Boden's three-criterion definition of creativity — each necessary, none sufficient. Novelty without value is randomness; value without novelty is routine; surprise without either is bewilderment.
Boden defines creativity as the production of ideas that are novel, surprising, and valuable. Each criterion is necessary; none is sufficient. Novelty without value is random noise. Value without novelty is routine competent performance. Surprise without either is bewilderment. Only the intersection — novel, surprising, valuable — constitutes genuine creativity. The framework is essential to understanding AI's capacities because it specifies precisely which criteria the machine can and cannot satisfy. AI systems reliably produce novelty; their training-corpus range produces combinations no individual has made. Whether the output is surprising depends on who is evaluating — surprise is a subject-dependent property. Whether it is valuable depends on evaluative judgment the machine cannot supply. The machine generates candidates; the human provides the surprise and the value assessment.
Novelty, Surprise, and Value
In The You On AI Field Guide
The three criteria are not independent. Surprise and value both require an evaluating subject — someone who is surprised, someone who recognizes worth. This subject-dependence is not a philosophical curiosity but a practical constraint.