No you can't with machines; but guess what can? Your ear!
Your ear/human sensory of sound is a
horribly inaccurate measurement device. Indisputable.
BTW, some people's hearing is better than others, which is a fact.
My dad is a mechanic, has been for 35+ years. One day my car was making this odd high-pitched squeaking noise (not wear indicators on the pads). I took my dad on a drive in my car so that he could hear the noise, when it occurred, etc to try to troubleshoot it. So we get out on the road, a few miles into our drive, and he says...."So it must not be making the noise now, huh?". //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif "What the hell are you talking about, you can't hear that god awful noise?" I say. "Nope, I don't hear a thing."
All those years working with power tools and loud engines, his high frequency hearing is shot! //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/crap.gif.7f4dd41e3e9b23fbd170a1ee6f65cecc.gif
Moral of the story....Your right; human hearing is inaccurate and a horrible device with which to measure sound.
Well what is the scientific idea of quality? How would you describe quality? What is quality?
The output that most closely matches the input. Not that difficult. Personal perception and subjectivity can be left at the door. Which you most "prefer" is completely irrelevant, to this discussion at least.
Which begs the question, do we listen for scientific numbers and for machines? Or do we listen for our own enjoyment and the satisfaction of our brains?
Accuracy is not measured with our ears or brains. That simple.
Set up your system how you prefer, what you think sounds subjectively better, if you wish. That's certainly up to you. But don't try to argue that because you prefer it, it must be most accurate. That would be a fallacy to say the least.
I've seen amplifiers with rather impressive statistics putter out sound that is utterly unlistenable. Is that quality? The problem is quality can't really be defined without the human element.
See above. Subjectivity and personal preference does not in any way equate to accuracy and/or quality.
Accuracy is 100% objective. No two ways around it. You might not prefer it. You might subjectively think that non-accuracy "sounds better". Fine. Whatever.
But you liking it does not equate to accuracy/quality. People "enjoy" and subjectively prefer some pretty horrendous things as far as accuracy is concerned......bass 40+db louder than the rest of the system, distortion
well into the double digits, etc.
But, when you enter the human element you add a completely non objective source of observation.
Exactly.
So, I guess you guys can listen for machines. I'll listen for my ears. //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif
Fine. Just don't call it "accurate" or higher "quality".