Abstract
Appeals to multiple-intelligence theory have become common currency among educators in the arts, apparently because status as “an intelligence” is seen as vindication of the educational integrity of artistic undertakings. Unfortunately, ascendancy to the status of intelligence has not been accompanied by careful examination of what intelligence means. We have become assertive about its plurality, to be sure. But “it” remains more or less the kind of cognitive construct it always has been: abstract, mental, cerebral, disembodied. After years of unsuccessful urging that music’s alignment with feeling made it an essential corrective to such one-sided cognitive activity, we appear to have decided in recent years that there is more strategic clout to be found on the rational side of the cognitive/emotional divide. What we have not done, precisely, is to question the nature of the divide itself: this stubborn dichotomy between knowing that counts and that which does not, in light of which musical and artistic endeavors invariably come up short. In this essay, I explore from the perspective of musical experience what cognition means—of what intelligence that is musical consists on the assumption that there can be no genuine progress in our efforts to explain and justify the contributions of artistic endeavors to education until the meanings of things like intelligence and cognition are reconstructed.
There is not a word, not a form of behavior which does not owe something to purely biological being—and which at the same time does not elude the simplicity of animal life, and cause forms of vital behavior to deviate their preordained direction, through a sort of leakage and through a genius for ambiguity which might serve to define man.Maurice Merleau-Ponty.Phenomenology of Perception
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NOTES
I use intelligence and cognition more or less interchangeably here. Since intelligence is a manifestation of exceptional cognitive capacity, problems attending the latter attend the former as well. This essay will focus more on cognition than intelligence, however.
This binary hierarchical opposition insinuates itself into our language and our thought processes at almost every turn. Not only do its offspring distort our understanding of almost everything to which they are applied, they are, as feminist theories show, deeply implicated in the perpetuation of social inequalities of all kinds.
Here I allude to Wittgenstein, who suggests that logic’s “crystalline purity” is ill-suited to making our way in the messy, practical world. Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical investigations, trans. G. E. M Anscombe (New York: MacMillan Publishing, 1976) §107 (p.46). •
This is an argument that has been advanced repeatedly over the years by Bennett Reimer. See, for instance, Reimer, B. (2003). A philosophy of.music education: Advancing the vision. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 93.
This strategy is not entirely wrong-headed. In fact I will advance a variant of that claim myself Only, I will reject the desirability, indeed the possibility, of education that is purely cognitive in nature—in contrast to which, music must be doing something not-quite or not-really cognitive.
This goes back to Langer, Schiller, and others. See also note 4, above.
Admittedly, there have been noteworthy historical efforts to stress the “non-discursive” nature of the knowledge music affords. Unfortunately, the definitions of discursiveness on which these were based were not very illuminating. Moreover, the representational, idealistic models of mind on which they have built draw distinctions between knower and known that more recent science and scholarship has shown to be mistaken.
Much of the literature on “critical thinking” in music confirms my assertions about the limited range of what counts, implicitly, as “thinking” among musicians and music educators.
“Knowing-in-action” unfortunately reduces, on this view, to “knowing-while-in-action”—an advance over “knowing inaction,” to be sure, but hardly the enactive, bodily-grounded, experiential knowledge to which we should be appealing.
Michael O’Donovan-Anderson, “In search of real bodies: Theories and/of embodiment” in The incorporated sellf Interdisciplinary perspectives on embodiment, Michael O’Donovan-Anderson, ed. (Lanham, Maryland: Rowan and Littlefield, 1996) 2–3.
Where, by contrast, the Cartesian attitude may grant the necessity of incorporation, but cannot escape the fundamentally sceptical stance created by a body whose sensations have to be sorted and sifted in order to separate those that are cognitively and ideally trustworthy from those (many) that are not. Thus, my choice of the term “bodily-constituted” rather than “bodily-mediated.”
Damasio and others make a strong case that emotion plays an indispensable role in cognition. Antonio Damasio, Descartes error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain (New York: Putnam’s, 1994).
Steven Feld puts it this way: “The significant feature of musical communication is . . . that its generality and multiplicity of possible messages and interpretations brings out a special kind of “feelingful” activity and engagement on the part of the listener, a form of pleasure that unites the material and mental dimensions of musical experience as fully embodied” (C. Keil and S. Feld, Music grooves [Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 19941 91).
Note the parallels to certain important features of the genetic epistemology of Jean Piaget.
See The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992).
Oliver Sacks advances neither a theory of cognition nor a philosophy of mind, nor speaks of music at length, but his extraordinary case studies offer vivid, compelling examples of what it means to say that cognition is distributed. They also raise provocative questions about the links between things like musical experience and quite a number of other human capacities we are not usually inclined to regard as musical at all.
This is Mark Johnson’s way of putting the embodiment thesis. Johnson’s work, and his collaborations with George Lakoff advance numerous examples of the way bodily schemata structure the workings of mind. See M. Johnson, The body in the mind (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), and G. Lakoff and M. Johnson, Philosophy in the flesh: The embodied mind and its challenge to Western thought (New York: Basic Books. 1999).
Jean Lave, Cognition in practice: Mind, mathematics, and culture in everyday life (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988) 1.
Evan Thompson, “The mindful body: Embodiment and cognitive science,” in The incorporated self: Interdisciplinary perspectives on embodiment, Michael O’Donovan-Anderson, ed. (Lanham, Maryland: Rowan and Littlefield, 1996) 128.
Evan Thompson, “The mindful body: Embodiment and cognitive science” 128.
Phenomenological accounts of these facts abound, of course. In my book Philosophical perspectives on music (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998) I explore phenomenological/experiential accounts of music in the sixth chapter. Many of the points made here in passing receive extensive elaboration in D. Burrows Sound, speech, and music (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1990).
John Shepherd and Peter Wicke, Music and cultural theory (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1997). Among Shepherd’s and Wicke’s points are that this “technology of articulation” represents a significant contrast to the arbitrary signifier-signified relationships generally held to constitute semiosis.
For these reasons, musicing is not just part of culture but of biology as well.
John Shepherd, “Music and male hegemony,” in Music and society: The politics of composition, performance and reception, R. Leppert and S. McClary eds. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987) 158 .
See Tia DeNora, Music in everyday life (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000) 79–82.
Their corporeal correlates are things I may or may not embrace, may or may not be able to take up, depending on the circumstances.
Nelson Goodman makes the claim that expression amounts to metaphorical exemplification—where, that is, something that functions symbolically shows forth and to that extent represents properties that it possesses, but has acquired metaphorically. See Goodman’s Languages of art: An approach to a theory of symbols (Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 1976) 85–95.
Eliot, T. S. (1988). “The dry salvages: V,” in Four quartets. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich.
Thomas Clifton, Music as heard: A study in applied phenomenology (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983) 297.
Roland Barthes, quoted in Richard Middleton, Studying popular music (Philadelphia: Open University Press, 1990) 266.
Tia DeNora, Music in everyday lifevery 161.
Steven Feld, in C. Keil and S. Feld, Music grooves 91.
B. Carroll-Phelan and P. J. Hampson. “Multiple components of the perception of musical sequences: A cognitive neuroscience analysis and some implications for auditory imagery,” in Music perception 13:4, 554. This “recruitment” of motor activity’s neural systems for the rhythmic components of auditory imagery extends in particular, state the authors, to those involved in the planning of motor sequences.
Tia DeNora takes up the idea of “affordance” from psychologist J. J. Gibson, by way of sociologist Juergen Streeck. See Music in everyday life 38–39.
John Shepherd, “How music works: Beyond the immanent and the arbitrary,” in Action, criticism, and theory (act) for music education 1:2 (http://mas.siue.edu/ACT/index.html) 14.
By no means do I mean to suggest that this is a uniquely human capacity. In fact, its continuity with other forms of life is precisely among the strengths of this approach.
Richard Middleton, Studying popular music 223.
As a trombonist, for instance, I can aurally identify notes produced on trombone with considerable accuracy, but that ability does not transfer to pitches generated on other instruments.
I use quotation marks here because the view I am sketching clearly discounts the possibility of a musically-pure realm.
Here I would urge, with Thomas Regelski and others, that we attempt to recover the original sense of “amateur” engagements: actions motivated by love. Amateur perception and engagement is not simply a diluted or deficient version of the professional. Recognizing action and embodiment as musically-constitutive precludes ranking and sorting music in virtue of its corporeal qualities. If all music becomes musical in virtue of the presence of bodily engagement and action, we cannot segregate “ideal” music—music directed to the mind—from music with more conspicuously visceral appeal. The ideal and the bodily are differences in degree, not in kind or in value.
John Shepherd writes eloquently about timbre’s tactile essence in his Music as social text. Experientially, please note, timbre is not a function of pattern. Pattern is a structural thing—about abstract relations—whereas tone quality is an inextricably bodily affair—concrete and particular, here and now. Most of our accounts of music cognition seriously neglect quality, focusing instead on pattern and structure, and relegating the remainder to the unfortunately residual status of psychological “response.”
For me, at any rate, the experience of in-tune and out-of-tune is a dramatically corporeal event—never an idle or detached observation.
Thus, to Steven Feld’s diagram (Keil and Feld, Music grooves, 86) of the act of musical communication, which features a reflexive interaction between a dialectically-constituted sound object and a listener’s “interpretive moves” on the other, I would suggest the addition of a specifically kinaesthetic dimension that conjoins object and action.
I am reminded of an assertion by Charles Rosen to the effect that in successful improvisation the fingers develop an independent logic, one not dependent upon mental ratification.
Judith Butler, Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of “Sex” (New York: Routledge, 1993).
Butler’s interest and focus lies primarily with discursive practices; to these I am obviously anxious to add musical actions and practices.
On this point, see Edward Casey, “The ghost of embodiment: Is the body a natural or a cultural entity?” in The incorporated self Interdisciplinary perspectives on embodiment, Michael O’DonovanAnderson, ed. (Lanham, Maryland: Rowan and Littlefield, 1996) 25. Casey invokes the phrase “ghostly” to describe this capacity to be both natural and cultural, yet neither: which should remind us of the long history of spirit/ghost metaphors associated with music.
Like water to a fish.
Among the points to which my previous remarks have alluded is that these differ in kind rather than degree: performing and listening are both skills, both active, both bodily, and both constructive.
Perhaps we might call this musical “body building”?
Edward Casey, The ghost of embodiment” 31.
“Talent and identity” in Orbit 31:1, 2000 (39). The brief quote is excerpted from a more extended discussion entitled “Thoughts on shaping talent and identity” by L. Bartel, J. Bellous, W. Bowman, and K. Peglar, in Orbit, 31(1) 2000 on-line edition (OISE, University of Toronto).
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Bowman, W. (2004). Cognition and the Body: Perspectives from Music Education. In: Bresler, L. (eds) Knowing Bodies, Moving Minds. Landscapes: the Arts, Aesthetics, and Education, vol 3. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-2023-0_3
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