Re: Difference between cognition and perception? (Eliot Handelman )


Subject: Re: Difference between cognition and perception?
From:    Eliot Handelman  <eliot(at)GENERATION.NET>
Date:    Thu, 15 Apr 2004 00:36:14 -0400

Martin Braun wrote: > > Most in speech remains on a perceptional level. > Only a small part can possibly reach the level of cognition. > And only a small part of the small part that can reach cognition actually > does so. > And even smaller part can become aware to a listener. > > Musically, I've come to think of this just in opposite terms: at the lowest level is awareness, (I know something is out there, but not much more). and then cognition, ( I attempt to grasp the thing through familiar categories) and finally perception. (I grasp the thing, it speaks to me, I experience it). These are just words, and the other permutations are probably also arguable. In the case of music, perception seems to me much more complex than cognition, though obviously in part driven by cognition: but this is because, as in all of the arts, we don't throw away the percept once we've extracted its meaning. Consider here the diifference in force between "I had a perception" and "I had a thought". One is a forceful insight to which you were suddenly awakened -- the other is something about which you probably feel much less certain. "Perception" seems to involve an integrated experience, whereas :cognition" seems to refer to the analysis (or analytical components) of such experience. -- eliot ------ eliot handelman phd music & ai montreal, qc


This message came from the mail archive
http://www.auditory.org/postings/2004/
maintained by:
DAn Ellis <dpwe@ee.columbia.edu>
Electrical Engineering Dept., Columbia University