The irreducible epistemic atoms underlying the curriculum. 4,828 atoms across 8 types and 2 molecules
Portability: the ability of a knowledge graph to survive tool changes, be readable without specialized software, and be reconstructible from exported files using only plain text editors
Cognitive extension: the functional integration of external resources into cognitive processes such that the external resource plays the same functional role in guiding behavior as an internal cognitive process, thereby constituting a genuine part of the cognitive system
Contradiction: a state where two beliefs or propositions held by an individual are psychologically inconsistent, creating cognitive tension that signals the need for investigation rather than immediate resolution, and which carries epistemically valuable data about the structure and boundaries of one's knowledge system
Deep contradiction: a genuine conflict between beliefs that are both well-supported and both connected to foundational assumptions about how reality works, requiring resolution through revision of foundational assumptions rather than adjustment within existing framework
Single-loop learning: the cognitive process of correcting errors within an existing framework without questioning the underlying assumptions or governing variables that produced the error
Holding a contradiction: the deliberate cognitive practice of maintaining active awareness of a genuine contradiction without attempting premature resolution, allowing the tension to incubate and potentially reveal new variables or patterns that would be obscured by immediate synthesis
Dialectical thinking: the cognitive operation that takes two opposing truths and produces a third position — a synthesis — that preserves what was correct in both while operating at a higher level of resolution than either alone
Polarity: an ongoing, chronic tension between two interdependent values where choosing one pole over the other always produces dysfunction and neither can 'win' without the system degrading
Scope: the boundary condition that determines where a claim holds, including the population, conditions, and timeframe to which a statement applies
Level: the abstraction layer or hierarchical position within a system at which a claim operates, where what is true at one level may not be true at another
Cognitive debt: the compound cost of unresolved contradictions that accumulate over time, manifesting as increased decision fatigue, organizational friction, and system inefficiency, with interest compounding through repeated activation and migration to new domains
Contradiction journal: a structured recording system that transforms cognitive conflict into a persistent dataset you can search, review, and mine for patterns, consisting of entries that explicitly state both beliefs, the context in which each holds, and a candidate variable for reconciliation
Internal contradiction: the experienced tension between two genuinely held beliefs or values about oneself, one's identity, or how one should live, which signals that the current meaning-making system has reached its limits and is preparing to reorganize at a higher level of complexity rather than indicating confused thinking or inconsistency
Cognitive agent: a repeatable process you design to handle recurring decisions, consisting of a trigger (situation that activates it), a condition (what must be true for it to fire), and an action (what it does when triggered and condition is met)
Implementation intention: a pre-decided behavioral plan structured in 'if-situation X arises, then I will perform behavior Y' format that creates a strong mental association between a specific situational cue and a specific response, delegating behavioral control from the self to the environment
Decision fatigue: the gradual degradation of cognitive performance and decision quality that occurs over extended periods of sustained deliberation, characterized by a push toward defaults, avoidance, and lower-quality reasoning as executive function resources become depleted
Agent: a cognitive or behavioral pattern that perceives, decides, and acts on your behalf, constructed deliberately as an artifact to serve a specific purpose rather than emerging spontaneously
Agent audit: a systematic inventory of every behavioral agent currently operating in your life, sorted by whether you designed it or whether it installed itself
Pre-mortem: a structured risk assessment technique that involves imagining a project or agent has already failed completely and then identifying specific reasons for that failure, used to surface risks and failure modes that would otherwise be suppressed by optimism bias
Blameless post-mortem: a structured engineering discipline for analyzing system failures that reconstructs what happened, identifies contributing causes, and produces action items without attributing blame to any individual
Social agent: a deliberately designed script for a recurring social situation that accounts for emotional state, underlying needs, and desired outcomes, operating through four steps: observe without evaluating, name the emotion, identify the underlying need, and make a specific request
Communication agent: a reusable cognitive structure that handles recurring communication tasks so deliberate attention can focus on content rather than form, encoding proven frameworks for direct messages, presentations, and difficult conversations
Health agent: a pre-designed cognitive system that governs recurring health decisions about sleep, exercise, nutrition, and stress management, following trigger-condition-action architecture to reduce willpower expenditure and increase compounding returns
Choice architecture: the systematic arrangement of options and environmental cues that predictably shapes which choices people select, without removing any options or changing incentives, where every environment has a design that silently votes on behavior