Analog Corner #234: Do You Believe in Magic?
When a magician pulls a quarter from someone's ear or saws a woman in half, I believe in magic. I know it's an illusionnot realbut that doesn't mean that magic isn't real.
What's real is that the magician's illusion is believable because your eyes see it and, until sometime latereven if only a fraction of a secondyour brain doesn't argue. The best your brain can do is tell you, "Yes, you saw that, but you know it didn't happen."
Funny, then, how anti-audiophiles always claim that the ear is more easy to fool than the eye. Yet books have been devoted to cataloguing optical illusions. Do you believe that a railroad track's two rails meet at the horizon? Sure looks like it! The brain and ear are easily fooled, yet our very survival depends on their reliability. And the survival of an audio reviewer's credibility depends on his ability to be fooled as rarely as possible.
What's real is that the magician's illusion is believable because your eyes see it and, until sometime latereven if only a fraction of a secondyour brain doesn't argue. The best your brain can do is tell you, "Yes, you saw that, but you know it didn't happen."
Funny, then, how anti-audiophiles always claim that the ear is more easy to fool than the eye. Yet books have been devoted to cataloguing optical illusions. Do you believe that a railroad track's two rails meet at the horizon? Sure looks like it! The brain and ear are easily fooled, yet our very survival depends on their reliability. And the survival of an audio reviewer's credibility depends on his ability to be fooled as rarely as possible.