OK, you are more wrong, and jancivil is more right. See particularly the section 'Music and Language' in:harryupbabble wrote:In the search for better understanding, correct me I am wrong
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive ... e_of_music
OK, you are more wrong, and jancivil is more right. See particularly the section 'Music and Language' in:harryupbabble wrote:In the search for better understanding, correct me I am wrong
Depends on the individual. I tend to rate some sociopaths as "successful" and others as not. My ex boss is a less successful one because he ruins things for himself while screwing the people in his environment. He disrupted his workplace relationships so badly that he had to exit from several of them before it caught up with him. Not very successful in the realm of keeping a career.annode wrote:The psychopath reference was mainly joking. But there is truth on some levels. They have no mechanism for a 'superego' conscience, so there`s no ego fragmentation or anxiety. This might appear self-realized to the observer. They will surely try to convince you they are.
From the psychiatric reading I've done: Psychopathy and sociopathy are types of antisocial personalities. Also there's narcissistic personality, borderline personality disorder, and maybe a few more I can't remember off the top of my head.An asocial personality is not a psychopathic personality or sociopathic personality. Sociopaths are frequently also asocial personality types. The psychopath is not usually violent or asocial.
That's actually the opposite of how I've been seeing it. Yes, the USA's awful DSM rejects the notion of the two being different and just considers sociopathy and psychopathy to be the same. I disagree. The UK's system also disagrees. It recognizes the sociopath and the psychopath individually (unless that has changed in the last few years). The difference is that they're regarded oppositely to what you described above:EDIT : to avoid confusion, sociopath and psychopath are frequently used interchangeably. It is becoming more comfortable to see the sociopath as the serial killer type and the psychopath as the user.
harryupbabble wrote: Also, are any of the following untrue:
Right-handed people uses the left hemisphere of their brain more than the right hemisphere.
Left-handed people uses the right hemisphere of their brain more than the left hemisphere.
The left hemisphere of the brain is what does the mathematics.
The right hemisphere of the brain is what does the languages.


Yeah, it's like studies on milk and eggs. One year (or even decade) they say it's bad, the next year they say it's not really bad but may in fact be good for you.Jace-BeOS wrote:
Finding out that the brain hemisphere myth was bunk was a lot like finding out the tongue taste bud zones was a myth. I felt betrayed by my public schooling. What did they actually present that wasn't BS?
So yeah, healthy skepticism is healthy.
In the case of scrabble, "counting" does count as math. Also, "permutation" is a math term, true? The permutation part of scrabble is probably where use of "imagination" is required most.jancivil wrote: Scrabble demands having enough vocabulary, which I can't place with mathematics 'skills' or even aptitude. I suppose counting is important.
These are popular notions today. AFAIK this whole left/right brain is crap. At base, this is a completely unnecessary dichotomy and the science isn't there for it. More later.harryupbabble wrote:
Also, are any of the following untrue:
Right-handed people uses the left hemisphere of their brain more than the right hemisphere.
Left-handed people uses the right hemisphere of their brain more than the left hemisphere.
The left hemisphere of the brain is what does the mathematics.
The right hemisphere of the brain is what does the languages.
Right-handed musicians would be the math type.
Left-handed musicians would be the language type.
I'm for the most part right-handed. 'Throws right, bats both.' But I'm not all that captured by math. My father taught me what he called 'business math' quite young but neither of us was any whiz. I was interested in drumming really early. Now, there may be some people that consider me coming away with eg., '5 in the time of 3 1/2' as maths-concerned but for me, fractions came pretty early.harryupbabble wrote: Right-handed musicians would be the math type.
Left-handed musicians would be the language type.
What on earth are you on about. All due respect and all, it looks like you have no exposure to (EDIT: REAL*) composers whatsoever and are just riffing on concepts for the fun of it here. (*: I mean that looks like an imaginary or hypothetical problem for the purposes of advancing this need for maths rhetorically. We're talking about varying degrees of sophistication in simple primary school arithmetic, realistically. Nobody worth a shit is impeded particularly by knowing their instrument.)harryupbabble wrote:
I guess a lot of composers do not like to be player/composer because they become "you are what you play". Tendencies for the fingers to be automatic (muscle memory?) tend to make those kinds of composers to keep making compositions that don't seem to vary.
That is probably why some composers use math to overcome that problem. Therefore, a lot of composers might actually be using math in different degrees of sophistication.
Makes sense to me except for your conclusion. No, self-realized as I read it, the full depth of - let's say the full range of - emotion is just not available to the person lacking essential empathy, I think. The full awareness of one's drives is quite subverted here. I would have to consider that the self-realized person self-critiques, for instance knows when she is purely self-serving and has ignored the ramifications on others' feelings. Seems a basic issue, to me.annode wrote:The psychopath reference was mainly joking. But there is truth on some levels. They have no mechanism for a 'superego' conscience, so there`s no ego fragmentation or anxiety. This might appear self-realized to the observer. They will surely try to convince you they are.jancivil wrote:I don't see how this 'psychopath' would be self-realized, with the basic problem of the lack of real empathy. Or that this 'psychopath' as a type poses any big surprise for someone that recognizes Full-Blown Antisocial Personality Disorder. That word's popularity seems to place as much with the prevalence of TV procedural crime drama as with anything.
Anyway, I'm open to read things like that, as I don't really know anything. I tended to trip alone, but the one person I did hang out with on acid was such a jock but his mind was wide open as to music and one of the more intellectually progressive people I knew then.The psychopath fits this enough.self-realization, which is a state of being in which the person responds to the world with the full depth of his or her spontaneous feelings[drives], rather than with anxiety-driven compulsion
Well, I saw <spear> in one or two seconds. No, I'm not likely to get 8 words in 10 seconds and I'm now bored with it. I don't know what this has to do with musical creativity, at all.harryupbabble wrote: Let's say you have in your rack the letters AEPRS. Rearrange, in your head, those letters and find all the English words. There are 12 valid words and 75 percent of them are common words, not weird words at all. So, can you find at least 8 words? And can you do it in 10 seconds?
That is kinda mathy, but permutation purely through itself does not strike me as musical endeavor to be perfectly honest. So you would be making up for a deficiency by this particular reliance, I think. If music was more like scrabble prowess that would be something (edit: I may be wrong it's just that I don't think thinking is where it's at, ideally), or one's focus was in dodecaphonic serialism that would be useful, but music is typically more like creating sentences I think.harryupbabble wrote: In composing music, I don't know about everybody else, but I just basically do permutations, by way of trial and error, with the notes of the scale, and keep "good-sounding" permutations. I guess it doesn't sound so mathy, but really... it is?
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