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Jordan Rubin's avatar

Good post. But I feel your Alice grows obviously more intelligent as she advances in Kegan stage, despite the claim that intelligence does not cause Kegan advancement. Here is Claude depicting Alice 3 as intelligently as you depicted Alice 5:

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alice walks into the postmortem having already war-gamed the social topology. she knows the eng director respects “systems thinking,” so she’s prepared a framing that distributes fault across capacity planning, client team communication, and monitoring—a causal graph where her review approval is one node among many, weighted low.

she lets bob speak first. she’s modeled that he’ll deflect defensively, which will slightly irritate the room and make her measured response look better by contrast. she doesn’t plan to throw him under the bus—that would backfire socially—but she positions herself as “the one trying to fix the system” rather than “the one who approved the change.”

when she speaks, she pre-empts the obvious attack surface: “i approved the config change, and in retrospect the TTL interaction with their load pattern wasn’t something our review checklist surfaced. that’s a process gap we should close.” she’s taking exactly enough responsibility to appear accountable while framing the failure as systemic.

she reads the room continuously. when the director leans forward at “process gap,” she elaborates there. when a peer frowns at blame-shifting, she softens with “bob and i were both working with incomplete information.”

by the end, she’s authored a narrative where she’s the reasonable actor in an unreasonable system. no one leaves thinking “alice screwed up.” several people leave thinking “alice handled that well.”

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Natalie Monbiot's avatar

A foundational essay that clarifies how humans must adapt to the inherently nebulous nature of AI.

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