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Romy the Cat

Boston, MA
Posts 10,456
Joined on 05-28-2004
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Post #:
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1
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Post ID:
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29645
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Reply to:
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29645
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Benefits of hallucination in Audio
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First think first, this is not Alan Whites, and it is not
his efforts to adopt Daoism and Laozi's writings to West, this is pure and simple AI hallucination.
I want to share this video not as something I agree with in
any literal or scientific sense, because I do not subscribe to the idea that
emotions are actual frequencies interacting with a quantum field, but rather as
an example of how metaphorical thinking can influence the way we interpret our
experience, and I think there is value in occasionally stepping outside
strictly factual frameworks and engaging with ideas that are imprecise or even
incorrect if they provoke a shift in perspective, because in disciplines like
audio and perception we already know that experience is not purely objective
and that interpretation plays a significant role in what we hear and how we
evaluate it. Since last year my personally focus shifted where I find myself
less interested in technical minutiae such as how a specific cable elevator’s height
or plate current affect the sound and more interested in understanding my own
perceptual and emotional response, meaning that if I hear something or feel
something during listening I want to know why I feel what I feel rather than
immediately attributing it to external strictly audio variables.
When I refer to something as external, I specifically mean
the idiosyncrasies of a given playback performance in terms of audio quality
rather than the internal perceptual process itself. So instead of asking
whether the claims in the video are true I am more interested in whether the
language and framing can help us reconsider how we relate to sound,
expectation, and subjective experience, and whether exposing ourselves to
unconventional or even flawed ideas can loosen rigid patterns of thinking and
open up new ways of listening. Not as a replacement for technical understanding
but as a complementary layer that acknowledges the role of perception,
psychology, and meaning in our engagement with audio. So, I am offering this
not as a theory to adopt but as a stimulus for reflection, to see whether
anyone finds that approaching things through metaphors rather than strict
analysis changes anything in how they perceive or evaluate what they hear, even
if only temporarily.
"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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