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E-raamat: There's No Such Thing as Creativity: How Plato and 20th Century Psychology Have Misled Us

(Rider University, New Jersey)
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Most people (including creativity researchers) act as if they believe that creativity is not simply a useful category or label but a real thing with its own essence (just as Plato would argue that an ideal triangle has an essence that is shared with all actual triangles). Most people (including creativity researchers) also believe that there is a set of general creativity-relevant skills that can be applied to most problems in ways that will lead to more creative outcomes. Creativity research now calls these beliefs into question. A domain-general misunderstanding of the nature of creativity-relevant skills and the equally mistaken belief that creativity exists independently of actual creative things and ideas have together hindered creativity theory, research, assessment, and training. A more domain-specific and nominalist understanding of creativity will free creativity researchers to make progress in areas where it is currently stymied.

A misunderstanding of the nature of creativity-relevant skills and the equally mistaken belief that creativity exists independently of actual creative things and ideas have hindered creativity theory. A more domain-specific and nominalist understanding of creativity will free creativity researchers to make progress in certain areas.

Muu info

Creativity theory as been crippled by the Platonic idea of Forms and by the assumption that creativity transcends domains.
Introduction: Creativity Matters, so How We Think about It Matters 1(9)
Philosophy: It All Goes Back to Plato
10(6)
Psychology: What Should Psychology Study?
16(30)
Conclusions: Creativity Research, Theory, Testing, and Training 46(13)
References 59