Music and Math Relationship
Mar 3, 2011 at 1:45 AM Post #16 of 20
I created this thread and I wanna close it because im ignorant...
I have absolutely no clue what half of you are talking about lol.
 
Mar 4, 2011 at 3:29 AM Post #17 of 20
 
Quote:
If you want to get crazy, grab a copy of Dave Brubeck's Time Out. There's lots of different time signature in that album, including Take Five done in an not typically used 5/4 beat. 

My first foray into jazz............
 

Amazon.com Review

Twenty years after it topped the bestseller charts, Douglas R. Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid is still something of a marvel. Besides being a profound and entertaining meditation on human thought and creativity, this book looks at the surprising points of contact between the music of Bach, the artwork of Escher, and the mathematics of Gödel. It also looks at the prospects for computers and artificial intelligence (AI) for mimicking human thought. For the general reader and the computer techie alike, this book still sets a standard for thinking about the future of computers and their relation to the way we think. Hofstadter's great achievement in Gödel, Escher, Bach was making abstruse mathematical topics (like undecidability, recursion, and 'strange loops') accessible and remarkably entertaining. Borrowing a page from Lewis Carroll (who might well have been a fan of this book), each chapter presents dialogue between the Tortoise and Achilles, as well as other characters who dramatize concepts discussed later in more detail. Allusions to Bach's music (centering on his Musical Offering) and Escher's continually paradoxical artwork are plentiful here. This more approachable material lets the author delve into serious number theory (concentrating on the ramifications of Gödel's Theorem of Incompleteness) while stopping along the way to ponder the work of a host of other mathematicians, artists, and thinkers.
The world has moved on since 1979, of course. The book predicted that computers probably won't ever beat humans in chess, though Deep Blue beat Garry Kasparov in 1997. And the vinyl record, which serves for some of Hofstadter's best analogies, is now left to collectors. Sections on recursion and the graphs of certain functions from physics look tantalizing, like the fractals of recent chaos theory. And AI has moved on, of course, with mixed results. Yet Gödel, Escher, Bach remains a remarkable achievement. Its intellectual range and ability to let us visualize difficult mathematical concepts help make it one of this century's best for anyone who's interested in computers and their potential for real intelligence. --Richard Dragan
Topics Covered: J.S. Bach, M.C. Escher, Kurt Gödel: biographical information and work, artificial intelligence (AI) history and theories, strange loops and tangled hierarchies, formal and informal systems, number theory, form in mathematics, figure and ground, consistency, completeness, Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometry, recursive structures, theories of meaning, propositional calculus, typographical number theory, Zen and mathematics, levels of description and computers; theory of mind: neurons, minds and thoughts; undecidability; self-reference and self-representation; Turing test for machine intelligence.
 

Product Description

This groundbreaking Pulitzer Prize-winning book sets the standard for interdisciplinary writing, exploring the patterns and symbols in the thinking of mathematician Kurt Godel, artist M.C. Escher, and composer Johann Sebastian Bach.  
 
Get a copy.
 
Mar 4, 2011 at 3:41 AM Post #18 of 20
So has anyone heard of the theory that Music is very closely related to Math and is nearly Identical?
I just checked google over a few pages, and the explanations make sense, but at the same time doesn't make sense.


You would probably enjoy this book.

Heck, the way Amazon's website is now with the "Look Inside" feature, you can read quite a bit of it on-line. Plus, the incredibly literate and well-informed reviews of the book on Amazon site confirm what you are asking - yes their is a neuro-biological relationship between math and music, since both are created and consumed by homo sapien brains.

Or as F. Murray Abram's character tried to downplay Wolfgang Mozart's precision compositions to the Austrian king in the movie "Amadeus" -

"Too many notes."
 
Mar 4, 2011 at 4:20 PM Post #19 of 20
Whoa! thanks attenuated!
Those short videos on Amazon are really entertaining and I have watched Amadeus in my Piano class. =]
 

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