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Quoting Krispen Hartung <khartung@cableone.net>: > Imagine if everything time I said something was > beautiful, I had to qualify exactly what I meant down the specific > logical atoms that denoted my owen sensory data or memories of sensory > data. It would take hours and we'd never be able to communicate. It's > easier to just use the word and assume we have a common understand in > absence of there being an actual "Thing" out there called beauty. This point is well-taken: that a word such as "beauty" is a shorthand that we can use to communicate with the presumption that you and I have enough in common that our respective approaches to "beauty" are similar. Having worked with live organ/choral music, a "good" acoustic suggests a live space with reflective surfaces and enough reverb to carry the sound without destroying clarity. A "poor" space would be one that is "dead" -- that is, a space with carpet, acoustical tile, and absorbent properties. One time a live-sound person commented to me that he had dealt with a lot of "bad" rooms. I asked him, "What to you is a bad room?" And his answer: "A room that has reverb." Thus, when someone tells you they want to deliver to you a "good" or "beautiful" product, you might want to investigate exactly what they mean to avoid an unpleasant surprise. :)