Since this piece is about inculcating a child with taste, I'd just like to say that in my own life, learning the basics of an analog art form like sketching or piano has been the most powerful way to appreciate the effects that the art can create, the power and potential and degrees of freedom. The gloss on Maria Edgeworth's writing doesn't mention this, but by becoming an amateur, it's a little easier to see how much a great artist must have mastered to express what they did. Standing on the foothills to see the peaks...
And I think that's possible with kids, first just by exposing them to the idea of making, that they can be a producer rather than a consumer of sounds and visuals. And then by modeling the behavior, giving them an example of an adult who sits down and makes something physical.
And finally by actually trying to teach them skills, one inch at a time. A lot of kids in America grow up without those things 1) the idea that they can create; 2) access to tools however basic; 3) the vision of someone actually doing it; 4) the support of someone who can put them on the gradual path of skill acquisition. Like most elements of culture and behavior, it starts at home, and it's hard to create effective institutional proxies.
PG gets into this a little when he talks about transcribing his younger son's oral stories. It's that kind of parental support that parts the waters so that a kid can see what's possible.
I don't know. My parents made me learn how to play piano as a child (well, they didn't force me, but let me understand that they really wanted it) and as a result I was completely uninterested in piano and classical music in general for a long time. Somehow the stuff you grow up with always becomes uninteresting until maybe later into the adulthood.
I hear that. I also wasted several years of piano lessons that I had to attend as a boy, only to come back to the instrument much later. I'm very much on the "inspire kids to want to do something" side of education and skill development, which is why I think it's important for them to see adults having a lot of fun, or making something meaningful, so that they want to do it. That makes all the difference, and it's one reason why families of musicians tend to breed future musicians.
Interesting. I would have thought that perfect pitch is not helpful at all with classical guitar. Can you tolerate music that is (deliberately) slightly out of standard tuning?
> I would have thought that perfect pitch is not helpful at all with classical guitar
I guess it cuts both ways. It's very useful to hav perfect pitch when playing single melodies on guitar since the notes on the frets are arranged less linearly than with piano, where you can just look down and know what note your finger is on. However it does get in the way if you have primarily memorized chord shapes, since sliding the shape down the guitar leads to completely different notes depending on where on the neck you are, causing something like an audio version of the Stroop effect. Because of this, when I use a capo I have to make a conscious effort to completely ignore the pitch and only think about finger position when playing songs, since my fingers pressing in familiar patterns leads to completely unexpected notes. It is actually very annoying.
I think one thing that helped me develop 'perfect pitch' is that I was always trying to emulate the right hand melodies of the piano pieces that my brother was practicing in the next room.
I'm gonna give some more unsolicited thoughts on perfect pitch since I really like the topic.
Our parents also made us take music theory classes once a week (this was in France where we had Wednesdays off of school), and I think that the solfège system lends itself to learning pitches more than the letter system of the US.
The letters are seemingly arbitrary (might as well be numbers) with no resemblance to the notes being represented (except B and E), whereas to me the notes sound like someone is saying "do" or "re" "fa" or whatever the note is right in my ear.
My brother and I actually made up solfège-like words for in between notes, so F# for example would be "fin" (french pronunciation, i.e. feuh(n) or fɛ̃) which is way easier to remember, as a modulation on "fa" than the sound of the words "F sharp" which is just more memorization and mapping that you have to do in your head. Now imagine learning the hindu raga system using single letters for each note...you might as well be doing mental algebra (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Melakarta.katapayadi.sank...).
There are certain notes which can be trickier to distinguish from each other (especially at very high or low pitches) because the sounds of the notes 'rhyme' with each other, for example 'mi' vs 'si' and 'la' vs 'fa'. Interestingly, the B and E letters do preserve the rhyming effect in spoken English, however A vs F does not, so I wonder if people who learned on the letter system can distinguish A vs F better than solfege-trained people.
> Can you tolerate music that is (deliberately) slightly out of standard tuning?
It's not necessarily that bad, it depends on my expectation and the context. Any false note can be rescued by placing other notes around/after it in harmonious way like in jazz, but if you are expecting a perfect note in advance for whatever reason, then yes it is annoying when it's off. But we also grew up listening to middle eastern/persian music, so half or quarter steps between notes were pretty typical.
It's kind of like asking if a specific color is annoying..it depends what is around it and what the goal of the visual is. You don't get annoyed at the mere presence of a specific shade of blue unless it's because you know that that shade is not supposed to be in the sky.
The term perfect pitch is a terrible term anyway, which probably discourages people from learning the skill.
For example, my brother's perfect pitch is better than mine. He can detect more notes at once and tune an instrument faster than I can. Most people only focus on the detection part of perfect pitch, but he can always instantly produce exact notes without any adjustment (e.g. whistling or singing) whereas depending on the note, I may have to briefly hear myself back and quickly adjust to my expectations. His 'internal voice' for pitch must be stronger (I would assume this phenomenon is why a deaf person like Beethoven can still compose music).
I'll add that I was extremely surprised when we moved to the US and no one here was able to identify notes, and even more surprised by the claim that you must have special genetics to learn it. The early life/critical period part of it makes sense but I'm still convinced that any child can learn it if they try hard enough or receive enough exposure/positive feedback sessions. Kind of like squibs and mudbloods that can still do magic through sheer effort and training, in Harry Potter? Or like "wizards of the third/second order" in terry goodkind's books.
Support for this is that in countries which speak tonal languages, pretty much everyone automatically has perfect pitch. I don't doubt that there are genes that can enhance the trait though. ChatGPT says these genes haven't been identified yet though, and the best evidence I can find is that "The inheritance pattern for perfect pitch observed in these families resembles [...] autosomal dominant transmission with incomplete penetration" (https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2011/01/98114/genetically-set-perf...).
My parents--and probably mother in particular--were in retrospect very determined not to push me into (non-academic) activities that I didn't pro-actively express an interest in. (I think my mother had piano lessons that she didn't really like.)
I'm not saying this was good or bad but did result in me never having any real exposure to doing music or art.
And I never had much in the way of music or art in school.
I'm sure that's the case for a fair number of schools. And I also think that in many others, it doesn't happen. There's huge variation across schools and districts. But... I think parents can greatly augment those school activities if they have the skills that students are practicing, and when that's the case, and when students see adults making meaningful use of such skills, I suspect they learn faster!
I think you need to reflect to develop taste, not just create art for fun as kids do, and this is something schools don't teach until high school. It also happens if you go deep on your own.
> The general principle that governs taste is the association of ideas, and this, fortunately, can be most easily illustrated: “I like such a person because her voice puts me in mind of my mother’s. I like this walk because I was very happy the last time I was here with my sister. I think green is the prettiest of all colors; my father’s room is painted green, and it is very cheerful, and I have been very happy in that room, and besides, the grass is green in spring.”
This feels like an extraordinarily Modern view, in that it's not suffering from the idea of an ideal standard of divine beauty embedded in the universe, but rather that it is discovered by the viewer and their emotional associations.
It's also very pluralist, this advice to expose your child to the best examples of art from a variety of cultures.
> in that it's not suffering from the idea of an ideal standard of divine beauty embedded in the universe
Frankly, it's your take that feels extraordinarily modern. Do you really believe that people living at this time, being familiar with centuries of style movements (from Greco-Roman antiquity to Italian Renaissance through Baroque and Bronze age Egypt) that were all considered to be beautiful, would cling to an ideal standard of beauty?
Why do modern humans believe that for some reason, they discovered thinking very recently and that all their forefathers were obscure brutes?
You can find people today arguing for a single absolute standard of beauty. Usually they mean "neoclassical architecture".
And indeed it's what the original author from that time was arguing against, the "bigotry" mentioned. So it was clearly an attitude held by some people at the time.
>And I'd call them imbeciles, why you think that "the people like that exist" is argument for anything ?
I agree, I don't understand these sorts of arguments. While I suppose deference to anecdotal evidence has always been around it seems more and more prolific as of late, and more often than is used as justification for a baseless argument simply because others argue baselessly.
They are not only arguing in favor of neoclassical architecture, I have met plenty of people who believe that Bauhaus is the only standard of beauty and that every space should look and feel like an Apple Store.
I'm not saying there were no dumb people in the past, I'm saying that being amazed that most people of the past could not see further than their nose is a very naive take.
They also sometimes argue for Art Deco any others. Basically anything that is the anathema of CAD-drawn monstrosity of rebar concrete sheetmetal and glass by an establishment celebrity architect with overblown ego.
As a person very much raised with heavy upper-class British influence (one side of my family comes from nobility, and while I'm American, I maintain very strong cultural, philosophical, and even linguistic ties to Britain), I'm gonna take this top comment spot to hang on a caution: this way of thinking can be really really bad for you in sufficient quantities.
It turns experiences into thoughts. It separates you from your emotions by changing your priority from experiencing, processing, and accepting your feelings to trying to analyze them. And if you, like me, are prone to mental illness, this can be devastating - because emotions often do not have a reason, especially if your brain has strong natural tendencies.
When you're depressed or anxious, sadness or anxiety form of their own accord. You can feel terrible even when things around you are good, or scared even when there is no danger. And it is very easy to get into the habit of trying to justify these feelings after the fact. When you feel sad and the world around you provides you no reason to, the justification you can give - if you're trying to rationalize your emotions - is that the problem is you, and that is an abyss you can easily find yourself trapped in.
Worse, this habit leads to you being "on the side of" those tendencies. When someone tries to help you to understand that your view of the world is skewed, your habit of justifying and rationalizing makes that feel like an attack on your reason or intelligence. You're not depressed, see, because there's this logical reason you came up with for why you feel bad. And there is always a reason you can give, a justification for why you feel bad, because life always has problems that can be invoked to explain emotions that exist in their own right. But they're not why you're miserable, they're just the reasons you give for why being miserable is rational and right. Healing from that kind of illness requires recognizing your reason and your feelings are different things with different roles, and that to try to rationalize emotion is to make a category error.
Introspection can be good, but introspection must pair with experience, not replace it. You may like such a person because her voice puts you in mind of your mother's, but that origin or association is usually not what is important - the fact that you like them is. You may like the walk because you had a lovely day on it once, but what matters is that the walk brings you joy. The analysis is useful largely when your emotions misguide you ("I keep getting into bad relationships because they draw from X emotional weakness", for example), but even then, you want to feel your feelings even if you do not let them guide your beliefs. When I'm in a depressive episode, I can't not feel bad, but what I can do is recognize that my negative feelings are not truths about the world, so that they do not poison me into a factual belief that things can never improve. When I'm anxious, I can't not feel the fear, but I can recognize that it's not a sign of real danger and that I may need to endure it to make some personal progress. These things aren't about rational understanding of my emotions, they're about a recognition that I do not and cannot control them, only how I respond to them.
I tend to think this sort of thing is a pretty big "original sin" of Anglo-American (or perhaps more generally Protestant?) culture. It arises in a kind of guilt-based virtue ethics, one that I think was originally religious, that tells us that our moral value comes from our impulses and drives, not from what we choose to do with them. It told me, in particular, that my inability to force myself to be more motivated or calm was a personal failing, not a piece of me fundamentally separate from my reason or my virtue. It tells us, as a culture, not to listen to ourselves, not to accept half of what we are, in favor of suppression and repression and self-judgement, and it leaves us as half-people as a result.
I find your comment fascinating and also I don’t understand it at all.
> You may like such a person because her voice puts you in mind of your mother’s, but that origin or association is usually not what is important—the fact that you like them is.
Are feelings a black box? That seems like a sensible way to see anxiety and depression, which are bad feelings that happen for no (good) reason. But then how should we analyze art, which is what TFA is about, IIUC? Should we stop analyzing art because our enjoyment of it is as inscrutable as depression? That doesn’t seem right (to me) either.
Maybe art can only be understood in the context of groups of people, whose cerebral machinery and personal experiences will vary, but whose cultural context won’t? Maybe your personal feelings about art can only say a tiny amount about the art, but can say a lot about you, to yourself. I guess, if nothing else, knowing that you like a particular kind of art is good in that it gives you a way to make yourself happier.
I’m very curious for your thoughts if you happen to come back to this thread! Thanks!!
In the sense of "has internal workings that are not directly observable [at least in practice]", yes, emotions are a black box (or may be usefully treated as one, at least). But you can learn to predict the behavior of a black box, given particular inputs, even without understanding of its internals.
I don't perceive much difference between the dysfunctional feelings produced by mental illnesses and the feelings produced by everyday experiences, except that one is unpleasant and interferes with function to an unusual degree. But if a loved one of yours died tomorrow, those feelings would be unpleasant and interfere with function, too - it's only the normality of that unpleasantness and interference that separates the feelings of normal grief from those of depression.
When you say "feelings that happen for no good reason" in reference specifically to mental-illness-related feelings, I think you're sort of missing the point - no feeling happens for "a good reason" except perhaps in some broader evolutionary sense. Feeling and reason are wholly separate and incommensurable categories. If you say "I'm sad because my friend died", you are making a category error: you are sad, period, end of sentence. That is why, among other things, you become less sad as time passes after your friend dies - regulatory processes in your emotions are returning you to an emotional set-point, even though none of the "reasons" to be sad have changed (your friend is still dead, you still miss them, you still have things you can't do with them, etc).
It's not that being sad after your friend dies isn't a predictable emotional response, it's that the apparent logic and the response are separate, in the same way that the movement of a hurricane is predictable but carries no logic or intent. A hurricane doesn't weaken or strengthen, turn or move straight, because it's logical to - it just does so according to the particular dynamics that drive it. And while those dynamics may be analyzed by reason, they are not, themselves, driven by it, nor do they carry it. And so it is with emotions: any logic they carry is in our external understanding of the patterns of the black box, not something contained within it, and the fact that a black box may or may not happen to behave similarly to other peoples' black boxes is incidental.
I'm not arguing that you shouldn't or can't try to understand emotions from the rational side of yourself. I'm arguing that reasoned understanding of emotions is always "from the outside", while experience of emotions is "from the inside", and that the two are fundamentally different things. And I mean this more as a practical claim for living as a being with qualia than as any sort of philosophical claim - it's a way to understand and approach your emotions, not some claim about the Universe.
bigot (noun) : a person who is obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices
The notion that bigot is primarily synonymous with "racist" is a modern change; traditionally it was just concerned with intolerance of conflicting ideas. I think it was over the political debate about segregation that the idea bigotry transferred to racial attitudes.
(obsolete) One who is overly pious in matters of religion, often hypocritically or else superstitiously so.
the eighteenth century probably dates back to the more obsolete sense of the word
1820 Charles Robert Maturin "Donna Clara was a woman of a cold and grave temper, with all the solemnity of a Spaniard, and all the austerity of a bigot."
Weird takes down this thread. Personally I have never heard/seen bigot being used to describe as defined here. I have always heard it used in the context of intolerance to some group of people. Would never have guessed it’s history.
Frame challenge, I wouldn't say it's common to consider bigot synonymous or nearly synonymous with racist, or at least that has never been my experience. What makes you feel like this is the case?
Racist might be wrong but it's definitely now used for people who are intolerant of other people, usually for identity-politics reasons.
These days you can be bigoted against black or Muslim or gay or transgender people, but not really about Greek statuary or rap music or electric cars or PHP, no matter how strong your opinions on those.
Hrm, in which country? I'm Irish; in modern writing in Ireland and the UK, certainly anything from the last 50 years, it's generally used to mean racists, sexists et al. Wasn't aware there was any English-speaking country which had held onto the archaic meaning, at least as a primary meaning.
(India? Indian English has a few things still in common use which are obsolete in UK English).
Example UK usage from 50 years ago: the "Barry bigot" doll in S3E5 of Monty Python's Flying Circus (1972; it's a wind-up racist doll).
Hmm. I have several times described myself as a "keyboard bigot". That is, I have very strong opinions about what is and is not a good keyboard, and a very strong dislike of bad ones.
I'm questioning whether I should say that now, based on your comment. Could you explain a bit more about what you mean by "intentionally hurtful"? Specifically, intentionally hurtful of whom?
I’m afraid to because I mean specifically in my context and I don’t want to inadvertently police how you communicate. You may not live where I do and the word can hold a different connotation as demonstrated by the original commenter pointing out that bigot was not originally about racism.
I mean that in my neck of the woods, when people say someone is bigoted or is a bigot, it isn’t always about racism, but it’s almost always aggressive.
If I said “oh he’s a keyboard bigot” in this context, I would be attempting to be insulting and harmful towards you.
If you said “oh I’m just a keyboard bigot” it comes off as lighter but my context has me tilting my head in curiosity. It wouldn’t have been a word I’d expect someone to call themselves.
It's a difference of intent. Quite frankly, when I refer to someone as a bigot, I couldn't care less whether they find it hurtful or not; I do absolutely intend to condemn them, though.
> The notion that bigot is primarily synonymous with "racist" is a modern change;
And primarily a US-American one, it seems to me. I wasn’t aware of his change, and the definition marked as “obsolete” above is actually what I think of as the word’s literal, non-metaphorical meaning.
One of the great lines of 18th century theater comes from Richard Brinsley Sheridan's "The School for Scandal." Sir Peter, alarmed at his wife's extravagant spending, asks her why she buys such expensive things. She says, "Because I have taste." To which he replies, "You had no taste when you married me."
I love this, and it strikes me that one of the main differences between then and now is that we are awash in cheap objects. Isolation from trash in the service of taste seems almost impossible.
Secondly, I can’t think of a contemporary national authority I would defer to.
> Secondly, I can’t think of a contemporary national authority I would defer to.
I imagine people living in the developed world defer to many national authorities all the time. Being able to eat almost anything sold and drink tap water with near zero risk of getting sick, being able to trust doctors and medicine, safely flying from one place to another, minimal risk of being in a fire, having all these wireless communications devices work without interference, not worrying about electronic money and securities account balances suddenly disappearing, etc.
> If a child sees you look at the bottom of a print for the name of the artist before you venture to pronounce upon its merits, he will follow your example and judge by the authority of others and not by his own taste… He will not trouble himself to analyze his taste or discover why one proportion or design pleases him better than another.
I’ve noticed myself falling into this more and more regularly. I’m shifting responsibility a little, but I think the internet makes this more difficult because everyone’s opinion is so public. I find myself reading what others have to say about everything I consume, be it books, movies, music, etc, and I think it impacts my feelings about that thing more than it should. How does one battle that practically?
And I think that's possible with kids, first just by exposing them to the idea of making, that they can be a producer rather than a consumer of sounds and visuals. And then by modeling the behavior, giving them an example of an adult who sits down and makes something physical.
And finally by actually trying to teach them skills, one inch at a time. A lot of kids in America grow up without those things 1) the idea that they can create; 2) access to tools however basic; 3) the vision of someone actually doing it; 4) the support of someone who can put them on the gradual path of skill acquisition. Like most elements of culture and behavior, it starts at home, and it's hard to create effective institutional proxies.
PG gets into this a little when he talks about transcribing his younger son's oral stories. It's that kind of parental support that parts the waters so that a kid can see what's possible.