User:NoNamesLeft/Imagination
“Just use your imagination”
“I'd Like to imagine I didn't just read this article”
Imagination is a mental faculty that serves as a coping mechanism for those who cannot or will not accept reality. In short, it is the ability to conjure up images and factual scenarios that do not, in actuality, exist at the present moment. Like all mental faculties, this ability can be used for good or evil. Luckily, it is usually just used by harmless children who imagine things like flying popcorn or talking puppies. In the hands of the wrong person with the "right" capabilities, however, imagination can wreak havoc on reality (the ability to imagine a Jew-less world can turn into quite a horrible waking nightmare, for example). This article will cover the nature of imagination and its characteristics, as well as those who are most likely to utilize its power, for better or for worse.
The Nature of Imagination[edit | edit source]
Unicorns and dragons and wives who don't nag are all figments of the "imagination." As such, they have one thing in common: they exist only in people's minds. This is the hallmark of imagination; the very concept of envisioning something that does not exist right now.
Yet at the same time, imagination is fundamentally a paradox. On the one hand - as stated above - imagination involves envisioning things that do not exist. On the other hand, people can only imagine non-existent things based upon what they have perceived in reality. To imagine a pleasant airport, for example, one must have experienced a real airport at some time in his or her life (this example borders on the ridiculous (a pleasant airport!), but please bear with it - this article is about imagination, after all). To imagine a unicorn, a person must be familiar with real horses and real animals that actually have horns. To imagine a funny Uncylopedia article, moreover, a person must have actually read a funny article elsewhere (the Onion, perhaps). The point is obvious but crucial: imagination is the opposite of reality, but depends wholly upon reality to exist.
Imagination is also a paradox because it is uniquely harmless and potent at the same time. A one-year old child who imagines the ability to swim, for example, is very unlikely to make much impact on reality - the child may not yet even be able to walk, let alone stay afloat in a pool on his own. Likewise, an inmate who is serving a life sentence in a Supermax prison facility can imagine imposing a nuclear attack on New York City, but will almost certainly lack the ability to act on his imaginative ruminations - he sleeps on a concrete bed 23 hours a day, seven days a week, and never has human contact. Indeed, most instances of using imagination result in no harm.
On the other hand, imagination can lead to incredible things when it leads to obsession. In the early 1900's, Orville Redenbacher and his brother Wilbur imagined human beings flying; they developed an obsession and changed the world forever by inventing popcorn airplanes. Thus imagination can work for the betterment of humanity. At the same time, however, imagination can lead to terrible things. For example, several Hollywood sitcom writers in the 1990's came up with an idea for a show starring Tim Allen, they created the disastrous television series known as "Home Improvement." The horror remains with humanity to this day.
Subtypes of Imagination[edit | edit source]
As stated above, the first and primary use of imagination is to cope with reality. This "coping" can take many forms.
Childhood Imagination[edit | edit source]
Children are not always good at separating reality from imagination - and often times they do not want to do so. Children have little to no control over their environments. They do not choose their parents, their homes, or even what they eat. It is therefore not difficult to understand why so many children turn to imagination to cope with the stresses of everyday life (that is, until they are old enough to score street drugs).
One common form of imagination (often called "make-believe" when referring to its use by children) is conjuring up friends. These "make-believe" friends are almost always invisible to adults, whose powers of imagination are often lacking. If make-believe friends take the form of dead or mangled people, they are usually an indicator of psychiatric trauma and mean that the child should be seen by a health-care professional.
Religious Imagination[edit | edit source]
Make-believe statistics show that 93.5% of the population (adult and child) take solace in the idea that an imaginary "God" watches over and protects them. The imagination can be quite extreme, such as (1) accepting the belief that wine is miraculously transformed in an instant into the Blood of Christ, (2) accepting the belief that "sinners" are sent after death to a fiery pit of brimstone and torture called, "Hell", and (3) accepting the belief that one who behaves well during life will be entitled to 72 virgins in Heaven upon his death. The imagination needed can also be less extreme (see Agnosticism).
Drug-Induced Imagination (also known as Hallucination)[edit | edit source]
This is the best kind of imagination because it is often the most extreme. Pink elephants, puppets in disguise, talking sporks - you name it, it can be manifested during a drug-induced hallucination. Such hallucinations are often so vivid that the sufferer cannot tell them apart from reality. When people suffer from such delusions, they should drive themselves promptly to their doctors.
Sexual Imagination[edit | edit source]
Sex is one of the most basic human drives and as such very often is subjected to the imagination. Midget pornography and fisting were imagined before they became reality. So were cock rings, love dolls, dildos, vibrators, and artificial vaginas. The subject is simply too expansive to tackle here. Suffice to say that at least where sex is concerned, if it can be imagined, it has probably happened. And imaging the reality is itself a scary thought.
Commercial Imagination[edit | edit source]
Advertisers bombard consumers constantly with made-up images of how much better life would be if only the consumers were to buy the product being sold. This holds true for products ranging from soft drinks to dildos to houses. The unifying theme is the imagination, and how it contrasts with reality. In real life, one's existence is not improved substantially just by drinking a certain soda or driving a certain car.
Conclusion[edit | edit source]
The imagination is a powerful tool that can be incredibly silly or incredibly dangerous. It has existed since the dawn of humanity, and will continue to exist as long as their are people, or until robots gain artificial intelligence and imagine a world without humans (i.e., probably sometime in the next century).