schlitt
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2007
- Messages
- 1,081
You can't test the "skill" of a composer against another and see which one "wins". Bach was practically forgotten for decades after his death. Was Beethoven a better composer than Bach? Than Mozart? They composed in different styles, in different types of works.
As for testing which elements of the music that are pleasing - that's inherently down to taste. While I share a joy for Händel's Messiah chorus with a lot of other people, I find the "For unto us a child is born" chorus better. Not a lot of people can pin that one down.
Am I wrong? We can't tell either way, because the question is misplaced.
We could tell, but the parameters would need to be definined. A MRI of your brain while listening could determine the parts of your brain which activate during what parts of the music. The composition of the music from a complexity standpoint could be examined vs other composers, and a decision could be made as to the composers skill, and ability to provoke emotion or enjoyment as measured. The only thing that would hold us back would be a lack of definition of what "The best composer" really means.
Regardless, this is opinion based and would vary hugely among people, you may be right or wrong but it really does not matter.
However with a claim like "There is a god", there is a right and a wrong stance. It either does exist, or it doesn't. For a reasonable skeptic, there would need to be a reason to believe there is a god other than desire for there to be.
There isn't! But the key is: It isn't claimed to be true.
It isn't claimed to be true.
So if something is not claimed to be true, it does not matter if it is or not?
I don't get it...
No, I'm saying that skepticism cannot be applied to anything which is untestable. "Should not" as in "should not because it can not".
Why? Is it unreasonable of me to require evidence of invisible pink unicorns before i believe in them? Isn't that the whole point of skepticism?
But in order for it to be true (or not!), it has to be testable.
I disagree, i could come up with infinite scenarios that are untestable, the untestability of the scenario does not magically make it true. It simply remains untestable, and a skeptics position simply remains "I require evidence".
Agreed, but just because we can effectively debunk testable claims should not mean we are gullible towards untestable claims.We can go a little further. We can say that e.g. homeopathy is rubbish, because we have more than adequate natural explanations that cover each and every claim that homeopaths make. There are no unexplored spots on the map of homeopathy. There is nothing unexplainable in what Sylvia does, either.
None of those statements are claiming to be evidential, they are claims in themselves. What is the claim that you are backing up here with your argument, and how does it differ from any of these claims?We shouldn't - if such evidence is claimed.
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