opaqueice;180543 Wrote: > But this isn't about possibility. Anything is possible (trivial formal > statements aside); therefore possibility is totally uninteresting. > What matters in the real world is not possibility, it's plausibility > and the relative likelihood of different explanations. The argument > that something is plausible because it is possible is a logical > fallacy, one which is often committed on this forum. > > At least for my part, the point is simply that there is an extremely > plausible and likely explanation for these observed differences; namely > psychology. Sometimes there is another plausible explanation as well > (measurable harmonic distortion, say) and it isn't easy to choose one > over the other without more data, and sometimes there isn't another (as > in the case of ebony hockey pucks). > > Obviously how plausible something is requires a judgement call - that's > life. One way to judge it is to ask the opinion of experts, meaning > scientific researchers in that field without a financial interest in > the answer, another is to learn something about the physics involved > and draw your own conclusions.
In fact, you have no safe way of estimating plausability when you have incomplete knowledge. And if you have complete knowledge you know if it is POSSIBLE or not. So much for that distinction. -- P Floding No, I didn't ABX it. And I won't even if you ask me. (Especially not if you ask me.) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ P Floding's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=2932 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=32352 _______________________________________________ audiophiles mailing list [email protected] http://lists.slimdevices.com/lists/listinfo/audiophiles
