Concepts

Multi-Perspective Circle

The Multi-Perspective Circle enables structured movement through viewpoints, allowing a cognitive system to rotate perspectives and analyze meaning across different domains.

Identity

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.

Why it matters

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.

Core distinction

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.

Structural role

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.

Failure modes

These are the structural problems that appear when the concept is ignored, collapsed, hidden, or misapplied.

  • viewpoint fragmentation
  • contradiction blindness
  • unstructured perspective shift
  • single-view bias

Related concepts

Minimal links that deepen the distinction without turning this page into a dense graph.

Canonical restraint

Every multi-perspective rotation must maintain alignment with the central yantra to ensure that viewpoint shifts do not introduce untraceable semantic drift.