I think it's a bit of a strange thing, from outside photography people think that because their cameraphone does so much for them, that my expensive cameras must obviously do so much more for me. The reality of course is the opposite, the more you pay, the less automation you are buying. My phone does hdr and instagram effects, but it'd have no chance of capturing a rally car at full chat, or a bird in flight, or shooting great pictures in a cave, etc.
I can press a few buttons on my microwave to get it to cook a roast chicken, but if I want a perfect roast, the only way to get one is learn a bit about the science that creates it. It seems ridiculous from here but a lot of people do sort of believe that a vintage strat will help them play like Jimi Hendrix, a bag full of L lenses will turn you into Joe Cornish etc.
Great Landscape photography requires;
good light, composition and an interesting landscape, whereas great sports photography requires;
good light, composition and an interesting action, and great portrait photography requires;
good light, composition and an interesting subject, but great wildlife photography requires;
good light, composition and an interesting subject
Most people never step back far enough to work out that the important bit is a common denominator no matter what you point your camera at, or what sort of camera (or lens) it is.