The music is good

Author: Formatii nunta

It’s great that science begins to study the social roots of the music. Is there anything that will stick more than a good tune? All we know for sure of it-and has been with us since the beginning of the first human tribes, is its universality. Parisian and Cameroonian adults and children all seem to get excited tones and similar times. Do not tell me it is not amazing that both sides agree on formatii nunta delving into some harmony, in a chord, the result of giving eighth, while interpreted as discord, or at least as a sign of sadness, a melody too slow.

All I know about music is its universality … and this is a social event. I know nothing that can hold together a group for so long, maybe religion or political belief. Now, the funny thing is that both religion and politics go less, while the melodies are more.

muzicaPrecisely, it may be this lack of practical usefulness of the music that makes it so beloved worldwide. The language seems to follow in number of devotees, though for formatii nunta very different reasons: all people pride themselves on being able to speak and convey a thought to others. A future neurologists detect their part if the difference between the music and the spoken language is as big as it looks: the first does not seem to convey much, while the second has utilities: understood, concentrate and aim at achieving a goal formatii nunta determined.

But what if the differences were not as sharp? In laboratories are apes and humans demonstrating that memories are much more fragile than previously thought, people tend to distort them with extreme ease and say ‘Diego’ where he said ‘tell’. Furthermore, it appears that the cognitive processes of the brain are so complicated that we now know for sure that the unconscious decides for us a few milliseconds before we resolve, consciously, eat or not to, go right or left , forget an idea or remember.

Dublin Philharmonic Orchestra

What if it turns out that the music had preceded the language, but the latter would have preserved the genetic heritage of the first? And that neither serve for another big deal. Indeed, it is increasingly clear that more and more people comes closer to music while continuously increasing the number of those who distrust of language. I always say that a language not understood-that serves to have to leave it to the body and movement-but to deceive one another, to make others believe what we want to believe.

Some scientist out there in the world trying to convince me that, contrary to what the Greek philosopher Plato said, the thought was most important, but the move. That body had gotten such chicanery and advances that language or thought only needed to acompasarlos, to implement them. Have you stopped to think my readers on implausibility that results please correct me mathematicians-equilibrium theory of bipedal animals like us? Neither God knows yet what allows us to walk with only formatii nunta two legs without losing balance, having to dodge, as we have to do-so many convoluted twists and turns and curves.

Let alone what some musicians with Magic Play your fingers playing the piano one of the pieces of Mozart. Have you noticed how your fingers move memory without pulse and shake them respecting the melody that captivates us? Maybe all that matters is precisely what fascinates us: to feel that we are part of the herd, to empathize with others. Maybe the music is good for something.