Related concept: Layered Cognition Diagrams
Layered Cognition Diagrams visually map perspective rotation.
Concepts
The Multi-Perspective Circle enables structured movement through viewpoints, allowing a cognitive system to rotate perspectives and analyze meaning across different domains.
This concept frames perspective rotation as an active cognitive operation, not merely a diagram pattern. It governs how different viewpoints are structurally related, compared, and synthesized.
Without a structured way to rotate perspectives, cognitive systems suffer from single-view bias and fail to detect contradictions or synthesize distributed signals into coherent insight.
The Multi-Perspective Circle is not a facilitation exercise or a coaching tool. It is an abstract, architectural model of multi-viewpoint processing, with no claims of live AI runtime implementation or automated translation.
Within the MoM meta-architecture, this circle guides how different domains (slices) are oriented around a shared semantic center, ensuring that multi-perspective reasoning remains anchored by core yantra constraints.
These are the structural problems that appear when the concept is ignored, collapsed, hidden, or misapplied.
Minimal links that deepen the distinction without turning this page into a dense graph.
Layered Cognition Diagrams visually map perspective rotation.
The Crossover Layer bridges visual representations with human interpretation.
Transitions govern state changes between perspectives.
Every multi-perspective rotation must maintain alignment with the central yantra to ensure that viewpoint shifts do not introduce untraceable semantic drift.