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2019 | 3 | 3(9) | 1–4

Article title

Music and Philosophy: Contemporary Challenges

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Preview: The ties between music and philosophy are strong and venerable, as they date back to the very beginnings of the latter. According to the ancient tale, Pythagoras, when passing by a smithy one day, noticed that the hammers make sounds of different pitch and, more importantly, that some of the pitch combinations feel pleasant on the ear while the others sound rather harsh. Intrigued by this phenomenon, the ancient sage began to further investigate it with the so called monochord (being just a plank with a string attached to it which could be shortened at any chosen position to alter the pitch). Thus he discovered that the successions of two sounds that sound pleasant (or, to use a more technical term, consonant) could be achieved if the string is being shortened by 1:2, 2:3 or 3:4. Pythagoras could not be more satisfied with this finding, as it proved his claim that the universe is, on its hidden and true level, based upon an intelligible mathematical structure, and, moreover, that a key to understanding this structure is the Holy Tetractys, a figure representing the first four natural numbers in the form of a regular triangle.

Keywords

Year

Volume

3

Issue

Pages

1–4

Physical description

Dates

published
2019-10-31

Contributors

  • Institute of Philosophy, University of Warsaw

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-07489da2-4451-4452-9ecd-c13176bf9c20
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