LOL. Love dill's comment. A critic.
And I agree ;-)
Beware the audio guru
As well, we’re always getting into new points of understanding, every day. This just in... in the neuroscience of Human hearing. Science marches on: http://kavliprize.org/prizes-and-laureates/prizes/2018-kavli-prize-neuroscience It’s difficult to be a guru when the ground keeps changing. |
Don’t take this the wrong way but I find all that talk of “how hearing works” from the neuroscience point of view, the sound waves interacting with the ear and the brain actually quite mundane. The work by Rupert Sheldrake, by contrast, in behavior of animals and other living things, how memory works and Mind-Matter interaction and related topics, is not only more interesting but more relevant to the audio hobby. Not to mention the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research PEAR group. And the work of Peter Belt specifically with the perception of sound. In other words, I think it’s a serious mistake to reduce perception, including the perception of hearing to a physical level, no matter how you wish to describe that physical level. “The acoustic waves impinge on inner ear and the neurons transmit the information to the brain.” Give me a break! I think it’s an indication just how conservative audiophiles really are. |