a psychic medium told me that it is only possible to reach spiritual beings when using the creative mind. — TiredThinker
An act is not recognised as ‘creative’ until an abstract thinker attributes intentionality - but the act still happens.
— Possibility
Do you mean by “abstract thinker” another person or the person carrying out the act?. — Brett
So unless there is a perceived connection between the creativity and the action then the act is random or meaningless.
Edit: so monkey see and monkey do is not creative. — Brett
An act is not recognised as ‘creative’ until an abstract thinker attributes intentionality - but the act still happens.
— Possibility
Do you mean by “abstract thinker” another person or the person carrying out the act?.
— Brett
Either - does it matter? — Possibility
An act is not recognised as ‘creative’ until an abstract thinker attributes intentionality - but the act still happens
— Possibility
Not necessarily, if I am interpreting what you are saying correctly. My own experience in mathematics belies this statement. I have had ideas pop into my head without having primed myself by thinking about a subject; the ideas then have been recognized as creative - but without intentionality. — jgill
Either - does it matter?
— Possibility
I think so. How can people other than the one performing the act know it was intentional? — Brett
Intentionality is a predictive distribution of effort and attention - it requires consciousness, — Possibility
Once they attribute intentionality (which is not the same as conscious intent), accurately or not, they recognise it as a creative act. — Possibility
Intentionality is a predictive distribution of effort and attention - it requires consciousness, but one need not be conscious of it — Possibility
But I think that people who work in very original creativity, producing original ideas in art or maths for instance, do actually do it in a conscious way, but they also allow their mind to open up to possibilities that others may not put together. Because of this strange or unreal abilities are attributed to them and we begin to hear the word genius for instance.
I can see the first beginnings of controlling fire in that light or making sharp tools from flint. — Brett
Intentionality needs an object.
But if that object doesn’t yet exist how can there be intentionality?
In remembering I remember a past object, imagining presents an imaginary object. But even then the imaginary object is made up of existing parts assembled as an imaginary object.
How would this apply to creating a cutting tool by striking a flint and creating a sharp edge for the first time, or domesticating fire, or Picasso creating Les Demoiselles Avignon? — Brett
Remembering and imagining are not consolidated in the creative process. They are not formed into an imaginary object assembled from formed parts, — Possibility
My own experience in mathematics belies this statement. I have had ideas pop into my head without having primed myself by thinking about a subject; the ideas then have been recognized as creative - but without intentionality. — jgill
Can you elaborate on this further, that imagining presents an imaginary object in the mind is not true? — Brett
↪jgill
There is a common confusion between intention and intentionality, just as there is between potential and potentiality. The former has content, the latter is indeterminate: better understood as a faculty rather than a capacity. — Possibility
in the creative process, it’s not about formed or consolidated objects, but about the relational structures that form them, or enable them to be consolidated. — Possibility
A creative idea - as jgill proposes in mathematics - is a process of interrelating unconsolidated potentialities. — Possibility
A creative idea - as jgill proposes in mathematics - is a process of interrelating unconsolidated potentialities.
— Possibility
Wouldn’t you say that the process comes before the creative idea? The idea is the consolidated potentiality, like the dancing. In the dancing the idea and form happen at once, the event, unless it’s choreographed. But there has to be something that comes before that, something that allows, directs or opens up the potential for consolidation. — Brett
It is my understanding that creativity decreases with age — TiredThinker
There’s a difference here between the dancer, the painter and the mathematician. So let’s say that moment, for the dancer, is a series of rapid decisions based on a deep understanding and knowledge of movement. They are, as you say, amorphous. For the observer the idea and form happen spontaneously in front of them.
But for the painter and, I suspect, the mathematician it’s different. That moment where the idea and form come together is internally. For them you might say the idea “pops” into their head, which I only use to show the difference between the dancer and painter.
So the moment before the idea “pops” into the artist’s head that idea is formless, amorphous as you say.
That’s the moment, the formless moment, that I meant by “process”, which of course is not a good enough description.
So the idea is consolidated in the artist’s consciousness just before it goes on the canvas, in the same way the idea is consolidated in the dancers consciousness immediately before every minute action,
It’s that amorphous process that I’d like to nail down. It doesn’t mean the following step is totally consolidated, because it’s a continuous process after all, except in the form of the dancer where we actually see the consolidation process take place. — Brett
If you attend a professional dance performance, you can be sure that the dancer has choreographed and rehearsed their actions to the last detail. — Possibility
The difference between the dancer and painter is that the dancer’s actions consolidate a potential event in his/her mind, whereas the painter’s actions consolidate on the canvas. — Possibility
When I am talking about the dance and dancer I’m not talking about a choreographed dance. I’m talking about a dance that is created as the dancer dances, all their experience, all their knowledge of dance, the physical aspects, the appearance of the body in action, it’s history, it’s tradition, everything the dancer is aware of about dance is laid out in that act, but each movement is grasped as they dance.. It’s someone throwing themselves through space and moment by moment creating the dance, like Jazz musicians jamming “a relatively informal musical event, process, or activity where musicians, typically instrumentalists, play improvised solos and vamp on tunes, songs and chord progressions.” Wikipedia. — Brett
It’s something that happens very quickly. And it is as you say an event in time. Painting is not like this. A painting, as you say, is a material object. The painting may take place over time, but the creative idea that you see in the dance on the stage, performed in time, moment by moment, for the painter take place in the painters consciousness. You don’t see it. But if you imagine a creative idea as the dancer moving through space, going this way and that, a gesture here or there, a leap, a shrug of the shoulders, a hand held out, all those moments fluid and connected, then you can imagine the processing of the creative idea in the painter’s mind. — Brett
However, before the painter begins to consolidate this idea in their head, and before the dancer consolidates the dance in time on the stage there is the amorphous phase beforehand, the formless idea still not yet born but approaching consolidation. The whole thing, from the formless to the consolidation to the action is one process. It’s the amorphous stage that interests me. — Brett
That’s not how it works. A dance is always a collaboration between the dancer and the music - it isn’t simply the dancer expressing what they know. — Possibility
Jazz musicians, too, are interrelating unconsolidated potentialities - — Possibility
But you don’t see the creative idea on stage - you only see one possible expression of it, just like with the painting. — Possibility
What you see is a creative act. — Possibility
You’re still seeing the creative process as a temporal duration, and looking for something before it. — Possibility
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