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- Creative_synthesis abstract "The principle of creative synthesis was first mentioned by Wilhelm Wundt in 1862. He wanted to identify the different elements of conscious and to see what laws govern the connections of these different elements. It started with the fact that colors, touches, and the spoken were not seen as the decoding of stimuli or the reception and storage of the things that are received into the brain from the external world. Wundt believed that instead, these factors are seen as the brain's subjective reactions to external stimuli that enter into our sensory systems. This is the concept of creative synthesis.This theory shifted towards the emphasis on principles concerned with emotion, motivation, and volition as it had matured. These three ideas compete with one another, with the idea of creative synthesis at the center. This relates to the fact that Wundt viewed the mind as \"active, creative, dynamic, and volitional.\" Volitional acts are creative but they are not free. This viewpoint could be assumed due to Wundt's deterministic view. Behind every volitional action that occurs, there were mental laws that acted on the contents of the consciousness. The shift in the goal-directed activity may have occurred, but it was already determined to change from the original plan.The sensory organs can be described endlessly in physics and other sciences, but these descriptions do not include explanations of the psychological qualities that are experienced. Qualities such as \"sweet\", \"heavy\", \"painful\" or \"dark blue\" are ones that can only be studied in a brain that is still able to react to experiences around it.A key feature of creative synthesis is that mental capacities are more than the sum of their parts. In all psychical combinations, the product is more than the sum of their different parts that are combined, what occurs it a new creation all together. By this, it is meant that they are generative (creative) in every aspect. There is a real novelty and creativity in higher cognitive operations.".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageID "41283739".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageLength "6092".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageOutDegree "14".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageRevisionID "610670685".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Apperception.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Psychological_concepts.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Consciousness.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Determinism.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Heterogony_of_ends.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Sense.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Short-term_memory.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Volition_(psychology).
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLink Wilhelm_Wundt.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageWikiLinkText "Creative synthesis".
- Creative_synthesis align "right".
- Creative_synthesis quote "There are no psychological qualities in physics. For example, there is no red, or green, or blue in that world. Redness, greenness, and blueness are phenomena that are created by the cortex of the experiencing individual. A musical quality, the flavor or the wine, or the familiarity of a face is a rapid creative synthesis that cannot, in principle, be explained as a mere sum of elemental physical features.".
- Creative_synthesis width "50.0".
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Philosophy_of_science.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote_box.
- Creative_synthesis wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Creative_synthesis subject Category:Psychological_concepts.
- Creative_synthesis comment "The principle of creative synthesis was first mentioned by Wilhelm Wundt in 1862. He wanted to identify the different elements of conscious and to see what laws govern the connections of these different elements. It started with the fact that colors, touches, and the spoken were not seen as the decoding of stimuli or the reception and storage of the things that are received into the brain from the external world.".
- Creative_synthesis label "Creative synthesis".
- Creative_synthesis sameAs Q17147151.
- Creative_synthesis sameAs m.0zgbdw1.
- Creative_synthesis sameAs Q17147151.
- Creative_synthesis wasDerivedFrom Creative_synthesis?oldid=610670685.
- Creative_synthesis isPrimaryTopicOf Creative_synthesis.