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Re: Do We Perceive Beauty in an Unexpected Context



Make that: EVERYTHING's less important than the "task at hand".

On Feb 20, 2012, at 10:29 AM, David Coffin wrote:

Ditto Paul and Pawel; this "experiment", which I recall reading about shortly after it happened, always seemed to me to have been set up to guarantee the results obtained and wanted, and pretty obviously so.

What's so surprising about a bunch of commuters in a metro station on the way to work being too busy, too preoccupied and too habituated to jump the rails for some serious, long-form music, no matter how high-quality? Any marketing person could have predicted exactly what happened, let alone any busker…

Similarly, I don't see any evidence that an average crowd or the average person values random beauty much at all. How often have you ever seen a freeway traffic jam, or even a single pulled-over vehicle, during a spectacular sunset, or any other jaw-dropping display of light on landscape as seen from the road? Nothing's less important than the "task at hand".

What's more of a cliche than "Stop and smell the roses!" or that the Artistic Life (which is not renowned for being an enviable one) is about noticing the beauty that everyone else misses?

dpc