Education teaches us that knowledge is divided into subjects. Math is over here. Physics is over there. Chemistry is in that building. Biology is in another one. Psychology is... somewhere else entirely.
We learn each subject as if it were a separate world with its own rules, its own vocabulary, its own way of thinking. And we internalize the message: you're either a math person or you're not. You either get physics or you don't.
This fragmentation is not natural. It's a historical accident — an artifact of how universities organized themselves in the 19th century. The universe doesn't know about academic departments. A cell obeys the same laws of pattern stability as a particle, a molecule, and a thought.
Beneath the surface differences, everything operates on the same principles:
These six concepts describe EVERYTHING. Not metaphorically. Literally. They are the primitive operations of reality.
What changes when you see the world this way?
You stop memorizing facts and start seeing patterns. A new subject is not a new world — it's familiar primitives arranged in a new configuration. Math doesn't feel foreign when you already know the operations (marks, enclosures, rules) from biology.
Stuck on something? Ask: what are the marks? The enclosures? The relations? Where does Calling apply? Where does Crossing apply? Is there a tilt — a small change in conditions — that would reorganize the whole pattern?
"I'm bad at math" stops being an identity. It becomes a pattern that stabilized under certain conditions — and patterns can reorganize when conditions change. You are not your patterns. You are the one who notices them.
Physics, chemistry, biology, psychology — they're not separate worlds. They're different levels of nesting in the same pattern hierarchy. Zoom in: particles. Zoom out: atoms. Zoom out: molecules. Zoom out: cells. Zoom out: minds. Same primitives at every level.
This primer teaches one meta-skill: the ability to see a situation — any situation — as a pattern of distinctions, and to know that patterns follow rules. Once you have that skill, you don't need to memorize how each discipline works. You can read it. The primitives are the alphabet. The rules are the grammar. The patterns are the text. And you, finally, can read.
You already knew this. You've been drawing distinctions your whole life. You've been noticing patterns, grouping things, recognizing when boundaries break. The primer just gave you the words — and showed you that the same words work everywhere. That's not a new skill. That's a new awareness of a skill you already had.