Yes, but the fact remains that it's traditional (since c. 1940) in cinema to use the center channel for dialog, and the stereo pair for music and effects.
While there's no valid reason to have a physical center speaker when there's a stereo pair, if you're going to do without the center speaker, it's important to either do a goood stereo mixdown, or have a circuit in an A/V receiver that accomplishes the same thing. All things considered, it's often better for the non-expert to simply buy the middle speaker to save the trouble.
Re what dangus said: I don't know if Radio Shack still sells a Minumus 7, and if they do, it's nothing like the "classic" desirable version that was sold in the late 1980s. I own a pair of the late-'80s Minimus 7s, and cherish them greatly. But you can't get the same great deal from Radio shack today.
I used to have a pair of (unnamed, pre-production) NHT speakers as near-field monitors, and would probably put my money on the Absolute Zero sight unseen. But let's face it, these are dinky little speakers that can't reproduce the entire audio spectrum alone, and adding a subwoofer rarely gives good results to the untrained system builder.
IME spending the bulk of your money on transducers (speakers) is the best policy, and nothing beats a pair of full range loudspeakers. IMO a more viable setup would start with a pair of NHT Classic 3 (or even better, Four Floor) loudspeakers for the front and back corners. The NHT ThreeC Center Channel Speaker is IMO money well spent for a center channel speaker for the "set it and forget it" crowd. Add a subwoofer, and you have a good, solid 5.1 system that's a LOT less dependent on proper subwoofer setup/location, compared to systems that use little main speakers all-around. That's $3000-6200 on loudspeakers for a good, solid 5.1 system. Add $900-1400 for a 7.1 system.
If that's more money than you'd like to spend, then I would honestly recommend a good stereo setup over surround sound. We do, after all, only have two ears.
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