Catastrophe theory; geniuses and maniacs (2011)
3 days ago
- #Creative Personality
- #Catastrophe Theory
- #Intellectual Development
- A creative personality is characterized by three parameters: technical proficiency (T), enthusiasm (E), and achievement (A), forming a surface in 3D space.
- The model describes transitions based on T and E: low enthusiasm with high skills leads to gradual achievement, while high enthusiasm can cause discontinuous jumps in achievement.
- A catastrophe occurs when enthusiasm grows without corresponding technical proficiency, leading to a sudden drop in achievement, labeled as 'maniacs.'
- The model suggests that geniuses and maniacs can share identical T and E but differ in achievement and history, highlighting path-dependent outcomes.
- Criticism of catastrophe theory includes lowered rigor and novelty, but the figure remains a useful caricature of intellectual development.
- Discussion points include the 'out of madness, genius' idea, the potential for geniuses to fall into mania with increased enthusiasm, and suggestions to add noise or dynamic folds.