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Well, I think creativity's relationship to a scholarship is really like the origins.
A scholarship is what comes first to stimulate the question.
What are you trying to solve. If you're not aware of
what is your curiosity about. And if it's not something interesting,
thus far not worth doing scholarship on it. So if you have a novel creative, new question,
that's worth the hard work of scholarship.
I think some scholars are very good at asking these, you know, sort of more methodical, step-by-step,
next questions or logical extensions from other people's work.
Some can also be quite good enough to get you your Master's degree or Doctor's, get you a tenure
that I don't know that they're really doing anything that creative.