Each sensation is distinct, particular, and unique, due to the changing nature of the world which we sense. Therefore a thought which is derived from a sensation, is necessarily a truly original thought. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think creation of 'new' ideas is more like filling in links. We start with an existing idea (which can be traced back to our senses) and what we create is the link to a new idea, via deduction/induction. — Devans99
Training to conceive... — BrianW
the question remains 'is it possible to have a truly original thought?' — Devans99
You discount creativity, then? New ideas, even if they aren't truly original, as discussed, cannot be derived by deduction or induction. Creativity includes an element of chaos, randomness and disorder, and its output cannot always be understood in the logical/rational terms you present — Pattern-chaser
Computers can't generate truly original information so why should we be able to? — Devans99
Everything we can deduce/adduce is from our senses. Our memory is filled with things deduced from our senses. I don't see where 'original thoughts' can come from? — Devans99
That's because you seem unable to move beyond that which can be "deduced/adduced" — Pattern-chaser
That's because you seem unable to move beyond that which can be "deduced/adduced". — Pattern-chaser
How else do we derive new knowledge? It seems its always via links to existing knowledge (and ultimately to our senses). — Devans99
I'm not saying its abduction/deduction only that we use, but whatever we use (heuristics etc...) it seems to take existing ideas as input. — Devans99
f we take existing ideas that are, at our current state of knowledge, unrelated, and we establish an unexpected (but useful! :wink:) connection between them, that connection is new and original. — Pattern-chaser
So inspiration seems to be providing those new links (via deduction or whatever). — Devans99
What is it that is known, sometimes even learnt, that makes a person adequate at formulating solutions?
Strangely, he then went on to suggest that the notion of a 'missing colour blue' is an idea that is not just a connection between existing ideas. Nobody can work out why he did that, and personally I don't agree that it is a new idea — andrewk
As we have already demonstrated, new things cannot be deduced, because things that can be deduced from facts we already have, are not new, they are derived. But the thought that resulted from that "inspiration" (or vice versa, I'm not sure :smile:) is an original one. — Pattern-chaser
What about the identification of new axioms of infinity in mathematical logic? Do you consider them new or just derived from the preceding ones? — Ikolos
The value of an idea is in its usefulness, not in its novelty. — Pattern-chaser
Not at all: the possibility of deriving something effectively is what distinguish what we know and what we can not say we know. If your contention were true there would be no criteria to establish in which direction orientates a research with uncertain results, except on some kind of unspecified usefulness.
Furthermore, you're hiding something: if an idea is useful, and if we rest on usefulness alone, there is no other way than casual discovery to search for another, because we may rely on the first occurring useful idea. Using this kind of reasoning, only casualty, and not reasoning, would have been the source of discovery such as calculus(which deepest origin is: how to calculate the area of a circle), its application to physics and the incredible development of technology.
Explicitly you are saying, that(and this is so disputable) we CLASSIFY ideas on the criterion of their usefulness, which, in this case, is COMPARATIVE criterion not a GENERATIVE, as I requested you to give your account on. — Ikolos
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