Perhaps. But it stimulates an interesting dialogue.Michael L wrote:But if anything a human does is natural, the concept of 'natural rhythms' becomes meaningless.herodotus wrote:I think the only 'nature' involved is human nature.
But 'our' biological rhythms are not universal. Some of us are old. Some of us are young. Some are of us healthy, some of us are unhealthy, and some are athletes. In all of these cases, the biological rhythms are quite different. And then there are further irregularities like heart murmurs and lung ailments.I propose that musical rhythms which are grounded in our familiar biological rhythms are most 'natural,'
We are also biologically inclined to use language, which is perhaps the most definitive and universal human characteristic. This little bit of nature throws an even bigger monkey wrench into the mix.but unfamiliar variation from those rhythms creates interest, and that is also 'natural' because we are biologically attracted to novelty!