<p>for "does planning interfere with creativity?" </p>
<p>i talked about how the classical art movement limited expression with strict rules and meticulous premeditation. then the romanticism movement came along and artists followed their inner genius, rebuked the plans, and great works of art were produced by the likes of hugo and later mozart.</p>
<p>and then in "blink", the army does a drill where they have a computer lead the american army and a general lead the foreign enemy and the creative, spur-of-the-moment general dominated. the computer's plan could not react to creativity.</p>
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then the romanticism movement came along and artists followed their inner genius, rebuked the plans, and great works of art were produced by the likes of hugo and later mozart.
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<p>Mozart was a classicist, not a romanticist. But hell, they don't care about accuracy, and that isn't too off-topic. You'll may just lose a little bit.</p>
<p>well, i thought by the end he was sort of leaning more toward romanticism and was a classic example of straddling two movements. plus, he was the only thing i could think of. lol</p>
<p>and you don't think because my second example only explains why creativity is better than planning that it would be considered the dreaded "off-topic"?</p>