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Our "Creative Mission" is to foster a rich, interdisciplinary dialogue that will convey and forge new tools and applications for creative, critical and philosophical thinking; engaging the world in the process. Through workshops, tutorials and social media platforms we also strive to entertain, educate and empower people - from individuals, to businesses, governments or not-for-profit groups; we aim to guide them in building a base of constructive ideas, skills and a Brain Fit paradigm - thereby setting the stage for a sustainable, healthy, and creative approach and lifestyle . These synthesized strategic "Critical Success Factors" - can then give rise to applied long-term life or business - Operating Living Advantages and Benefits.

And, at the same time, we encourage Charlie Monger's key attitude and belief - for and with all of whom we reach - " develop into a lifelong self-learner through voracious reading; cultivate curiosity and strive to become a little wiser (and more grateful)* everyday."


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Monday, 4 February 2019

Inspired! The #Science of #Creativity


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Inspired! The Science of Creativity

My parents thought I would make a good doctor or engineer. I excelled at science and math, after all. Instead I chose to pursue journalism, even though it seemed better suited for a “creative person” than for me. I had a passion for writing but not necessarily a flair, and my early efforts were not pretty. Fortunately, as this special edition shows, creativity is not just something you're born with. Most of us have more of it than we realize.
Some people, of course, have a creative edge from an early age. In “Predicting Artistic Brilliance,” Jennifer E. Drake and Ellen Winner write about a two-year-old who would work meticulously for days on a single drawing and about another child who drew astonishingly realistic dinosaurs by age six. These children have what the authors call “a rage to master.”
What makes some people more creative than others? In “The Unleashed Mind,” Shelley Carson writes that genetic variations may make some people's brain more open to thoughts, sensations and behaviors that don't make it past the average person's mental filters. These same variations may also explain why many highly creative people seem eccentric at times—or even suffer from mental illness.
The Science of Creativity - Talks at GOOGLE



Despite these genetic variations, “nurture may still account for the lion's share of genius,” writes Dean Keith Simonton in “The Science of Genius.” Practice, training and exposure to unfamiliar ideas and experiences play essential roles in shaping creativity. Even something as simple as living in a big city promotes creativity because close contact with other humans breeds new ideas, explains Edward Glaeser in “Engines of Innovation.”
Dreams and imaginative play can also nurture creativity. Dreaming may allow ideas to incubate during sleep, leading to inspiration during waking hours, writes Deirdre Barrett in “Answers while You Sleep.” Daydreaming can likewise fire up neurons that give you access to ideas and solutions hovering below the surface of your consciousness, as Josie Glausiusz writes in “Living in an Imaginary World.” Stimulating the brain with a weak electric current to make the left hemisphere less dominant may even boost creative thinking, according to Allan W. Snyder et al. in “Switching on Creativity.” A panel of experts reveals other powerful techniques for cultivating originality in “Let Your Creativity Soar.”
As it turns out, creativity is just as important in medicine and engineering as it is in journalism. In “Your Fertile Brain at Work,” Evangelia G. Chrysikou explains how innovation can elevate the careers of chefs, university presidents, psychotherapists, police detectives, teachers, engineers, architects, attorneys and surgeons. We hope this special issue will help you unleash your own creative self.
TIME Magazine
The Science of Creativity







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Inspirations of passions


Make your interests gradually wider and more impersonal, until bit by bit the walls of the ego recede, and your life becomes increasingly merged in the universal life. An individual human existence should be like a river — small at first, narrowly contained within its banks, and rushing passionately past rocks and over waterfalls. Gradually the river grows wider, the banks recede, the waters flow more quietly, and in the end, without any visible break, they become merged in the sea, and painlessly lose their individual being.


Bertrand Russel

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