vvvexation: (Default)
vvvexation ([personal profile] vvvexation) wrote2005-04-01 09:10 pm
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An experience difficult to describe

I just asked my dad the following question over email:
Is there a name for the phenomenon whereby a pale imitation of some
experience is better known than the experience itself, and becomes
almost more of a prototype than the prototype is? But without people
forgetting that it is just an imitation, so that when they for once in
their lives have the prototypical experience, they think "wow, this
feels like [prototype X]" just as they always do when they're having
the derivative experience, and forget for a moment that this time it
actually is the prototype they're experiencing?

He evidently isn't quite sure what I mean and wants a specific example. However, I'm not sure I want to share with him the example I was thinking of.

Anybody have any parent-safe examples of this kind of thing?

[identity profile] enleve.livejournal.com 2005-04-02 06:24 am (UTC)(link)
Here's an example: some popular music tunes are based on classical music, and someone encountering the original for the first time might think "Hey, this is just like that song." Or they might encounter the classical music in a different context than they first heard it, and think "Hey, this sounds just like Looney Tunes."

For specific examples of songs like this, Wikipedia has a list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_popular_songs_based_on_classical_music and I'm sure there are more.