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I certainly agree with Mr. Haskins' statement. In the modern world that we live in it's unfortunate that it's become acceptable to give equal weight to opinions verses facts. It been suggested since the 1960s that "there is no right or wrong, only shades of gray" or the Marxist idea of a situational context or validity regarding facts.
Is this a philosophical statement Ethan? "If a man runs naked in the woods and nobody was there to see it, did it happen?"
it seemed to me pretty cukoo after he had just proven that he couldn't tell the difference.
Thankyou Occam. I don't quite understand what some others here are talking about, it sounds like when questioning a cables validity the nay sayers require proof and when it is provided they question the meaning of the word proof.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 22 Apr 2009, 09:22 pmIs this a philosophical statement Ethan? "If a man runs naked in the woods and nobody was there to see it, did it happen?"Yes, I'm just full of philosophy today. The more compelling question is, "If an attractive young woman prances naked around a bunch of acoustic treatment, does that make the room sound better?" --Ethan
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 22 Apr 2009, 09:48 pmit seemed to me pretty cukoo after he had just proven that he couldn't tell the difference.And this surprises you why exactly? --Ethan
I believe that the tests carried out were good enough to satisfy the Electronic Engineers Association, the organisation that the original complaint was upheld by. So that is good enough for me. As for Ethan and Kevin Haskins and Turkey your comments mean little to me and I hope anyone else who has taken the time to read my original post. I ask you more directly not to post here unless you are going to write something other than pathetic nonsense. I understand you have your own products to further but not at the expense of this thread. Is it possible to have admin remove spurious comments from a thread in the interests of pursueing a proper disscusion?
I believe that the tests carried out were good enough to satisfy the Electronic Engineers Association, the organisation that the original complaint was upheld by. So that is good enough for me. As for Ethan and Kevin Haskins and Turkey your comments mean little to me and I hope anyone else who has taken the time to read my original post.
I ask you more directly not to post here unless you are going to write something other than pathetic nonsense. I understand you have your own products to further but not at the expense of this thread.
I'd much rather you stayed and discussed the technical paper seriously.
Quote from: TerryO on 23 Apr 2009, 05:00 amI certainly agree with Mr. Haskins' statement. In the modern world that we live in it's unfortunate that it's become acceptable to give equal weight to opinions verses facts. It been suggested since the 1960s that "there is no right or wrong, only shades of gray" or the Marxist idea of a situational context or validity regarding facts.In some cases, opinion is ok.How would you factually compare two movies for relative quality? Two wines? You could perhaps provide some facts to be used in making a comparison, but there would be plenty of opinion too.
This thread struck a nerve for me because it is the "marketing masquerading as science syndrome". It just leads the consumer to think that engineering and science are pretty much useless tools in developing good sound. That is unhealthy for the industry. It leads to bad products at very high prices. It pretty much insures that high-end audio will forever be a small inconsequential industry.
What the problem seems to be, in many of these discussions, is where fact ends and opinion begins. An ethical approach would be to identify the demarcation from one to the other, instead of blurring the line between them as many marketing types seem to do.