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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Anonymous Nicholas Fulford said...

Pretty succinct.

I am going to add the Zen koan factor to the process as well.

When a subject that (seemingly) cannot be answered is posed, and enough intensity is brought to bear on the problem with sufficient intelligence, a tipping point, or aha moment can occur. It is as though a change of state has occurred, and that change of state is the creative moment, but it was built upon an intense and sustained focus on the problem with often terrible frustration - which enabled the mind to look at things from outside the box of convention. It is a full engagement, and the answer may even come as a sudden insight after awakening or from a daydream, as when the benzene ring was seen as Ouroboros by Kekule.

What I learn from this is that creative insight often occurs suddenly, but is built upon a lot of previous cogitation that has made the mind ripe for a triggering observation or event to cause it to snap into place - to collapse the wave function so to speak.

Another way that I think about the creative impulse and insight has to do with being certain that there is something to be found, but that it is hidden behind a number of barriers that I cannot currently get beyond. As I struggle with the barriers, I get momentary tantalizing glimpses which add more fuel to the fire of my quest. Sometimes I stop along the path and become distracted by something else, and it may yield an insight since part of me is still playing with the problem, but in a less structured way. Returning back to the obstacle, my playful imaginings sometimes bring an insight which my overly focused rational mind was unable to see, and the obstacle is overcome.

This brings me back to what I see as one of the most overlooked of intellectual activities, the constitutional walk following - though sometimes preceding - a day of thinking in a focused way about a problem. During the walk my mind wanders and plays in a stream of consciousness type of way. At the very least it helps to reset my mind from having been fixated with a tree to being able to see a forest once again. I may, however, find myself in places I had not expected if I was so engaged in the thinking, while walking, that I have lost track of where I was going. It happens from time to time, and I just have to make allowance for it.

25 January 2015 at 15:02