@russbutton --
+1
There’s an emphasis in this thread on ’learning,’ while I would as well stress the importance of unlearning. Depending on the breadth of information gathered through years a lot of what’s accumulated can set one on a course that may be more reflective of a paradigm or school of thought than an explorative approach. DIY in a range of areas can be helpful in this regard with an element of trial and error or "Alice down the rabbit hole" that’s very rewarding.
At the core of things it may be an anarchistic tendency to challenge the established and ask the ’why’ in addition to ’how;’ about perspective and a different vantage point and daring to turn your back on things that may have previously held meaning and importance. Sometimes, or even more often than not it’s a feeling of reverence to something or someone that in effect makes secondary your own thoughts on a matter, and yet at some point the realization may surface that it’s time to look elsewhere. Not necessarily because of thorough deduction on a specific matter coming to an opposing view, but simply because following the current has you asking too many questions on the why of it that one can’t not pause and step back for a moment.
For a while I found myself heading in a direction in PC audio very much lead on or affected by a general tendency in this field, but at a certain juncture I began to question that direction, through chance almost, that it started a process of me devolving in a sense in the opposite way and back to an outset of years earlier. Not because I needed to be in opposition per se, but because I challenged a stance trusting my very own abilities to analyze it with an open mind. There was no presupposed right or wrong, price or principle didn’t matter, and suddenly I found myself reading through threads almost a decade old. Where I revived them I was told to basically "get into the loop" of the new. Why, because it’s new?
If people tell you something is generally accepted as "the shit" in opposition to something else, test it out for yourself. Maybe you feel the variations are miniscule and mostly about ’different’ rather than ’better,’ and then why shell out thousands of $$ if you can avoid it and be just as happy, and maybe even more? What’s interesting is seeing how a particular field in audio reproduction (like accessories or diaphragm materials, and also computer audio) can be obsessed about to a degree where it’s seemingly about a segment of a leaf on a tree that keeps you from seeing the damn forest. Or a least that’s my assessment on the priority shown in some cases that completely throws me off and has me wondering where audio in any way fairly authentic to a live reference, on the whole, enters the picture.
I digress. Be a warrior, throw things up in the air, challenge the established - not least try to see the forest for the trees. At the end of the day have the guts to go you own way, all the while sucking up all the information you care to. I don’t mean to be disrespectful of the "experts" in a particular field in audio reproduction, on the contrary, but their expertise may not speak to where this or that individual is heading.