CONCEPT
Componential Theory of Creativity
Teresa Amabile’s framework—first published in 1983 and refined over four decades—that creativity requires three conditions simultaneously: domain-relevant skills, creativity-relevant cognitive processes, and intrinsic task motivation, and that AI in 2025 destabilized all three at once.
Creativity,
Teresa Amabile established through four decades of controlled experiments and field research, is not a trait possessed by exceptional individuals. It is a confluence of conditions—measurable, manipulable, and present or absent in any workplace, classroom, or collaboration. The componential theory identifies three conditions that must be simultaneously present: domain-relevant skills (the technical expertise specific to the field), creativity-relevant processes (cognitive flexibility, tolerance for ambiguity, willingness to take genuine creative risks, capacity to break set and try something structurally different), and intrinsic task motivation (engagement because the work itself is interesting, not because a reward or deadline compels it). Remove any one and the stool collapses—not gradually but categorically, the way structure fails when a load-bearing element is removed. The theory’s power lies in this interdependence: domain expertise without creative processes produces competent but conventional work; creative processes without domain expertise produce novelty without substance; and neither produces lasting creative value without intrinsic motivation, because creative work is difficult