Efforts to establish a
connection between intelligence and creative problem solving has been taken
many times, but after years of research, psychologists have concluded that
creativity is not the same as intelligence. Someone can be much more creative
than intelligent, or vice versa without any influence on the other parameter.
With productive thinking, the
objective is to create different approaches and consider even the least obvious
or likely approaches. Creative problem solving creates a willingness to keep
looking for different approaches, even if a promising solution has been found
to a problem.
Rigid thinking tends to
produce an inability in solving problems because such problem-solving methods
rely on the past experiences to be successful. Such problem-solving methods,
are thus, called reproductive thinking.
The main reason for highly
productive creative thinkers to create so many rich, varied and divergent ideas
is that they look for a new perspective that no one might have considered. The
first step of creative problem solving, hence, is to re-visualize a problem in
many unique ways. The first few ways of viewing a problem might be too
reproductive to come up with unique solutions.
With each different layer of
restructuring, the understanding of the problem improves, which brings the
thinker to the root of the problem. At this point, a creative thinker abandons
all the reproductive thinking steps that stem from their past experiences and
re-conceptualizes the problem. Another noted ability of creative thinkers is
that they can manage to operate between ambivalent opinions and incompatible
subjects.
Edison’s first invention of a
light bulb which is the earliest system of lighting involved combining wiring
in parallel circuits with high-resistance filaments in his bulbs. The idea of
using parallel circuits and resistance wires were two opposite thoughts that
did not come to the conventional thinkers of that time, but Edison could see
the connection between two incompatible things.