i'm sorry to ask this but why are slides more real than a digital file that is not manipulated or cropped in any way whatsoever?
aside from it being "tangible"....
i met people at a art-fair years ago and they exposed like they were shooting slides, perfect exposures
that they refused to crop, edit, &c in any way ... they submitted their images to a printer and made prints
as someone who exposed slides would have cibachromes or ilfachromes made ....
its all about the extreme... and it is a personal choice, like to shoot slide film or b/w or c41 or chromogenic b/w ..
and plenty of people use the non film media and have a great time and lots of fun, adn don't spent their free time tethered to the wall.
You keep referring to the print as if that were the intended end product. Although I have had slides printed, that is an ancillary object for permanent display. The slide itself is always the true end product. Looking at a slide projected onto a good screen is one thing, but viewing them directly with magnification and a backlight is sublime. As a colleague commented once, it is like standing there looking at the scene.
As I mentioned before, everyone here uses d!%!!+@l and we certainly understand its strengths and appreciate its capabilities. It would be absolutely foolish for me to take my OM-1 and 600mm Zuiko with slide film to a sporting event. The lens itself is over six pounds and there would be no way to focus it in time, let alone set the exposure. To get a single, decent shot on an entire roll would be sheer luck. With my micro four thirds the equivalent lens is tiny by comparison and the auto-everything produces consistently good shots.
But those good shot are not great shots. For shooting landscapes or anything with fine textures, film (and especially slides) will always win out because these textures are captured faithfully. That how film works, it captures the actual light in a very organic, "natural" way. Many folks here have hit on the "plastic" look of d!%!+@l images. That is because the world is not made up of little squares arrayed in neat rows and columns, resolved with edge enhancement algorithms and "corrected" with heaven only knows what filters.
Alan's point about the apple tree is spot on, and mirrors the example I posted earlier. Any image that has fine detail will always look different on film than d!%!+@l. And by "different" we mean to say more natural and realistic, more warm and accessible. On a slide this can be seen directly, without any intervening processing to lose or obscure the quality.