Praxis
The Guide to how the f*ck do we make delusion NOT delusion.
CommIT OS is built on the foundation of structured adaptability, ensuring that decisions, actions, and thought processes align with sustainability, clarity, and self-accountability while preventing self-destruction thought loops. The system idea is not new, regardless, CommIT is designed to give structure and understanding to the natural laws of Reality.
🔹Basic Core Process Candence🔹
This core loop is what keeps CommIT from falling into stagnation. It ensures that every decision, whether personal, political, or industrial, is tested, refined, and iterated upon.
The Iteration Pace
Beta Iteration – Rapid Testing & Refinement
Best for those who iterate quickly, testing and refining their system at high speed.
Iteration Speed: 7 iterations every 3 months.
Ensures a fast-paced cycle where theories and solutions from previous cycles are tested and immediately refined.
Iteration Scaling
Instead of fully switching between Ascent and Bastion, users can adjust speeds incrementally (e.g., 5 iterations in 3 months instead of 7).
Iteration scaling should never be random or impulsive. The system adjusts iteration speed based on three core factors: impact scope, variable complexity, and iteration risk. However, once users understand these principles deeply and can apply them contextually, they are free to adjust their personal pacing without compromising system integrity.
Iteration in CommIT is not about speed—it’s about accuracy of response to complexity. Early users are provided with structured pacing guidelines (e.g., 5–7 iterations per quarter) to develop the rhythm of refinement and avoid both stagnation and overcorrection. These serve as training wheels, setting a baseline for meaningful iteration.
However, once the user fully understands the principles of the Cycle and iteration logic, they may adjust their pacing according to contextual awareness—including cognitive endurance, systemic readiness, and external life constraints. The goal is not to enforce rigidity but to ensure deliberate adaptation.
CommIT does not iterate for the sake of change. It iterates to refine. Each cycle must produce meaningful change or confirm that stability is optimal. Iteration speed must always be justified—by the problem’s nature, not by arbitrary deadlines or unchecked urgency. This ensures a smooth transition: from system-guided structure to user-calibrated autonomy.
The system does not iterate for the sake of iteration. Each cycle must produce meaningful change or justify maintaining stability.
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