Scale in Choice determines the level at which an individual decision-maker is represented and the temporal scope over which their optimization unfolds. Because this domain isolates a single agent whose environment does not respond to their actions, the scale must be sharply defined. Too fine a scale obscures the simplicity of the agent’s structure; too broad a scale invites forces—strategic influence or macro adjustments—that do not belong to solitary optimization and would break the logic of the domain.

A well-specified scale clarifies which details matter for the agent’s decision, which elements remain fixed as parameters, and how time should be represented when only one decision-making unit is present. Establishing scale in this way ensures that the analysis remains internally coherent and that the problem does not drift into the terrain of Interaction or Aggregation.
The Scale Framework provides the structure needed to articulate these requirements with precision.


THE SCALE FRAMEWORK

1. Ontological Scale (What exists at this level of analysis?)

At the ontological scale of Choice, the only analytically meaningful unit is a single decision-making agent. This agent is treated as a unified entity whose internal components—psychology, sub-motives, departments, workers, neurons—are not modeled as interacting parts. Likewise, no external agents are modeled as decision-makers whose actions alter the environment. The world at this scale consists of one agent facing a fixed environment.

The environment is real in the sense that it supplies parameters (constraints, available actions, information, payoffs), but it is not an active participant. It does not respond, adapt, or change as a result of the agent’s choices. At this scale, nothing else in the world is recognized as having agency.

The ontology of Choice is therefore composed of:

Nothing else “exists” in the analytic sense.
This is a one-entity world.

2. Resolution of Representation (How finely or coarsely are things described?)

In the domain of Choice, the representation must be fine enough to capture the structure of a single agent’s decision problem, and coarse enough to exclude any detail that would imply the presence or influence of other agents or system-level forces. The model focuses on what the agent sees, evaluates, and chooses from—nothing more.

Only the following details are represented explicitly:

Everything beyond this is abstracted away.
There is no representation of:

The environment is rendered as a set of fixed parameters, not as an object with its own internal dynamics.

Choosing too high a resolution would incorrectly introduce additional agents, strategic channels, or system adjustments.
Choosing too low a resolution would obscure the internal logic of the agent’s choice—preferences, constraints, and available actions.

The correct resolution for this domain is therefore:

This is the resolution at which the problem of Choice makes sense.

3. Temporal Scale (Over what timeframe do processes unfold?)

In the domain of Choice, temporal scale concerns the speed at which a single decision-maker’s evaluations and selections unfold. Because only one agent exists at this level of analysis and no external environment responds to their actions, time functions as an internal dimension of the agent’s problem rather than an arena of interaction or system-level adjustment.

The model represents time only insofar as it shapes the agent’s own decisions:

The temporal scale of Choice must exclude:

Within this domain, time determines:

If time is treated too finely, the model incorrectly implies internal microdynamics or continuous psychological processes that do not belong to this scale.
If treated too coarsely, important tradeoffs across moments—delay, risk, discounting, future constraints—disappear.

The correct temporal scale for Choice is therefore:

This is the speed at which reality moves for a one-agent world.

4. Interpretive Constraints (What conclusions are allowed at this scale?)

At the scale of Choice, the only valid inferences are those that follow from the internal structure of a single decision-maker’s problem. Because no other agents exist at this scale and no system-level variables evolve in response to the agent’s actions, the scope of legitimate conclusions is intentionally narrow. Any inference that relies on influence, coordination, feedback, propagation, or collective behavior lies outside this domain.

Permitted conclusions include statements about:

Forbidden conclusions include statements that imply:

These constraints are not aesthetic—they ensure logical coherence.
At this scale:

Violating these constraints produces category errors—analyses that implicitly rely on Interaction or Aggregation while claiming to occupy the domain of Choice.

The interpretive rule is simple and strict:

Only conclusions that emerge from one agent optimizing within a fixed environment are valid at this scale.

Everything else belongs to another domain.

5. Canonical Scale Statement

The domain of Choice operates at the scale of a single decision-making agent whose environment is fixed and unresponsive to their actions. At this level, representation is limited to the agent’s own preferences, constraints, feasible actions, and information, with no additional detail concerning other agents or system-level variables. Time is modeled only insofar as it structures the agent’s internal sequence of decisions; no temporal adjustments arise from outside the agent. Valid inferences are restricted to conclusions that follow from the agent’s solitary optimization problem, excluding any reasoning that relies on cross-agent influence, institutional structures, or dynamic system behavior. This scale is the lawful operating level of Choice: a one-agent world defined entirely by the structure of its decision problem and insulated from the forces that govern Interaction or Aggregation.


1. Choice has its own scale ladder inside the social sciences.

Across disciplines, each science occupies a band of size, time, and organizational complexity. For Choice, the relevant ladders are:

Choice lives exactly at the “single decision problem of a single agent” rung on all of these.

At this scale, the only object that exists analytically is:

That is the ontological rung of Choice.

2. Scale transitions define the handoffs out of Choice.

Once you know where Choice sits on the ladder, you can specify precise exit conditions—the points where the problem must be handed off to another domain because the scale has changed.

There are three main transition directions:

  1. Downward (into sub-personal detail).
    • If the analysis must explain how the agent forms preferences, processes information, or generates actions via underlying biological or cognitive mechanisms, the scale shifts downward to psychology, neuroscience, or cognitive science.
    • Choice does not model neurons, attention mechanisms, or subconscious processes; it assumes a coherent decision function.
  2. Sideways / upward into Interaction.
    • The moment another agent’s decision must be represented explicitly—because that decision changes payoffs, constraints, or information—the problem leaves Choice.
    • As soon as “what I do depends on what you do” becomes central, the scale has transitioned to Interaction (games, markets, bargaining, institutions).
  3. Upward into Aggregation & Dynamics.
    • If the relevant variables become aggregates or macro-states (e.g., population behavior, systemic risk, macroeconomic conditions), the scale has moved to Aggregation & Dynamics.
    • Individual decision problems can still exist in the background, but they no longer define the level of analysis.

These transitions are scale rules, not stylistic choices.
If you violate them—by talking about strategic responses or macro dynamics while claiming to be in Choice—you are simply in the wrong domain.

3. Choice’s time scale is the agent’s decision horizon, and nothing beyond that.

The general template insists that time scale be treated as precisely as spatial/organizational scale. For Choice, the temporal band is:

Choice does not operate at time scales where:

In short:

4. Choice uses formal tools that are scale-independent but anchored to the single-agent level.

The general template notes that formal sciences (logic, math) are not tied to physical scale but to abstraction scales. Choice leans heavily on these:

These tools are scale-independent math, but in Choice they are anchored to a very specific abstraction scale:

This has consequences:

So Choice is not a formal science, but it is:

5. Choice’s organizational level distinguishes it from both biology and higher social sciences.

The template separates biology and social sciences by organizational level. Choice fits into this hierarchy as follows:

This clarifies:

Choice’s scale is therefore organizationally minimal within the social sciences.

6. The full result: Choice has a sharply defined operational zone in the multi-scale map of science.

With the Scale template applied, Choice is pinned down along four axes:

In the layered atlas of the sciences, this makes Choice: