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Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis. / Marsden, Alan.
Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos: Proceedings of the ICMC/SMC 2014. International Computer Music Association, USA, 2014. p. 41-46.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Marsden, A 2014, Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis. in Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos: Proceedings of the ICMC/SMC 2014. International Computer Music Association, USA, pp. 41-46, Joint International Computer Music Conference and Sound and Music Computing Conference 2015, Athens, United Kingdom, 14/09/14.

APA

Marsden, A. (2014). Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis. In Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos: Proceedings of the ICMC/SMC 2014 (pp. 41-46). International Computer Music Association, USA.

Vancouver

Marsden A. Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis. In Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos: Proceedings of the ICMC/SMC 2014. International Computer Music Association, USA. 2014. p. 41-46

Author

Marsden, Alan. / Echoes in Plato's cave : ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis. Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos: Proceedings of the ICMC/SMC 2014. International Computer Music Association, USA, 2014. pp. 41-46

Bibtex

@inproceedings{e1e4b837607e4f72b436fb09393354f7,
title = "Echoes in Plato's cave: ontology of sound objects in computer music and analysis",
abstract = "The sonic aspects of Plato's analogy of the cave is taken as a starting point for thought experiments to investigate the objective nature of sound, and the idea of quasi-Platonic forms in music. Sounds are found to be objects in a way that sights or appearances are not, and it is only in the presence of technology that they become artificial. When recognition, control and communication about sound come into play, abstract concepts emerge, but there is no reason to give these the priority status Plato affords to forms. Similar issues arise in discussion of the ontology of musical works, where the ideas of extension and intension prove useful for clarity about the nature of musical objects. They are also useful for strategies in the development of music software. Musical concepts are not fixed but arise from complex cultural interactions with sound. Music software should aim to use abstract concepts with are useful rather than correct.",
author = "Alan Marsden",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
isbn = "0984527435",
pages = "41--46",
booktitle = "Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos",
publisher = "International Computer Music Association, USA",
note = "Joint International Computer Music Conference and Sound and Music Computing Conference 2015 ; Conference date: 14-09-2014 Through 20-09-2014",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Echoes in Plato's cave

T2 - Joint International Computer Music Conference and Sound and Music Computing Conference 2015

AU - Marsden, Alan

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The sonic aspects of Plato's analogy of the cave is taken as a starting point for thought experiments to investigate the objective nature of sound, and the idea of quasi-Platonic forms in music. Sounds are found to be objects in a way that sights or appearances are not, and it is only in the presence of technology that they become artificial. When recognition, control and communication about sound come into play, abstract concepts emerge, but there is no reason to give these the priority status Plato affords to forms. Similar issues arise in discussion of the ontology of musical works, where the ideas of extension and intension prove useful for clarity about the nature of musical objects. They are also useful for strategies in the development of music software. Musical concepts are not fixed but arise from complex cultural interactions with sound. Music software should aim to use abstract concepts with are useful rather than correct.

AB - The sonic aspects of Plato's analogy of the cave is taken as a starting point for thought experiments to investigate the objective nature of sound, and the idea of quasi-Platonic forms in music. Sounds are found to be objects in a way that sights or appearances are not, and it is only in the presence of technology that they become artificial. When recognition, control and communication about sound come into play, abstract concepts emerge, but there is no reason to give these the priority status Plato affords to forms. Similar issues arise in discussion of the ontology of musical works, where the ideas of extension and intension prove useful for clarity about the nature of musical objects. They are also useful for strategies in the development of music software. Musical concepts are not fixed but arise from complex cultural interactions with sound. Music software should aim to use abstract concepts with are useful rather than correct.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

SN - 0984527435

SP - 41

EP - 46

BT - Music Technology Meets Philosophy: From digital echos to virtual ethos

PB - International Computer Music Association, USA

Y2 - 14 September 2014 through 20 September 2014

ER -