
WmAx
Audioholic Samurai
Your summary makes it seem as if you have not paid very much attention to what I or mtrycrafts have tried to make clear.mulester7 said:.....well, good for you, WmAx, few question marks are displayed in posts usually....what I did was only post a post, but I'll admit, the desire to do so might have been prompted somewhat by seeing what you posted, that once again goes back to what we see at this site too much....if something can't be proven by science, or a scope or a meter, it could not be true and valid, or, could not have been heard....that type of reasoning is useless in my view as it stands only for not having had an experience involving the senses, and saying others could not have either....I sure didn't mean it as a personal attack, I promise, but that line of reasoning eludes me.....
I'll try to be specific, for the sake of clarification.....
"that once again goes back to what we see at this site too much....if something can't be proven by science, or a scope or a meter, it could not be true and valid, or, could not have been heard."
No, you say this in absolute sense. That's not the case. Really, it's about probability, not absolutes. For example: there could be ghosts and goblins(of the supernatural variety). There could be a magic fairy named Zues that only I can see, whom washes my back while I'm asleep. I could guess the pick 6 lottery numbers and win millions of dollars. All of these things could be, but are highly improbable. Using the degree/type of speculation as typically used by audiophiles to explain what they percieve is about as useful a method to solve problems as if someone asked a question, and then drew from a hat an answer, when the information on 1,000,000,000 slips of the paper are fiction and the factual information written on 1 slip of paper. Highly improbable that the answer drawn will be the factual one. The same goes for claimed audible factors of an amplifier that are typically claimed by audiophiles: no one has ever demonstrated in a properly controlled test, a phenomena that can not be measured, that is audible. Call it factor X. It could exist, but it's highly improbable. To claim factor X exists is speculation. It is not responsible or efficient to claim that factor X is a real factor and to proceed to give advice based on such an assumption in a forum that's intent is to propogate factual knowledge/advice. The same goes for measurable parameters that have not been specifically coorelated/linked to the claimed effect by valid, bias-controlled observation(s). Call this factor Y. The repeated unsubstantiated speculations that you have made in reference to amplifier sound in various threads as if they were fact, without taking the required precautions[double blind protocol, sufficient statistical scoring, level matched, measurements to correlate what was heard in case of positive results in DBTing, etc.] to heed known factors that will affect perception to carry out a valid listeing comparison are not responsible in a forum such as this. You lower the signal-to-noise ratio when doing this. Such speculative comments made in the form of fact would, however, be welcomed in most forums, therefor it escapes me why you frequent this forum... unless perhaps you find it entertaining when you get to argue these subjects?
-Chris
Last edited: