The Totalitarianism of the Rational Audiphile


I read not too long ago a blog post by some one who called himself a rational audiophile. I found it amusing across multiple dimensions.


Among the first, the idea you can be rational without being emotional. In fact, nothing is further from the truth. Our emotions are motivating. The words even share a similar etymological origin. Even if you want to be rational, you’ve made that choice based on your emotions. The entire concept of personal choice and values is emotional. Those without emotions lack the energy to make choices. In other words, if you’ve made a choice, you have done so using emotions to push you towards a goal.


Further, as an audiophile, I buy for pleasure, not for numbers. What I mean is, the precision of the experience will not trump what I hear. I’m not buying a CNC machine, or laser cutting device. Nor am I buying an oscilloscope when I buy audio gear, or listen to music. I’m buying to sense and to feel. Even when I’m designing speakers, I rely heavily on tools to explain where my design is going, but the tonal balance I choose is very much based on gauging my listening pleasure.


The other thing that struck me about this person’s’ blog is this: They were not actually engaging in science. They were using 50 year old measurements (for the most part) to gauge the value of a product. If your measurements are this old, you aren’t doing science, you are doing quality control. Science involves research, invention, the discovery of new ways in which our ear/brain mechanism interprets sound. That would be science. Using THD to make absolute judgements between two pieces of gear is hilarious.


Science ceases as well when you believe you have defined everything that can be known about human experience with a dozen or so numbers. Repeatedly in mechanical sciences, medicine, etc. the one's who advanced science did so in spite of those who went before them who insisted nothing more could be learned.  So, in this case you go from scientist, to egoist. A very very irrational and emotional take.

erik_squires
Yes, music is emotional but not when it’s digital. Digital is what music sounds like when you’re dead. 
@glupson 2003 and it's the single best purchase I've made in my life to be honest.

@erik_squires  All I can say is pretty sure my dogma chased your kharma. :)
@jond ....I'm not sure I'd want to be in the room when a set of cables start pushing a 50+lb. amp around...

"What are all those dents in the wall?  This carpet is all wet..." *L*

I can think of sort great ad copy for 'KY Kables'...but it all gets turgid really quick....
Johnson Jacks...Crescendo Cable....(hmmm, that one is likely already taken)....Sudden Surge Splitters...Handy Hookups...Hard Wires...

A Mind of It’s Ohm DACs’....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xB3VNOuERlM

'Trolltalitarianism' as 'alt amusement'....*G*
jond,

2003 is among the last of the real good ones. I still keep 1999 insured, inspected, garaged, pampered, loved, driven 500 miles a year at most. For simple reason, it has been the most pleasant single purchase ever. I think 2003 was still a big time Audi. Later it diluted into something amorphous.