The Structure of Creativity presents a discipline‑neutral framework for understanding creativity as a universal structural process rather than a domain‑specific talent. The paper defines creativity as the emergence of new coherence through a four‑operator generative sequence: tension, movement, collapse, and reorganization. This mechanism appears across art, science, engineering, theology, interpersonal life, and personal development, revealing creativity as a fundamental operator of adaptive systems.The paper introduces a structural metric for evaluating creativity—generativity, coherence, cross‑domain transfer, structural novelty, perceptual expansion, and propagation—and shows how these dimensions allow creativity to be measured independently of style or domain. It also examines the perceptual foundations of creativity, the energetic conditions that support or inhibit generativity, and the predictable failure modes that lead to stasis, simulation, fragmentation, or noise.By reframing creativity as a lifelong process of movement, experience, collapse, and reorganization, the paper positions creativity as a way of living: a continuous orientation toward reality that increases coherence, expands perception, and enables adaptive transformation. Creativity becomes not an artistic preference but the structural mechanism through which systems remain alive, responsive, and aligned with the world.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Denis Bailey (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba427c4e9516ffd37a2c1b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19042847
Denis Bailey
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...