The irreducible epistemic atoms underlying the curriculum. 4,828 atoms across 8 types and 2 molecules
Agent Deadlock Syndrome (ADS): a failure mode in multi-agent AI systems where agents repeatedly defer decision authority to one another or to a missing arbiter, causing extended inactivity or circular handoff behavior with no explicit error signal, producing logical impossibility of progress
Agent collaboration patterns: the structural blueprints that define how multiple agents — human, cognitive, or artificial — coordinate their work, with each pattern being a specific solution to a specific dependency structure
Coordination overhead: the cost of managing handoffs, maintaining shared context, resolving conflicts, and synchronizing agents that arises from every collaboration pattern and scales super-linearly with the number of participants
Emergent behavior: the phenomenon where combined agent behavior produces results none of the individual agents intended, arising from interactions between agents that follow local rules in a shared environment
Agent ecosystem health: the assessment and maintenance of a collection of interacting cognitive agents as a living system, evaluated across three dimensions - vigor (metabolic throughput and productivity), organization (structural coherence and information flow), and resilience (capacity to absorb disturbance and maintain function)
Interaction channel: a specific pathway or mechanism through which agents in a multi-agent system communicate, coordinate, or influence each other, including shared time, shared attention, shared data, shared goals, or shared resources.
Effortless competence: the observable outcome of well-coordinated cognitive agents where the coordination becomes invisible to outside observers, appearing as natural ability while actually representing the seamless integration of multiple coordinated cognitive processes that have been compiled into automatic patterns through repeated practice and refinement
Delegation: the cognitive strategy of reallocating attention from tasks that do not require unique judgment or expertise to tasks where attention is irreplaceable, thereby expanding effective capacity
System delegation: the practice of assigning cognitive tasks to structured processes, tools, checklists, or automated workflows rather than to individual human agents, enabling scalability and consistency
Delegation Resistance Score (DRS): a numerical metric calculated by multiplying scores from three dimensions — irreversibility, identity-centrality, and cognitive uniqueness — each scored from 1-5, used to determine the appropriate routing destination for a task among five options: strong delegation candidate, partial delegation or automation candidate, retain with periodic re-evaluation, core retention, or elimination
Irreversibility: the first dimension in the delegation decision framework that measures how costly it is to fix a poor outcome of a task, determining the quality risk tolerance in delegation decisions and influencing whether a task should be retained or delegated to agents with demonstrated competence
Non-delegable duties: obligations that cannot be transferred to another party — or, if transferred, the original party remains fully liable for any breach. The duty can be performed by someone else, but the accountability cannot be.
Identity-defining decisions: decisions that define who you are — as a person, as a leader, as an organization. These are decisions about values, mission, ethical boundaries, and strategic direction.
Context-dependent judgments: decisions that require context that is non-transferable — accumulated experience, relational knowledge, pattern recognition built over years, or situational awareness that cannot be communicated in a briefing document.
Irreversible-consequence decisions: decisions that carry consequences that cannot be undone if the delegate gets them wrong. These decisions share a structural feature: the feedback on whether they were correct arrives long after the decision point, and by then, the original state cannot be restored.
Clear delegation: the practice of specifying the outcome, constraints, success criteria, available resources, and timeline with checkpoints before handing anything off, such that a competent stranger with zero context could produce an acceptable result from the specification alone.
Specification: the act of making the implicit explicit — translating what exists in your head (desired outcome, constraints, quality bar) into language precise enough that someone with no access to your thoughts can produce what you need.
Outcome-based delegation: a delegation architecture where the delegator specifies the desired result and constraints, but leaves the method of achievement open to the delegate's discretion, thereby preserving autonomy, inviting better solutions, and enabling adaptation to changing conditions
Auftragstaktik: a military command philosophy in which a superior officer communicates the objective, constraints, and intent behind a mission, then leaves the subordinate free to determine how to accomplish it, enabling real-time adaptation to changing battlefield conditions while preserving mission purpose
Micromanagement: a delegation architecture at the pathological extreme of method-based delegation where the delegator monitors and corrects each step of the delegate's work in real time, resulting in lower motivation, higher turnover, reduced productivity, and diminished job satisfaction
Verification: the systematic process of monitoring delegated outcomes through structured feedback mechanisms at three distinct layers (signal, sample, and structural audit) to detect failures before they compound and maintain accountability while preserving delegate autonomy
Trust but verify: the calibrated approach to delegation that maintains high autonomy for agents while implementing verification mechanisms proportional to risk, consequence, and track record, where verification is built into the process rather than added as an afterthought
Tool: a delegated capability — it does something you could do, but faster, more reliably, or at greater scale
Extended mind: an external tool that performs the same functional role as an internal cognitive process, thereby becoming part of the cognitive system