A contemporary philosopher called Vilém Flusser once wrote an article called “The Cube’s mith” in which he affirms that we are beings that tend to crystallize ourselves in cubes, meaning that our creativity, although very elastic, is limited by walls.
These boundaries are built throughout our species’ history, through a set of concepts that petrified our sense of reality. This last one is, in the first place, one very strong manifestation of our collective imagination.
To bend these fences is a challenge that demands abstraction from what we primarily know as being reality. It requires that we unleash our minds from the mith of society itself in order to free our amorphous creative potential and get rid of the box that shapes it.