Does happiness chase away the creative ability?
This
intriguing New York Times article suggests that depression and its
attendant emotions might play an evolutionary role that has led to its
being preserved in the human species across time, perhaps for the
creative advantages that it confers.
Imagine, no Lascaux cave art, if it weren't for a miserable young hunter
who missed his great prey on the plains. Instead, he decided to draw
his quarry on the walls, trying to recapture the figure and spirit of
the animal that had eluded him in reality.
I exaggerate of course, but there's no proof to the contrary, either. As
to the article's premise that heightened pain can result in a
heightened attention to detail, I can attest to that from just merely
the experience of physical pain (as in a migraine), tiny things jump out
with greater clarity, cutting through the pain and embedding themselves
in the brain- the angle of the sun, the smell of cooking oil twenty
yards away, the imperceptible sway of a branch, the suddenly deafening
rendition of the same phrase for the nth time by the robin outside in
the yew tree…
Just imagine how it must be for someone who is under the considerable
mental anguish that accompanies a depressive state, and it becomes
easier to postulate why this horrendous condition might have persisted
over the millenia that it took for homo sapiens to evolve to their
current state.
(Cross-posted from Fluff 'n' Stuff)
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