Michal
Gibodai Towards
the creative society from knowledge based society through
Science and Art
A century ago, the US and European
economies and societies transitioned from agricultural to industrial systems. There was a massive movement of people
from rural communities to rapidly growing urban industrial
centers. This set in morión a whole series of sweeping
demographic, social, economic and cultural shifts. Today,
the US and Europe are again going through a period of sweeping
economic and social transformation — this time from
an industrial to a creative economy Creativity is the motor force of economic growth. Roughly.
The creative economy has grown considerably over the past
century with the most rapid and punctuated growth occurring
over the past two decades or so. A hundred years ago, at
the dawn of the 20th century, fewer than 10 percent of working people worked in the creative
sector of the economy. Fewer than 15 percent of the workforce
did so in 1950. But over the past two decades, creativity
has become the driving force of our ekonomy and the creative
sector has exploded. Today, from between 25 to more than
30 percent of workers in the advanced industrial nations
work in the creative sector of the economy, engaged in science
and engineering, research and development, technology-based
industries, in the arts, music, culture, aesthetic and design
industries, or in the knowledge-based professions of health
care, finance and law. In the United States, the creative
sector accounts for nearly half of all wage and salary incomes,
as much as the manufacturing and service sectors combined.
Creativity is a basic element of human existence. Every
single human being is creative and houses creative potential:
Every single human being is creative in some way. Creative
geniuses play their role, but creativity is a broad social
process and requires teamwork. It’s stimulated by
human exchange and networks; it takes place in real communities
and places.
To bridged science and art offers excellent strategy to
enhance the capacity of the left and right lobe of the human
brain.