Music and Emotion: From Ancient Greece to
Contemporaneity
Music and Emotion: From Ancient Greece to Contemporaneity
Author(s): FLORENTINA ENEASubject(s): Philosophy, Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Music, History of Philosophy, Aesthetics, Ancient Philosphy, Contemporary Philosophy
Published by: Editura Universităţii din Bucureşti
Keywords: music; emotion; aesthetics; ethics;
Summary/Abstract: Understanding how music and emotion co-vary has been the focus for many scholars for a long time, starting with the writings of Ancient Greeks to contemporary thought. Philosophers, musicologists, and cognitive scientists alike have been puzzling on the extent to which music can have an influence on how humans feel, think and act morally and ethically. Therefore, the understanding of this relation is of paramount importance as we are immersed in organized-sound contexts every day, and this has a major effect on how listeners think and act in social environments. The current investigation aims at highlighting the development of the music and emotion relationship throughout the stylistic periods of the European space (with a short comparison to Ancient Chinese music) as a preamble for a more nuanced future research on the topic.
Journal: Analele Universității din București – Seria Filosofie
- Issue Year: 71/2022
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 57-78
- Page Count: 21
- Language: English
