okay, i'll use one of my famous analogies that make absolutely no sense... If your'e trying to teach a kid to play guitar, you can give them an acoustic guitar, which you can use with no other equipment, but the strings are hard to push. You can give them a vintage gretsch, and a priceless aged fender tube amp with nos tubes, and rebuilt pots, but it never really sounds "right" to you, and is really touchy and finiky with all it's settings... or you can start them with a cheap electric with a hot bridge pickup and a cheap amp with an overdrive. This is a chronology of my guitar learning experience, and the first took too much effort, the second needed to be tuned just so, and then muscians would argue over which subtle nuances were picked up by which tube, but i always felt that i didn't do it justice, and it sounded funny when i played it. The third had enough flash and bang to make me think "wow, this is cool" and i could show off little simple things to my friends, and it was simple enough and flashy enough that i stayed interested until i was ready to move onto the next level.
Now, this may have made absolutely no sense, but what i kindof mean is that first, a beginning audiophile (which i'm not claiming to be anything but one) may not really hear the quality differences between a 26 and a 24 Hz tone, or know what a hot reciever smells like, but after time, and experience with cheaper equipment you get to recognize, realize, and respect different qualities of all audio equipment. The first time you burn up a sub, which maybe everyone doesn't but i did, and it was a cheap one, thank god

and experiences like that are half of the fun of getting to understand the scene, it's a learning process, half the fun is getting there, and bells and whistles like a sub and 5 or 6 channels, getting to string wires all over, it's exciting right away, people walk into the room and say "wow" which is fun, you guys know that

and finally crawling through setup menus on a lower (but now crappy) end reciever is easier to get used to, and leads the way to more technical things, finally, upgrading is fun. okay, that turned into a book, and maybe doesn't make sense, but it's my opinion.