Latest Posts


  • The will to live

    Throughout recorded history, thinkers and natural philosophers have commented on the innate, energetic spark that is imbued within all living things. Eastern and Western civilisations have simultaneously described a will to live, an internal life force, a spirit, or soul,… Continue reading

    The will to live
  • What should life be like?

    What should life be like? What can we reasonably expect from our existence? I’m not referring to those ultra people, with extreme lifestyles, who live as monastic monks or who have blue blood and live in palaces. I’m also not… Continue reading

    What should life be like?
  • Draw Like a Boss

    In this interview, author Ashley Edge and Paul Carney explore the purpose of drawing and learning to draw, including explicit instruction. Ashley Edge is a Lake District based artist and the author of the Draw Like a Boss series of… Continue reading

    Draw Like a Boss
  • It’s Life Jim!

    Some scientists now believe the chances of life emerging on Earth by itself are too remote. In a very honest, refreshing, (but complex), scientific paper, Robert Endres of the Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College, London in December 2025, explored… Continue reading

    It’s Life Jim!
  • Finding God in an age of reason

    What evidence is there that God exists? In my opinion, the likelihood of the universe springing into existence by itself, for no reason, is so remote as to be non-existent. The mathematics of this universe forming event are mind-bogglingly extreme.… Continue reading

    Finding God in an age of reason
  • The Blob

    A short story. The blob floated mindlessly in the darkness. It had no eyes, or senses, save the ability to touch. To feel. It had no explicit conscious thoughts as such. But, driven by impulse, it knew what it wanted.… Continue reading

    The Blob
  • One in a billion

    In the Big Bang, when the universe was formulated, there should have been a blinding flash of radiation as these opposing forces cancelled each other out. But that is not what happened. By the order of one particle in a… Continue reading

    One in a billion
  • Welcome to the spirit world.

    A short story. It had been another excellent meeting, Wendy thought, as she tidied her props away into her handbag and picked up her phone. Her back was killing her from sitting on a hard seat all night, but she… Continue reading

    Welcome to the spirit world.
  • Stephen Hawking: Is there a God?

    “One could define God as the embodiment of the laws of nature. However, this is not what most people would think of as God. They mean a human-like being, with whom one can have a personal relationship.” Hawking refers to… Continue reading

    Stephen Hawking: Is there a God?
  • Beyond Words

    All of our thinking is through words, all of our actions, all of our science, all of our literature, all of our history, all our technology, all our kingdoms and empires. All of it stems from language and communication. And… Continue reading

    Beyond Words
  • Pure awareness is heaven

    What are your thoughts on life after death? Where do you think we go when we die? Perhaps you think you’ll live eternally in a heavenly paradise surrounded by your loved ones. Maybe you don’t believe any of that stuff… Continue reading

    Pure awareness is heaven
  • Movie Night

    ‘Where the hell am I?’ she muttered to herself, as the vortex gave way to a dimly lit room, complete with brightly-coloured, patterned furnishings and the kind of Jamaican, cultural furnishings she was familiar with from her childhood. ‘Oh wow,… Continue reading

    Movie Night
  • Roads to Happiness

    Two eastern mystics with profound insights into the nature of existence and how to lead happier lives are Sri Ramana Maharshi and Thich Nhat Hanh. Maharshi was a Hindu sage who lived around eighty years ago in India, while Hanh… Continue reading

    Roads to Happiness
  • How can an inanimate force become a God? 

    When we think of a force such as the quantum field, we don’t think of an omnipotent, personified being, we think of an abstract mass of crackling energy; a bubbling froth of excitable forces, where a myriad of particles might… Continue reading

    How can an inanimate force become a God? 
  • The axis of evil

    Aristotle’s geocentric model of the universe, with earth in the centre, fitted with western Biblical ideologies and so stood for two thousand years until Copernicus upset the apple cart and proclaimed the sun was at the centre of things. Despite… Continue reading

    The axis of evil
  • True Survivor (the pom-poms)

    Harry woke up before the alarm and instinctively woke his wife, Jacinda, too. ‘Hey Jac, come on, you’ve got a long day today, you’re on lates.’ ‘What? Huh, oh God, my head hurts.’ ‘I’ll let you go in the shower… Continue reading

    True Survivor (the pom-poms)
  • The grand coder

    A computer coder creates a virtual world which replicates our ‘real’ world, and the characters have a form of artificial intelligence. Characters in this world have the ability to sense their environment, and assume what they experience is real. In… Continue reading

    The grand coder
  • An odd thing to find

    ‘Tonight, we bring you a special report on the mysterious phenomena known as sea pyramids – the strange, glowing triangular prisms that have washed up on the beaches of Japan and the Philippines in recent months. ‘Professor Richard Binks, a… Continue reading

    An odd thing to find
  • The True Self

    The true Self is the spiritual self. The true Self is the single self; it is not scattered, disorganised or divided.  The true Self has no ego.  The true Self does not crave attention, fame, status, wealth, or ambition. The… Continue reading

    The True Self
  • The Secret of Life

    There is a secret to life that is so simple, yet so elusive, and it is this: all the life that has ever existed, in every corner of the universe, has one primary purpose – to find happiness. What is… Continue reading

    The Secret of Life
  • An Origin Story 

    A young girl was seated alone in a plush café, talking into her friend through her smartphone. The friend was on speakerphone, and the girl, although clearly distressed, made no attempt to hide her conversations. The girl sobbed and wailed… Continue reading

    An Origin Story 
  • Last Night in Middlesbrough

    The old man winced in pain as he leant forward to pull the flimsy blanket over his calloused, gnarled feet. Even thick, thermal socks weren’t enough to keep out the icy cold depths of winter. It wouldn’t be long now,… Continue reading

    Last Night in Middlesbrough
  • Dragged kicking and screaming

    Do you trust your instincts? Everybody talks about the good old days, the good old days, right? Well, let’s talk about the good old days. As bad as we think they are, These will become the good old days for our children. Gladys Knight… Continue reading

    Dragged kicking and screaming
  • The Fundamental Spirit

    Reality has a fundamental layer that pervades and connects all things. The Hindus call it Brahman; the invisible essence that permeates the whole universe. The Chinese call it the Tao. Buddhists call it the Dharma. Scientists might call it the… Continue reading

    The Fundamental Spirit
  • An Almighty state of being

    God for me, isn’t a being in the sky, but a creative life force all around me, present in all things. As my regular readers will know, I’ve been on a journey of self-discovery over the last year and an… Continue reading

    An Almighty state of being
  • Finding Patterns

    Pattern Is religion just the brain seeing patterns in things? Human beings have a tendency to attach supernatural meanings to everyday phenomena. Seeing faces in clouds (pareidolia), believing there is a pattern in random events (like in gambling), or confirmation… Continue reading

    Finding Patterns
  • Believing in Nothing

    No one believes in a God who does nothing,” G. K. Chesterton  Something rather than nothing It seems obvious to me that something, rather than nothing, created the universe. Proving it, however, is extremely difficult, if not impossible. It is… Continue reading

    Believing in Nothing
  • If everything that exists has a cause, who or what is the cause of God?

    Preface: Some people associate God with that described in religious texts, others like me simply say that God is an unknown higher power. The cosmological argument for the existence of God says that nothing exists without a cause. The universe… Continue reading

    If everything that exists has a cause, who or what is the cause of God?
  • The Ouroboros

    How are you feeling right now? “The sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being.” Carl Jung For me, one of the hardest aspects of having ADHD is emotional dysregulation. I’ve struggled… Continue reading

    The Ouroboros
  • An Atheist Rebuttal

    A rebuttal of a New Scientist article by atheist Victor J. Stenger In his 2012 New Scientist article, the God Hypothesis, Victor J. Stenger focusses on the Judaic-Christian-Islamic version of God, and then looks for empirical evidence for it. Here… Continue reading

    An Atheist Rebuttal
  • Melding our Minds

    A mind meld is a fictional, telepathic link that the character Spock was able to perform on other organisms to connect their minds. But could it possibly be a real ability? Might we be able to connect our thoughts with… Continue reading

    Melding our Minds
  • Part of something greater

    If the Earth were a hydrogen atom, and I looked out from my window at the electron whizzing past in the air above, I might be tempted to think that this was all there was. After all, I wouldn’t know… Continue reading

    Part of something greater
  • What is the purpose of our existence?

    Reading time 10 minutes For the majority of the world’s population, God is the purpose of their existence. According to the 13th-century Italian scholar Thomas Aquinas, the ultimate goal of human existence is to attain a supernatural union with God,… Continue reading

    What is the purpose of our existence?
  • A universal SATs exam

    What are you curious about? I’m curious about God. I’m pretty sure God exists, but I’m also pretty sure there is no Divine Intervention. This is because I have enough evidence to say that the universe creating itself is highly… Continue reading

    A universal SATs exam
  • A Spiritual Journey

    What are your future travel plans? Life is taking me on a journey at present and it’s one I didn’t seek. Of course, all life is a journey, but this is something completely different. These last few years, I’ve felt… Continue reading

    A Spiritual Journey
  • Near Death Experiences

    I’ve been reading an old book about Near Death Experiences called Life After Life by Dr Raymond Moody. It very much relates to a topic I wrote about a while ago Where Do We Go When We Die? in which… Continue reading

    Near Death Experiences
  • The effects of infinity on finite systems

    “Imagine you had a perfectly sealed box. Nothing can come in, and nothing can escape. Into this box you placed an apple and sealed it shut. If you waited long enough, the apple would go through various states of decomposition.… Continue reading

    The effects of infinity on finite systems
  • Life and time

    Which activities make you lose track of time? Einstein showed that, rather than there being a single unified time, time is relative, and so every phenomena has its own time. There isn’t a single entity of time, there are numerous… Continue reading

    Life and time
  • Why Isn’t Life Easy?

    Why isn’t life easy? If a God created life, why make it so difficult? I mean, if you were omnipotent, and you were designing life, surely you’d make it so that things ticked over nicely, you’d want them to purr… Continue reading

    Why Isn’t Life Easy?
  • Splashing in Puddles

    So many of us are finding the world overwhelming these days. The constant hostility on social media, the lack of empathy and tolerance for other people’s’ views, not to mention the depressing news stories, climate change and soaring crime, it’s… Continue reading

    Splashing in Puddles
  • Was the world made for us?

    Imagine there was a safari park, complete with big cats, monkeys, zebras, giraffes etc. Now, imagine that the human keepers became extinct and the park was left to its own devices, with all the cage doors left open. There would… Continue reading

    Was the world made for us?
  • Explore Paul Carney’s Two Unique Albums

    Paul Carney has released two albums, “Dying Days,” produced by Mike Franklin in 2008, featuring a tribute track for his late mother, and “Suspicion,” recorded in his home studio in 2010. He also performed covers with the band Red Book.… Continue reading

    Explore Paul Carney’s Two Unique Albums
  • Hand of God?

    Many years ago I had a marine fish tank which took a lot of hard work to keep. I had to make sure it was always at the right temperature. I had to check the pH levels and ensure the… Continue reading

    Hand of God?
  • The Spirit Within Me

    How important is spirituality in your life? I define the spirit as the living essence of a person, which includes consciousness, and the bioelectrical life force within all living things. In this way, the spirit is my mind and my… Continue reading

    The Spirit Within Me
  • Beyond Words

    All of our thinking is through words, all of our actions, all of our science, all of our literature, all of our history, all our technology, all our kingdoms and empires. All of it stems from language and communication. And… Continue reading

    Beyond Words
  • Valuing our Values

    Your beliefs become your thoughts, your thoughts become your words, your words become your actions, your actions become your habits, your habits become your values, your values become your destiny. Mahatma Gandhi  We all have values that mould and shape our… Continue reading

    Valuing our Values
  • How to lead a good life

    What are the most important things needed to live a good life? Dear Margot  Here are five life lessons I’ve accumulated over the years. I hope they will help you become happy and healthy when you grow up. There are… Continue reading

    How to lead a good life
  • I Believe…

    Beliefs are the foundations upon which we build our sense of self. They are pivotal to our well being and happiness. But our beliefs are also personal, insecure and subjective. That’s partly because of the nature of knowledge itself, but… Continue reading

    I Believe…
  • Get away from it all

    It’s hard to be happy if you’re constantly looking inward. When we focus on ourselves too much, when we live inside our own heads, or even when our ailments occupy more of our time than they should, we suffer. It’s… Continue reading

    Get away from it all
  • Education education education

    What advice would you give to your teenage self? Stop dreaming and finish your education. Everything good will come to you from education. Continue reading

    Education education education
  • Abstractions of Microbes

    A selection from a series of drawings I did based on microbiology. These are produced digitally on an iPad using an Apple Pencil in Procreate. Continue reading

    Abstractions of Microbes
  • Tea total

    What is your favorite drink? I used to LOVE red wine but then in 2015 I gave up alcohol because my liver scores weren’t very good and I wasn’t well. I have a weak liver and my Dad died of… Continue reading

    Tea total
  • My favourite person

    Who are your favourite people to be around? My wife. We spend all day together, every day and I never tire of being with her. However, my other favourite person is my granddaughter. Once a week we take her for… Continue reading

    My favourite person
  • Am I going bananas?

    Alethea thought she was going mad. When she awoke that morning, she went downstairs for breakfast and her banana started talking to her! It said it wasn’t really real. It told her it was just a shadow on a cave… Continue reading

    Am I going bananas?
  • A bit of a twitch

    The birds in my garden are a constant source of pleasure for me. I am lucky enough to live near a nature reserve and so get some real beauties visiting me. Here are some birds I’ve drawn or painted. I… Continue reading

    A bit of a twitch
  • “This is another fine-tuned mess you’ve gotten me into…”

    ‘When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?’ John Maynard Keynes ‘We have overwhelming evidence for cosmic purpose. Goal-directedness played some role in shaping the early universe. Professor Phillip Goff  I recently outlined that I… Continue reading

    “This is another fine-tuned mess you’ve gotten me into…”
  • Sweating the small stuff

    I made several observational drawings of microorganisms a while ago, and I tried to make them in the style of Renaissance drawings of the masters. Here are two drawings I really like. I hope you like them too! Continue reading

    Sweating the small stuff
  • Abstract Art

    When I was an art student, many moons ago, I hated abstract art. Back then, I believed that art required skill to be ‘good’. I thought that art was a craft that needed to be honed and developed. Abstract artists,… Continue reading

    Abstract Art
  • Crows, crows, and more damn crows

    I went through a period of drawing nothing but crows for about two years. I really love them and enjoyed this drawing period immensely. The problem I had was that I just couldn’t get enough high quality images in the… Continue reading

    Crows, crows, and more damn crows
  • The Great Creative in the Sky

    “I often wish (God) would manifest himself a bit more. He limits himself to once in a million years if we’re lucky.’ Peter Cook ***** I’m not an atheist – I don’t disbelieve in God, but I’m not religious either.… Continue reading

    The Great Creative in the Sky
  • Digitally hand-made crafts

    Digital art gets a bad rap from some people. I’m regularly told I can’t enter my art for competitions or excluded from exhibiting because it has been produced digitally. I certainly don’t get the same social media validation as other… Continue reading

    Digitally hand-made crafts
  • Wise advice

    I really love this quote from Plato, written nearly 2,400 years ago. It’s still resonates with me now and I think it’s good for younger people to bear in mind. Us oldies are here to help and guide. (The illustration… Continue reading

    Wise advice
  • Anatomical Self-Portraits

    Here are a few anatomical self-portraits I did in 2022. I find it incredible that all of this is stuffed inside our heads! Continue reading

    Anatomical Self-Portraits
  • Anatomical art

    I produced these drawings during lockdown from medical atlases. I have a long obsession with the human body and its many intricacies. I hope you like them. Don’t forget to hit subscribe and like! If any medical students want to… Continue reading

    Anatomical art
  • Everyone is Better than Me

    I think this is a common thought among artists. We all doubt ourselves at times don’t we? It’s so easy for me to get caught up in negative thinking. I am diagnosed as OCD ADHD anxiety and depression. Apart from… Continue reading

    Everyone is Better than Me
  • The Electric Life Orchestra

    How bioelectricity shapes the whole universe and every living thing. Continue reading

    The Electric Life Orchestra
  • Four types of play that help us be more creative

    Play is a profound way to learn and is inherent to our species. We can formulate play activities, engineer them in ways that facilitate particular experiences. In other words, we can teach it. #creativitycanbetaught 1. Conceptual Blending Combine or juxtapose… Continue reading

    Four types of play that help us be more creative
  • Where do we go when we die?

    Spirits; 0% proof  I’ve been thinking quite a lot about spirits lately, and what happens to us when we die. Unfortunately for me, the spirits are the out of body kind, not the alcoholic kind, as I don’t drink. I… Continue reading

    Where do we go when we die?
  • AI – the artists friend, not foe

    A while ago now, I wrote a post called Art is dead, long live AI. In it, I spelled out how AI works creatively, and gave some practical ways in which we can teach AI skills in art rooms in… Continue reading

    AI – the artists friend, not foe
  • My Art

    A huge reason why I chose to retire from education was my burning ambition to spend more time in my own art and creativity. I reckon I have a few years left in me yet and so I want to… Continue reading

    My Art
  • The Arthrobot Scriptures

    My new novel is finally in the Amazon bookstore. It’s only taken me over 15 years to get it to this point! I wrote and re-wrote it several times during this period, pushed it one side, abandoned it, then picked… Continue reading

    The Arthrobot Scriptures
  • Art Assessment

    When it comes to inspection, inspectors are looking to see that a school’s assessment system supports the pupils’ journeys through the curriculum. Inspectors do not need to see quantities of data, spreadsheets, graphs and charts on how children are performing.… Continue reading

    Art Assessment
  • Vision and its impact on learning

    Outside-In model of seeing I’ve thought long and hard in the past about vision; how do we see and how is vision processed in the brain? Now, I’m an artist, not a biologist or scientist, but it seems natural to… Continue reading

    Vision and its impact on learning
  • Book Review

    Teaching a diverse primary art curriculum, a practical guide written and illustrated by Kaytie Holdstock Coming on the back of the Visualise: Race & Inclusion in Art Education report into diversity in art and design education, Kaytie Holdstock’s new book… Continue reading

    Book Review
  • The Beatles’ Creative Influences

    The Beatles were some of the most creative people who have graced popular culture. So, what inspired the Beatles songwriting and how might we use this to inform our own creativity? Here are some examples I recorded from Paul and… Continue reading

    The Beatles’ Creative Influences
  • Fine Motor Skills in Art

    When we think of pupils making progress in art, we tend to think of pupils developing their skills or abilities in separate domains such as drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking and so on. Certainly, that’s the way most school progression maps… Continue reading

    Fine Motor Skills in Art
  • A Potted History of Art Pedagogy

    ‘Pedagogy, most commonly understood as the approach to teaching, is the theory and practice of learning, and how this process influences, and is influenced by, the social, political and psychological development of learners. Pedagogy, taken as an academic discipline, is… Continue reading

    A Potted History of Art Pedagogy
  • Art is dead. Long live AI

    Art is dead. Surely, artists are redundant now that we can just pop a few prompts into an AI engine and get a stunning piece of art? Artificial Intelligence software can produce new images based on a set of parameters… Continue reading

    Art is dead. Long live AI
  • Creative Choice

    Some teachers believe that we need to master skills before we can be creative. They say that creativity cannot be properly realised without the skill to express it. So, they might narrow the creative activity to focus on mastering a… Continue reading

    Creative Choice
  • You CAN teach creativity

    By Paul Carney http://www.paulcarneyarts.com Some very knowledgeable people say ‘you can’t teach creativity’. You can. As a creative teacher, I teach people how to be creative all the time. I can teach you the historical processes by which inventions and… Continue reading

    You CAN teach creativity
  • Developing imagination in learners

    Imagination is the foundation of all inventiveness and innovation. It is uniquely human, and with it, we have been able to think, design, conceive, construct and develop our whole human society. Imagination is a powerful tool for learning and with… Continue reading

    Developing imagination in learners
  • Schemas

    The term schema refers to the cognitive structures we have to describe various categories of knowledge about the world. Theorist Jean Piaget introduced the term schema, and they are linked to his theory of cognitive development, which said that children… Continue reading

    Schemas
  • Artistic development in Children

    By Paul Carney This blog post contains extracts from an essay by Anna Kindler – Art in early Childhood “One man may sketch something with his pen on half a sheet of paper in one day, or may cut it… Continue reading

    Artistic development in Children
  • Sequencing learning in art and design? Don’t ask the DfE!

    Schools all over England are being judged by Ofsted on their ability to sequence learning and progression in the subject, despite the fact that the national curriculum for art and design in England isn’t properly sequenced and it’s progression of… Continue reading

    Sequencing learning in art and design? Don’t ask the DfE!
  • Art and Design Process

    Making art is a complex, diverse process that can take many forms and be shaped by a wide range of factors. I’ve attempted to outline the main ones in a series of graphic organisers that could help teachers plan activities… Continue reading

    Art and Design Process
  • Drawing to Learn Anything

    The exercises and techniques used in this post are contained in my book: Drawing to Learn Anything. Buy from www.paulcarneyarts.com Drawing to Learn Anything is a collection of ideas and explorations into how simple, non-skilled drawing can help you learn… Continue reading

    Drawing to Learn Anything
  • Digital drawing

    I am a lifelong artist, especially in the field of drawing, aged 57 years. I feel comfortable working in a variety of styles; literal or abstract, I work across a wide range of mediums and on a variety of scales,… Continue reading

    Digital drawing
  • It’s patently clear what the UK’s creativity problem is…

    The UK has been ranked as the 6th most innovative nation in the world by the Global Innovation Initiative in 2020. There is a lot we can be proud of. But if we are to improve our global position then… Continue reading

    It’s patently clear what the UK’s creativity problem is…
  • Memory is human. The Hidden Half of Pedagogy.

    Education is made up of a wide range of disciplines and delivered (usually) in classrooms to children aged three upwards. No two schools are identical, no class of children the same, some areas are affluent, some deprived. The education of… Continue reading

    Memory is human. The Hidden Half of Pedagogy.
  • The best way to remember something is to make it memorable.

    Memory is an emotional, sensory and experiential process. Spaced retrieval is one way we can remember better, but there are other techniques have been shown to be just as, if not more, effective. The first way we remember anything is… Continue reading

    The best way to remember something is to make it memorable.
  • Copying the ‘masters’.

    “The artist must imitate one of three objects: things as they were or are, things as they are said or thought to be, or things as they ought to be.” Aristotle 4th century BCE Aristotle’s Poetics Copying, mimesis, or iteration,… Continue reading

    Copying the ‘masters’.
  • Metabolic Innovation in Biology; Life’s Creative mechanisms

    Creativity in nature requires a huge variety of diverse possibilities and an incredible genotype network to support an almost infinite range of options. All life is made up of cells and there are many many different types. Cells work in… Continue reading

    Metabolic Innovation in Biology; Life’s Creative mechanisms
  • Drawing for Science, Invention & Discovery

    Buy it from: www.paulcarneyarts.com This book is aimed at all the scientists, mathematicians, engineers, pioneers and thinkers out there who understand the value of creative thinking in their field. It identifies some of the key cognitive processes that drive innovation,… Continue reading

    Drawing for Science, Invention & Discovery
  • Syllable Association Drawing (SAD) Memory Technique

    To remember complex words and terminology try the SAD technique that uses a combination of familiar, well-researched memory techniques. I don’t lay claim to inventing the memory techniques, only that I have developed a method of combining them into an… Continue reading

    Syllable Association Drawing (SAD) Memory Technique
  • Drawing for Anatomy

    I observed a second-year medical students’ practical anatomy session at the school of medical education, Newcastle University in May 2019 under the tutelage of Doctor Joanna Matthan. It was a great honour to be given an insight into this important… Continue reading

    Drawing for Anatomy
  • I dont have a creative bone in my body…

    “I dont have a creative bone in my body.” I hear this a lot. It usually comes from people who aren’t ‘arty’ types. These people believe that if they don’t make their own craft Christmas cards or attend local art… Continue reading

    I dont have a creative bone in my body…
  • Can Creativity be taught? Yes, I do it every day.

    Creativity; noun – the use of imagination or original ideas to create something. Inventiveness. Source; Oxford English Dictionary There is a general agreement among scholars that creativity involves the production of novel, useful products,” (Mumford, 2003, p. 110) however hundreds of… Continue reading

    Can Creativity be taught? Yes, I do it every day.
  • Perfect Child

    No two things in nature are exactly the same, yet everything is made from perfect, exact particles. Nature is like some eerie living Minecraft game, where electrons and atoms simulate bricks and build incredible, unique structures. The implication of this… Continue reading

    Perfect Child
  • Creativity Myths

    Creativity arises naturally as a result of knowing more The most knowledgeable people aren’t necessarily the most creative. In fact, it’s often the naive newcomer with a fresh pair of eyes that makes a breakthrough. Increasing knowledge means increasing awareness… Continue reading

    Creativity Myths