Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Robert Wrote: I can correlate ideas cognitively, ie blue is 'cool' red is 'hot' but i don't feel or experience these.
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Sakiro Wrote:
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Alex i think you are right .. but don't you think that we can too develop "wrong" synesthesia if you do it the way you say too? (maybe if you have a lot of wrong use in your rear nets)
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Hi dude,
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Cool .. now every piece is fitting together and i see it more clearly! =)
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Alex, do you know why we can develop imagination for example listening audiobooks (the mere act of listening that words "triggers" images in your minds) but .. this doesn't happend (because if it does there will be no reason to do the exercise) with listening the words merged with another sense? (example watching tv, or just listening to a person talk face to face?) .. is because somehow you can concentrate better with the words you hear and process internally the images that when there is another senses "competing" with it? (ej: vision)
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Hi dude,
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Another study about self-training Synesthetic abilities
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Hi dude,
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics long post, replying to long ago statements.
this is difficult to explain. Music does "affect" me, but so does any "noise". I find background music distracting, even irritating and would rather silence unless I'm using music to drown out some more irritating background noise, like people talking while I’m trying to concentrate. If music appreciation is hard wired, then why don't all people from different cultures or even within the same culture all like the same music? Should there not be a perfect set of tones that all humans find pleasing? Looking online, I found there is quite a bit of research on the subject http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles. … -the-Mind/ is an article that links to these studies, http://www.cell.com/current-biology/abstract/S0960-9822(14)00133-X http://cercor.oxfordjournals.org/conten … 80306ca5a0 if you go to the Barcelona University website you can take an only survey test. Unfortunately what I find is the "research" categorizes things, and compares music to monetary reward. There is no information I can find on repairing or improving things. I know I'm missing out on something that the majority of people put in the top 5 most important things in their lives, and want to address this. I have difficulty following lyrics, and making out accents, so I started doing the tutorial 5 auditory exercises, thinking it might be an inability to discern nuances that makes me lack appreciation. I find them tedious and boring, but stuck with them for a month hoping to see some improvement. One improvement from this has been that I pay close attention to how people speak. No obvious improvement in musical appreciation. An experiment I did that was informative was I collected about 2000 songs from various genres, and started listening to music twice a day. Any time I found myself paying attention to the music I marked that song with a note stating what I felt at the time. Normally the word that came to mind was "invigorate". I gathered about 50 such songs, and they were from varied genres. What I figured out was common among them, was they were all used in various movies (most of) which I enjoyed. This also explains "thus spake Zarathustra" which was used in "2001 a Space Odesye" A few other songs reminded me of specific places and events in my past with no obvious correlation to visual media. I made a playlist of these 50 songs and played them for few days, but they quickly lost their "invigorate" feeling. A month off, and (some of them) recover that feeling. Another thing I tried was to download all the lyrics to the music I was listening. This helped my "appreciation" tremendously for much of the music! I can see now why you enjoy Rush so much Alex. The lyrics make the music. But, I enjoyed reading them about the same as listening to them, and in some cases more so. Musical instruments. We have a piano, acoustic guitar, alto sax, bongos, harmonica, and a recorder. I messed around with each one for awhile, but did not feel any kind of interest. Should I force myself to "learn" one? My last experiment was to "forced association". Every year I go on a motorcycle road trip with a friend, just exploring the countryside. I really enjoy this trip so last summer down through the Appalachians, I listened to the local radio station as much as I could stand over two weeks. Now when I hear those songs, they do elicit the feelings of being on the open road. I don't know if this was a good trade off though, as it detracted from enjoying the original experience. any advice on how to exercise or hack this limitation is appreciated. I'm thinking I may need a hard take off approach, as I don't mind music when I'm drunk. (unless it is too loud and gets in the way of conversation) I wasn't clear here. When I am suddenly exposed to bright light, it make me want to sneeze, which I find very uncomfortable. So I move into bright areas slowly and cautiously, thereby preventing sneezing while allowing my eyes to adjust to the brighter conditions and then able to see potential threats. thanks for looking that up. I was thinking the trigeminal nerve might be associated because it’s involved in activation of the mammalian dive response. |
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics > Should there not be a perfect set of tones that all humans find pleasing?
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics Hi dudes,
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics
Thanks, I did find this funny in a cynical way, because that is pretty much how I hear the majority of music I'm exposed to... all mostly the same thing. as for universally pleasing tones, if there was some improvisational jazz, chinese opera, and austrailian indigenous music in that melange, i'd think you were on to something. For the second one, while it does appeal to my N5 in style, there are not enough points of similarity for me. watching it was much like trying to understand the Turbo-Encabulator. |
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics When I wrote “ If music appreciation is hard wired, then why don't all people from different cultures or even within the same culture all like the same music? “ (and yes, I meant societies)
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Re: synesthesia & aesthetics "improvisational jazz, chinese opera, and austrailian indigenous music in that melange, i'd think you were on to something. "
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