mep
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2013
- Messages
- 5,093
Happy New Year Mark, hope 2023 finds you well...and able to just sit back and enjoy some tunes.
No knives.
Thanks AJ and I wish you the same. I enjoy my system every day.
Happy New Year Mark, hope 2023 finds you well...and able to just sit back and enjoy some tunes.
No knives.
It's a "polite" knife fight for now.
Even so, there's something I don't understand about audiophiles "deniers"...
I think that, we audiophiles, go through the forums to share our toys and report the progress we are making as we move along this labyrinthine path of audio. And naturally, we are also here to learn from others and from the different paths they have followed, hoping to skip a few steps and be able to make better choices.
What I ask is, what do "deniers" do on the internet audio spaces? What do they have to share/teach? The dangers of being deceived by the sense of hearing, which is responsible for hearing and enjoying listening to music so much?
Sometimes I wish that the "deniers", along with the warnings for all the dangers and idiocy in which we "audio fools" let ourselves get caught up, had the intellectual honesty to invite us so that we could listen to their systems and confirm the performance they achieved to reach. Not being fooled by marketing gimmicks, esoteric science or neuroacoustics mistakes, they certainly achieved superlative performance in their systems.
Sometimes I wish that the "deniers", along with the warnings for all the dangers and idiocy in which we "audio fools" let ourselves get caught up, had the intellectual honesty to invite us so that we could listen to their systems and confirm the performance they achieved to reach. Not being fooled by marketing gimmicks, esoteric science or neuroacoustics mistakes, they certainly achieved superlative performance in their systems.
Not sure why you addressed your question to me.
Hmmm, not sure if as an educated adult who doesn't believe people actually hear Santa Claus, that I qualify as a "Denier", but I've been publicly demoing for well over a decade (note date). Does that count?
AJ
I still don't understand what you believe and don't believe. But for me there are basic things, without them, those who don't believe cannot build a good system. It may be good in one aspect or another, but it will fail somewhere. A detailed system for example. The detail is of no interest if you turn up the volume and the transition between mids and highs hurts your ears, a sign that there is a lot of garbage in the signal...
So, rhetorical question: does electricity count?
Back around 2008 or 2009 I set up a simple music server using a cast off desktop computer running XP. I was wondering if the USB cables could sound different. I bought two identical generic cables. I send one to Jena Labs for cryogenic treatment. I found there was a noticeable improvement with the cryo cable. I posted this experiment at a digital forum at a popular discussion site. There were a number of digital smart people and a few industry folks who got a big laugh out of it. The 0 1's argument was a common response.
Contempt prior to investigation.
Even so, there's something I don't understand about audiophiles "deniers"...
I think that, we audiophiles, go through the forums to share our toys and report the progress we are making as we move along this labyrinthine path of audio. And naturally, we are also here to learn from others and from the different paths they have followed, hoping to skip a few steps and be able to make better choices.
What I ask is, what do "deniers" do on the internet audio spaces? What do they have to share/teach?
Sometimes I wish that the "deniers", along with the warnings for all the dangers and idiocy in which we "audio fools" let ourselves get caught up, had the intellectual honesty to invite us so that we could listen to their systems and confirm the performance they achieved to reach. Not being fooled by marketing gimmicks, esoteric science or neuroacoustics mistakes, they certainly achieved superlative performance in their systems.
I think it falls back on a very simple premise: either they have tried and they are unable to hear a difference with their hearing, or their hearing is fine and they have a system that isn't good enough.
I just can't understand why anyone would refuse to use their own ears. And if they have and can't hear a difference, that's fine but leave the rest of us alone.
Yes, that is the usual (forgive the phrase) "Golden Ears" response to skepticism. It is to disparage either the skeptic's hearing or his system.
What responses like yours virtually never contain is the admission your strongly held belief based on your own perception could be wrong, unfortunately. It can only be "the other guy" who is wrong. This is what you get with a purely subjective paradigm.
What this misses is a huge variable: The way our biases affect our perception. This is a very well known, highly studied issue. What you call the person "refusing to use their own ears" is simply someone who is aware of this variable. Our "ears" are not perfect detecting machines. Together with our brain, they are fallible and we can "perceive things" that are not there. It can be due to an expectation effect (e.g. "the more expensive item will sound better") or to all sorts of influences, even the mere act of listening to see if there's any difference can change how you listen, and you can perceive a "difference in the sound" when there is no difference in the sound.
Unless you recognize these facts, you will never understand objections to some audiophile/high-end marketing claims.
Also, it's one thing to take on board such variables intellectually, it's another to experience it. That's when it can really sink in to your bones. If I compare different AC cables in my system I'm just as vulnerable as anyone else to hearing a difference. That's being human. Yet I've had 'obvious sonic differences' vanish when I set up blind tests, for instance between AC cables (or video cables...or music servers). When you experience how fallible your own perception can be, it's a good Life Lesson to take on board. But those audiophiles who believe only a purely subjective impression can possibly determine the truth tend not to be interested in alternatives to that viewpoint, and never truly put their hearing to the real crucible: whether you can detect a difference between A and B WITHOUT knowing which is which before-hand. THAT is truly "relying on what you can REALLY hear."
Again, as I often emphasis, neither you nor any audiophile HAS to care a thing about measurements or blind tests to enjoy the hobby. But at the same time, without grappling with these issues, you will likely continue to put forth question-begging claims where you have simply presumed you "hear" a difference that others "can not" without ever questioning yourself on the matter.
I hope I'm wrong, though. A good question to always ask yourself "How would I learn that I was wrong?" If you have made your position unfalsifiable, others are justified in being suspicious of your findings.
Cheers.
C'mon down, can't bring it to you. Despite what you've heard, I don't bite believers. Or I can arrange a trip to Redmond.My personal view/experience is that the sound quality of a system - at least in terms of what would impress ME - isn't tied to someone having followed every "best technical practice" in putting together their system
Indeed modern day homes can have a lot of noise inducing gadgetsBut I do hear a difference when I reduce these effects in my system by eliminating bitching power supplies and optically isolating wired ethernet.
Simple - it's my ears, my money, my system. Therefore I can never be "wrong" if I like it. It's literally that simple.
Cable deniers simply need to butt out, stop attacking us and trying to convince us we are the wrong ones. It frankly doesn't concern them whether we are wrong, right or in between.
The real question is why are cable deniers obsessed with attacking and forcing their dogma on others and can't simply let it go?
It's literally that simple.
C'mon down, can't bring it to you. Despite what you've heard, I don't bite believers. Or I can arrange a trip to Redmond.
As I've said, its the folks who have zero trust of ears who fear trust your ears, just listen listening. Rightfully so, as JGH said above ;-).
cheers,
AJ
Well, I meant the audio show, as in FL Intl Audio Expo. Many identical rooms, so you're not just listening to adapting to one system. You can go room to room and compare the sound. Best if one has own music as an anchor.Oh I've always been happy to visit other audiophile dens.
That's a bit of a strawman. I know there are some knuckleheads at ASR et al, but is anyone actually arguing there are no good sounding believer systems? I've heard absolutely stellar stereo sound in rooms of folks who believe in things I certainly don't. However, those tend the exceptions to the rule. The majority of believer systems I've heard sound either mediocre, or some, outright terrible, despite the tons of voodoo nonsense. Similar to what the Capfest guy described above. I think you might be missing my point. Do you think these 2 guys wouldn't have heard cream of the crop voodoo believer stereos? Yet they almost creamed themselves when they heard a real HiFi system for the first time ever. A very very non-believer "Santa Denier" guy/system if there ever was one.As I've argued over on ASR, even if we presume there are aspects of a system chosen by a purely "subjective" audiophile that may be voo-doo, that doesn't mean the audiophile hasn't a good sense of sound, hasn't paid attention also to what does make sonic differences, and hasn't arrived at a good sounding system.
That's a bit of a strawman.