Karpel Tunnel wrote:Creative men have lower levels of testosterone. Creative women have higher.
Than normal for their sex, that is.
lordoflight wrote:What is the seat of creativity?
barbarianhorde wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:Creative men have lower levels of testosterone. Creative women have higher.
Than normal for their sex, that is.
How do you figure?
Some one like say, Picasso seems to have had pretty high testosterone. Creativity isn't possible without wildly throwing around libidinal energy.
What I can believe is that creative people are more right brained meaning less murderous and more seeking.
barbarianhorde wrote:lordoflight wrote:What is the seat of creativity?
Technically the stars.
In any case its not in us, but what we live in. We live in the seat of creativity. We can either be just creation or be part of the process of creation that recreates itself.
barbarianhorde wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:Creative men have lower levels of testosterone. Creative women have higher.
Than normal for their sex, that is.
How do you figure?
High Testosterone Level: A Hurdle to Creating Art
A research in Current Anthropology, a journal dedicated to study and learn more about the human race or humanity, discovered that our antediluvian human ancestry may have been hindered to yield or create art for the reason that their testosterone levels are very high.
According to study and analysis, about 50,000 years in the past, technology, and cultures such as visual arts, music, and literature started to change and progress and was prompted by a rather abrupt decrease of testosterone-related qualities in skeletal remnants of humans. The decline of testosterone affected them to become less hostile or aggressive making them more open and willing to live with others in bigger groups or clusters.
This incident was said to have manifested the beginning of artistic or creative expressions and the advancement of utensils and tools plus a more intricate manner of harvesting food. The research’s timeline and discoveries match to the visual art or cavern paintings and images discovered near Málaga, Spain approximately 42,000 years before.
Lead author, Robert Cieri, stated that “The modern human behaviors of technological innovation, making art and rapid cultural exchange probably came at the same time that we developed a more cooperative temperament,”
The research discussed that when people began treating each other nicer, there was progress in the human civilization and culture because of low testosterone level that decreased their hostility or aggression.
Gloominary wrote:Aside from not being able to give birth, I think men are the more creative, and destructive sex for that matter, women are more the preservative/sustentative sex.
Creative people are risk takers.
They dare to be different, stand out, stray from the beaten path.
experiment, observe and interpret, as opposed to relying on second hand info.
Men are risk takers, they prefer to learn things hands on, women are risk averse, they prefer to do things by the book.
That's why more women attend church and school, whereas more men entrepreneur.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:barbarianhorde wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:Creative men have lower levels of testosterone. Creative women have higher.
Than normal for their sex, that is.
How do you figure?
Well, honestly I am waiting for more research. But I thought it was interesting and kind of disturbing. The research below does not all fit perfectly together, but I was not using deduction, but rather working with what they seem to be finding out.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1938141
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1778236
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/nigel-ba ... ccounter=1High Testosterone Level: A Hurdle to Creating Art
A research in Current Anthropology, a journal dedicated to study and learn more about the human race or humanity, discovered that our antediluvian human ancestry may have been hindered to yield or create art for the reason that their testosterone levels are very high.
According to study and analysis, about 50,000 years in the past, technology, and cultures such as visual arts, music, and literature started to change and progress and was prompted by a rather abrupt decrease of testosterone-related qualities in skeletal remnants of humans. The decline of testosterone affected them to become less hostile or aggressive making them more open and willing to live with others in bigger groups or clusters.
This incident was said to have manifested the beginning of artistic or creative expressions and the advancement of utensils and tools plus a more intricate manner of harvesting food. The research’s timeline and discoveries match to the visual art or cavern paintings and images discovered near Málaga, Spain approximately 42,000 years before.
barbarianhorde wrote:Gloominary wrote:Actually what this research says is that when testosterone levels dropped species-wide, there came a greater level of cooperation.
Meaning that creative people had more of an impact, because their ideas where shared. Its not indicated at any level that specimen-specific low testosterone correlates to high creativity.
Fake science!
Karpel Tunnel wrote:barbarianhorde wrote:Gloominary wrote:Actually what this research says is that when testosterone levels dropped species-wide, there came a greater level of cooperation.
Meaning that creative people had more of an impact, because their ideas where shared. Its not indicated at any level that specimen-specific low testosterone correlates to high creativity.
Fake science!
That was just what that piece was focused on. The others focus on saliva tests of creative vs. non-creative people and findings that people who are more androgenous, testosterone-wise, are more likely to be creative. That is, woman with more than average, men with less.
barbarianhorde wrote:I don't think this is even possible. Creation is risk taking, thats just a fact.
I have very high testosterone and Im always creating.
I think these scientists are in the dark about what creation is. Probably they mean people who cut out ribbons and tie them to balloons, not philosophers or great artists or great scientists.
lordoflight wrote:[
I stated earlier I was talking mostly about art. When you say "I create a lot" it sounds like building. Testosterone boosts mental energy to a certain extent. I would say testosterone causes boredom and the inability to settle.
As for your artistic merits, if your avatar was drawn by you then you are a good artist, if not, then its just your word then, until you show us something you've made.
lordoflight wrote:So the ancient texts and ancient gods say Femininity is the seat of creativity. But modern science says testosterone and lust drives creativity.
What is the seat of creativity?
The Eternal Warrior wrote:lordoflight wrote:So the ancient texts and ancient gods say Femininity is the seat of creativity. But modern science says testosterone and lust drives creativity.
What is the seat of creativity?
All of it, including being nothing; shedding the flesh and becoming 'selfless'. Femininity can be masculine when viewed from another angle, can be viewed as homosexuality in a male while masculinity can be viewed as lesbianics in females; like hooked on phonics; and the seat of creativity is just what we do with all the pain of not knowing and everything else as its passed around. Creativity and the 'seat'.... what of when there aren't any seats or not enough seats? who gets creative then?
I'm a very creative person - have no idea what my testosterone levels are - and yes, there is a certain kind of risk taking involved, but it feels unlike that when I take risks in sports or in nature.barbarianhorde wrote:I don't think this is even possible. Creation is risk taking, thats just a fact.
WEll, my sense is that coming from you this is a compliment, so thanks.barbarianhorde wrote:I bet your testosterone levels are pretty high.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:WEll, my sense is that coming from you this is a compliment, so thanks.barbarianhorde wrote:I bet your testosterone levels are pretty high.
I'm a very creative person - have no idea what my testosterone levels are
- and yes, there is a certain kind of risk taking involved, but it feels unlike that when I take risks in sports or in nature.
I experience it as much more open and relaxed than physical or any aggressive type testosterone moments.
Sure, there is a strong assertiveness, sometimes in the process.
You have to be willing to really be yourself.
Arcturus Descending wrote:Karpel Tunnel
What kind of risk taking is involved in creating ~ unless it is a political work of art or text, like speaking out against grave injustice? Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream is definitely a work of art and anyone who believes otherwise is deaf, blind and dumb.
In the context of testosterone, where hunting, fighting might get categorized and sports are a modern way of using the same kinds of energies.What do sports have to do with creativity? Wouldn't that be more in the realm of strategies and the like?
You have to be willing to really be yourself.
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