This is what creativity is. It's what we're actually doing when we're doing creative things. — Terrapin Station
When you create something, you're simply taking pre-existing materials and putting them into some different relationship, one step at a time. That's all there is to it, really. — Terrapin Station
It cannot be denied that there IS only one of YOUR perspective. It requires a leap of faith to believe that there are other perspectives. — Norman Stone
Solipsism is one of the least creative of alternative ontologies. No wonder solipsists are so lonely.. — Norman Stone
Philosophy should confidently assert what we don't know as opposed to faith in the unknown. — Willyfaust
There are some subject areas, or ideas, which are not amenable to the kind of analysis that will yield the kind of empirical evidence that is considered scientific, so questions about those kinds of topics aren't considered legitimate at all by scientific standards. — Wayfarer
What I mean by "rearranging" is that with the car, for example, you're taking some metal and plastic and rubber and electronics, etc. that already exist and you're putting them into different relationships with each other to make something different.
I don't know enough about software to describe it in these terms, but that's all we're doing when we create musical things, and visual art things and cars and so on. — Terrapin Station
What I mean by "rearranging" is that with the car, for example, you're taking some metal and plastic and rubber and electronics, etc. that already exist and you're putting them into different relationships with each other to make something different. — Terrapin Station
Is belief or faith in the supernatural a worthy idea for us or is it a tool used by lying preachers intent on fleecing sheeple? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Sure, but a different perspective of the universe? — Brett
I was trying to think of how what you’ve said relates to my own thoughts so far, because it threw me for a bit, that is the creative act in a business orientated environment, and it seems to me that that’s the only place creativity can take place today because there is purpose, a demand, and result, as has always been required in the creative act (according to my thoughts). — Brett
‘... a different perspective of any aspect of the universe.’ What exactly does that mean in terms of being creative?
What you’re saying is that a different perspective of the universe forms part of the creative process because what you’re doing is creative. That doesn’t explain anything. It’s an endless loop. — Brett
Creative work is ultimately constrained in some way, whether by the materials/parts available or by the discourse or value systems in which they are often required to operate. The creative animal is acutely aware of these constraints and strives to explore just beyond them, to challenge them in the creative process.
The creative process, in my view, is an open-ended interaction with these constraints of subjective experience. This is how we discover new ways of seeing the world, new ways to relate to the world and relate elements of the world to each other, and new capacities or ways to achieve. — Possibility
The question is would it be better if there was no 'work' to the process, or not. And the creator was just purely enjoying his/her self? It it my opinion that the process of having that enjoyment is in part derived from the social value of the act itself. — kudos
Well there's the pure act of creativity itself and then there's sub-category of creative industry. Being involved in industry presupposes there's a reason to produce already determined. But being involved in any type of creativity doesn't have to involve producing for the work-return benefits of an industry, which would account for the big difference in these two types. Suppose you were independent, and had decided to make a software app or a painting. What are the reasons why you would do this, pure love of one's neighbour, G-d, or on the other side vanity or glory maybe? I presume the reasons would be similar or comparable in nature despite ending in very different results. — kudos
For me, creativity is not about use-value, but about sharing our subjective view of the universe in a form that pursues at least one of three aims: increased awareness, increased interconnectedness or increased overall achievement/capacity. These aims, I believe, are instinctive at the deepest level of existence, but it is in recognising my uniquely subjective view as valuable in itself to the unfolding universe that enables me to be creative.
Putting creative (uniquely personal) work into something for the benefit of others is precisely what drives creativity in the first place. It is a selfless act at its core. Monetization or any system of value is counterproductive to creativity - the moment a value system begins to influence creative labours, the original impetus is obscured and the creative animal is lured from creativity towards productivity. — Possibility
IME, design involves much more than rearrangement of existing building blocks. Often (usually), the building blocks themselves must be designed and implemented before they can be used in the main project. — Pattern-chaser
What are you building the building blocks out of? — Terrapin Station
Smaller blocks. Like bones are built from cells, I suppose. — Pattern-chaser
Sure. Aren't you rearranging those, then? — Terrapin Station
Setting parsimony aside would be really silly because it's one of the basic principles of deciding how likely a belief is to be true when there is no direct evidence either way. — luckswallowsall
We can't put apreciseprobability on the existence of God but that doesn't stop God from being highly improbable. — luckswallowsall
I don't know enough about programming to mention what would make sense as parts, but it would be something similar--some sort of cache of unique command words for the coding language in question, some cache of logical statements with particular syntax, etc.
If you're needing to solve a particular problem, yeah, that also requires that you rearrange the stuff you're rearranging in a way that it has a pretty specific result . . . — Terrapin Station
As someone who does creative work for a living, working with lots of other creative folks, and who has done that for decades... — Terrapin Station
You're basically rearranging things and seeing what happens when you "put this there" and "try removing this from here" etc. — Terrapin Station
what constitutes the creative animal, as it were, of todays modern age. What are it's qualities? — kudos
We have opened the door to new forms of creativity, creating works without use-value. — kudos
The creativity of today is both against monetization, but also ascribes virulently to a lottery system of value. Large web-front companies make money of the creative labours of the masses, but what drives us to do it? Are we still driven to do it? Is it a form of slavery to put creative work into something to the benefit of someone else? Does this mean that creativity must be devoid of 'work'? — kudos
I could see in your choice of wording you may not being paying attention to the process of producing art - the creative process - which is a little confusing for me. Maybe I just misunderstood the focus of your OP? — I like sushi
It's what's at dispute if we're disputing whether value judgments can be objective. — Terrapin Station
If the law is immoral, — Terrapin Station
Who decides? — tim wood
But the mind-independent framework has a lot of intractable and unsettling problems. In that framework we cannot explain how we can experience anything. We never see things as they are. Free will is very limited or inexistent. Why do these things bother us so much? Maybe because they are not an accurate representation of existence. These problems go away if we stop assuming a mind-independent reality. — leo
The problems as I see them are largely about awkward language. I don't think we can solve them. — g0d
Facts exist, knowledge suggests a being aware of a fact. — 3rdClassCitizen
I think it's far more likely that scientists are unable to find causes once we get down to the quantum level than it is the case that there actually are no causes. — luckswallowsall
if so far it seems that the world has explanations then it's more parsimonious to assume that that's the way the world works until there's evidence of something without an explanation. — luckswallowsall
the problem is that you can't have evidence of a world without explanations because that would require an explanation — luckswallowsall
It is not clear whether you are laughing at my claim or at their presumptuousness. — Fooloso4
It is worth noting that until recently analytic philosophers all but ignored the history of philosophy, the assumption being that they had progressed to the point where the ancients could have nothing to teach them. — Fooloso4
But I do think that nobody knows there is a noise if nobody exists to know of the noise. — luckswallowsall
Every event must have an explanation [...] Everything has an explanation [...] Even if the universe is acausal then that just means that events are determined by probabilistic laws that can't be predicted. — luckswallowsall
Does modern philosophy still make valuable contributions that create new knowledge, or are contemporary philosophers just busy analyzing existing knowledge?
If we assume that philosophers do create new knowledge (that cannot be found in the natural or social sciences), why is it so difficult - or even impossible - to detect progress in the philosophical debate ? My impression is that philosophers are still debating the same basic topics they were busy debating 50 or even 100 years ago, and that there is little hope that they will come to a conclusion.
Why is that so? — Matias
how did you people manage to overcome the pressure of the cage that tells you what you should do and when you should do it, — virginia west
He is an outspoken leftist (not Marxist though, as he leans more towards anarchism/left wing libertarianism), a bit insecure, hence his 'contemptuously dismissive' comments and a bit autistic when it comes to social interaction. — ritikew
ethics are society's overall "right and wrong" guidelines, morality being each individual's adopted choice of "right and wrong" — THX1138
↪Pattern-chaser
No, you are not misreading it. No knowledge is possible at all without consciousness. Why?
Because to be conscious is to be aware. And you can't have knowledge of X without being aware of X. Because being aware of something and having knowledge of it is the same thing. — luckswallowsall