What is this ‘awareness’? You seem to be saying that in the beginning was awareness, then came creativity.
Your quote states that “Human creativity comes from a gradually developed capacity for awareness”.
What does this gradual development stem from?
And without tools for survival how would the organism, us, survive, enough to develop awareness?
I have no idea how it happened but somehow man learned to make a fire, create fire from nothing. That must have come before awareness, otherwise he would have died and with it awareness.
And how is awareness passed on? — Brett
The evolution of the human being demonstrates an abandoning of survival features in favour of developing the capacity for increasing awareness, interconnectedness and collaborative achievement: from the brain and sensory organs to child-rearing, communicative ability and social structure. — Possibility
My descriptions of this ‘drive’ are my own understanding of it, not a definition as such - which I’m not sure is possible — Possibility
The op brought up the ‘the creative animal’, not ‘the artistic animal’. They’re two distinct beings to me. — Brett
Art is something made visible by using the creative act as a tool, it’s not just the creative act. Art is a metaphor. First there’s the idea, then the visible metaphor. The creative act gives form to the metaphor. — Brett
I would find it difficult to view these as anything but survival features. — Brett
Creation is at the heart of art; art cannot exist without it. — Pattern-chaser
But in terms of evolution I wonder, for instance, how we determine that the live birth of a child, who is then completely dependent on an interactive parent for several years, is a survival feature. Do you get the feeling that we’re forcing some features and behaviour to fit the theory because there’s no alternative reasoning and it appears to work for everything else? — Possibility
I am puzzled that, in this discussion, some posters seem to minimise the importance, or even presence, of creation in the creative process*. Have I misunderstood, or missed something? :chin:
* - I claim only that creation is at the heart of the creative process. Important to state there is more to the creative process than creation, though. :up: — Pattern-chaser
in my view a specific completed creation (particularly a successful one) need not be part of a process that tends towards creation in general. — Possibility
Any specific completed creation is surely the result of a creative process? — Pattern-chaser
But eventually it’s possible they saw having male children as beneficial to their survival when they have grown. — Brett
But a creative human not in immediate danger who observes this situation can recognise the potential of fire to deter wild animals. By integrating this new information with:
- what he knows from interacting with fire in situations when he isn’t trying to survive a wild animal but instead trying to survive a fire, and
- what he knows from interacting with fire when he isn’t threatened by either the fire or wild animals,
the creative human can then determine a way to harness the potential of fire in deterring wild animals, thereby increasing awareness of his own capacity - in this instance for survival. — Possibility
As described in my previous post, this potential is not necessarily limited to survival - rather it is our focus on survival that limits it by requiring a specific result. — Possibility
Though your fire story could be regarded as a creative act, or thought, that has a beneficial result. I really don’t know how to classify that. — Brett
The result is purely chance. Early man was not seeking a specific result. You cannot say I’m going to invent a specific thing, because you must already be aware of aspects of that thing. Once the original thing is made real then it can be applied in different ways. — Brett
I see human creativity as an additional dimension of awareness that enables us to integrate information from both stimulus-response and memory to increase our awareness of potential. As described in my previous post, this potential is not necessarily limited to survival - rather it is our focus on survival that limits it by requiring a specific result. — Possibility
It’s hard for me to make clear, and I maybe missing something myself, that without a creative act that contributes towards survival there will be no second act. And as a consequence, only those who can manipulate that creative act will survive. — Brett
But to me, the creative act incorporates the integration of all the necessary information/experience in order to recognise one’s own capacity to use making fire as a tool for survival, and act on that awareness when the situation arises. — Possibility
those who can create fire will survive, while those who don’t have sufficient experiences to make a correlation between the flint, wood and their own hand movements will... freeze to death? — Possibility
Have you ever tried to describe it from within the act? As a participant - not as an observer or even a creator at the completion of the act, but as someone being creative right now? — Possibility
Of course the creative act opens us up to other potentials, but it can’t keep opening up potentials endlessly, forever. — Brett
A potential is exactly that, the capacity to develop into something. What is a potential that never develops into something? — Brett
I disagree that it must contribute to survival in order to exist. — Possibility
to call it a ‘result’ in terms of a ‘completed’ act is false — Possibility
This is how the creative process operates alongside natural selection and rational thought, to increase overall achievement. — Possibility
Any specific completed creation is surely the result of a creative process? — Pattern-chaser
It can only be an anticipated result while the process is occurring. — Possibility
Any specific completed creation is surely the result of a creative process? — Pattern-chaser
I disagree that it must contribute to survival in order to exist.
— Possibility
I can’t see it any other way. — Brett
The creative process and rational thought work together, natural selection has the final say. — Brett
By ‘fiddling’ I do mean how we “correlate between entities, value and meaning“. That is being creative, maybe being conscious and being creative are the same thing: “how we process and integrate information”. — Brett
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