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hmm, I think you're missing my point maybe?
Dayglow, could you have become an objectivist through the course of this debate?
I'm not questioning measuring equipment, what I'm saying is that if some part of a live performance is lost in the chain between the performance and our ears, it can't be measured for the simple reason that it isn't there.
In that situation, a piece of measuring equipment isn't going to tell us what isn't there whereas our ears might tell us, for example, that what we are listening to is "sterile".
It'll tell us what's missing.
you could measure what the artifacts are that are being lost in the translation.
I'd question that, but there's not going to be an answer here is there
If the "magic" measurements are known and reflective of what people hear, I assume manufacturers are using them in the design process. Those measurements should be available at least to the manufacturers, correct? It seems a builder could easily promote their "superior testing" methods as a marketing strategy. Or even if the information isn't shoved in a customer's face, what would the harm be in making it available if requested?If you build a better mousetrap and all that. If we have the technology to build better stuff, we should be using and touting it.
Do the objectivists in the audience believe that sufficient measurements are made available to potential consumers for them to make educated decisions on purchases?
1) "We" know all the dimensions of human hearing and can quantify it in graphs to be able to objectively capture all of what people hear. This has all been known for a long time.
John,> Ethan, you have to be kidding. Hearing has little to do with the brain? <Where did I say that?! I said I use my brain to assess the quality of a music composition, as opposed to needing pristine playback fidelity which I thought was the point of this thread.
When I evaluate music I use my brain. Hearing has little to do with that.
John, this thread has been going on for so long now I don't even know who is arguing what anymore. Do you really believe there is some as yet unknown audio parameter - other than frequency response, noise, and distortion - that affects the sound of an amplifier circuit? If so, why do you believe that?
No argument?! I've got 26 pages of terse communication that says otherwise.
So, let's recap:1) "We" know all the dimensions of human hearing and can quantify it in graphs to be able to objectively capture all of what people hear. This has all been known for a long time.2) "We" indeed use all these dimensions in the design of the gear you have to choose from when shopping for audio equipment.3) "We" choose to keep this information tightly under wraps, even though at least some of "you" could significantly benefit in making tough choices with your money. Bear in mind, "you" wouldn't know what to do with the information/don't want to hear about it. We know better.4) If "you" ever discover what "we've" been hiding from you, we'll just blame it on the recording studio because "you" are probably stupid enough to be distracted from 1 - 3, above.I'm just recapping what I understand from the other side of this argument. Frankly, I don't doubt for a minute that lots of testing AND listening occurs at most audio labs. I do not believe science has utter command of the ear/brain interface, its relationship to reproduced signal, and design of the reproducers. However, that is not my claim.If 1 - 3 are true and I'm not misunderstanding the statements, that is an awfully elitist attitude.