All this theoretical back and forth will lead nowhere and achieve nothing (except raise some administrative hackles

). Why don't some senior members get together at a neutral venue with a neutral setup, and do a double blind test to see if anyone can or cannot identify cables and equipment by "quality"?
It would be helpful to those of us who cannot make head or tail of all this technical jargon.
<<Ethan Winer: Audio Myths Workshop Video>>
You posted my favourite audio mythbuster!
Blind, let alone double-blind, tests are not so easy to set up or conduct. You need to connect all-identical components so that they can be switched instantly, and volume levels must be set to exactly equalise SPLs at the listening positions. To do this for cables, you might need to make the switching equipment (switches for changing speaker and amp configurations are available. Are they for cables?). You need an entire crew to set all this up, who should be audio engineers. Then you need another crew (who do not know what they are switching) to operate the A-B switching, and
then your listeners. "Guys, get a cup of tea while we switch these cables over," is
not good enough
I believe that it is quite reasonable to expect this of an established audio publication, even perhaps some of the online ones, but that it is not an amateur undertaking. They won't: it is not in their interest to change the culture.
Your group of "senior" (or other) members is ...here! And telling you. The trouble is that all answers are here: of course they do not all agree.
Science is a constantly evolving thing. Observation and curiosity is the first step towards scientific inquiry...
immediate problem! Don't you think it would have been a good idea to do the research
before the mass marketing?
Lets not burn people on stakes because of the limitations of present day science. Perhaps it is already explained. I dont care as long I can experience it myself.
Is not that it is deficient in its use? Because neither blind testing nor non-subjective measurement of results is commonly done, or even asked for.
What is happening here is more like burning people at the stake for wanting the science to be done. There is nothing to be lost! Anyway, we don't even
have to believe scientists
I am happy that you are happy with your cable, that you may have picked a cable by comparison with other, and that your personal research is ongoing. At least, as far as analogue cable is concerned, I do not have a problem with people hearing the difference and picking the one they like. Might even do it myself if I was buying, Why not?
What I have a problem with, is the whole marketing angle, and especially the vast numbers of people who are sold cables (named after large animals, maybe) because they are told they need them, without any objective basis whatsoever.
The problem is till I am convinced, dont want to spend money on cables. And I guess till I send money on cables, I wont get convinced.
I'm almost with you. I'm inclined to believe (and to accept the word of listeners here) that they do, but I'd put a price cap on that, and I'd apply my own feelings about likelyhood and reasonability to things like fancy wood attachments. However, if the culture had devoloped differently, and some of standard measurements and blind test had been the rule, rather than the exception, then people like you and I, not to mention the untold millions to whom hifi is just a piece of furniture to play music, would have a much better starting place. Just like I have a problem with PC audio people who ask, "What DAC do I need?" when they haven't even
listened to the output of the sound card: this is not informed audio buying, it is swallowing marketing. And there are times when the whole community seems to join in with that marketing --- which must be enormously gratifying to the manufacturers!
People who got burnt on stake were the ones who believed in science, not the other way around.
Depends which bit of history you look at. People who get burned at the stake are those who are not acceptible to the establishment at the time. In Galileo's day, it was scientists, in middle-ages Europe it was not-scientists.