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When "Creative Enough" Is the Wrong Question: Far-Fetchedness, Premature Closure, and the Pareto Distribution of Ideas
Most creativity literature frames the challenge as generating more ideas. The volume question. But there is a prior and subtler problem that rarely gets named precisely: how do you know whether a response is genuinely creative, or merely competent, or pleasantly unexpected, or genuinely far-fetched to the point of uselessness? And underneath that, a structural problem borrowed from economics - the fact that in any real ideation session, a tiny fraction of responses do almost
The Difference Between Generating and Creating: Why Most of What We Call Creativity Is Fluency in Disguise
There is a distinction that rarely gets made in creativity discourse, and it has become more urgent as generative AI colonizes the vocabulary of "original thinking." The distinction is this: producing something unfamiliar is not the same as thinking creatively. Arranging known elements in a novel sequence - which is precisely what most people do when they believe they are being creative - is better described as combinatorial fluency. It is useful. It is pleasurable. But it is


The Cognitive Architecture of Structured Spontaneity: Why Randomness Builds Better Minds
Grandomastery Conceptual Framework
Fostering Creative Mastery Through Structured Spontaneity


The Associative Horizon: Why Creative Minds Connect What Others Cannot
I have spent two decades observing a peculiar cognitive limitation among otherwise accomplished professionals and advanced learners. When confronted with concepts from different domains, most minds reflexively search for surface similarities, retreat to dictionary definitions, or simply declare no meaningful relationship exists. A minority, however, immediately begins generating unexpected connections, perceiving structural parallels, discovering functional analogies that ill
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