Thanks Greg for the perspective check. I've personally long since divorced myself from the idea that wine is some ethereal product of the gods, given to man to express the essence of...whatever.
Yeah, it's extraordinarily important to us, and I think that truly great wines often show an unmistakable sense of place. But I've given up my romantic notion that my favorite wines must be culled as the product of a vintage and place, minimally handled by humans, happily displaying the vagaries of the vintage.
Seriously, once you've taken your first wine course; visited your first winery; taken your first business course; met your first winemaker; understood that winemakers are trying to actually make good wine and SELL wine... where's the line? Tell us: What's manipulating wine and what's not? You've got to draw a line somewhere; where should we start? No, really. Where?
To Master Harrington: I find your wines an easy sale, but you do have to know how to set people up for them. I often ask people whether they're looking for something fat and extracted, or for something with good concentration that's elegant and polished, with some old-world complexity, or something to that end. They end up in the latter camp most of the time. ;)