When AI Steals Our Creativity, Is That a Feature… or a Bug?
SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas
Release Date: 08/14/2025
SuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas
In this solo episode, James Taylor breaks down the core idea behind his new book SuperCreativity – Accelerating Innovation in the Age of AI. He explains why the common framing of humans versus machines is outdated, and how the real competitive advantage now comes from intentional collaboration with both people and intelligent systems. Drawing on eight years of global research and work with organisations across industries, James introduces the three types of modern creativity and reveals why AI doesn’t kill creativity, it exposes unpractised creativity. This episode offers a clear,...
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In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Jonathan Brill, futurist in residence at Amazon, inventor, strategist, and one of the world’s top-ranked futurists according to Forbes. Jonathan is the co-author of AI and the Octopus Organization, a provocative new book arguing that most AI initiatives fail because they are deployed into broken organisational systems. Rather than fixing dysfunction, AI often amplifies it. Jonathan explains why traditional, top-down organisations struggle in a world of accelerating change, and why the future belongs to adaptive,...
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In this solo episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, keynote speaker and AI advisor James Taylor reveals the real conversations happening backstage, in green rooms, and behind closed doors with global CEOs, board members, and fellow AI keynote speakers. While public discussions about artificial intelligence often focus on tools, demos, and optimism, the private conversations are shifting to much deeper questions. This episode explores how leaders are redesigning organisations, rethinking decision-making, redefining value creation, and reimagining leadership itself in an AI-augmented world....
info_outlineSuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas
Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Professor Jonathan S. Feinstein, the John G. Searle Professor of Economics and Management at Yale School of Management, and one of the world’s foremost thinkers on the science of creativity. His acclaimed new book, Creativity in Large-Scale Context, explores how creative ideas don’t emerge in isolation—they evolve within complex networks of people, places, experiences, and guiding principles. Feinstein shares why pure inspiration is rarely enough in today’s interconnected world, and how...
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The World of Creativity: Lessons from 75 Countries with Fredrik Haren Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor welcomes back Fredrik Haren, the globally renowned Creativity Explorer and author of The World of Creativity: A Journey Across 37 Countries to Discover the Secrets of Creative Minds. Over the past 25 years, Fredrik has travelled to more than 75 countries, meeting everyone from artists in Afghan villages to innovation leaders in global corporations — all to answer one question: What is creativity? In this fascinating and deeply human...
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Our Brains, Our Selves: How the Mind Creates Identity with Professor Masud Husain Episode Description In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Professor Masud Husain, neurologist, neuroscientist, essayist, and author of Our Brains, Ourselves: What a Neurologist’s Patients Tell Him About the Brain. A leading researcher at the University of Oxford, Husain explores how the brain constructs our sense of self—and what happens when that system breaks down. Through remarkable patient stories—from a man who loses his motivation after a stroke to a woman whose hand...
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In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor interviews Dr. Anna Abraham, neuroscientist, educator, and author of The Creative Brain: Myths and Truths. As the E. Paul Torrance Professor at the University of Georgia and director of the Creativity and Imagination Lab, Dr. Abraham has spent decades exploring the science behind creativity and imagination. Together, they dive deep into some of the most persistent myths about creativity—from the supposed link between creativity and mental illness to the popular idea that creativity is only a “right brain” activity. Along the...
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In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Anne-Laure Le Cunff — neuroscientist, entrepreneur, founder of Ness Labs, and author of Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World. Anne-Laure shares her personal journey from Google’s hustle culture to a health crisis that sparked a radical rethinking of success. Instead of chasing fixed goals and rigid outcomes, she advocates for a mindset of tiny experiments—low-risk, curiosity-driven trials that build resilience, creativity, and self-knowledge. We explore her insights on neuroscience,...
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In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor speaks with Dr. Leidy Klotz, engineer, designer, behavioral scientist, and author of Subtract: The Untapped Science of Less. Klotz reveals why our brains are biased toward adding complexity—and why the smartest solution is often to remove, reduce, or simplify. From Lego bridges and Jenga-inspired problem solving to organizational strategy and sustainability, Klotz shows how subtraction can fuel innovation, improve decision-making, and create more meaningful lives. Learn why leaders struggle to showcase competence by doing...
info_outlineSuperCreativity Podcast with James Taylor | Creativity, Innovation and Inspiring Ideas
The Creativity Advantage: How Creativity Shapes Our Lives with Dr. James C. Kaufman In this episode of the SuperCreativity Podcast, James Taylor sits down with Dr. James C. Kaufman, one of the world’s leading creativity researchers and a professor of educational psychology at the University of Connecticut. Known for groundbreaking concepts like the 4C Model of Creativity and the Sylvia Plath Effect, Kaufman’s latest book, The Creativity Advantage, explores how creativity impacts our lives far beyond innovation—enhancing our emotional well-being, self-insight, relationships, and sense of...
info_outlineIn this solo episode, James Taylor explores a timely question: when AI seems to take over creative work, is that progress or a problem? From a reflective moment on the beach at San Diego’s Hotel Del Coronado to research on “cognitive offloading,” James examines how generative AI (ChatGPT, Midjourney, DALL·E) can both supercharge and stunt our creative muscles. You’ll learn where AI outperforms humans (divergent and convergent thinking), where humans still shine (emotionally resonant storytelling), and a simple system for making AI your trampoline—not your crutch. Walk away with three practical habits—“No-AI time,” voice-and-values checks, and owning the “why”—to keep your imagination strong while you collaborate with machines.
Key takeaways
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AI can amplify or atrophy creativity. Heavy reliance risks “creative muscle” loss via cognitive offloading; intentional use expands your range.
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Strengths split: AI often scores higher on divergent (many ideas) and convergent (selecting) thinking, while humans lead in meaning-making and emotionally rich storytelling.
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Use AI as a collaborator, not an autopilot. Treat it like a trampoline that helps you jump higher, but you still do the jumping.
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Adopt “No-AI time.” Schedule regular sessions where you sketch, write, and brainstorm without digital assistance to keep creative muscles active.
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Own the context and the ‘why.’ Let AI assist with the what and how, but humans must retain judgment, values, and meaning.
Memorable quotes
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“AI is like a trampoline. It can bounce you higher—but you still need to do the jumping.”
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“Use AI like a trampoline, not a crutch.”
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“The future belongs to those who can imagine first, and engineer later.”
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“AI can draw our monsters faster, but we shouldn’t stop imagining them ourselves.”
Timestamps (approx.)
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00:09 — Opening question: Is AI stealing our creativity—or refining it? Beachside reflection at Hotel Del Coronado.
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01:xx — From curiosity to core tool: How generative AI moved into everyday creative workflows.
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02:xx — Cognitive offloading warning: Why heavy AI use can weaken the “creative muscle.”
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03:xx — What AI does better vs. worse: Divergent/convergent thinking vs. emotionally resonant writing.
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04:xx — Partnering with AI: How James uses AI to prototype, research, and explore client angles—without handing over the reins.
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05:xx — The trampoline metaphor: Collaborate with AI while preserving judgment and voice.
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06:xx — Three practices: No-AI time, voice/values injection, and owning the “why.”
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07:xx — Closing image: The child’s imperfect sand monster and the call to keep imagining first.
Call to action
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