I think philosophy is – has in some sense always been – about 'conceptual and moral creativity' insofar as it problematizes – exposes and calls into question – how 'ways (habits) of living' and 'ways (habits) of thinking' incorrigibly fail to be creative (adaptive).I am raising this thread to ask where does creativity fit into the picture of philosophy? — Jack Cummins
IMO, this is too large and varied a topic for a post. Consider (if you haven't already, Jack) this article:How may the sources of the creative processes be understood in society and on a personal basis?
I suspect creativity is "valued" today mostly in forms of economic or monetizable 'innovations', quite "undervalued" throughout primary-secondary education (certainly in the US and other theo/neo-fascist countries) and devalued as threatening in classist, national & international 'politics' everywhere. The Frankfurt School's critiques of the culture industry and (it's knockoff) the Wachowskis sisters' The Matrix have some insightful things to say about this 'fetishistic-p0m0 use of creativity' to reify – ideologize – sociopolitical status quos.To what extent is creativity valued or undervalued in the twentieth first century?
I do wonder how ideas of creativity are socially constructed and to what extent do some pursue their creative quests in relation to social circumstances and luck. — Jack Cummins
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