\"Writing.Com
*Magnify*
    November     ►
SMTWTFS
     
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Archive RSS
SPONSORED LINKS
Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/books/entry_id/944617-Labyrinth
Image Protector
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1196512
Not for the faint of art.
#944617 added November 1, 2018 at 1:29am
Restrictions: None
Labyrinth
Ever wonder if knowledge inhibits creativity?

I have.

I remember once when I was a young child, there was an illustration in a children's book that featured a night sky through a window. I don't remember the context or anything else about the book, but I do remember a crescent moon and stars against a dark blue background seen through the classic rectangular grid of a double-hung window.

Or I might be remembering some details wrong. Memory is like that. But what I am certain of is that there was a stylized star between the horns of the crescent moon.

"That can't happen," I told the teacher, or babysitter, or caretaker, or whatever. "The moon is still there; it's just dark. It would block the star." Okay, I probably didn't use a semicolon, but you can't know that for sure, because I spoke it, and it's not like I would have vocalized the punctuation.

"It's just a drawing," the adult explained. Or something to that effect.

That's the first time I remember using knowledge I'd gained to revoke someone's artistic license. I've done it countless times since then, most often when some science fiction show depicts the asteroid belt as a dense field of tumbling rocks. In reality, the view from any given place in the asteroid belt might feature one or two extra points of light, but is otherwise identical to the view from, say, the other side of the moon. Asteroids are widely separated. If they're not, they turn into smaller asteroids which then become widely separated. The result is barely even a hazard to astrogation, and you're not going to be able to use it to lose the bad guys who are chasing you.

And yet, such a depiction immediately conveys "asteroid belt" to the viewer, just as stars - misplaced or not - and a crescent moon on a dark blue or black background says "night."

Knowledge is like a labyrinth, in a way. A really big and convoluted one. Fixed, but with dark, twisty corridors and branches that lead nowhere, but must be traversed anyway. It has a floor, and walls, and a ceiling, and even adjoining spaces might be miles apart as one traces one's path. It occurred to me recently that the idea of such a maze might have even been inspired by the naked human brain, with its lobes and crevices - the brain, of course, being the container of knowledge.

The classical labyrinth housed the Minotaur, a bull-man chimera with a penchant for munching on humans. The Minotaur never made sense to me, either. Even if you allow for divine intervention or genetic engineering, the circulatory, muscular, nervous, lymphatic, and other bodily systems of human and bovine are simply incompatible. Not to mention that, in its classic depiction as a human figure with a bull head, its teeth would be that of a ruminant: dull, flat, and entirely unsuitable for chewing on any kind of meat - long pig or otherwise.

If the labyrinth represents knowledge, the Minotaur would have to represent ignorance. Fake news. Unfounded fears; the monster in the shadows. Illusions.

Theseus had to a) defeat the Minotaur and b) escape the labyrinth. For the first task, he had a sword. Swords are extremely useful for such things, but only if you know how to use them. For the second task, he had a ball of string helpfully provided by some chick who probably realized that, while Theseus could have simply marked his path with the sword so that he could follow the marks back out, doing so would reduce the sword's effectiveness at its primary task; to wit, turning the Minotaur into prime rib.

I think that part of the story was put in there to illustrate that Cretan women were smarter than Athenian men. But I digress.

It occurs to me that Theseus could have accomplished both tasks if, instead of a sword, he'd carried a sledgehammer. Go in, find the Minotaur, bash it between the horns, and then knock down some walls. But I suppose that would be cheating.

Hang on, though - isn't creativity all about cheating? Did Alexander the Great cheat when he used his own sword to cut through the tangle of the Gordian Knot? Did Captain America cheat when he knocked down the flagpole to earn a ride in the Jeep?

As I mentioned above, two adjacent spaces in a labyrinth could be very far apart if one traverses the maze like a good little lab rat. But let's give the lab rat some supplies - say: a) a chocolate-chip cookie; b) a paper clip; and c) a toy truck. Rats are both smart and creative, so can our Theseus-rat MacGyver his way out of the labyrinth?

This is where creativity comes in. It turns out that each chocolate chip is actually a concentrated block of C-4. Go to a wall, press one of the chips to it, stick one end of the paper clip in the chip, attach the truck's ignition to the other end, and use the starter motor on the truck to ignite the explosive. Boom. No more wall. Step through, see another wall. Pull out another chocolate chip. Repeat as necessary, and you're out. As a bonus, you can even eat the cookie when you're done. And maybe even the truck.

There, now - just because something is absurd doesn't make it impossible, you know. Especially if you're a rat - or a writer.

© Copyright 2018 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Robert Waltz has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/books/entry_id/944617-Labyrinth