Thanks rjbudz, I think I understand your viewpoint a little better (I possibly should have spent more time reading the rest of the thread in detail before chiming in!) This sentence is probably the one that I found most interesting:
rjbudz said:
I have no interest in discussing how a speaker asymptotically approaches some absolute "accurate" performance.
While I absolutely understand this view, I'm not sure that I share it. The fact that something may or may not *sound* more accurate is, in my opinion, not relevant to a discussion of "accuracy". For example, I don't think I agree with this:
rjbudz said:
Speakers only have attributes such as 'accurate'...based upon psychoacoustic factors
For me, speakers have many attributes that can be decided without even listening. Dynamic range, frequency response, phase coherence can all be quantified, and can all be measured to be more or less accurate than some other speaker. As I said, how they sound to you, and whether your *perception* is of more accuracy is irrelevant to me. (Well, of course it isn't irrelevant

but for the purposes of my definition of "accuracy" it is).
We may at this point be talking at cross purposes, but here's a fairly extreme example to demonstrate what I mean. I listen to a lot of organ music, and I know that the bottom C on a 32' stop in the pedals gives a fundamental frequency of 16Hz. Now, if I play a sine wave of 16Hz (and I know that's not the same thing, but this is a thought experiment) through my speakers at home, the response is pretty much zero. Inaudible. However, if I play a sine wave of 16Hz through some state-of-the-art full range setup, there will be some response, and possibly quite a good response, at 16Hz. So, my speakers have an accuracy of zero playing 16Hz, because there is no sound at all. The better speakers are more accurate in the sense I'm referring to, because they can at least reproduce that frequency. Psycho-acoustics don't come into it. One speaker is simply more accurate to the input signal. Similar arguments can be made to other attributes, again in the measured sense.
Note, I'm not referring to speakers being accurate to a waveform heard in the church at the time of recording. I agree that there are too many variables to make that an achievable goal. However, the speaker is a transducer to turn an electrical input signal into an acoustic waveform. That transformation can be done more or less accurately by various measures, irrespective of the sound a listener hears, and their perception of it.
Of course, my speakers at home, for whatever reason, might convey to my ears the effect of being in a cathedral listening to an organ better than the full-range rig, but that is a separate question. I can't quantify accuracy in this case, that *is* a psycho-acoustic phenomenon. Some may argue that that's all that matters, but that, unfortunately, is in the ear of the beholder.
Si