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This paper formalizes a pervasive interpretive mode found across contemporary scholarship on ancient texts, rituals, myths, and philosophical dialogues. Termed Psychologically Expressive Evaluation, this mode interprets epistemic systems through expressive surfaces—motives, emotions, genre categories, literary symbolism, and character psychology—rather than through their underlying structural architecture. Drawing on the Structural Analysis Technique derived from Supra‑Agency Theory (SAT), this paper demonstrates that Psychologically Expressive Evaluation is not merely methodologically different from structural analysis but is its near‑opposite: opposite in orientation but not in kind. Psychologically Expressive Evaluation is value‑laden and expressive; structural analysis is value‑free and architectural. Because Psychologically Expressive Evaluation never reaches the structural layer, it does not qualify as analysis in SAT terms, but only as evaluation of expressive content. The paper defines Psychologically Expressive Evaluation formally, contrasts it with structural analysis, and shows how Psychologically Expressive Evaluation systematically obscures the mechanisms of polarity, agency, containment, and transduction that govern opacity‑aligned epistemic worlds.