Creative Deep

IterativeDepth

Structured multi-angle exploration that runs 2-8 sequential passes through the same problem, each from a different scientific lens, to surface requirements and edge cases invisible from any single angle.

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Workflows
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References
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Triggers
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Effort

The Problem

When you ask an AI to analyze a problem, it runs one pass and gives you the obvious answer — the surface requirements, the happy path, the constraints the user mentioned. That's it. Everything invisible from that single angle stays invisible: the stakeholder who wasn't in the room, the failure mode that only shows up under load, the implicit assumption that makes the whole approach wrong in six months. Single-pass analysis is fast, but the missed requirements are what blow up mid-execution.

How This Skill Approaches It

IterativeDepth runs 2–8 sequential passes through the same problem, each from a structurally different lens. Lens 1 extracts what was literally said. Lens 2 asks who else is affected. Lens 3 assumes the solution shipped and looks for what breaks. Lens 4 examines what changes over time. Lens 5 asks how it should feel. Lens 6 inverts constraints to surface hidden assumptions. Each pass outputs new ISC criteria the previous passes couldn't see — the Explore workflow runs all passes, stops when yields repeat, and feeds the combined criteria into the ISA. The technique draws from validated work across 20 frameworks: Gadamer's hermeneutic circle for progressive pre-understanding, de Bono's Six Thinking Hats for structured angle rotation, Wang et al.'s Self-Consistency for why multiple reasoning paths beat one, and Finkelstein's Viewpoint-Oriented Requirements Engineering for the stakeholder lens.

  • Grounded in 20 techniques across cognitive science (Hermeneutic Circle), AI/ML (Self-Consistency, Ensemble Methods), requirements engineering (Viewpoint-Oriented RE), design thinking (Six Hats, Causal Layered Analysis)
  • Each pass outputs new ISC criteria; passes stop when yields repeat
  • Best in OBSERVE phase at Extended+ effort
  • Single workflow: Explore (Fast = 2 lenses)
Not for scope/zoom analysis (use ApertureOscillation)

In Action

What you say to your DA, and what the IterativeDepth skill actually does.

  • You say "use iterative depth on this api redesign before we write specs"
    Runs the Explore workflow with up to 6 lenses on the API problem — extracting stated requirements, stakeholder needs, failure modes, temporal concerns, experiential quality, and hidden assumptions — then outputs a unified set of ISC criteria covering what a single-pass analysis would miss.
  • You say "quick depth on this, just two angles"
    Runs Explore in Fast mode (2 lenses), applying the Literal and Failure lenses to surface the most common missing criteria without the full time budget of a complete multi-pass run.

Inside the Skill

The thinking, frameworks, and architecture that distinguish this skill from a generic version of the same task.

What It Does

IterativeDepth runs 2-8 sequential passes through the same problem, each from a systematically different lens. Each pass surfaces requirements, edge cases, and criteria invisible from other angles, and passes stop when the yield repeats. It is grounded in 20 established techniques across cognitive science, AI/ML, requirements engineering, and design thinking, and it works best in the OBSERVE phase at Extended effort or above.

The Problem

Analyze a problem once and you see it from one angle — usually the obvious one — and the requirements you miss are exactly the ones that surface mid-build as expensive surprises. Rework from a missed requirement costs far more than the few minutes it would have taken to catch it upfront. The hard part is that you can't spot your own blind spots by looking harder from the same direction; you have to deliberately change the angle. Running the same problem through stakeholder, failure, temporal, and constraint-inversion lenses pulls out the criteria a single pass can't.

How It Works

Instead of analyzing a problem once, run 2-8 structured passes through the same problem, each from a systematically different lens. The combination yields ISC criteria that no single-pass analysis could produce. The skill is grounded in 20 established scientific techniques across cognitive science (Hermeneutic Circle, Triangulation), AI/ML (Self-Consistency, Ensemble Methods), requirements engineering (Viewpoint-Oriented RE), and design thinking (Six Thinking Hats, Causal Layered Analysis).

Use / Win

When to use: Any time you have time budget beyond Standard tier and the task is important enough that getting the ISC right matters more than speed. This is the single most valuable thinking capability for the OBSERVE phase. If you're at Extended effort or above, you should be asking "why NOT use IterativeDepth?" rather than "why use it?"

Concrete triggers:

  • Extra time available — Extended+ effort means you have the budget. Spend it on understanding the problem deeply before writing ISC, not on writing more code faster.
  • Deep analysis of what's actually being asked — The user said X. But what do they actually need? What are they trying to accomplish? What would make them rate this 9-10? Single-pass reverse engineering catches the obvious. IterativeDepth catches the rest.
  • Different angles of approach — Before committing to an approach, explore the problem from stakeholder, failure, temporal, experiential, and constraint-inversion angles. The right approach often only becomes obvious after seeing the problem from 3-4 directions.
  • Important or critical tasks — When the user says "this is critical" or the task has high blast radius, the cost of missing a dimension is much higher than the cost of 2-5 extra minutes of analysis.
  • Tasks you've never done before — Novel work has the highest density of hidden requirements. IterativeDepth is insurance against the things you don't know you don't know.

What you win:

  • ISC criteria that single-pass analysis cannot produce. Each lens surfaces requirements invisible from other angles. A 4-lens pass routinely discovers 30-50% more criteria than direct analysis.
  • Blind spot elimination before they become mid-EXECUTE surprises. Rework from missed requirements is 5-10x more expensive than the upfront analysis. IterativeDepth pays for itself by preventing restarts.
  • Approach clarity. Seeing the problem from failure, stakeholder, and constraint-inversion angles often reveals that the obvious approach is wrong and a better path exists.
  • Confidence. When ISC criteria are built on multi-angle analysis, you can execute with conviction instead of discovering gaps halfway through.

The default mental model should be: At Extended+ effort, IterativeDepth is not optional enrichment — it's the standard way to understand what you're building before you build it.

Quick Reference

  • 8 Lenses available, scaled by SLA (2-8)
  • Each lens is a structurally different exploration angle
  • Output is new/refined ISC criteria per pass
  • Integration point: Deeper understanding through structured multi-angle analysis

Full Documentation:

  • Scientific grounding: ScientificFoundation.md
  • Lens definitions: TheLenses.md

Gotchas

  • 2-8 lens passes, not infinite. Diminishing returns after ~5 passes for most topics.
  • Each pass should surface genuinely NEW requirements, not restate previous findings. If passes start repeating, stop early.
  • This is a BPE-fragile skill. Monitor whether smarter models make it unnecessary. Quarterly test recommended.

Examples

Example 1: Surface hidden requirements

User: "use iterative depth on this API redesign"
→ Pass 1: Functional requirements
→ Pass 2: Security implications
→ Pass 3: Performance constraints
→ Pass 4: Backward compatibility
→ Each pass surfaces new requirements missed by previous

Workflows · 2

  1. 01
    `Workflows/Explore.md` Workflows/`Workflows/Explore.md`.md

    iterative depth, explore deeper, multi-angle

  2. 02
    `Workflows/Explore.md` (Fast mode: 2 lenses) Workflows/`Workflows/Explore.md` (Fast mode: 2 lenses).md

    quick depth, fast angles

How to Invoke

Say any of these to your DA and PAI activates the IterativeDepth skill automatically:

  • "iterative depth"
  • "explore deeper"
  • "multi-angle analysis"
  • "surface hidden requirements"
  • "blind spot check"
  • "what am I missing"

Or invoke explicitly:

Skill("IterativeDepth")

References · 2

Auxiliary files the skill loads at runtime — frameworks, guides, configs.

  • ScientificFoundation
  • TheLenses

Want PAI to do this for you?

Install PAI on your machine — your DA gets the IterativeDepth skill plus 44 others, all hooked into one Life OS.