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Culture Beyond Art
45

Beta: Yeah, I agree. This doesn’t mean that repeating and understanding are the same.
Gamma: What does that mean?
Beta: Now I think they are related.
Alpha: Come back, guys. You are disrupting the accounting process.
Kappa: All right. So the seventh question could be: How does copying and understanding relate to each other in general terms?
Teacher: Perfect!
Delta: I got the eighth one. Is seeing a creative process?
Gamma: Where did that come from?
Delta: I asked earlier whether a person who makes copies is creative because he is seeing all of the details.
Gamma: I have an example of when seeing all the details relates to creativity: investigation.
Beta: Hey, a good example. Sherlock Holmes is a creative guy.
Alpha: What does he create?
Delta: A picture of a crime.
Alpha: That one was created by a criminal.
Teacher: The crime, not the picture.
Gamma: Sherlock Holmes doesn’t know the criminal’s plan and actions, thus, he has to invent them from scratch and check them against the evidence, right? It is a creative process.
Kappa: Ha, look, we got it again. A bad investigator cannot recreate the picture—how it was in reality—and amends it with invented details. So he happens to be less creative at the same time. Wow!
Teacher: Have we recalled all of our questions?
Kappa: There were a few more, I think . . . one about photography. . . . Does creation relate to some goal?
Beta: I want to ask another one. Does seeing something unusual mean being creative?
Kappa: Seeing again?
Teacher: All right, we’ve got a pretty decent list. I would add one last question. Do all creative features of human activity apply equally to arts and non-arts? Or better yet: Do all of our questions apply equally to arts and non-arts?