Creativism… the beginnings of a new philosophy, with positive implications on social, political and economic theories.
Ok – with that amazing very creative photograph that won “Portrait of the Year 2009” by Sydney photographer Pippin Schembri – I now divert your attention to something close to my heart – for now I’m calling it “Creativism”, but it seems that “Potentialism” also fills the bill. (Click here to see Potentialist version of below)
I think you’ll find there’s nothing really new about what you’re about to read … we are all so connected that I have this feeling when you finish reading this, you’ll feel like I’ve just typed out a transcript of your own mind. I may be wrong – all of the following may make no sense to anyone other than myself… Anyway, I hope you enjoy, and please post your thoughts!
Just to clarify – this is NOT to be confused with “Creationism” which refers to a belief in a 6-day creation 6000 years ago. NO. Creativism is about CREATIVITY and the role WE play in the ONGOING CREATION PROCESS of our universe. These ideas are a work-in-progress (that I wrote one year ago and haven’t touched since) hence I thought I’d put out there. Everything in life always seems to be a work-in-progress, so carpe diem…
Creativism: a philosophy for life
Discovering your ultimate creative potential: you as your individual conscious, you as your society and you as the universe – playing your role in the creation of a future reality you desire.
What is a Creativist?
A Creativist is someone who sees Creativity as the expression of the Divine Creator present in all life and the universe. Creativity is humanity’s source of greatest pleasure, satisfaction, and act of generosity. Creativity expresses your individual consciousness and shares it with others, simultaneously expressing the collective conscious and providing avenues for your individual conscious to learn.
Expressions of Creativity:
Creativity is not only for those left-brainers; creativity is for everyone. Analyse the sources of pleasure in your life, you will probably find they involve some form of creation that you contribute to. For example:
– art of any kind: photography, draw, write,
– in numbers, in science, in business: look for creative solutions to problems
– food and wine: play with life’s little pleasures
– breathe: take pleasure in every breath, it feeds your cells and contributes to the production of new ones
– look for improvement: in every aspect of your life, each little bit of creative expression adds value
– in interior and exterior of your house, fashion, self expression
– make babies: the most amazing creation a human can make
Syncretic paradigms:
1. The purpose of life is to discover and fulfil your creative potential in a way that brings the most benefit to others.
- This is the purpose of all life
- This is “living God’s will”
- This is expressing Who You Truly Are and Who You Want To Be
- This is discovering your inner being, your intuition, and listening to it
- As Shakespeare said, “Above all things, to thyself be true”
2. We are defined not only by our separate identity, but are in fact a collective identity of humanity, of living organisms and of the universe.
- In the same way that our body is not separate from the living micro atoms that make it up
- In the same way that science describes all matter, us included, as made of the same substance: atoms, which at quantum levels flash in and out of physical existence
- In the same way the Buddhists imagine God to be everything
- In the same way Christians describe God, as three forms: the father, the son and the Holy Spirit, yet one God; simultaneously omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent ie all-knowing, all-powerful and present everywhere.
- These ideas do not contradict – they complement. They are each other’s missing link – the way such abstract concepts maybe by physically actualised.
3. Peace is a state of harmony, when the body, mind and spirit are united
Key principles:
4. Listen to “God”
- Thoughts – ideas, images, and words that come into your mind
- Intuition – the deep feeling inside that says ‘yes’ or ‘no’
- Omens/signs – notice the things in the world around you that you are conscious of at each particular point in time
- Words of other people – be it in conversation, a religious, fiction or nonfiction text, or a song on the radio, everything that enters your world is God communicating with you
5. Minimize fear and maximize love
- Fear leads to insecurity, hate, and greed
- Love leads to security, generosity, and kindness
6. Commit to the process not the result –
- Creative potential is infinite and there is no end. An end means a beginning, and the circle of life continues.
- Living in the present – it’s a present, a gift from God, pre-sent to you as an accumulation of all your life experiences and thoughts.
7. Realise that all problems can be solved with:
- Will – desire to solve the problem
- Honesty – about everything
- Empathy – understanding where the other is coming from
- Creativity – finding solutions
Transform and transcend:
8. Equal care for self and others
- When we understand the inseparable connectedness between ourselves and others, we realise our happiness depends on the happiness of everyone else.
- Hence our goal: to maximise our collaborative creative potential – expressing our own creativity, and encouraging others to express theirs
9. Consequences of this paradigm:
- Selfishness transforms into selflessness – I want the best for me, and since you are me, I want the best for you.
- Greed becomes generosity – I want everyone else to have as much as they can, because everyone else is me.
- Jealousy and envy becomes pride and happiness for one another – others achievements are achievements of other expressions of myself
- The concept of hate disappears – we cannot hate what is you
- Self confidence increases, as we feel other’s trying to bring us up, not put us down
- We truly put into action Jesus teaching to “do unto others as you’d have them do to yourself” (check wording + add equivilant teaching from other religions)
10. Self-reflection and self-transcendence
- Breaking down defensiveness, building up confidence to critically evaluate one’s self and acknowledge our wrongs or harms we have done to others – allow us to repent and allow them to forgive
- Rid yourself of your own grievances and any desire for vengeance for injuries inflicted by others – through empathy with the Other, we learn to forgive and move on
11. Create your own happiness
- Make the decision to be happy – it is the biggest decision you will ever make in your life.
- Begin with gratefulness, for what you have, even if it is little
- Study the past, analyse different perspectives, take lessons from it and use it to expand your creative potential
- Don’t cultivate feelings of regrets, everything has happened for a reason, figure out what that reason is, and how the past can help you in your quest for creative potential.
- Bad decisions do not exist, that is judgement you make yet instead you can realise that this results may have led you to challenging times, from which you can now learn. These consequences were a small sacrifice, part of the process of discovering your creative potential.
- Do not cultivate feelings of guilt. Guilt is of no benefit for you nor for those around you. Forgive yourself and let it go. Learn from the past, but keep your mind in the present, and an eye on the future
12. Cultivating wisdom
- Facts are never static, but are the closest statement of the truth, at a particular point in time. If the data changes, facts also change. We must remain open to new data, ready to evaluate it in order to constantly progress towards a more truthful truth.
- Taoists belief “what is impossible today may become possible tomorrow, and what is good today may become evil tomorrow; what seems right from one point of view may from another view seem completely wrong.”
13. The pleasure of extremes, and joys of balance
- Life and death, hot and cold, love and hate, good and bad – you can’t have one without the other. This is the dualistic nature of life, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. I’d prefer a passionate love, even if it sometimes slips over to hate, than a mediocre love all the time. The extremes are much more fun. Ups and downs are what make life interesting. It’s the challenges that bring the most satisfaction.
- Happiness when pushed to the extreme becomes sickly and dull. Beauty overdone becomes ugly. Even too much chocolate makes feel sick…
14. Rid your life of fear
- In the same way that millions of skin cells die every day, and yet our human body continues to live
- Our consciousness is already connected, and will continue to be connected even when the separateness of our present memory no longer functions, our consciousness will continue to live on through others – that are ourselves
15. Cultivate faith
- Faith is about cultivating a state in your heart and mind whereby you give yourself to God* – not about conforming to a set of “beliefs”
- Don’t worry, don’t struggle, allow the will of God/ the Universe to be done
- Is not about belief in hocus pocus or confession to any kind of autocratic dogma – faith is about a state of heart and mind
- Even things that seem to have no reason whatsoever, in time, you will see how it expanded your, or another’s, creative potential
16. Get in-touch with your creative side
- We ALL have one, you just have to give it a go
- Try everything, don’t be afraid of anything
- Know that time and effort are what give results; if you are prepared to invest yourself in something, you can do whatever you want to do.
In order to maximise happiness in life:
17. Right investment
(a) Of your time
- Spend it with people who motivate and encourage
- In an occupation that allows you to learn and express your creativity
- Feelings of daily happiness are essential to stimulate your creative potential
- Expanding other’s creative potential, and the creative potential of other forms of life, including the planet
- In ways that will provide maximum benefit to the most people
- Spend some time in silence, connecting to your conscious and giving it room to create; meditation, walking, driving, prayer
(b) Of your money
- Money is in fact, a cumulation of time and effort, that you have expended, and can henceforth use in exchange for others’ time and effort
- In your purchases, buying what is good for yourself and good for others
- In your financial investments, in businesses that are helping life move toward it’s creative potential
18. Not no conflict but no violence
- No circumstance ever substantiates violence
- The ideology of Creativism must never be fought for – this is against the nature of creative potential. Fighting for an ideology destroys creativity, which may be trying to morph into new forms, in which case, this is it’s achievement of creative potential.
- Fighting against nature is fighting against the will of God, that is, fighting against the deepest drive of each of us,
- Creativism seeks organic expansion through love, it is never forced or forged, but is the result of a synergy between selfish and selfless – working together for the good of all-life itself, all which is God.
19. The power of the mind
- The universe operates through spontaneous creativity, and through patterned phenomena – your role may be to contribute to either
- Thoughts are powerful in ways we don’t yet understand. We do know they are measurable on wavelengths, like radio waves, but have not tapped in to harness them yet. Experiments have shown the incredible impact of positive thoughts on plants, water molecules, and even the nature of atoms.
- Harness this power. Dream, make goals, pray, meditate, make them reality.
20. The power for world peace lies with you
- Each of us have, together, the power to change the world
- All it takes is a vision: what do we want the world to look like?
- And then in each of us the will to reconnect with our life’s purpose and play out our roles in this transformation.
- It begins with finding the peace within ourselves.
- Anything is possible!
A brief note about the word “Creativism”:
I’m not sure how this term first came into my head but when I googled it I discovered it was a term being used by a few people to describe a similar concept of what I wanted to use it to describe. There is even a definition in the Urban Dictionary: Creativism = ‘The theory or practice of creation as a way to live and understand life’ and a Creativist = ‘someone who is attuned creatively to their surroundings; a person who understands and expresses their life through creative works or motifs.’
Anyway if you have got through this essay then I have to say I’m extremely impressed. Six pages of babbling… anyway I would really really really love to know what you think. So please make a comment or send me an email.
Thank you!!!
Juliet xxx
nice blog! you wrote all that?! wow! anyway, I like your thoughts
x
this was much harder than the last book i read “cat in the hat”…i have trouble concentrating due to my lack of head smarts…i don’t usually give much thought to these sort of things these days due to some bad experiences with pseudo hippys who tend to take it to a dark place, you know…cleansing by petrol dousing…however i see that’s not the case here.. top stars *****
Aloha Juliet! I stumbled on your site while looking into Shantaram. I really enjoyed your post. It is well thought out and cleverly presented, and I have a feeling I’ll come back to it often. And yes, it is something like the running transcript of my thoughts. Mahalo!
i still do not get what is creativism
Point taken lol 😛
Creativism isn’t really anything more than a personal philosophy based on understanding of one’s self as part of a greater whole, expressing itself in creative ways.
Could definitely do with a revisit though… Thanks for the comment!
Excellently written, a must read whenever ur feeling little bit down , it has points which has to me remembered for rest of the lifetime, a point for every situation in life. It has filled some kind of great pleasure in me
Very well said. I am sorry I have just run across this post now some 3 years after you wrote it. I hope you are well and that life continues to unfold it’s mysteries to you. Live well my sister!
love your writting ! it’s intriguing !! I believe this kind of paradigm will overcome consumtivism in near future !
thx for sharing sis hihi
I am currently following the works of Dr Eric Maisel who created natural psychology – our purpose is to make meaning. I have noticed that he calls this the atheist’s way. In my heart of hearts, I love the ideas and realized that I took my personal philosophy beyond atheism to a belief in creativity and creative potentional. My life purpose centers around a passion for bringing these 2 together.
Years ago I wrote a poem about: I create to expand my potential
as my potential expands,
my potential to expand into my potential expands
so expanding greater potential
and greater potentials potential to expand into its potential.
I somehow have a feeling you will get this!
Your ideas really really resonate with me. I love it.
Many thanks!
I agree with everything Juliett says EXCEPT I just don’t get what “God”, an archaic human-created concept, has to do with it. And to you I would say this: being an atheist just means that you reject that concept because it is not compatible with human autonomy, the very basis of spititual, intellectual creativity. It does NOT mean that you cannot BELIEVE. Why can’t we believe in the positive meaning we create in our lives without having to think that there is a “God” who made it all possible? Just to be clear: I’m not being intolerant of your belief in whatever it is you call “God”; I’m just pointing out that it’s not a pre-requisite and might even get in your way if you think you’re somehow beholden to this “god”. I say let’s just do our thing of beauty, whatever it is, share it with others and enjoy this creative life we have as autonomous human beings, wherever it may have come from.
Thanks Ben 🙂 I think it’s useful to get beyond words and consider what we are trying to capture with them. We can certainly believe in the positive meaning we create in our lives without having to think there is a “God” who made it all possible. But I think it can be helpful to have a term that helps us to ponder the Whole Great Mystery of which we are part of, expressions of, and participants within. Call it “The Universe” if you like. I find people with religious upbringing (myself included) can connect with the idea in a deeper way if you refer to the Whole of which we are a part as “God”. I find people with atheistic or scientific backgrounds connect better without using the term God. And I don’t think one is better or worse – just different ways of making sense of the wonders of Life.
This was right up my ally. It also moved me to self reflection, and I see some things i want to work on. Thanks for this essay lol. Also is ur blog name “Adventures with ideas….” because it says “Adentures with ideas….” am thinking its a typo.
Thanks Zo – would you believe that typo has been there for YEARS! without me or anyone I know picking it up. THAT IS HILARIOUS!!! Thank you for letting me know.
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Dear Juliet
I tried contacting you through ordinary email a couple of months ago, but it didn’t seem to work, so here we go again.
I’ve been working on creativism for some time now, aiming for a book but in the interim a website, which is now up. Creativism for me is a philosophy, a theology and an ethic: both a worldview and a way to live life. For me, it arose partly out of frustration at the overheated and “closed door” character of so many discussions about religious and spiritual belief. When the big questions of meaning are still treated as battlegrounds rather than discovery trails, I look for a calmer, more rational approach, more respectful of difference, and more determined to constructively push the boundaries of inquiry. My website, http://www.banishingboundaries.com, is offered as a step in this direction.
Banishing Boundaries suggests a “new-old” set of answers to the big questions: new because it is a fresh set of interpretations, old because it draws on insights that are in some cases pre-Christian. It is founded on the philosophy, theology and ethic of creativism, which acknowledges a wide array of sources from Lao Tse and Plotinus to Alfred North Whitehead, Simone Weil and John Archibald Wheeler.
My journey in developing this website has been full of surprises. I have found, for example, theological implications in physicist David Bohm’s concept of implicate order, where it is not things alone that give rise to the physical world, but the relationship between these things. I’ve also found interesting parallels between the moral and spiritual worlds and the material world – between the creative actions arising from human truth and love and the creative processes arising from right order and right relationships in nature. These and similar insights are things to be shared.
If you could find time to visit the website and give some feedback I’d be very grateful. It would be good to get a conversation going on this topic, because there’s much to talk about.
Yours
Phil Roberts
Writer | Philosopher | Creativist
“Creativism – the pursuit of the good through creative action”
Dear Phil,
I’m sorry that I missed your email. I submitted my thesis less than two weeks ago and my hotmail is overfilled to an extent it is far too easy to miss things. I am glad that you wrote again.
I looked at your website and I am encouraged to see your thought along very these lines 🙂
http://www.banishingboundaries.com/essays/creativism-20-key-points !
Have you come across “panentheist” theology? I find it a helpful umbrella for exploring some of these interrelated ideas, especially when related to the notion of “God”. Process philosophy in all its forms is extremely rich and “Big History” is an exciting development in Australian education and abroad… “religion and ecology” at Yale university, the “Californian Institute for Integral Studies”… there are so many exciting things happening at this intersection of creativity, process, ecology and peace!
My research explores these areas, although my focus on creativity has wavered a little. It is nice to be reminded of its importance by your and others’ recent comments on this page. Thank you.
I hope to be blogging much more often now, sharing aspects of this research with readers.
Stay in touch!
Juliet
Thanks Juliet. It’s great to be in conversation, and good luck with your Ph.D. I’m looking forward to hearing more about that research.
Regarding your question about panentheism, the answer is yes. From my perspective, panentheism is slowly taking root and gaining ground on the older paradigm of “supernatural theism,” to use Marcus Borg’s terminology, though I qualify this by saying this is progressive religion perspective, and progressive religion is still very much a minority movement. I wonder if you’ve engaged at all with the Sea of Faith in Australia, where this sort of thing is much discussed. (Your answer may of course be “There haven’t been enough hours in the day”).
As I see it, part of the beauty of creativism, which is of course consistent with a panentheist view, is that it takes us to the next step. By that I mean it leads us from a worldview (philosophical and religious) to ethics. It is a vehicle both for understanding and for doing. This is evident even in a secular context, e.g. the Creativist Manifesto by Olivia Sprinkel.
Getting back to religion, though I’ve had limited feedback I’ve been much encouraged by an email from Michael Benedikt, author of the wonderful book God Is the Good We Do. From science, there’s also been brief feedback from Stuart Kauffman, who at age 74 is working on his own book somewhere in this general field. Just as an aside, I’ve been amused at the similarity in thought between scientist Kauffman and the late Harvard theologian Gordon Kaufman, who saw God as essentially creativity.
Another thing that’s intrigued me is the connection between aspects of western thought (Process, Teilhard de Chardin etc) and a significant strain of Chinese thought. I was led to this realisation by an article by Suncrates (wonderful name) and Kidd. Chinese thought is by and large a closed book to me, so exploring this more is another big challenge that lies ahead.
Even if we’re not yet banishing boundaries (to use the metaphor from my website), We’re doing useful work, I think, chipping away at them. So, to be in conversation is a very good thing.
Looking forward to more!