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Post a Comment On: Bruce Charlton's Notions

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Blogger Nicholas Fulford said...

Very interesting comment Bruce.

I have to admit that intensity is something that I crave in art, music and literature. And you have a point about intensity in and of itself being an ephemeral thing. It has a certain quality that is similar to addiction. Is it that endogenous dopamine is released in high quantities in response to the effective intensity stimulated by an artistic form? If it is then really what we are talking about is a type of drug addiction, albeit one that does not require injecting, snorting or smoking.

My favourite fix is music. It has the most direct, potent and immediate hit. Literature, film and visual art all have their own capacity to evoke powerful states, but in my experience music stands alone in the intensity department.

But if all art is, is a means to get high on endogenous neural chemicals, I do think we cheapen it - a lot. Good art has layers and its beauty is not strictly a case of high intensity, but often embodies a subtle and harmonious patterns that support a unified whole. If we make intensity the aim, then without question art has been reduced to being a drug. I may as well just listen to the same high intensity piece over and over and over. The funny thing is, when that is done, the piece moves from powerful to irritating as the damn piece just replays in the mind - ceaselessly. What was intense becomes cheap tinsel through over and repetitive stimulation.

So then, what is a person who loves great art to do?

I will patiently and persistently add to the forms of art that I encounter, and do so not just on the basis of getting high but on the more subtle joy of realizing deeper, wider and more complex patterns that are meaningful beyond mere intensity.

18 October 2016 at 03:41

Blogger Bruce Charlton said...

@Nick - I think you are sensing that nothing makes any sense except in the context of deity (note I say deity, not God) - without-which our habitual ways of thinking reduce everything to ephemeral and subjective patterns of atoms being perceived by other ephemeral patterns of atoms.

This is refuted by our deepest experience - which is of meaning and purpose and beauty; but modern metaphysics has pre-immunised us against the validity of our deepest experience - and instead we base our whole lives upon the propaganda of shallow and transient conventional wisdom; inculcated by the mass media and public institutions...

18 October 2016 at 06:00