Imagination
Dollcee said to Dos, if we are invisible to the culture only because no one knows we exist, then, there must be lots of things that are invisible to us as well. Really good things, that if we knew they existed, then we could, do whatever.
Dos said, I think that is why we have an imagination.
Dollcee said, that is all well and good Dos, but I am sure there are things that are so fantastical, that we do not know how to imagine them.
Dos said, do you think imagination was invented back in the olden days to prevent ‘Sudden Onset Boredom’.
Dollcee replied, that must be where that old time saying, ’to sob’ came from, ‘Sudden Onset Boredom’.
Dos said, I think imagination can only happen, if you practice doing it, imagining, that is. When you are a musician, you have to practice. So, if you are an imaginationist, then, I am sure you would have to practice imagining.
Dollcee said, as content makers for the culture, all our conceptualism is sort of practicing for being imaginationists.
Dos said, that’s it, we probably only have to practice certain aspects, because we are doing it all the time.
Dollcee asked, what aspects do you think we should practice Dos?
Dollcee’s question put an end to the continuity of the conversation, because Dos did not have a clue about the conceptual aspects of imagination.
Dollcee, who is a keen conceptualizer, did have thoughts about what is imagining and so she reignited the conversation.
Dollcee said, I think imagination is a game played in the neural networks through random switching to make new pathways. These new pathways provide interesting concepts from previously established configurations. This could probably be easier to understand by applying the term, thinking.
Padoke thought, you have to hand it to them, ‘thinking’, what a clever concept.