Perhaps, a little understanding of what causes resonance is in order. There are two primary sources aside from transducer resonance: 1) Panel resonance caused by the coupling of the transducer to the cabinet and energy being transferred between the two units; 2) As a transducer moves forward and backward it creates waves in two directions, in a typical cabinet the back waves will create resonance as well.
Both resonances must be dealt with differently if considering a typical cabinet speaker, the first can be attenuated through a mix of dense bracing, constraint layers and decoupling the driver from the cabinet. The second can be dealt with by using large amounts of highly absorbent acoustic material.
In the case of the S1, based on the pictures, it would certainly be a lower resonance unit compared to most (I cannot comment on its price class as I don't know what it costs). The bracing structure is efficient and of a suitable material, but the lack of damping shown will result in some resonances due to back waves. Of course, it is possible damping material is used and not pictured, but in almost all cases poly fill type materials are insufficient, 8lb rock wool or OC705 is far superior.
The B&W 802D uses a mix of dense cross bracing for the lower module, a special inert material for the midrange and also uses a highly sophisticated decoupling method when attaching the drivers. Additionally, the enclosure is specially designed to address issues of back waves.
As far as Paradigm is concerned, as of late it seems they have been giving more attention to resonances as shown by measurement of their newer speakers. Does this mean the S8s are resonance free? I cannot fully comment as I have seen no measurements or auditioned them with a resonance free reference. Although, if they are treated as the S1 are it is likely they have low resonance.
Indeed, they've often suggested that people go out and listen to all they can and they've said complementary things about other speaker brands.
Certainly, auditioning is fun, but it has been shown time and time again that sighted listening tests are biased by a variety of factors. I suggest reading the following literature to illustrate the exact effects of bias in a sighted listening test.
Toole, Floyd E. Subjective Evaluation: Identifying and Controlling the Variables. J. Audio Engineering Soc., Conference Paper 8-013. May 1990.
Toole, Floyd E.; Olive, Sean E. Hearing is Believing vs. Believing is Hearing: Blind vs. Sighted Listening Tests, and Other Interesting Things. J. Audio Engineering Soc., Conference Paper 3894. November 1994.