"What is unlikely is that you have any idea what my mind will let me see."
You wrote lines and lines and lines of intellectual stuff when my whole point is that your mind filters everything.
Listening without interpretation...is it impossible?
I came across an interesting quotation about texts which applies, it seems, to music listening and audio:
"We never really confront audio immediately, in all its freshness as a thing-in-itself. Rather, audio comes before us as the always-already-heard; we apprehend it through sedimented layers of previous interpretations or --if the audio is brand new -- through the sedimented listening habits and categories developed by those interpretive traditions." [Paraphrased from Frederic Jameson in The Political Unconscious (1981)]
If this application to audio is accurate, it indicates that what we hear and how we listen are profoundly influenced by how we talk about it, argue about it, interpret it. The ways we talk about it and who we talk about it with change the very ways we “confront” or encounter it the next time.
This would apply not only to the macro impressions about entire songs or even passages of songs, but even the minute ways we describe the details. (Using “etched” to describe the “highs” or “boomy” to describe the “lows,” and so on.) It also would set aside, as obtuse, the repeated suggestion that one can ignore what people say and “just get back to listening for oneself.” There is no such way of listening. Yes, one can move away from the computer, for days or weeks or more, but the notion that one can move one’s “own” mind away from the “sedimented layer of previous interpretations” is, well impossible.
I’m not sure, personally, where I fall on this interesting question. Just wanted to share it.
@berner99 I cannot help you and will not try. |
If your read and understand my post you will see that you are right about "representation" theory of perception but he is right too in his own way about the way the mind conditioned by language and historical personal and collective history filter our inattentive habit of perception... Then you are right all together but from different perspective... Understanding each other first is more important than to be right at the end , in most ordinary non critical situation of everyday life...😁😊
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