The irreducible epistemic atoms underlying the curriculum. 4,828 atoms across 8 types and 2 molecules
Fact-story separation exercise: pick one situation that bothered you, write two columns — column A for observable facts only, column B for the stories you constructed — then examine how much of your reaction came from column B
Explanation writing test: pick one concept you believe you understand well and attempt to write a clear explanation from scratch without references — the gaps that emerge reveal where understanding is illusory
Atomicity audit: open your note system, find your five most recent notes, and for each ask whether it contains exactly one idea that can be understood without its original context
Capture speed test: time your current capture workflow from thought-to-recorded and compare against the 5-second threshold — if it takes longer, redesign for speed
Weekly review protocol: block 45-60 minutes weekly using a three-phase structure — collect (gather all loose items), process (decide on each), and review (assess systems and priorities)
Attention log practice: set a timer every 90 minutes for one workday and record what you were actually doing versus what you planned, revealing the gap between intended and actual attention allocation
Observation-without-judgment exercise: pick a 15-minute window and carry a small notebook, writing only what you observe without any interpretation, evaluation, or story — pure sensory data
Pattern naming practice: pick one small repeated behavior from today, name it precisely with a descriptive label, and write down the trigger, the behavior, and the consequence — making the invisible pattern visible and manipulable
Information audit: track every information source you encounter in a single day from first screen to last, categorizing each as signal (directly informs a decision) or noise (everything else)
Base rate log: for one week, each time you encounter a vivid anecdote, record it alongside the actual statistical base rate for that event, training your System 2 to counter availability heuristic distortions
Daily externalization trigger: pick a fixed moment in your existing routine and attach a 5-minute externalization practice to it, writing down whatever is on your mind without filtering
Schema externalization exercise: identify one recurring decision you make, write down the criteria you actually use (not what you think you use), and compare the written schema against your last three decisions to test accuracy
Default schema detection: choose a routine situation, observe yourself going through it, and write down every assumption you made without thinking — each assumption is a default schema operating invisibly
Classification audit: pick one domain you manage, list every category you use, then test each by asking: does this category help me act, or does it just feel organized?
Relationship mapping exercise: pick five concepts from your knowledge system, draw all connections between them with labeled edges, and identify which connections you assumed existed but cannot articulate
Causal chain tracing: pick a significant outcome from the past six months and trace backward through five levels of cause, asking "what caused that?" at each level until you reach structural rather than proximate causes
Schema stress test: select one schema you hold with high confidence, design three scenarios that would falsify it, then honestly assess whether any of those scenarios have partially occurred
Schema shelf-life review: pick three mental models you rely on, write down when you adopted each, what has changed in the domain since then, and whether the model still fits current reality
Self-schema articulation: write three sentences completing "I am the kind of person who..." then for each, find one piece of behavioral evidence that supports it and one that contradicts it
Contradiction holding practice: find two beliefs you hold that genuinely conflict, write the strongest case for each, and resist resolving the tension for at least one week while documenting what insights emerge
Cross-domain integration exercise: choose three schemas from different life areas, look for structural similarities between them, and write a meta-schema that captures what they share
Agent documentation template: for each cognitive agent, write trigger, condition, action, success criteria, and failure mode
Decision framework installation: identify three most frequent decision types, create written frameworks, route all instances through them for two weeks
Error post-mortem protocol: run a five-why analysis documenting what happened, expected, deviation point, enabling condition, and structural prevention