Machinesworking wrote: Try defining creative adaptability, without using examples of artists you like or are world renowned. Problem is I don't think you can, there's no way to determine what is creative, without it being subjective. I mean that a new idea that involves a process that's an open playing field like music is open to subjective criticism. I agree IQ tests are lame. All I was stating was that intelligence is adaptability, not what you know now. Ability to learn is certainly part of and important to the creative process, but not necessary. In that sense I agree that IQ tests aren't a true measure of creativity, which is IMO as important as the ability to learn.
Creative Adaptability is really just the applied imagination in an original context. By "original context" I just mean ideas and adaptions that you yourself are originally and newly responsible for.
logical problem solving deals in absolutes. In other words, there is only one correct answer. The aforementioned creative adaptability applies itself to both open ended scientific and liberal undertakings.
I do see what you mean however, in that outside of loose descriptive qualifiers, how do we place a merit measurement on "genius"?
In this sense I am honestly not thinking in terms of declaring the genius of being as one would a compliment. Like the statement: "Paul McCartney is a creative genius"
This is more of a non-subjective entitlement based upon what I feel are IQ test ill-merits. More so a judgment based on actual accomplishments without the subjective nature of personal opinion attached.
The way one might state: Paul McCartney was a genius because he originally accomplished...in the same sense that Paul might contend, James Jamerson was a genius because he originally accomplished,...
Men of great analytically logical disposition assuredly can be geniuses of course, but this would be based on their accomplishments in life, not any form of appointed external examination.
My point is I think, almost identical to everyone else's that feels that IQ tests are a poor barometer for what is genius.
It seems absolutes would have to be thrown out the window for the sake of accuracy in determining such.
