"We can't measure sound and make predictions about how it will sound to you, because how it will sound to you depends on too many factors besides the actual sound." This is what I have been saying in addition to less than favorable comments about many subjective reviews. This problem is one of many that equally hampers "objective" reviews.
A closer reading of what I have written would reveal that I am, at best, ambivalent about the whole process of audio reviewing, subjective or objective. Moreover, DBT has yet to produce much of significance beyond some people can sometimes tell under some conditions.
"And the idea that you, an amateur audio hobbyist without even an undergraduate degree in psychology, has any standing to declare what is and is not valid..." You have constructed a total absence of "valid" credentials for me, an exercise in "creative writing." "Lack of standing" is the problematic judgment invoked that leads you to invalidate experience, a source of needless angry conflict. It might be somewhat accurate to characterize me as "an amateur audio hobbyist," but you have taken quite a leap to decide that I am "without even an undergraduate degree in psychology," a leap that could not be more inaccurate. At least, you didn’t mention my lack of teeth and eviction from the trailer park.
There are subjective reviews in just about every field. Anyone that takes them for hard fact is not understanding what they are. I’d also suggest an advanced readings in sensation and perception to better understand the distinction between "what we are able to perceive" and "how we perceive it."
So, I’ll leave you with two thoughts apropos of this discussion. Einstein said, "Not everything that can be counted counts; and not everything that counts can be counted." In Alice in Wonderland, the Dodo said, "Everybody has won, and all must have prizes." Where's Rodney King, anyhow?
A closer reading of what I have written would reveal that I am, at best, ambivalent about the whole process of audio reviewing, subjective or objective. Moreover, DBT has yet to produce much of significance beyond some people can sometimes tell under some conditions.
"And the idea that you, an amateur audio hobbyist without even an undergraduate degree in psychology, has any standing to declare what is and is not valid..." You have constructed a total absence of "valid" credentials for me, an exercise in "creative writing." "Lack of standing" is the problematic judgment invoked that leads you to invalidate experience, a source of needless angry conflict. It might be somewhat accurate to characterize me as "an amateur audio hobbyist," but you have taken quite a leap to decide that I am "without even an undergraduate degree in psychology," a leap that could not be more inaccurate. At least, you didn’t mention my lack of teeth and eviction from the trailer park.
There are subjective reviews in just about every field. Anyone that takes them for hard fact is not understanding what they are. I’d also suggest an advanced readings in sensation and perception to better understand the distinction between "what we are able to perceive" and "how we perceive it."
So, I’ll leave you with two thoughts apropos of this discussion. Einstein said, "Not everything that can be counted counts; and not everything that counts can be counted." In Alice in Wonderland, the Dodo said, "Everybody has won, and all must have prizes." Where's Rodney King, anyhow?