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Reclaiming the Imagination

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groovedaddy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-16-10 11:00 AM
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Reclaiming the Imagination
Imagine being a slave in ancient Rome. Now remember being one. The second task, unlike the first, is crazy. If, as I’m guessing, you never were a slave in ancient Rome, it follows that you can’t remember being one — but you can still let your imagination rip. With a bit of effort one can even imagine the impossible, such as discovering that Dick Cheney and Madonna are really the same person. It sounds like a platitude that fiction is the realm of imagination, fact the realm of knowledge.

Why did humans evolve the capacity to imagine alternatives to reality? Was story-telling in prehistoric times like the peacock’s tail, of no direct practical use but a good way of attracting a mate? It kept Scheherazade alive through those one thousand and one nights — in the story.

On further reflection, imagining turns out to be much more reality-directed than the stereotype implies. If a child imagines the life of a slave in ancient Rome as mainly spent watching sports on TV, with occasional household chores, they are imagining it wrong. That is not what it was like to be a slave. The imagination is not just a random idea generator. The test is how close you can come to imagining the life of a slave as it really was, not how far you can deviate from reality.

A reality-directed faculty of imagination has clear survival value. By enabling you to imagine all sorts of scenarios, it alerts you to dangers and opportunities. You come across a cave. You imagine wintering there with a warm fire — opportunity. You imagine a bear waking up inside — danger. Having imagined possibilities, you can take account of them in contingency planning. If a bear is in the cave, how do you deal with it? If you winter there, what do you do for food and drink? Answering those questions involves more imagining, which must be reality-directed. Of course, you can imagine kissing the angry bear as it emerges from the cave so that it becomes your lifelong friend and brings you all the food and drink you need. Better not to rely on such fantasies. Instead, let your imaginings develop in ways more informed by your knowledge of how things really happen.

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/15/reclaiming-the-imagination/?th&emc=th
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jailthecrooks Donating Member (34 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-16-10 02:54 PM
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1. Imagining alternatives to reality
That was God's way of paving the way for the Republican Party.

If you have to always tell the truth then no person would ever vote for a Republican.
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mzteris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-16-10 09:02 PM
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2. one of the problems with too much media
(tv/movies) and too many gadgety toys.

Make kids PLAY. Make them "make do" with whatever they can find to play with. Turn off the tv and the 'puter and the games. Lock up the "play sets". Give them boxes and spoons and sticks and old clothes and old pots and whatnot...

I know most of you guys are anti- homeschooling, but hs children generally "play pretend" well after the school kids have stopped because of peer pressure. Hs'ers will play pretend until puberty hits, school kids stop around grade 4 . . .

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soleiri Donating Member (913 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-17-10 02:22 AM
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3. There are exceptions
"I know most of you guys are anti- homeschooling, but hs children generally "play pretend" well after the school kids have stopped because of peer pressure. Hs'ers will play pretend until puberty hits, school kids stop around grade 4"

My sons are now 14 and 16. They're in public school. All their lives they've played pretend, made up stories and characters.
They even made up a whole new galaxy including planets and animals.
Long after puberty hit.
Now they use their imagination to write stories, movie scripts or comic books. If a kid is creative, he or she will be creative.


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