This section identifies the key terms used across disciplines and organizes them by domain, providing a clear map of how each field uses its foundational vocabulary. It also establishes a consistent framework for defining every term so their roles, meanings, and relationships in scientific reasoning are explicit and comparable.

I. Identification
1. Field Name – The formal name assigned to the analytical field or schema entry
2. Word – The specific term being analyzed
3. Part of Speech – The grammatical classification of the word (noun, verb, adjective, etc.)

II. Domain Placement
4. Science Domain – The broad scientific or scholarly domain in which the word is primarily used
5. Domain Field – The specific subfield or discipline within the science domain
6. Field Focus – The primary phenomenon, object, or problem-space the field is concerned with
7. Focus Core – The irreducible conceptual nucleus that defines what the field is fundamentally about

III. Semantic Definition
8. Definition – A precise, domain-respecting statement of the word’s meaning in context

IV. Ontological Classification
9. Ontological Type – The fundamental ontological identity of the word (carrier, state, process, structure, or system)

V. Binary Positioning Matrix
10. B1 — Micro / Macro – The scale at which the concept primarily operates, from localized elements to aggregate systems
11. B1 – Reasoning – The justification for assigning the concept to a micro or macro scale
12. B2 — Discrete / Continuous – Whether the concept is composed of distinct units or varies smoothly across a range
13. B2 – Reasoning – The justification for treating the concept as discrete or continuous
14. B3 — Equilibrium / Non-equilibrium – Whether the concept assumes stable balance or persistent change and flux
15. B3 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as equilibrium-based or non-equilibrium
16. B4 — Open / Closed – Whether the concept exchanges matter, energy, or information with its environment
17. B4 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as open or closed
18. B5 — Deterministic / Stochastic – Whether outcomes are fixed by rules or involve inherent randomness
19. B5 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as deterministic or stochastic
20. B6 — Local / Global – Whether the concept’s effects are confined to a region or extend across an entire system
21. B6 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as local or global
22. B7 — Linear / Nonlinear – Whether changes in the concept produce proportional or disproportionate effects
23. B7 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as linear or nonlinear
24. B8 — Classical / Quantum – Whether the concept is governed by classical approximations or quantum-level formalisms
25. B8 – Reasoning – The justification for classifying the concept as classical or quantum

VI. Integrative Synthesis
26. Full Ontological Chain – A single integrated statement expressing the concept’s ontological type together with all eight binary determinations

Field NameEx. 1Ex. 2Ex. 3Ex. 6Ex. 9Ex. 10Ex. 11Ex. 14Ex. 15
WordPreferenceUtilityEquilibriumIncentiveEquilibriumMechanismOutputAdjustmentExpectations
TreeScience DomainSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial SciencesSocial Sciences
Domain FieldEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomicsEconomics
Field FocusChoice (Microeconomic Foundations)Choice (Microeconomic Foundations)Choice (Microeconomic Foundations)Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms)Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms)Interaction (Markets, Strategy & Mechanisms)Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems)Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems)Aggregation & Dynamics (Macroeconomic Systems)
Focus CoreNANANANANANANANANA
DefinitionAn ordering over alternatives reflecting desirability.A numerical representation of preference strength.A stable condition where no agent gains by changing their choice.A factor that motivates or discourages specific actions.A stable configuration where no agent benefits from unilateral deviation.A structured rule system that maps actions and information into outcomes.Total productive activity generated within an economy.The internal responses that move the system toward a new state.Forward-looking beliefs about future economic conditions.
Part of SpeechNounNounNounNounNounNounNounNounNoun (Plural)
Science Analysis Template1. DomainCategoriesOntological TypeProperty-BearerState / Condition-of-BeingState / Condition-of-BeingRole / Functional-PositionRegime / Mode-of-BehaviorStructure / Pattern-of-RelationsState / Condition-of-BeingProcess / TransformationRepresentation / Model-of-Reality
B1 — Micro / MacroMicroMicroMicroMicroMicroMicroMacroMacroMacro
B1 – ReasoningApplies to one agent’s internal ranking.Utility is defined per agent-option.Stability is defined at the agent-choice level in micro foundations.Incentives act on individual agents’ motivations.Strategic equilibrium is defined among agents but at the choice level.Mechanisms act on individual and multi-agent behavior but are modeled at agent level.Defined only at system-wide scale.Adjustment mechanisms are macro-level responses.Expectations coordinate macro behavior.
B2 — Discrete / ContinuousContinuousContinuousContinuousContinuousContinuousDiscreteContinuousContinuousContinuous
B2 – ReasoningPreferences compare arbitrarily close alternatives.Utility varies smoothly with changes.Equilibria in micro adjust smoothly to small shocks.Incentive strength varies smoothly with payoffs.Stability shifts smoothly with payoffs and beliefs.Mechanisms use discrete rule sets, allocations, or messages.Output changes smoothly over time.Adjustment variables shift gradually.Expectations update continuously with information.
B3 — Equilibrium / Non-equilibriumEquilibriumEquilibriumEquilibriumEquilibriumEquilibriumEquilibriumNon-equilibriumNon-equilibriumNon-equilibrium
B3 – ReasoningFixed ordering at a moment in time.Settled valuation mapped to preferences.Defined as a stable fixed point.Incentives define stable best responses.Defined entirely as a strategic fixed point.Mechanisms define stable mappings once implemented.Output is typically driven by forces away from stability.Adjustment occurs until equilibrium is reached.Expectations shift the system away from static equilibrium assumptions.
B4 — Open / ClosedClosedClosedClosedOpenClosedClosedOpenOpenOpen
B4 – ReasoningNo environmental exchange; purely internal ranking.Utility computed entirely within system bounds.Equilibrium assessed for a closed theoretical system.Incentives depend on external payoffs and environment.Equilibrium is defined inside the game’s closed structure.Mechanisms operate within a sealed rule system.Output depends on trade, flows, external demand.Adjustment processes involve feedback from environment.Expectations depend on external signals.
B5 — Deterministic / StochasticDeterministicDeterministicDeterministicDeterministicDeterministicDeterministicStochasticDeterministicStochastic
B5 – ReasoningGiven preferences, ranking is fixed.Utility values have definite evaluations.Whether a state is an equilibrium is a deterministic fact.Incentives determine direction of behavior precisely.Given payoffs and beliefs, equilibrium is determinate.Mechanisms define exact mappings from inputs to outputs.Output fluctuations include randomness.Adjustment processes follow rule-defined dynamics once conditions are set.Expectation formation explicitly models uncertainty.
B6 — Local / GlobalLocalLocalGlobalLocalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalGlobal
B6 – ReasoningA single agent’s evaluative structure.A per-agent mapping of options to values.Equilibrium in micro is a joint condition spanning all agents.Incentives apply locally to one agent’s payoff.Equilibrium covers all players simultaneously.Mechanism rules govern all agents within the system.Output summarizes the whole economy.Adjustment applies to system-wide variables.Expectations coordinate behavior across the system.
B7 — Linear / NonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinearNonlinear
B7 ReasoningMarginal changes need not change ranking proportionally.Utility curvature creates diminishing sensitivity.Stability conditions often involve nonlinear feedback.Incentive effects amplify or diminish depending on structure.Small payoff shifts produce large changes in best responses.Mechanism outcomes often involve nonlinear incentive effects.Small changes often lead to disproportionate output responses.Adjustment paths involve thresholds and nonlinear dynamics.Expectations amplify nonlinear macro feedback.
B8 — Classical / QuantumClassicalClassicalClassicalClassicalClassicalClassicalClassicalClassicalClassical
B8 – ReasoningAssumes definite, non-superposed preference states.Utility uses classical real numbers.Equilibria defined on classical state space, not quantum.Incentives assume classical state-defined payoffs.Equilibrium defined in classical game theory.Mechanisms operate on classical signals, types, and allocations.Output uses classical continuous aggregates.Adjustment occurs in classical macro dynamics.Expectations assume classical beliefs, not quantum states.
Full Ontological ChainProperty-Bearer → Micro → Continuous → Equilibrium → Closed → Deterministic → Local → Nonlinear → ClassicalState/Condition-of-Being → Micro → Continuous → Equilibrium → Closed → Deterministic → Local → Nonlinear → ClassicalState/Condition-of-Being → Micro → Continuous → Equilibrium → Closed → Deterministic → Global → Nonlinear → ClassicalRole/Functional-Position → Micro → Continuous → Equilibrium → Open → Deterministic → Local → Nonlinear → ClassicalRegime/Mode-of-Behavior → Micro → Continuous → Equilibrium → Closed → Deterministic → Global → Nonlinear → ClassicalStructure/Pattern-of-Relations → Micro → Discrete → Equilibrium → Closed → Deterministic → Global → Nonlinear → ClassicalState/Condition-of-Being → Macro → Continuous → Non-equilibrium → Open → Stochastic → Global → Nonlinear → ClassicalProcess/Transformation → Macro → Continuous → Non-equilibrium → Open → Deterministic → Global → Nonlinear → ClassicalRepresentation/Model-of-Reality → Macro → Continuous → Non-equilibrium → Open → Stochastic → Global → Nonlinear → Classical