from this week in May, 2013 (I was 68)
The Chemistry of Creativity
Much reputable research is done to discover the chemistry
of creativity. Daniel J. Levitin’s, Your Brain on Music, makes me
smarter about an artistic discipline I do not practice.
The classic, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, by Betty
Edwards, gave me practical insight into another artistic practice at
which I am not proficient. –Enough so, as to create a longing for
its pursuit, but also, an understanding that my artistic path lay
elsewhere.
Carl Sagan’s, The Varieties of Scientific Experience, (title
taken from Henry James’ Varieties of Religious Experience ?)
furthered my cosmic view of perceptions, perhaps first piqued long
ago by Marshall McLuan’s, The Medium is the Massage.
Poetry & Mysticism, by Colin Wilson has been a valuable
reference for me.
The forces and effects that engender creativity remain
mysterious. Isn’t that great? Creativity is not prescriptive. In
fact, one definition of creativity may be that it is anti-prescriptive,
a notion that widens our window of opportunity.
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