Creative Cognitive Processes in Kekule's Discovery of the Structure of the Benzene Molecule
1995; University of Illinois Press; Volume: 108; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/1422898
ISSN1939-8298
Autores Tópico(s)Creativity in Education and Neuroscience
ResumoAugust Kekule's account of his discovery of the ring or hexagonal structure of the benzene molecule-the event that ushered in the science of organic chemistry-is the single most cited personal report in psychological writings on creativity. Although his mental state has been depicted as dreaming, visual hallucination, alcoholic stupor, or hypnagogic imagery, such depictions do not cite Kekule's original German account but rely either on secondary sources or an 1898 English translation by F R. Japp in the Journal of the Chemical Society. Kekule's original account is presented together with the results of three new translations by German language experts. Comparative analysis of all translations indicates omissions in the one byJapp and significant differences. Psychological assessment indicates that Kekule's breakthrough was due to specific forms of primarily conscious creative cognition named homospatial and janusian processes.
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