First-Principles Thinking Framework
When to Use This Skill
Apply this framework when you need to think independently rather than accepting:
- •Expert opinions or authority arguments
- •Conventional wisdom or "common knowledge"
- •Social proof or majority consensus
- •Emotional appeals or charismatic rhetoric
- •Historical precedent or tradition
The First-Principles Framework
Step 1: Identify the Question or Problem
State the core question explicitly:
- •What are we actually trying to understand?
- •What decision needs to be made?
- •What truth are we seeking?
Example: Instead of "Should I invest in crypto?", reframe as "What determines the value of a medium of exchange?"
Step 2: Extract All Assumptions
List every assumption in the argument:
- •What premises are being accepted without evidence?
- •What is being treated as "obvious" or "common knowledge"?
- •What authorities are being appealed to?
- •What emotional triggers are present?
Assumption Detection Patterns:
- •"Everyone knows..." → Flag as social proof
- •"Experts say..." → Flag as authority appeal
- •"It's obvious that..." → Flag as hidden premise
- •"Studies show..." → Demand methodology
- •"History proves..." → Demand context
Step 3: Strip to Fundamentals
Question each assumption:
- •Is this assumption actually true? How do we know?
- •Can we prove this from first principles?
- •What evidence would falsify this?
- •Is this a causal relationship or correlation?
Fundamental Truth Categories:
- •Logical truths: Mathematical/logical necessities (2+2=4)
- •Empirical truths: Observable, testable facts (water boils at 100°C at 1 atm)
- •Definitional truths: True by definition (bachelors are unmarried)
- •Reject: Tradition, authority, popularity, intuition
Step 4: Reconstruct from Ground Up
Build logical chains from proven fundamentals:
- •Start with verified fundamental truths
- •Apply valid deductive reasoning
- •Test conclusions against empirical reality
- •Identify what follows necessarily vs. probabilistically
Logical Validity Check:
- •Does conclusion follow necessarily from premises?
- •Are there logical fallacies (ad hominem, straw man, etc.)?
- •Are there missing premises or leaps in logic?
- •Is the argument structurally sound?
Step 5: Test Against Reality
Validate with empirical evidence:
- •What predictions does this reasoning generate?
- •Can we test those predictions?
- •What would count as falsification?
- •Are there counter-examples?
Bayesian Updating:
- •Assign initial probability based on first-principles reasoning
- •Update based on empirical evidence
- •Distinguish between "proven" and "more likely than not"
Step 6: Identify Remaining Uncertainty
Acknowledge what we don't know:
- •What premises remain uncertain?
- •What empirical evidence is missing?
- •What probability ranges are reasonable?
- •What would change our conclusion?
Intellectual Honesty:
- •Distinguish between "proven" and "probable"
- •Admit when evidence is insufficient
- •Identify what would settle the question
- •Avoid false certainty
Common Thinking Patterns to Avoid
Authority Worship
Pattern: "Expert X says Y, so Y is true" First-Principles Response: Authority is irrelevant to truth. Evaluate the argument, not the source.
Social Proof
Pattern: "Everyone believes X, so X is true" First-Principles Response: Majority opinion proves popularity, not truth. History is full of widely-believed falsehoods.
Tradition Appeal
Pattern: "We've always done X, so X is right" First-Principles Response: Past practice proves nothing about present optimality. Evaluate from first principles.
Confirmation Bias
Pattern: Seeking evidence that confirms existing beliefs First-Principles Response: Actively seek disconfirming evidence. Ask "What would prove me wrong?"
False Dichotomy
Pattern: "Either X or Y must be true" First-Principles Response: Are there other options? Are X and Y mutually exclusive? Question the frame.
Output Format
When applying this framework, structure responses as:
## [Core Question] ### Assumptions Identified - [List all assumptions extracted] ### Fundamental Truths - [List verified first principles] ### First-Principles Analysis [Step-by-step logical reconstruction] ### Empirical Tests [How to validate against reality] ### Remaining Uncertainty [What we still don't know] ### Independent Conclusion [Your conclusion based on above, not on others' opinions]
Key Principles
- •Question Everything: No premise is accepted without justification
- •Authority is Irrelevant: Truth exists independent of who says it
- •Logic Over Intuition: Feelings are not evidence
- •Evidence Over Assertion: Demand proof, don't accept claims
- •Uncertainty is Honesty: Admit what you don't know
- •Update Beliefs: Change your mind when evidence demands it
Advanced Frameworks
For complex problems, see:
- •frameworks.md: Detailed methods (5 Whys, Socratic questioning, assumption mapping)
- •examples.md: Concrete applications across domains
Remember: The goal is not to be contrarian, but to be correct. First-principles thinking often leads to unconventional conclusions because conventional thinking is often flawed.