A combination of both methods. You know in medicine why, putting aside CYA, a MD asks for several tests? Because one doesn't give them all the information they need to make a diagnosis. The same is true for audio.
When will you admit that reductionism doesn't work?
I'm in a big believer in the more listening tests and the more technical measurements the better; Good perceptual data and good technical data allow us to better understand the psychoacoustic relationship between perception of sound and its measurement.
However, there are good data and bad data. Data from uncontrolled listening tests are generally unreliable,biased, and what I consider bad data. A lot of technical measurements produce bad data. That doesn't mean there aren't technical measurements that produce good data. You learn which ones are good and bad only through a scientific approach towards listening and measurement. I don't see you doing much of either.
Medical doctors make diagnosis using well-established scientific practices (at least I hope so) and good data. The drugs they prescribe are based on controlled drug studies. They make a diagnosis based on current knowledge of the medical scientific literature, and the available physical evidence based on tests and evaluation of the patient. If they have doubt they will get a 2nd expert opinion from another doctor. What doctors don't do is solicit opinions from unqualified people, ignore all published scientific on the subject, and distrust physical measurements or data from controlled perceptual measurements. Yet, this approach is quite common in audio. I don't subscribe to it.
Sorry, you can't have your cake and eat it too. You can't argue that a scientific approach is good for medicine, and in the same breath (or an earlier breath), say a scientific approach does not work for audio.
My science may not be perfect, but to say it is reductionist ignores the 30+ years of research that has already been done by myself and many others.
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