Originally Posted by
rhadorn
I have also seen wonderful pictures which were totally out of focus. This could also be a good argument against caring for limiting diffraction.
I don't share your viewing scheme. I don't look at big enlargments from a greater viewing distance: I look at pictures at various distances, going closer, retreating further away... I do the same with paintings, sculptures...
The importance of caring for detail also varies with the style of the pictures you take or want to show.
The objective impact of diffraction can be measured and compared to other limitations of lenses. But this is not the only issue. The importance of limiting diffraction is also a matter of practice, depending on the style of pictures you like to take, how you look at pictures. A photographer can consider a marginal benefit as important to him. If limiting diffraction seems to be a matter of opinions, it is only because the presuppositions are never made explicit - or because the experts take their presuppositions as universal. The importance of limiting diffractions is not only a scientific matter, but a matter of jugement, as is very well shown in the citations proposed by Glenn.
Why are there so many people around who absolutely want to be the (only) ones who are right?
Reto