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Title: Creativity and Madness


1
Creativity and Madness
  • CREATIVITY works to reconcile once seeming
    irreconcilable truths cognition and emotion,
    ideal and real, Dionysian and Apollonian
  • The accommodation of each thereto and the
    subsequent clarity of insight. . . . Insight into
    ones soul is insight into all meaning. This is
    the highest good! (Prolegemonon)

2
Thinking Differently
  • Here is to the crazy ones, the misfits,
  • the rebels, the troublemakers,
  • the round pegs in the square holes.
  • The ones who see things differently.
  • They are not fond of rules
  • and they have no respect for the status-quo.
  • You can quote them, disagree with them,
  • glorify or vilify them.
  • But the only thing you can't do is ignore them.
  • Because they change things.
  • They push the human race forward.
  • And while some may see them
  • as the crazy ones, we see genius.
  • Because the people who are crazy enough
  • to think they can change the world,
  • are the ones who do.

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3
Thinking Differently
  • There is a long tradition associating dysfunction
    with creativity . . . And it is a short step from
    thinking differently in a way useful to ones
    self and society to thinking differently in
    dysfunctional ways.
  • dysfunction defined as activity that (directly
    or indirectly) fails to meet biological needs.
    Needs are viewed in a hierarchy of relative
    urgency from basic to self-actualization

4
SOCRATES on MADNESS in PHAEDRUS
  • Socrates begins his tale with glorification of
    madness , which he divides into four kinds
  • first, there is the art of divination or prophecy
  • secondly, there is the art of purification by
    mysteries
  • thirdly, poetry or the inspiration of the Muses
    (cp. Ion 533a foll.), without which no man can
    enter their temple. All this shows that madness
    is one of Heaven's blessings, and may sometimes
    be a great deal better than sense.
  • There is also a fourth kind of madness which
    cannot be explained without inquiring into the
    nature of the soul

5
Everyones Crazy
  • When we see things that arent there, are we
    crazy?

6
Im an artist, I cant help myself
7
Seeking the bilogical sources of dysfunction
(they are all biological)
  • DEVELOPMENT
  • ECOLOGY
  • EVOLUTION
  • PHYSIOLOGY
  • PHYSIOLOGY is the proximate cause and involves
  • input, integration, output

8
The Brainexcavating the paleopsychology of our
species
  • The Brain of Man has not abandoned its ancient
    animal foundations, it has built upon them . . .
    . But it has also reconstructed them as the
    shifting earth beneath dictates . . . . We have
    done the best possible in the landscape in which
    we have found ourselves with the raw materials we
    have inherited.

    (Prolegomena to a Study of Mind (1973
    translation) ch. 42)

9
Subcomponents of our Naturehave been long
recognized
  • When the gentler part of the soul slumbers and
    the control of Reason is withdrawn . . . the Wild
    Beast in us . . . becomes rampant.

    (Plato, The Republic, IX 571)
  • We are conscious of an animal in us which
    awakens in proportion as our higher nature
    slumbers (Henry David Thoreau in Walden)

10
The Artist as Wounded Healer
  • The Wounded Healer Shaman, Priest, therapist, .
    . . Artist
  • The poet becomes a seer, by a long, immense, and
    conscious disorder of all the senses. (Arthur
    Rimbaud)
  • Most wretched men /Are cradled into poetry by
    wrong They learn in suffering what they teach in
    song (Percy Bysshe Shelley)

11
The Artist as Wounded Healer
  • The most gifted artists most effectively point
    to the source of the wound and the means by which
    it is healed
  • the dis-integration of motivation, affect, and
    cognition for whatever reason and
  • their re-integration in the workings of art.
  • As healer, the artist is a role model . . . . We
    seek those with whom we resonate with comparable
    dis-eases.
  • Neil Greenberg, Art and Organism

12
The Mind of the Centaur
  • Dissonance-induced stress is a constitutional
    element in the growth and development of the
    central nervous systems of Homo sapiens
  • They are born of the perpetual maelstrom of
    disintegration and renewal we call change
  • The energizing effect of the stress responses is
    in proportion to the urgency of needs that have
    not been accommodated.

13
Stress and Coping
  • The neuroendocrinology of stress is known to
    affect cognitive, affective, and motivational
    systems in ways that can help the organism cope
    --to restore harmony, homeostasis
  • Specific neurobehavioral functions are
    selectively inhibited or facilitated, and
    receptive or active fields of neurons is
    enlarged, effectively increasing the possibility
    of new connections.
  • Among the most effective mechanisms for restoring
    proportionate responses between systems is
    creativity, most strikingly manifest in works of
    art.

14
Disproportion
  • Is there any excellence
  • hath not an origin in
  • disproportion or deformity?
  • (Francis Bacon)

15
Stress and Creativity
  • Two traits converge in this view of the artist as
    a wounded healer
  • Creativity is an evolutionarily exaggerated
    expression of ordinary learning processes
    involving competitively created connections
    between multiple distributed systems involving
    perceptions, actions, and memory
  • It involves creating connections not otherwise
    possible
  • Stress affects all of these processes.

16
Creativity and Coping
  • Stress-related behavior is difficult to interpret
    because of its paradoxical or biphasic expression
  • Is energized by mild to moderate stress
  • But may be impaired by high levels of stress
  • Thus, effective coping behavior may be
    facilitated at low/moderate levels or at the
    transitions to and from high levels

17
the artists healing harmony
  • The artists goal is often viewed as the
    restoration of harmony.
  • Few still agree with Popes All discord, harmony
    not understood . . . Whatever is, is right.
    (Essay on Man Epistle 1.)
  • HARMONY is now --as in medieval thinking-- the
    eagerly sought "accord between the structure of
    the universe, the canons of the social order and
    the good of the individual (Joseph Campbell,
    1972), representing needs ranging from
    physiological homeostasis to spiritual
    self-actualization.

18
the power of harmony
  • Dostoyevskis TLE gives us an eloquently
    expressed window on the rapturous power of
    harmony
  • There are moments, and it is only a matter of .
    . . seconds,
  • when you feel the presence of the eternal
    harmony. . .
  • a terrible thing is the frightful clearness with
    which it manifests itself and the rapture with
    which it fills you.
  • If this state were to last more than five
    seconds, the soul could not endure it and would
    have to disappear.
  • During these five seconds I live a whole human
    existence, and for that I would give my whole
    life and not think that I was paying too dearly
    . . .
  • --Alajouanine, T. (1963) Dostoevsky's epilepsy.
    Brain 86209-221

19
the artists healing harmony
  • Dostoyevskis rapturous harmony recalls the
    ecstasy of the timeless primary phenomenon of
    Eliade -- A fragment or aspect of the AHA! --
    the oceanic feeling of Freud, a transient loss
    of ego boundaries and fusion with ones
    environment, becoming one with the truth you
    seek, epiphany, eureka!
  • Its energy derives from the resolution of stress
    for example, of the dissonance between the
    unsolved problem and the conviction that there is
    a solution.
  • Neil Greenberg, Art and Organism

20
Harmony and Insight
  • Dostoyevskis rapturous harmony recalls Oliver
    Wendell Holmes comment
  • A moments insight
  • is sometimes worth a lifes experience.

21
Insight
  • INSIGHT bridges gaps, organizes, pulls together
    previously disconnected fragments into a coherent
    whole
  • (Or a feeling of a coherent whole)
  • It is a perception of another order of
    understanding

22
the compensating insight
  • Our most creative artists are near the end of
    bell-shaped curve --flat in some cultures, steep
    in others--
  • Much further and their works would be
    unrecognizable, beyond our ability to generalize
    and utilize their healing insights
  • Or to take inspiration from their efforts

23
resolving stress, seeking harmony
  • Creativity is a principal source of stress
    resolution and its wellspring is the microcosmic
    cerebral transcendence that is the essential
    phenomenon of extending connections -- growth
    (not least expressed in learning)
  • The energizing power of stress derives from the
    unique neuroendocrinological profile of mild,
    moderate, or extreme states of stress.

24
Prousts Artist
  • All the greatest things we know have come to us
    from neurotics. . .
  • It is they and they only who have founded
    religions and created great works of art.
  • Never will the world be conscious of how much it
    owes to them, nor above all of what they have
    suffered in order to bestow their gifts on it.

    (Proust)

25
Creativity Creates Connections
  • Creating connections is part of the restoration
    of balance in neurobehavioral systems contending
    with stress
  • For example, Painting is only a bridge linking
    the painter's mind with that of the viewer
    (Delacroixs journal)
  • But like all communications-- external expression
    --the corporealization of the psyche-- may also
    help forge bridges between different parts of
    the creative mind.

26
Connections between Subcomponentsare central to
our humanity
  • Only connect! . . . Only connect the prose and
    the passion, and both will be exalted, and human
    love will be seen at its height. Live in
    fragments no longer. Only connect, and the beast
    and the monk, robbed of the isolation that is
    life to either, will die.
  • (E.M. Forster)

27
The Triune Brain
  • Paul D. MacLeans (1968) triune view of the
    mammalian brain is a powerful heuristic that
    emphasizes the modular substrate of behavior

28
The Triune Brain
  • But while each module is more connected with its
    components than with those of adjacent modules,
    its is the continuing development of each module
    and the relentless bias towards developing
    connections when stressed that reflects the path
    of evolutionary change

29
Integrated but distributed systems for
motivation, affect, and cognition mediate
behavior from reflex to reflection
  • Archaic reflexes and homeostatic functions are
    embedded in recent systems that enable
    representations of the self as well as of the
    outside world.
  • Connections with the cortex enable planning
    .
    . (Figure
    after D.A. Oakley 1985)

30
Integrated but distributed systems for
motivation, affect, and cognition mediate
behavior from reflex to reflection
  • Homeostatic functions and archaic reflexes of
    motivation are energized by the systems of affect
    and are embedded in more recent systems that
    enable cognition and representations of the self
    as well as of the outside world.

31
Integrated but distributed systems for
motivation, affect, and cognition mediate
behavior from reflex to reflection
  • Homeostatic functions and archaic reflexes of
    motivation are energized by the systems of affect
    and are embedded in more recent systems that
    enable cognition and representations of the self
    as well as of the outside world.


32
Tolerance of Dysfunction
  • Gradients of functionality are always recognized
    what differs is the tolerance of the extremes
  • Many dysfunctional traits exist on a continuum
    with highly adaptive traits
  • Expressions of more-or-less disproportion are
    appreciated to the extent that they reflect
    prevailing individual or social needs
    pathologically thin models, absent-minded
    scientists, Olympic athletes
  • Dysfunction in one domain may be highly
    functional in another
  • Some genes that are keys to highly adaptive
    traits can have dysfunctional collateral
    effects
  • All evolution cares about is productivity
    (fitness) of the genome

33
Rationalization of Dysfunction
  • Society recognizes and more-or-less appreciates
    expressions of adaptive disproportion that
    reflects prevailing needs
  • pathologically thin models,
  • absent-minded scientists
  • Olympic athletes

34
Tolerance of Dysfunction
  • IS this because ARTISTS are the ANTENNAE of the
    RACE?
  • (Ezra Pound 1954)

35
Desperately SEEKING Dysfunction
  • . . . addiction has also come to signify a
    perverse state of grace a hustling renunciation
    of worldly ambition, a willful abandonment of the
    will, a self-absorbed abnegation of the self. As
    long as artists and writers, musicians and
    filmmakers identify themselves with post-Romantic
    rebellion . . .

36
Phaedrus
  • madness is one of Heaven's blessings (Socrates in
    Phaedrus)
  • All the greatest things we know have come to us
    from neurotics. It is they and they only who have
    founded religions and created great works of art.
    (Marcel Proust)

37
out of control, in control
38
Where does creativity come from ?
  • Sometimes the creative insight strikes like
    lightening, but it is
  • orchestrated by cognition
  • guided by motivation
  • energized by emotion
  • (These engage the same neural and endocrine
    subsystems as the stress response)

39
INSPIRATION
  • Joan . . . you must not talk to me about my
    voices.
  • Robert How do you mean? Voices?
  • Joan I hear voices telling me what to do. They
    come from God.
  • Robert They come from your imagination.
  • Joan Of course. That is how the messages of
    God come to us.

40
PERSPIRATION THEORY
  • Thomas Alva Edison
  • Genius is one per cent inspiration, ninety-nine
    per cent perspiration.

41
CREATIVITY as an AFFECTIVE DISORDER
  • Genius, madness, and the wounded healer
  • Is there any excellence hath not an origin in
    disproportion or deformity? Francis Bacon

42
CREATIVITY as an AFFECTIVE DISORDER
  • great art is at the end of a continuum --
    recognizable by certain connections we have in
    common with the artist
  • specific disorders TLE, depression,
    schizophrenia
  • States of Consciousness (like sleep, awake,
    dreaming)
  • Buddha is a title, not a name it means to be
    awake

43
INTEGRATING . . .
  • Phantasy plays a most decisive function in the
    total mental structure it links the deepest
    layers of the unconscious with the highest
    products of consciousness, the dream with
    reality it preserves the archetypes of the
    genus, the perpetual but repressed ideas of the
    collective and individual memory, the tabooed
    images of freedom
    (Marcuse)
  • It is through Art, and through Art only, that we
    can realise our perfection
  • through Art, and through Art only, that we can
    shield ourselves from the sordid perils of actual
    existence
  • (Oscar Wilde)

Maybe LIFE like poetry requires the willing
suspension of disbelief. (Samuel Taylor
Coleridge)
44
What is more REAL than REALITY ?
  • IMAGINATION alone, tells me what can be
  • (Kennedy quoted Shaw you see things and say,
    why? I see them and say, why not?)
  • SUR-REALITY

45
The Wounded Healer
  • Wounded Healers get in control of their
    challenges to creatively serve others
  • the shaman (Joan Halifax)
  • the therapist (countertransference, Jung)
  • the artist
  • the archetype (Chiron, the Centaur)

46
Neurotics . . .
  • All the greatest things we know have come to us
    from neurotics. It is they and they only who have
    founded religions and created great works of art.
    Never will the world be conscious of how much it
    owes to them, nor above all of what they have
    suffered in order to bestow their gifts on it.
    (Marcel Proust 1921)

47
Is ART the CURE?
  • Artists dont get down to work until the pain
    of working is exceeded by the pain of not
    working
  • (Stephen DeStaebler 1993)
  • At the deepest level, the creative process and
    the healing process arise from a single source.
    When you are an artist, you are a healer.
  • (Rachel Naomi Remen)

48
Appreciation of DysfunctionHeres to the Crazy
Ones
  • Here is to the crazy ones, the misfits,
  • the rebels, the troublemakers,
  • the round pegs in the square holes.
  • The ones who see things differently.
  • They are not fond of rules
  • and they have no respect for the status-quo.
  • You can quote them, disagree with them,
  • glorify or vilify them.
  • But the only thing you can't do is ignore them.
  • Because they change things.
  • They push the human race forward.
  • And while some may see them
  • as the crazy ones, we see genius.
  • Because the people who are crazy enough
  • to think they can change the world,
  • are the ones who do.

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