first-principles
$
npx mdskill add guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills/first-principlesDeconstructs complex problems into fundamental truths to enable innovative solutions for impossible challenges.
- Helps with solving seemingly impossible problems where conventional approaches fail.
- Integrates with no specific tools or APIs, relying on a philosophical methodology.
- Decides recommendations by breaking down issues to core principles and reasoning upward.
- Presents results through structured reasoning to guide strategic decisions and innovation.
SKILL.md
.github/skills/first-principlesView on GitHub ↗
---
name: first-principles
description: "Break down complex problems to their fundamental truths, then reason up from there. Master Aristotle's ancient method modernized by Elon Musk to solve seemingly impossible problems. Use when: **Facing a \"impossible\" problem** where conventional solutions don't work; **Challenging industry assumptions** that everyone accepts as truth; **Pricing or cost analysis** to find dramatic savings (like Musk with batteries); **Product innovation** when iterating on existing solutions isn't enough; **Str..."
license: MIT
metadata:
author: ClawFu
version: 1.0.0
mcp-server: "@clawfu/mcp-skills"
---
# First Principles Thinking
> Break down complex problems to their fundamental truths, then reason up from there. Master Aristotle's ancient method modernized by Elon Musk to solve seemingly impossible problems.
## When to Use This Skill
- **Facing a "impossible" problem** where conventional solutions don't work
- **Challenging industry assumptions** that everyone accepts as truth
- **Pricing or cost analysis** to find dramatic savings (like Musk with batteries)
- **Product innovation** when iterating on existing solutions isn't enough
- **Strategic decisions** where analogies to other companies may mislead
- **Breaking through mental blocks** when you're stuck in conventional thinking
## Methodology Foundation
| Aspect | Details |
|--------|---------|
| **Source** | Aristotle (384-322 BC), modernized by Elon Musk |
| **Expert** | Aristotle called it "the first basis from which a thing is known"; Musk applies it to SpaceX, Tesla, and every venture |
| **Core Principle** | "Boil things down to the most fundamental truths and say, 'What are we sure is true?'... and then reason up from there." - Elon Musk |
---
## What Claude Does vs What You Decide
> "Claude structures the breakdown. You challenge the assumptions."
| Claude handles | You provide |
|---------------|-------------|
| Systematically listing assumptions | Domain expertise to validate/invalidate |
| Breaking down atomic components | Real-world cost/constraint data |
| Applying the physics vs convention test | Judgment on what's truly immutable |
| Structuring the rebuild from fundamentals | Strategic decisions on which path to pursue |
| Generating novel solution frameworks | Feasibility assessment and implementation |
**Remember**: First principles is a thinking tool. Claude accelerates the structure; breakthrough insights come from YOUR willingness to question everything.
---
## What This Skill Does
1. **Deconstructs assumptions** - Identifies what you think is true vs. what IS true
2. **Reveals hidden constraints** - Exposes artificial limitations masquerading as laws
3. **Enables breakthrough solutions** - Creates paths invisible to analogical thinkers
4. **Reduces costs dramatically** - Finds the true floor price of anything
5. **Builds original insights** - Generates conclusions others can't reach by copying
## How to Use
### Challenge Conventional Wisdom
```
Apply First Principles Thinking to challenge this assumption:
[describe the "truth" everyone accepts in your industry]
Break it down to fundamental truths and show me what's actually possible.
```
### Analyze Costs or Pricing
```
Use First Principles to analyze the true cost of:
[product, service, or process]
What are the raw components? What should this actually cost?
```
### Solve an "Impossible" Problem
```
I'm told [problem] is impossible because [reasons].
Apply First Principles to find a path forward.
What fundamental truths apply here? What assumptions can we challenge?
```
## Instructions
When applying First Principles Thinking, follow this systematic process:
### Step 1: Identify the Problem and Current Assumptions
```
## Current State Analysis
**Problem:** [What are you trying to solve?]
**Current "Truth":** [What does everyone believe about this?]
**Analogies in Use:** [How do people currently reason about this?]
- "It's always been done this way"
- "Company X does it like this"
- "Industry standard is..."
**Hidden Assumptions:** (List everything assumed to be true)
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
```
**Key Questions:**
- What do "experts" say is impossible or fixed?
- What have you never questioned about this problem?
- What would a complete outsider find strange about your assumptions?
---
### Step 2: Break Down to Fundamental Truths
```
## First Principles Breakdown
For each assumption, ask: "Is this a LAW OF NATURE or a CONVENTION?"
| Assumption | Type | Evidence |
|------------|------|----------|
| [Assumption 1] | Law / Convention | [Why?] |
| [Assumption 2] | Law / Convention | [Why?] |
| [Assumption 3] | Law / Convention | [Why?] |
**Laws of Nature** (Cannot be changed):
- Physics (gravity, thermodynamics, etc.)
- Mathematics (proven theorems)
- Biology (human needs)
**Conventions** (CAN be changed):
- Industry practices
- "Best practices"
- Historical precedent
- Regulatory (can be challenged)
- Social norms
```
**The Physics Test:**
Ask: "Does the law of physics prevent this?" If no, it's changeable.
**Elon Musk's 3-Step Process:**
1. Identify and define current assumptions
2. Break down the problem into fundamental principles
3. Create new solutions from scratch
---
### Step 3: Find the Atomic Components
```
## Atomic Breakdown
**What is this thing MADE OF at the most basic level?**
Example: Battery Pack
├── Lithium: $X per kg
├── Cobalt: $X per kg
├── Nickel: $X per kg
├── Aluminum: $X per kg
├── Steel: $X per kg
├── Polymers: $X per kg
└── Manufacturing energy: $X
**Raw Material Cost:** $___
**Current Market Price:** $___
**Gap to Explain:** $___
The gap represents: convention, inefficiency, margin, or artificial scarcity
```
**For Non-Physical Problems:**
- What are the atomic ACTIONS required?
- What are the atomic INPUTS needed?
- What are the atomic CONSTRAINTS (true constraints)?
---
### Step 4: Reason Up from Fundamentals
```
## Rebuild from First Principles
Starting ONLY from verified truths, ask:
1. **What is physically possible?**
[Based on laws of nature]
2. **What is the theoretical minimum?**
[Cost, time, resources, steps]
3. **What new combination could work?**
[Ignoring how it's "supposed" to be done]
4. **What would we do if starting from scratch?**
[No legacy constraints]
## New Solution Design
**Fundamental Requirements:**
- [Only TRUE requirements]
**Eliminated "Requirements":**
- [Things assumed necessary but aren't]
**Novel Approach:**
[Description of solution built from first principles]
```
---
### Step 5: Validate and Iterate
```
## Validation Checklist
- [ ] Solution respects actual laws of nature
- [ ] No hidden conventional assumptions snuck back in
- [ ] Can explain WHY each element is necessary
- [ ] Theoretical minimum is understood
- [ ] Gap between current and theoretical is explained
## Implementation Path
**What makes this hard (real obstacles):**
1.
**What makes this SEEM hard (false obstacles):**
1.
**First experiment to validate:**
[Smallest test of the core assumption]
```
---
## Examples
### Example 1: SpaceX Rocket Cost Reduction
**Context:** Elon Musk wanted to buy rockets for Mars mission. Quote: $65 million per rocket.
**Input:**
> "Everyone says rockets cost $65M and that's just what they cost. Is this true? Apply First Principles."
**Output:**
**Current State Analysis:**
| Assumption | Challenge |
|------------|-----------|
| Rockets are expensive | Convention - based on historical pricing |
| Must buy from established vendors | Convention - could manufacture |
| Rockets are single-use | Convention - airplanes aren't single-use |
| Aerospace requires premium pricing | Convention - not physics |
**First Principles Breakdown:**
"What is a rocket made of?"
- Aerospace-grade aluminum
- Titanium
- Copper
- Carbon fiber
- Fuel (kerosene, liquid oxygen)
**Atomic Cost Analysis:**
```
Raw materials for Falcon 9:
├── Aluminum alloys: ~$35,000
├── Titanium: ~$15,000
├── Carbon fiber: ~$20,000
├── Avionics components: ~$100,000
├── Engines (9x Merlin): ~$1M (at scale)
└── Other materials: ~$30,000
Theoretical material cost: ~$1.2M
Industry price: $65M
Gap: 54x markup
```
**Reasoning Up:**
1. **Physics allows:** Rockets can be reusable (planes land and fly again)
2. **Minimum cost:** ~$1.2M in materials + manufacturing + margin = $5-10M possible
3. **Novel approach:**
- Manufacture in-house (eliminate contractor margins)
- Design for reusability (eliminate single-use assumption)
- Vertical integration (control supply chain)
**Result:** Falcon 9 now costs ~$28M to launch, with reusability bringing marginal cost to ~$15M. Other companies still charge $100M+.
**Why This Works:** Musk didn't accept "rockets cost $65M" as a truth. He found it was a convention built on inefficient practices, not physics.
---
### Example 2: Rethinking Employee Training Costs
**Context:** Company spends $2,000 per employee on annual training. CFO says "that's industry standard."
**Input:**
> "We spend $2,000/employee on training. HR says that's normal. Is it? First Principles analysis please."
**Output:**
**Current State Analysis:**
| Assumption | Type |
|------------|------|
| Training must be instructor-led | Convention |
| Must use external vendors | Convention |
| Must be synchronous | Convention |
| Certifications require paid courses | Convention |
| Training = classroom time | Convention |
**Atomic Breakdown - What does training actually require?**
```
Training = Transfer of Knowledge + Skill Practice + Verification
├── Knowledge Transfer
│ ├── Content (can be recorded once)
│ ├── Delivery (can be async/digital)
│ └── Q&A (can be AI-assisted or peer)
│
├── Skill Practice
│ ├── Exercises (can be self-paced)
│ ├── Feedback (can be automated or peer)
│ └── Repetition (individual, no instructor needed)
│
└── Verification
├── Testing (automated)
└── Observation (sampling, not 100%)
```
**Cost Breakdown:**
```
Current $2,000/person:
├── Vendor fees: $800 (40%)
├── Instructor time: $500 (25%)
├── Travel/facilities: $400 (20%)
├── Materials: $200 (10%)
└── Admin overhead: $100 (5%)
First Principles minimum:
├── One-time content creation: $50/person (amortized)
├── Platform/LMS: $30/person/year
├── Peer mentoring time: $100/person
├── Verification tools: $20/person
└── Buffer: $50/person
Theoretical minimum: ~$250/person
```
**Reasoning Up - New Model:**
1. **Create content once:** Record best trainer explaining each topic. Amortize over 5 years.
2. **Async delivery:** Employees learn at their pace, no scheduling costs
3. **AI Q&A:** Claude/GPT handles 80% of questions
4. **Peer practice:** Employees practice together (free)
5. **Automated verification:** Digital assessments, spot-check practical
**New Solution:**
- Year 1: $500/person (content creation investment)
- Year 2+: $250/person (75% reduction maintained)
**Validation:**
- Still transfers knowledge? Yes
- Still builds skills? Yes (peer practice)
- Still verifies? Yes (automated + sampling)
- Respects laws of learning? Yes
---
## Checklists & Templates
### First Principles Analysis Template
```
## First Principles Analysis: [Topic]
### 1. THE ASSUMPTION AUDIT
**What "everyone knows" about this:**
1.
2.
3.
**Source of these beliefs:**
- [ ] Physics/Math (unchangeable)
- [ ] Biology (unchangeable)
- [ ] Regulation (changeable but hard)
- [ ] Industry practice (changeable)
- [ ] Historical precedent (changeable)
- [ ] Someone told me (verify)
### 2. THE ATOMIC BREAKDOWN
**Physical components:**
- Component 1: [cost/quantity]
- Component 2: [cost/quantity]
- ...
**Required actions (minimum):**
1.
2.
3.
**True constraints (laws of nature):**
-
**False constraints (conventions):**
-
### 3. THE REBUILD
**If we started from scratch with only true constraints:**
**Theoretical minimum:** [cost/time/resources]
**Current state:** [cost/time/resources]
**Gap:** [X%]
**Gap explained by:**
- [ ] Inefficiency
- [ ] Margin/profit
- [ ] Convention
- [ ] Lack of innovation
- [ ] True complexity (irreducible)
### 4. THE NEW SOLUTION
**Core insight:**
**New approach:**
**First experiment to test:**
**What could go wrong:**
```
---
### Quick First Principles Checklist
```
## Before Accepting Any "Truth"
□ Is this a law of physics/math/biology?
□ Or is it "how things are done"?
□ Who benefits from this being "true"?
□ What would a complete outsider think?
□ Has anyone ever done it differently?
□ What would this look like if we started fresh?
## The Musk Test
□ Can I explain the atomic components?
□ Do I know the theoretical minimum cost?
□ Is there a 10x gap I can't explain?
□ Am I reasoning by analogy or from fundamentals?
```
---
### Common First Principles Domains
```
## Where to Apply First Principles
### COST REDUCTION
- What are the raw materials?
- What is labor actually required?
- What steps can be eliminated?
### PRODUCT DESIGN
- What does the user fundamentally need?
- What is convention vs. requirement?
- What would this look like in 10 years?
### PROCESS IMPROVEMENT
- What are the required steps (physics)?
- What are the assumed steps (convention)?
- What is the theoretical minimum time?
### PRICING
- What is the cost to deliver?
- What is convention in pricing?
- What would a new entrant charge?
### STRATEGY
- What does the customer fundamentally want?
- What is assumed about competition?
- What constraints are real vs. imagined?
```
---
### Red Flags: When You're NOT Using First Principles
```
## Warning Signs
You're reasoning by ANALOGY (not First Principles) when you say:
- [ ] "Industry standard is..."
- [ ] "Competitors do it this way..."
- [ ] "We've always done it like this..."
- [ ] "Best practice says..."
- [ ] "Experts recommend..."
- [ ] "It's common knowledge that..."
- [ ] "That's just how it works..."
None of these are REASONS. They're appeals to convention.
## The Fix
For each statement above, ask:
"But WHY? What fundamental truth makes this necessary?"
If you can't answer with physics, math, or biology - it's changeable.
```
## Skill Boundaries (Frontier Recognition)
### This skill excels for:
- Cost reduction analysis (finding the "true floor")
- Challenging industry assumptions everyone accepts
- Product innovation beyond incremental improvements
- Strategic decisions where analogies may mislead
- Pricing strategy (understanding what things SHOULD cost)
### This skill is NOT ideal for:
- **Quick decisions** where speed matters more than depth → Use heuristics instead
- **Execution tasks** where the path is already clear → First principles is overkill
- **Emotional/relationship problems** → Not everything reduces to physics
- **Regulatory constraints** that truly can't be changed → Accept and work within
- **Pure creative work** where logic isn't the bottleneck → Use different creative tools
### Quality Checkpoints
Before accepting the analysis, verify:
- [ ] You've genuinely identified the REAL alternatives (not just direct competitors)
- [ ] "Laws of physics" are actually physics, not just hard conventions
- [ ] The atomic cost breakdown uses real market data
- [ ] Novel solution doesn't sneak conventional assumptions back in
- [ ] You have a way to validate the first insight before committing
---
## Iteration Guide
> "First principles is a dialogue, not a one-shot analysis."
### Recommended Iteration Pattern
| Pass | Focus | Questions to Ask |
|------|-------|------------------|
| **1st** | Assumption dump | "List every assumption in this problem" |
| **2nd** | Challenge | "For each, is it physics or convention?" |
| **3rd** | Atomic | "What is this actually made of / what does it actually require?" |
| **4th** | Rebuild | "Starting from only true constraints, what's possible?" |
### Useful Follow-up Prompts
After the first analysis, try:
- "I think [assumption] is actually physics because [reason]. Convince me otherwise."
- "The atomic breakdown is missing [component]. Redo with this included."
- "Everyone accepts [constraint] as given. Push harder on whether it's truly immutable."
- "The 'novel solution' still feels conventional. What would be a 10x different approach?"
---
## Learning Curve
| Usage | What You'll Experience |
|-------|----------------------|
| **1st use** | Structured assumption breakdown, discover the method |
| **3rd use** | You catch yourself reasoning by analogy and stop |
| **10th use** | First principles becomes a reflex when facing "impossible" problems |
**Pro tip**: The biggest gains come when you're willing to look stupid by questioning "obvious" truths. If everyone already knows it's changeable, it's not a first principles insight.
---
## References
- Aristotle. "Posterior Analytics" (~350 BC) - Original first principles concept
- Musk, Elon. Various interviews on SpaceX methodology (2012-present)
- Clear, James. "First Principles: Elon Musk on the Power of Thinking for Yourself"
- Farnam Street. "First Principles: The Building Blocks of True Knowledge"
- Munger, Charlie. "Elementary Worldly Wisdom" - Adjacent mental model thinking
## Related Skills
- [inversion](../inversion/) - Complementary: think backward from failure
- [pre-mortem](../pre-mortem/) - Challenge assumptions about success
- [eisenhower-matrix](../eisenhower-matrix/) - Prioritize insights from first principles analysis
- [six-thinking-hats](../six-thinking-hats/) - Structured multi-perspective analysis
---
## Skill Metadata
- **Mode**: cyborg
```yaml
name: first-principles
category: strategy
subcategory: problem-solving
version: 2.0
author: GUIA
source_expert: Aristotle, Elon Musk
source_work: Posterior Analytics (Aristotle), SpaceX methodology (Musk)
difficulty: intermediate
mode: both # Both = can be structured (Centaur) or exploratory (Cyborg) depending on use
estimated_value: $2,000 strategy consulting session
tags: [problem-solving, innovation, cost-reduction, assumptions, Musk, thinking]
created: 2026-01-25
updated: 2026-01-28
```
---
*This skill is part of the GUIA Premium Marketing Skills Library — the 201 layer that bridges AI basics and technical implementation.*