Many people equate creativity with knowledge but nothing could be further from the truth. According to creativity guru Roger von Oech, “The real key to being creative lies in what you do with your ...
You might think that creativity requires the antithesis of rules and regulation. Even the thought of being creative conjures up images of disorder. Messy rooms, paint everywhere, scraps of paper with ...
We have a complicated relationship with creativity. Intuitively, we understand its value—the ability to produce new ideas and novel innovation. Instinctively, we know that it presents opportunities ...
Creative potential combines the ability to think in original ways with the motivation to do so. Creative thinking grows with knowledge and experience; they are the raw material for new ideas. The ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about the psychology of leadership, tech and entrepreneurship. To be sure, much of what AI generates is hardly creative, ...
Do you ever try to be creative but despite all your efforts, struggle to access that creative voice in your head? If you're anything like me, you may feel the pressure to immediately snap out of this ...
Being creative is a source of happiness for many people. Whether engaging in art, music, writing, cooking, gardening, crafting, or inventing, stretching your creativity muscle is good for you and for ...
As Hollywood grapples with the upheaval of current AI tools — from writers striking over machine-generated scripts to VFX artists watching their jobs getting reshaped in real time — Silicon Valley is ...
Go grandmaster Lee Sedol recently announced he was retiring from the game because “there is an entity that can never be defeated”: AI. As readers likely remember, an artificial intelligence known as ...
Before the pandemic started, the debate between open office proponents and haters was as hot as ever, with a new day and a new ‘study’ showing favorable results for rubbing elbows with colleagues. And ...
When British artist Harold Cohen met his first computer in 1968, he wondered if the machine might help solve a mystery that had long puzzled him: How can we look at a drawing, a few little scribbles, ...