He makes an interesting point. I have engaged in the "Meter Reader vs. Golden Ear" debate since the 1980s. In my old "Audio Mythology" magazine column in RE/P magazine I dedicated one column back then to speaker wire (short version, it's the wire resistance). Funny (hifi) speaker wire is a ripe category for separating fools from their money.
A decade or two ago, I revisited this speaker wire topic on a professional sound reinforcement forum when a respected member claimed that he could definitely hear a dramatic improvement from using XYZ premium speaker cable. I did not dismiss him as a Phool, but dug a little deeper into his personal speaker/wire experience. Long story short it turned out that his premium speaker wire was higher resistance than typical speaker zip cord. This significant wire resistance for the length he used, was forming a variable voltage divider with the loudspeaker's changing impedance over frequency (due to a passive crossover). The variable attenuation result from this changing voltage divider was a modest (major fraction of dB) HF boost over the top octave. He heard that frequency response difference and because the funny speaker wire was more expensive, he was biased to ASSume that it was the more accurate reproduction. After I opened his eyes to what was actually going on he stopped advocating for premium speaker wire.
In my decades of experience designing and merchandising audio SKUs I have encountered numerous examples of misguided subjective conclusions. Don't get me started on phono preamp magazine reviews.
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We have forum rules requiring civil discourse in forum exchanges (rule #4). Since you have announced your sensitivity to that particular term I trust nobody will call you that. These civility rules apply to person to person exchanges. Vague derogation of third parties is not covered (otherwise we could never discuss politics).
On topic, over the decades I have encountered any number of Audio_____ who claimed that they could hear a single switch contact in their audio path.
Even a casual inspection of a basic recording console audio circuitry reveals multiple switch contacts in the primary audio path. My response back then stands today. "If you can hear a switch contact, it is faulty and needs to be replaced."
JR
PS: Subjective audio perception has been well studied over the decades. AES journal published some well respected papers back last century.