Nudgeminder

Plato argued in the 'Republic' that musical modes aren't merely aesthetic preferences — they're moral architectures that shape the soul. He wanted to ban certain scales from the ideal city because he believed they cultivated softness or despair. This sounds extreme until you notice that contemporary neuroscience echoes him: entrainment research shows that rhythm and tonality literally synchronize brainwave activity, altering emotional regulation and even moral decision-making. What we choose to listen to isn't passive consumption — it's a kind of ongoing self-construction. On a Sunday, when the week resets, the music you let in first may quietly author the person you'll be by Friday.

If your habitual listening were a philosophical argument being made about the kind of person you should become, what position would it be defending?

Drawing from Ancient Greek Philosophy / Platonic Ethics — Plato

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