Can you think of a reason? It sound psychological to me.
If it *is* actually Psychological, which is preventing him/her from enjoying a computerised recording, despite it's accuracy regarding a performers desired Style of Performance and Execution - would the solution be to remove the Human Psyche? (Whatever that means, or involves exactly) As it sounds like it's getting in the way of admiring Technical & Musical perfection, or whatever it is exactly you are referring too (Whole/Partial Computerised Interpretations of Music, programmed perfectly by the Performer, to sum briefly?)
I'm usually terrible at Debates, so I may regret posting this XD But it's such an intriguing thread.
As I believe someone has stated, the user "Term" I believe discussed it, so I'll be brief, that's it's about a Virtual Simulation of a Piano in a Hall using Giant Super Computers to calculate the Sound. Calculations so refined down to the Atoms in the real life Air, vibrating sounds ever so variably which each nanosecond passing, to all the extremely slight nuances in each String Vibration of each note. So basically, to go a big extreme, a Star Trek Holodeck with a Hologram performing. Which quite frankly, if it existed, and you were plonked in the said Holodeck Simulation of a Musical Hall, you wouldn't know, presumably, what was real and was what fake, as it's... perfect O_o
Perfect Simulation, backed so powerfully by such accurate blazing computers, it equals that of what is possible in Real Life physical situations. And as Term mentioned, the Algorithms and so forth would be SO extensively computated, it would be a Fake Human Being. Which then brings me to what someone else stated, as soon as you discover it's a fake simulation of Sound and Performance of a piece, it would be less exciting or whatever.
Which brings me to the Psychological factors I guess, where our Pysche's, I presume, keep us from losing ourselves in Virtual Reality XD Or something, oh lawd, I'll post this anyway, heh, just ignore me if this is blabber.
Anyway, Midi's can be useful, but I would never replace Vasary's performance of the Rach3 with any perfectly programmed interpretation of the same piece, again - Psychological I guess?