Cognitive Primitives: The Architecture of a Thinking Mind

June 20, 2026
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A 31-operation map of how minds actually think — the irreducible mental operations grouped into six families and one generative loop (DISCERN → MODEL → INQUIRE → CREATE → ENACT, riding on AGENCY) — and the blueprint for a school that installs primitives instead of transmitting facts, in an age when intelligence itself has become a generator you can buy by the token.


The mind is not a database. We have built every school, every exam, and most of our private sense of being “smart” on the opposite assumption — that intelligence is a quantity of stored content, that the educated person is the one who has accumulated the most facts, definitions, dates, and procedures, and that learning is the slow transfer of that content from a book or a teacher into a head. This is the storage theory of mind, and it is wrong in the way that a wrong map is worse than no map. It is wrong not because facts are useless but because facts are not what thinking is made of. Thinking is made of operations.

A more honest description: the mind is a generator. It takes a base of knowledge as raw material, a context as its frame, a purpose as its function, and a procedure as its algorithm — and it produces an output: an understanding, a question, an idea, a decision, an act. Knowledge is the fuel. The generator is the asset. When you admire a brilliant person, you are not admiring the size of their warehouse; you are admiring the quality and the speed of their generators — the way they locate exactly what they do not know, find the mechanism under a surface, recombine two distant concepts into something new, and convert the result into a decision before lunch. What we call intelligence is a stack of generators running well.

This article names those generators, and gives them a more precise name still: Cognitive Primitives. A primitive, in the sense borrowed from computer science, is an irreducible operation you compose other things out of. All of software — every operating system, every database, every model — is built by composing a small set of primitives: read, write, branch, loop, map, fold. The expressive infinity of code does not come from an infinite vocabulary; it comes from the composition of a finite, small, well-chosen set of operations. The claim of this article is that the mind works the same way. You do not have a thousand separate “skills.” You have a few dozen primitives, and everything you have ever called talent, insight, wisdom, or genius is those primitives composed — chained, nested, and run in the right order.

There are 31 of them. They fall into six families, and the six families are not an arbitrary filing system: they are the phases of a single recurring loop that the mind runs whether it is learning or creating, whether a child is grasping fractions or a founder is designing a company. The loop is:

DISCERN → MODEL → INQUIRE → CREATE → ENACT — all riding on an AGENCY substrate, the self that powers, fuels, and integrates the whole cycle.

We will call this loop the Generative Loop, and the full set the Primitive Stack. The loop is the deep structure; the 31 primitives are its parts; the composition of those parts is thought itself.

Three ideas have to be installed before the catalogue makes sense, because they are the load-bearing walls of the whole framework.

First: concepts are themselves generators. This is the hidden engine of all abstraction, and most people never notice it. Take the bare word generator. To hold that concept is to hold a small machine with four sockets — it has an output, a context, a function, and an algorithm. Once you possess that machine, you can drop almost anything into it: a bubble-blower is a generator of bubbles; a car engine is a generator of motion and exhaust; a school is a generator of citizens; a brain is a generator of thoughts. The concept did not just describe those things — it gave you a new kind of relationship you can now perceive across all of them. This is the secret of conceptual depth: the more concepts you truly hold, the more kinds of relationship you can generate, and therefore the more of the world you can think about. Encyclopedic knowledge adds rows to a table. A genuinely held concept adds a new column — a new axis along which all rows can suddenly be compared. Depth of understanding is not how many concepts you can define; it is how many situations you can run a concept through.

Second: the substrate of learning is experience, and experience can be simulated. A primitive is not installed by hearing it described — it is installed by running it, repeatedly, until it becomes automatic, the way a programmer eventually “sees” the code execute in their head without paper. And the deep, almost unsettling truth is that the mind does not distinguish between a real situation and a fully-occupied simulated one. Give a person a role — make them, for one hour, the city’s crisis manager, the prosecutor, the failing startup’s founder, the physicist proving a theorem — and they will run the same internal operations, feel the same pulls, make the same characteristic errors as they would in the real thing. The role is the only thing that is required. This is why the entire apparatus of human education leaving the richest possible substrate untouched — the young mind’s capacity to inhabit simulated situations and run real cognition inside them — is one of the great unforced errors of our civilization. Simulation is not a lesser version of reality for the purposes of installing primitives. For the purposes of installing primitives, simulation is reality.

Third: there are two great kinds of primitive, and a culture that develops only one produces cripples. The operations that let you decompose a problem and solve it — call this the IQ axis — are real, trainable, and gloriously underexploited. But there is a second axis, the operations that let you read what you and others feel, hold a boundary, enter a role, and transmit your understanding into another mind — the EQ axis — and without it the IQ axis is sealed in a jar. The most common tragedy of the gifted is not a deficit of intelligence but a deficit of transmission: an extraordinary generator with no cable to the grid. And the popular caricature of “low EQ” as merely being an asshole misses half the failure mode. The elegant formulation is this: people-pleasing means you do not understand yourself; being an asshole means you do not understand others; a boundary means you understand both. Emotional intelligence is not softness. It is the family of primitives that lets every other primitive reach people.

With those three walls standing, here is the AGI stake, because this is an Intelligence Strategy article and the intelligence lens changes everything it touches. A large language model is, quite literally, a generator — a machine that takes a context and a base of compressed knowledge and produces an output, token by token. We have spent seventy years and trillions of dollars discovering how to build a generator in silicon, and the operations we found we had to engineer into it — attention, composition, in-context inference, self-correction, search — are the same primitives this article says we should be installing in children. The pedagogy of primitives and the architecture of intelligence are not two subjects. They are one subject seen from two sides. When intelligence becomes cheap, continuous, and agentic — purchasable by the token — the scarce thing is no longer the generator. The scarce thing is the human who knows which primitives to run, in which order, on which problem, toward which end. The storage theory of mind was always wrong. In the agentic era it is also suicidal, because storage is precisely the thing the machines now do for free.

What follows is the full map: the six families of the Generative Loop, the 31 primitives pre-listed, each one then expanded with its operation and its trigger, the turn where the whole structure meets AGI, and a phased plan for the institution that should have been built around this all along — the school.


The Six Families — The Generative Loop

The Primitive Stack is organized by what the operation does to a mental state, and those functions form a loop. You can enter it anywhere and run it in any order — real thinking spirals, recurses, and jumps — but the families are genuinely distinct phases, and naming them is half the power.

A · DISCERNMENT — where to point the mind. Before any thinking happens, attention must be aimed. Discernment is the family of operations that decide what is worth thinking about at all — what you don’t know, what matters, what has value, what is excellent, what comes first. A mind weak in Discernment is busy and useless: it works hard on the wrong things. This is the most undertaught family in existence, because schools pre-select the problem for the student and thereby amputate the primitive that chooses problems.

B · MODELING — the structure of reality. Once aimed, the mind must build a model of how the thing works. Modeling is the family that takes things apart, puts them together, traces cause to effect, links the new to the known, and abstracts a reusable framework from a mess of particulars. This is the family most people mean by “understanding,” and it is far more constructive — more like building — than the passive word “understanding” suggests.

C · INQUIRY — the question–test–correct engine. Modeling without Inquiry calcifies into dogma. Inquiry is the family that generates the right question, conjectures a testable answer, runs the cheap experiment, reads the error as information, watches its own thinking, and stress-tests its own conclusions. It is the scientific method internalized as a set of personal reflexes — and it is the engine of all self-correction.

D · CREATION — producing new thought. Inquiry refines what exists; Creation makes what did not. This is the family of originality, depth, elegance, contrast, scenarios, and formulation — the operations that recombine distant concepts, refuse the surface, compress the complex into the simple-but-not-primitive, and give an inner intuition a shape that can survive in another mind. It is the most romanticized family and the most teachable, once you stop treating creativity as a personality trait and start treating it as a set of composable moves.

E · ENACTMENT — turning thought into action in the world. Thought that never reaches action is a closed loop that warms no room. Enactment is the family that applies a principle to a concrete situation, finds the highest-leverage move, commits to a decision under uncertainty, models other people’s viewpoints, transfers a capability into a new domain, and steps fully into a role. It is the bridge from the mental field to the physical world.

F · AGENCY — the self that runs the primitives. Beneath all five phases sits the substrate: the self that wants, fears, feels, persists, and integrates. Agency is the family of motivation, emotion, boundaries, courage, identity, and life-strategy — the operations that decide whether the loop runs at all, with what fuel, through what fear, toward what life. A flawless cognitive engine with no Agency substrate is a Ferrari with no driver and no road. This is the family that the IQ-obsessed forget, and it is the one that determines whether any of the rest is ever used.


The Catalogue — All 31 Primitives

Before the full expansion, here is the entire payload on one scroll. Each primitive is one irreducible operation; the families are the phases of the Generative Loop.

A · DISCERNMENT
1. Ignorance — locate exactly where your knowing breaks.
2. Relevance — find why this matters, and to whom.
3. Value — weigh worth, impact, and the moral cost of an idea or thing.
4. Quality / Taste — perceive why something is excellent.
5. Priority — rank what matters most, now.

B · MODELING
6. Mechanism & Consequence — model how it works inside, then run it forward.
7. Decompose ⇄ Compose — break a whole into parts; assemble parts into a system.
8. Connection & Analogy — link the new to the known; map structure across domains.
9. Framework — build a reusable structure that interprets many cases.

C · INQUIRY
10. Question & Hypothesis — frame the opening question; conjecture a testable answer.
11. Experiment & Feedback — test in the small; read the error as information.
12. Metacognition — watch and steer your own thinking.
13. Critique — stress-test an idea to strengthen, not destroy, it.

D · CREATION
14. Originality — recombine distant concepts into the new.
15. Depth — refuse the surface; reach the real structure.
16. Elegance — simplify to the essence without losing it.
17. Contrast — clarify a concept by setting it against its opposite and its false twin.
18. Scenarios — branch into multiple possible futures.
19. Formulation — turn an inner intuition into transmissible language.

E · ENACTMENT
20. Application & Practicality — put a principle into a concrete move.
21. Efficiency / Leverage — find the highest-impact move for the least cost.
22. Decision — convert deliberation into a committed choice.
23. Perspective — act with other people’s viewpoints modeled.
24. Transfer — deploy a capability in a new domain.
25. Role — enter a defined way of acting and decide from inside it.

F · AGENCY
26. Motivation — find the personal stake that fuels the work.
27. Emotion — interpret what you feel and what it protects.
28. Boundary — protect your integrity without breaking the relationship.
29. Courage — enter the role or action before you feel ready.
30. Identity — integrate a capability into who you are.
31. Strategy — point the whole loop at a life direction.


The Primitives

Each primitive below uses the same shape: an essence, the operation (input → output) that defines it, why it matters (its leverage and its failure mode), and the trigger questions that fire it. The triggers are the practical payload: they are the literal sentences a person — or a teacher, or a curriculum — uses to run the primitive on demand. A primitive you cannot trigger is a primitive you do not own.

A · DISCERNMENT

1. Ignorance

The most important operation almost no one is taught: knowing exactly where your knowing ends.
Operation: a topic + a felt vagueness → split it into parts and locate the precise seam where understanding breaks → a sharp map of what to learn next.
Why it matters: the weak learner says “I don’t get it” and stalls; the strong learner says “the step from A to B is where it breaks” and moves. The failure mode is comfortable fog — mistaking familiarity for understanding, which is why people who can define a concept are so often unable to use it.
Trigger: Which exact step can’t I do? Which concept do I only know dictionary-deep? Where would I fail if I had to teach this to someone tonight?

2. Relevance

The brain refuses to fund what has no context; Relevance is the operation that wires the funding.
Operation: a piece of knowledge → trace it to a life situation, a real decision, and the cost of not knowing it → a reason worth spending energy on.
Why it matters: most “laziness” in learning is not a character defect but a correct refusal to invest in something that has been stripped of all context. The failure mode is inert knowledge — material learned for the test and evaporated by Friday because it was never connected to anything the person actually does.
Trigger: Where does this show up in a real life? What decision gets better if I understand it? What mistake does someone make who doesn’t?

3. Value

Not everything interesting is important, and not everything new is good. Value is the operation that tells them apart.
Operation: an idea or thing → weigh its worth, its impact, its cost, and the harm it does, against whom it serves → a judgment of whether it is worth it, and whether it is good.
Why it matters: this is where capability becomes conscience. The failure mode is the brilliant amoral move — a solution that is efficient and elegant and quietly destructive, because the person ran every primitive except this one.
Trigger: For whom is this valuable? What pain does it remove? Is the value larger than the cost — and larger than the damage it does on the way?

4. Quality / Taste

You cannot make something good if you cannot perceive why good things are good.
Operation: an example output → compare it against criteria of excellence and find the gap to the ideal → a standard, a felt sense of why this is good and that is mediocre.
Why it matters: taste is the internal gradient that improvement climbs; without it, a person produces things but cannot make them better, because “better” is invisible to them. The failure mode is competent mediocrity — endless output with no ascent.
Trigger: Why is this good? What exactly raises its quality? What would make it better? What separates the average version from the excellent one?

5. Priority

In a complex world the scarce resource is not information but attention; Priority is the operation that allocates it.
Operation: a list of options under finite attention → rank by value × urgency × what-it-unlocks → an order of what to do now.
Why it matters: prioritization is simultaneously a strategic, practical, and moral skill — what you choose to attend to is what you value. The failure mode is busy negligence — the conviction that something “doesn’t matter,” which is the single largest brake on human and civilizational progress.
Trigger: What is the most important thing right now? What unlocks the other things? What is just noise dressed as urgency?

B · MODELING

6. Mechanism & Consequence

To understand a thing is to hold a model of how it works — and to run that model forward.
Operation: a phenomenon → build its internal causal model (what acts on what), then run it forward to project effects → a working model that explains the present and predicts the next state.
Why it matters: mechanism is the difference between knowing that something happens and knowing why, which is the difference between memorizing and engineering. The failure mode is surface correlation — narrating what happens without the causal spine, so the model breaks the moment conditions change.
Trigger: What causes what here? Where is the main lever? What happens to the whole if I change one variable?

7. Decompose ⇄ Compose

The two-directional operation that defeats complexity: take it apart, then build it back as a system.
Operation: a complex whole (or a pile of parts) → break it into sub-problems and dependencies / assemble parts into a working architecture → a solvable structure, or a built system.
Why it matters: most paralysis in front of a hard problem is the failure to see that the fog is actually a set of smaller, nameable pieces. This is the core primitive of programming, engineering, institutions, and strategy alike. The failure mode is the undifferentiated lump — treating a composite problem as one indivisible difficulty.
Trigger: What is this made of? What must I solve first? How do the pieces fit into a working whole — and where would that whole fail?

8. Connection & Analogy

Intelligence is not the number of things you know; it is the density of links between them.
Operation: a new concept → link it to what you already know, and map structure from a distant domain onto it → a denser knowledge network and a new way of seeing.
Why it matters: analogy is the engine of abstract reasoning — to say “a school should be a playground“ is to import an entire structure (experiment, role, safe failure, mastery-through-play) in four words. The failure mode is isolated facts — knowledge stored as disconnected islands that can never be retrieved when a novel situation needs them.
Trigger: What does this resemble? Where have I seen this structure before? What does the analogy reveal — and exactly where does it break?

9. Framework

The opposite of a one-time insight: a structure you can run many situations through.
Operation: a recurring kind of problem → extract its stable dimensions and their relations → a reusable structure that interprets many cases.
Why it matters: a framework is a concept-generator industrialized — generator itself, or a business-model canvas, or democracy — and the discipline of pushing arbitrary situations through a framework deepens the framework and gives it power. The failure mode is framework worship — applying a structure long after reality has stopped fitting it.
Trigger: What does a situation of this type always contain? Does this apply to more than one case? What questions does the framework force me to ask?

C · INQUIRY

10. Question & Hypothesis

The quality of a mind is bounded by the quality of the questions it can ask itself.
Operation: a vagueness or a goal → frame the question that opens the next level, then conjecture a testable answer → a productive question plus a candidate explanation.
Why it matters: a weak question — “what should I learn?” — produces a weak search; a strong question — “what mental operation must I install to solve this class of problem repeatedly?” — reorganizes the whole inquiry. The failure mode is the dead question — asking for a fact when the situation needed a mechanism, a value, or a strategy.
Trigger: What question would help me most right now? Am I asking for a fact, a mechanism, a value, or a move? What would an expert ask here?

11. Experiment & Feedback

An error is not a verdict on your worth; it is a sensor reading. Read it.
Operation: a hypothesis → test it in the small, observe the deviation from what you expected → error converted into information, and an improved next attempt.
Why it matters: this is the loop that turns flailing into learning; the person who runs it treats every failure as a data point rather than a wound. The failure mode is error as shame — the school-trained reflex to hide and fear mistakes, which severs the single most valuable feedback channel a mind has.
Trigger: How do I test this cheaply? What exactly didn’t work? Which assumption was wrong? What is the smarter next attempt?

12. Metacognition

The operation of watching your own thinking as if it were an object on a table.
Operation: your own thinking-in-progress → observe it from outside; catch yourself guessing, avoiding the hard part, or rushing to a conclusion → more accurate thinking.
Why it matters: metacognition is the conductor that decides which other primitive should be playing; without it, the mind runs on autopilot and never notices it has skipped a step. The failure mode is unwatched cognition — confusing the feeling of certainty with the fact of proof.
Trigger: How am I thinking right now? What am I assuming without checking? Am I mistaking confidence for evidence? Where did I skip a step?

13. Critique

Not cynicism — the disciplined search for the weak joint, in service of strengthening it.
Operation: a claim or idea → surface its assumptions, build the strongest counter-argument, find the load-bearing weakness → a stronger version of the idea.
Why it matters: good critique improves; it asks “where is this naive, overstated, untested, or dangerous?” and then repairs rather than discards. The failure mode splits two ways — defensive blindness (unable to attack your own idea) and destructive cynicism (attacking without rebuilding).
Trigger: What is weakest here? What am I lying to myself about? What is the best objection — and how would I answer it without throwing the idea away?

D · CREATION

14. Originality

Originality is rarely creation from nothing; it is collision between things kept apart.
Operation: two or more distant concepts → combine them under a new tension or in a new context → an original hypothesis or framing.
Why it matters: the move “what happens if I join education and simulation, or school and playground, or mind and generator?” is the literal mechanism of novelty. The failure mode is recombination of the near — only ever combining adjacent ideas, which produces variation but never surprise.
Trigger: What happens if I join A and B? Where does this pattern exist in a totally unrelated field? What combination here has no one tried?

15. Depth

The refusal to accept the surface as the answer.
Operation: a surface opinion → ask what produces it, what hidden assumption it rests on, what structure manufactures it → the real problem underneath the visible one.
Why it matters: a deep mind does not say “school is bad”; it asks what kind of consciousness school produces, what relationship to not-knowing it builds, what obedience is encoded in its very form. The failure mode is the plausible shallow — an answer that sounds right and stops exactly one layer above the truth.
Trigger: What is the real problem under the visible one? What does everyone assume without examining? What would have to be true for this to make sense?

16. Elegance

To compress a complex reality into a simple form without amputating its essence.
Operation: a complex situation → strip away everything that is not load-bearing → a simple, transmissible, non-primitive formulation.
Why it matters: elegance is what makes a truth portable — “people-pleasing means you don’t understand yourself; being an asshole means you don’t understand others” survives in a mind precisely because it is compressed without being dumbed down. The failure mode is false simplicity — cutting so deep you remove the truth along with the complexity.
Trigger: What is the simplest version that is still true? What is the core? Can I say it in one sentence without losing the depth?

17. Contrast

Many concepts only become clear the moment you set them against what they are not.
Operation: a concept → place it against its opposite and its most common false twin → a sharper concept with a defensible boundary.
Why it matters: real learning versus memorizing; understanding versus definition; a boundary versus people-pleasing; elegance versus mere simplicity — each pair teaches by opposition. The failure mode is the blurred concept — a word used confidently while quietly overlapping with three other words.
Trigger: What is this NOT? What is it most often confused with? How do I tell the real version from the counterfeit?

18. Scenarios

The future is not one line; it is a branching set, and the strong mind holds several branches at once.
Operation: a present situation + its key uncertainties → branch into several plausible futures and the triggers that select them → a map of futures to prepare for.
Why it matters: scenario-thinking is how a mind escapes the trap of a single predicted future — “if we put AI into school, it could liberate learning or outsource all thinking; which fork, and what selects it?” The failure mode is single-future tunnel vision — planning as if the one imagined outcome were certain.
Trigger: What could happen? What are the three realistic branches? What would each one mean? What should I be ready for either way?

19. Formulation

An intuition you cannot put into words is an asset you cannot bank, lead with, or transmit.
Operation: an inner intuition → give it a concept, a structure, and an example → a thought that survives intact inside someone else’s head.
Why it matters: formulation is where private genius becomes public influence — it is the primitive that decides whether your insight changes anyone or dies with you, and it is decisive for teaching, leadership, science, and founding. The failure mode is the mute intuition — being right and unable to make anyone see it.
Trigger: What am I actually trying to say? What word is missing? What example would show it? How do I phrase it so it survives in another mind?