DreX
New member
Re: "Pickup Break-in" Any truth here??
Speaking on confirmation bias, it's especially concerning when it comes to people who make a living off guitars, like John Suhr et al. The best salesman is one who believes what he says, because he doesn't have to act, he's naturally convincing. The fewer differentiators that exist, the fewer reasons there are to sell guitars. It's in their best interest to conclude that woods and materials vary substantially in tone. They might not even realize their own biases, nothing motivates as well as money. Seymour Duncan would probably love it if Rich Menga was right, and pickups expired after so many months, because then he could sell more pickups, you'd have to change them like batteries, and buy value pack of five JB's to get you through the year. Unfortunately, it's too obviously not true, but tone woods on the other hand....
There's a third option you're not considering . . . like all human beings, they are remarkably easy to fool. If you spend any time learning about how optical illusions work you'll see what I'm talking about. The human brain is a pattern matching machine. We are naturally predisposed to seek cause and effect . . . it's baked in to the way you interpret data. If you perform an experiment expecting an outcome, you can easily change the outcome of the experiment even subconsciously. I don't think that people do this out of malice, but just because it's very easy to make mistakes and fail to account for variables. That's why rigor is so important in scientific testing. Information is never useless, the more information from a well designed test the better your conclusions should be.
Choosing to accept the word of someone in a particular field over empirical evidence is in fact anti-science and a well known logical fallacy (there's a name for this flawed reasoning . . . appeal to authority).
Speaking on confirmation bias, it's especially concerning when it comes to people who make a living off guitars, like John Suhr et al. The best salesman is one who believes what he says, because he doesn't have to act, he's naturally convincing. The fewer differentiators that exist, the fewer reasons there are to sell guitars. It's in their best interest to conclude that woods and materials vary substantially in tone. They might not even realize their own biases, nothing motivates as well as money. Seymour Duncan would probably love it if Rich Menga was right, and pickups expired after so many months, because then he could sell more pickups, you'd have to change them like batteries, and buy value pack of five JB's to get you through the year. Unfortunately, it's too obviously not true, but tone woods on the other hand....