Pure "Maharishi sez" nonsense. 

Someday you should learn that not everyone has 
the same limitations you impose on yourself.


--- In [email protected], "authfriend" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> > >
> > > > > I'm not sure how any
> > > > > composer could write any music down without first
> > > > > hearing it in his/her head, any more than a writer
> > > > > writes without first hearing the words in his/her
> > > > > head.  ...
> > > > 
> > > > Just like writers have different ways of writing so 
> > > > do musicians have different ways of composing.  
> > > 
> > > Yeah, what he said. Just FYI, writers who have to 
> > > hear the words in their head before writing them 
> > > down are the counterpart of "mouth readers" when 
> > > reading. Slows you down and is definitely not 
> > > necessary, except maybe for poetry and to get a 
> > > strong feel for dialogue. Sometimes the process
> > > is concept --> language, without an intervening
> > > stop at speech.
> > > 
> > > I know, I know...somebody's going to come running
> > > in and say something like, "...also without a stop
> > > at thinking," which is possible, but not my point. :-)
> > > I'm just making the point that the idea of the usual
> > > progression as concept --> "hearing" it in your 
> > > head --> paper is not always true. Many writers 
> > > skip the middle step entirely.
> > 
> > Just because this subject interests me, here's a
> > followup. I would bet that programmers can identify
> > with what I'm saying. You read a spec and get the
> > concept of the thing that has to be expressed in
> > code, and the code just comes out. I would bet that
> > most programmers don't pause to put the code that
> > they're writing into audible words and sound them
> > out in their head. Right, programmers?
> 
> Of course they don't.
> 
> > Well, it's the same thing when programming English,
> > or any other language. Once you have the syntax
> > down,
> 
> The syntax, once you've mastered it, "lives" in the
> sense of hearing, just as it does with writing.
> 
>  you can go straight from concept to descrip-
> > tion of that concept on paper, without ever hear-
> > ing the sounds in one's head. I would imagine the
> > same thing is true for mathematicians who have the
> > syntax of math down pat, and for physicists who have
> > the syntax of physics down pat. Sounding things out
> > in one's head is an unnecessary step that can slow
> > down (and sometimes stifle) the process of creation.
> 
> Absolutely.  As I said, it isn't a matter of "sounding
> things out in one's head."
> 
> > For dialogue, I agree that it's essential. Otherwise,
> > you wind up writing dialogue that sounds like it
> > was written by David Mamet. :-)
> 
> Not necessarily even with dialogue, any more than you
> sound words out in your head before you speak.
>





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