But then you are not explaining how music is able to "directly push emotional buttons". The last time you were saying that it is explained by our responses to recognizing patterns. This time, it seems like you are saying music somehow has direct access to emotions. — hypericin
Food for thought...why are educators so bent on making learning "fun" and why does "fun" in this case resemble marketing tactics? — TheMadFool
There are tunes that one listener finds sad and another finds happy. It still surprises me when it happens. So counter-intuitive! — Olivier5
I used to agree with this idea that the emotional charge of a given piece of music was "obvious" or "objective" for all to hear but it is not the case. — Olivier5
Creating the illusion of a natural connection. — bongo fury
Haha, but is it disappointing if the connection isn't natural? — bongo fury
The notion of the structure of a work [or any object] is as specious as the notion of the structure of the world. A work, like the world, has as many different structures as there are ways of organising it, of subsuming it under categorical schemata dependent upon some or other structural affinities with and differences from other works.
— Goodman, Problems and Projects — bongo fury
Is metaphor illusionary? — bongo fury
The chord expresses sadness in that it is a sample of metaphorically-sad things in general.
It still does not explain why minor chords tend to be heard as more subdued and less assertive than major chords. — Olivier5
because they have been used successfully to express sadness. — bongo fury
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