Pretty Ugly
Pretty Ugly
Pretty Ugly
Charles Maurer  &  Daphne Maurer

Pretty Ugly

Why We Like Some Songs, Faces, Foods, Plays, Pictures, Poems, Etc., and Dislike Others

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    Beschrijving

    "Why do we find some things attractive and others not? In this fascinating book, the authors take the reader on a vast intellectual journey to offer a comprehensive approach to answering this age-old question." Janet F. Werker, PhD, FRSCCanada Research Chair, Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia"One of the most enlightening books I have ever read."Timothy McGee, PhDProfessor Emeritus, Department of Music, University of Toronto"Imagine that you are an early human walking through the jungle and a tiger is lurking nearby. To survive, you would need an ear that could distinguish the sound waves released by the tiger's footfall from all the other noises around you. Or an eye that could catch sight of the slightest spot of orange among the many green leaves. You would have to recognize patterns and be alert to changes in them. Today, you may be using those same abilities to enjoy harmonies in music or admire visual effects in art. That is the conclusion of McMaster University psychologist Daphne Maurer and Toronto writer Charles Maurer, who have spent three decades establishing a scientific basis for aesthetics. Their recent book, Pretty Ugly: Why we like some songs, faces, foods, plays, pictures, poems, etc. and dislike others, begins with evolutionary biology and goes on to use neuroscience, developmental psychology, physics, mathematics, anthropology, musicology and art history to establish the mechanisms behind our cultural tastes. The tastes are subjective, to be sure, but the way they are established is not."Kate TaylorThe Globe and Mail, June 27, 2020"This book is much richer than these few paragraphs can depict. Literate readers will be impressed by the range of erudition and international exposure of the authors, and will probably derive pleasure from the metaphors and similes that ornate the text."Gregory Hanlon, PhDMunro Professor of History, Dalhousie University; Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture, 2020

    "Why do we find some things attractive and others not? In this fascinating book, the authors take the reader on a vast intellectual journey to offer a comprehensive approach to answering this age-old question." Janet F. Werker, PhD, FRSCCanada Research Chair, Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia"One of the most enlightening books I have ever read."Timothy McGee, PhDProfessor Emeritus, Department of Music, University of Toronto"Imagine that you are an early human walking through the jungle and a tiger is lurking nearby. To survive, you would need an ear that could distinguish the sound waves released by the tiger's footfall from all the other noises around you. Or an eye that could catch sight of the slightest spot of orange among the many green leaves. You would have to recognize patterns and be alert to changes in them. Today, you may be using those same abilities to enjoy harmonies in music or admire visual effects in art. That is the conclusion of McMaster University psychologist Daphne Maurer and Toronto writer Charles Maurer, who have spent three decades establishing a scientific basis for aesthetics. Their recent book, Pretty Ugly: Why we like some songs, faces, foods, plays, pictures, poems, etc. and dislike others, begins with evolutionary biology and goes on to use neuroscience, developmental psychology, physics, mathematics, anthropology, musicology and art history to establish the mechanisms behind our cultural tastes. The tastes are subjective, to be sure, but the way they are established is not."Kate TaylorThe Globe and Mail, June 27, 2020"This book is much richer than these few paragraphs can depict. Literate readers will be impressed by the range of erudition and international exposure of the authors, and will probably derive pleasure from the metaphors and similes that ornate the text."Gregory Hanlon, PhDMunro Professor of History, Dalhousie University; Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture, 2020

    Charles Maurer is a free-lance writer who specializes in science and technology. He reads academic literature in many areas, and has professional skills in graphic design and commercial photography.Daphne Maurer is an experimental psychologist who studies the development of vision. She is Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience and Behaviour at McMaster University, Canada, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.Their previous book, The World of the Newborn, won the Book Award of the American Psychological Association.

    Specificaties

    Uitgever Cambridge Scholars Publishing
    Verschenen 23 september 2019
    Pagina's 327
    Thema Kunst: algemene onderwerpen
    Afmetingen 212 x 148 mm
    EAN 9781527538603
    Bindwijze Hardback / gebonden
    Taal Engels

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