i think these studies that suggest that people that listen to
specific types of music are more intelligent because they listen to that
music are getting the causality backwards.
first, if
you're focusing on a specific genre, you're doing this wrong. if the
idea is the abstraction in the music, no specific genre has a monopoly
on that. you may get different correlations, depending on personality.
debussy is going to appeal to a different type of person than mozart
does. and skinny puppy is going to appeal to a different type of person
than genesis does. but, it's all abstract music and it should all have
basically the same effect, if the factor is the abstraction in the
music.
focusing specifically on "classical" music is
going to mostly simply produce class differences, which are well
understood as having an effect on test scores. it's a situation where x
is correlated with y, y is correlated with z and a fallacious conclusion
is being drawn that z is therefore caused by y - when it could very
well be that x and z are where the causal relationship is occurring.
but
the point of this shouldn't be to isolate "intelligent people".
"intelligent people" is a pretty broad category, that encompasses humans
with a wide variety of tastes. rather, the useful conclusion is
something like as follows:
"if you actually legitimately enjoy mainstream pop music, it is probably because you are not of above average intelligence."
but you don't need a study to understand that.
even that's maybe a little unfair, as it's not impossible that you could be into abstract music and still like pop.
maybe something like...
"if you *only* listen to pop music, then chances are high that you're not that bright."
i
think the key thing that bugs me about the studies is that they tend to
focus so much on mozart. mozart was not the most abstract, creative or
interesting writer of his era from any perspective. even people that
really like mozart will acknowledge how prodding he could be from time
to time. if the studies were based on something a bit more difficult....
i'd
expect that if they did a direct comparison between kids that listen to
mozart specifically and kids that listen to a spectrum of other
"classical" composers, mozart would actually rank near the bottom in
terms of test results.
i entirely agree that things are
constantly in flux, and the causal model has problems at the micro
level. i think the intuitive understanding is that things are happening
too quickly for causality to apply. i say intuitive, but that's a tricky
thing to understand if you try to break it down, despite it being the
intuitive way to kind of understand it.
i think you can
try and put some kind of conceptual bounds around it, though. every
causal reaction requires a finite amount of time. if there's so much
energy in a system that it pushes the cause through faster than a
reaction can occur in, then you'd see causality seem like it's not
working. you could think of it like a censor failing, by missing a
signal because it's too fast - or in some cases like a censor exploding
by taking in a signal that zaps it like a laser.
depending
on the scale of the subject, the micro might be very perceptible to us.
so, the question of how music affects intelligence is micro on this
scale - it's reinforcing each other, because it's happening at a time
scale that is shorter than a reaction can develop in.
but i think you can still pull out patterns, and the patterns are still meaningful, even if they require some careful analysis.