Some minds do not create by choice; they create because their internal structure demands it. This paper offers a relational–structural account of creative necessity, arguing that creativity is not a personality trait or an expressive impulse but a homeostatic requirement of generative cognition. Creative individuals experience a high density of internal relational tension—patterns, associations, and conceptual pressures—that cannot remain unresolved within the system. Creation functions as the stabilizing mechanism: a way of externalizing accumulated structure so the mind can return to equilibrium. This framework explains the characteristic phenomenology of creative people—the restlessness, the pressure, the relief of completion, and the immediate readiness for the next cycle—without appealing to mysticism or romanticized psychology. By reframing creativity as a structural process rather than an optional activity, we gain a clearer understanding of why creative individuals must make things, why they suffer when they cannot, and how environments can better support minds whose stability depends on generative output.
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Denis Bailey
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Denis Bailey (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6992b4c59b75e639e9b09c77 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18632977
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