Are you equating religion with idiocy? Or just religions (or other priorities) that are different than yours?
What a fascinating take on my statements. I am using flowery language to create a metaphor to those who believe that faith in the claims of others and their own faith in the thing of interest is more important than their own experiences. If this were the 1800's I would have added the modifier "cult" to the term "religions" to fit into the cultural norms of the time:
They are installing cultish religious icons in their houses which may, if they are deemed worthy and their faith is strong enough, make a difference. It is a cult religion.
This isn't an issue of faith or belief systems, it is an issue of facts and science. If my audiophile friends were assembling great systems in great rooms and loving the experience of listening to music THEN added some silly thing like a dime sized acoustic treatment product, I would just assume they were desperate to spend money on their hobby but couldn't find a practical way to improve what they already assembled. It would still be a pointless waste of money, but it would reflect a reasonable priority.
So, you mention priority... yes, when I speak to most audiophile idiots, they claim they want to listen to music, but most spend very little time listening and more time collecting and bragging about those collections. Some collect music, others collect silly add-ons, and still others collect the bragging rights to say they've owned and used every overpriced amplifier on the market. But I find it rare that those same people truly enjoy the music.
That's fine for them, as a hobby. I know people who collect guns which rarely get fired more than the one time they took them out immediately following the acquisition. Not for me, but I get the interest. Other people collect bottles of booze, or cameras and lenses, or headphones, or whatever. That's a different hobby than what the term "Audiophile" was meant to mean. Audiophile was meant to imply a love and expertise in the field of audio, in this case music and its reproduction at home. Convincing yourself that a $20,000 pair of speaker cables is audibly superior to a scientifically provable superior cable that costs $50 a pair is more like a
cult religion than a love for music and audio.
That's what I am saying.
I would hope they would use the right terms for their hobby's - They love exploring the outrageousness of the hobby and industry and talking about their experiences with it.