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: "Internal World (The Self)"
Split Justification: The Internal World involves both mental processes (**Cognitive Sphere**) and physical experiences (**Somatic Sphere**). (Ref: Mind-Body Distinction)
3
From: "Cognitive Sphere"
Split Justification: Cognition operates via deliberate, logical steps (**Analytical Processing**) and faster, intuitive pattern-matching (**Intuitive/Associative Processing**). (Ref: Dual Process Theory)
4
From: "Intuitive/Associative Processing"
Split Justification: Intuitive/associative processing fundamentally operates in two distinct, yet complementary, modes: either by rapidly identifying and utilizing pre-existing patterns and associations (often automatically and implicitly), or by forming new, non-obvious connections that lead to emergent insights and novel ideas. These two categories comprehensively cover the scope of how this cognitive function processes information.
5
From: "Novel Connection & Insight Generation"
Split Justification: Novel Connection & Insight Generation fundamentally serves two distinct, exhaustive purposes: either to deepen comprehension and reveal latent truths about existing concepts or phenomena (understanding), or to produce new ideas, solutions, or expressions that did not previously exist (creation/innovation). An insight is primarily oriented towards one of these two outcomes.
6
From: "Insight for Conceptual Understanding"
Split Justification: ** When gaining conceptual understanding through insight, the focus is fundamentally directed either inward, revealing the core nature, internal mechanisms, or intrinsic properties of a concept or phenomenon itself, or outward, integrating that concept within a broader network of related ideas, systems, causes, effects, or implications. These two perspectives comprehensively cover how understanding is deepened.
7
From: "Extrinsic Insight (Broader Contextual Integration)"
Split Justification: Extrinsic Insight (Broader Contextual Integration) involves understanding a concept's place within its external environment. This understanding fundamentally branches into two exhaustive and mutually exclusive modes: either by discerning its current structural configuration and static relationships with other entities or systems (Structural & Relational Context), or by comprehending its dynamic origins, evolutionary trajectory, causal influences, and effects over time (Process & Causal Context). These two perspectives comprehensively cover how something is integrated into its broader environment.
8
From: "Process & Causal Context"
Split Justification: When understanding a process and its causality, the focus is fundamentally directed either backward, examining the preceding influences, foundational origins, and inputs that led to its current state, or forward, analyzing its resulting impacts, emergent properties, and future progression over time. These two temporal and directional perspectives comprehensively cover the dynamic and causal aspects of a concept's context.
9
From: "Causal Antecedents & Origins"
Split Justification: When seeking to understand the causal antecedents and origins of a concept or phenomenon within its broader context, these contributing factors fundamentally arise either from its inherent nature, internal processes, and self-contained historical development (intrinsic), or from external forces, environmental conditions, and interactions with other systems (extrinsic). These two categories comprehensively and mutually exclusively cover the sources of all such antecedents.
10
From: "Extrinsic Causal Antecedents & Environmental Factors"
Split Justification: When seeking insight into extrinsic causal antecedents and environmental factors, their origins fundamentally stem either from the non-human natural world and its inherent processes (e.g., climate, geology, biological processes) or from human activity, societal structures, and cultural contexts (e.g., policies, technology, social norms, economic systems). This dichotomy exhaustively covers all potential extrinsic origins while being mutually exclusive.
11
From: "Human-Generated & Socio-Cultural Causal Antecedents"
Split Justification: When seeking insight into the causal antecedents stemming from human activity and socio-cultural contexts, these factors fundamentally arise either from deliberate actions, conscious designs, and explicit intentions of individuals or groups, or from emergent, unforeseen, or systemic consequences and byproducts that were not the primary goal but resulted from human presence and interaction.
12
From: "Unintended & Emergent Socio-Cultural Causal Antecedents"
Split Justification: Unintended and Emergent Socio-Cultural Causal Antecedents fundamentally arise from two distinct sources: either from the dynamic, often unforeseen, collective patterns that emerge from the aggregation and interaction of numerous individual or group behaviors, or from the more persistent, often path-dependent, consequences and byproducts that flow from the established structures, rules, and underlying cultural assumptions of institutions and societal systems. These two categories comprehensively cover how unintended socio-cultural factors come into being while remaining mutually exclusive in their primary locus of emergence.
✓
Topic: "Systemic Consequences of Institutional & Cultural Structures" (W8043)