Independent thinking framework using first-principles reasoning to break down problems, evaluate opinions, make decisions, and find truth without relying on authority, social proof, or conventional wisdom. Use when Claude needs to: (1) Analyze problems from fundamental truths instead of accepting assumptions, (2) Evaluate arguments and opinions to identify logical fallacies and hidden premises, (3) Make decisions based on first principles rather than following others, (4) Cut through controversial debates to find underlying truths, (5) Think independently instead of accepting conventional wisdom
Apply this framework when you need to think independently rather than accepting:
State the core question explicitly:
Example: Instead of "Should I invest in crypto?", reframe as "What determines the value of a medium of exchange?"
List every assumption in the argument:
Assumption Detection Patterns:
Question each assumption:
Fundamental Truth Categories:
Build logical chains from proven fundamentals:
Logical Validity Check:
Validate with empirical evidence:
Bayesian Updating:
Acknowledge what we don't know:
Intellectual Honesty:
Pattern: "Expert X says Y, so Y is true" First-Principles Response: Authority is irrelevant to truth. Evaluate the argument, not the source.
Pattern: "Everyone believes X, so X is true" First-Principles Response: Majority opinion proves popularity, not truth. History is full of widely-believed falsehoods.
Pattern: "We've always done X, so X is right" First-Principles Response: Past practice proves nothing about present optimality. Evaluate from first principles.
Pattern: Seeking evidence that confirms existing beliefs First-Principles Response: Actively seek disconfirming evidence. Ask "What would prove me wrong?"
Pattern: "Either X or Y must be true" First-Principles Response: Are there other options? Are X and Y mutually exclusive? Question the frame.
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]
For complex problems, see:
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.