While the
self of the composer, through the
intellect, fathoms the subjective sphere on the level of the
mind, and perceives it as being very alive, that very same self scans the sound on the level of the mind from outside, through the sense of
hearing as if with a measuring instrument, and makes the composer the first listener of his work.
Due to its nature the
feeling aspect of the intellect is associated with more life than the
understanding, and therefore the listener will always experience the knowledge perceived on the level of his feeling as much more lively than the information brought in by his understanding.
By virtue of this twofold-structured system, based on the
feeling and the
understanding, for gathering musical information through the intellect, the listener regards the lively inner aspect of the mental
musical sound-space, which he predominantly perceives by his
feeling, as subjective. And in contrast, he regards the less lively, outer aspect of the mental
musical sound-space, which he perceives rather by his
understanding, as lifeless, or as objective.
Nevertheless, the conscious self of an alert listener will be aware at all times that nature, as music describes it, is always lively and
subjective, never dead or, in the scientific materialistic sense, objective.
The realistic, holistic description of the living reality through the “spoken word” of music is extremely
profound and
systematic – even by
today’s scientific standards. This fact, amongst others, accounts for the persuasive
power of classical music.
However, life cannot be pressed into
patterns of rational numbers. Correspondingly, the irrational element predominates in classical music and the different musical parameters interact in ratios of irrational numbers, and it is this
controlled incalculability from which the great appeal of music, that realistic lively language, really arises.
As opposed to the conventional, rational,
materialistically-oriented natural sciences, music describes the reality of life in the fantastic dimension of
irrational values. Although the educated musician may comprehend the real world
holistically and
intuitively, he can only describe it correctly with
irrational values, if he wants to express the reality of life satisfactorily.