Objectivity and Detachment | Parts One | Two | Three | Four this fourfold OP is not dissimilar to poetic tones of (the later) Heidegger, an attempt to make a distinction between calculative thinking and meditative thinking, and by implication the distinction between the correspondence theory truth and, truth as unconcealment/disclosure- Aletheia (ἀλήθεια) . Note that Heidegger argues that these are not oppositional binaries nor a rallying call to undermine science, but a more modest claim that the latter is forgotten, made indifferent, symptomatic of the technological utility driven epoch we are now dwelling:
Calculative thinking computes. It computes ever new, ever more promising and at the same time more economical possibilities. Calculative thinking races from one prospect to the next. Calculative thinking never stops, never collects itself. Calculative thinking is not meditative thinking, not thinking which contemplates the meaning which reigns in everything that is. There are, then, two kinds of thinking, each justified and needed in its own way: calculative thinking and meditative thinking…
…Yet anyone can follow the path of meditative thinking in his own manner and within his own limits. Why? Because man is a “thinking”, that is, a “meditating being”. Thus meditative thinking need by no means be "high-flown." It is enough if we dwell on what lies close and meditate on what is closest; upon that which concerns us, each one of us, here and now; here, on this patch of home ground; now, in the present hour of history…
… For the way to what is near is always the longest and thus the hardest for us humans. This way is the way of meditative thinking. Meditative thinking demands of us not to cling one-sidedly to a single idea, nor to run down a one-track course of ideas. Meditative thinking demands of us that we engage ourselves with what at first sight does not go to-gether at all (Discourse on Thinking 1959).