Let's spend a couple of months on a critique of the difference between feeling and comprehending meaning by addressing this question : "Is Rock and Roll an example of the difference between feeling and comprehending meaning?"
To do this we should begin by trying to pinpoint the much abused and possibly pointless meanings in the words Subjective and Objective. Why do I say 'possibly pointless' because one of the great tragedies of the human is that if it had to objectively process every single piece of sensory data it received before acting, our ancestors would have been eaten while calculating the velocity of a predator.
This simple and barbaric reality resulted in the highly strung instrument we developed to manage our world producing what in the 1970's became Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman's understanding of what they decided to call Heuristics. This word with its origin in the Greek for "to find" or "to discover" - as in Coumbus "finding America" - is a word that shares a root with "Eureka"and it fundamentally changed how we view human rationality.
These two aggravating personAmos and Daniel, described how people don't think like flawless, objective computers. Instead, we rely on a cluster of hardwired heuristics, short cuts, to navigate a world where there is a lion behind every blade of grass and desease carrying tic behind every tree.
Classically, and I hate having to say this, Tversky and Kahneman were behavioural economists. They challenged Utility Theory, one of them got Nobel Prize for something, the other one died before he got his Nobel Prize, and all in all a cold chill ran down the spines of all sentient creatures until, like typical economists, they started exchanging insults and quarrelling.
But out of their turpitude into the frontal cortex came this understanding of Heursistics, the brains capacity to engage in short cuts, an understanding that had been existent for thousands of years in the recorded history of our species, since Zarathustra proposed a single source of behavior preferences in the wisdom of Ahuru Mazda.