MARC Record
Leader
001
14329
005
20250120120039.0
008
120124s1992 0 e
020
a| 0945193203
041
a| eng
100
a| Wallin, Nils L.
4| aut
9| 16301
245
a| Biomusicology: Neurophysiological, neuropsychological and evolutionary perspectives on the origins and purposes of music
260
a| New York
b| Pendragon Press
c| 1992
300
a| 582 pages
520
a| Since the 1960s, Swedish musicologist Nils Wallin has been exploring man's biological inheritance and its relationship to music. This book, the culmination of these many years of investigation, offers a musicological interpretation of recent r esearch in neurophysiology and paleobiology. A model of music as a natural system which serves as a foundation for the understanding of our musical mind, its capacity, and its phylogenetic roots is proposed. And a unified bio-socio-cultural field theory of music is presented. It is here argued that music creates structures which develop and grow in a manner not unlike the processes controlling the growth of organisms. Thus, music as a system is conditioned by biological microsystems, as well as superi or macrosystems of a more complex nature, such as the flow of consciousness and social, political, and economic systems-a natural synergetic system.Wallin's discourse encompasses-1) the musical consequences of cerebral functional asymmetry; 2) the h ierarchic and selective organization ofperceptual-cognitive auditory processes; 3) reticular-limbic responses to musical stimuli interpreted as synapse-modifying mechanisms for long-term motivation and learning, as well as for phylogentical learning; 4 ) the question of remnants or retentions with roots in the sound-gestures of other vertebrates of a higher order (and not solely the non-human primates) being active in the innermost structure of music; 5) vocalization techniques, e.g., the kölni ng technique of the late Paleolithic herding culture of Europe, as paleobiological retention; 6) the epistemological perspective of models of life-processes as discussed in recent scientific research.
942
c| BOO
2| ddc
920
a| boek
852
b| ORPH
c| ORPH
j| ORPH.SCI WALL
999
c| 14329
d| 14329