Greetings from the thread starter:
I wanted to say, and it will be the last thread that I ever start regarding the ZS, that I am a ZS user and proud of it; it's a neat way of understanding. I am not ashamed to say that I use it nor do I feel that I am some kind of "Zonie", "Zonite", or whatever, not that anyone was calling me that in particular, but in the collective sense.
These terms imply that one has somehow been programmed to view photography only as AA did; this is a complete absurdity, as far as I'm concerned. Simply put, for me, I taught myself the ZS concept in a short period of time, and am currently involved in some self study of sensitometry, which is not so simple. As a result, my understanding of the relationships between film, light, development, exposure, contrast, density, etc....has made a monumental leap and that's a good thing.
I am not, however, a slavish robot to a relatively simple concept that I may have been previously unaware. Before I learned the ZS, I was shooting from the hip on all occasions with many more misses than hits. Now, I am taking dead aim and enjoying much improved precision and accuracy.
After skimming through all the posts in this messy thread that I have started, I have come to a conclusion about something, right or wrong and without meaning to offend, this is what I think:
Those that maintain such an arrogant position against the ZS, seem, to me, to be trying to defend their own lack of understanding and inadequacies with it. For the life of me that is the only conclusion that I can arrive at to describe another's contempuous point of view regarding someone else's proven success (meaning AA's formulation of the ZS). There are many other successful methods I'm sure, but this is the one I have latched onto and have learned from. Lastly, those claiming that the ZS is some kind of fatal mental block to creativity and self expression....................well, let me just say, that's BS. I've struggled with creativity and self expression in my photography and produced horrible negatives at the same time for a long time; now, I mostly just struggle with creativity and self expression. My own inadequacies of the past with the craft of photography, for the most part, no longer get in the way. Learning how to express myself with my camera is way harder than anything I have experienced so far in photography, now that I have much more command of its craft (not perfect command, but more than I've ever known before).
Chuck
P.S.
Mr. Nestler, I have found your comments to be insightful, enlightening, and level headed with an aim toward advocacy without pleading insistance. I will never understand the distasteful rhetoric the evolves ( I say that feeling/hoping that I have not engaged in myself at times, perhaps it is just inevitable). So, as the starter of this thread, let me also be the end of it.