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Alvin wrote:I think it’s also important to recognize that music, while capable of healing, can be used in destructive ways too. For example, its use as a form of torture at places like Guantanamo Bay. The same qualities that make music powerful can also be twisted for darker purposes, which highlights its ambiguous nature.
When we consider instrumental music, it can be seen as a form of communication, yet it isn’t literal communication in the way language is. Music often conveys emotions or abstract ideas, but its inherent ambiguities can sometimes obscure or even distort meaning. In that sense, rather than adding clarity, it could be said that music introduces complexity, even "corrupting" meaning at times.
What fascinates me most is how music’s ingredients are rooted in physical laws like vibration, time and space but somehow, it isn’t confined by these structures. Music can evolve and elaborate infinitely beyond the basic dimensions that shape it, suggesting that while it may originate from the material world, it takes on a life of its own, free to grow in unpredictable directions. This ability to endlessly shift and reshape is what leads me to think of it as a ‘bug,’ something that breaks away from strict function.
NTFMTS wrote:But my last question is, certain birds enjoy music themselves, although "song" is also their inherent communicative function, is music a bug for them too? Just curious what you think!
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