Creativity versus order

Being a thoughtful and creative person, I have spent a lot of time thinking about creativity. What makes one person more creative than another? Why is it that creative people have so many emotional problems? Why is it that creative people seem to have a lot of characteristics in common?

First off, I think it boils down to a tension between two extremes, the creative mindset, and the ordering mindset. And the difference between these two mindsets, on a cognitive level, lies in how they treat barriers.

The ordering mindset is optimized towards separations and distinctions. It seeks out the differences between things and seeks to put all things in categories, structures, systems, and orders. It is a mindset supremely capable of dealing with a great deal of disparate information and sorting and comprehending it in an orderly and systematic way. It is drawn to clear lines, sharp distinctions, known procedures, established facts, and “a place for everything and everything in its place”. It is repelled by ambiguity, judgment calls, blurred boundaries, uncharted territory, and things which defy categorization. It is most comfortable in small mental spaces and feels anxious and unsafe without a great deal of predictability and order surrounding it.

Above all, it is a mind built for order.

The creative mindset, on the other hand, is optimized towards making connections. Hence, the creative mind wants their to be as few barriers and distinctions in its contents possible. Walls only impede the discovery of connections between things that is the heart of creativity. The creative mind is always seeking to break down barriers, find connections between things which seem unconnected, and seeks wide open mental spaces in which to experiment with large ideas and find those elusive connections. It is attracted to ambiguity, mystery, inconsistency, and things which defy categorization. It avoids sharp distinctions, restrictions, ordered systems, strict definitions, and limited possibilities. The creative mind feels anxious and trapped in the sort of ordered and defined space that the ordering mind finds comforting. The creative mind finds safety not in order but in its own maneuverability, like an animal that relies on its speed and adaptability to survive, and thus avoids anything that smells like a cage or a trap.

This are, of course, two polar opposites, and the bell curve of life dictates that most people will be some mix of these two extremes. Nobody is entirely ordered or completely creative (except perhaps autistics and schizophrenics, respectively) and I am not trying to pigeonhole people under labels and definitions.

As a creative person, that would be anathema to me.

I am simply pointing out an interesting axis which I think yields fruitful results when applied to the examintion of the human psyche.

Most people, as I have said, will be a mixture of the two poles, but most people will be more on one side of the spectrum than the other. I’ve already said that I am a creative person. Rules, restrictions, and definitions tend to bore, depress, and/or frighten me. It would be easy, therefore, for me to look down on the orderly types as dull and colorless and us creatives types as being ever so much better.

But I also know my own weaknesses too well to permit such provincialism. I know that, for one thing, my creative mind makes it difficult to make decisions sometimes. The ability to see a myriad of possibilities in every situation comes at the cost of having those many possibilities to choose from when a course of action is needed. Ordered minds rarely face such indecision. They see a clear route through every maze and are only stopped when they encounter something so ambiguous or unknown that their existing tools of ordering and categorization can’t conquer it. Then, ironically, they need someone like me.

So clearly, both mindsets have their strengths and weaknesses, and the world simply could not keep turning without both of them. We need the ordered minds to keep things straight, to create order out of chaos, to deal with situations which required a strong sense of order and regularity, and to keep everything together. We need creative minds to chart new territories, to push the boundaries, to test the known facts for weaknesses and hence improve the strength of the system as a whole.

To conclude, I think that, in the spirit of greater human harmony and understand, it would be a great boon to humanity if we creative types strove to understand the ordering types and accept that they have their value and their role as well, and for them to do the same for us.

It’s how we create greater order in the world!

3 thoughts on “Creativity versus order

  1. Hi I was just wondering how you would have the creatives understand the ordered mindset and vise versa. It seems that an individual’s perspective would be at odds with being able to fully understand the opposing perspective- at least with the same level of clarity that those with a strength in the opposite thinking type have.

    Even if we aren’t talking in terms of “same level of clarity” I still don’t really understand how you expect Right Brainers and Left Brainers to better understand each other.

    Is it a walk a mile in their shoes kind of thing- where the ordered minds must walk in anything but a straight line, wear flashy clothes, and think of 100 different ways to use a common brick and the creative minds are required to be accountants for a day?

    I honestly want to learn how to be more ordered and structured so, despite the jest, I am really curious as to how you would answer this.

    I agree that an aim to understand one’s weaker type of thinking is a worthy and worthwhile endeavor but I am at a loss as to how it would be implemented.

    Actually, I understand how to teach people to be more creative. That’s basically my job. But I don’t understand how to make a creative individual more ordered. Is it setting up routines and using a planner? Because when I do that- I keep at it for a good 2 weeks maybe a month or more and then LOSE the organization tool and am once again back to square one (or worse). I could really use some insight on this.

    Thanks,
    Steve

    • Well, let’s see.

      About getting the two types to understand one another : first, you would need to explain to each how the other mindset works, and stress the strengths each has, so that they can both see that neither type is superior, just different, and thereby provide a basis for mutual respect, and from there, understanding. I find most people can get that far, at least.

      About how to be more ordered when you are creative…. beats the hell out of me. 😛 If you could see the mess this room is in, the one where I am typing this, you would understand. I am strongly on the creative side of the scale, and I, too, have tried to keep myself organized by various sensible seeming methods, but it never lasts and I end up back in the usual muddling chaos.

      I think the problem is that the creative mindset inherently rebels against structure and strictures, and even if we consciously decide to embrace order, unconsciously looking for a way out, an escape hatch. And sooner or later, it finds it.

      Perhaps it’s more about getting better at coping with a lack of structure than trying to turn yourself into something you are not. I don’t know.

  2. Pingback: Creativity, the subconcious mind, and surprise | The Homepage of Michael John Bertrand

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