Creativity Books


Books-Under-Review-->Computers-->Artificial Intelligence-->Creativity-->50
Related Subjects: Hofstadter, Douglas R.
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Creativity Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Creativity
GVA: A Universe of Creativity (Talenti)
Published in Hardcover by l'ArcaEdizioni (2003-02-25)
Author:
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Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-15
This is an extraordinary example of what is happening in latin american architecture, specially on leisure and retail, beatiful edition

Creativity
Hope: A Woman's Inspirational Journal (A Color Me Butterfly) (A Color Me Butterfly)
Published in Hardcover by El Publishing (2007-02-05)
Author: L.Y. Marlow
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HOPE, A woman's Inspirational Journal
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
The "Hope, A Womans Inspirational Journal" is a special journal to give as a gift or use yourself. Each page is lined and has inspiring quotes. It comes with a pen, keepsake pocket at the back and has a nice wraparound closure. I gave the Hope Journal to my special friends and they loved it. I also ordered one for myself and love using it for journaling the special events that happen each day. Have not seen a journal as pretty as this one with the light green coloring and the pretty butterflies on it's cover and back.

Creativity
The Houdini Principle: Discover Harry Houdini's Secrets of Creativity and Confidence
Published in Hardcover by Lean Marketing Press (2006-09-13)
Author: Tim Kenning
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Interesting and a great self coaching book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-07
Author Tim Kenning has done something I consider to be very clever. On one level The Houdini Principle is an fascinating introduction to the life and work of the enigmatic escapologist, filled with interesting anecdotes, photographs, challenges and newsprint. On another, it uses Houdini as a metaphor for personal freedom and growth. How do we escape from the binds of our lives? What do Houdini's remarkable feats offer as learning to us? The book brings out thought-provoking points about using one's strengths, taking control, changing what one believes about oneself (and about what's possible), making the most of situations and increasing creativity. We're challenged to wonder how unlimited we could each be if we could learn to have unreasonable amounts of self belief for ourselves. In short, it is an excellent book for self coaching.

The idea of using metaphor as a way to express personal development isn't new, but by using such an enigmatic reference, Tim Kenning's book is a more entertaining and enlightening experience than many of the academic personal development books around. By using a real-life reference, the stories and learning comes alive.

Creativity
How Children Make Art: Lessons in Creativity from Home to School
Published in Paperback by Teachers College Press (2006-08-04)
Author: George Szekely
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A must have for every parent and teacher!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-16
An amazing account of childrens creative experiences and suggestions of how it can be adapted to the classroom. A wonderful guide to the understanding and supporting of childrens home art and how to encourage the creative ideas children bring to school.

Creativity
How to Make Big Profits Publishing City & Regional Books: A Guide for Entrepreneurs, Writers, and Publishers
Published in Paperback by Communication Creativity (1986-10)
Author: Marilyn Heimberg Ross
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This book was essential to getting our book to market!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-29
While some of the information contained in "How to Make Big Profits Publishing City & Regional Books", can be found in other self-publishing type books, this book provided much more. Regional publications are an untapped resource, and this book tells you how to capitalize on that concept. Our book, "101 Things To Do on the Wisconsin Great River Road" is proof.

Creativity
How to Say No and Keep Your Friends: Peer Pressure Reversal for Teens and Preteens
Published in Paperback by HRD Press (1997-07)
Author: Sharon Scott
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How ot Say No and Keep Your Friends
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
I like this book because it tells and teach stories about Negative Peer- Pressure, how Drugs aren't good for you, also Violence, Alcohol, Sex, and other. It also tells you the right rout to take, tells you that Alcohol can get you in really big trouble, and if you know anyone that drinls Alchol stay away from them casue it can lead to really bad danger. Also to always have your eyes open to every step you take by yourself or with your friends, cause your friends might want you to go the same path their going, and you can be setting yourself up to get in trouble. So it tells to look and listen and to say no to your friends and keep them at the same time.

Creativity
How To Turn Your Million Dollar Idea Into A Reality
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (2007-01-01)
Author: Pete Williams
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Inspirational, Creative and Sassy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
If you've ever considered starting a business I rate this book as a must read. Aussie Pete Williams is offers a veritable paper treasure trove of practical ideas. If you're brand new into entrepreneurialism be prepared to be flooded with ideas. If you're a seasoned entrepreneur you won't get off lightly either - I found myself having heaps of "ah-ha" moments and found a stack of websites references especially that I wanted to look at. Pete's story is inspirational, creative and sassy - but the book isn't just about his story "selling" one of Australia's landmarks, it's also about practical, implementable tips and ideas that any business can put into place now.
Kirsty Dunphey, Author - Retired at 27, If I can do it anyone can

Creativity
How to Write While You Sleep: And Other Surprising Ways to Increase Your Writing Power
Published in Paperback by Celestial Arts (1993-03)
Author: Elizabeth Irvin Ross
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This is the most useful writing book I've ever bought
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
I've owned a lot of writing books and they've had varying levels of usefulness. "Writing while you Sleep" is the only one that I have kept and referred back to save for the basic reference works, such as "Elements of Style".

What's so great about this book is that the concept of writing while you sleep works both for nonfiction and fictional work. "Sleep on it," we've all heard that phrase relating to decisions. Fundamentally, people using that phrase are counting on your dreams processing the 'daywork' of your brain.

Along with the book, you need to buy a notebook and pen to keep somewhere close to your bed. You're going to wake up with ideas and the more you write them down, the more you're going to have. Don't think you're going to remember, because you won't.

Using the book to write didn't disturb my sleep. As a matter of fact, during a very stressful time while I was working on my Master's Report, I would read my research materials and tell myself as I was going to sleep that I would 'sleep on' what I'd read. I usually slept pretty soundly instead of tossing and turning worrying about whether I'd get the report done on time. When I woke, I'd make notes about what I'd processed during the night.

You can not only write scenes and reports, but re-write your dreams. Something else that might not have occurred to some is that you can use this concept to guide your dreams. If you start having a repetitive nightmare (in my case, the "I'm not going to finish this report" one) just program yourself before you go to sleep with the idea that you are going to finish the report and do well.

Creativity
Human BE-ing : How To Have A Better Relationship
Published in Kindle Edition by Trafford Publishing (1973-11-30)
Author: William Pietsch
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Human Be-ing
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-18
This book is simple in it's presentation however very deep in it's meaning. The impact this book has made for me is very signficant. By using the simple guidelines the author suggests I have found I can better listen and understand people. When confronted it is easy for me to become defensive. As the author suggests, now I try and listen to the person's feelings and the deeper message they are sharing.

The power of the techniques when done with sincerity and guinuiness as the author suggests are, not then just new "techniques" they become a way to connect....on a deeper level. I find that I am able to quickly connect with others and in my fast pasted lifestyle, I find the skills presented in the book to be very helpful.

I have found that is not only helpful in my interpersonal relationships yet in my business/sales and negotiating responsiblities at work. Often by using the skills articulated in the book, I hear others now saying to me, " you really understand" or "that's exactly what I am saying".

It is a nice feeling to have someone say, " I have never told anyone this but....." As Dr. Pietsch says, Love is listening. Being willing to shut up, slow down, and reflect the deeper message communicated is easy to say to do...but hard to really do. When I really do what he instructs, both parties I find are winners. I like the feeling of being known as someone who cares, and obviously this is helpful for family, friendships and my business relationships.

This book I think is useful for all ages to learn. My children are developing these skills and when they use them with me, I smile inside knowing they will be more successful in the world they are about to enter when they one day leave home.

It may sound corny, but it is one of the best books out there, coulda, shoulda been a best seller...maybe on Amazon.com it will now reach and be able to help others as it has me. Thanks for allowing me to review this book.

Creativity
Humanism and Creativity in the Renaissance: Essays in Honor of Ronald G. Witt (Brill's Studies in Intellectual History) (Brill's Studies in Intellectual History)
Published in Hardcover by Brill Academic Publishers (2006-02)
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Renaissance Intellectual History Explored
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-10
Excerpt: The essays vary widely in focus and appropriately so, inasmuch as they suggest something of the range of Professor Witt's interests and influence. While some essays offer fresh readings of canonical texts and explore previously unnoticed lines of filiation among them, others present "discoveries," including a hitherto "lost" text and overlooked manuscripts that are here edited for the first time. This engagement with little-known material reflects another of our dedicatee's characteristics: a passion for work with original sources in the libraries and archives of Europe.
Inspired by one of his mentors, Hans Baron, Ronald Witt has always been acutely sensitive to the political contexts in which the revival of antiquity took place, as well as to ways that scholarship on antiquity provided humanists with instruments for analyzing their own social and political world. Evident throughout Witt's career, these interests are especially prominent in his early writings on Florentine politics and on Civic Humanism. We think, for example, of his essays on the views of politics and history in Coluccio Salutati's De tyranno; on the significance for Republican thought of an early Quattrocento Florentine tract responding to a Milanese invective; and on office-holding by new families in Florence in the politically crucial years around 1400.1 Witt's first book, a study of Salutati's public letters on behalf of the Florentine Republic, was fittingly dedicated to Hans Baron, whose own interrogation of Salutati's political thought in his Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance inspired many of the questions that initially guided Witt's inquiry.'
Section One of our collection begins with an essay by James Hankins, a leading expert on another Florentine chancellor, Leonardo Bruni. Here, Hankins focuses on the relationship of classicizing humanism to vernacular culture. After opening with an elegant historiographical synthesis, the essay analyzes Bruni's vernacular writings, before examining how and why a number of his Latin works were translated into the vernacular. Bruni's case serves as an exemplar of an important insight: that although humanists were in one respect creating an "elite" culture, they saw beyond matters of linguistic imitation, many of them believing that the values they cherished in ancient texts were so important for the lives of an active citizenry not all of whose members could be expected to learn Latin and Greek well-that those values needed to be translated, culturally as well as literally, into the vernacular.
In the second essay, Anthony F. D'Elia broaches another important issue: whether stylistic imitation can contribute to ideological change. D'Elia's point of departure is a little-known oration by the Riminese humanist Pietro Parleo, which is here edited for the first time. In the work, Parleo defends a captain who disobeyed a direct order of Sigismondo Malatesta, thereby committing a capital offense. Using examples from Livy and other classical authors, Parleo describes the captain using the value system of ancient republicanism, even as he is presenting the oration to a despot. D'Elia compares the use that Parleo makes of classical sources with the use to which Machiavelli later puts them. The key point comes through clearly: although Parleo's oration may have been no more than a rhetorical exercise, it exemplifies how, in following ancient forms, Renaissance thinkers could often find themselves-sometimes even unwittingly adhering to ancient values.
Robert Black presents a synthetic portrait of a figure on whom he is the world's leading expert: Benedetto Accolti who, like his fellow Aretine, Bruni, and like Salutati, went on to became chancellor of Florence. This is the first short summary of Accolti's career and importance to appear in English, and it is a definitive one. Enriched with new manuscript discoveries, the essay also includes a thoughtful assessment of a dialogue in which Accolti uses a discussion of the quarrel of ancients and moderns as a framework for launching pointed criticisms at the moral condition of the contemporary papal court.
Staying within the Florentine environment, Melissa Bullard sheds new light on the collecting practices of the fifteenth century and, in particular, upon their affective dimension. Focusing on Lorenzo de' Medici's accumulation and deployment of his famous gem collection, she shows how physical remnants of antiquity could serve as social markers and endowers of virtue. Thus, the tangible past facilitated the creation of lived identities in the present, as patrons defined themselves within the interwoven contexts of the revival of antiquity and the pursuit of honore et utile that defined Quattrocento status-seeking and influenced social relations.
Mark Jurdjevic offers a provocative analysis of a little-studied set of writings: the Discorsi palleschi, recommendations by Medici partisans about how to deal with possible instability after the suppression of the Florentine republics of 1494-1512 and 1527-30. Overwhelmingly, the authors turned to a re-theorized variety of aristocratic "republicanism" that in effect represented oligarchy. In so doing, they wound up transforming earlier "civic" traditions of humanism: retaining the classicism, but jettisoning the ideals of a more open, active citizenry.
Turning our attention north of the Alps, John Headley deftly analyzes the relationship between Guillaume Bud? and Thomas More in the years 1515-20. This crucial half-decade saw the ascent of Francis I to the French throne and Bud?'s publication of De asse, his complex treatise on wealth and its physical forms in antiquity; and on the English side More's publication of Utopia and his own fateful decision to remain in government service. By juxtaposing the two treatises, and assessing their significance in the contexts of the authors' correspondence and their careers, Headley elucidates the contributions that both made to early sixteenth-century discussions of the role and the suitability of the intellectual in politics. While taking us far from the particularities of Florence, this essay-like the others in Part One, and like much of Ronald Witt's work enriches our understanding of the dynamic interplay of the humanists' revival of antiquity with the political exigencies of their own distinct historical moments.
Humanism, Religion, and Moral Philosophy
Part Two of our collection centers on another cluster of concerns integral to Professor Witt's scholarship: "Humanism, Religion, and Moral Philosophy." In his second monograph, a sophisticated biography of Coluccio Salutati, he assesses with unprecedented thoroughness, precision, and eloquence his subject's intellectual growth and pivotal place in the development of the Humanist movement.' Dedicated to the memory of Witt's doctoral advisor at Harvard, Myron P. Gilmore, this comprehensive study offers a profound, well-rounded understanding of Salutati's thought and its contexts in his experience. To be sure, political issues are not absent from this narrative, but its focus is elsewhere: namely, on Salutati's efforts to integrate-or at least to juxtapose with less tension-his classicism and his Christianity. Thus, the chancellor's engagement with civic concerns is less central here than are his ruminations on whether the ancient pagan poets could truly be eloquent, his efforts to fashion a Christian Aristotelianism, and his growing ambivalence in his later years-precisely in the critical decade around 1400-about the usefulness of humanistic studies to those who took seriously the call to progress along the path to Christian virtue.
Part Two begins with a piece by Timothy Kircher that bridges the Tre- and Quattrocento, vernacularity and Latinity. Kircher discovers an affinity between the Leon Battista Alberti of the Intercenales-those short, ironic dinner pieces written in elegant humanist Latin and the Giovanni Boccaccio of the Decameron. This affinity is to be found in their use of irony, in a skeptical attitude toward publicly lived virtues, and in a style of moralizing that is anti-didactic in form, even as it communicates a powerful critique of existing modes of behavior.
John Monfasani's study recovers and edits a work hitherto thought lost: the final section of a dialogue On Faith by George Amiroutzes, a Byzantine intellectual and native of Trebizond who entered the household of Mehmed the Conqueror after that sultan took Trebizond in 1461. The work records a sustained conversation about Christianity between Amiroutzes and the Sultan which, even if it has been idealized in a literary fashion, does seem actually to have occurred. The original Greek text remains lost, and prior knowledge of this treatise was restricted to an incomplete Latin version. Monfasani recovers the lost portion and edits the treatise in its entirety. In addition, he provides more concrete proof than previously available that its translator into Latin was Zanobi Acciaiuoli, O.P. (1461-1519).
Next, Edward P. Mahoney makes a compelling case that Marsilio Ficino be considered not just a member of the Platonic tradition in his capacity as a translator and an exegete of Plato, but as someone who strove to be a philosopher in his own right, taking part in three separate areas of a lengthy ancient and medieval tradition of philosophical debate. Ficino comments suggestively on the problems of metaphysical hierarchy in the universe; epistemologically, he is committed to a variety of "innatism," ringing his own particular changes on traditional Platonic anamnesis (recollection); and with respect to political philosophy, in Mahoney's view, Ficino harbored an ultimate preference for monarchy owing to his deep commitment to a theory of Platonic forms.
Returning our attention north of the Alps, Charles Fantazzi elucidates the early Parisian years of Juan Luis Vives. Drawing on some recent discoveries, Fantazzi shows that Vives remained in the city from 1509 to 1514, not departing for Bruges in 1512, as has generally been supposed. While lecturing and studying in Paris, in part under the humanist Nicole B?rault, Vives wrote praelectiones, inaugural lectures, which in that context could also serve as introductions to the course. Fantazzi's analysis shows how these orations foreshadow Vives' later works, even as they offer insight into early sixteenth-century Parisian intellectual life. The early Vives emerges here as one unafraid to challenge entrenched authority; and certain themes are sounded which Vives will later develop in depth as part of his enduring masterpiece of pedagogical and cultural criticism, De disciplinis libri xx.
In the last essay of Part Two, Anthony Grafton investigates the way a wide-ranging group of sixteenth-century intellectuals dealt with the phenomenon of dreaming. They prescribed foods that were believed to control the types of dreams one had, delved into all manner of ancient sources to elucidate their meaning, and in general made dream-investigation a part of the "technologies of the self" that were fast developing in this age of Erasmus and Montaigne, Castiglione and Della Porta, Luther and Melanchthon. Grafton gives particular attention to the phenomenon of prophetic dreams, whose destabilizing potential was especially dangerous in an age of fundamental religious conflict.
Erudition and Innovation
The remaining four essays approach in diverse ways the themes of erudition and innovation themes that receive lucid articulation in Professor Witt's magisterial study of the origins of humanism, "In the Footsteps of the Ancients."' A persuasive reconceptualization of the devel-
opment of humanism as a stylistic ideal, this much-honored book opens with a dedication to the memory of Paul Oskar Kristeller, whose prodigious contributions to the study of Italian Humanism and its relationship to Medieval rhetoric provided a key stimulus for Witt's own erudite innovations.
Paul F. Grendler starts us off by examining the life and work of a pioneering historian, Georg Voigt, whose contributions deserve greater recognition than they have tended to receive. Voigt's 1859 masterpiece Die Wiederbelebung des classischen Alterthums oder das erste Jahrhundert des Humanismus (The Revival of Classical Antiquity; or, The First Century of Humanism), is often overshadowed by Jacob Burckhardt's classic Die Cultur der Renaissance in Italien, published only a year later. Grendler offers a portrait of Voigt, showing how the East Prussian historian became part of nineteenth-century Germany's rich scholarly tradition. In Grendler's reckoning, Voigt's work on the Italian Renaissance emerges as an original, sharply focused account concerned primarily with the revival of antiquity, the location and chronology of humanism, and that movement's literary taxonomies.
David Lines follows, presenting a challenging rereading of the relationship between Italian humanism and universities. Instead of seeing "two cultures"-scholasticism and humanism-he argues that there was considerable interaction between humanists and universities from the fourteenth century onward. Lines documents humanists teaching at Italian universities as early as the mid-fourteenth century, and he shows that scholastic philosophers were often receptive to a variety of humanist innovations. The relationship between university culture and humanism becomes, in his analysis, more one of collaboration (with occasional disciplinary frictions) than one of mutual incomprehension and hostility.
In our own contribution, we analyze a text only recently rediscovered to explore the variety of factors-methodological and stylistic, yet also institutional and social-that shaped humanists' translations of Aristotle. In 1521, the Venetian humanist Pietro Alcionio (1490s?-1528) published a volume comprising several Latin translations of Aristotle, including ten books from the philosopher's writings about animals. Less than a year later, the prominent Spanish humanist Juan Gin?s de Sep?lveda (1490-1573) who had already labored long on his own rendition of the same materials-wrote a tract enumerating and ridiculing Alcionio's infelicities and mistakes. The fusillades that Sepulveda directed at Alcionio highlight the points of controversy, and thus help to orient a comparative analysis of the translations from a less engaged perspective. In addition, we assess the social significance of the rivalry between these humanists as they competed for recognition and for the preferment of a common patron: Cardinal Giulio de' Medici, the future Pope Clement VII.
In a coda to the volume, Louise Rice tackles an intriguing scholarly mystery: how can it be that in 1602, nearly a quarter-century before the first known European sighting of a marsupial, an animal that looks suspiciously like a kangaroo appears in an engraving by the Italian printmaker Francesco Villamena? In solving this puzzle, Rice touches on New World discoveries, the customs of late sixteenth-century dissertation defenses, and the curious varieties of early modern naturalism; in so doing, she suggests a solution to the mystery. Marrying the performative, lived reality of early modern life to the textual scholarship in which her subjects were engaged, she fittingly closes a volume dedicated to a scholar who has always been open to new evidence, innovative ideas, and fresh readings of old materials.


Books-Under-Review-->Computers-->Artificial Intelligence-->Creativity-->50
Related Subjects: Hofstadter, Douglas R.
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