How many audiophiles only buy gear if they can do a blind listening test first? Professing love for blind listening tests vice actually using blind listening tests to choose your gear are two separate worlds that don't meet. It's just one more category on the audiophile argument wheel that keeps getting spun.
It's one thing to acknowledge that the vast majority of audiophiles don't employ blind testing in making decisions on gear, which is of course true (for reasons I stated). The problem is that the article makes gratuitous, bad arguments against the very method of blind testing.
In any case, I personally have used blind testing occasionally and sometimes it certainly has influenced my purchases. For instance I had a bunch of very highly regarded, expensive AC cables to test out. At one point I perceived one of the AC cables as changing the sound of my system. When I had a friend help me blind test between them, I couldn't tell any difference in the sound. I saved a lot of money right there!
Back when home theater was becoming all the rage and cable companies were seeing dollars in their eyes "more cables to sell!" the subjective mags were lauding the performance of expensive video cables (deeper contrast! Better color saturation! Clearer image!).
I got a hold of a range of video cables from cheap all the way up to Nordost.
I *thought* at first I was seeing some differences. But in blind testing...I realized I couldn't reliably detect any difference at all (which would have been predicted by the engineering theory anyway of such cables). Again...saved money by realizing I could get the necessary performance from cheaper cables.
More recently I switched digital servers. For some reason I perceived the new server as sounding a bit off balance, a bit brighter, which bummed me out because I really wanted to use it. If what I was hearing was real it would force me back to using the old server.
But knowing that there should not be any technical (and audible) difference I double checked, blind tested between them and...what do you know?...there was NO detectable difference. I'd imagined it earlier. So I just went with the new server and had no issues since...sounds just like the previous one.
So I am among those who are happy to have blind testing in the tool box.
(As I mentioned earlier, it's not like blind testing erases any audible differences: I've successfully identified between DACs, for instance, in blind testing).