Not gonna quote the rest, since it's so long.
But first of all, yes, I did assume that I would argue against your method, based on my understanding of your posts. But since it seemed so farfetched, I had to ask if I understood it correctly. It's also very possible that you had a good method, I simply didn't understand what you were trying to convey.
Now, in regards to points 1,2,4,5 and 6, I don't understand "how" it does this; I'm not sure I can agree, and assuming it does, it might only work for some people. I don't think they can be counted as facts until we have more people trying out your method.
Why the hell would you ask for the benefits just to call bullshit? What is wrong with you?
3 and 7 will be covered later.
In regards to your methods, you haven't really described how to hear the decay; you keep comparing it to simple algebra, but I think it's more like trying to measure something without a ruler.
I have ears. You measure the volume not the decay. And the same freaking problem exists with all counting methods. Do you claim to have a ruler while you count? Didn't think so. These are fallacious arguments.
I mean, why don't you wear a piece of caesium-133 instead of a watch to tell time? Since a mechanical watch doesn't tick exactly...
What are you talking about man? Mechanical watches are very accurate when made right. Guess and check, however, will never be accurate.
What you're saying to do is simply impossible for humans to do, especially when you're playing fast and don't have time to react. And if you're not using this method when playing fast, then it doesn't really work, does it. In fact, then you're not really doing anything different than others.
Once-again I'm not reacting I'm planning ahead. This is the exact problem I have with counting...it requires reacting, which is an unthoughtful and lame practice in which is hard to wrap the head around. You need to back away from the problem and solve it as a whole. Don't think you're reacting? Otherwise you wouldn't be counting in the first place, as that is the only purpose it serves.
One of your arguments earlier was that nervousness and external conditions influence our sense of rhythm, and thus our natural human instinct is not a good metronome, while your method is mathematical and thus can't go wrong. But one thing you failed to take into account is "who is measuring?". If you're using your natural human instincts to measure when the volume goes from 15 decibels to 10 decibels, I think it's much easier for that to be influenced by nervousness and other factors, as it is a much more precise measurement.
Once-again, you only need to pay attention to the volume while learning a rhythm not while performing it.
In regards to 3 and 7, and you made a similar question before about how we would keep uneven rhythm, well, personally I think my method is much easier:
Simply tune the metronome to a common denominator. If you're doing 3 against 4 for example, I would count to twelve instead of 4 or 3. This way every note falls on a beat. I don't think we would ever need to play any complicated rhythm that the common denominator is too large; something like 13 vs 17 for example would never appear.
Un sospiro has 7:3 thats 84 "counts" a measure in some places. Are you going to count 1* 2 3* 4 5 6* 7* 8 9* 10 11 12* 13 14* 15* 16 17 18* 19 20 21*? And you're saying my method isn't humanly possible? To learn the volume curve of a note? My guess is you simply will never play un sospiro with correct tempo.
I'm not an advanced musician and don't know how pros practise. Personally I need to go from slow to fast. So it's not like you can't put the metronome fast enough to match the speed if you use 12 beats; you'll be playing slow at the start anyway. Once you're familiar with the 3 vs 4, or 4 vs 5 or whatever, you can speed up gradually and wouldn't need to pay special attention to counting anymore.
Unfortunately it doesn't work this way. Counting has a speed limit and you have an attention span. If you need to play a pattern that takes longer than 10 seconds to repeat you might not ever learn that pattern. Hence my method doesnt require an attention span, extreme slowing, or a speed limit.
And playing notes with EXACTLY the same volume seems a lot harder than counting uneven rhythm.
That is the easiest part. That is simple muscle memory. You're going to tell me it's impossible for a baseball player to throw a ball at the same speed everytime?
It's not my method you don't like, it's a simple irrational hatred for new ideas. If you were to question your own methods with the same rhetoric you would be having the same "problems" I am having with you.
It the same exact thing as your method, except I am using volume as a reference point. It's a tool added on. You can keep saying it's impossible or that it's not fact until everyone in the world is doing it aswell. But I am getting results, that is a fact. And yours is a simple conjecture you put forth which ignores the evidence right infront of you, that it's working. You obviously don't believe me, so don't. But why do you come back for more deconstructive criticism? Am I the only one here that knows you aren't going to budge? I know why, and it has more to do with you than it does with me or my method.
Not a single argument in your post has not been addressed allready.
"Though" process? How do you know my thought process? Too formal? I merely ask you to elaborate which you are unable to do, if that is being too formal then quick run for the hills! I am afraid this method of yours is "made up" and quite useless if you are unable to explain it. Your diagram with the volume drawn in, what is that supposed to be telling us and how do you use it as a tool to maintain timing/rhythm? What is the thickness of the red supposed to represent? How do you notice that the thickness should be at a particular width? How do you know it is such a linear decay? Why is this better than merely considering the strong beats of the bar? How can you tell how much decay a note has undergone before another note comes in? Your diagram makes it look simple but how do you notice "time vs decay" in the redness?
How about I ask you these same questions. How does one count a strict rhythm? How do we know we are counting evenly? How do we know that our rhythm doesn't drift when we put the metronome away?
Do you see what I see? I see double standards. And once again this isn't going to go anywhere until you grow some, and try it.
Responding with, I listen, or I practice hard, or I use skill, or theory etc, does not answer it.
Umm yes it does? Are you denying that I have an ear? Or that practice has limits? Or that skill is non-existent? Or that mathematical theory is flawed?
Perhaps you are the one that need critique not my method.
I wasn't going to "try" your method at all in the first place, mostly because you haven't even explained how it is used and merely use general terms to try and evade answering it directly.
I evade stuck up stubborn argumentative instigating know-it-alls, I don't evade explaining things. Say please and you shall recieve a better effort. But to say I am evading answering it directly when i have posted paragraphs and paragraphs is simply delusional. Maybe I am explaining it perfectly fine, it is just this delusional personality that is the trouble.
Since you said you are an engineer you might not have much experience writing technical documents or essays I know it is not focused upon in Engineering in my country when I studied it. If you want to be taken seriously you should brush up on how one writes technical works in a manner which is understandable. I am not asking for dictionary definitions but exactly how you define certain things in action based on your method. You are unable to connect the two thus everything you post is ineffective, for me at least.
I don't think I said I was an engineer in this thread, are you stalking me now? Perhaps you should brush up on how one understands technical works. While you're at it you should brush up on some social skills, respect, perhaps linguistics. Throw in some Cotillion, some yoga, a pinch of self-learning skills, and a rectoscopy.
I'm no genius, neither did I didn't figure this out by some act of god. I think if you go and try it you might figure out how to make it work, and find the same way I did. And THEN you can come back and look at all the redundant posts I've made in this thread.
When you first learned the piano did your teacher write an essay for you on how to play? Can you imagine how lost you would be? Thats not going to work here either. Surprise.