Behind every "this is just how it works"
there is a structure waiting to be found.
Most product problems are not method problems.
They are level problems.
There is a moment with any method
when something stops being magic.
A problem that seemed to require intuition
suddenly reveals a structure.
A mechanism. A pattern.
What looked like talent becomes technology.
What looked like intuition becomes a repeatable move.
For us, that moment came through TRIZ —
a discipline built on a single claim: every unsolvable problem
contains a contradiction, and contradictions have structure.
That structure can be found.
The question that started everything
The maps of individual methods exist.
Each describes its own boundaries — from the inside.
Cynefin classifies situations. Wardley maps value chains. Every framework knows where it stops working. None of them shows what works where the others stop.
The field has hundreds of methods.
But no topology of where they actually work.
The map revealed something unexpected.
Methods do not simply work or fail.
They produce three structurally different outcomes —
and the difference between them is not degree. It is kind.
The method reaches the right level. Energy converts into progress toward the function. This is the normal case.
The method produces visible results. The team feels progress. The system does not move. The problem remains — invisible, accumulating.
Applied at the wrong system level, the method strengthens exactly what it was meant to resolve. More effort produces more damage.
Not missing entries in a catalog.
Areas the field has not yet learned to work with.
What lies there is still unknown.
The zone around architectural contradictions.
TRIZ resolves contradictions.
But some contradictions should not be resolved.
They drive the system.
The difference is not degree — it is kind.
TRIZ treats every contradiction as an enemy to eliminate.
CDSA classifies first: productive, dissipative, or destructive.
The action depends on the type.
"Who has described this from the outside?"
Applied one level deeper.
CDSA grew from this observation. Not as a new framework invented to fill a gap — as the continuation of the same investigation.
A parallel line of investigation now concerns trialogue as a configuration that makes positional distinctions operational.
StratoAtlas began as a personal investigation by Roman Kir
and continues as an open research dialogue.
The work is
not finished.
These questions are open.
Some of them may be yours.
Your team applies the right methods — but the system does not move.
Progress is visible. Outcomes remain unchanged.
The real problem seems to sit at the architectural level — and no current method reaches it.
Navigate 47 methodologies across system levels and action types. Find where your current approach reaches — and where it stops.
→System levels, action types, CDSA, and the theoretical foundations the map is built on.
→The investigation is open. If one of those questions is yours — you're already part of it.
→