Earthborn
Terrestrial Intelligence
Not everything that is not random noise is music. If you want to argue that musical ability is just the ability to produce non-random noise than every mechanical clock or diesel engine has musical ability. I don't think that's what musicologists mean by it, though.But I can determine whether or not it's music or just random noise.
It also does not distinguish between the 'towering virtuoso' and the person who struggles making music. The difference between a virtuoso and a struggler is how good their music is, which you have claimed can be determined objectively. Now you claim otherwise.
I can easily make noise that is not random. Making music is a lot harder. So my ability to make music is not directly connected to ability to make non-random noise.Right. And that is their ability to make music as opposed to random noise.
What objective criteria can they use to distinguish music from non-music?Absolutely incorrect. There are all sorts of objective criteria that they use.
I don't believe you.In many cases, no.
No, and I did not have to teach my cats either. So I don't see the difference between my behaviour and that of other animals.Did someone have to teach you how to deal with each and every challenge or decision you have made in your entire life?
Your point should be that humans and animals are different in this regard. I still don't see how it is.But it's not limited to the precise lessons of that enforcement. That's the point.
I can think of a few other situations too. If I look out the window, the sky seems closer to orange/black to me.Not when it's cloudy.![]()
No, I don't. In my mind learning means gaining the ability to use it other situations, if I am not able to use it I have not learned it, and if I learned it I am able to use it.You don't see any objective difference at all between learning a particular lesson and being able to apply what you've learned to new situations?
I'm afraid I posted a link to the wrong moth music because I didn't know where to find the original site I found it on. I meant to post this. This is about using data measured directly from nerve cells and changing them directly into musical sounds. So what you are listening to is nerve cells communicating with eachother.This story doesn't say much. Were these moths taught to do something, or is it just reading harmonic vibrations that all moths eminate?
The link I posted earlier is also interesting, but not as remarkable.
There are still many forms of vibrating air that have many of those characteristics without being music, while some forms of music misses some of these characteristics. I can make a tape consisting of little more than a pounding beat similar to heavy machinery, and some people will think it is music. But the sound of heavy machinery is not something considered music. So what is the difference? Whatever it is, it is not an objective difference. It seems more likely that the difference is in how people interpret the sound.Again, I have pointed out all sorts of things that make music unique from other forms of "vibrating air."