askarzh/epistemator Skills
(6)Browse AI agent skills from askarzh/epistemator for Claude Code, OpenClaw, Cursor, Windsurf, and more. Install them with a single command to extend what your agents can do.
cartesian
askarzh/epistemator
This skill should be used when the user asks to "decompose a problem", "apply Cartesian method", "break this down systematically", "reduce to first principles", "analyze from the ground up", "apply methodical doubt", or wants to process input through Cartesian Reductionism to decompose complex wholes into clear, distinct parts.
doors
askarzh/epistemator
This skill should be used when the user asks to "classify a decision", "is this a one-way or two-way door", "apply the doors framework", "triage this decision", "how much thinking does this need", "should I decide fast or slow", "apply Bezos decision framework", "Type 1 or Type 2 decision", or wants to determine how much analysis a decision requires before acting.
epistemic
askarzh/epistemator
Multi-framework epistemic analysis — compare, suggest, or pick frameworks
pirsig
askarzh/epistemator
This skill should be used when the user asks to "assess quality", "apply Pirsig's framework", "analyze through Metaphysics of Quality", "evaluate static vs dynamic quality", "examine value conflicts", "apply MoQ", or wants to process input through Pirsig's Metaphysics of Quality to understand value, quality, and the tensions between static patterns and dynamic change.
scholastic
askarzh/epistemator
This skill should be used when the user asks to "analyze an argument", "apply scholastic method", "use quaestio disputata", "examine a thesis", "find objections and replies", "apply Thomistic analysis", or wants to process input through the Modern Scholastic framework of structured disputation.
sixhats
askarzh/epistemator
This skill should be used when the user asks to "use six hats", "apply six thinking hats", "think with different hats", "use De Bono's hats", "separate thinking modes", "look at this from all angles", "consider all perspectives", or wants to process input through Edward de Bono's Six Thinking Hats to systematically examine a topic from multiple cognitive perspectives.