jamest wrote:Well, in some instances at least, creativity must be indicative of originality. That is, some ideas must be entirely unique. The concept of a 'God', for instance, must have an absolute origin attributable to some individual that lived long ago, even if his notion of that concept was completely bizarre.
Well, we have a word for that, now. We call it "fiction". The really bizarre stuff, like H.P. Lovecraft, we call "imaginative fiction".
jamest wrote:That is, there must have been a time when the thoughts of an individual far-surpassed anything that had been inputted into his brain by his 'environment'.
Yep. You've got a handle on "imaginative fiction". Tall tales.
jamest wrote:Such giant leaps in thought are admittedly rare and are only apparent when new and significant concepts or ideas are brought to our attention.
Depends on what you have to compare it to. That's relativism, for ya.
jamest wrote:But the occurence of such events must surely demonstrate that brain states are more than JUST direct responses to environmental input.
Oh, clearly, James. It's just that we use the term "fiction" for it now, because, unless we're solipsistic, we distinguish it from "fact".
jamest wrote:In fact, I think that such occurences present clear evidence of 'an observer' at work, since ultimately it can be said that they are actively re-creating the environment for us. Enlightening us, where previously, we were in darkness about such notions.
Yes, we were, at one time, very much in the dark about the Cthulhu Mythos.
jamest wrote:Secondly, it becomes clear that we don't respond to the environment at all - we respond to what we think it is.
That must be why certain individuals keep
jamest wrote:Brain states aren't just responses to the external world. They must mirror what we think that world is, and they must also mirror the innate drives that we have in association with it. Fear and hunger, for instance, will have alot to say in how we behave. But so too will our beliefs about what the environment is.
Fact: You are an author of fictions.
jamest wrote:So, a human response to its environment very-much depends upon its own review of that environment. And a review of the environment is a subjective analysis or belief about what it is. One cannot harbour subjective views about the world unless one subjectively analyses that world, or accepts the subjective opinions of others as the basis of his own actions.
Yeah, but if you don't check your facts, the result is
jamest wrote:What is a "known concept", Graham? That is, how many of these known concepts are not products of subjective opinion?
It's just fecking fact-checking. That's where the empirical comes in, and, apparently, where you make your exit. I ain't ridin' shotgun on
your buggy. Not in this life.