Dear Robert,
Thank you for your detailed and interesting reply.
Although at the present I find many of your assertions very hard to believe, I am interested to see whether or not you, and others, can back up these claims.
I admit to having a marked initial resistance to the "conspiracy theory" type rewriting of history. That is because I have been heavily involved in three fields of study - archaeology/history, biology, and theology - which have been especially heavily infested with such theories. Many of these theories originate from people with very defective understanding of the basic principles of scientific research (and history is, or ought to be, a science). They often tend to rail against what they see as the "establishment" in their particular field of study, who they accuse of being overly conservative.
Whatever the case, I believe it is quite right to adopt, as a starting position, an attitude of scepticism to new theories, or revivals of old theories. Otherwise science/history just gets blown all over the place by the latest idea. If students of literature had accepted all the theories as to who, if not Shakespeare, actually wrote "Shakespeare's" plays, we would be in a complete mess. So, until anyone comes up with conclusive evidence to the contrary, I will continue to believe that indeed these plays were written by William Shakespeare.
However I do believe that most theories, even the most seemingly "heretical", deserve a fair hearing. There are quite a number of cases of theories originally dismissed as cranky which are now generally accepted - continental drift, the KT asteroid impact and the end of dinosaurs (except for birds - the descent of which from dinosaurs, originally a "heretical" theory, is now generally accepted), evolution of species, and so on.
For myself, I have always been open, I hope, to being persuaded to change my mind. In my youth, I was almost an atheist, but I am now a convinced Christian, and thus a theist (but still believing in evolution, as indeed many Christians do). As far as music is concerned, I was formerly much more drawn to music of the late Romantic era, especially Sibelius and Brahms. Now I find myself appreciating more the music of Beethoven, Haydn, and, especially, Mozart, whoever wrote it. Incidentally, I detect a strong stylistic uniformity to the works I think of as by Mozart, and to the works I think of as by Haydn, which is related to, but generally distinct from the Mozart style. Your theories about the origin of these works will have to deal with this in a convincing way.
Robert, would you mind if I mentioned your ideas on the MozartForum site? I am interested as to how members of that forum would view your theories. (Perhaps you've already done so, but I haven't been a member of that forum for very long, so wouldn't know if you had).
Regards,
Frank
(London South Bank University)
Thank you for your detailed and interesting reply.
Although at the present I find many of your assertions very hard to believe, I am interested to see whether or not you, and others, can back up these claims.
I admit to having a marked initial resistance to the "conspiracy theory" type rewriting of history. That is because I have been heavily involved in three fields of study - archaeology/history, biology, and theology - which have been especially heavily infested with such theories. Many of these theories originate from people with very defective understanding of the basic principles of scientific research (and history is, or ought to be, a science). They often tend to rail against what they see as the "establishment" in their particular field of study, who they accuse of being overly conservative.
Whatever the case, I believe it is quite right to adopt, as a starting position, an attitude of scepticism to new theories, or revivals of old theories. Otherwise science/history just gets blown all over the place by the latest idea. If students of literature had accepted all the theories as to who, if not Shakespeare, actually wrote "Shakespeare's" plays, we would be in a complete mess. So, until anyone comes up with conclusive evidence to the contrary, I will continue to believe that indeed these plays were written by William Shakespeare.
However I do believe that most theories, even the most seemingly "heretical", deserve a fair hearing. There are quite a number of cases of theories originally dismissed as cranky which are now generally accepted - continental drift, the KT asteroid impact and the end of dinosaurs (except for birds - the descent of which from dinosaurs, originally a "heretical" theory, is now generally accepted), evolution of species, and so on.
For myself, I have always been open, I hope, to being persuaded to change my mind. In my youth, I was almost an atheist, but I am now a convinced Christian, and thus a theist (but still believing in evolution, as indeed many Christians do). As far as music is concerned, I was formerly much more drawn to music of the late Romantic era, especially Sibelius and Brahms. Now I find myself appreciating more the music of Beethoven, Haydn, and, especially, Mozart, whoever wrote it. Incidentally, I detect a strong stylistic uniformity to the works I think of as by Mozart, and to the works I think of as by Haydn, which is related to, but generally distinct from the Mozart style. Your theories about the origin of these works will have to deal with this in a convincing way.
Robert, would you mind if I mentioned your ideas on the MozartForum site? I am interested as to how members of that forum would view your theories. (Perhaps you've already done so, but I haven't been a member of that forum for very long, so wouldn't know if you had).
Regards,
Frank
(London South Bank University)
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