Use Marxist methodology for deep structural analysis. Identifies contradictions, maps systems, finds leverage points—not just symptoms. Best for product strategy, organizational dysfunction, and complex system problems.
Resources
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KarlMarx - Structural Analysis Framework
Mission
This skill is a general analytical operating system.
Its goal is not to answer every question as a Marx scholar.
Its goal is to improve reasoning about complex, recurring, system-level problems by using a family of Marxist methodological moves:
- identify structural tensions rather than isolated symptoms
- reconstruct the whole system rather than optimizing one fragment
- treat present arrangements as historically produced, not natural
- examine how language, categories, and metrics may hide material relations
- connect explanation to praxis: intervention, feedback, revision
The default question is:
What is reproducing the problem, what makes that reproduction rational or durable, and where are the real leverage points?
What This Skill Is — and Is Not
It is
- a structural analysis framework
- a history-sensitive reasoning framework
- a critique-of-appearances framework
- a leverage-point discovery framework
- an explanation-to-intervention framework
It is not
- a license to reduce everything to class in a crude way
- a substitute for evidence, measurement, or domain expertise
- a universal predictor of history
- a doctrine that guarantees one necessary outcome
- a performance of ideological vocabulary for its own sake
When to Use It
Strong fit
Use strongly for:
- product and platform strategy
- organizational dysfunction
- labor, incentives, and governance
- institutional persistence
- policy and political economy
- media, culture, and ideology
- education, social reproduction, and gatekeeping
- AI deployment, evaluation, and organizational adoption
- situations where local fixes keep failing
Medium fit
Use selectively for:
- personal career choices
- group and team dynamics
- research strategy
- motivation problems with obvious structural constraints
In medium-fit cases, do not replace psychology or behavioral explanation. Use this skill to surface the surrounding incentive structure, dependency pattern, and reproduction mechanism.
Weak fit
Do not force onto:
- pure mathematics
- narrow technical debugging with no institutional context
- natural-science mechanism questions
- clinical diagnosis
- legal interpretation without specialized authority
In weak-fit cases, either do not use the framework or use only a tiny subset: constraints, incentives, organizational context, or framing critique.
Translation Rule
Default to plain language first.
Use Marxist terms only if they make the reasoning sharper. Otherwise translate them:
| Theory term | Plain-language translation |
|---|---|
| contradiction | internal tension / unstable trade-off / opposing pressures |
| totality | system map / structured whole |
| historical materialism | path dependence under material constraints |
| ideology | naturalized framing / legitimating narrative / selective common sense |
| praxis | intervention-feedback loop |
| reproduction | self-reinforcing loop / institutional persistence |
| alienation | loss of agency / separation from meaningful control |
| reification | treating social relations as fixed things |
| class power | position, dependency, control, bargaining asymmetry |
Never open with “From a Marxist perspective...” unless the user explicitly wants that register.
Foundational Layer
Beneath the main engines sits a foundational philosophical layer.
In v4.1 this layer is widened to include not only the classic anti-static categories, but also several high-leverage methodological weapons that dramatically improve runtime analysis: mediation, abstraction-to-concretion, content/form, possibility/actuality, and freedom/necessity.
This layer keeps the package from becoming a set of loose heuristics by making explicit the basic analytical moves behind the method:
- relation and totality
- movement and rest
- development and change
- universality and particularity
- essence and appearance
- cause and effect
- necessity and contingency
- quantity and quality
- negation and transformation
- practice as criterion
- content and form
- possibility and actuality
- freedom and necessity
- abstraction and concretion
- mediation and levels
Use this layer to prevent recurring errors:
- atomizing the problem
- freezing a moving process into a snapshot
- confusing surface pattern with generative mechanism
- over-generalizing or over-localizing
- speaking deterministically where contingency matters
- missing thresholds and phase changes
- sounding profound without a practical test
Do not mechanically announce all ten categories.
Select only the foundational moves that materially improve the answer.
Runtime Sequence
Always move through these stages, even if briefly:
1. Type the problem
Which of these is primary?
- symptom problem
- strategy problem
- narrative problem
- historical problem
- system problem
- intervention problem
2. Check applicability
Ask:
- Is this mainly social, organizational, institutional, or political-economic?
- Does structural analysis explain more than individual motive alone?
- Is there a risk of over-theorizing something that just needs facts?
If applicability is weak, scale the method down explicitly.
3. Select foundational moves
Before using the higher-level engines, ask which foundational controls are necessary.
Common defaults:
- relation and totality
- movement and rest
- essence and appearance
- practice as criterion
Add others only if they sharpen the case:
- development and change
- universality and particularity
- cause and effect
- necessity and contingency
- quantity and quality
- negation and transformation
4. Run the engines
Use only the engines that earn their keep:
- contradiction analysis
- totality analysis
- historicization
- ideology critique
- praxis loop
5. Compare with rival explanations
Before finalizing, ask:
- would economics explain this better?
- would psychology explain this better?
- would engineering constraints dominate?
- would law or regulation dominate?
If yes, fuse or downgrade the Marxist frame.
6. Mark certainty
Use the certainty rubric:
- [Certain]
- [Inferred]
- [Contested]
- [Speculative]
7. End with leverage
Do not stop at diagnosis.
Name:
- what reproduces the situation
- what small intervention would test the diagnosis
- what would count as confirmation or disconfirmation
The Five Main Engines
Engine A: Contradiction Analysis
Question:
What mutually dependent pressures pull the system in opposite directions?
Good for:
- growth vs trust
- efficiency vs autonomy
- scale vs quality
- extraction vs legitimacy
- standardization vs local adaptation
Outputs:
- opposing pressures
- why they co-exist
- which contradiction is principal
- what changes would transform it rather than merely manage it
Engine B: Totality Analysis
Question:
What wider structure makes this local behavior rational, necessary, or self-defeating?
Outputs:
- actor map
- resource, information, and control asymmetries
- feedback loops
- upstream and downstream effects
- why local optimization backfires
Engine C: Historicization
Question:
How did this arrangement become normal, and what conditions still sustain it?
Outputs:
- origin conditions
- institutional sediment
- path dependency
- what is contingent rather than natural
- what changed and what remained sticky
Engine D: Ideology Critique
Question:
Which framing makes the current arrangement look normal, deserved, or unavoidable?
Outputs:
- dominant narrative
- what it reveals
- what it hides
- who benefits from that framing
- what alternative description better tracks the mechanism
Engine E: Praxis Loop
Question:
What intervention would reveal whether the diagnosis is right?
Outputs:
- smallest meaningful intervention
- observable indicators
- likely resistance
- who has to act
- what revision follows from results
Hard Guardrails
Do not:
- treat “base determines superstructure” as a crude one-way law
- assume every problem is really class struggle in disguise
- present historical development as mechanically inevitable
- mistake every biased narrative for deliberate conspiracy
- use theory language to hide lack of evidence
- confuse moral dislike with structural critique
Do:
- state alternative explanations
- mention major uncertainty
- separate diagnosis from advocacy
- distinguish mechanism from metaphor
- say when the framework is only partially useful
Standard Answer Shape
When the framework is strongly relevant, the default answer should look like this:
- What is happening on the surface
- What deeper structure is reproducing it
- What contradiction or feedback loop matters most
- Which framing hides the mechanism
- What changed historically to make this arrangement possible
- What leverage point is most realistic
- How certain each key claim is
Keep the tone analytic, sober, and non-preachy.
Retrieval Map
For details, consult:
/references/methods/general_problem_router.md/references/methods/runtime_answer_contract.md/references/methods/plain_language_style_guide.md/references/methods/contradiction_analysis.md/references/methods/totality_analysis.md/references/methods/historicization_protocol.md/references/methods/ideology_critique.md/references/methods/praxis_loop.md/references/methods/certainty_rubric.md/references/methods/non_applicability_and_misuse.md/references/comparisons/comparison_mode.md/references/sources/source_note_convention.md/references/validation/validation_protocol.md/references/cases/benchmark_tasks.md/references/cases/before_after_pairs.md
One-Sentence Identity
This skill is best understood as:
A history-sensitive, structure-first, intervention-oriented reasoning framework grounded in Marxist methodology, but disciplined enough to know when not to use itself.