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Music and the Ineffable

Princeton University Press (2003)

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  1. Music and Noise: Same or Different? What Our Body Tells Us.Mark Reybrouck, Piotr Podlipniak & David Welch - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    In this article, we consider music and noise in terms of vibrational and transferable energy as well as from the evolutionary significance of the hearing system of Homo sapiens. Music and sound impinge upon our body and our mind and we can react to both either positively or negatively. Much depends, in this regard, on the frequency spectrum and the level of the sound stimuli, which may sometimes make it possible to set music apart from noise. There are, however, two (...)
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  • Multidimensional scaling of emotional responses to music: The effect of musical expertise and of the duration of the excerpts.E. Bigand, S. Vieillard, F. Madurell, J. Marozeau & A. Dacquet - 2005 - Cognition and Emotion 19 (8):1113-1139.
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  • Music, Nature and Ineffability.David E. Cooper - 2016 - Philosophia 44 (4):1257-1266.
    In the final chapter of his Ineffability and Religious Experience, Guy Bennett-Hunter proposes that the ineffable may be ‘bodied forth’ through works of art and ritual, and hence engage with our lives. By way of supporting this proposal, this paper discusses some relationships between experiences of music and of natural environments. It is argued that several aspects of musical experience encourage a sense of convergence or intimacy between human practice and nature. Indeed, these aspects suggest a codependence between culture and (...)
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  • Music, discourse and intuitive technology.Jonathan Impett - 2021 - AI and Society:1-12.
    This paper proposes that intuitive technologies play a vital role in cognition and cultural reception. The case of music is considered in particular. The perceived temporality of contemporary technology is shown to be an artificial barrier to the acknowledgement of longer-term dynamics. The increased role of explanatory metaphors from technology is traced across various fields of study. Processes of sense-making—conscious or otherwise—are seen as an informal, unreflected repertory of mechanisms ranging from predictive models to instrumental metaphors. It is suggested that (...)
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  • Dimensions of aesthetic encounters: perception, interpretation, and the signs of art.Robert E. Innis - 2022 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
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  • The Gender Politics of Music and the Ineffable: On the Feminine in Jankelevitch and Levinas.Robin James - 2018 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 5 (2):99-118.
    ABSTRACTTranslated into English in 2004, Vladimir Jankelevitch’s book Music and the Ineffable has made a significant impact in anglophone musicology. I argue that the figure of the feminine is central to his understanding of music and musical ineffability, and use feminist philosophers’ interpretations and critiques of the figure of the feminine in his close friend and colleague Emmanuel Levinas’s work to unpack the gender politics of Jankelevitch’s book and the secondary literature on it. I focus on the figure of the (...)
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