T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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748.1 | Computers and Creativity ? | FDCV10::BOTTIGLIO | Some Teardrops Never Dry | Thu Apr 27 1989 09:30 | 25 |
| Wes - very interesting topic, thanks.
I teach a few MIS courses evenings at a local university, and
in teaching a programming class - always encourage my students to
use their creativity in defining programmed solutions to given
problems. They sometimes ask - How ? not an easy answer - I just
encourage them to turn the problem inwards, define their own solution
rather than seeking a canned solution, and let their thoughts roam
freely.
Yes even in the sterile world of business software programming,
there is room for creativity - accentuated in the world of Personal
computers today. In some cases, there is a blending of computer
literacy with artistic talenn - color graphic image painting.
Creativity is one of the aspects of our humanity which will
not be seen under a microscope, so attempts by science to define
it and how it works are barren. Some, like myself, believe it is
an attriubute given by the Higher Power who created us.
Yes - it is apecial, the satisfaction of completing an original
is a real high.
Guy B.
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748.2 | DOES THIS FIT? | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Who takes note of the Noters? | Thu Apr 27 1989 09:57 | 22 |
|
I knit, sew, and make things for home. Whilst this is satisfying
it doesn't give me a great kick....
..the real thrill, I find, is through using creativity to solve
everyday problems. Finding a new and fruitful way to look at
an old problem I find is tremendously exciting, and it gives
me a lot more energy to actually implement it rather than
treading a well-worn route.
This doesn't refer to just work-related problems although
most of my "brain-waves" seem to come around my job. I
am, fortunately, blessed with a manager who encourages
this (and doesn't use irritating phrases ike "thinking
outside the square!).
Would you consider this "creativity"?
Or was your base-note directed at physically making things?
'gail
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748.3 | Creativity, Yes! | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | Just Another Manic Monday | Thu Apr 27 1989 10:48 | 27 |
| I use my creativity to balance my work with computers. I design
quilts and teach quilting, in addition to other types of needle
work. My first impression about quilting is that it was something
that grandmothers did, and didn't see the creative possibilities.
As I learned more about the craft, I discovered that includes
components from a wide range of areas - drafting, design, color,
texture, construction, aesthetics, among others. I have only kept
2 of my quilts, the others were made for special friends or occasions.
My next goal is to design a series of wall quilts, so that I will
have the opportunity to experiment with a variety of techniques
on a manageable scale.
The time I spend stitching and designing is MY time; almost a
meditation of sorts. When I teach classes, I use another set of
skills, providing my students with the basic tools for the craft.
I find that I need my creative pursuits to balance things out.
My craft is also a means of expressing ideas. Activities like music,
theatre and dance require different energy, but also are a means
of expression. (Anyone who has ever seen kids in a creative drama
class can understand how important that expression is.)
Yes, I need my creative pursuits!
Judi
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748.4 | Allowing for creativity is necessary in my life | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | We're part of the fire that is burning! | Thu Apr 27 1989 11:45 | 42 |
|
I find that being creative is an extremely important part of
living for me. I create all kinds of things, even this reply is
just another creation of mine, where I make use of facilities and
knowledge to put something together.
I find that, a lot of the time, it's also "extremely important"
for my creation to be physically tangable. Building a wooden box
takes on a lot of meaning to me, as "it's there" I can see "it"
as a result of my efforts, in good ole everyday plain reality. At
times, I find I MUST do this kind of thing, in the proverbial effort
to keep both feet on the ground.
Creations such as I place in here do not meet the concrete
tangability "requirement", because I need this *special* window to
this space, just to see it. I also play music, which is a transient
creation - unless it's recorded, which is something that never seems
to happen at the *right* time. It seems that the best performances
I do are "lost in the ether", never to be heard again...Unless I
make an explicit effort to replicate it, but since music is emotional,
it's highly likely that I'll not capture the feelings in the "one
great time" and the subjective differences in how I play it will
be apparent. The original creation is gone!
I'd enjoy being a carpenter, from the aspect of getting to
see - in a concrete physical sense - something of a creative structure
wrought from a pile of wood. Being a blacksmith would give the same
sense of satisfaction for me, only working with metal.
Completing a theoretical analysis on a hypothetical electrical
structure, using a canned program running on my workstation seems
to lack in the "tangable results" aspect that some part of me wants
to see for some reason. I can talk about them, show them on slides,
even print them out - but, holding the pile of paper in my hands
just doesnt compare to holding a real, three-dimensional, physical
creation.
At least it seems that way to me...Anyone else feel this way?
If so, how do you get yourself to actually feel that "you've done
something"?
Joe Jas
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748.5 | I need seeds from others | WEA::PURMAL | The paper was blue and green | Thu Apr 27 1989 12:37 | 16 |
| I don't consider myself a very creative person. I'm good at
taking an idea and expanding it, or taking two ideas and putting
them together. But it seems as if someone else has to plant the
ideas in my head before I can get to work. I'm rather frustrated
that I rarely have original thoughts and that my "creations" are
based on ideas I get from others.
I also get frustrated when I try to create something with my
hands. What I draw, paint or whatever never comes out the way I
imagined it to. The only artistic endeavor I've gotten a lot of
pleasure from has been photography and cinematography. I consider
photography to be just capturing my point of view, but the cinema-
tography was the most "creative". Angles, lighting, and camera
movement are very exciting to me when I try to put them together.
ASP
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748.6 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Apr 27 1989 14:09 | 28 |
| I get annoyed when people imply that the liberal arts are better
than the sciences because liberal arts are more creative. Hah!
You try an proof of NP completeness without any creativity and see
how far you get.
Any time a problem must be solved, there is room for creativity.
What do I do with my creativity? Well, I have at least three books
mapped out in my head and various smaller scenarios with different
characters. I crochet afghans. The real creativity there comes
in coming up with the right afghan for someone. (The only real
disappointment I've had is when I couldn't find a good brown and
had to settle for blue.) Being in the support business, my job
sort of requires creativity. It crops up everywhere, not being
the kind of thing you can really control.
I find that often my creativity is reactive rather than truly
generative. I come up with things in response to someone else's
creativity; more like a modification than a creation. I've found
that if I let things stew for a while, revisiting and revising
occasionally, I come up with things that are much less derivative,
more original and more personal. Two of the three books I've mapped
out were started off by catalysts over ten years ago: one came
out of the rush from seeing _Star Wars_ the first time and one came
from the Kansas song "Lightning's Hand." (The third, inspired by
Robby Neville's "Dominique," is a sequel to the second, so it sort
of inherits the benefits of the stewing process.) Neither of these
two books is much like the original premise, which is just as well.
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748.7 | Musical Therapy | BSS::VANFLEET | 6 Impossible Things Before Breakfast | Thu Apr 27 1989 14:22 | 12 |
| My creative outlet is through my voice not my hands. I sing
once a week at a "Mostly Music" service at the Science of Mind
church. It isn't a choir, it's a performance. I find that
making music is my therapy. I feel that music keeps me in
alignment with myself and the universe as a whole. When I'm
focused on the creativity and harmony of singing I feel like
my whole being is a channel for positive energy. As the energy
flows through me it goes out to the audience and is reflected back
to me multiplied by the number of people there. It's energizing
and cleansing both in body and spirit.
Nanci
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748.9 | | HAMSTR::IRLBACHER | not yesterday's woman, today | Thu Apr 27 1989 17:49 | 27 |
| My late mother-in-law came to this country very shortly after WWI.
As she neared the end of her life, she talked very often about herself
and her family, her husband and her old home in Germany. My oldest
son took notes about what she told, and his friend is putting it
into some sense of historical order along with the pictures she
left. One of them has my late father-in-law in his German uniform,
steel helmet with spike and all!
In my Psychology of Aging class, our prof. suggested that keeping
a journal of one's life was both historical and a creative act.
Since I like to write, I have begun a journal. And I feel, when
I am writing, that I am creating for my family not just the story
of my life, but giving them a sense of historical continuity at
a very personal level.
There are many ways to be creative. I have a neighbor who has created
2 generations of gardeners by teaching little kids how to grow flowers
in patches of her land. Most of those kids are grown and almost
all of them have flower gardens which are a reflection of her
teachings.
M
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748.10 | Creativity is key | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Fri Apr 28 1989 16:35 | 22 |
| Creativity is one of the sole purposes of my life. It's my main
goal. It's the sine qua non of most of the things I do.
I create when I:
solve simple or complex problems, be they engineering or other
write manuals (yes, it's possible....)
play piano
write poetry
dance
make new friendships, or expand old ones
make internal connections between how-things-are, and how-they-could-be
take photographs
love
Creativity is vital to life. Creativity is what keeps life
interesting. Creativity is one thing that sets us apart from other
omnivores on the planet. Creativity and honesty are the two things
I admire most in other people.
-Jody
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748.11 | | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | Love is Love no matter... | Fri Apr 28 1989 17:41 | 22 |
| I'm in a class where we recently took an assesment on what our values
are.
I found I scored extremely high in creativity. And yes, creativity
is important to me.
Creativity is to me:
Solving engineering problems
Writing poetry
Writing prose/novels
Interacting with friends/getting to know them better.
Writing letters/notes.
Sewing
Decorating a new place
Building something.
Making an old item into something different.
Writing test plans.
Figuring out how to show/tell someone that I really love them.
Dancing.
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