It is quite irritating to hear a monologue when I'm trying to think,
perhaps that's why I find it so hard to write. When I am pondering
things I am free from it, there are concepts and ideas moving around too
fast and messily. Communication is difficult triggering memory can be
like navigating a minefield, first there is interpreting, then there is
everything that shouldn't be said (which seems like everything under the
freaking sun), then putting things into digestible bits and so on. I
can't imagine how people write so easily, it seems mine are all lies and
hypocrisy, I'm cursing nearly every word with contempt but still need to
speak. A damnable position to be in no doubt.. ;-)
My first reaction is to discount music and dance as just aesthetic
expression, but if I try to place that in the field of language it is
tricky. The most direct observation I have is in meditative moments,
where something is captivating, the emotional experiences stimulated by
audio visual and abstract stimulus have some similarity at times. I
think this goes back to the earliest storytelling that was probably
reenactments and rudimentary symbolic concepts optimized for
preprogrammed genetic language induced stimulus-response mechanisms.
Those we iteratively adapted to changing environments, genetics, and
experiences as more advanced language and environmental analysis and
interpretation would afford a higher survival rate to innovations.
Andrew, there is a comedy called History of the World Part 1, you might
find it a humorous take on human progress. "It's good to be the king." LMAO
On 1/6/2013 12:35 PM, andrew vecsey wrote:
I suppose dance would be like body language. You raise a very
interesting point for me about music Gabby. Sometimes when I am in the
right frame of mind, I can think of music and I am able to hear (in my
mind) the music, hearing all the notes being played in detail. At those
times, when I think of music with lyrics, I can hear (in my mind) the
words of the song even though I can not remember the words normally.
Kind of strange. Has anyone else experienced that? I suppose it is a
kind of photographic memory retrieval. But what I meant to discuss in
this post is that if I want to think about the music or about the
dance... maybe to critique it or to analyze it, I find that I can not do
that without articulating the thoughts in my mind with words. I wonder
if others have found the same thing.
On Sunday, January 6, 2013 4:41:53 PM UTC+1, Gabby wrote:
This is indeed a very, very complex topic worth discussing and
simplifying. Help me understand what you are aiming at by telling me
whether music and dance would also account for languages of
thinking. Thanks.
2013/1/6 andrew vecsey <[email protected] <javascript:>>
I have written a new chapter to my "Think Park - A Journey thru
space and time" publication/video that made me think more about
thinking. Whenever I think, I seem to be talking to myself, I
can think about something in my memory by imagining and reliving
sensations I remember, but whenever I think about those
memories, I ultimately revert to talking to my self (up to now,
fortunately silently). Do others in this group of thinkers have
the same experience? If yes, why do you think that it is like
that? If not, how do you manage to think without mentally
talking it out? The excerpt of my new chapter that started me
thinking about this line of thought is below:
"Before men could talk, they groaned and grunted.Just like with
crying and laughing, it was sometimes difficult to tell the
difference between displays of sorrow and joy, or pain and
pleasure.At the 60 meter point from the start of the think park,
about 18,000 years ago, man started to use *words* to display
his emotions. Words helped man to think and enabled him to
articulate and share his inner most thoughts.*Pictures and
written words* enabled his thoughts and his knowledge to be
stored for later contemplation and to be scattered like seed to
grow.This cultivation, communication and sharing of thoughts,
knowledge and experience resulted in the growth of *agriculture*
that enabled *civilizations* to flourish."
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