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Creativity, History and You

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Astronomy and zodiac. Bible and monotheism. Why were they creative? ... Indian and Chinese Creativity. Contributions. Caste system (not all creativity is good) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Creativity, History and You


1
Creativity, History and You
2
Historical Examination of Creativity (Case study
method)
  • Look at people and times to understand creativity
    better
  • What traits made creative people creative?
  • What environmental conditions existed?
  • What was the process of creativity?

3
Creativity and Society
  • Creativity affects society "Creativity is the
    engine that drives cultural evolution."
    -M. Csikszentmihalyi
    in Handbook of Creativity, Robert J. Sternberg
    (ed.), 1999, 320.
  • 2. Society affects creativity "There are indeed
    certain instances in which social/cultural
    realities largely determine the possibility or
    lack of possibility for developing creativity in
    a given field."
    -D. H. Feldman
    in Handbook of Creativity, Robert J. Sternberg
    (ed.), 1999, 179.

4
Beginnings River Societies
  • Mesopotamia
  • Egypt
  • Indus River Valley
  • Yellow River Valley

5
Mesopotamian Creativity
  • Contributions
  • Agriculture, Plow
  • Cities
  • Bronze and iron ages
  • Wheeled vehicles
  • Writing (Cuneiform)
  • Mathematics (60 and 360)
  • Astronomy and zodiac
  • Bible and monotheism
  • Why were they creative?
  • War brought new cultures which expanded and
    blended
  • When did they stop being creative?
  • When the Greeks overlaid their culture.

6
Egyptian Creativity
  • Contributions
  • Pyramids
  • Papyrus
  • Hieroglyphics
  • Calendar
  • Art
  • Number system
  • Queen Hatshepsut
  • Why were they creative?
  • Making a nation
  • When did they stop being creative?
  • Priests took control

7
Indian and Chinese Creativity
  • Contributions
  • Caste system (not all creativity is good)
  • Hinduism, Jainism
  • Buddhism
  • Character writing
  • Paper
  • Gunpowder
  • Compass
  • Confucianism, Taoism
  • Why were they creative?
  • Interactions
  • When did they stop being creative?
  • When isolated

8
Greeks Formative Period
  • Alphabet
  • Homer
  • Aesop
  • Science
  • Thales, Pythagoras, Xeno, Democritus
  • Golden Mean
  • Government
  • Draco
  • Solon

9
Greeks Classical Period
  • Architecture
  • Drama
  • Philosophy/Science

10
Greeks Hellenistic Period
  • Alexander
  • Art
  • Lifestyle
  • Science

11
Greek Society
  • Minoans (Crete)
  • Mycenaeans (Trojan War)
  • Formative Period
  • Golden Age
  • Humanism
  • Philosophy
  • Art and science
  • Hellenism
  • Why were the Greeks creative?
  • Trade
  • Idea "We can understand"

12
Roman Society
  • Roman Republic
  • Roman Empire
  • Romans art and science
  • Greece provided the blueprint
  • Practical application
  • Government
  • Technology
  • Art
  • Roman Creativity
  • Thieves or innovators?

13
Byzantium
  • Centered in Constantinople
  • Continued the Roman Empire but lost direction
    (only thought of preserving the past) and,
    therefore, lost creativity

14
Islamic Society
  • Islam's foundation
  • Islam's expansion
  • Highly creative in making a new culture
  • Religion
  • Art
  • Architecture
  • Science
  • Literature
  • Islam's decline
  • Desire is to recapture past glories

15
Middle Ages
  • Creativity lost
  • Catastrophe (weather and plague)
  • Absence of rule of law
  • Absence of leisure time
  • Absence of learning
  • Corruption in the Catholic church
  • Minor revival in days of Charlemagne

16
Late Middle Ages
  • Positives
  • Nations
  • Scholasticism
  • Gothic
  • Dante
  • Chaucer
  • Discovery
  • Negatives
  • Great schism in Catholic church
  • Warfare that consumed resources

17
Renaissance
  • Architecture
  • Sculpture
  • Painting
  • Science
  • Creativity
  • Re-instituted Classical thinking

18
Renaissance Painting
Realism
Perspective, Background
Chiascurro, Sfumato, Arrangement
19
Leonardo DaVinci
20
Reformation
  • What caused the creativity?
  • Courage to think new thoughts and break with
    tradition

21
Baroque Glory
  • Art, sculpture
  • Architecture
  • Music (Handel, Bach)
  • What motivated the creativity?
  • Glory to God or king or people

22
Scientific Awakening Enlightenment
  • Bacon
  • Newton
  • Descartes
  • Locke
  • Voltaire
  • Rousseau
  • Creativity in thinking
  • New methods
  • New applications

23
Classical
  • Music Haydn, Mozart
  • Art David
  • Creativity
  • In the rules

24
Romantic
  • MusicBeethoven, Tchaikowsky, Liszt, Wagner
  • ArtGoya, Delacroix
  • LiteratureGoethe, Scott, Hugo, Tolstoy, Dumas
  • Creativity themes
  • Personal emotion
  • Country
  • Nature
  • Exoticism

25
Impressionism and Post-impressionism
  • ArtMonet, Manet, Renoir, Cezanne, Degas, Van
    Gogh, Dali
  • MusicDebussy, Ravel, Stravinsky
  • Creativity based on?
  • Technique

26
Modern
  • Art
  • Music
  • Dance
  • Literature
  • Creativity?
  • No rules
  • Beyond emotion of artist
  • Viewer finds meaning

27
Creativity Trends Throughout History
  • War versus peace
  • Interactions with other societies
  • Borrow and improve
  • Leisure time, safety, chaos
  • Sponsorship
  • Rules
  • Individualism
  • Purpose

28
Renaissance through Today
  • National Prominence
  • 15th CenturyItaly
  • 16th CenturySpain
  • 17th CenturyFrance
  • 18th CenturyEngland
  • 19th CenturyGermany
  • 20th CenturyAmerica
  • 21st Century?

29
  • "The illiterate of the twenty-first century will
    not be those who cannot read and write, but those
    who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn."
  • Toffler, Alvin (author of Future Shock), quoted
    in Thorpe, Scott, How to Think Like Einstein,
    Barnes Noble Books, Inc., 2000, p. 26.

30
  • The psychological conditions which make a
    society or an epoch creative and consistently
    original have been little studied, but it seems
    likely that social conditions analogous to those
    seen in individual creativity are important.
    Freedom of expression and movement, lack of fear
    of dissent and contradiction, a willingness to
    break with custom, a spirit of play as well as of
    dedication to work, purpose on a grand scale
    these are some of the attributes which a creative
    social entity, whether vast or tiny, can be
    expected to have.
  • Frank Barron, Institute of Personality
    Assessment and Research, University of
    California, Berkeley

31
Creativity aspectsSkill, Talent, and Personality
  • How to improve all three areas

32
Improving Creativity Skills
  • Thinking better
  • Linear and lateral
  • Conscious and subconscious

33
Enhancing Linear Thinking
  • Build Associative Barriers
  • These are patterns (paradigms) that help us
    proceed in a specific area
  • These patterns give context to our thinking
  • Example My chemistry research is done within the
    context of the atomic model of matter
  • When I do research, I interpret results in light
    of my paradigm

34
Enhancing Linear Thinking
  • Seek Depth
  • Stay Current
  • Understand better
  • Explain difficult concepts to people outside the
    domain
  • Be focused

35
Enhancing Lateral Thinking
  • Break down Associative Barriers
  • Expose yourself to a range of cultures
  • Learn differently
  • Reverse assumptions
  • Look at multiple perspective

36
Enhancing Lateral Thinking
  • Learn art
  • Travel extensively
  • Read widely and avidly
  • Study outside your primary domain
  • Practice making unusual and unexpected mental
    associations
  • Be perceptive
  • Practice humor

37
Be Perceptive
  • Rely on intuition, imagination and impetuousness
  • Envision the consequences
  • Mozart
  • Michelangelo
  • Slow down, look at the big picture

38
Creativity and Humor
  • Atheism is a non-prophet organization
  • No sense being pessimistic, it probably wouldnt
    work anyway.
  • I used to think I was indecisive, but now Im not
    sure.
  • Editing is a rewording activity
  • My reality check just bounced
  • What if there were no hypothetical questions?

39
Creativity and Humor
  • Specialized Humor
  • Does the name Pavlov ring a bell?
  • Entropy isnt what it used to be.
  • 186,000 miles/sec not just a good idea, its the
    LAW!
  • Santas elves are just a bunch of subordinate
    Clauses.
  • Clones are people, two.
  • Dyslexics have more fnu
  • Help stamp out and eradicate superfluous
    redundancy.
  • Air pollution is a mist-demeanor.
  • Microbiology Lab Staph.

40
Creativity aspectsSkill, Talent, and Personality
  • How to improve all three areas

41
Brain control
  • Choosing left and right as the situation dictates
  • Choosing conscious or subconscious as the
    situation dictates

Example Napoleon Napoleon was the only
member of the French Mathematical Society that
was not a working mathematician Napoleon's
brain control "Different subjects and different
affairs are arranged in my head as in a cupboard.
When I wish to interrupt one train of thought, I
shut that drawer and open another. Do I wish to
sleep? I simply close all the drawers and there I
am asleep." Napoleon (http//www.geocities.com
/Area51/2162/napmem.html)
42
Creativity AspectsSkill, Talent, and Personality
  • How to improve all three areas

43
Creative Personality
  • Confident
  • Not afraid of criticism
  • Hard working
  • Self-motivated

44
  • "I have no special gift. I am only passionately
    curious."
  • Einstein, quoted in Thorpe, Scott, How to Think
    Like Einstein, Barnes Noble Books, Inc., 2000,
    p. 115.

45
Be Confident
  • Anyone who has never made a mistake has never
    tried anything new.
  • --Albert Einstein

46
Be Self-Motivated
47
Putting it all togetherSkill, Talent, and
Personality
  • Skills
  • Think better
  • Linear
  • Depth and focus
  • Lateral
  • Art, travel, reading, new areas, practice new
    thinking, perceptive
  • Conscious/subconscious
  • Talent
  • Balance and choose attributes for the moment
  • Personality
  • Confident
  • Hard working
  • Self-motivated

48
Thank You
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