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This thread is getting quite philisphical and possibly instructive. The question I want to ask is -- if 1 Billion people are "moved" by the sound of an electric guitar, does that make the experience of being "moved" by a violin felt in just 50 people less "moving" to these 50 people. Briefly, is their experience any less "moving" than the experence felt by the guitar fans? If you say "No," then I think this is acknowledging how individual emotional responses are not "measurably comparable" as say the weights bassoons and hammond organs :-) If you say "Yes," then I don't know what you are measuring. Please explain this to me. I feel the desire to compare A to B is compelling and oftentimes useful, but ultimately denies both A and B the truths of their "Now" experience. If I think to myself while I'm playing guitar and I'm "sailing" with my muse, "I wonder if MY HERO sails 'higher' than me when (S)HE is sailing?" doesn't that steal from MY 'sailing' experience? I'm not a student of philosophy, and maybe this thread is wearing thin now, but I suspect the philosphy of comparisons can dig us into some complex territory. david > -----Original Message----- > From: T.W. Hartnett [SMTP:hartnett.t@apple.com] > Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 1997 11:13 AM > To: Looper's Delight > Subject: Re: Guitar good, DJ's bad, etc (was LOOPING PHILOSOPHY) > > > <snip> > > I don't think anyone can argue with statements such as "I'd rather > hear a > really good musician on one instrument than a really bad one on > another". > > It might be more interesting to compare musicians at the top of the > skill > spectrum, rather than at opposing ends. > > Travis