The Creative Crisis and the Relentless Pursuit of Mediocrity.

by Peter Holmes on August 8, 2010

We’re in a technological era like no other before. Yet, I’m not the only one who has noticed an opposite decline in creativity.

In 1958, E. Paul Torrance pioneered a creativity evaluation system. Though not without error, these tests have predicted and projected children’s creative accomplishments as adults with enough accuracy to remain the standard tests for the past 50 years.

Based on these tests, a recent article in Newsweek, titled “Creativity in Crisis” shows that while IQ scores are up, Creativity is down:

Kyung Hee Kim at the College of William & Mary discovered this in May, after analyzing almost 300,000 Torrance scores of children and adults. Kim found creativity scores had been steadily rising, just like IQ scores, until 1990. Since then, creativity scores have consistently inched downward. “It’s very clear, and the decrease is very significant,” Kim says.

The article goes on to say:

It’s too early to determine conclusively why U.S. creativity scores are declining. One likely culprit is the number of hours kids now spend in front of the TV and playing videogames rather than engaging in creative activities. Another is the lack of creativity development in our schools. In effect, it’s left to the luck of the draw who becomes creative: there’s no concerted effort to nurture the creativity of all children.

I think there’s more to it than that.

Fear and its equally evil sister, conformity, are the culprits.

Over the last while, political correctness has threatened, cajoled and belligerently permeated everything in society, working its way into school and home. The altruistic idea of cultural relativism – the belief that everything is equal, including ambition and talent – is flattening the world once again and distorting reality.

Technology is helping. It’s enabled all arts – from design, to music, to film making – to be democratized. This mass access has hood winked people into believing that art and ideas can come from anyone. That there’s no such thing as a ‘big idea’ anymore. That nothing is original. That “genius steals.” And that the crowd is better than the individual.

The equality and validity of anybody and everybody’s ideas is promised without anybody having to possess a modicum of talent, or learn and practice to acquire skills, or be genuinely curious, or mature through the accumulation of knowledge.

Presto! Everybody is instantly creative because society says so.

But, societal conformity isn’t just wrong. The whole concept of creative equality is wrong. From the Newsweek article:

A fine example of this emerged in January of this year, with release of a study by University of Western Ontario neuroscientist Daniel Ansari and Harvard’s Aaron Berkowitz, who studies music cognition. They put Dartmouth music majors and nonmusicians in an fMRI scanner, giving participants a one-handed fiber-optic keyboard to play melodies on. Sometimes melodies were rehearsed; other times they were creatively improvised. During improvisation, the highly trained music majors used their brains in a way the nonmusicians could not: they deactivated their right-temporoparietal junction. Normally, the r-TPJ reads incoming stimuli, sorting the stream for relevance. By turning that off, the musicians blocked out all distraction. They hit an extra gear of concentration, allowing them to work with the notes and create music spontaneously.

But the conformists march on, regardless of the consequences. And even though the necessity of creativity should be undisputed.

A recent IBM poll of 1,500 CEOs identified creativity as the No.1 “leadership competency” of the future. I’d argue it’s always been that way, whether through the invention of the wheel, the light bulb, Martin Luther’s famous speech, or the Apple computer.

Advertising and other professionally creative disciplines are now being abused by things like crowd sourcing, where ideas are bought and traded for a few hundred dollars. Where it’s less likely that truly great ideas can be produced because the ‘contestants’ do not have access to the client and the marketing information, just a brief. Where qualifications, passion and experience play no part. Where mostly non-creative people judge and decide what is creative and therefore effective.

I’ve always believed that creative people have soldered abnormal connections in their brains that serve to quickly unravel mysteries and discover solutions to problems. These connections don’t come without curiosity, ambition, hard work and years of practice.

For example, the way I go about solving a problem is to immerse myself in all the facts and relevant information and then walk away for days, or as long as I can. Leaving the problem in the back of my brain to more-or-less solve itself. Afterwards, I focus on the possibilities – writing them down for further exploration, or rejection.

This isn’t a left-brain, right-brain approach. It’s a whole brain approach as the article goes on to illustrate:

When you try to solve a problem, you begin by concentrating on obvious facts and familiar solutions, to see if the answer lies there. This is a mostly left-brain stage of attack. If the answer doesn’t come, the right and left hemispheres of the brain activate together. Neural networks on the right side scan remote memories that could be vaguely relevant. A wide range of distant information that is normally tuned out becomes available to the left hemisphere, which searches for unseen patterns, alternative meanings, and high-level abstractions.

Having glimpsed such a connection, the left brain must quickly lock in on it before it escapes. The attention system must radically reverse gears, going from defocused attention to extremely focused attention. In a flash, the brain pulls together these disparate shreds of thought and binds them into a new single idea that enters consciousness. This is the “aha!” moment of insight, often followed by a spark of pleasure as the brain recognizes the novelty of what it’s come up with.

Now the brain must evaluate the idea it just generated. Is it worth pursuing? Creativity requires constant shifting, blender pulses of both divergent thinking and convergent thinking, to combine new information with old and forgotten ideas. Highly creative people are very good at marshaling their brains into bilateral mode, and the more creative they are, the more they dual-activate.

Finally, I’m not saying that everybody can’t participate in adding to ideas and making them better. It’s just the hatching, nurturing, design, aesthetics, steering and judgment of ideas where I don’t think everybody is, or can be equal.

Lets not confuse amateurs, hobbyists and tinkerers (in other words ‘the crowd’) with talented professionals. Else we’re all doomed to mediocrity.

Agree, or disagree? I’d love to hear your thoughts and comments.

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  • http://blog.competitivefutures.com/ ericgarland

    I have been recently pondering how much of recent popular culture has been pandering to the masses, attempting to sell them the notion of excellence and artistry without any of the pain, experimentation, inner journey, and creativity that is usually required. It’s rote flattery that intends to sell people’s false impressions of excellence back to themselves.

    Consider for one moment the putrescent blasphemy that is American Idol. Gaggles of mediocre non-artists gather for the right to compete head-to-head copying 0.2% of the total musical world’s repertoire, the Big Standard Pop Song. Never mind Brazilian funk or Algerian rai, or lo-fi pop or bluegrass or Afro-Cuban or Colombian vallenato as influences – you can compete to see who can rip off Whitney Houston while failing miserably in the attempt. The methodology is fantastic, exposing the audience to the “characters” long enough to get them to relate with their story, and then convince them and the American public that this person really has blossomed into an artist – one with a built in mass market appeal! Rinse, repeat, profit!

    Here’s the rub, though – it’s an insultingly obvious con from start to finish. These people are not artists. They are not creating, growing, or making choices. And moreover, they rarely show what would be called excellence by the world of professional musicians. Of course, it wouldn’t make good television to show that music is actually quite rigorous and it might take you 20 or 30 years to master your craft enough to contribute something of real, noteworthy value. Most of the truly awesome musicians out there have kept on expanding their craft and their art in the face of low pay, no health insurance, stressed relationships, and delayed gratification of the highest order. And who wants to see some 52 year old pianist making real artistic choices while showing us what a lifetime of commitment looks like? That would remind us of work, sweat, tears, failure, and reality.

    Which is why these shows are so popular. They flatter the masses into believing, “Oh no, darling, your quarter-hearted attempt at butchering Motown classics is the height of communication with the divine!” You too can be excellent if you just declare it to be so. And you can also become thin through ab machines, rich through real estate systems, and happy through endless cheap credit.

    Bach was an organ repairman who literally knew the inner workings of every major organ in Europe. He died poor after a lifetime of supreme musical exploration years before achieving global notoriety. Mozart had to run home after the premier of every one of his operas to bang out quartet parts to sell to local chamber musicians – the only profitable part of his enterprise – before the dozens of other copyists in the audience beat him to the punch. Miles Davis would have to keep a close eye on John Coltrane while on tour, because Coltrane would practice his saxophone for 72 hours at a time without eating or sleeping and then show up to gigs in rumbled clothing and with mossy teeth. Tito Puente was an equal genius in Latin percussion, piano and vibes, while also being an expert composer and arranger.

    People are not being creative because the vision of the artist is being actively distorted from an artisan-explorer to a technicolor copycat. It’s not that music shouldn’t be democratized, but it is that mediocre forms of popular music should not be presented as excellence, creativity and artistry.

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  • http://www.flatacre.mp flatacre

    Thanks for your thoughtful comment Eric. I’ve heard it said that it takes 10,000 hours for anybody to become accomplished at anything. Which certainly doesn’t bode well in these days of instant gratification and ADD.

  • Steve Silverman

    Well written, Peter. This is especially true with photography with just about everyone owning a digital camera these days. Today everyone’s a photographer, but buying a Nikon doesn’t make you a photographer, it makes you Nikon owner.

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