Why Subjective Experience Is Not Rejected

Subjective experience is central to human understanding. All observation, interpretation, and meaning begin with experience.

Within the Physical Mediumship Verification Framework, subjective experience is neither dismissed nor devalued. It is acknowledged, respected, and clearly distinguished from verification.

1. Subjective Experience Is a Valid Human Phenomenon

Perception, emotion, intuition, memory, and internal imagery are all aspects of normal human cognition. Experiences described as clairvoyance, clairsentience, or inner perception fall within this domain.

The framework does not question whether such experiences occur. It recognizes that they do.

2. Respect Does Not Require Reclassification

Acknowledging an experience does not require classifying it as evidence.

A key function of standards is to prevent category confusion:

  • Experiences are acknowledged as experiences
  • Claims are evaluated according to their evidentiary nature

Respecting experience means allowing it to remain what it is, not forcing it into a category it cannot support.

3. Subjectivity Is Not a Flaw—It Is a Boundary

Subjective experiences are intrinsically private. They are accessible only to the individual who has them.

This does not invalidate them.
It simply defines their boundary.

Within this framework, a boundary is not a rejection—
it is a clarification.

4. Verification Requires Shared Access

Verification begins when an observation can be:

  • independently observed
  • documented
  • re‑examined by others

Subjective experience alone does not meet these criteria. This distinction is methodological, not philosophical.

5. Experience Often Guides Inquiry

In many fields, subjective experience plays an important role in hypothesis formation and exploratory work.

Within physical mediumship investigations, personal impressions may guide attention or suggest where further testing is warranted.

However, guidance is not verification.

6. Protection Against Overstatement

By clearly separating experience from verification, the framework protects individuals from making claims that cannot be supported by external evidence.

This protects:

  • practitioners from misrepresentation
  • observers from confusion
  • the field from loss of credibility

7. Neutrality Toward Meaning and Interpretation

The framework does not interpret subjective experiences, assign meaning to them, or judge their personal significance.

Meaning belongs to the experiencer.
Verification belongs to method.

8. Complementarity, Not Conflict

Subjective experience and objective verification are not enemies. They serve different functions.

Experience may inspire inquiry. Verification determines what can be claimed publicly.

The absence of verification does not imply the absence of experience.

9. A Clear Line Benefits Everyone

When experience and verification are clearly distinguished:

  • personal narratives remain personal
  • public claims remain accountable
  • dialogue remains coherent

This clarity is essential for constructive discussion.

10. Conclusion

Subjective experience is not rejected within the Physical Mediumship Verification Framework.

It is acknowledged, respected, and allowed to remain what it is— a personal human phenomenon.

Verification begins only when claims move beyond the subjective domain and enter a space that can be independently examined.

© Physical Mediumship Verification Framework
Companion page to standards on physical and mental mediumship