Learning to Question Reality
Unit Brief
This unit is your first encounter with the question that runs beneath all four domains of this course: how do you know what you're actually seeing? Plato and Aristotle ask it from opposite directions — Plato argues that ordinary perception is systematically misleading, Aristotle argues that reality is embedded in particular things if you know how to look. By the end of four weeks, you will have read both, held the tension between them, and applied their frameworks to something real in your life.
This is a Foundation unit. The goal is not to master Greek philosophy — it is to build the perceptual vocabulary and conceptual scaffolding that every later unit depends on. Read slowly. Sit with what's difficult. The discomfort of genuine thinking is not a problem to solve.
"The beginning of wisdom is the discovery of our own ignorance."
Plato · The RepublicReading List
Vocabulary
These are the terms you need before the reading makes full sense. Read through them before you begin Week 1, then return to them as you encounter each term in the text.
Weekly Pacing Schedule
Four weeks, one text per week (with Metaphysics bridging weeks 3–4). Each week has a reading focus, a domain emphasis, and a defined daily rhythm. The Studio Build occupies the final week.
Daily Session Guide
What each session type looks like in practice for this unit. The structure is fixed; the content is specific to Plato and Aristotle.
These texts require a different posture than modern nonfiction. Plato writes in dialogue — you are watching a conversation, not receiving conclusions. Aristotle writes in compressed lecture notes — every sentence is load-bearing. The goal of each reading session is not to finish the pages. It is to encounter the argument.
In practice: Read with something to write with. When you hit a passage you don't understand, mark it and keep going — do not re-read immediately. When you hit a passage that surprises or unsettles you, stop and write one sentence about why. At the end of the session, write one question the reading has opened.
For The Republic specifically: Socrates is not always right. Notice when his arguments feel forced. Plato built in deliberate vulnerabilities — that is part of the method.
Wednesday sessions are execution sessions — not reflection, not reading. You are applying a specific framework to a specific real situation. The task tells you which framework and which situation.
In practice: Pick a situation that is actually live for you right now. Not a hypothetical, not a past situation you've already processed. The closer to a current reality, the more honest the work will be. SP is earned by accuracy — correctly naming the causes, correctly identifying the telos, correctly locating the terms in the right conceptual position.
The most common mistake: Describing the situation instead of analyzing it. Analysis means naming relationships, not narrating events.
Thursday sessions push past the week's skill task into territory that requires connecting ideas across the unit — and eventually across the course. CP rewards this connection. A Thursday response that only uses this week's reading will earn partial CP at best.
In practice for Unit 1.1: Ask yourself whether your Thursday analysis connects to something from your own experience of how systems work, how the future unfolds, or how time reveals things that weren't visible in the moment. You don't have the full systems vocabulary yet — that's fine. The connection doesn't need to be technically precise. It needs to be genuine.
What distinguishes high CP from partial CP: A high CP response names not just what is happening but what the pattern reveals about something larger. It makes the implicit explicit.
Friday is the week's accounting session. Not journaling in the loose sense — analytical accounting. The question is not "how did I feel about the reading?" The question is "what did I actually do this week, and where did the quality of the thinking fall short?"
In practice: Review Wednesday and Thursday's work. Be specific about what was accurate and what wasn't. If you earned partial SP or CP on a task, the Reflection Pathway in Section H will direct you to the RP earn. If you earned full points, write one sentence naming what you are carrying into next week — what question, tension, or unresolved idea you are taking with you.
Skill Application Tasks
Four tasks across four weeks. Each task has a defined SP and CP value and a rationale explaining why those values were assigned. Submit each task when complete and earn your XP.
Reflection Pathway
Complete this pathway if any task earned partial SP or CP, or at the end of the unit regardless of performance. This is not a penalty — it is the unit's most demanding analytical task. The reflection is about the thinking, not the feelings.
- Name the task and the specific moment of breakdown — not "my analysis was shallow" but "in Task 2B, when I got to the chains, I described the policy rather than the structural mechanism that makes the policy stable."
- Identify whether the shortfall was a reading gap (you didn't understand the framework well enough), an observation gap (you didn't look closely enough at the situation), or a connection gap (you didn't push the analysis far enough).
- Write one sentence that does the work the original response didn't do — the sentence that would have earned the fuller score.
- Name what this reveals about how you currently think — not a self-criticism, an accurate description of where your analytical edge currently sits.
Studio Build
Unit Complete
Unit 1.2 opens with a question this unit raised but didn't answer: once you can see the cave, what do you actually do? Plato can name the illusion. The Stoics built the discipline for living inside one while remaining unowned by it. The operating system comes next.

