So creativity then. Right now we are in the so called Information Age, some called next as Imagination Age. Like Scientific Age created Industrial Age, Industrial Age made Information Age possible, Imagination Age made possible by the Information Age. From Information, we can exploit it into something, Imagination, which include creativity are widespread, as Information now. It maybe went so far from the original conversation, but it’s fun lol
Creativity and imagination exist in every age, it is just the style, how they are expressed and governed through conventions and institutions differs from time to time.
For example, in the past armies show up on a field, and do set-piece battle for 1 day to 1 week, now battles are more fluid and longer in duration, with bigger scale. Strategy and tactics employed also differs accordingly, the dynamics of the logistics also.
For insight, the speed of an army in 100 BC and 1800 AD are the same; that is the speed of marching of men and horse, but we know war in 100 BC and 1800 are very different type of wars, this is where various other things has to be taken into consideration. In Battle of Pyramids, and Battle of Abukir, Napoleon faced a bigger Egyptian army with far more cavalry, tens of thousands of them, some also equipped with guns too. So why the French won and not the Egyptian? Both of them has infantry with guns, and cavalry units equipped with swords, then what make the French different? The
human of course,
the quality of the general and the troops were superior.
All books that I read on the theory of war,
all of them agreed that there is no single answer, or method, that can be considered the best, or even the only way that war should be taught and fought. So what they put in the books are
insights, to train the mind of the
human to be creative and able to recognize fundamental truth in war, and from there, able to be creative in solving unique problems that they face.
So yes, you can say human creativity is the key, including in war. Yes it is chaotic and uncertain, but it is what it is. Some tries to use mathematical calculation and machines to make war predictable, yet as recent cases proves, some things are not governed with these rules. Why Taliban won? this is unexplainable if one uses "objective" measurement only. It's clear that human insight is always needed and reliance on machines is not always the best way to solve a problem.