Physical Space is the way the world is truly manifested, not concerning any biased opinion or perception.
Psychological Space is a person’s interpretation of the world in connection with emotions, memories and their imagination.
Creativity is an imaginative process that goes on within a person [intrapersonal] or between persons [interpersonal] that results in a novel, public work that holds significance for a single person, society or history.
Spatial Intelligence is the capacity for seeing patterns, connections and relationships among physical and psychological space in the world. It is evaluated by looking at a person’s performance level in everyday instances, such as judging the amount of leftover food to fit into a container, estimating the amount of space to parallel park, and the ability to navigate a familiar space.
Spatial Creativity is the conscious manipulation of patterns, connections and relationships among physical and psychological space in the world. These new connections are helpful and novel to a single person, to a society or in history. Furthermore, the actions carried out through a spatially creative process refine “everyday” actions.
These definitions are key to my proposal because I will begin to use these definitions to state how people can be spatially creative. Currently, I believe people can be spatially creative in 5 different ways:
1. Change of Locomotion: This involves changing the way you move through a space. This would involve literally changing the way you move [crawling vs walking] or involve changing how you control your movement [riding a train vs walking]. I argue that having a more active role in your movement through space makes you more aware of your travel through space, not just the destination.
2. Spatial Redefinition of Use: This involves manipulating your schemas about a certain environment. As an example, someone would be spatially creative by entering a defined study space and turning it into a performance space.
3. Object Manipulation: This involves the manipulation of an object in physical space. This can be referred to as "hacking" an object, where you can redefine the use of an object for your personal purpose.
4. Path Alteration: This involves navigating a space in a way that people would normally not. Often times this is seen when people do not walk on designated paths. Though this may be an intuitive navigation of space based on wants/needs, it is spatially creative because it is defying social norms.
5. Differ Spatial Perception: Lastly, this involves a reinterpretation of space psychologically. A person's imagination is highly engaged and their new interpretation of space involves a reevaluation of connections and affordances in space.
No comments:
Post a Comment