1
From: "Human Potential & Development."
Split Justification: Development fundamentally involves both our inner landscape (**Internal World**) and our interaction with everything outside us (**External World**). (Ref: Subject-Object Distinction)..
2
From: "External World (Interaction)"
Split Justification: All external interactions fundamentally involve either other human beings (social, cultural, relational, political) or the non-human aspects of existence (physical environment, objects, technology, natural world). This dichotomy is mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive.
3
From: "Interaction with Humans"
Split Justification: All human interaction can be fundamentally categorized by its primary focus: either on the direct connection and relationship between specific individuals (from intimate bonds to fleeting encounters), or on the individual's engagement within and navigation of larger organized human collectives, their rules, roles, and systems. This dichotomy provides a comprehensive and distinct division between person-to-person dynamics and person-to-society dynamics.
4
From: "Social Systems and Structures"
Split Justification: All social systems and structures can be fundamentally categorized by whether their rules, roles, and organization are explicitly codified, institutionalized, and formally enforced (formal systems), or are unwritten, emergent, culturally embedded, and maintained through custom, tradition, and implicit social pressure (informal systems). This dichotomy is mutually exclusive, as a system's primary mode of operation is either formal or informal, and comprehensively exhaustive, covering all aspects of collective human organization.
5
From: "Informal Social Systems"
Split Justification: All informal social systems can be fundamentally divided into two mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive categories: those focused on the collective, unwritten understandings, values, beliefs, traditions, and customs that guide behavior (Shared Meaning and Norms), and those focused on the spontaneous, interactional processes and structures of influence, status, reputation, and cohesion that arise within groups (Emergent Social Dynamics). One describes the content and collective interpretation of the informal system, while the other describes the interactive mechanisms and relational outcomes.
6
From: "Shared Meaning and Norms"
Split Justification: The node "Shared Meaning and Norms" encompasses both the collective cognitive frameworks by which a group understands and interprets the world (its 'meaning' and 'beliefs') and the collective evaluative and prescriptive frameworks that guide appropriate action and interaction (its 'values' and 'norms'). This split fundamentally divides these two aspects into a category focused on the descriptive understanding of reality and a category focused on the prescriptive principles and patterns of behavior within that reality.
7
From: "Shared Worldviews and Belief Systems"
Split Justification: Shared Worldviews and Belief Systems fundamentally divide into two core components: those collective cognitive frameworks that describe the observable, verifiable, and causally understood aspects of reality (e.g., scientific principles, historical facts, common knowledge) and those frameworks that interpret the deeper meaning, purpose, and ultimate nature of existence, often extending beyond direct empirical observation (e.g., philosophical tenets, religious doctrines, theories of ultimate reality). This dichotomy is mutually exclusive, as a belief's primary focus is either on the empirically ascertainable or the transcendent/interpretive, and comprehensively exhaustive, covering all facets of how a group cognitively structures its understanding of the world.
8
From: "Shared Metaphysical and Existential Beliefs"
Split Justification: The node "Shared Metaphysical and Existential Beliefs" inherently contains two fundamental conceptual domains: one pertaining to the foundational nature, structure, and origins of existence or the cosmos itself (its ultimate reality), and another concerning the specific place, meaning, purpose, and eventual fate of humanity within that broader reality. This split directly separates collective beliefs about the inherent properties of existence from those focused on the human condition and its teleological aspects, providing a mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive division of the node's scope.
9
From: "Shared Beliefs about Human Purpose and Destiny"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates collective beliefs about the active 'why' and 'how' of human life (its intrinsic meaning, role, and operational purpose) from beliefs concerning its passive 'what' and 'where' in terms of its ultimate outcome, end-state, or future trajectory. One focuses on the journey and role, the other on the destination and culmination. This distinction is mutually exclusive, as a belief primarily addresses either the intrinsic purpose/meaning of existence or its ultimate fate/future, and comprehensively exhaustive, covering both core components of "Human Purpose and Destiny."
10
From: "Shared Beliefs about the Meaning and Function of Human Existence"
Split Justification: This dichotomy separates collective beliefs about the inherent value, worth, or ultimate significance ascribed to human life (its 'meaning' aspect) from collective beliefs about the active role, operational purpose, or prescribed duties that humanity is meant to fulfill within a larger framework (its 'function' aspect). This provides a mutually exclusive distinction between understanding *why* human existence matters inherently and understanding *what* human existence is meant to *do* or *be for*.
11
From: "Shared Beliefs about the Designated Function and Purpose of Humanity"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates collective beliefs about humanity's designated function and purpose based on its perceived source: whether it is decreed, bestowed, or inherent within an order external to humanity (e.g., divine mandate, cosmic law, natural teleology) or whether it is autonomously defined, chosen, and pursued by humanity itself through its collective agency, reason, values, and aspirations. This distinction is mutually exclusive, as a belief system typically attributes the ultimate origin of this designation to one primary source, and comprehensively exhaustive, covering all fundamental ways in which humanity's function and purpose are understood to be established.
12
From: "Shared Beliefs about Humanity's Intrinsically Self-Determined Function and Purpose"
Split Justification: This dichotomy fundamentally separates collective beliefs about humanity's self-determined function and purpose into two distinct categories: those focused on the specific desired outcomes, achievements, and future states that humanity collectively strives to realize (Aims and Goals), and those focused on the fundamental ethical frameworks, rules of conduct, and inherent duties that humanity collectively establishes for itself to guide its existence and actions (Guiding Principles and Obligations). This provides a mutually exclusive distinction between the ends humanity sets for itself and the self-imposed means or duties it believes it must uphold, comprehensively covering how humanity self-determines its purpose and function.
✓
Topic: "Shared Beliefs about Humanity's Self-Imposed Guiding Principles and Obligations" (W7884)