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How human musical experience emerges from the audition of organized tones
is a riddle of long standing. In The Musical Representation, Charles Nussbaum
offers a philosophical naturalist's solution. Nussbaum founds his naturalistic
theory of musical representation on the collusion between the physics of sound
and the organization of the human mind-brain. He argues that important varieties
of experience afforded by Western tonal art music since 1650 arise through the
feeling of tone, the sense of movement in musical space, cognition, emotional
arousal, and the engagement, by way of specific emotional responses, of deeply
rooted human ideals.
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