Conventional measurement systems — clinical, financial, neurological, social — are E-dimension instruments. They measure external behavior, symptom profiles relative to population averages, material resource levels, and compliance with normative output expectations. They have no instruments for the G, I, or L dimensions of the GILE framework: no measurement of the depth of moral commitments, no sensor for i-channel access, no assessment of the quality of a person's orientation toward alleviating suffering. This is not a minor gap. It produces a systematic, predictable error: transcendent individuals — those operating at high G, I, and L simultaneously — are consistently misclassified as dysfunctional because transcendence and dysfunction produce nearly identical signatures on E-only instruments. The error is not on the side of the transcendent individual. The error is entirely on the side of the measurement system. The burden of proof does not belong to the transcendent individual to justify their transcendence. The burden belongs to the measurement system to acknowledge its own limits. This is the Inverse Metric Problem.
Brandon Charles Emerick (Tue,) studied this question.