Originally posted by Maclintick
View Post
CD playback from Blu-Ray player
Collapse
X
-
-
-
Well I'm afraid 'audiophiles' make themselves fair game for this in many cases - anybody who talks about 'cable lifters' making 'night and day' differences, or the infamous Peter Belt 'improvements' is going to be ridiculed. And fwiw the network switch debate I mentioned has become rather heated and is still going on...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostWhoa, RFG ! I wouldn't expect to have to leap to the defence of empiricists under attack from a member of the medical profession, one in which the whole panoply of therapeutic interventions have been arrived at by empirical studies of different kinds, many approved for use through large scale testing under double-blind conditions (really dodgy methodology, that -- lacking psychological insight according to some). Your alien analogy is interesting, their puzzled reaction to the spectacle unfolding before them mirroring my own bemusement when inadvertently tuning to an NFL game on late-nite TV, but it seems to me that their scattergun methodology lacks focus.
As you say - & you are far better qualified than me to make such an assertion -- neuroscience is in its infancy, and the way that the brain interprets sensory information is opaquely buried in that cranial iceberg, the large and mysterious mass below the surface, but one can't get away from the fact that for all of human existence our senses have served us well in that they have revealed truth about the world and the larger cosmos, so the brain's mysterious rendering of sensation has objective value. If seeing is believing, then hearing should receive equal validation as an objective truth, perceptible to the majority of humanity. If you were presented with a patient who was hallucinating and hearing hidden voices, you would rightly regard these as pathologies, not as some manifestation of his or her own "subjective" truth, or that the sufferer was possessed by demons.
Can we take it then, that the brain resembles a black box, receiving sensory input and mysteriously transmuting these impulses into revealed truth about the world ? This is not to say that all brains are identical, & that there won't be a myriad divergences of perception in that truth, but that broadly speaking, the vast majority of humanity, if confronted by a growling grizzly at twenty paces, will immediately perceive danger. Compared to the as-yet-imperfectly-understood mechanism by which the cerebral cortex achieves this feat, the process of transferring audio signals from amplifiers to loudspeakers seems trivial. Assuming the amp has been designed to match any real-world speaker, it's a bit of wire, right ? Oh, and I don't imagine any empiricist worth his or her salt would rule out new discoveries revolutionising our understanding of audio transmission -- esoteric cables harnessing dark energy to lead us into audio nirvana, perhaps ?
You state that vision has an objective truth. One of my sons is color blind. His objective truth differs significantly from mine. The way that grasshoppers perceive visual stimuli is vastly different from the manner in which most humans perceive visual stimuli.
Perception of vision is routinely altered by cataract surgery, retinal disease...Imagine what Monet might have produced had he been able to get his cataracts extracted. People with cochlear implants probably are hearing in ways that are different from most of us.
Dogs hear differently than we do. What about synasthesia? Did Scriabin, for example, hear the same way that I do?
It is impossible for empiricists in audio to dismiss that there are yet to be discovered factors that influence the end result of an audio product. They simply refuse to concede that there is anything left to discover regarding audio. Perhaps Aristotle thought
he had it all down and if he was in control of research funding allocation in Ancient Macedonia would have shut down Bio-Medical Research. Perhaps not. Back to Audio, there are some of us that find pleasure in products that may not measure significantly different from another product. Remember when Apple and others began pioneering mp3 files? They discarded 93% of all information in the file because their measurements showed that the missing data was beyond the capacity of humans to perceive. Except that a very large number of humans have decided "F--- that". There are some people who can't tell the difference between an mp3 and an uncompressed file, but I imagine that most of the people on this forum would not be happy if forced to listen to all of their music in a compressed format
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Pianoman View PostWell I'm afraid 'audiophiles' make themselves fair game for this in many cases - anybody who talks about 'cable lifters' making 'night and day' differences, or the infamous Peter Belt 'improvements' is going to be ridiculed. And fwiw the network switch debate I mentioned has become rather heated and is still going on...
The Sceptics are always crashing in the same car....
Comment
-
-
Interesting thread, I would never spend big money on a high fi system unless I won the lottery.
My cheapie old CD player does enough for me https://www.reevoo.com/p/panasonic-sc-hc27db
Never used the iPod function or radio function.Last edited by JasonPalmer; 24-01-23, 21:58.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Pianoman View PostWhy not ? The 'audiophiles' trot out the same, what shall we call them, 'hobbyist testimonies' telling us of imagined 'improvements'...
But we find great joy in our systems, so carefully assembled over so many years, as in our beloved music...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostInteresting thread, I would never spend big money on a high fi system unless I won the lottery.
My cheapie old CD player does enough for me https://www.reevoo.com/p/panasonic-sc-hc27db
Never used the iPod function or radio function.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI think we in the same room here. You say that in the Alien Analogy I provided is unrealistic because of the "scattershot methodology". Whose to say that a few centuries from now that our present measurement techniques won't look as scattered?
You state that vision has an objective truth. One of my sons is color blind. His objective truth differs significantly from mine. The way that grasshoppers perceive visual stimuli is vastly different from the manner in which most humans perceive visual stimuli.
Perception of vision is routinely altered by cataract surgery, retinal disease...Imagine what Monet might have produced had he been able to get his cataracts extracted. People with cochlear implants probably are hearing in ways that are different from most of us.
Dogs hear differently than we do. What about synasthesia? Did Scriabin, for example, hear the same way that I do?
It is impossible for empiricists in audio to dismiss that there are yet to be discovered factors that influence the end result of an audio product. They simply refuse to concede that there is anything left to discover regarding audio.
Comment
-
-
I'll reiterate my point about being able to hear differences. As a violinist, I'm well used to hearing differences in 'sound colour', for me it's what distinguishes good HiFi systems.
Having been to a HiFI news event at Ascot just before lockdown, I concluded that, despite the enormous price tags, few of the systems sounded very good to me. Lots of bass, yes, very loud, yes but 'popular music' doesn't really need accurate reproduction in the way 'classical music' does. As to the improved cables, replacements for mains power supplies, black boxes sitting between components etc. Well they were all on display but there were NO demos to show how much difference they really made. And before others reply, yes I do know that hotel rooms are not ideal for demos but they do represent many domestic settings reasonably well.
As a long time reader of HiFi news (well over 50 years) I have seen quite a few questionable trends along with some good reviewing, the challenge is reading between the lines and telling the difference. Remember Quadraphonic? Well we now have realistic surround sound but much of the pseudo-science of the 70s seemed like rubbish, even at the time.
As to measuring things, well electronics have improved enormously but I can still hear differences between (for example) amplifiers and DACs that are not always shown in the measurements. I like RFG's brain analogy. I notice that the reviews don't often refer to the measurements anymore in the way that they used to reference things like THD but have a separate lab report. No doubt designers measure everything to get their excellent results but nobody seems to have straightforward measurements that distinguish good systems from less good.Last edited by mikealdren; 25-01-23, 09:56.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostAssuming the amp has been designed to match any real-world speaker, it's a bit of wire, right ?
Here I assume that when refer to a "bit of wire" you are thinking of an idealised device, with a completely perfect flat frequency transfer characteristic - so you are pulling a linguistic and discoursive trick out of the bag which you may not have noticed.Last edited by Dave2002; 25-01-23, 17:08.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostHere I assume that when refer to a "bit of wire" you are thinking of an idealised device, with a completely perfect flat frequency transfer characteristic - so you are pulling a linguistic and discoursive trick out of the bag which you may not have noticed.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostI'll reiterate my point about being able to hear differences. As a violinist, I'm well used to hearing differences in 'sound colour', for me it's what distinguishes good HiFi systems.
Having been to a HiFI news event at Ascot just before lockdown, I concluded that, despite the enormous price tags, few of the systems sounded very good to me. Lots of bass, yes, very loud, yes but 'popular music' doesn't really need accurate reproduction in the way 'classical music' does. As to the improved cables, replacements for mains power supplies, black boxes sitting between components etc. Well they were all on display but there were NO demos to show how much difference they really made. And before others reply, yes I do know that hotel rooms are not ideal for demos but they do represent many domestic settings reasonably well.
As a long time reader of HiFi news (well over 50 years) I have seen quite a few questionable trends along with some good reviewing, the challenge is reading between the lines and telling the difference. Remember Quadraphonic? Well we now have realistic surround sound but much of the pseudo-science of the 70s seemed like rubbish, even at the time.
As to measuring things, well electronics have improved enormously but I can still hear differences between (for example) amplifiers and DACs that are not always shown in the measurements. I like RFG's brain analogy. I notice that the reviews don't often refer to the measurements anymore in the way that they used to reference things like THD but have a separate lab report. No doubt designers measure everything to get their excellent results but nobody seems to have straightforward measurements that distinguish good systems from less good.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Maclintick View PostNo, not an idealised device, since these of course do not exist, but a cable of negligible resistance over the distances likely to be encountered in even the largest living-rooms. Then again, braided solid silver interconnects with conductivity 5% greater than equivalent copper will give superior transfer over short distances, but somehow one never sees such advertised in even the most esoteric audiophile blurbs. I wonder why ?
Leading manufacturer and retailer of Hi-Fi mains cables, mains conditioning products and Kimber Kable interconnects and speaker cable. Est 1986.
(ps.... I chose the XLR Carbon Interconnects last time out....... very happy with them linking SACD Player to Preamp.....still giving me beautiful Bruckner four years on)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 26-01-23, 01:40.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBraided Silver Cables? Maybe something from the (long-established) Kimber range is what you seek...?
Leading manufacturer and retailer of Hi-Fi mains cables, mains conditioning products and Kimber Kable interconnects and speaker cable. Est 1986.
(ps.... I chose the XLR Carbon Interconnects last time out....... very happy with them linking SACD Player to Preamp.....still giving me beautiful Bruckner four years on)
Comment
-
Comment