On the Process of Creativity in Puzzles, Inventions, and Designs
journal contribution
posted on 1996-12-26, 00:00authored byOmer Akin
The most common means of identifying creativity has been through its products. In
architecture, music, writing, art, even puzzle solving and scientific discovery, the prerequisite
for considering creativity has been the presence of a creative product. Alternatively,
anecdotal descriptions have been used to identify processes that are
considered creative. Many scientific discoveries have been linked to a sudden realization
or unexplainable revelation punctuated with the AHA! response. Outside of the
creative product itself and the AHA! response, the kinds of concrete evidence that
point to the process of creativity are precious few. Our purpose here is to further
examine these phenomena and develop hypotheses about the nature of the creative
process
. Our ultimate aim is to develop a general theory of creativity. We intend to
base this theory on a set of conditions that are necessary for the creative process to
take place in a number of domains: puzzles, scientific discoveries, and design, with
special emphasis on architectural design.