Imagination is the production of sensations, feelings and thoughts informing oneself. These experiences can be re-creations of past experiences, such as vivid memories with imagined changes, or completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes. Imagination helps apply knowledge to solve problems and is fundamental to integrating experience and the learning process.
Imagination is the process of developing theories and ideas based on the functioning of the mind through a creative division. Drawing from actual perceptions, imagination employs intricate conditional processes that engage both semantic and episodic memory to generate new or refined ideas. This part of the mind helps develop better and easier ways to accomplish tasks, whether old or new.
A way to train imagination is by listening to and practicing storytelling (narrative), wherein imagination is expressed through stories and writings such as fairy tales, fantasies, and science fiction. When children develop their imagination, they often exercise it through pretend play. They use role-playing to act out what they have imagined, and followingly, they play on by acting as if their make-believe scenarios are actual reality.
Etymology
The English word "imagination" originates from the Latin term "imaginatio," which is the standard Latin translation of the Greek term "phantasia." The Latin term also translates to "mental image" or "fancy." The use of the word "imagination" in English can be traced back to the mid-14th century, referring to a faculty of the mind that forms and manipulates images.
Definition
In modern philosophical understanding, imagination is commonly seen as a faculty for creating mental images and for making non-rational, associative transitions among these images.
One view of imagination links it to cognition, suggesting that imagination is a cognitive process in mental functioning. It is also associated with rational thinking in a way that both imaginative and rational thoughts involve the cognitive process that "underpins thinking about possibilities". However, imagination is not considered to be purely a cognitive activity because it is also linked to the body and place. It involves setting up relationships with materials and people, precluding the notion that imagination is confined to the mind.
The psychological view of imagination relates this concept to a cognate term, "mental imagery," which denotes the process of reviving in the mind recollections of objects previously given in sense perception. Since this use of the term conflicts with that of ordinary language, some psychologists prefer to describe this process as "imaging" or "imagery" or to speak of it as "reproductive" as opposed to "productive" or "constructive" imagination. Constructive imagination is further divided into voluntary imagination driven by the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC), such as mental rotation, and involuntary imagination (LPFC-independent), such as REM sleep dreaming, daydreaming, hallucinations, and spontaneous insight. In clinical settings, clinicians nowadays increasingly make use of visual imagery for psychological treatment of anxiety disorders, depression, schizophrenia and Parkinson's disease.
Conceptual history
Ancient
Ancient Greek philosophers conceived imagination, or "phantasia," as working with "pictures" in the sense of mental images.Aristotle, in his work De Anima, identified imagination as a faculty that enables an image to occur within us, a definition associating imagination with a broad range of activities involved in thoughts, dreams, and memories.
In Philebus, Plato discusses daydreaming and considers imagination about the future as the work of a painter within the soul. However, Plato portrayed this painter as an illustrator rather than a creator, reflecting his view of imagination as a representational rather than an inventive faculty.
Greek philosophers typically distinguished imagination from perception and rational thinking: "For imagination is different from either perceiving or discursive thinking, though it is not found without sensation, or judgement without it" (De Anima, iii 3).Aristotle viewed imagination as a faculty that mediates between the senses and intellect. The mental images it manipulates, whether arising from visions, dreams or sensory perception, were thought to be transmitted through the lower parts of the soul, suggesting that these images could be influenced by emotions and primal desires, thereby confusing the judgement of the intellect.
Middle Ages
In the Middle Ages, the concept of imagination encompassed domains such as religion, literature, artwork, and notably, poetry. Men of science often recognized poets as "imaginative," viewing imagination as the mental faculty that specifically permitted poetry writing. This association, they suggested, lies in the capacity of imagination for image-making and image-forming, which results in a sense of "visualizing" with "the inner eye."
An epitome of this concept is Chaucer's idea of the "mind's eye" in The Man of Law's Tale from The Canterbury Tales (ca. 1390). He described a man who, although blind, was able to "see" with an "eye of his mind":
"That oon of hem was blynd and myghte not see, / But it were with thilke eyen of his mynde / With whiche men seen, after that they ben blynde."
Medieval theories of faculty psychology posited imagination as a faculty of the internal senses (alongside memory and common sense): imagination receives mental images from memory or perception, organizes them, and transmits them to the reasoning faculties, providing the intellect with sense data. In this way, it enables the reshaping of images from sense perception (even in the absence of perception, such as in dreams), performing a filtering function of reality.
Although not attributed the capacity for creations, imagination was thought to combine images received from memory or perception in creative ways, allowing for the invention of novel concepts or expressions. For example, it could fuse images of "gold" and "mountain" to produce the idea of a "golden mountain."
In medieval artistic works, imagination served the role of combining images of perceivable things to portray legendary, mysterious, or extraordinary creatures. This can be seen in the depiction of a Mongolian in the Grandes Chroniques de France(1241), as well as in the portrayal of angels, demons, hell, and the apocalypse in Christian religious paintings.
Renaissance and early modern
The Renaissance saw the revival of classical texts and the celebration for men's dignity, yet scholars of the time did not significantly contribute to the conceptual understanding of "imagination."Marsilio Ficino, for example, did not regard artistic creations such as painting, sculpture and poetry as privileged forms of human creativity, nor did he attribute creativity to the faculty of imagination. Instead, Ficino posited that imagination could be the vehicle through which divine intervention transmits insights in the form of images, which ultimately facilitates the creation of art.
Nevertheless, the groundwork laid by humanists made it easier for later thinkers to develop the connection between imagination and creativity.Early modern philosophers began to consider imagination as a trait or ability that an individual could possess. Miguel de Cervantes, influenced by Spanish physician and philosopher Juan Huarte de San Juan, crafted the iconic character Don Quixote, who epitomized Huarte's idea of "wits full of invention." This type of wit was thought to be typically found in individuals for whom imagination was the most prominent component of their "ingenium" (Spanish: ingenio; term meaning close to "intellect").
Early modern philosophers also started to acknowledge imagination as an active, cognitive faculty, although it was principally seen as a mediator between sense perception (Latin: sensus) and pure understanding (Latin: intellectio pura).René Descartes, in Meditations on First Philosophy (1641), interpreted imagination as a faculty actively focusing on bodies (corporeal entities) while being passively dependent on stimuli from different senses. In the writing of Thomas Hobbes, imagination became a key element of human cognition.
In the 16th and 17th centuries, the connotations of imagination" extended to many areas of early modern civic life.Juan Luis Vives noted the connection between imagination and rhetoric skills.Huarte extended this idea, linking imagination to any disciplines that necessitates "figures, correspondence, harmony, and proportion," such as medical practice and the art of warfare. Additionally, Galileo used the concept of imagination to conduct thought experiments, such as asking readers to imagine the direction a stone released from a sling would fly.
Enlightenment and thereafter
By the Age of Enlightenment, philosophical discussions frequently linked the power of imagination with creativity, particularly in aesthetics.William Duff was among the first to identify imagination as a quality of genius, distinguishing it from talent by emphasizing that only genius is characterized by creative innovation.Samuel Taylor Coleridge distinguished between imagination expressing realities of an imaginal realm above our mundane personal existence, and "fancy", or fantasy, which represents the creativity of the artistic soul. In Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot (French: Discours Préliminaire des Éditeurs), d'Alembert referred to imagination as the creative force for Fine Arts.
Immanuel Kant, in his Critique of Pure Reason (German: Kritik der reinen Vernunft), viewed imagination (German: Einbildungskraft) as a faculty of intuition, capable of making "presentations," i.e., sensible representations of objects that are not directly present.Kant distinguished two forms of imagination: productive and reproductive. Productive imagination functions as the original source of the presentation of an object, thus preceding experience; while reproductive imagination generates presentations derived from past experiences, recalling empirical intuitions it previously had.Kant's treatise linked imagination to cognition, perception, aesthetic judgement, artistic creation, and morality.
The Kantian idea prepared the way for Fichte, Schelling and the Romantics to transform the philosophical understanding of it into an authentic creative force, associated with genius, inventive activity, and freedom. In the work of Hegel, imagination, though not given as much importance as by his predecessors, served as a starting point for the defense of Hegelian phenomenology. Hegel distinguished between a phenomenological account of imagination, which focuses on the lived experience and consciousness, and a scientific, speculative account, which seeks to understand the nature and function of imagination in a systematic and theoretical manner.
Modern
Between 1913 and 1916, Carl Jung developed the concept of "active imagination" and introduced it into psychotherapy. For Jung, active imagination often includes working with dreams and the creative self via imagination or fantasy. It is a meditation technique wherein the contents of one's unconscious are translated into images, narratives, or personified as separate entities, thus serving as a bridge between the conscious "ego" and the unconscious.
Albert Einstein famously said: "Imagination... is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world."
Nikola Tesla described imagination as: "When I get an idea I start at once building it up in my imagination. I change the construction, make improvements and operate the device in my mind. It is absolutely immaterial to me whether I run my turbine in thought or test it in my shop. I even note if it is out of balance. There is no difference whatever, the results are the same. In this way I am able to rapidly develop and perfect a conception without touching anything."
The phenomenology of imagination is discussed in The Imaginary: A Phenomenological Psychology of the Imagination (French: L'Imaginaire: Psychologie phénoménologique de l'imagination), also published under the title The Psychology of the Imagination, a 1940 book by Jean-Paul Sartre. In this book, Sartre propounded his concept of imagination, with imaginary objects being "melanges of past impressions and recent knowledge," and discussed what the existence of imagination shows about the nature of human consciousness. Based on Sartre's work, subsequent thinkers extended this idea into the realm of sociology, proposing ideas such as imaginary and the ontology of imagination.
Cross cultural
Imagination has been, and continues to be a well-acknowledged concept in many cultures, particularly within religious contexts, as an image-forming faculty of the mind. In Buddhist aesthetics, imagination plays a crucial role in religious practice, especially in visualization practices, which include the recollection of the Buddha's body, visualization of celestial Buddhas and Buddha-fields (Pure Lands and mandalas), and devotion to images.
In Zhuang Zi's Taoism, imagination is perceived as a complex mental activity that is championed as a vital form of cognition. It is defended on empathetic grounds but discredited by the rational intellect as only a presentation and fantasy.
In psychological research
Memory
Memory and mental imagery are two mental activities involved in the process of imagination, each influencing the other.Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) technology shows that remembering and imagining activate the identical parts of the brain. When compared to the recall of common ideas, the generation of new and old original ideas exhibits a similar activation pattern, particularly in the bilateral parahippocampal and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) regions. This suggests that the construction of new ideas relies on processes similar to those in the reconstruction of original ideas from episodic memory.
Perception
Piaget posited that a person's perceptions depend on their world view. The world view is the result of arranging perceptions into existing imagery by imagination. Piaget cites the example of a child saying that the moon is following her when she walks around the village at night. Like this, perceptions are integrated into the world view so that they make sense. Imagination is needed to make sense of perceptions.
Brain activation
The neocortex and thalamus are crucial in controlling the brain's imagination, as well as other functions such as consciousness and abstract thought. Imagination involves many different brain functions, including emotions, memory, and thoughts.
Visual imagery involves a network of brain areas from the frontal cortex to sensory areas, overlapping with the default mode network, and can function much like a weak version of afferent perception.
A study that used fMRI while subjects were asked to imagine precise visual figures, to mentally disassemble them, or mentally blend them, showed activity in the occipital, frontoparietal, posterior parietal, precuneus, and dorsolateral prefrontal regions of the subject's brains.
Evolutionary theory
Phylogenetic acquisition of imagination was a gradual process. The simplest form of imagination, REM-sleep dreaming, evolved in mammals with acquisition of REM sleep 140 million years ago. Spontaneous insight improved in primates with acquisition of the lateral prefrontal cortex 70 million years ago. After hominins split from the chimpanzee line 6 million years ago they further improved their imagination. Prefrontal analysis was acquired 3.3 million years ago when hominins started to manufacture Mode One stone tools. Progress in stone tools culture to Mode Two stone tools by 2 million years ago signifies remarkable improvement of prefrontal analysis. The most advanced mechanism of imagination, prefrontal synthesis, was likely acquired by humans around 70,000 years ago and resulted in behavioral modernity. This leap toward modern imagination has been characterized by paleoanthropologists as the "Cognitive revolution", "Upper Paleolithic Revolution", and the "Great Leap Forward".
Moral imagination
Moral imagination usually describes the mental capacity to find answers to ethical questions and dilemmas through the process of imagination and visualization. Different definitions of "moral imagination" can be found in the literature.
The philosopher Mark Johnson described it as "[an ability to imaginatively discern various possibilities for acting in a given situation and to envision the potential help and harm that are likely to result from a given action."
In one proposed example, Hitler's assassin Claus von Stauffenberg was said to have decided to dare to overthrow the Nazi regime as a result (among other factors) of a process of "moral imagination." His willingness to kill Hitler was less due to his compassion for his comrades, his family, or friends living at that time, but from thinking about the potential problems of later generations and people he did not know. In other words, through a process of moral imagination he developed empathy for "abstract" people (for example, Germans of later generations, people who were not yet alive).
Artificial imagination
As a subcomponent of artificial general intelligence, artificial imagination generates, simulates, and facilitates real or possible fiction models to create predictions, inventions, or conscious experiences. The term also refers to the capability of machines or programs to simulate human activities, including creativity, vision, digital art, humour, and satire.
The research fields of artificial imagination traditionally include (artificial) visual and aural imagination, which extend to all actions involved in forming ideas, images, and concepts—activities linked to imagination. Practitioners are also exploring topics such as artificial visual memory, modeling and filtering content based on human emotions, and interactive search. Additionally, there is interest in how artificial imagination may evolve to create an artificial world comfortable enough for people to use as an escape from reality.
A subfield of artificial imagination that receives rising concern is artificial morals. Artificial intelligence faces challenges regarding the responsibility for machines' mistakes or decisions and the difficulty in creating machines with universally accepted moral rules. Recent research in artificial morals bypasses the strict definition of morality, using machine learning methods to train machines to imitate human morals instead. However, by considering data about moral decisions from thousands of people, the trained moral model may reflect widely accepted rules.
See also
- Creative visualization – Purposeful visualisation for neuropsychological, physiological or social effects
- Creativity – Forming something new and somehow valuable
- Fantasy (psychology) – Mental faculty of drawing imagination and desire in the human brain
- Imagery – Author's use of vivid and descriptive language to add depth to their work
- The Imaginary (psychoanalysis) – Term in Lacanian Psychoanalysis
- Imaginary (sociology) – Set of values, institutions, laws, and symbols through which people imagine their social whole
- Imagination Age – Proposed era of humanity after the Information Age
- Imagination inflation – Type of memory distortion
- Sociological imagination – Type of insight offered by the discipline of sociology
- Tulpa – Entity manifesting from mental powers
- Verisimilitude – Resemblance to reality
References
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To imagine is to form experiences in the mind. These can be recreations of past experiences as they happened such as vivid memories with imagined changes, or they can be completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes.
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Basically what this means is that the children use their make-believe situation and act as if what they are acting out is from a reality that already exists even though they have made it up.imagination comes after story created.
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Like feelings and emotions, imagination is a prickly topic with a history of exclusion from the realm of the cognitive.
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Rational thought and imaginative thought may be based on the same kinds of cognitive processes, processes that underpin thinking about possibilities.
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Further reading
- Books
- Byrne, R. M. J. (2005). The Rational Imagination: How People Create Alternatives to Reality. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
- Fabiani, Paolo "The Philosophy of the Imagination in Vico and Malebranche". F.U.P. (Florence UP), Italian edition 2002, English edition 2009.
- Salazar, Noel B. (2010) Envisioning Eden: Mobilizing imaginaries in tourism and beyond. Oxford: Berghahn.
- Wilson, J. G. (2016). "Sartre and the Imagination: Top Shelf Magazines". Sexuality & Culture. 20 (4): 775–784. doi:10.1007/s12119-016-9358-x. S2CID 148101276.
- Articles
- Salazar, Noel B. (2020). On imagination and imaginaries, mobility and immobility: Seeing the forest for the trees. Culture & Psychology 1–10.
- Salazar, Noel B. (2011). "The power of imagination in transnational mobilities". Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power. 18 (6): 576–598. doi:10.1080/1070289X.2011.672859. S2CID 143420324.
- Watkins, Mary: "Waking Dreams" [Harper Colophon Books, 1976] and "Invisible Guests - The Development of Imaginal Dialogues" [The Analytic Press, 1986]
- Moss, Robert: "The Three "Only" Things: Tapping the Power of Dreams, Coincidence, and Imagination" [New World Library, September 10, 2007]
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 14 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 304–305. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Imagination".
Three philosophers for whom imagination is a central concept are Kendall Walton, John Sallis and Richard Kearney. See in particular:
- Kendall Walton, Mimesis as Make-Believe: On the Foundations of the Representational Arts. Harvard University Press, 1990. ISBN 0-674-57603-9 (pbk.).
- John Sallis, Force of Imagination: The Sense of the Elemental (2000)
- John Sallis, Spacings-Of Reason and Imagination. In Texts of Kant, Fichte, Hegel (1987)
- Richard Kearney, The Wake of Imagination. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press (1988); 1st Paperback Edition- (ISBN 0-8166-1714-7)
- Richard Kearney, "Poetics of Imagining: Modern to Post-modern." Fordham University Press (1998)
External links
The dictionary definition of imagination at Wiktionary
- Media related to imagination at Wikimedia Commons
- Imagination on In Our Time at the BBC
- Imagination, Mental Imagery, Consciousness, and Cognition: Scientific, Philosophical and Historical Approaches
- Two-Factor Imagination Scale at the Open Directory Project
- "The neuroscience of imagination". TED-Ed.
Imagination is the production of sensations feelings and thoughts informing oneself These experiences can be re creations of past experiences such as vivid memories with imagined changes or completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes Imagination helps apply knowledge to solve problems and is fundamental to integrating experience and the learning process Olin Levi Warner Imagination 1896 Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building Washington D C Imagination is the process of developing theories and ideas based on the functioning of the mind through a creative division Drawing from actual perceptions imagination employs intricate conditional processes that engage both semantic and episodic memory to generate new or refined ideas This part of the mind helps develop better and easier ways to accomplish tasks whether old or new A way to train imagination is by listening to and practicing storytelling narrative wherein imagination is expressed through stories and writings such as fairy tales fantasies and science fiction When children develop their imagination they often exercise it through pretend play They use role playing to act out what they have imagined and followingly they play on by acting as if their make believe scenarios are actual reality EtymologyThe English word imagination originates from the Latin term imaginatio which is the standard Latin translation of the Greek term phantasia The Latin term also translates to mental image or fancy The use of the word imagination in English can be traced back to the mid 14th century referring to a faculty of the mind that forms and manipulates images DefinitionIn modern philosophical understanding imagination is commonly seen as a faculty for creating mental images and for making non rational associative transitions among these images One view of imagination links it to cognition suggesting that imagination is a cognitive process in mental functioning It is also associated with rational thinking in a way that both imaginative and rational thoughts involve the cognitive process that underpins thinking about possibilities However imagination is not considered to be purely a cognitive activity because it is also linked to the body and place It involves setting up relationships with materials and people precluding the notion that imagination is confined to the mind The psychological view of imagination relates this concept to a cognate term mental imagery which denotes the process of reviving in the mind recollections of objects previously given in sense perception Since this use of the term conflicts with that of ordinary language some psychologists prefer to describe this process as imaging or imagery or to speak of it as reproductive as opposed to productive or constructive imagination Constructive imagination is further divided into voluntary imagination driven by the lateral prefrontal cortex LPFC such as mental rotation and involuntary imagination LPFC independent such as REM sleep dreaming daydreaming hallucinations and spontaneous insight In clinical settings clinicians nowadays increasingly make use of visual imagery for psychological treatment of anxiety disorders depression schizophrenia and Parkinson s disease Conceptual historyAncient Ancient Greek philosophers conceived imagination or phantasia as working with pictures in the sense of mental images Aristotle in his work De Anima identified imagination as a faculty that enables an image to occur within us a definition associating imagination with a broad range of activities involved in thoughts dreams and memories In Philebus Plato discusses daydreaming and considers imagination about the future as the work of a painter within the soul However Plato portrayed this painter as an illustrator rather than a creator reflecting his view of imagination as a representational rather than an inventive faculty Greek philosophers typically distinguished imagination from perception and rational thinking For imagination is different from either perceiving or discursive thinking though it is not found without sensation or judgement without it De Anima iii 3 Aristotle viewed imagination as a faculty that mediates between the senses and intellect The mental images it manipulates whether arising from visions dreams or sensory perception were thought to be transmitted through the lower parts of the soul suggesting that these images could be influenced by emotions and primal desires thereby confusing the judgement of the intellect Middle Ages In the Middle Ages the concept of imagination encompassed domains such as religion literature artwork and notably poetry Men of science often recognized poets as imaginative viewing imagination as the mental faculty that specifically permitted poetry writing This association they suggested lies in the capacity of imagination for image making and image forming which results in a sense of visualizing with the inner eye An epitome of this concept is Chaucer s idea of the mind s eye in The Man of Law s Tale from The Canterbury Tales ca 1390 He described a man who although blind was able to see with an eye of his mind That oon of hem was blynd and myghte not see But it were with thilke eyen of his mynde With whiche men seen after that they ben blynde Medieval theories of faculty psychology posited imagination as a faculty of the internal senses alongside memory and common sense imagination receives mental images from memory or perception organizes them and transmits them to the reasoning faculties providing the intellect with sense data In this way it enables the reshaping of images from sense perception even in the absence of perception such as in dreams performing a filtering function of reality Medieval paintings of imaginary creatures as seen in frescos and manuscripts often combined body parts of different animals and even humans Although not attributed the capacity for creations imagination was thought to combine images received from memory or perception in creative ways allowing for the invention of novel concepts or expressions For example it could fuse images of gold and mountain to produce the idea of a golden mountain In medieval artistic works imagination served the role of combining images of perceivable things to portray legendary mysterious or extraordinary creatures This can be seen in the depiction of a Mongolian in the Grandes Chroniques de France 1241 as well as in the portrayal of angels demons hell and the apocalypse in Christian religious paintings Renaissance and early modern The Renaissance saw the revival of classical texts and the celebration for men s dignity yet scholars of the time did not significantly contribute to the conceptual understanding of imagination Marsilio Ficino for example did not regard artistic creations such as painting sculpture and poetry as privileged forms of human creativity nor did he attribute creativity to the faculty of imagination Instead Ficino posited that imagination could be the vehicle through which divine intervention transmits insights in the form of images which ultimately facilitates the creation of art Don Quixote engrossed in reading books of chivalry Nevertheless the groundwork laid by humanists made it easier for later thinkers to develop the connection between imagination and creativity Early modern philosophers began to consider imagination as a trait or ability that an individual could possess Miguel de Cervantes influenced by Spanish physician and philosopher Juan Huarte de San Juan crafted the iconic character Don Quixote who epitomized Huarte s idea of wits full of invention This type of wit was thought to be typically found in individuals for whom imagination was the most prominent component of their ingenium Spanish ingenio term meaning close to intellect Early modern philosophers also started to acknowledge imagination as an active cognitive faculty although it was principally seen as a mediator between sense perception Latin sensus and pure understanding Latin intellectio pura Rene Descartes in Meditations on First Philosophy 1641 interpreted imagination as a faculty actively focusing on bodies corporeal entities while being passively dependent on stimuli from different senses In the writing of Thomas Hobbes imagination became a key element of human cognition In the 16th and 17th centuries the connotations of imagination extended to many areas of early modern civic life Juan Luis Vives noted the connection between imagination and rhetoric skills Huarte extended this idea linking imagination to any disciplines that necessitates figures correspondence harmony and proportion such as medical practice and the art of warfare Additionally Galileo used the concept of imagination to conduct thought experiments such as asking readers to imagine the direction a stone released from a sling would fly Enlightenment and thereafter By the Age of Enlightenment philosophical discussions frequently linked the power of imagination with creativity particularly in aesthetics William Duff was among the first to identify imagination as a quality of genius distinguishing it from talent by emphasizing that only genius is characterized by creative innovation Samuel Taylor Coleridge distinguished between imagination expressing realities of an imaginal realm above our mundane personal existence and fancy or fantasy which represents the creativity of the artistic soul In Preliminary Discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot French Discours Preliminaire des Editeurs d Alembert referred to imagination as the creative force for Fine Arts Immanuel Kant in his Critique of Pure Reason German Kritik der reinen Vernunft viewed imagination German Einbildungskraft as a faculty of intuition capable of making presentations i e sensible representations of objects that are not directly present Kant distinguished two forms of imagination productive and reproductive Productive imagination functions as the original source of the presentation of an object thus preceding experience while reproductive imagination generates presentations derived from past experiences recalling empirical intuitions it previously had Kant s treatise linked imagination to cognition perception aesthetic judgement artistic creation and morality The Kantian idea prepared the way for Fichte Schelling and the Romantics to transform the philosophical understanding of it into an authentic creative force associated with genius inventive activity and freedom In the work of Hegel imagination though not given as much importance as by his predecessors served as a starting point for the defense of Hegelian phenomenology Hegel distinguished between a phenomenological account of imagination which focuses on the lived experience and consciousness and a scientific speculative account which seeks to understand the nature and function of imagination in a systematic and theoretical manner Modern Between 1913 and 1916 Carl Jung developed the concept of active imagination and introduced it into psychotherapy For Jung active imagination often includes working with dreams and the creative self via imagination or fantasy It is a meditation technique wherein the contents of one s unconscious are translated into images narratives or personified as separate entities thus serving as a bridge between the conscious ego and the unconscious Albert Einstein famously said Imagination is more important than knowledge Knowledge is limited Imagination encircles the world Nikola Tesla described imagination as When I get an idea I start at once building it up in my imagination I change the construction make improvements and operate the device in my mind It is absolutely immaterial to me whether I run my turbine in thought or test it in my shop I even note if it is out of balance There is no difference whatever the results are the same In this way I am able to rapidly develop and perfect a conception without touching anything The phenomenology of imagination is discussed in The Imaginary A Phenomenological Psychology of the Imagination French L Imaginaire Psychologie phenomenologique de l imagination also published under the title The Psychology of the Imagination a 1940 book by Jean Paul Sartre In this book Sartre propounded his concept of imagination with imaginary objects being melanges of past impressions and recent knowledge and discussed what the existence of imagination shows about the nature of human consciousness Based on Sartre s work subsequent thinkers extended this idea into the realm of sociology proposing ideas such as imaginary and the ontology of imagination Cross cultural Imagination has been and continues to be a well acknowledged concept in many cultures particularly within religious contexts as an image forming faculty of the mind In Buddhist aesthetics imagination plays a crucial role in religious practice especially in visualization practices which include the recollection of the Buddha s body visualization of celestial Buddhas and Buddha fields Pure Lands and mandalas and devotion to images In Zhuang Zi s Taoism imagination is perceived as a complex mental activity that is championed as a vital form of cognition It is defended on empathetic grounds but discredited by the rational intellect as only a presentation and fantasy In psychological researchMemory Memory and mental imagery are two mental activities involved in the process of imagination each influencing the other Functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI technology shows that remembering and imagining activate the identical parts of the brain When compared to the recall of common ideas the generation of new and old original ideas exhibits a similar activation pattern particularly in the bilateral parahippocampal and medial prefrontal cortex mPFC regions This suggests that the construction of new ideas relies on processes similar to those in the reconstruction of original ideas from episodic memory Perception Piaget posited that a person s perceptions depend on their world view The world view is the result of arranging perceptions into existing imagery by imagination Piaget cites the example of a child saying that the moon is following her when she walks around the village at night Like this perceptions are integrated into the world view so that they make sense Imagination is needed to make sense of perceptions Brain activation The neocortex and thalamus are crucial in controlling the brain s imagination as well as other functions such as consciousness and abstract thought Imagination involves many different brain functions including emotions memory and thoughts Visual imagery involves a network of brain areas from the frontal cortex to sensory areas overlapping with the default mode network and can function much like a weak version of afferent perception A study that used fMRI while subjects were asked to imagine precise visual figures to mentally disassemble them or mentally blend them showed activity in the occipital frontoparietal posterior parietal precuneus and dorsolateral prefrontal regions of the subject s brains Evolutionary theoryPhylogenesis and ontogenesis of various components of imagination Phylogenetic acquisition of imagination was a gradual process The simplest form of imagination REM sleep dreaming evolved in mammals with acquisition of REM sleep 140 million years ago Spontaneous insight improved in primates with acquisition of the lateral prefrontal cortex 70 million years ago After hominins split from the chimpanzee line 6 million years ago they further improved their imagination Prefrontal analysis was acquired 3 3 million years ago when hominins started to manufacture Mode One stone tools Progress in stone tools culture to Mode Two stone tools by 2 million years ago signifies remarkable improvement of prefrontal analysis The most advanced mechanism of imagination prefrontal synthesis was likely acquired by humans around 70 000 years ago and resulted in behavioral modernity This leap toward modern imagination has been characterized by paleoanthropologists as the Cognitive revolution Upper Paleolithic Revolution and the Great Leap Forward Moral imaginationMoral imagination usually describes the mental capacity to find answers to ethical questions and dilemmas through the process of imagination and visualization Different definitions of moral imagination can be found in the literature The philosopher Mark Johnson described it as an ability to imaginatively discern various possibilities for acting in a given situation and to envision the potential help and harm that are likely to result from a given action In one proposed example Hitler s assassin Claus von Stauffenberg was said to have decided to dare to overthrow the Nazi regime as a result among other factors of a process of moral imagination His willingness to kill Hitler was less due to his compassion for his comrades his family or friends living at that time but from thinking about the potential problems of later generations and people he did not know In other words through a process of moral imagination he developed empathy for abstract people for example Germans of later generations people who were not yet alive Artificial imaginationAs a subcomponent of artificial general intelligence artificial imagination generates simulates and facilitates real or possible fiction models to create predictions inventions or conscious experiences The term also refers to the capability of machines or programs to simulate human activities including creativity vision digital art humour and satire The research fields of artificial imagination traditionally include artificial visual and aural imagination which extend to all actions involved in forming ideas images and concepts activities linked to imagination Practitioners are also exploring topics such as artificial visual memory modeling and filtering content based on human emotions and interactive search Additionally there is interest in how artificial imagination may evolve to create an artificial world comfortable enough for people to use as an escape from reality A subfield of artificial imagination that receives rising concern is artificial morals Artificial intelligence faces challenges regarding the responsibility for machines mistakes or decisions and the difficulty in creating machines with universally accepted moral rules Recent research in artificial morals bypasses the strict definition of morality using machine learning methods to train machines to imitate human morals instead However by considering data about moral decisions from thousands of people the trained moral model may reflect widely accepted rules See alsoPhilosophy portalPsychology portalCreative visualization Purposeful visualisation for neuropsychological physiological or social effects Creativity Forming something new and somehow valuable Fantasy psychology Mental faculty of drawing imagination and desire in the human brain Imagery Author s use of vivid and descriptive language to add depth to their work The Imaginary psychoanalysis Term in Lacanian Psychoanalysis Imaginary sociology Set of values institutions laws and symbols through which people imagine their social whole Imagination Age Proposed era of humanity after the Information Age Imagination inflation Type of memory distortion Sociological imagination Type of insight offered by the discipline of sociology Tulpa Entity manifesting from mental powers Verisimilitude Resemblance to realityReferences Mental Imagery The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2021 Szczelkun Stefan 2018 03 03 Sense Think Act a collection of exercises to experience total human ability Stefan Szczelkun ISBN 9781870736107 To imagine is to form experiences in the mind These can be recreations of past experiences as they happened such as vivid memories with imagined changes or they can be completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes Norman Ron 2000 Cultivating Imagination in Adult Education Proceedings of the 41st Annual Adult Education Research 1 2 Sutton Smith Brian 1988 In Search of the Imagination In Egan K Nadaner D eds Imagination and Education New York Teachers College Press p 22 Egan Kieran 1992 Imagination in Teaching and Learning Chicago University of Chicago Press p 50 Devitt Aleea L Addis Donna Rose Schacter Daniel L 2017 10 01 Episodic and semantic content of memory and imagination A multilevel analysis Memory amp Cognition 45 7 1078 1094 doi 10 3758 s13421 017 0716 1 ISSN 1532 5946 PMC 5702280 PMID 28547677 Frye Northrop 1963 The Educated Imagination Toronto Canadian Broadcasting Corporation p 49 Top Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazines 2023 10 August 2023 Goldman Laurence 1998 Child s play myth mimesis and make believe Oxford New York Berg Publishers ISBN 978 1 85973 918 1 Basically what this means is that the children use their make believe situation and act as if what they are acting out is from a reality that already exists even though they have made it up imagination comes after story created page needed imagination Etymology of imagination by etymonline www etymonline com Retrieved 2024 07 27 Cottrell Jonathan 2016 Imagination in modern philosophy Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 ed London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780415249126 da083 1 ISBN 978 0 415 25069 6 retrieved 2024 07 31 Dierckxsens Geoffrey 2019 10 10 Making Sense of Moral Things Fallible Man in Relation to Enactivism In Davidson Scott ed A Companion to Ricoeur s Fallible Man Studies in the Thought of Paul Ricoeur Rowman amp Littlefield p 104 ISBN 9781498587129 Retrieved 6 October 2022 Kant s notion of imagination designates a cognitive capacity that is purely mental Perlovsky Leonid Deming Ross Ilin Roman 2011 08 28 Emotional Cognitive Neural Algorithms with Engineering Applications Dynamic Logic From Vague to Crisp Volume 371 of Studies in Computational Intelligence Berlin Springer p 86 ISBN 9783642228308 Retrieved 6 October 2022 Imagination was long considered a part of thinking processes Kant emphasized the role of imagination in the thought process he called thinking a play of cognitive functions of imagination and understanding Compare Efland Arthur 2002 06 14 Imagination in Cognition Art and Cognition Integrating the Visual Arts in the Curriculum Language and Literacy Series New York Teachers College Press p 133 ISBN 9780807742181 Retrieved 6 October 2022 Like feelings and emotions imagination is a prickly topic with a history of exclusion from the realm of the cognitive Byrne Ruth M J 2007 2005 The Rational Imagination How People Create Alternatives to Reality A Bradford Book Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press p 38 ISBN 9780262261845 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Rational thought and imaginative thought may be based on the same kinds of cognitive processes processes that underpin thinking about possibilities Vergunst Jo 2012 Seeing Ruins Imagined and Visible Lands in North East Scotland In Janowski Monica Ingold Tim eds Imagining Landscapes Past Present and Future Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 9781409461449 Vyshedskiy Andrey 2020 Voluntary and Involuntary Imagination Neurological Mechanisms Developmental Path Clinical Implications and Evolutionary Trajectory Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 4 2 1 18 doi 10 26613 esic 4 2 186 ISSN 2472 9884 JSTOR 10 26613 esic 4 2 186 S2CID 231912956 Pearson Joel 2020 06 18 The Visual Imagination In Abraham Anna ed The Cambridge Handbook of the Imagination Cambridge Handbooks in Psychology Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 175 ISBN 9781108429245 Retrieved 12 October 2022 Visual imagery typically refers to the voluntary creation of the conscious visual experience of an object or scene in its absence e g solely in the mind imagery can play a core role in many anxiety disorders depression schizophrenia and Parkinson s disease and is increasingly harnessed as a uniquely powerful tool for psychological treatment Patzold Deltev 2004 Imagination in Descartes Meditations In Nauta Lodi Patzold Detlev eds Imagination in the later Middle Ages and Early Modern times Groningen studies in cultural change Leuven Dudley MA Peeters pp 153 159 172 173 ISBN 978 90 429 1535 0 The Internet Classics Archive On the Soul by Aristotle classics mit edu Retrieved 2024 07 04 Aristotle s Psychology gt Imagination Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato stanford edu Retrieved 2024 06 10 The Internet Classics Archive Philebus by Plato classics mit edu Retrieved 2024 07 30 Cocking John 1991 12 12 Murray Penelope ed Imagination A Study in the History of Ideas London Routledge pp 1 8 105 106 doi 10 4324 9780203980811 ISBN 978 0 203 98081 1 Le Goff Jacques 1988 The medieval imagination Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47084 9 Sumillera Rocio G 2016 From Inspiration to Imagination The Physiology of Poetry in Early Modernity Parergon 33 3 17 42 doi 10 1353 pgn 2016 0129 ISSN 1832 8334 Castor G 1964 Pleiade poetics a study in sixteenth century thought and terminology Dissertation At the University Press metaphors lib virginia edu http metaphors lib virginia edu metaphors 8723 Retrieved 2024 07 28 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Chaucer Geoffrey The Man of Laws Tale In Wyatt A J ed The Canterbury Tales London University Correspondence College Press Lines 550 553 Schmitt C B Skinner Quentin Kessler Eckhard Kraye Jill eds 1988 The Cambridge History of Renaissance Philosophy Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 chol9780521251044 ISBN 978 0 521 25104 4 Kooij Suzanne 2004 Poetic Imagination and the Paradigm of Painting in Early modern France In Nauta Lodi Patzold Detlev eds Imagination in the later Middle Ages and Early Modern times Groningen studies in cultural change Leuven Dudley MA Peeters ISBN 978 90 429 1535 0 Orobitg Christine 2021 Wit Imagination and the Goat In Jaen Isabel Simon Julien Jacques eds Cervantes and the early modern mind Routledge studies in Renaissance literature and culture New York NY Routledge pp 98 105 ISBN 978 0 415 78547 1 Harvey E Ruth 1975 The inward wits psychological theory in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Warburg Institute surveys London Warburg Institute ISBN 978 0 85481 051 2 Bovey Alixe 2002 Monsters and grotesques in medieval manuscripts Toronto Buffalo University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 8512 2 OCLC 49649965 Frisvold Nicholaj de Mattos 2013 01 01 Marsilio Ficino and His Platonic Psychology a href wiki Template Cite journal title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help de Iriarte Mauricio El Ingenioso hidalgo y el Examen de ingenios que debe Cervantes al Dr Huarte de San Juan Revista internacional de los estudios vascos in Spanish 24 4 499 522 Green Otis H 1970 The literary mind of medieval amp Renaissance Spain essays Studies in Romance languages Lexington University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 1204 6 Huarte de San Juan Juan 1594 The examination of mens wits Translated by Carew Richard London pp 69 70 103 Orobitg Christine 2014 07 01 Del Examen de ingenios de Huarte a la ficcion cervantina o como se forja una revolucion literaria Criticon in Spanish 120 121 23 39 doi 10 4000 criticon 700 ISSN 0247 381X Mestre Zaragoza Marina 2018 08 29 Les metiers de l imagination dans l Examen de ingenios para las ciencias de Huarte de San Juan Cahiers de recherches medievales et humanistes Journal of medieval and humanistic studies in French 35 339 364 doi 10 4000 crm 15497 ISSN 2115 6360 Clarke Desmond M 2003 Descartes s theory of mind Oxford Oxford New York Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926123 9 OCLC 52878350 Newman Lex 2023 Descartes Epistemology in Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri eds The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2023 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2024 07 29 Runco Mark A Albert Robert S 2010 Creativity Research In Kaufman James C Sternberg Robert J eds The Cambridge Handbook of Creativity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 73025 9 Crane William G 1937 12 31 Wit and Rhetoric in the Renaissance Columbia University Press doi 10 7312 cran94640 ISBN 978 0 231 89968 0 Marr Alexander Garrod Raphaele Marcaida Jose Ramon Oosterhoff Richard J 2018 10 02 Logodaedalus University of Pittsburgh Press doi 10 2307 j ctvcb5c95 ISBN 978 0 8229 8630 0 Mack Peter 2004 Early Modern Ideas of Imagination The Rhetoric Tradition In Nauta Lodi Patzold Detlev eds Imagination in the later Middle Ages and Early Modern times Groningen studies in cultural change Leuven Dudley MA Peeters pp 59 60 ISBN 978 90 429 1535 0 Arrizabalaga Jon 2018 08 29 La medicina en Huarte de San Juan Practica clinica versus filosofia natural1 Cahiers de recherches medievales et humanistes 35 405 426 doi 10 4000 crm 15521 ISSN 2115 6360 Arrizabalaga Jon Giordano Maria Laura 2020 12 30 Cristianismo paulino en Huarte de San Juan meritocracia y linaje en el Examen de ingenios para las ciencias Baeza 1575 1594 Hispania Sacra 72 146 363 375 doi 10 3989 hs 2020 025 hdl 10261 235630 ISSN 1988 4265 Franklin James 2000 Diagrammatic reasoning and modelling in the imagination the secret weapons of the Scientific Revolution PDF In Freeland Guy Corones Anthony eds 1543 and All That Image and Word Change and Continuity in the Proto Scientific Revolution Dordrecht Kluwer pp 53 115 ISBN 9780792359135 Kristeller Paul Oskar Tatarkiewicz Wladyslaw Kasparek Christopher January 1981 A History of Six Ideas An Essay in Aesthetics The Journal of Philosophy 78 1 56 doi 10 2307 2025397 ISSN 0022 362X JSTOR 2025397 Dacey John 1999 Concepts of Creativity A history In Runco Mark A Pritzer Steven R eds Encyclopedia of Creativity Vol 1 Elsevier ISBN 978 0 12 227076 5 Gregory A P R 2003 Coleridge and the conservative imagination Mercer University Press p 59 Alembert Jean Le Rond d Schwab Richard N Rex Walter E 1995 Preliminary discourse to the Encyclopedia of Diderot Internet Archive Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 13476 5 Matherne Samantha 2021 Kant s theory of the imagination In Fridland Ellen Pavese Carlotta eds The Routledge handbook of philosophy of skill and expertise Routledge handbooks in philosophy Abingdon Oxon New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 74477 6 Kuehn Manfred 2006 Louden Robert B ed Immanuel Kant Anthropology from a Pragmatic Point of View Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp Anthro 7 167 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511809569 ISBN 978 0 511 80956 9 Kneller Jane 2007 02 08 Kant and the Power of Imagination Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9780511487248 ISBN 978 0 521 85143 5 Lopez Dominguez Virginia 2018 12 22 The Imagination in Kant and Fichte Revista de Estud i os sobre Fichte 17 doi 10 4000 ref 952 ISSN 2258 014X Bates Jennifer 2004 Hegel s Theory of Imagination State University of New York Press doi 10 1353 book4857 ISBN 978 0 7914 8445 6 Hoerni Ulrich Fischer Thomas Kaufmann Bettina eds 2019 The Art of C G Jung W W Norton amp Company p 260 ISBN 978 0 393 25487 7 Jung C G Hg 1997 12 31 Jung on Active Imagination Princeton University Press doi 10 1515 9781400866854 ISBN 978 1 4008 6685 4 The Saturday Evening Post 1929 10 26 What Life Means to Einstein An Interview by George Sylvester Viereck Tesla Nikola 1982 My inventions the autobiography of Nikola Tesla Internet Archive Williston Vt Hart Bros ISBN 978 0 910077 00 2 Sartre Jean Paul 1972 1940 The Psychology of the Imagination London Psychology Press ISBN 9780415119542 OCLC 34102867 John B Thompson Studies in the Theory of Ideology 1984 p 6 John R Searle The Construction of Social Reality Penguin 1996 p 4 Imagination Cross Cultural Philosophical Analyses Bloomsbury Academic 2019 pp 13 15 doi 10 5040 9781350050167 ISBN 978 1 350 05013 6 Copp Paul 2014 12 31 The Body Incantatory Spells and the Ritual Imagination in Medieval Chinese Buddhism Columbia University Press doi 10 7312 copp16270 ISBN 978 0 231 16270 8 Dalton Jacob P 2023 01 16 Conjuring the Buddha Columbia University Press doi 10 7312 dalt20582 ISBN 978 0 231 55618 7 Long Priscilla 2009 12 01 My Brain On My Mind The American Scholar Benedek Mathias Schues Till Beaty Roger E Jauk Emanuel Koschutnig Karl Fink Andreas Neubauer Aljoscha C 2018 02 01 To create or to recall original ideas Brain processes associated with the imagination of novel object uses Cortex 99 93 102 doi 10 1016 j cortex 2017 10 024 ISSN 0010 9452 PMC 5796649 PMID 29197665 Piaget J 1967 The child s conception of the world Translated by Tomlinson J Tomlinson A London Routledge amp Kegan Paul Abraham Anna 2016 10 06 The imaginative mind Human Brain Mapping 37 11 4197 4211 doi 10 1002 hbm 23300 ISSN 1065 9471 PMC 6867574 PMID 27453527 Hustvedt Siri January 2011 Three Emotional Stories Reflections on Memory the Imagination Narrative and the Self Neuropsychoanalysis 13 2 187 196 doi 10 1080 15294145 2011 10773674 ISSN 1529 4145 Pearson Joel October 2019 The human imagination the cognitive neuroscience of visual mental imagery Nature Reviews Neuroscience 20 10 624 634 doi 10 1038 s41583 019 0202 9 ISSN 1471 003X PMID 31384033 Schlegel Alexander Kohler Peter J Fogelson Sergey V Alexander Prescott Konuthula Dedeepya Tse Peter Ulric 16 September 2013 Network structure and dynamics of the mental workspace Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110 40 16277 16282 Bibcode 2013PNAS 11016277S doi 10 1073 pnas 1311149110 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 3791746 PMID 24043842 Hobson J Allan 1 October 2009 REM sleep and dreaming towards a theory of protoconsciousness Nature Reviews Neuroscience 10 11 803 813 doi 10 1038 nrn2716 PMID 19794431 S2CID 205505278 Harmand Sonia Lewis Jason E Feibel Craig S Lepre Christopher J Prat Sandrine Lenoble Arnaud Boes Xavier Quinn Rhonda L Brenet Michel Arroyo Adrian Taylor Nicholas Clement Sophie Daver Guillaume Brugal Jean Philip Leakey Louise Mortlock Richard A Wright James D Lokorodi Sammy Kirwa Christopher Kent Dennis V Roche Helene 20 May 2015 3 3 million year old stone tools from Lomekwi 3 West Turkana Kenya Nature 521 7552 310 315 Bibcode 2015Natur 521 310H doi 10 1038 nature14464 PMID 25993961 S2CID 1207285 Vyshedsky Andrey 2019 Neuroscience of Imagination and Implications for Human Evolution PDF Current Neurobiology 10 2 89 109 ISSN 0975 9042 Archived from the original PDF on 2019 05 31 Harari Yuval N 2014 Sapiens a brief history of humankind London ISBN 9781846558245 OCLC 890244744 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bar Yosef Ofer October 2002 The Upper Paleolithic Revolution Annual Review of Anthropology 31 1 363 393 doi 10 1146 annurev anthro 31 040402 085416 ISSN 0084 6570 Diamond Jared M 2006 The third chimpanzee the evolution and future of the human animal New York HarperPerennial ISBN 0060845503 OCLC 63839931 Freeman R E Dmytriyev S Wicks A C 2018 The moral imagination of Patricia werhane A festschrift Springer International Publishing p 97 Johnson M 1993 Moral imagination Chicago University of Chicago Press p 202 Langhof J G Gueldenberg S 2021 Whom to serve Exploring the moral dimension of servant leadership Answers from operation Valkyrie Journal of Management History 27 4 537 573 doi 10 1108 jmh 09 2020 0056 S2CID 238689370 Abramson J Ahuja A Carnevale F 21 November 2022 Improving Multimodal Interactive Agents with Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback p 26 arXiv 2211 11602 cs LG Allen K R Lopez Guevara T Stachenfeld K Sanchez Gonzalez A Battaglia P Hamrick J Pfaff T 1 February 2022 Physical Design using Differentiable Learned Simulators arXiv 2202 00728 cs LG How Generative AI Can Augment Human Creativity Harvard Business Review 2023 06 16 ISSN 0017 8012 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Thomee B Huiskes M J Bakker E Lew M S July 2007 Visual information retrieval using synthesized imagery Proceedings of the 6th ACM international conference on Image and video retrieval ACM pp 127 130 doi 10 1145 1282280 1282303 ISBN 9781595937339 S2CID 11199318 Retrieved 19 December 2023 AUDIO CONTENT TRANSMISSION by Xavier Amatriain amp Perfecto Herrera Publications PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 01 06 Retrieved 2007 12 22 Oliva Aude 2008 Visual long term memory has a massive storage capacity for object details Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 38 14325 14329 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10514325B doi 10 1073 pnas 0803390105 PMC 2533687 PMID 18787113 Hypertext and the Hyperreal by Stuart Moulthrop Yale University http portal acm org citation cfm doid 74224 74246 Tigard Daniel W 2021 06 10 Artificial Moral Responsibility How We Can and Cannot Hold Machines Responsible Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 30 3 435 447 doi 10 1017 s0963180120000985 ISSN 0963 1801 PMID 34109925 Constantinescu Mihaela Vică Constantin Uszkai Radu Voinea Cristina 2022 04 12 Blame It on the AI On the Moral Responsibility of Artificial Moral Advisors Philosophy amp Technology 35 2 doi 10 1007 s13347 022 00529 z ISSN 2210 5433 Allen Colin Varner Gary Zinser Jason July 2000 Prolegomena to any future artificial moral agent Journal of Experimental amp Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 12 3 251 261 doi 10 1080 09528130050111428 ISSN 0952 813X Moser Christine den Hond Frank Lindebaum Dirk March 2022 Morality in the Age of Artificially Intelligent Algorithms Academy of Management Learning amp Education 21 1 139 155 doi 10 5465 amle 2020 0287 hdl 1871 1 042dea52 f339 445e 932c 8a06c9a51c0a ISSN 1537 260X Floridi Luciano 2016 12 28 Faultless responsibility on the nature and allocation of moral responsibility for distributed moral actions Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 374 2083 20160112 Bibcode 2016RSPTA 37460112F doi 10 1098 rsta 2016 0112 ISSN 1364 503X PMID 28336791 Wikiquote has quotations related to imagination Wikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Imagination Further readingBooksByrne R M J 2005 The Rational Imagination How People Create Alternatives to Reality Cambridge MA MIT Press Fabiani Paolo The Philosophy of the Imagination in Vico and Malebranche F U P Florence UP Italian edition 2002 English edition 2009 Salazar Noel B 2010 Envisioning Eden Mobilizing imaginaries in tourism and beyond Oxford Berghahn Wilson J G 2016 Sartre and the Imagination Top Shelf Magazines Sexuality amp Culture 20 4 775 784 doi 10 1007 s12119 016 9358 x S2CID 148101276 ArticlesSalazar Noel B 2020 On imagination and imaginaries mobility and immobility Seeing the forest for the trees Culture amp Psychology 1 10 Salazar Noel B 2011 The power of imagination in transnational mobilities Identities Global Studies in Culture and Power 18 6 576 598 doi 10 1080 1070289X 2011 672859 S2CID 143420324 Watkins Mary Waking Dreams Harper Colophon Books 1976 and Invisible Guests The Development of Imaginal Dialogues The Analytic Press 1986 Moss Robert The Three Only Things Tapping the Power of Dreams Coincidence and Imagination New World Library September 10 2007 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Imagination Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 304 305 Three philosophers for whom imagination is a central concept are Kendall Walton John Sallis and Richard Kearney See in particular Kendall Walton Mimesis as Make Believe On the Foundations of the Representational Arts Harvard University Press 1990 ISBN 0 674 57603 9 pbk John Sallis Force of Imagination The Sense of the Elemental 2000 John Sallis Spacings Of Reason and Imagination In Texts of Kant Fichte Hegel 1987 Richard Kearney The Wake of Imagination Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1988 1st Paperback Edition ISBN 0 8166 1714 7 Richard Kearney Poetics of Imagining Modern to Post modern Fordham University Press 1998 External linksThe dictionary definition of imagination at Wiktionary Media related to imagination at Wikimedia Commons Imagination on In Our Time at the BBC Imagination Mental Imagery Consciousness and Cognition Scientific Philosophical and Historical Approaches Two Factor Imagination Scale at the Open Directory Project The neuroscience of imagination TED Ed