KingNothing
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What is it in our brains that makes us enjoy music?
The discussion centers around the neurological and psychological aspects of why humans enjoy music. Participants explore various theories, personal experiences, and emotional connections to music, touching on its qualities, properties, and the impact it has on listeners. The scope includes theoretical insights, personal anecdotes, and speculative reasoning about music's role in human experience.
Participants express a range of personal experiences and theories regarding music, with no clear consensus on the reasons behind its enjoyment. Multiple competing views remain about the emotional, structural, and naturalistic aspects of music appreciation.
Some discussions reference the complexity of sound and its effects on listeners, but these ideas remain speculative and are not universally accepted among participants. The conversation includes various interpretations of music's role and significance, highlighting the subjective nature of musical experience.
Ivan Seeking said:One thought that comes to mind is the rhythm of our mother's heartbeat.
Ivan Seeking said:Well, what qualities or unique properties can we assign to music?
For one, there is order. Music is comprised of patterns. There is melody,
harmony, rhythm, texture, and color. The form is modeled by the use of repetition and contrast.
KingNothing said:What is it in our brains that makes us enjoy music?
arildno said:Hmm..I'd say the same thing that makes us enjoy bird song, the sound of waterfalls and so on, i.e, that there is a component in our make-up that makes us enjoy our natural, auditive environment.
Hell_SD said:I don't know but i'd be keen to and also why do some people like music i just can't stand ?
BTW we make a bit of music ashttp://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=78588340"
arildno said:Of the set of sounds, humans seem to agree the most on whether they like/dislike it when it comes to naturally/organically produced sounds.
Far more discrepancy can be noted by sounds made by humans (i.e, music), whereas we agree again when it comes to the often sharp, jarring, "artificial" sounds produced by technological devices.