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by _qc3o
3314 days ago
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But you see how you are making my point. Mathematicians as a bunch are very creative and precise at the same time. Going back to my point about the article setting up a false dichotomy. Mathematicians study formal systems which are as precise a thing as humans have managed to make so far. Even if their initial exploration of new territory is not precise it is always in the context of formal systems. I think the problem is the article is trying to put vaguely defined terms on some spectrum and the tension he is talking about is just an artefact of his own special mapping. Really there is no tension and this mapping is not canonical because the terms are not well-defined. So comparing accuracy, creativity, etc. on a single spectrum doesn't make sense. Mathematics being an existence proof that you can do both things at the same time. |
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The most powerful ideas in science are concise, unexpected, predictive, and mathematically rigorous.
Creativity generates the unexpected. It opens up new spaces for exploration.
But it's easy to confuse it with mimicry, which is formulaic repetition of existing practices in existing spaces that may or may not have useful outcomes.
Einstein's development of SR and GR was creative. Weber's gravity waves claims were exploring a space that Einstein created, not generating a new space.
There's nothing wrong with mimicry - it's an essential process in human culture. We think of the arts as creative, but in fact most art is made by somewhat modified mimicry of existing tropes, not by outstanding originality.
Original creativity is much rarer and very different phenomenon. It expands human experience into spaces that weren't previously accessible at all.