Isn't the term "operational definition" a very terse admission that science is inherently anthropometric? For the word "operation" comes from the word "opus" which is a human action. And that action is the act of measuring, an action involving anticipation, imagination, desire, will, deliberation, memory, etc.--none of which is ever given as such in a manner that can be measured. Measurement always has a human signature. That is, in measuring we are always comparing the measured to our own agency, and that agency (including when it is engaged in the act of measuring) is itself is never given as something that could be measured.
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