The irreducible epistemic atoms underlying the curriculum. 4,828 atoms across 8 types and 2 molecules
Pressure: external forces that systematically degrade the cognitive functions necessary for deliberate, reflective decision-making, operating through social, institutional, temporal, emotional, or financial mechanisms that reduce access to deliberate reasoning while amplifying automatic, habitual, and emotionally-driven responses
Authority pressure: the vertical force that operates on judgment by causing people to subordinate their own evaluation to someone above them in a hierarchy, bypassing their evaluation process entirely and responding to a specific combination of factors including title, proximity, institutional backing, confidence of delivery, and lack of visible dissent
Artificial urgency: time pressure that is manufactured rather than genuine, characterized by vague or social costs when more time is taken rather than concrete and significant costs, and which replaces the thinking process with temporal coercion
Emotional pressure: the mechanism by which another person's emotional state transmits to you through contagion or deliberate deployment, bypassing your independent assessment and altering your decisions as if the emotion were your own evaluation
Emotional sovereignty: the ability to register and take seriously other people's emotions as data while choosing whether and how much to let them alter your own state and decisions, operating through a permeable membrane rather than a wall or open door
Financial pressure: the cognitive distortion that occurs when financial constraints or anxiety consume cognitive bandwidth and reorganize attentional systems to prioritize financial considerations over deeper values, resulting in systematic shifts in priority rankings and decision-making patterns that are not consciously evaluated.
Bandwidth tax: the cognitive process by which worry about scarce resources consumes mental processing capacity that would otherwise be available for other thinking, reducing overall cognitive performance and decision-making quality.
Scarcity trap: the feedback loop created by financial pressure that reduces cognitive bandwidth, impairs decision quality, and worsens financial situations, leading to a spiral where the very problem being solved degrades the cognitive capacity needed to solve it effectively.
Pressure response: the automatic, neurobiologically driven default behavioral pattern that emerges in response to pressure, operating below conscious awareness and determined by the autonomic nervous system's evaluation of threat, manifesting as fight, flight, freeze, or fawn.
Pause: a deliberate temporal gap of three to thirty seconds between the arrival of pressure and the onset of action, consisting of three components—recognition of somatic cues, labeling of the pressure type, and delay of response—that creates space for intentional rather than automatic behavior and enables cognitive reappraisal to modulate amygdala activation
Cognitive reappraisal: an antecedent-focused emotion regulation strategy that requires a temporal gap to intervene early in the emotion generation process, involving reinterpretation of a situation to change its emotional impact, which is more effective than suppression because it operates before the amygdala's rapid threat-detection response has fully formed
Pressure-as-information reframe: the cognitive operation that treats pressure signals as data about situational relevance and personal stakes rather than as commands requiring immediate action, allowing for deliberate evaluation of appropriate responses
Prepared response: a structural anchor that prevents cognitive vacuum under pressure, consisting of pre-loaded starting position that prevents the cognitive collapse induced by stress and enables automatic execution rather than deliberation
Recognition-primed decision making (RPD): a decision-making process where experts recognize situations as similar to past patterns, mentally simulate the first response pattern suggests, and execute it if simulation doesn't flag problems, rather than deliberating or weighing pros and cons
Stress inoculation: a three-phase technique that gradually exposes individuals to controlled, sub-overwhelming doses of stressors to build tolerance and capacity to perform under pressure, consisting of conceptualization, skills acquisition and rehearsal, and application and follow-through
Pressure inoculation: the specific application of stress inoculation techniques to prepare individuals for high-stakes interpersonal situations by practicing prepared responses under progressively increasing levels of simulated pressure
Stress response dampening: the neurobiological process by which repeated exposure to sub-overwhelming stressors reduces the intensity of the initial alarm response and increases the prefrontal cortex's capacity to maintain function during stress activation
Values anchoring: the cognitive process of using deeply encoded core values as a decision-making reference point under acute stress, where the values remain accessible when working memory and prefrontal cortex function are compromised due to stress-induced resource reallocation
Physical grounding: body-based techniques like breathing and posture changes that restore cognitive function under stress by manipulating vagal nerve afferent signals to shift nervous system state from survival mode to cognitive engagement
Physiological sigh: a breathing technique involving a double inhale through the nose followed by an extended exhale through the mouth that maximally inflates alveoli and triggers parasympathetic activation through CO2 offloading
Pressure debrief: a structured reflective process that occurs after a high-pressure situation to analyze automatic responses, emotional states, and gaps between intended and actual behavior, with the goal of identifying specific, actionable adjustments for future similar situations
Peer pressure in adult life: the subtle, ambient social influence that operates through descriptive norms, lifestyle expectations, career benchmarks, milestone timelines, and digital comparison mechanisms, which shapes decisions without explicit demands and is phenomenologically invisible to the decision-maker
Self-imposed pressure: the expectations, standards, and demands you place on yourself that can be as sovereignty-undermining as external pressure and operates through identity rather than reasoned evaluation
Chronic yielding: a pattern of consistently caving to pressure from any source (peers, authority, circumstances, or self-imposed) that erodes self-trust and eventually self-respect by updating internal predictive models to expect failure