reproductive imagination









reproductive imagination


noun

  1. See under imagination(def 6).

noun

  1. the faculty of imagining, or of forming mental images or concepts of what is not actually present to the senses.
  2. the action or process of forming such images or concepts.
  3. the faculty of producing ideal creations consistent with reality, as in literature, as distinct from the power of creating illustrative or decorative imagery.Compare fancy(def 2).
  4. the product of imagining; a conception or mental creation, often a baseless or fanciful one.
  5. ability to face and resolve difficulties; resourcefulness: a job that requires imagination.
  6. Psychology. the power of reproducing images stored in the memory under the suggestion of associated images (reproductive imagination) or of recombining former experiences in the creation of new images directed at a specific goal or aiding in the solution of problems (creative imagination).
  7. (in Kantian epistemology) synthesis of data from the sensory manifold into objects by means of the categories.
  8. Archaic. a plan, scheme, or plot.

noun

  1. the faculty or action of producing ideas, esp mental images of what is not present or has not been experienced
  2. mental creative ability
  3. the ability to deal resourcefully with unexpected or unusual problems, circumstances, etc
  4. (in romantic literary criticism, esp that of S. T. Coleridge) a creative act of perception that joins passive and active elements in thinking and imposes unity on the poetic materialCompare fancy (def. 9)
n.

“faculty of the mind which forms and manipulates images,” mid-14c., ymaginacion, from Old French imaginacion “concept, mental picture; hallucination,” from Latin imaginationem (nominative imaginatio) “imagination, a fancy,” noun of action from past participle stem of imaginari (see imagine).

see figment of one’s imagination.

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