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Cargo Interactive » mythology

Cargo Interactive

with the brain in mind

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Category: mythology


Convergence

20 October, 2008 (10:23) | categorization, conceptual flipping, mythology | By: cargo

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about convergence. I see it as one of the main ingredients in creativity, and we see it everywhere when we look for it.

By convergence, I mean, whenever you take two concepts and put them together to create one concept. Joseph Campbell, for example, has referred to the dragon as a serpent and an eagle. It’s a very comon property of mythical creatures: a mermaid is both a human and a fish, a centaur is both a man and a horse, pegasus is both a horse and a bird. These creatures are not a patchy mish-mash of concepts. They take the best of each half to produce a meaningful whole. Birds are associated with flying, so a creature that inherits the characteristics of the bird should fly, it shouldn’t inherit a birds legs, for example.

a Chimera - by Yoshitaka Amano

Sometimes meaningless hybrids are produced for the sake of confusion and horror. The Chimera is the classic example, a creature which usually is comprised of snake, lion, and goat parts. What makes the Chimera interesting is how strange the combination is executed - often starting the the prototype of a lion, then swapping out the tail for a serpent, and then having a goat’s head jutting out of the lion’s back. This certainly offends our sensibilities, and it’s meant to. So it’s clear that the choice of, let’s say, ‘ingredients’ changes the taste of a mixture.

I recently watched a number of 80s cartoon intros on youtube, for nostalgia’s sake, and I was struck by how often this method of combining ingredients is employed.

No Such Thing as A Dragon

30 June, 2008 (17:05) | literature, mythology, psychology | By: cargo

A couple years ago, a friend of mine, who is studying Cognitive Science at the University of Toronto, introduced me to some ideas which completely changed the way I looked at the world and myself. Among those ideas was Csikszentmihalyi’s work in Positive Psychology. This lecture was another.

As an English student, this bridge between literature and psychology is extremely compelling for me. It runs about an hour, but I highly recommend it to anyone with the time who has an interest in the value of narrative in everyday life.