PhilS
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2004
- Posts
- 3,158
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- 13
Quote:
I'm not hosite to talking about empirical evaluation at all. I'm hostile to someone stating that empirical evaluation is the only way to determine whether cables make an audible difference, that I can't possibly he hearing differences in cables, that it must be placebo and there is no other explanation, etc. I agree that empirical evaluation is something to be carefully weighed and considered, along with what one's ears reveal. I also think that most "believers" feel the same. On the other hand, the "non-believers" are generally hostile to any notion that someone can hear something that is not measured by instrumentation. It is the "non-beleivers" who will generally only consider one type of evidence, and not the other way around, IMO.
Quote:
All I know is the silver interrconnect I tried sounded different than the copper interconnect I replaced, and I noticed this (as I have said in previous threads) even when I had forgotten that I had swithced interrconnects.
Quote:
It wouldn't baffle you if you had experienced what I had experienced. To put it in an extreme way, I used to cringe at the sibilance in my system and I experienced listener fatigue. I changed some cables. Now I can listen for long periods of time. I don't need a blind test to tell me something changed when it is that obvious. I also don't need a blind test to tell me the sushi I ate last night from Restaurant X was not as good as what I ate the previous week from Restaurant Y. Also, to conduct a blind audio test in a way I think is valid takes a hell of a lot of effort. I am not interested in engaging in the effort, as I am confident of what I heard and am hearing. Also, I am not interested in conducting a blind sushi test either. I will just buy from restaurant Y from now on, as I am confident of my ability to discern different tastes with my taste buds given my experience with good sushi.
Originally Posted by NotJeffBuckley Edit: It is increasingly apparent that members of this particular subforum are very, very hostile to talking about empirical evaluation and prefer a strictly qualitative approach. May I ask why? |
I'm not hosite to talking about empirical evaluation at all. I'm hostile to someone stating that empirical evaluation is the only way to determine whether cables make an audible difference, that I can't possibly he hearing differences in cables, that it must be placebo and there is no other explanation, etc. I agree that empirical evaluation is something to be carefully weighed and considered, along with what one's ears reveal. I also think that most "believers" feel the same. On the other hand, the "non-believers" are generally hostile to any notion that someone can hear something that is not measured by instrumentation. It is the "non-beleivers" who will generally only consider one type of evidence, and not the other way around, IMO.
Quote:
Originally Posted by NotJeffBuckley I am not suggesting that cable differences don't change anything; rather, I'm insisting (and I do continue to insist) that there's nothing magical about the transmission of electricity that can only be accomplished sufficiently by very, very expensive wire compared to inexpensive wire of the same length and gauge. All of the tests conducted seem to be conducted on different lengths and gauges of wire, which leads me to believe that any sonic differences are perfectly explainable by those factors alone rather than by what seems to me to be vaguely alchemic ideas of the necessity of precious metal construction. |
All I know is the silver interrconnect I tried sounded different than the copper interconnect I replaced, and I noticed this (as I have said in previous threads) even when I had forgotten that I had swithced interrconnects.
Quote:
Originally Posted by NotJeffBuckley Edit 2: To put a question to you, PhilS, about your views on testing: Do you believe in A/B testing sight-seen? That is, can you tell differences sight-seen? If so, why would taking away the sight aspect make you unable to discern differences? That's the question that really baffles me insomuch as anything related to audio as a hobby can baffle me. |
It wouldn't baffle you if you had experienced what I had experienced. To put it in an extreme way, I used to cringe at the sibilance in my system and I experienced listener fatigue. I changed some cables. Now I can listen for long periods of time. I don't need a blind test to tell me something changed when it is that obvious. I also don't need a blind test to tell me the sushi I ate last night from Restaurant X was not as good as what I ate the previous week from Restaurant Y. Also, to conduct a blind audio test in a way I think is valid takes a hell of a lot of effort. I am not interested in engaging in the effort, as I am confident of what I heard and am hearing. Also, I am not interested in conducting a blind sushi test either. I will just buy from restaurant Y from now on, as I am confident of my ability to discern different tastes with my taste buds given my experience with good sushi.