Looking Beyond The Obvious
Imagination is the power and process of producing mental images and ideas. The term is technically used in psychology for the process of reviving in the mind percepts of objects formerly given in sense perception. Since this use of the term conflicts with that of ordinary language, some psychologists have preferred to describe this process as "imaging" or "imagery" or to speak of it as "reproductive" as opposed to "productive" or "constructive" imagination. Imagined images are seen with the "mind's eye".

One hypothesis for the evolution of human imagination is that it allowed conscious beings to solve problems by use of mental simulation.
The common use of the term is for the process of forming in the mind new images which have not been previously experienced, or at least only partially or in different combinations.

Imagination in this sense, not being limited to the acquisition of exact knowledge by the requirements of practical necessity, is, up to a certain point, free from objective restraints. The ability to imagine one's self in another person's place is very important to social relations and understanding.

In various spheres, however, even imagination is in practice limited: thus a man whose imaginations do violence to the elementary laws of thought, or to the necessary principles of practical possibility, or to the reasonable probabilities of a given case is regarded as insane.

The same limitations beset imagination in the field of scientific hypothesis. Progress in scientific research is due largely to provisional explanations which are constructed by imagination, but such hypotheses must be framed in relation to previously ascertained facts and in accordance with the principles of the particular science.
In spite, however, of these broad practical considerations, imagination differs fundamentally from belief in that the latter involves "objective" control of subjective activity. The play of imagination, apart from the obvious limitations is conditioned only by the general trend of the mind at a given moment.

Belief, on the other hand, is immediately related to practical activity: it is perfectly possible to imagine myself a millionaire, but unless I believe it I do not, therefore, act as such. Belief always endeavours to conform to objective conditions; though it is from one point of view subjective it is also objectively conditioned, whereas imagination as such is specifically free.

The dividing line between imagination and belief varies widely in different stages of mental development. Thus someone from a technologically primitive culture who is ill frames an ideal reconstruction of the causes of his illness, and attributes it to the hostile magic of an enemy.

In ignorance of pathology he is satisfied with this explanation, and actually believes in it, whereas such a hypothesis in the mind of someone who understood germ theory it would be treated as a pure effort of imagination, or even as a hallucination.

It follows that the distinction between imagination and belief depends in practice on knowledge, social environment, training and the like.
Although, a certain unreality is characteristic of imagination, it has great practical importance as a purely ideational activity. Its very freedom from objective limitation makes it a source of pleasure and pain.

A person of vivid imagination suffers acutely from the imagination of perils besetting a friend. In fact in some cases the ideal construction is so "real" that specific physical manifestations occur, as though imagination had passed into belief or the events imagined were actually in progress.
Freedom is actually a bigger game than power. Power is about what you can control. Freedom is about what you can unleash
Harriet Rubin
Imagination is more important than knowledge
Albert Einstein
"What you know you can't explain, but you feel it. You've felt it your entire life, that there's something wrong with the world. You don't know what it is, but it's there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad."
Morpheus
"You must unlearn what you have learned."
Yoda
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win."
Mahatma Gandhi

"An investment in knowledge pays the best interest."
Benjamin Franklin

"Society exists only as a mental concept; in the real world there are only individuals."
Oscar Wilde

"Sometimes I'm confused by what I think is really obvious. But what I think is really obvious obviously isn't obvious..."
Michael Stipe

"Reality is for those who lack imagination"
Dream Quote
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"Open Your Mind To New Possibilities"
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