You know, I'm starting to see this issue in a new light. Science? Bah! It is all a bunch of egg-heads trying to sound smart. DBT's? Ridiculous! All those people are unethical bastards that are just on the take to the big companies that want you to believe that all their expensive gear sounds like all that cheap gear out there. They just fix those tests to confuse the thinkers among us. Broad-brushing people is so FUN!
Yep, I think we should definitely leave science out of all this talk of our hobby. Cause it is ruining it. I'd much rather have endless pointless debates about what I heard vs. what you heard that can never truly be resolved. I'd rather deal with people that claim that CDs sound better in the southern hemisphere because the Coriolis force affects the movement of the CD and doesn't slow it down like it does in the northern hemisphere. And I won't be able to argue with them because I live in the north. It doesn't matter that there is ample physical evidence (measurement and other such poppycock) that shows no difference between the speeds the CDs turn. Doesn't matter at all. Because if I haven't moved to the southern hemisphere and listened to it myself, I can't know.
You are absolutely right, that sounds way more fun to me.
Plus, we all know that are subjective experiences are the only real evidence we have of anything. I don’t really know that New York exists until I’ve been there. Since I haven’t, it is still up in the air to me. Sure, I’ve met people from there. I’ve seen pictures. My wife has been there. But until I’ve actually stepped foot in the city, it could all be some elaborate hoax.
I, for one, can say in all seriousness that my personal observations are always right. Always. In my 35 years of life, I’ve never made a mistake. Not a one. When I eyeball a stick and say, “That’s about a meter,” I’m always right on. To the centimeter. When I get a new product in for review, my first impressions are always right. Always. Heck, I don’t even use my SPL meter to calibrate my system anymore; I just do it by ear. I’m positive that if I checked my calibration (I won’t, but if I did) it would be dead on.
So, that sounds like a plan. A world free of science and measurement would definitely open the floodgates to a whole world of discussion possibilities. We could discuss with the pediatrician how much my son weighs and whether he’s gained weight since our last visit (since we won’t use scales). I can discuss with my doctor about whether I had bad heartburn or a heart attack. How would he know? He didn’t feel it. Has he had a heart attack? Has he had bad heart burn that felt like a heart attack? No? Then how can he claim to know anything about them?
Discussing is so much fun I want to spend every moment of every day doing it. Especially when there is no way to be right.