A good part of what you're getting lately is esthetics. Look, feel, solidarity, smoothness of functions, ergonomics, finish quality. For example, when I ordered the Emotiva ERC-2 CD player I planned to use in place of the Mark Levinson No39 that I was selling, I got to compare the two side-by-side. On paper, they should have been comparable. Both even had a lot of machined aluminum, including the remotes, but beyond that there was no comparison. If all of the criteria I just mentioned were important, the ML blew the Emotiva away in every usability regard. A child would have noticed the build quality, design quality, implementation, and feel differences. Where the ML was intuitive, the Emotiva was annoying. I sold the Emotiva after less than three months. (Oh yeah, and it was delivered defective.)
(Why did I sell the ML CD Player? - because it fried some key components on its digital board, which cost about $1400 to replace. I wasn't impressed. After I had it fixed I sold very ML component I had, because I just wasn't in the mood anymore.)
So if nothing on list means anything to you, then you're not in the target market, and that's all there is to it. I currently use a Tascam CD player as a digital drive, and it is truly junk by comparison to the ML, but the replacement cost will be $300 if it breaks. I suppose I fell out of the target market for high-end electronics. But I still understand it.