You On AI Encyclopedia · Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation The You On AI Encyclopedia Home
Txt Low Med High
WORK

Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation

Goldberg's 2018 direct engagement with the question of whether computers can be creative — and his nuanced answer: they can produce outputs humans judge as novel and valuable, but through a process structurally different from the coordinated six-system performance that produces human creative work.
Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation extends Goldberg's framework into the contested terrain of artificial creativity. The book develops the six-system decomposition of creative performance and uses it to diagnose what current AI systems can and cannot do. Computers excel at pattern-based generation at scale. They can produce outputs that humans rate as creative. But the process by which they produce those outputs — statistical interpolation within training corpora — is structurally different from the process by which the human brain produces genuinely novel responses to unprecedented problems. The difference is not one of degree but of kind: the difference between deploying an existing template and constructing a new one.
Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation
Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation

In The You On AI Encyclopedia

The book situates AI creativity within the broader framework of human creativity, refusing both the dismissive claim that AI cannot be creative and the enthusiastic claim that AI creativity is equivalent to human creativity. The truth, Goldberg argues, is more specific. AI performs certain creative operations at superhuman scale while failing to perform others. The operations it performs well are the left-hemisphere-like pattern-based operations. The operations it fails to perform are the right-hemisphere-like novel-construction operations. Increasing scale does not address the architectural limitation.

The book engages directly with the culture's romanticization of creativity. The popular conception of creativity as a flame, a spark, a gift locates the phenomenon in a single privileged faculty. Goldberg's framework distributes creativity across six coordinating systems, each of which can be studied, strengthened, or disrupted independently. The reframing has practical consequences: if creativity is coordination, building the conditions for coordination is what protects creativity.

Six Creative Systems
Six Creative Systems

For the AI-augmented workflow, the book provides the precise diagnostic framework that You On AI's discussion of human-AI collaboration required. The human is not contributing a faculty the AI lacks. The human is contributing the coordination among six systems, which the AI's architecture does not perform. This reframing makes the human contribution specific and the AI augmentation precise.

Key Ideas

Creativity as coordination. The six-system framework replaces the flame-and-faculty conception.

AI excels at pattern generation. Statistical interpolation at scale produces outputs humans rate as creative.

AI lacks novel construction. The process differs architecturally from human novel problem-solving, not merely quantitatively.

Novelty-Routinization Gradient
Novelty-Routinization Gradient

The left-right distinction. AI is a left-hemisphere routinization engine; genuine novelty requires right-hemisphere-like processing AI does not perform.

Coordination is the human contribution. What the AI does not do at the neurological level is what the human must supply.

Further Reading

  1. Goldberg, E. Creativity: The Human Brain in the Age of Innovation (2018)
  2. Dietrich, A. How Creativity Happens in the Brain (2015)
  3. Simonton, D.K. Origins of Genius (1999)
Explore more
Browse the full You On AI Encyclopedia — over 8,500 entries
← Home 0%
WORK Book →