 Originally Posted by Dannon Oneironaut
@Really: Did you read the wiki article on scientism?
and yeah, I think appreciation is subjective also, kind of like ethics in a way.
Yes I read the main part of it, why? Appreciation is definitely subjective, yes.
 Originally Posted by thegnome54
Dannon, I think a good analogy here might be chess. It was long believed that chess masters would always be able to beat the computers, because they intuitively knew the best strategies and could see higher aspects of the game than any program could. However, since chess is a very well-defined system, computational power eventually won out. This seems like something similar to 'the ability to make good music'. Music is a huge but well-defined thing: a sequence of noises audible to the human ears. Right now, human musicians are believed to be able to make much better music than any program could because of their artistic intuition and whatnot. Eventually, however, we might come to understand the human brain well enough to make a program that creates music which people find more enjoyable, and generally 'better' than human musicians can reliably produce.
There are already people who code music using ridiculous math and fancy programs, however it is generally for other reasons. I still see that you have a limited argument. First of all, there is only one aim for a chess game: Check-Mate. In music, the variables and ideals are theoretically infinite. There is no such thing as "correct" music or "good music." The only thing a smart computer program would be able to do is to formulate a piece according to somebodies ideal. That is only one ideal. Sure, it may sound great to the target audience. But to another person, it is all the same: They either enjoy it or not. There's no such thing as programming 'good music', because 'good music' is another term for desirable music; desirability and goodness are subjective. A persons desirability could even be that the music must be human-made, otherwise it is 'unnatural'. All a program can do is provide another method, probably for less a experienced musician.
 Originally Posted by DuB
A scientific approach could tell us a lot more than that. As you know, there are a near infinite number of chord changes one can cycle through during a song, and which combination of progressions and resolutions will sound best to the audience is an empirical question, in the sense that it is concerning a fact which can be verified or refuted by reference to the external world. We can approach it as such by trying several of the combinations and seeing what works the best.
And how is this approach any different than a talented musician doing the same thing? There is potentially an audience for whatever sound you're going to make. Science is not essential to art at all. An artist who knows their audience already knows what they like, and often that just happens naturally.
 Originally Posted by DuB
Well, yes and no. I think this point is where the fundamental disagreement here lies, so let me clear things up a bit. As I wrote earlier, I am skeptical that science will ever answer the question of why we have subjective experience in the first place. So in that sense, you're right, science cannot tell us the "why" of subjective experience. Which is unfortunate, because it's one of the most interesting and puzzling questions of all.
But we're not talking about the "why"--we're talking about the "what." Studying the contents of subjective experience is actually very easy, and I happen to be in the business of doing so ( <---I'm a link... click me and read me! I'm interesting!  ). All you have to do is ask people! For example, I can give you a chocolate bar, and then punch you in the face, and ask you which of those two experiences gave you more pleasure. Upon hearing your answer, I've just learned a fact about your subjective experience! (Although perhaps not a very informative one in this case.)
Using this same basic method, I can learn all sorts of interesting facts about your subjective experiences as you listen to various pieces of music. And as long as I am eliciting your responses in a systematic and rigorous way, I am "doing science" on your subjective experience of music.
That's a good explanation, because at the same time it illustrates why science is both limited and yet useful. However, the fundamental notion of 'consciousness' is not concerning 'content' of experience, but 'context'. The very doubt of "will ever answer the question of why we have subjective experience in the first place." indicates that science is limited to the paradigm of causality (except quantum physics & string theory etc). This also means that to really discover the 'why' of life is actually the 'what' of life; 'why' is just more of a conundrum.
 Originally Posted by Mark75
I am talking about the experience itself, too. The experience is subject to individual brains. That doesn't make it something magical or outside of nature.
If you were talking about the experience itself, you wouldn't need to mention the brain. Experience itself in terms of subjectivity is primarily related to consciousness, not just the physical apparatus of perception and the five senses. Science cannot really go far into consciousness.
|
|
Bookmarks