top of page
Search


The Semantic Distance Catastrophe – Why Remote Associations Define Creative Intelligence
The Uncertainty of the Poet / Giorgio de Chirico / 1913. De Chirico's metaphysical painting juxtaposes a classical torso with bananas in an empty plaza – maximum conceptual dissonance. It embodies defamiliarization and the productive discomfort of remote associations. I have spent eighteen years teaching English to professionals at Fortune 500 companies, startup founders, and university faculty. Over that time, I noticed something troubling: even C2-level learners – those wi


Hyperassociativity in the AI Era: Why Wide Semantic Leaps Are Becoming a Rare Human Skill
Composition IV / Wassily Kandinsky / 1911 Kandinsky sought to express inner spiritual necessity through non-representational forms that force viewers to forge their own distant connections between colour, shape, and emotion. In an era dominated by large language models that excel at close-range pattern completion, one distinctly human cognitive trait is quietly diminishing: hyperassociativity - the capacity to rapidly activate and connect concepts across vast semantic distan


Janusian Thinking: How True Breakthroughs Are Born from Holding Contradictions as Simultaneously True (Not Just Tolerating Them)
Archaeological Reminiscence of Millet's "Angelus", Salvador Dalí, 1935. Two antithetical realities - devotional peasants and predatory mantis-cathedral - superimposed without resolution, forcing the viewer to accept both readings at once. The mind does not create in straight lines - it stumbles into originality when two seemingly incompatible frames refuse to stay separate. Arthur Koestler called this collision bisociation back in 1964, but the deeper, less discussed layer i
bottom of page