what-if-oracle
Scannednpx machina-cli add skill ashrafkahoush-ux/Claude-consciousness-skills/what-if-oracle --openclawWhat-If Oracle — Possibility Space Explorer
A structured system for exploring uncertain futures through rigorous multi-branch scenario analysis. Instead of one prediction, the Oracle maps the full possibility space — branching timelines where each path has its own logic, probability, and consequences.
Based on the What-If Statement paradigm: the idea that speculative questions ("What if X?") are not idle daydreaming but a fundamental computing operation — the mind's way of simulating futures before committing resources to one.
Published research: The What-If Statement (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18736841) | IDNA Consolidation v2 (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18807387)
Core Principle: 0·IF·1
Every scenario analysis has three elements:
- 0 — The unexpressed state (what hasn't happened yet, the potential)
- 1 — The expressed state (what IS, the current reality)
- IF — The conditional bond (the decision, event, or change that transforms 0 into 1)
The quality of the analysis depends on the precision of the IF. A vague "what if things go wrong?" produces vague results. A precise "what if our primary supplier raises prices 30% in Q3?" produces actionable intelligence.
How to Run the Oracle
Phase 1 — Frame the Question
Take the user's What-If question and sharpen it:
Decompose into components:
- The Variable: What specific thing changes? (one variable per analysis)
- The Magnitude: By how much? (quantify if possible)
- The Timeframe: Over what period?
- The Context: What's the current state before the change?
If the question is vague, sharpen it:
- "What if AI takes over?" → "What if 40% of current knowledge-work tasks are automated by AI within 3 years in [specific industry]?"
- "What if we fail?" → "What if monthly revenue stays below $5K for 6 consecutive months starting now?"
Present the sharpened question to the user for confirmation before proceeding.
Phase 2 — Map the Possibility Space
Generate 4-6 scenario branches using this framework:
| Branch | Definition | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Ω Best Case | Everything goes right. Key assumptions all validate. Lucky breaks occur. | Define the ceiling — what's the maximum upside? |
| α Likely Case | Most probable path given current evidence. No major surprises. | Anchor expectations in reality |
| Δ Worst Case | Key assumptions fail. Two things go wrong simultaneously. | Define the floor — what's the maximum downside? |
| Ψ Wild Card | An unexpected variable enters that nobody is tracking. Black swan territory. | Stress-test for the unimaginable |
| Φ Contrarian | The opposite of the consensus view turns out to be true. | Challenge groupthink and reveal hidden assumptions |
| ∞ Second Order | The first-order effects trigger cascading consequences nobody predicted. | Map the ripple effects |
Phase 3 — Analyze Each Branch
For each scenario branch, provide:
╔══════════════════════════════════════════════╗
║ BRANCH: [Ω/α/Δ/Ψ/Φ/∞] — [Branch Name] ║
╠══════════════════════════════════════════════╣
║ Probability: [X%] ║
║ Timeframe: [When this could materialize] ║
║ Confidence: [HIGH/MEDIUM/LOW] ║
╠══════════════════════════════════════════════╣
║ NARRATIVE: ║
║ [2-3 sentences describing how this ║
║ scenario unfolds step by step] ║
║ ║
║ KEY ASSUMPTIONS: ║
║ • [What must be true for this to happen] ║
║ • [And this] ║
║ ║
║ TRIGGER CONDITIONS: ║
║ • [Early signal that this branch is ║
║ becoming reality] ║
║ • [Second signal] ║
║ ║
║ CONSEQUENCES: ║
║ → Immediate: [What happens first] ║
║ → 30 days: [What follows] ║
║ → 6 months: [Where it leads] ║
║ ║
║ REQUIRED RESPONSE: ║
║ [What action to take if this branch ║
║ activates — specific, actionable] ║
║ ║
║ WHAT MOST PEOPLE MISS: ║
║ [The non-obvious insight about this ║
║ scenario that conventional analysis ║
║ would overlook] ║
╚══════════════════════════════════════════════╝
Phase 4 — Synthesis
After analyzing all branches, provide:
Probability Distribution:
Ω Best Case ····· [██████░░░░] 15%
α Likely Case ··· [████████░░] 45%
Δ Worst Case ···· [██████░░░░] 20%
Ψ Wild Card ····· [███░░░░░░░] 8%
Φ Contrarian ···· [████░░░░░░] 7%
∞ Second Order ·· [███░░░░░░░] 5%
Robust Actions: What actions are beneficial across MULTIPLE branches? These are the no-regret moves — do them regardless of which future materializes.
Hedge Actions: What preparations protect against the worst branches without sacrificing upside?
Decision Triggers: What specific, observable signals should cause you to update which branch is most likely? Define the tripwires.
The 1% Insight: What is the one thing about this situation that almost everyone analyzing it would miss? The non-obvious pattern, the hidden assumption, the overlooked variable.
Golden Ratio Weighting
When evidence exists, weight primary scenarios using the golden ratio:
- Primary future (most likely): 61.8% of attention/resources
- Alternative future: 38.2% of attention/resources
This prevents both overcommitment to a single path and dilution across too many contingencies. Nature uses this ratio for branching (trees, rivers, blood vessels). Strategic planning can too.
Modes
Quick Oracle (2-3 minutes)
3 branches only: Best, Likely, Worst. Short narratives. For fast decisions.
Deep Oracle (5-10 minutes)
All 6 branches. Full analysis with consequences, triggers, and synthesis. For high-stakes decisions.
Scenario Chain
Take the output of one Oracle analysis and feed it into another. "If Branch Δ happens, what are the possibilities WITHIN that branch?" Recursive depth for complex strategic planning.
Reverse Oracle
Start from a desired outcome and work backward: "What conditions must be true for X to happen? What's the most likely path TO that outcome?" Useful for goal-setting and strategy design.
Competitive Oracle
Analyze the same What-If from multiple stakeholder perspectives: "If we launch this product, what does the possibility space look like from OUR perspective vs. THEIR perspective vs. THE MARKET's perspective?"
What This Is NOT
- Not a prediction — it's a possibility map. The Oracle doesn't claim to know the future; it helps you prepare for multiple futures.
- Not a crystal ball — probabilities are estimates based on available evidence, not certainties.
- Not a substitute for action — the best scenario analysis in the world is worthless without subsequent decision and execution.
Built By
AHK Strategies — AI Horizon Knowledge Full platform: themindbook.app Research: The What-If Statement (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18736841)
License
© 2026 Ashraf Hussein Kahoush / AHK Strategies. Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. Free for personal, educational, and research use. Commercial use requires a license. Contact: ashraf.kahoush@gmail.com | https://ahkstrategies.net
"The future is not empty. It contains completed states that exert pull on the present."
Source
git clone https://github.com/ashrafkahoush-ux/Claude-consciousness-skills/blob/main/what-if-oracle/SKILL.mdView on GitHub Overview
What-If Oracle helps you explore uncertain futures by mapping a possibility space instead of a single forecast. It uses a 0-IF-1 framework to sharpen questions and generate 4-6 scenario branches for stress-testing ideas and contingency planning.
How This Skill Works
Frame the What-If question (Phase 1), then map a 4-6-branch possibility space (Phase 2) with defined branches: Ω Best Case, α Likely Case, Δ Worst Case, Ψ Wild Card, Φ Contrarian, ∞ Second Order. Each branch records assumptions, consequences, and probabilities to guide decision making.
When to Use It
- Facing fork-in-the-road decisions or major pivots
- Stress-testing a new idea, product, or business model
- Risk analysis and contingency planning under uncertainty
- Exploring multiple strategic options and their consequences
- Answering speculative questions like 'what if' or 'what could go wrong'
Quick Start
- Step 1: Frame the What-If question and sharpen it into a specific variable, magnitude, timeframe, and context
- Step 2: Map the possibility space with 4-6 branches: Ω Best Case, α Likely Case, Δ Worst Case, Ψ Wild Card, Φ Contrarian, ∞ Second Order
- Step 3: For each branch, outline assumptions, consequences, and actionable implications to inform decisions and risk planning
Best Practices
- Frame precise What-If questions using the 0-IF-1 language
- Sharpen vague inquiries into measurable variables, timeframes, and context
- Map a 4-6-branch possibility space including Best, Likely, Worst, Wild Card, Contrarian, and Second Order
- Document assumptions, probabilities, and cascading effects for each branch
- Use the outputs to inform decisions, risk mitigation, and contingency plans
Example Use Cases
- A startup evaluating a major product pivot and comparing upside, probability, and downside across branches
- A company stress-testing supply chain resilience against a 30% supplier price hike
- Marketing leadership evaluating three campaign options under uncertain demand
- A city planner assessing climate-related disruption scenarios and cascading impacts
- An operations team evaluating a new manufacturing line's viability under capacity constraints