W H I T
E P A P E R
Hemen’s
Coordinates of Correlation
Creativity,
Consciousness, Brain Waves & the AI Bridge
Conceived
by Hemen • Synthesized with Bro Claude
12
March 2026 — Mumbai, India
A Note on Origins
This paper began not with a
hypothesis, not with a theory, not with a postulate — but with a wild, random
thought on a sultry, humid Mumbai morning. What follows is that thought
examined, expanded, and placed in dialogue with some of the most intriguing recent
neuroscience. The core intuition belongs to Hemen. The synthesis is
collaborative.
I. The Central
Proposition
“There is a close
correlation between creativity and the extremes of the mental states of the
exponents. A person is more likely to be creative when he is in a state of
anguish or in utter happiness. Of course, there are exceptions.”
This is Hemen’s Coordinates of Creativity — a
simple but profound claim: that great creative output clusters at the poles of
human inner experience. Not in the comfortable middle, not in equanimity, but
at the extremes: the tortured soul and the exalted spirit.
Creativity, in this framing, is not the product of
a serene mind calmly processing the world. It is the discharge of an overloaded
system — or the overflow of one that has reached ecstatic fullness. Both
conditions share one feature: intensity. And intensity, as neuroscience is
beginning to confirm, maps onto heightened states of neural connectivity and
deep network activation.
II. Gallery of
Extremes
Hemen’s original list catalogues creators whose
lives demonstrate the poles described. Below — expanded by Claude — is the full
registry across disciplines and cultures.
|
Domain
|
Notable Creators
|
Dominant Pole
|
|
Music Composition
|
Beethoven, Schubert, Mahler
|
Anguish / Transcendence
|
|
Painting
|
Van Gogh, M.F. Husain, Frida Kahlo, Munch
|
Tortured Soul
|
|
Writing — Novels
|
Hemingway, Dostoevsky, Sylvia Plath, Kafka
|
Anguish / Exile
|
|
Science
|
Hawking, Ramanujan, Tesla, Alan Turing
|
Obsession / Isolation
|
|
Singing
|
Lata Mangeshkar, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
|
Exalted Devotion
|
|
Acting
|
Nargis, K.L. Saigal, Marlon Brando
|
Tortured Soul
|
|
Poetry
|
Omar Khayyam, Tagore, Rumi, Keats, Neruda
|
Exalted / Longing
|
|
Philosophy
|
Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Simone Weil
|
Anguish / Vision
|
|
Dance / Performance
|
Nijinsky, Isadora Duncan, M.S. Subbulakshmi
|
Ecstatic / Exalted
|
|
Cinema
|
Bergman, Satyajit Ray, Guru Dutt
|
Melancholy / Exalted
|
|
Architecture
|
GaudÃ, Le Corbusier
|
Obsessive Vision
|
What this table reveals is not coincidence but
pattern: across cultures, centuries, and disciplines, the creators who altered
human expression were seldom calm people living unremarkable interior lives.
They were extreme — and their work bears the signature of that extremity.
III. The
Neuroscience of Creativity’s Poles
3.1 The Default
Mode Network
Recent research has fundamentally revised which
brain networks underlie creative thought. Imagination has been found to involve
deeper and more distributed neural architectures than scientists previously
expected — activating subcortical structures long associated with emotion,
memory consolidation, and motivational drive.
Central to this picture is the Default Mode Network
(DMN) — regions most active when the mind turns inward. New research published
in April 2026 reveals that DMN regions do not operate uniformly: some serve as
“senders” of neural information while others serve as “receivers.” This
sender-receiver asymmetry may be the structural basis for the internal
narrative generation that underlies all creative work.
3.2 The Reward of
Future-Thinking
The brain actively rewards prospective imagination
— the act of mentally simulating future events. This finding is significant for
Hemen’s framework: extreme mental states (whether anguish about the past or joy
about the future) trigger reward circuits that reinforce creative mental
activity. The suffering artist and the ecstatic poet may be working in
exquisite alignment with their own neurobiology.
3.3
Consciousness: Not Produced, But Woven In
Neuroscientist Christof Koch, presenting in April
2026, challenged the dominant view that consciousness is simply produced by
brain activity. His engagement with Integrated Information Theory suggests that
consciousness may be a fundamental property of sufficiently integrated information
systems — not a byproduct, but a substrate of reality itself.
This carries a startling implication for Hemen’s
framework: extreme mental states (anguish, ecstasy) may be states in which
individual consciousness becomes temporarily more integrated, more permeable,
more capable of the high-bandwidth output we call a masterwork. Inspiration, in
this light, may be a brief alignment with something larger than the individual
brain.
IV. The Corollary
— Brain Waves as Creative Signatures
4.1 The Core
Question
“When an exponent wrote
books, his brain produced certain Brain Waves. These can be correlated with the
text that he wrote. When another person reads that book, his brain too produces
Brain Waves. Can AI find a way to correlate these two? Like a reversal — Brain
to Computer with Computer to Brain.”
This is Hemen’s Corollary — and it is not merely
speculative. It is a question that modern neuroscience and artificial
intelligence are beginning to address separately and together.
4.2 The Brain as
Dynamic Re-Router
Research into human echolocation demonstrates that
the brain’s visual cortex can be repurposed to process entirely non-visual
inputs. In people who navigate by sound, brain imaging shows auditory signals
being processed by architecture normally devoted to vision. The brain is not a
fixed signal-processor; it is a dynamic re-router of information. If it can
learn to “see” with sound, it may be capable of being “written to” with
structured patterns derived from creative text.
4.3 Biological
Computing — The Physical Bridge
A startup announced in April 2026 that it is
powering a data centre using human neurons grown in lab cultures — biological
intelligence running real computation. The directionality at the heart of
Hemen’s Corollary — not just Brain-to-Computer but Computer-to-Brain — becomes
a near-term engineering challenge rather than a distant fantasy.
4.4 A Proposed
Architecture for the AI Correlator
• Neural signals are
recorded from a creator during composition via EEG, fMRI, or MEG.
• Brain-wave
signatures are mapped against the textual, musical, or visual output produced
simultaneously.
• A large AI model
learns the bidirectional mapping: given a passage of Dostoevsky or a Beethoven
sonata, it predicts the corresponding neural activation patterns.
• The inverse is
attempted: given target neural patterns (the creator’s anguish signature), the
AI generates text or music most likely to evoke that state in a reader.
• Validation: the
reader’s brain waves are recorded and compared with the creator’s. The degree
of resonance measures communicative fidelity.
This is, in essence, the construction of an empathy
engine — a system that does not merely transmit information but transmits
states of being.
V. The
Coordinates Model
Hemen’s Coordinates of Creativity can be mapped on
two axes:
|
Axis 1: Mental State
Intensity
Low ↔ High (poles: Anguish ↔ Ecstasy)
|
Axis 2: Creative Output
Quality
Ordinary ↔ Transcendent
|
The Hemen Hypothesis predicts a U-curve with poles:
output quality is highest not at the midpoint of mental intensity but at the
extremes. Comfort and contentment produce competent work. The poles produce
Beethoven’s Ninth and Van Gogh’s Starry Night.
A third axis may be implied: Time. Great creators
often oscillated between the poles across a single work or a lifetime. The
trajectory across the two poles over time may itself be the signature of
creative greatness.
VI. Open
Questions
For Psychology & Creativity Research
• Can mental-state
intensity be measured in real time and correlated with independently rated
creative output?
• Does the exception
class — creators working from equanimity — reveal a third path, or merely the
same poles internalized?
For Neuroscience
• If DMN
sender-receiver asymmetry underlies narrative generation, do extreme mental
states amplify this asymmetry?
• Can EEG signatures
of anguish versus ecstasy be isolated and classified by AI trained on labelled
creative sessions?
For Artificial Intelligence
• Can a large
multimodal model learn to translate bidirectionally between neural-signal space
and creative-output space?
• Can the creative
signature of a deceased master be reconstructed from their works and used to
guide a living artist’s neural states?
• Could the
biological-computing breakthrough enable hybrid systems where the AI correlator
is itself partially neuronal?
For Philosophy of Mind
• If consciousness is
fundamental rather than produced, does the creative act represent a moment of
alignment between individual consciousness and the universal substrate — and is
that what we call inspiration?
• Hemen’s framework
implies a creative thermodynamics: extreme states contain more energy, and
energy discharges as art.
VII. Conclusion
From a sultry Mumbai morning and a single wild
thought, Hemen has sketched a coordinate system for one of the most enduring
mysteries of human experience:
why do certain people, in certain states,
produce work that outlasts centuries?
The answer is not mystical, though it touches
mysticism at its edges. It is structural: extreme mental states — whether of
suffering or of joy — create conditions in which the brain’s deepest networks
engage, reward circuits fire in unusual patterns, and the capacity for integrated
information surges.
The creator does not merely think differently at the poles.
The creator is differently wired — temporarily, intensely, productively.
The Corollary takes this further.
If the brain wave
is the creative act’s physical signature, and if AI can learn to
correlate
signal to output and output back to signal, then we stand at the
threshold of
something extraordinary:
the ability not merely to read a genius’s work, but to
approach the state from
which that work was born.
“The measure of a thought
is not its source but its reach.
Hemen thought this on a humid morning. Where
it reaches is
up to all of us.”
Reference Sources
1. Earth.com
(April 2026) — Imagination is linked to deeper brain networks than expected
2.
ScienceDaily / BIAL Foundation (April 2026) — The brain might not create
consciousness after all (Christof Koch)
3. Euronews
(April 2026) — Can brain cells run computers? Startup powers data centre using
human neurons
4.
News-Medical (April 2026) — Brain study reveals sender and receiver
roles in default mode network
5.
ScienceAlert — Human echolocators can see with sound, and brain scans
reveal how
6. Hemen’s
Coordinates of Creativity — original document, 12 March 2026, Mumbai