Page:Culture.vs.Copyright 01.pdf/67

 Beta: They all are necessary. You skip any single point and you will not get a work of art.

Kappa: But you certainly don’t know how to take a beautiful photograph in the beginning, do you? How does your aesthetic goal work then?

Beta: And if one doesn’t have this goal, how then can a beautiful picture happen?

Kappa: What if you wanted to take one picture but happened to spot another interesting subject?

Beta: That means I changed the subject, but I could not just skip it, right? You cannot make a picture of nothing.

Alpha: Why don’t you make “nothing” your subject then?

Beta: You still have to have a subject.

Delta: OK, what if we ask another question. Do these points of yours apply only to art?

Alpha: The initial question was about creativity in general, not about arts.

Gamma: Yes, and we even have questions, whether art is always creative and whether all we asked about art could be applied to non-arts and vice versa.

Teacher: That is right.

Kappa: Listen, Beta. One can be really, really non-creative even with a subject, right?

Beta:. . . Yes,. . . obviously.

Gamma: Can one be non-creative and still have a creative goal?

Beta: You mean one can want to create something? Just want?

Kappa: Yes, and this will be number two, agree?

Teacher: I am recalling that Beta said the idea must be about how to make something beautiful.

Gamma: If we are talking about arts!

Delta: Yeah, we can drop this requirement about beauty.

Beta: I feel like you are going to leave me bone dry.

Alpha: You will survive, don’t worry.

Kappa: Hold it. Number three—one can have excellent skills. ..

Beta: And accomplish nothing. I give up.

Delta: Wait, wait. You cannot have the third point in place and yet be non-creative!