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General Discussion
Confirmation bias, is it a one or two way street?
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<blockquote data-quote="AlleyCat" data-source="post: 1141319" data-attributes="member: 2194"><p>Reading some of the above makes me think some of the comments relates to : Taste. Such as, you ‘acquired’ a taste for a particular piece of equipment. Like a skill learnt.</p><p></p><p>More closer to the OP’s question is, example - how does ‘acquiring’ the knowledge/theory of the intrinsic characteristics of what makes a speaker cable/ interconnect, affect/ drive your confirmation biases and/or cognitive dissonace, in the real world.</p><p></p><p>Or is it even necessary to acquire that knowledge at all? There are guys out their that mix various (precious} metals together (some ad hoc) and they still get a (decent) music signal passing through them. There could be theorists out there that say, no, a proper formula is definitely needed.</p><p></p><p>The above is an example that is more centered around the OP’s post, I think. I could be wrong.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AlleyCat, post: 1141319, member: 2194"] Reading some of the above makes me think some of the comments relates to : Taste. Such as, you ‘acquired’ a taste for a particular piece of equipment. Like a skill learnt. More closer to the OP’s question is, example - how does ‘acquiring’ the knowledge/theory of the intrinsic characteristics of what makes a speaker cable/ interconnect, affect/ drive your confirmation biases and/or cognitive dissonace, in the real world. Or is it even necessary to acquire that knowledge at all? There are guys out their that mix various (precious} metals together (some ad hoc) and they still get a (decent) music signal passing through them. There could be theorists out there that say, no, a proper formula is definitely needed. The above is an example that is more centered around the OP’s post, I think. I could be wrong. [/QUOTE]
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General Discussion
Confirmation bias, is it a one or two way street?
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