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REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS
What our world has become.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 8:36 AM
RUE
I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 9:10 AM
CAUSAL
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Quote:Originally posted by Causal: Well, we could sneer about "what our world has become" or we could try to examine it phenomenologically, like Weingarten did. Is it that these people are fools? Or was there some validity to the art-without-a-frame thing? Seriously, we're conditioned to register street musicians as annoying presences and move along. Okay, stop right there, seriously. We are "conditioned?" Who or what is conditioning us? Who or what has taken away Causal's ability to make his own judgements about what is and is not annoying? "Causal" indeed!
Quote:Originally posted by Causal: Well, we could sneer about "what our world has become" or we could try to examine it phenomenologically, like Weingarten did. Is it that these people are fools? Or was there some validity to the art-without-a-frame thing? Seriously, we're conditioned to register street musicians as annoying presences and move along.
Quote:Originally posted by HK: Quote:Originally posted by Causal:That sort of environment is the one where people see a musician and say, "Homeless schill wanting my money" and then walk right by. I'd want to know who the heck Causal is talking about when he says "people" but there's evidence all over this thread of exactly who he's talking about. Where did all this contempt for street musicians come from?
Quote:Originally posted by Causal:That sort of environment is the one where people see a musician and say, "Homeless schill wanting my money" and then walk right by.
Quote:Originally posted by Causal:But if they got dressed up and went to a concert hall, the experience would be phenomenologically different. Because there people see a musician and say, "Genius playing masterpieces."
Quote:Originally posted by HK: In Causal's utopia, any musician can just get dressed up and go to a concert hall--the artist's version of "boot-strapping," I guess. Street musicians may not be homeless, but most musicians across the board can't get booked at a concert hall--and plenty of them wouldn't want to anyway.
Quote:But beyond that, Causal is saying that beauty is all a matter of framing and packaging and that's about the worst thing anyone could say about beauty.
Quote:[ Causal has ] abdicated his ability to make his own judgement of what is and is not beauty--apparently because making one's own judgements is just too dang inconvenient in this fast paced modern world.
Quote:Sorry to belabor Causal's remarks like this, but I think the relationship he describes to art and beauty and self determination, his self-concept as the poor victim of societal forces "conditioning" him to view street people with contempt and telling him what and what not to applaud as beautiful is shared by a lot of others here.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 11:20 AM
FREDGIBLET
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Listen: if pausing and listening to Bach in the subway for--what?--a minute and a half is going to get you fired, then your life--your actual life--is not running smoothly. If you don't have an extra minute and a half to spare on any given morning, you're killing yourself. If you were to be late to work that morning and you were to blame it on the minute you spent listening to the musician, you'd be kidding yourself and your boss.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 11:22 AM
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 11:26 AM
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 11:29 AM
Quote:Originally posted by fredgiblet: The problem is that people like you seem to think that there is some pressing reason why we SHOULD stop for every decent street musician and listen for a while. If you can explain why I should structure my life around street musicians please do as I'd love to hear your arguments.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 1:44 PM
SIGNYM
I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.
Quote:If you think that culture doesn't exert an extremely powerful influence on the way that people think about and process things, I suggest you may have another think coming. Nearly everyone, I think, will say, "Yes, that's true, but not in my case!" because I think most people don't like the idea that culture has made an impact on the way they perceive and think about things. But I believe that that's just the case. If you deny that, feel free to make an argument for why that's not the case, but please don't just insult me. That's called an ad hominem fallacy: you attack the person making the argument and not the argument itself.
Quote:Music is phenomenologically different in a subway station than in a concert hall (and when I say "phenomenologicall" I mean the total experience of it, not just the music as such). And I do think that our culture conditions people to have certain expectations of the phenomenon of music in a subway station, and certain other ones of music in a concert hall (or open-air park, or bar, or wherever). Again, if you disagree that it's phenomenologically different in different contexts, you're free to argue that. But don't accuse me, personally, of having contempt for street musicians as though that accusation makes me wrong about everything I've said. That's the ad hominem fallacy all over again.
Quote: if he took an Ellworth Kelly painting and removed it from its frame and hung it in a restaurant, the most it would get would be a second glance from another curator. Now why would that be? Because it's not altogether common for a restaurant to display a 5 million-dollar painting. Some environments arouse different expectations than others. I'd never expect to see a 5 million dollar painting at a flee market, for instance, so I'm not even looking for fine art there. But I do expect to see fine art when I go to the MOMA, so the way I look at things is different. Context matters. That was, in fact, a main point of discussion in the article.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 1:51 PM
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 2:31 PM
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Causal I think you mis-perceive HK's argument. You miss the dialectic that culture makes the people... but people also make the culture. You become victim to a culture when you disavow any ability to chage it. Again, as with my comment above, what I was trying to get at was context.
Quote:I don't know Weingaten, but I DO know that people are very 'contextual". Their experience of the music is different but the music itself remains the same. Is this a failure to differentiate between subjective and objective phenomena? Unfortunately smart people - politicians and advertizers- know the power of context and take full advantage of it. Being so contextual is one of our biggest weaknesses as thinking beings.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 2:53 PM
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 3:00 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: I knew someone who knew someone ... who was a petroleum geologist by training and trade. And who was also someone who followed a creationist religion. On the one hand he would date strata as being so many million year old, on the other he believed the earth was only ~5000 years old. The problem with rampant contextualism is that one can have a fractured approach to a single reality.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 3:08 PM
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 3:20 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: (I truly wonder how he never put the two ideas side by side in his head)
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 5:37 PM
FUTUREMRSFILLION
Quote:Originally posted by Causal: Quote:Originally posted by FutureMrsFIllion: So because you would have walked by this man - you are a better human being than those that say they wouldn't? They are lying? Or self righteous? Well, I'm not sure where you might have gotten that impression, but thanks for the accusations. I'm not saying I'm better than the people who would stop. I'm just saying I'm not worse. And this thread (at least, when I wrote my initial post) had an awful lot of sneering about the people who would have walked. So my point was not that I'm better than others, but that I'm not worse. You've got the time and the loose change to stop and appreciate? Good for you. But don't look down on me for choosing not to. And I'm quite sure that most of those who claim they would have stopped aren't lying. But a goodly number have been self-righteous about it--as if their choice is somehow morally superior to mine. And it's that implication that I resent. I think I have the freedom to be entertained at a place and a time of my choosing, especially if I have somewhere else to be. I don't want people acting as though I'm somehow a soulless robot because my choice would have been to keep walking. Quote:Casual, I always stop to listen, I always drop a little change and I always put money in a beggars hand. That is who I am and what I do, doesn't make me better than anyone else and doesn't make me self righteous either. Not saying it does. I'm not sure exactly why you're taking me completely personally. I'm not suggesting that everyone who has said "I'd stop" is a self-righteous prig, and I'd appreciate it if you would recognize that that's not the case. But I don't always stop, and don't always drop change, and don't always put money in a beggar's hand. And that doesn't make me a monster. So perhaps what you're really saying is, "I'm not self-righteous!" to which I reply, "I know; I never said you were." And what I'm really saying is, "I'm not a soulless bastard!" To which I await your reply. ________________________________________________________________________ - Grand High Poobah of the Mythical Land of Iowa, and Keeper of State Secrets - Captain, FFF.net Grammar Police Vote for Firefly! http://richlabonte.net/tvvote/index.html] As I am sure you know I do not think you are a soulless bastard. Quite the opposite. But, at the same time when you make a broad statement that "there is a lot of self-righteousess comin of this thread" you imply that anyone that doesn't agree with you is self-righteous. I simply choose to point out that in saying that, well it makes you sound as if you are. Slippery slope my friend. At some point in the next 500 years or so we have GOT to stop making personal attacks in these threads. I would hold my breath, but then I would die. "crap: ---- plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose Bestower of Titles, Designer of Tshirts, Maker of Mottos, Keeper of the Pyre, Owner of a too big Turnippy smelling coat with MR scratched in the neck (thanks FollowMal!) I am on The List. We are The Forsaken and we aim to burn! "We don't fear the reaper" FORSAKEN original
Quote:Originally posted by FutureMrsFIllion: So because you would have walked by this man - you are a better human being than those that say they wouldn't? They are lying? Or self righteous?
Quote:Casual, I always stop to listen, I always drop a little change and I always put money in a beggars hand. That is who I am and what I do, doesn't make me better than anyone else and doesn't make me self righteous either.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 6:40 PM
MARINA
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 6:42 PM
Quote:Originally posted by FutureMrsFIllion: As I am sure you know I do not think you are a soulless bastard. Quite the opposite.
Quote:But, at the same time when you make a broad statement that "there is a lot of self-righteousess comin of this thread" you imply that anyone that doesn't agree with you is self-righteous. I simply choose to point out that in saying that, well it makes you sound as if you are.
Quote:At some point in the next 500 years or so we have GOT to stop making personal attacks in these threads. I would hold my breath, but then I would die.
Tuesday, May 8, 2007 7:33 PM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 12:05 AM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 2:28 AM
AGENTROUKA
Quote:Originally posted by SignyM: Back to contextualization: Rue once gave this example of even animals being able to abstract from experience: If animals couldn't abstract from context, then each appearance of (say) water- in a bowl, a puddle, falling from the sky, in a stream- would lead to a whole welter of questions each and every instance: Do I fight it? Mate with it? Avoid it? Eat it? .
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 2:54 AM
Quote:Originally posted by marina: But Dr. Ross is hardly a conventional paleontologist. He is a “young earth creationist” — he believes that the Bible is a literally true account of the creation of the universe, and that the earth is at most 10,000 years old.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 5:55 AM
HKCAVALIER
Quote:Originally posted by fredgiblet: Here's the thing though, do we have to stop at EVERY SINGLE STREET MUSICIAN? Most of the people going by him lack the knowledge of classical music to recognize the skill he has so for most of the people there he's just another pretty good street musician. If I'm 1 minute late I'm not going to get fired, but I don't pass by one street musician every day, I pass by dozens. If I devote a minute and a half to each one of them the time adds up quickly and I WILL get fired if I show up a half-hour late every day. So who decides who I should stop and listen to? You? Should I get your phone number and call you every time I go by a street musician to ask if I should stop and listen? No. I make the decisions about which ones I should stop for, and I (probably) would not have stopped for him. The problem is that people like you seem to think that there is some pressing reason why we SHOULD stop for every decent street musician and listen for a while. If you can explain why I should structure my life around street musicians please do as I'd love to hear your arguments.
Quote:And just to be clear: were I there, I may or may not have stopped to listen based upon my own judgement in the moment. I would blame no one but myself if I missed out on some great music. Whether or not people would stop, doesn't interest me. Why we think we do the things we do, the amount of personal responsibility we, each of us, take for "what our world has become" is of the utmost importance to us all.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 6:13 AM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 6:20 AM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 7:41 AM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: "Whether or not people would stop, doesn't interest me." Not once did I say that anyone should have stopped to listen to the violinist. Not once. Nor did I imply it.
Quote:My beef was with the absurd 5th grade excuses people were making for not stopping...My concern is with people being able to take personal responsibility for their actions and their choices without scapegoating "societal pressure" or "my boss" or "capitalism," etc.
Quote:(and more importantly, though you didn't have anything to say about it, the contempuous language people were using to describe street musicians; the implications of such language in terms of free will and the search for beauty)
Quote:There seems to be an awful lot of guilt and embarrassment (hence the many silly excuses made in this thread) on the part of folks who wouldn't have stopped
Quote:It bothers me, actually, that adults like yourself would lend credence to an argument that you should have stopped to listen to a street musician during rush hour in the subway.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 8:41 AM
Quote:Originally posted by HKCavalier: Or consider this unfortunate victim of art:
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by AgentRouka: With a musician on the street, their art is pushed onto you, whether you're in a frame of mind to receive it or not. It's like a child demanding your attention - and then asking for your money. *Snap* Appreciate on demand - or you have the wrong priorities? Some enjoy that, but some don't. Many don't. I gotta wonder what bizarre clauterphobic distopia these folks live in that they feel street music is "pushed onto" them. Good god, what about the birds that sing and the sunsets every last night of the week? Thrust upon us without our say-so! Oh, the misery!
Quote:Originally posted by AgentRouka: With a musician on the street, their art is pushed onto you, whether you're in a frame of mind to receive it or not. It's like a child demanding your attention - and then asking for your money. *Snap* Appreciate on demand - or you have the wrong priorities? Some enjoy that, but some don't. Many don't.
Quote: And this insinuation that street musicians demand money! What, indeed, has our world become when people perceive the passive invitation of a violin case open at the feet of a musician as a demand thrust upon them? It's as if the simple presence of the artist offends these people! Oh, wait...
Quote: Quote:Originally posted by AgentRouka: Our society works because it is based on precision. People being in certain places, doing certain things at very certain times. In between that we're supposed to fit our lives, families and sleep. Does it rob us of certain freedoms and is that sad? Yes. But with as many people as we are, inparticular concentrated in one place in big cities, it's probably the only way to keep things running smoothly. All this sacrifice in the name of that holy grail of modern control-freak culture: "running smoothly." What in this world that matters, seriously now, runs smoothly?
Quote:Originally posted by AgentRouka: Our society works because it is based on precision. People being in certain places, doing certain things at very certain times. In between that we're supposed to fit our lives, families and sleep. Does it rob us of certain freedoms and is that sad? Yes. But with as many people as we are, inparticular concentrated in one place in big cities, it's probably the only way to keep things running smoothly.
Quote: Listen: if pausing and listening to Bach in the subway for--what?--a minute and a half is going to get you fired, then your life--your actual life--is not running smoothly.
Quote: If you don't have an extra minute and a half to spare on any given morning, you're killing yourself.
Quote: If you were to be late to work that morning and you were to blame it on the minute you spent listening to the musician, you'd be kidding yourself and your boss.
Quote: And just to be clear: were I there, I may or may not have stopped to listen based upon my own judgement in the moment. I would blame no one but myself if I missed out on some great music. Whether or not people would stop, doesn't interest me. Why we think we do the things we do, the amount of personal responsibility we, each of us, take for "what our world has become" is of the utmost importance to us all.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 8:56 AM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 9:27 AM
BIGDAMNNOBODY
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 9:44 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: But it's a valid question.
Quote:Why is it people haven't learned about classical music?
Quote:Why is it enough people haven't learned to play any instrument so that they can appreciate the art of another's playing?
Quote:Why is it people can be so preoccupied standing in line to buy a lottery ticket (and doing nothing, not even rushing to work) they don't even remember a violinist nearby?
Quote:Why is it an (apparent) lack of money is akin to being a leper, such that people not only didn't stop for a second or two, they didn't even turn and look in acknowledgment.
Quote:The question wasn't - what's wrong with YOU?
Quote:It's, rephrased - is this the society you want to live in?
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 9:56 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: "Yet people keep calling it "sad" and ask what has become of the world." But it's a valid question.
Quote: Why is it people haven't learned about classical music? Why is it enough people haven't learned to play an instrument so that they can appreciate the art of another's playing?
Quote: Why is it people can be so preoccupied standing in line to buy a lottery ticket (and doing nothing, not even rushing to work) they don't even remember a violinist nearby?
Quote: The question wasn't - what's wrong with YOU? It's, rephrased - is this the society you want to live in? Is it ?
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 3:25 PM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 4:24 PM
FINN MAC CUMHAL
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Why is it people haven't learned about classical music? Why is it enough people haven't learned to play any instrument so that they can appreciate the art of another's playing? Why is it people can be so preoccupied standing in line to buy a lottery ticket (and doing nothing, not even rushing to work) they don't even remember a violinist nearby? Why is it an (apparent) lack of money is akin to being a leper, such that people not only didn't stop for a second or two, they didn't even turn and look in acknowledgment. The question wasn't - what's wrong with YOU? It's, rephrased - is this the society you want to live in? Is it ?
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 7:04 PM
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 10:00 PM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: Ask the larger questions. Mine were only a starting point.
Quote:Do we WANT people to appreciate classical music? AFAIK maybe not.
Quote:Do we WANT people to be so consumed with their jobs and their things that they don't appreciate pleasant moments? Do we WANT a society that can't place a value on things unless there's a dollar sign on it? And so on.
Wednesday, May 9, 2007 11:09 PM
Quote:What I would enjoy, seeing as how you keep repeating these "open your mind" and "is this what you want" questions, a little more concrete ideas of what it is YOU want.
Quote:And, please, another example to draw your conclusions from than Bell, because ... it's not about the amount of free time or preoccupation with money, it's about the numer of people, the amount of stimuli available and the fact that even in a holiday world we would occasionally have reason to be precise in our timing.
Quote:Rue: Do we WANT people to appreciate classical music? AFAIK maybe not. Agent: So it's really, do people want to appreciate classical music? And if they don't, is that actually a problem?
Quote:Rue: Do we WANT people to be so consumed with their jobs and their things that they don't appreciate pleasant moments? And so on. Agent: See, here you're losing me again ... Do you honestly think this one incident is any indication on whether people are capable of enjoying pleasant moments? Or just your own personal idea of a pleasant moment?
Quote:I think that the people who walked by Bell were happy and well-adjusted and that they walked by him not for "bad" reasons but for completely harmless ones.
Quote:If he's lying in a puddle of his own urine or blood or even just beer, babbling and confused, and no one pays him any mind - that is something worth talking about. That's something that raises complicated questions I consider to be relevant. (Such as, is there a right to be publically miserable and harmful to one's self?)
Quote:And I STILL don't think it would have anything to do with whether they would have walked by him as a healthy man playing the violin.
Thursday, May 10, 2007 3:10 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 3:59 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 4:36 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: If you read my post, I hope you'll notice that my point is that the same thing that makes people ignore buskers is the same thing that makes them ignore panhandlers or the homeless. The response to them is the same even though the situation is not.
Thursday, May 10, 2007 5:04 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 5:05 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: How many people do you think passed by that day. 500? 1000? 3000? Out of all those people, how many even turned to look at where the music was coming from? So in one sense, you are right. It's not about free time, because surely many could have spared a half-second glance.
Quote: Quote:Rue: Do we WANT people to appreciate classical music? AFAIK maybe not. Agent: So it's really, do people want to appreciate classical music? And if they don't, is that actually a problem?Didn't I say that ? I could have sworn ...
Quote: Given when and where, that's roughly 1000 well fed, well housed, well educated, gainfully employed solid urban citizens - the achievement of urbanized society. That very few stopped, and almost no one apparently could spare a glance is, given the numbers, statistically significant. And this question ties into the next -
Quote:We agree. So the question is NOT (let's say this again) - what's wrong with those people, but rather - is that the normality we want to have?
Quote: And yes, you'd walk by one of those every time. I'm guessing the difference in your mind is whether or not someone can stand up.
Quote: Quote:And I STILL don't think it would have anything to do with whether they would have walked by him as a healthy man playing the violin.
Thursday, May 10, 2007 5:08 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 6:28 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 7:27 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: The article, if I read it correctly, wavers between several potential directions. One is that encountering a street musician is a moral choice as to what to do next; and/ or that people have a classical music appreciation deficiency; and/or a surfeit of busy-ness; and/ or that people don't recognize art without a frame.
Quote:On reconsideration, all the reasons come down to - that's just not what we do in this society. We're too busy, too preoccupied, too inured, too scheduled, too tamed, and so, it's just something we don't do.
Quote:So what is the disincentive to, without breaking stride, turning around to look ?
Quote:And the reason people pretend not to see - why they override their instinct to glance - is that something makes them uncomfortable.
Quote:people will walk past a violinist 3 feet away without an instinctive, natural glance.
Quote:So I propose that all the 'reasons' - too busy, too scheduled etc - the reason why it's just not something we do in this society - come down to personal discomfort and the moral dilemma proposed above.
Quote:And what does that personal discomfort hinge on? It's the apparent lack of money.
Thursday, May 10, 2007 7:46 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 8:01 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 8:17 AM
Quote:Originally posted by rue: "But once again this implies that there is some reason why we should be paying attention to street musicians, an assertion that no one has backed up so far." No one has even implied it except to say that it's instinctive to turn to look at the source of a sound. Don't believe me? Make a loud noise at work and see how many people look over.
Quote:"How about this: I don't want to walk into that guy in front of me?" So you never look at a poster on the wall? The sign on the tram? The hottie off to the left? Your suitpants to see if they got wet? I mean really, your comment is just ridiculous.
Quote:"They don't really affect me at all unless they are interesting in some way." They are a source of sound. The article talks about 6 minutes before a person, without breaking stride, GLANCING in the direction of ... not stopping, not turning, not even slowing down, just glancing over. Walling yourself off that way in an urban area is common in the US, it invovles an active suppression of an instinct to look in the direction of a sound.
Quote:"I would contend that that is an instinct that would be suppressed in cities because the desire to not run into people, step in something, step off of a curb etc." Again with the bogus argument. Give it a rest, already. It's like saying people are too inept to walk and chew gum at the same time. How about you go to a large Canadian city - say Toronto - and see how many people manage to walk and look around.
Quote:"unless you can prove to me that there is a moral dilemma or discomfort" What is the disincentive to glancing in someone's direction? You tell me.
Quote:"I can't judge someones monetary situation without glancing at them" Then you are dumber than the average mugger.
Thursday, May 10, 2007 8:45 AM
THATWEIRDGIRL
Thursday, May 10, 2007 8:47 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:06 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:49 AM
Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:51 AM
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