I think Ken's posts regarding the difference between digital and film are being misinterpreted as being anti-digital. We've been over and over this. There is a fundamental difference. It does not, however, have anything to do with art, design, creativity etc., nor does it make either medium inherently "superior"/"inferior" in any way.
As always, Michael is one of the few to simply read directly and not add any extraneous personal axe grinding. He and I don't always agree. But I can
always count on him to read and think and respond with refreshing accuracy and clarity. Would that a few more could do the same, the better off we might all be.
My series of posts in question began solely in response to John's misinformation regarding relative media trustworthiness. I understand that he really, really wants things to be what he wants them to be. And in matters of art where anything goes, he can have that. But in matters of established physical facts, he cannot. No matter how hard he wants it. Or how vocal (22 posts thus far, the most of anyone) he tries to be to get it.
I said nothing previously regarding the relative functional merits and/or values of the two photographic technologies, other than to simply observe that due to their unavoidable physical differences there are unavoidable differences in their inherent levels of trustworthiness as potential arbiters of fact.
Neither is perfect, but one is decidedly and demonstrably superior. (See Maris' very eloquent earlier post.) I even made a point of including both film and sensor in my examples.
These physical differences between the two are not a matter of crowd-sourced opinion. They cannot be altered any more than a greater number of uninformed thumbs-ups could cause the sun to rise in the west and set in the east. Physical things simply are what they are. We can describe them. But we cannot fundamentally change them.
Since this thread has now sadly death-spiraled to the point of desperately seeking as many thumbs-up as may be convinced in a vain effort to rewrite nature and save face, I choose to bow out and leave that exercise to those for whom it is an important pursuit.
That said, I also think we have reached the point where (there was a url link here which no longer exists) in another thread, and (there was a url link here which no longer exists), becomes part of the critical path.
With any luck, in the near future new forum tools will exist to more easily segregate these unfortunate digital slugfests into their more appropriate venue. I truly hope and expect the resulting peaceful silence on APUG to be nothing less than exquisitely deafening.
Ken