Imaginative Creation

D.W.Kadete.
0

Creating Using Imagination 

Imagination is a powerful tool that can help us create new and exciting things. Imagination is creation, it allows us to explore new worlds, create new characters, and come up with new ideas.

Imagination


One way to exercise your imagination is to write a short story or poem. Creation is an art. Art is a craft, theoretically, it's a full work of joinery, painting, drawing, language use, carpentry, and so on. Creation as the artistic process is a fundamental expression of imagination. 


Philosophically the phenomenon of expression needs imaginative creation as an essential part of the life of the mind, not just a special activity that poets go in for. Creation of any art involves raw materials and a finished product, imagination in one finished product is the creation of another.


Our ever-changing world requires individuals with abilities to actively create the reality that surrounds them by:

  • Creating eminent works.
  • Proposing new scientific solutions by everyday creations.
  • Improving and modernizing everything around us through art and creative thinking.
  • Participating in Creativity Training as group exercises to increase individuals' creative potential as creative abilities (divergent thinking, imagination, fluency, flexibility, and originality of thinking), but also creative attitudes.


Imagination is being in the land of the unknown, where the trees are made of stone. And the sky is always red. It's creating your world in which new creatures live. It's about painting your world colorful.


Creation in the imaginative world roams in the land of grace with a smile on its face. And a twinkle in the eyes. As the world goes by. Imagination is creating magic with the light of the mind bringing joy to all insights.


Getting yourself lost in the land of the unknown is looking for creation that doesn't make you feel alone. Creation inspires the development of something imaginative and fun.


References

Kemp, Gary, "Collingwood’s Aesthetics", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2021 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2021/entries/collingwood-aesthetics/.

Creativity and Imagination | Authentic Happiness. https://www.authentichappiness.sas.upenn.edu/learn/creativity

Maciej Karwowski, Marcin Soszynski, How to develop creative imagination?: Assumptions, aims and effectiveness of Role Play Training in Creativity (RPTC), Thinking Skills and Creativity, Volume 3, Issue 2,2008, Pages 163-171, ISSN 1871-1871, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tsc.2008.07.001.

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