Clarity on Creativity


The Shire, about 5:40pm

Hello Reader,

Something happened at 1:30 am on Sunday, 4th August, that was of seismic significance to our family. Several of us are still in aftershock.

Our grandson was born at 28 weeks, weighing a mere 1.125 kg.

Mum and dad were staying at the John Radcliffe, a teaching hospital in Oxford, UK, when mum was taken down to the delivery room. Within minutes a baby boy was born.

As I write, our new grandson is doing very well. He spent his first few days in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), and a few days ago he was improved enough to be moved to the next, less-intensive, level of care.

To my eternal gratitude, all this happened, I learned later, in one of the best places on the planet for neo-natal care. God is good.

As grandparents, we are picking up the slack for our son and daughter-in-law. The family are doing well. I suppose this what my generation can do in these times: provide much-needed margin for our children, where and when we can.

Hybrid ICU

When I first went to visit little my new grandson in the ICU, I was a little surprised at what I found. My expectations from the movies was to see banks of incubators patrolled by a nurse or two.

I could not have been more wrong.

Instead, I found each incubator in the centre of its own workstation, monitored by a dedicated nurse. Behind were a bank of monitors with displays of the baby's body temperature, blood pressure, heart beat, etc. all wired up to that little life. Lots of tech was not so much of a surprise.

What was encouraging to me was that amidst all this, each nurse had a writing plinth, where they would be almost constantly be making notes by hand. This state-of-the-art medical facility had a hybrid approach--both digital and analog--to delivering the best care.

The Generation Effect

I recalled recent research of college students who made handwritten notes in lectures and were later found to have a deeper, more integrated understanding of what they learned than the comparison group that took notes on digital devices. Researchers called this the generations effect.

The generation effect is the unsung hero of creativity. I handwrite my Unburdened Journal each morning, and I extract notes on books I read by hand before later committing them to digital apps. In fact, I am handwriting the first draft of this newsletter. Writing by hand forces me to be more disciplined in what I take down as notes, and I add my reflections as I go along.

Sure handwriting is slow, messy, and cannot allow cut and paste. Yet it seems that this resistance helps improve clarity, creativity and retention.

Pen and paper is not the only medium by which we can achieve the generation effect. Rosemary achieves this on her Unburdened Journal using her iPad and stylus pen.

The Unburdened Webinar

In fact, Rosemary will be presenting her Goodnotes app template and how she uses it on our forthcoming Unburdened Webinar. Laura, another of our positive outliers, will be sharing about how the Unburdened structure has helped her find hope and freedom as a writer.

Come and join us:

Queue Idea!

Finally, much of my writing comes from answering questions, particularly from my coaching and mentoring clients, such as Liz. She asked, "How do you manage your portfolio of creative work and projects?"

I showed her. Then, I wrote up this approach in a short ebook:

Her response was,

"I used [the approach] yesterday and found it really helpful. I like the way you have written it up. I found it clear to follow. I'm using a whiteboard so I'll get some magnetic strips."

If you would like to talk to me about this kind of value-added coaching, I still have about three spare slots for new coaching or mentoring clients...yes, despite our grandson's delightful disruption!

All such clients have exclusive access to this and other resources. So feel free to book a discovery call with me at a mutually convenient time.

That's all for now!

Yours, somewhat delightfully disrupted,


In case you were forwarded this email by a friend and you would like to make sure you receive your own copy of my future newsletter, please head over to patrickmayfield.com where you can subscribe for yourself.


670 words | 3 minute read

The Shire, Middle Earth, nr Oxford, UK

Thursday, 5 pm-ish

Hi Reader,

This week my thoughts return to a collision of AI and Creativity. I hope you enjoy!

A Fresh Chance for Human Creativity

The excitement around AI at the moment tends to be rooted in a sense of awe and wonder, as well as fear. There persist two extreme and opposite views:

  • One person says, "AI is wonderful and exciting. It will turbocharge our productivity as knowledge workers."
    And another says,
  • "This is dangerous. It threatens big job losses for office workers and opens us up to all kinds of cybercrime."

Allow me put a rather different point of view. I see AI as a chance to compare and contrast with our human creativity. When AI shows what it can do, we can then appreciate what we can do beyond the digital. Also, we are more minded to abandon banal pursuits as creative because AI can do them better.

As AI advances, I see it as a chance to gain clarity on what is truly transcendent, when comes from a human imagination. Increasingly we will be able to discern, with finer and finer tuning, what is a human composition and what is not. The more we see of AI-generated art, for example, the more we will be able to recognise it as such.

Right now, we set the bar too low for our imagination. Allow me to give you an example.

Launch Creations

I get fairly frequent email updates from Kickstarter, the organisation that helps people gain funding for launching new products. Here is what I received on Tuesday this week as a list of projects they were showcasing:

  • A film about two parents fighting for their children in a foster-care system.
  • A magic kit for kids
  • A board game based on a dating reality TV show
  • A fantasy card-driven combat game
  • A new bluegrass/hip hop album
  • A revived retro board game
  • The second in a graphic novel series
  • A gothic fantasy graphic novel
  • A retro dice spinner for RPG games
  • A mechanical tumbler watch based upon current space exploration.

Which one of these intrigues you?

Which one makes you curious?

There was one which grabbed my attention. I did not understand what it was at first; that made me curious. And then, as I studied it … a it excited me.

This characteristic of creativity, exciting curiosity, is something irreplaceably human.

Now, I am not downplaying creativity which adapts and develops exisiting ideas. Not at all. But when there is a new genre, a new category of art or utility, we are seeing something beyond neural modelling and mimicry by computers; we are seeing something quite god-like.

In ancient Hebrew, the word ‘Creator’ is bara. And bara is a combination of two other words: bow’ meaning to come, and ra’ah meaning to see… thus, come and see.

Perhaps the essence of creativity is to excite curiosity; to prompt us to ponder deeper, to go higher, and wider… to come and see.

Perhaps the problem with AI replicating human creativity is that we have, in so doing, set the bar of our own creativity far too low. AI replicates that which is not truly transcendent.

If our response is that, “AI will catch up and overtake us,” I suspect we have a poor teleology (philosophy of meaning). We can believe that a fictional movie like the Terminator give us forecast of our future: "There will come a day soon when Skynet will become self-aware.” As well as giving too much weight to a great piece of fiction, it gives an inferior regard for what we can yet see in ourselves as humans.

So, the problem is not that we don't find AI's achievements impressive. Rather, it is that we hold such low expectations of ourselves.

Now, where's that cyborg... I'm stil waiting for my cup of tea!

Yours rambling in the Shire,

Patrick

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