Post by account_disabled on Dec 2, 2023 1:14:31 GMT -6
We should read a book by him a year to dive, for a few hours, into his impossible and bizarre worlds. Even if Zwaan does not give concrete examples, we can hypothesize an application: a sentence like "the tops of the pines" is processed more easily than "the tops of the pines", as the brain could misinterpret the initial "tops". 4. The beauties of Ramachandran Analyzing various arts from different countries, Ramachandran, in the book What We Know About the Mind , has identified what he believes are universal beauties.
I am: hyperbole metaphor repetition, rhythm symmetry modular insulation (less is more) perceptual grouping contrast vision as perceptual problem solving aversion to suspicious coincidences equilibrium Phone Number Data According to Ramachandran, the brain processes information by applying these characteristics, in order to immediately decipher it. When he succeeds, he reacts with a feeling of satisfaction, like when he solves a riddle. Ramachandran is based above all on the visual arts: will the principles also apply to written art? 5. The reader's opinion Luca Francesco Ticini, neurobiologist at the Italian Society of Neuroaesthetics, in the text Neuroaesthetics: a step towards understanding human activity? he hypothesizes that, when faced with particularly famous works of art, the brain renounces critical judgment, a bit like what happens with a loved one.
Zwaan also presents a similar idea: the division of the emotion caused by the work into A and F emotions. F emotions are those caused by the work itself, A emotions are those caused by external factors. An example is the Sistine Chapel: it is not only the work itself that excites, but also the idea that Michelangelo created it. 6. Other ideas Massimo Salgaro, in The literary work is realized in the reader's conscience , hypothesizes that the authorial interferences, such as the narrator's comments, do not distance the reader from the work, but rather favor the introjection of the text, leading the reader to reflect more intense way on the subject.
I am: hyperbole metaphor repetition, rhythm symmetry modular insulation (less is more) perceptual grouping contrast vision as perceptual problem solving aversion to suspicious coincidences equilibrium Phone Number Data According to Ramachandran, the brain processes information by applying these characteristics, in order to immediately decipher it. When he succeeds, he reacts with a feeling of satisfaction, like when he solves a riddle. Ramachandran is based above all on the visual arts: will the principles also apply to written art? 5. The reader's opinion Luca Francesco Ticini, neurobiologist at the Italian Society of Neuroaesthetics, in the text Neuroaesthetics: a step towards understanding human activity? he hypothesizes that, when faced with particularly famous works of art, the brain renounces critical judgment, a bit like what happens with a loved one.
Zwaan also presents a similar idea: the division of the emotion caused by the work into A and F emotions. F emotions are those caused by the work itself, A emotions are those caused by external factors. An example is the Sistine Chapel: it is not only the work itself that excites, but also the idea that Michelangelo created it. 6. Other ideas Massimo Salgaro, in The literary work is realized in the reader's conscience , hypothesizes that the authorial interferences, such as the narrator's comments, do not distance the reader from the work, but rather favor the introjection of the text, leading the reader to reflect more intense way on the subject.