So, you are more concerned with how YOU feel, than your audience.
That's what I said. Where is the insult?
And Corey, the defensiveness must have caused you to overlook that I never said there was anything wrong with that. Me thinks thou protests too much!
Why is it that you read it as an insult? Maybe words are like mirrors...
Anyway, I know of one talented creator that has 100 methods for almost any effect you can name. Most of them are impractical and would be hard to make entertaining, but that's what makes him happy.
What's important, though, is that he KNOWS what makes him happy and he doesn't pretend it is anything more or less than it is.
In other words, he doesn't go out and foist these problem solving experiences on real people. He doesn't go on internet forums and give advice on performing - something he knows nothing about. He doesn't sell overpriced DVD's promoting his self indulgent ideas as the thing that will make you great.
Nope, he is happy doing what he does.
But he is more concerned about his own pleasure than his audiences. (Unless you define his audience as HIM.)
Audiences don't know methods, nor should they care about them. All the audience cares about is the impact of the effect. Now, method affects effect. (Thank you Sam Schwartz.) So, to put a limitation on possible methods without considering their potential impact on effect is to willing privilege something the audience neither knows nor cares about. It is something that ONLY you care about. Heck, it is something only you KNOW about. You have decide to make what you care about more important than what the audience cares about.
So, by definition, a purist is someone who put his own pleasure (and concerns) above that of his audience (- But will probably never have the courage, honesty, or self confidence to admit to it.)
Brad Henderson