the illusion is the false reality. Kinda by definitionThat is correct, semantically. It's also kinda philosophical.
IMO we should distinguish between semantics and philosophical extrapolations and the simple PRACTICAL application of DBT in our (restricted) context.
BTW, I also suggest that certains things CAN be indicative of performance or INFLUENCE things, in OUR context, such as:
*measurements -- as long as we measure what correlates to what we're looking for (i.e. we would have to determine in advance which measurement indicates what aspect, in terms of perceived sound; little has been done there)
* wires for example -- because they link two electrical circuits, active / passive & combinations thereof
* active components: their circuit design, power supplies, input & output stages, components used... influence the distortion levels AND how well these components interact with the load. Change the load (what the output stage "sees") and things change electrically; if we change something in the system, we've modified the system "circuit" fer pete's sake. Things may also change in the audible range...
...etc.
So, maybe we are discussing whether it's worth setting up dbt to help notice differences in the audible spectrum?
Or whether perhaps dbt is not the most efficient/reliable method of doing so in this particular context?
Or, perhaps, discussion is a way of communicating -- a marvellous, human activity that we all need. And the subject of dbt allows us to do just that -- so what we really want to do is to talk regardless and dbt offers us just that opportunity, whether it is or isn't panacea.
I go for the latter -- my take of course! Cheers:)