Results for 'Middlesex Musical Society'

984 found
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  1.  9
    Music, society, agency.Nancy November (ed.) - 2023 - Boston: Academic Studies Press.
    Musicologists have increasingly taken a wide-angled lens on the study of music in society, to explore how it can be intertwined with issues of politics, gender, religion, race, psychology, memory and space. Recent studies of music in connection with society take in a variety of musical phenomena from diverse periods and genres-medieval, classical, opera, rock, etc. This ten-chapter book asks not only how music and society are, and have been, intertwined and mutually influential. It also examines (...)
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  2.  55
    (1 other version)Music, Metaphor and Society: Some Thoughts on Scruton.Robert Grant - 2012 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 71:177-207.
    Roger Scruton's 530-page blockbuster The Aesthetics of Music was published by Oxford University Press in 1997. A paperback edition followed two years later. Neither received more than a handful of notices, a few appreciative, but some grudging and some actually hostile. As its quality has come to be recognized, and as the resentments it provoked have either died down or found newer targets, the book has gradually achieved a certain canonical, even classic, status. Students of the subject now seem to (...)
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  3. Popular Music Studies and the Problems of Sound, Society and Method.Eliot Bates - 2013 - IASPM@Journal 3 (2):15-32.
    Building on Philip Tagg’s timely intervention (2011), I investigate four things in relation to three dominant Anglophone popular music studies journals (Popular Music and Society, Popular Music, and the Journal of Popular Music Studies): 1) what interdisciplinarity or multidisciplinarity means within popular music studies, with a particular focus on the sites of research and the place of ethnographic and/or anthropological approaches; 2) the extent to which popular music studies has developed canonic scholarship, and the citation tendencies present within scholarship (...)
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  4.  22
    Traditional Music in Modern Java: Gamelan in a Changing Society.Wayne Howard & Judith Becker - 1984 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 104 (2):346.
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  5.  19
    The Secret Power of Music: The Transformation of Self and Society through Musical Energy.David Tame - 1984 - Turnstone Press.
    This study of the hidden side of music and its subtle effects is one of the most detailed books ever written on the subject.
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  6.  23
    Sound, Society, and Music" Proper".Wayne D. Bowman - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review.
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  7.  28
    Parallels and paradoxes: explorations in music and society.Daniel Barenboim - 2004 - New York: Vintage Books. Edited by Edward W. Said & Ara Guzelimian.
    These free-wheeling, often exhilarating dialogues—which grew out of the acclaimed Carnegie Hall Talks—are an exchange between two of the most prominent figures in contemporary culture: Daniel Barenboim, internationally renowned conductor and pianist, and Edward W. Said, eminent literary critic and impassioned commentator on the Middle East. Barenboim is an Argentinian-Israeli and Said a Palestinian-American; they are also close friends. As they range across music, literature, and society, they open up many fields of inquiry: the importance of a sense of (...)
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  8.  64
    Music, Culture, and Society: A Reader (review).Eric Shieh - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (1):90-95.
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  9.  10
    Music as a Symbol of Cultural Resilience, Resistance, and Change: Reconstructions of Gendered Meanings in Revival of the Anzad, A One-Stringed Bowed Lute, in Tuareg Society.Susan Rasmussen - 2018 - Semiotics 2018:115-129.
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  10. Developing awareness of cultural music and its role in society with sound infusion.Alexis Dubourdieu & Jane Ward - 2012 - Ethos: Social Education Victoria 20 (2):8.
     
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  11. Rainbow Quest: The Folk Music Revival and American Society, 1940-1970.Ronald D. Cohen - 2004 - Science and Society 68 (4):507-510.
     
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  12.  59
    Music as a coevolved system for social bonding.Patrick E. Savage, Psyche Loui, Bronwyn Tarr, Adena Schachner, Luke Glowacki, Steven Mithen & W. Tecumseh Fitch - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44:e59.
    Why do humans make music? Theories of the evolution of musicality have focused mainly on the value of music for specific adaptive contexts such as mate selection, parental care, coalition signaling, and group cohesion. Synthesizing and extending previous proposals, we argue that social bonding is an overarching function that unifies all of these theories, and that musicality enabled social bonding at larger scales than grooming and other bonding mechanisms available in ancestral primate societies. We combine cross-disciplinary evidence from archeology, anthropology, (...)
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  13.  13
    The Aesthetics of Enchantment in the Fine Arts.Marlies Kronegger, Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka & Fine Arts Aesthetics American Society for Phenomenology - 2000 - Springer Verlag.
    Published under the auspices of The World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning, 19 essays document the April 1998 international congress held at Harvard University. They ponder on such topics as the phenomenology of the experience of enchantment, Leonardo's enchantress, the ambiguous meaning of musical enchantment in Kant's Third Critique, art and the reenchantment of sensuous human activity, the creative voice, the allure of the Naza, Henri Matisse's early critical reception in New York, Zizek's sublimicist aesthetic of enchanted (...)
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  14.  11
    The Politics of Memory in Music Education: (Re)imagining Collective Futures in Pluralist Societies.Albi Odendal & Heidi Westerlund - 2022 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 30 (1):79-99.
    Abstract:This theoretical inquiry approaches the challenge of reflexivity in the music education profession from the perspective of a collective and social understanding of memory. While memory is typically understood as being an individualistic, psychological, and cognitive phenomenon, in this paper we argue that the perspectives of collective and social memory may be of critical assistance to music teachers and music teacher educators who are facing the problem of increasing diversity. Teachers experience mounting pressure to include a wider selection of available (...)
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  15. Musical Meaning and Social Reproduction: A case for retrieving autonomy.Lucy Green - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (1):77-92.
    In this article I propose a theory of musical meaning and experience which takes into consideration the dialectical relationship between musical text and context, and which is flexible enough to apply to a range of musical styles. Through this theory I examine the roles played by the school music classroom which, despite the multiplicity of musical styles now incorporated into schooling, continues to contribute to the reproduction of existing social relations in the wider society. I (...)
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  16.  19
    A Music-Mediated Language Learning Experience: Students’ Awareness of Their Socio-Emotional Skills.Esther Cores-Bilbao, Analí Fernández-Corbacho, Francisco H. Machancoses & M. C. Fonseca-Mora - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    In a society where mobility, globalization and contact with people from other cultures have become its basic descriptors, the enhancement of plurilingualism and intercultural understanding seem to be of the utmost concern. From a Positive Psychology Perspective, agency is the human capacity to affect other people positively or negatively through their actions. This agentic vision can be related to mediation, a concept rooted in the socio-cultural learning theory where social interaction is considered a fundamental cornerstone in the development of (...)
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  17.  28
    Music in crime, resistance, and identity.Eleanor Peters (ed.) - 2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book considers the intersection of music, politics and identity, focusing on music (genres) across the world as a form of political expression and protest, positive identity formations, but also how the criminalisation, censuring, policing and prosecution of musicians and fans can occur. All-encompassing in this book is analyses of the unique contribution of music to various aspects of human activity through an international, multi-disciplinary approach. The book will serve as a starting point for scholars in those areas where there (...)
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  18.  17
    Judaism in Music and Other Essays.Richard Wagner - 1995 - U of Nebraska Press.
    Musical genius, polemicist, explosive personality-that was the nineteenth-century German composer Richard Wagner, who paid as much attention to his reputation as to his genius. Often maddening, and sometimes called mad, Wagner wrote with the same intensity that characterized his music. The letters and essays collected in Judaism in Music and Other Essays were published during the 1850s and 1860s, the period when he was chiefly occupied with the creation of The Ring of the Nibelung. Highlighting this collection is the (...)
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  19. "Music and Society: The Politics of Composition, Performance and Reception": Edited by Richard Leppert and Susan McClary. [REVIEW]Charlie Ford - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (4):383.
     
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  20.  22
    Music Education for Tomorrow's Society: Selected Topics. [REVIEW]Lawrence J. Dennis - 1978 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 12 (3):120.
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  21. The Music Between Us: Is Music a Universal Language?Kathleen Marie Higgins - 2012 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    From our first social bonding as infants to the funeral rites that mark our passing, music plays an important role in our lives, bringing us closer to one another. In _The Music between Us_, philosopher Kathleen Marie Higgins investigates this role, examining the features of human perception that enable music’s uncanny ability to provoke, despite its myriad forms across continents and throughout centuries, the sense of a shared human experience. Drawing on disciplines such as philosophy, psychology, musicology, linguistics, and anthropology, (...)
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  22.  40
    Language, Music, and Revitalizing Indigeneity: Effecting Cultural Restoration and Ecological Balance via Music Education.Anita Prest & J. Scott Goble - 2021 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 29 (1):24.
    In this paper, we explore challenges in conveying the culturally constructed meanings of local Indigenous musics and the worldviews they manifest to students in K-12 school music classes, when foundational aspects of the English language, historical and current discourse, and English language habits function to thwart the transmission of those meanings. We recount how, in settler colonial societies in North America, speakers of the dominant English language have historically misrepresented, discredited, and obscured cultural meanings that inhere in local Indigenous musics. (...)
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  23.  12
    Music as an Archetype in the 'Collective Unconscious'.Anthony Palmer - 1997 - Dialogue and Universalism 7 (3):187-200.
    The making of music has been sufficiently deep and widespread diachronically and geographically to suggest a genetic imperative. C.G. Jung's 'Collective Unconscious' and the accompanying archetypes suggest that music is a psychic necessity because it is part of the brain structure. Therefore, the present view of aesthetics may need drastic revision, particularly on views of music as pleasure, ideas of disinterest, differences between so-called high and low art, cultural identity, cultural conditioning, and art-for-art's sake.All cultures, past and present, show evidence (...)
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  24.  25
    Order and Chaos in Nature and Society. Chaos and Music.Rainer Hegselmann - 1993 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 1:296-298.
    Chaos, order and the transitions between them — these are issues which are being intensively debated in many different sciences at present. These debates are by no means restricted to the natural sciences. Numerous popularizations confirm the existence of a broad following which is intensely interested in the phenomenon. This provided the background against which the Institute Vienna Circle organized a symposion, as international as it was interdisciplinary, entitled “Order and Chaos in Nature and Society”, held on 18 – (...)
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  25.  31
    Confucian Music Aesthetics and Music Art of Ancient Traditional Religion in China.Ji Huihui - 2023 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 15 (3):347-362.
    China's traditional religious music is deeply rooted in the folk life and labor. Studying the influence of Confucian music aesthetics on ancient religious music and the establishment of modern music aesthetics has an important influence and the significance of learning from it. Studying the music aesthetics of Confucianism in the pre-Qin period can scientifically inherit and carry forward the traditional ritual and music civilization, combine the essence of China's traditional religious music aesthetics with reality, and explore the music theory that (...)
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  26.  22
    Vulgar Music and Technology.Richard Stivers - 2007 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 27 (2):133-135.
    Rock music, rap, and heavy metal are all forms of vulgar music. Vulgarity refers to actions and communication that are “common, noisy, and gross,” and are “untranscendent.” A technological society is a vulgar society in its base of materialism and exclusive concern with power. Its excessive rationality produces a need for escape, for ecstasy, for the release of instinctual power. Vulgar music mimics a technological society and provides compensation for its repressive impact.
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  27. Is music downloading the new prohibition? What students reveal through an ethical dilemma.Shoshana Altschuller & Raquel Benbunan-Fich - 2009 - Ethics and Information Technology 11 (1):49-56.
    Although downloading music through unapproved channels is illegal, statistics indicate that it is widespread. The following study examines the attitudes and perceptions of college students that are potentially engaged in music downloading. The methodology includes a content analysis of the recommendations written to answer an ethical vignette. The vignette presented the case of a subject who faces the dilemma of whether or not to download music illegally. Analyses of the final reports indicate that there is a vast and inconsistent array (...)
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  28.  12
    Music and Power in Eighteenth‐Century Court Society: Handel's Messiah and Protestant Ascendancy. By Marjorie Fitzpatrick. Pp. xxviii, 569, Lewiston/Lampeter, The Edwin Mellen Press, 2016, $119.95. [REVIEW]Patrick Madigan - 2016 - Heythrop Journal 57 (5):857-858.
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  29. Music and music education: Theory and praxis for 'making a difference'.Thomas A. Regelski - 2005 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 37 (1):7–27.
    The ‘music appreciation as contemplation’ paradigm of traditional aesthetics and music education assumes that music exists to be contemplated for itself. The resulting distantiation of music and music education from life creates a legitimation crisis for music education. Failing to make a noteworthy musical difference for society, a politics of advocacy attempts to justify music education. Praxial theories of music, instead, see music as pragmatically social in origin, meaning, and value. A praxial approach to music education stresses that (...)
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  30. Learning Music: Embodied Experience in the Life-World.Eva Alerby & Cecilia Ferm - 2005 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 13 (2):177-185.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Learning Music:Embodied Experience in the Life-WorldEva Alerby and Cecilia FermIn the present age, which is often signified as post-modern or knowledge-intensive, the calls for learning echo loud. Discussions of learning, as well as teaching, permeate almost all levels and arenas of our society, and have a sure place in every-day conversation as well as scientific debate. The concept of learning can be understood and explained in many different (...)
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  31.  12
    Music and Human Flourishing.Anna Harwell Celenza (ed.) - 2023 - New York, US: OUP Usa.
    It has long been accepted that participating in music, either as a performer, listener, and/or composer can contribute to human flourishing. This volume explores a fourth musical activity, the act of music scholarship, and reveals how engagement with the cultural, social, and political practices surrounding music contributes to human flourishing in a way that listening, performing, and even composing alone cannot. Music and Human Flourishing contains chapters by eleven prominent scholars representing the fields of musicology, ethnomusicology, and music theory. (...)
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  32.  38
    Music as Social Text.John Shepherd - 1991 - Cambridge: [England] : Polity Press.
    he study of music in its social context has expanded rapidly over the last fifteen years, yet little of this work discusses the music itself: the processes, textures and structures of sound which so powerfully affect us as individuals. Music as Social Text d begins by analysing the forces which have made this kind of discussion difficult within the intellectual tradition of the western world. The book argues that a society in which reality is grasped in an overwhelmingly visual (...)
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  33.  78
    Music and Cultural Theory.John Shepherd & Peter Wicke (eds.) - 1997 - Polity Press ; Published in the USA by Blackwell.
    In this book Shepherd and Wicke make a bold and original contribution to the understanding of music as a form of human expression. They argue that music is fundamental to social life. Music is not merely a form of leisure or entertainment: it is central to the very formation and reproduction of human societies. The authors pursue this argument through a wide-ranging assessment of some of the major cultural theoretical contributions to understanding music. Theories of culture, linguistic theories, structuralist and (...)
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  34.  30
    Music, singing and dancing in relation to the use of the harp and the ram’s horn or shofar in the Bible: What do we know about this?Morakeng E. K. Lebaka - 2014 - HTS Theological Studies 70 (3):01-07.
    There are many possible approaches to describing the effects and uses of music in a particular society. It would be a mistake to assume that music in the Bible is not the cement of social life and has no liturgical significance. The present study seeks to explore how people in ancient times employed music using the harp and the ram's horn , to cope with roles that were open or never-ending in their demands. In particular, it focuses upon the (...)
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  35. Whose Music? A Sociology of Musical Languages /John Shepherd ... [Et Al.] ; Foreword by Howard S. Becker. --. --.John Shepherd - 1977 - Transaction Books, C1977.
     
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  36.  18
    The Mother of All Interviews: Zappa on Music and Society.Florindo Volpacchio - 1991 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1991 (87):124-136.
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  37.  21
    Exploring Social Justice: How Music Education Might Matter.June Countryman & Elizabeth Gould (eds.) - 2009 - Canadian Music Educators' Association = Association Canadienne des Musiciens Éducateurs.
    The twenty-seven contributors to this book are professors, teachers, and students representing all parts of Canada, as well as the USA, Brazil, Norway, Finland, and South Africa. They wrestle with the meaning and practice of social justice in and through music education.
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  38.  37
    In Search of a Reality-Based Community: Illusion and Tolerance in Music, Education, and Society.Patrick K. Schmidt - 2007 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 15 (2):160-167.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:In Search of a Reality-Based Community:Illusion and Tolerance in Music, Education, and SocietyPatrick K. SchmidtThe two questions that arise in this symposium are: What kind of world engagement is required of music education? and Should music educators participate in political understanding? While my immediate response was and is: How we can afford not to? that is, not to engage fully with the world and not to do so politically, (...)
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  39.  10
    Experimental encounters in music and beyond.Kathleen Coessens (ed.) - 2017 - Leuven (Belgium): Leuven University Press.
    Experimental encounters in music and beyond opens a necessary dialogue on experimental practices in the arts and negotiates their place in contemporary society. Going beyond the music-historical usage of the term "experimental", this book reimagines experimentation as an open working definition encompassing multiple forms of artistic attitudes and processes. The texts, images, and sounds offer multiple traces, faces, and spaces, revealing what experimentalism in music and the wider arts entails today. With perspectives from a range of disciplines - from (...)
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  40.  7
    The Thought of Music.Lawrence Kramer - 2016 - Oakland, California: University of California Press.
    What, exactly, is knowledge of music? And what does it tell us about humanistic knowledge in general? _The Thought of Music_ grapples directly with these fundamental questions—questions especially compelling at a time when humanistic knowledge is enmeshed in debates about its character and future. In this third volume in a trilogy on musical understanding that includes _Interpreting Music_ and _Expression and Truth_, Lawrence Kramer seeks answers in both thought _about_ music and thought _in_ music—thinking in tones. He skillfully assesses (...)
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  41. Music practice and participation for psychological well-being: A review of how music influences positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning, and accomplishment.Adam M. Croom - 2015 - Musicae Scientiae: The Journal of the European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music 19:44-64.
    In “Flourish,” Martin Seligman maintained that the elements of well-being consist of “PERMA: positive emotion, engagement, relationships, meaning, and accomplishment.” Although the question of what constitutes human flourishing or psychological well-being has remained a topic of continued debate among scholars, it has recently been argued in the literature that a paradigmatic or prototypical case of human psychological well-being would largely manifest most or all of the aforementioned PERMA factors. Further, in “A Neuroscientific Perspective on Music Therapy,” Stefan Koelsch also suggested (...)
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  42.  33
    Making Music Matter.Mariam Fraser - 2005 - Theory, Culture and Society 22 (1):173-189.
    This article is based on a performance piece, Thought Conductor # 2, by the artist Bruce Gilchrist. In a live-art context, the signals generated by an individual hooked up to an EEG are converted into passages of musical notation and played by a string quartet. What is happening here, or rather what kind of happening is taking place, is the focus of this article. The article explores the relations between the author, the score, and the sound in Thought Conductor (...)
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  43.  24
    Dinner Music for the Florentine Signoria, 1350–1450.Timothy J. McGee - 1999 - Speculum 74 (1):95-114.
    Traditions and rituals play an important role in all facets of human behavior, and those connected with government tell us much about the society in which they are practiced. They point to the history, values, and self-image of the society, and any change in their content or practice reflects a revision of that status, a realignment of the self-image. Among the many traditions that had grown over the centuries and that both framed and shaped the activities and the (...)
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  44.  16
    Musical Performance As an Intermedial Affair (A Case of a Pianist).Dario Martinelli & Lina Navickaitė-Martinelli - 2017 - American Journal of Semiotics 33 (1/2):83-98.
    The professional profile of a performer does not only consist of mere music playing, but calls into question a number of variables of private and public, musical and extra-musical articulation. Performers have their own personality and inclinations; they are exposed to different forms of education and influences; they develop certain technical and stylistic abilities; they find certain repertoires more suitable than others; they confront themselves with composers and their requests/indications; they have to take into account social demands to (...)
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  45.  10
    Science, music, and mathematics: the deepest connections.Michael Edgeworth McIntyre - 2021 - Hackensack, NJ: World Scientific Publishing.
    Professor Michael Edgeworth McIntyre is an eminent scientist who has also had a part-time career as a musician. From a lifetime's thinking, he offers this extraordinary synthesis exposing the deepest connections between science, music, and mathematics, while avoiding equations and technical jargon. He begins with perception psychology and the dichotomization instinct and then takes us through biological evolution, human language, and acausality illusions all the way to the climate crisis and the weaponization of the social media, and beyond that into (...)
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  46.  11
    Musical Beliefs: Psychoacoustic, Mythical, and Educational Perspectives.Robert Walker - 1990 - New York: Teachers College Press.
    In this book, the author argues that what constitutes music in various societies is culturally based, not the result of some universal aspect of human physical and psychological make-up. This is true not only in non-Western music cultures, but in the West as well. Contrary to popular belief among musicians and the general public, the basis of Western music and acoustics is not scientific, but superstitious. Pythagorean mathematics as it relates to harmonics does not work, a fact that mathematicians and (...)
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  47.  12
    Music and Consciousness 2: Worlds, Practices, Modalities.Ruth Herbert, Eric Clarke & David Clarke (eds.) - 2019 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Consciousness has been described as one of the most mysterious things in the universe. Scientists, philosophers, and commentators from a whole range of disciplines can't seem to agree on what it is, generating a sizeable field of contemporary research known as consciousness studies. Following its forebear Music and Consciousness: Philosophical, Psychological and Cultural Perspectives, this volume argues that music can provide a valuable route to understanding consciousness, and also that consciousness opens up new perspectives for the study of music. It (...)
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  48. Musical qualia, context, time and emotion.J. Goguen - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (3-4):117-147.
    Nearly all listeners consider the subjective aspects of music, such as its emotional tone, to have primary importance. But contemporary philosophers often downplay, ignore, or even deny such aspects of experience. Moreover, traditional philosophies of music try to decontextualize it. Using music as an example, this paper explores the structure of qualitative experience, demonstrating that it is multi-layer emergent, non-compositional, enacted, and situation dependent, among other non-Cartesian properties. Our explanations draw on recent work in cognitive science, including blending, image schemas, (...)
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  49. Music Performance As an Experimental Approach to Hyperscanning Studies.Michaël A. S. Acquadro, Marco Congedo & Dirk De Riddeer - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10:160194.
    Humans are fundamentally social and tend to create emergent organizations when interacting with each other; from dyads to families, small groups, large groups, societies and civilizations. The study of the neuronal substrate of human social behavior is currently gaining momentum in the young field of social neuroscience. Hyperscanning is a neuroimaging technique by which we can study two or more brain simultaneously while participants interact with each other. The aim of this article is to discuss several factors that we deem (...)
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  50.  17
    Globalizing Music Education. A Framework by Alexandra Kertz-Welzel (review).Geir Johansen - 2019 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 27 (1):97.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Globalizing Music Education. A Framework by Alexandra Kertz-WelzelGeir JohansenAlexandra Kertz-Welzel, Globalizing Music Education. A Framework (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2018)A recurring challenge for the scholarship of music education is that, in a time of information overflow, we still miss significant knowledge about each other’s work, disseminated across national and cultural borders. However, as such challenges are situated within larger, more general frames of cultural as well as political (...)
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