Well, it's strange that you phrase things this way, as if autism is the supreme reason what drives a philosopher. — Wallows
Anything not understood appears to be magic. — Janus
Wouldn't physical evidence of the supernatural prove it's physical and therefore natural? — Hanover
No supernatural gods, no evidence, nothing, but they are ‘demonstrably' less moral than humans? — Brett
I [...] have a good grasp of the real and the imaginary. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
True that reality is a collective hunch. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
it does appear that in the US people are much more wary about their countries darker history (I’m from the UK and early on we were indoctrinated with the vile circumstances of WWI and the mistakes made). — I like sushi
Do you need saving and what did you do to be condemned? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
True that reality is a collective hunch. Still better to not add to the objective reality by adding a fantasy that one must believe in to be saved. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
So I'm wondering what you think your perspective gains us? — Pattern-chaser
It tells us what we're actually doing when it comes to creativity. — Terrapin Station
these acts of creation are now owned by professionals, so that the ordinary person views acts of creation as an act of a specific group: medicine, research, science, infrastructure, virtually everything about our societies. — Brett
I’ve been holding on to the term ‘value-use’ kudos used in the op. What I mean is a tangible benefit that enables a group, tribe, culture to move successfully forward in its development and to create the grounds for the next step. In the Darwinian sense only successful, beneficial creative acts survive because of what they offer to those who created it.
Somehow the arts have taken ownership of the word ‘creative’. My thoughts are that the creative act is a human instinct for survival. Whether it’s an instinct I’m not sure. But today these instincts (if that’s the right word) are really a watered down version of their origins and appear as acts of modification, like your car design. (It’s possible that this watered down version, like a fiddling at the edges, is responsible for the stagnation in our growth). They still have tangible benefits in that they contribute to our welfare and survival.
The ‘arts’ do not exist like this at all. They offer no tangible benefits. It can be argued that they contribute to something we need, but there’s never any hard evidence apart from some idea of “increased awareness, increased interconnectedness or increased overall achievement/capacity“. — Brett
I'm describing creativity. — Terrapin Station
If you want to argue that the only possible knowledge comes through science
[...]
You really think you can scientifically demonstrate all the things you know to be true? — Coben
I think the God one is less easy to predict. It might be beyond science. It might not be. — Coben
No? Then how will you obtain (scientifically-acceptable and -useful) evidence? For without evidence, science can do nothing. And there is no evidence. Thus... — Pattern-chaser
I was talking about the future history of science. You are saying it is beyond science, so this includes all future possible scientific theory and research. — Coben
I'm describing "creation" as a rearrangement. I'm not saying that something hasn't been created. — Terrapin Station
I've made a living as a musician, composer and arranger since the early 80s. I've done a lot of film work, but not only. I've done some film work outside of a musical context, too. I also do some visual art, and I've written fiction, including some scripts. — Terrapin Station
being creative does necessarily involve creating new and different [X] — Possibility
To not at least stick to what can be known, and think what cannot be known is real, would be people giving up logic and reason for fantasy. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I think we all do that and that is why it is important to have ones thinking in reality instead of fiction or the supernatural. If you use junk members in your scaffold, it is not safe. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If governments controlled disposable income of the .1 %, would poverty end? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Should people like me be registered predators even if we abide by the law regardless of our nature? — THX1138
I suppose I could attenuate its form in a manner such that what had been spoken of, and expressed on my part, be of greater frugality in that respect. — Vessuvius
Another thing that pushes me towards thinking we are, indeed just a body is things like OCD (Obsessive compulsive disorder), where one isn't in complete control of their thoughts, due to some difference in the structure of the brain. — Anirudh Sharma
I think the God one is less easy to predict. It might be beyond science. It might not be. — Coben
If such an issue, as any of these, is beyond science, is it beyond any way of knowing? I would say 'not necessarily'. — Coben
I’m meaning a value that goes beyond personal. — Brett
So the creative act, and the creative animal today, works with ‘value-use’, as the creative act always has, otherwise it dies in a vacuum. — Brett
The creative process in advertising, marketing etc., is driven by a) a brief, b) budget, c) market research, d) a deadline, e) the medium. None of this is subjective on your part. You don’t decide what the client needs, the client does. — Brett
But in the end it’s still a car, already invented. The designer is just pushing the idea of a car, modifying it. — Brett
The fields you worked in have different objectives. Website design, advertising, marketing, they’re driven by pure ‘use-value’, a monetary value and measures of success. There’s very little subjectivity here, it’s all market driven, measured against costs and returns. — Brett
In website design, advertising and marketing, there are many more scientifically generated constraints but in my opinion they can present more of a creative challenge than a painting or a play where you’re choosing many of your own constraints as part of the creative process. The capacity to produce something ‘new and different’ - to have a broad vision of the potentiality - in such a narrow scope demands a high level of creativity: a more flexible subjective view, if you will. — Possibility
I agree with your first statement, but your perspective of exactly what constitutes ‘new and different’ implies ‘something from nothing’ that unnecessarily mystifies the process. I don’t think Terrapin Station is denying the central attribute of creativity at all - ‘new and different’ relates essentially to awareness and perspective, not to actuality. — Possibility
So what do you think that I'm doing as a creative person other than what I'm describing? — Terrapin Station
I'd argue that it being new and different is a property of originality rather than creativity. — kudos
Because obviously, creativity has as it's aim to produce an original new thing. — kudos
But it's not a definitive quality inherent in the product, but in the intention — kudos
In some cases, it is exactly that. Cases such as 'Does God exist?', where there is no (scientifically-acceptable) evidence. Cases such as 'What is Objective Reality?', where there is also no possibility of us gathering evidence. And so on. — Pattern-chaser
Well, first off, I said it is not necessarily that kind of thing
it is not necessarily that science cannot confirm or measure these things/areas/phenomena — Coben
though I could have made my wording clearer. I meant, that just because cannot test something empirically now, does nto mean will not be able to later. — Coben
it is not necessarily that science cannot confirm or measure these things/areas/phenomena — Coben
Again, this is not at all a judgment about anything. I don't know how I can stress that to successfully get it across. — Terrapin Station
If the goal is to create a catalogue of all we know about creativity... — kudos