Ontological Argument Proving God's Existence scientific method attempts to eliminate ‘the subjective’ by concentrating exclusively on what can be objectively validated and measured. — Wayfarer
This statement made me think about something that I have been chewing on for a long time. On the one hand, the mission of science to arrive at truth sees the observer (subject/subjective) as a contamination to the objective study at hand. This is why, to have total “objectivity”, we have double/triple blind tests. This scientific method has proven to work extremely well when dealing with the outer, quantitative, material order. I for one am extremely grateful to science for its extraordinary success.
On the other hand, we have the philosophies of the “perennial traditions” asking the enduring questions of life. Their primary concern is the inner, subjective, immaterial order (psychological). They hold that these are also studies of importance, meaning and value. The difference is that the object of study is also the subject/observer doing the looking. This is called self-inquiry by some traditions. With such topics as “the unexamined life is not worth living” or “to know thyself”. They are aphorisms to remind us of the human task at hand, that there is more to life than mere material goods.
The basic rules and dynamics seem to change drastically between the two orders of inquiry. Science does not seem to be interested in the latter because of this perceived contamination.