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How Much Creativity Do We Need?
Here is a curious story that tries to think scientifically about how much creativity “we” need. At one point it suggests that maybe 30% creative and 70% mindless copying is acceptable.
To break from the writing about which I am obsessed, I sometimes paint. I use watercolors, though I do not call myself a water colorist because I don’t follow all the rules and disciplines associated with those who classify themselves as such.
It is frustrating to paint if you have the attitude that you must strive for creativity. You know that millions of people have looked at similar subjects and have given them similar treatment. I try to do something different. I sketch with a small paint set that I take with me where I can see people doing normal things. Avoiding being intrusive, I sneak a sketch and often complete it later so subjects don’t change their behavior while knowing that they are the model.
YJ
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Monday, November 16, 2009
The Curious Threshold For Creativity"A new model of society suggests that we should spend no more than 50 percent of our time being creative
"When it comes to creativity, it's easy to imagine that more is better. Creativity lies at the heart of science. It solves problems and drives innovation. Then there's the small matter of art and literature. Humanity's self expression and aesthetic explorations are born of our creative drive.
And yet creativity has its downsides too, say Stefan Leijnen and Liane Gabora at the University of British Columbia in Canada. Creative solutions can only spread if they are adopted by other individuals. These imitators play an important role in society. They act as a kind of memory, storing the results of successful creative strategies for future generations. But the time that individuals spend creating means less time imitating. Clearly we cannot all be creators all the time but neither can we all be imitators.
That raises an interesting question, say Leijnen and Gabora. How much creativity does a society need to optimize the evolution of ideas?
To find out, they built a computational model that simulates the way ideas are created, how they spread and how they evolve in a society. The model simulates the behaviour of agents that invent new ideas by modifying existing ones, that imitate these ideas and also think, in the sense that they are able to evaluate new ideas before trying them out. The agents are assessed against a fitness criteria and reproduce accordingly. A new generation then repeats the process and so on.
Leijnen and Gabora measure the success of creativity versus imitating by looking at the fitness of the society as a whole and how this changes over time.
Of course, real individuals are both creators and imitators. In their simulations, Leijnen and Gabora find that society benefits most when individuals spend less than half their time creating and the rest imitating. When that happens, there is scope for everyone to be creative without any drop in society's fitness.
But if some individuals spend all their time creating and none imitating, this situation changes. In that case, a maximum of 30 per cent of a population can be creative, without society suffering. Which means that 70 per cent of individuals are condemned to a life of mindless copying.
What does that mean for us? It's hard to say. It would be easy to question how well the model and, in particular, its fitness criteria applies to the real world. But that would be to miss the point of an interesting attempt to model the evolution of ideas.
The implication is that we should spend less than 50 percent of our time being creative, if we want to maximise the benefit of our ideas to society.
What we lack here is a good understanding of what it means for real humans to be creative and how much time it is possible to spend on this task. Given the unavoidable demands of being human: the need for sleep, food, sex, relaxation which all involve a certain amount of creativity and copying etc, it's quite possible that it's physically impossible to spend anywhere near the 50 percent threshold on being creative. That would imply that we can safely pursue creativity as a goal in our society for the foreseeable future.
There's another interesting idea. It may be possible that evolution has already solved this problem: that humans have evolved in a way that optimises the spread of ideas through society. So the balance between creativity and imitation in our lives is built inot our genese and culture. That's one for the anthropologists."
Ref: arxiv.org/abs/0911.2390: How creative should creators be to optimize the evolution of ideas? A computational model "
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 07:43 on November 20th, 2009
Let's have a contest. This article ran for a few days without comment or recommendation. Maybe its the woman in the picture. I will swith to a dog at the door of the same restaurant and see what happens. Creative experimentation at NowPublic in progress.
at 08:55 on November 20th, 2009
How much creativity does a society need to optimize the evolution of ideas?
Terrific article YankeeJim. Sorry I missed it on day of publication.
I have pondered the creative process for years, but on an individual basis, not on optimizing society in terms of progress. If we examine the creation of something concrete like a car for example, it is 50% design and 50% engineering which fits nicely with the study you have used. But it might be different in the Arts.
The use of the term "imitating" has a slightly negative tone because most of us believe that we are originals--whether it's true or not--, and I am not being silly or facious. If we accept Locke's definition of empiricism that all knowledge is derived from experience, then do original, innate ideas or principles exist?
Bertrand Russell writes that ideas are derived from two sources: sensation and perception of the operation of our own mind or internal senses. Because we think by means of ideas, and since ideas come from experience, it is evident that none of our knowledge is prior to experience.
I paint also for my own pleasure. Do I paint anything original? I look at a picture and copy it in watercolors, and is it original or does the fact that I am using my abilities to reproduce the image as the creation is rendered through all my previous painting experiences to produce a new painting. It is not "exactly" like the picture I copied, and it never can be because I am bringing my hand and thoughts to its creation.
Am I imitating or creating?
at 09:58 on November 20th, 2009
What an excellent reply. This is exactly what I had in mind by posting the story.
When people make a collage, they sometimes incorporate images of other art, photos, and artifacts. The new composition is original though the elements are from someone else.
Sometimes, I go to an art museum with my sketch book and sketch the art and sculpture from others. I do this to gain inspiration and to enrich the experience by retracing the steps of the original artist. Even though I may be "copying" in a different medium, the work that I produce is my original imitation, perhaps.
YJ
at 18:38 on November 20th, 2009
Thank you YJ
I tried copying some Van Gogh and Georgia O'Keefe from some art books I have. I changed the colors and even some of the figures, and when I finish it does not look like Van Gogh, its looks like my interpretation of the same scene. Like your sketches, my paintings are original to me. : )
I have made some collages. The best ones were with tissue paper "painted" on with a brush dipped in a thin solution of elmers glue. Tissue paper is nice to work with because you can layer the colors and the tissue is so thin that you can create texture by how you much paper you use and methods of applying it to canvas. I havent made one in years, but its a lot like water colors. Delicate yet sturdy.
at 10:50 on November 22nd, 2009
Sounds very much like original work to me. Look what they did with Obama and the Andy Warhol knock-off. It is now in the National Portrait Gallery. I am going to write a story about my artist brother as it will crack you up. He is Mr. Etch-a-Sketch.
YJ
at 09:26 on November 27th, 2009
Just saw an exhibit of Jasper Johns, among others at the National Gallery, that contains all kinds of knock offs -- called Art on Art.
YJ