Does hearing the best in high end audio make your opinions more valid?


I say yes. Some say no. What are your thoughts?
calvinj
Not necessarily. If it did matter, anyone could win any argument simply by claiming he’s heard the best of high end equipment. At its core it’s really a logical fallacy. Case in point, go to a big audio show sometime and you can observe just how difficult it is to get great sound out of the best of high end equipment, including speakers and cables.
The more and varied the systems you have exposure to will help a you figure out what your preferences are.  Which, if well articulated, could help someone else to some small effect.

"The best" is a concept that I don't think we will ever reach agreement upon.
It does if you have a good perspective it helps you understand different  sounding high end set ups.You can compare them and get a sound perspective if you know what to listen for.Enjoy!!
Depends. I used to go to hifi shows and listen to big expensive esoteric systems I wouldn’t be caught owning in a million years, even if I had a million to spend on such a thing. Curly-spiral-shaped speakers that looked like they come off the set of The Fifth Element, pressure cylindrical sound pumps (MBL $70,000 with frequency and step responses that are crap), horns, water cooled tube amps (where were the goldfish?), Nordost cable spray a/b demos (after an exhaustive half hour lecture on why this works, all eager ears, no one was impressed!), reps snorting coke in the bathrooms, all the above complete and uttter nonsense/bs to me at high $$$$$ and not one that sounded good. So, I listened, and I listened, and when I got home I felt so fortunate that, over time, and few mistakes, I had built, refined and set up properly a good sounding rig that well played the music I like and that I could chill to and hang with my audio buds every now and then.

And +1 glupson and onhwy61: best is an oxymoron in the land of music reproduction equipment.