If you want to look at me as being narrow-minded in this instance then feel free to do so. In some manner of speaking I suppose it is.Tsunami Jones wrote:You didn't, as I didn't directly quote you saying it, now did I? Instead, I inferred it to make a point. I also infer from your statement that you think his opinion is entirely invalid as well, and that you think he is "narrow-minded." But isn't invalidating someone's opinion like that "narrow-minded" also?
I accept his/her opinion as just that, an opinion. But his/her making such a rash generalization about a video based mostly on music (and not the connection of the music to the video) leads me (as myself) to view the opinion as mostly baseless as there seems to be no real critical observations or judgements being made about the video outside of, "I don't like the song, so the video isn't all that great. Max score is 1.67/5." I can't see that as a truly valid rating.
Actually, this statement has nothing to do with quantity. It's the principle that says that people don't first see the individual parts of a whole, but rather see the whole itself. When you look at a person, you don't see two arms, two legs, a pair of ears, a nose, etc. You see the whole human as a singular piece.Tsunami Jones wrote:In terms of quantity, yes. In terms of quality, meaning, or anything else? Not necessarily. If you add two piles of crap together, all you have is one big pile of crap.LivingFlame wrote:"The whole of anything is greater than the sum of its parts."
In a similar respect, when I watch a video, I'm not going to just look for one piece (the music here) and dismiss the whole based on a single part. I'll look at the whole and see how the editor has fit all the given pieces together to create one cohesive experience. That, in my mind, is open-minded and objective.
And no, there's nothing wrong with eventually breaking a video down to the individual pieces to get even more critical; I'm not dismissing that. But to be objective, even when analyzing the individual parts, the whole has to be considered as well.