So, yes, the best music and art is profound, even if it doesn't mean anything. — T Clark
Would mind independent objects be what Kant called "Thing-in-Itself"? Kant seems think they exist, but outside of the reason's boundary. They cannot be known, but are postulated? — Corvus
Oh, Ok. Then I'll address my remarks to Joshs; "convey" implies that something moved from here to there, so one might be tempted to ask what it is that was moved, and set that out in words. But nothing - no thing - was moved. — Banno
so one might be tempted to ask what it is that was moved, and set that out in words. But nothing - no thing - was moved. — Banno
convey (v.)
early 14c., conveien, "to go along with;" late 14c., "to carry, transport;" from Anglo-French conveier, Old French convoiier "to accompany, escort" (Modern French convoyer), from Vulgar Latin *conviare "to accompany on the way," from assimilated form of Latin com "with, together" (see con-) + via "way, road" (from PIE root *wegh- "to go, move, transport in a vehicle").
Meaning "communicate by transmission" is from late 14c. Sense of "act of transferring property from one person to another" is from 1520s. It was a euphemism for "steal" 15c.-17c., which helped broaden its meaning. Related: Conveyed; conveying.
- like that. Maybe this needs a thread of its own.)Information was moved. — Pop
are you just elucidating what was said? — Banno
the explanation for one's actions is post hoc. — Banno
expecting actions to be the expression of explicit deliberation. — Banno
This is far from simple.... — Banno
what the painting conveys is different from what any interpretation provides. — T Clark
The perturbations ( neural activity ) in an artist's mind, are expressed in their actions or an artefact, the information of which is conveyed to the audience as vibration ( music ), or light waves, to be reconstituted as perturbations of neural activity.
So the mind activity of one mind finds it's way into another mind, via information. — Pop
"convey" implies that something moved from here to there, so one might be tempted to ask what it is that was moved, and set that out in words. But nothing - no thing - was moved. — Banno
Isnt the painting itself an interpretation, and always a slightly different one every time we return to it, the same way that a novel or a poem means exactly how one interprets it at any given time — Joshs
Regarding your quote , of course when we hear the first notes of a song we notice the physical instruments -and other such surface details. — Joshs
Music is a language that particularly well suited to convey these shifts in feeling from moment to moment. That does not mean that it is content free. — Joshs
As long as we are conscious we are construing our world moment to moment on the basis of how the next event is similar and different with respect to the previous. This is the basis of all language. As we perform this construing moment to moment , we perceive each event both in terms of it’s unique content and its affective relation to what went before it , how it either carries forward or changes a previous mood , a feeling disposition, a motivational attitude , the way in which events matter to us. — Joshs
You're describing art as if it's like a phone call. I think it can be sort of like that, but sometimes an artist might make a painting that she herself doesn't understand, and wouldn't be able to put the experience of creating it in words. — frank
Yes, that is true. Nevertheless the work is always presented within a structure, and is symbolic of the artist's mind activity, and so as structured information makes its way to the mind of another, where it either resonates or does not. I have a definition of art here. — Pop
All true. I would just say the piece itself is like a seed. Some seed falls on rocky soil and comes to nothing. Some seed falls on fertile soil and becomes a jungle. — frank
A piece of art is like a single child who grows up to be a million different people, each in its own psychic universe. — frank
To convey a meaning is to alter what is expressed. — Joshs
This relates to what Joshs is saying above and what Shannon calls entropy of information. The information that is understood is in some way already established information. The information that is not understood is potentially new information, that may in time be understood, through a revisiting and reinterpretation of the work. — Pop
Are you identifying the artist's neurological states as the source data? Then the artwork is the channel and the viewer is receiving information that she uses to reconstruct the artist's neurological states in her own head? — frank
Exactly. That is precisely what I'm trying to get at. In some sense the pattern in one mind becomes a pattern in another mind, and If it resonates similarly in both minds, then it is understood, becomes meaningful, and is successful. — Pop
This is the difference between good art and bad art. Not so much a matter of artworthiness, but a matter of whether that communication took effect, and had the desired result. — Pop
Could be. I often wonder what an aesthetic sense really is. If I follow my aesthetics while gardening, am I using the scene around me to transmit information about my neurological states? — frank
This maintains the misleading reification that there is a something that is expressed, something reproduced. It isn't always so. Better to say something is done. Instead of looking for meaning, look at what we do when we use words. — Banno
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