---
name: think-contradiction-tension-mapping
description: Produces a both/and polarity map - two interdependent poles, the upside and downside quadrant of each, a greater purpose and a deeper fear, early-warning signs, and action steps - for a chronic tension that should be managed rather than resolved. Use when an organization keeps oscillating destructively between two opposites that are both true and interdependent (centralize versus decentralize, stability versus change, candor versus diplomacy), and treating each swing as a problem to solve is the actual mistake. Not for a dissolvable trade-off and not for a real either/or choice.
license: Apache-2.0
metadata:
  id: thinking-framework-skills.contradiction-tension-mapping
  family: synthesis
  evidence-tier: "C"
  version: 0.1.0
  standard: "0.8"
---
<!-- thinking-framework-skills | https://github.com/product-on-purpose/thinking-framework-skills | Apache-2.0 -->
# Contradiction / Tension Mapping

Some tensions are not problems with a right answer; they are permanent, interdependent pairs of opposites - both true, both necessary - where over-committing to one pole eventually summons the downside of having abandoned the other. Treating such a tension as a problem to solve produces the destructive pendulum: this year centralize to fix the chaos, next year decentralize to fix the bottleneck, repeat. Contradiction / tension mapping refuses that reflex. It names the two interdependent poles, fills the upside and downside quadrant of each, anchors them with a shared **greater purpose** (the why that makes holding both worthwhile) and a **deeper fear** (the loss of getting the downside of both), and finishes with **early-warning signs** of over-leaning into one pole and **action steps** that pull back toward the neglected one before its downside bites. The durable move is its **terminal stance**: it deliberately does not resolve, dissolve, choose, or synthesize the tension - it builds a structure for staying in the productive upper half of both poles over time, oscillating deliberately rather than lurching. The output is a **both/and polarity map**, not prose. The operational tool is Barry Johnson's Polarity Map; this skill implements the de-branded mechanism (see Evidence for attribution).

## When to Use

- A tension is genuinely chronic and interdependent, and the organization keeps oscillating destructively because it treats each swing as a problem to solve (the pendulum: centralize then decentralize then centralize again).
- A real disagreement has been smoothed into a bland compromise that gets the downside of both poles (the false-consensus trap).
- Two camps each defend one pole and treat the other as the enemy, and a clean decision for either side would be a category error (the values clash).
- Each pole genuinely depends on the other - you cannot have all of one with no cost to the other - and the value is in managing the ongoing oscillation, not ending it.

## When NOT to Use

- **Do not run it on a genuinely solvable problem - this is the dominant failure mode.** Not every two-sided issue is a polarity. If there is a right answer, a correct trade-off, or an option that genuinely dominates, a both/and map dignifies a wrong pole, stalls a decision that should be made, and manufactures the appearance of even-handed rigor over a question that did not deserve it. The first step is a diagnosis, and the method only proceeds if the answer is "polarity."
- **Do not use it when the trade-off can be dissolved.** If the conflicting requirements can be separated in time, space, scale, or condition so the tension disappears, that is `think-contradiction-resolution` (declare a contradiction, set an implementation-free Ideal Final Result, and dissolve it). Tension mapping does the opposite by design - it declares the tension permanent and builds a structure to live inside it. The two are complementary endpoints of the same diagnosis: one fires when the trade-off is dissolvable, the other when it is not.
- **Do not use it to choose a single winner among options.** Weighing options and selecting one weighted winner is `think-decision-option-review`. Tension mapping's defining refusal is *not* to choose; reaching for it on a real choice is how it gets cargo-culted into "manage both" as an excuse to never decide.
- **Do not use it as a set of separated content lenses over one object.** Running facts, upside, risk, intuition, alternatives, and process over one thing to get a rounded read is `think-parallel-perspectives-review`. Tension mapping is not lenses on one object; it is a structure for two *interdependent poles of a single tension*, each carrying its own upside, downside, and warning signs.
- **Do not use it to manufacture a tension that avoids a conflict.** Labeling a genuine disagreement a "polarity to manage" can be a diplomatic dodge that protects a weak position from being beaten on the merits - the mirror image of the false-balance trap.
- **Do not leave it as a static diagram.** A map with no early-warning signs and no action steps is just a vocabulary for never deciding anything. The operational additions are what make it a management tool.

## Instructions

When asked to manage a chronic tension, resolve a recurring fight between two camps, or stop a destructive pendulum, follow these steps:

1. **Diagnose: polarity or problem?** First decide whether this is a solvable problem with a right answer (or a dissolvable trade-off, or a real choice) or an unsolvable, interdependent polarity. Test interdependence: would having all of one pole, with no cost to the other, be a loss? If there is a right answer, stop and route it - a dissolvable trade-off to `think-contradiction-resolution`, a real option choice to `think-decision-option-review`. Proceed only if the answer is "polarity."
2. **Name the two poles.** State the pair of interdependent opposites in neutral, both-positive language (centralize / decentralize, stability / change, candor / diplomacy, planning / action). Neither pole is the villain; each is a value the organization legitimately wants.
3. **Name the greater purpose and the deeper fear.** Above the poles, state the shared higher purpose both poles serve - the why that makes holding both worthwhile. Below them, state the deeper fear - the loss the organization suffers if it gets the downside of *both* poles. These anchor the map and give both camps something to own together.
4. **Fill the four quadrants.** For each pole, write its **upside** (the positive results of focusing there) and its **downside** (what goes wrong when you over-focus there to the neglect of the other pole). The downside of each pole is, by design, what the *upside of the other pole* corrects - that interdependence is the engine of the map.
5. **Name the early-warning signs.** For each pole, list the observable, measurable signals that you have over-leaned into it and are sliding into its downside (the leading indicators, ideally early enough to act before the downside bites).
6. **Name the action steps.** For each pole, list the concrete steps that gain or maintain its upside, and that pull back toward the neglected pole when the warnings fire. These are what convert the diagram into a management routine.
7. **Emit the both/and polarity map** per `references/TEMPLATE.md`: the two poles, the greater purpose and deeper fear, the four upside/downside quadrants, the early-warning signs, and the action steps - built to manage the tension over time, never to resolve it.

## Output Format

Use the template in `references/TEMPLATE.md`. The deliverable is the filled both/and polarity map - two interdependent poles, the greater purpose and deeper fear, the four upside/downside quadrants, the per-pole early-warning signs, and the per-pole action steps - not a prose essay. Never collapse the map into a recommendation to pick one pole.

## Quality Checklist

Before finalizing, verify:

- [ ] The diagnosis step was run and the answer was "polarity" - not a solvable problem, not a dissolvable trade-off, not a real choice manufactured into false balance.
- [ ] The two poles are genuinely interdependent (having all of one with no cost to the other would be a loss) and are stated in neutral, both-positive language - neither pole is the villain.
- [ ] A shared greater purpose (top) and a deeper fear of losing both (bottom) are both stated and are genuinely shared, not one camp's slogan.
- [ ] All four quadrants are filled, and each pole's downside is visibly corrected by the other pole's upside (the interdependence shows).
- [ ] Each pole has concrete, observable early-warning signs of sliding into its downside.
- [ ] Each pole has concrete action steps, including how to pull back toward the neglected pole when warnings fire - the map is a management routine, not a static diagram.
- [ ] The output is the both/and polarity map artifact, not prose, and it does not resolve into "pick one pole."
- [ ] No overclaiming: the evidence is tier C and transferred; claim a structure for managing a genuine polarity, not a measured improvement in decisions (see `evidence/dossier.md`).

## Evidence

Tier **C** (governing - conceptually plausible but under-tested). The underlying idea - that some organizational tensions are persistent, interdependent, and better managed as both/and than resolved as either/or - is a real, named, influential position in management research, anchored by Smith and Lewis's dynamic-equilibrium model of organizing (2011), and the strongest adjacent empirical result (Miron-Spektor et al., 2018) validates a Paradox Mindset Inventory and shows a paradox mindset correlates with performance and innovation. But that evidence measures a *mindset* (a disposition), cross-sectionally - **not** the act of filling in a polarity map. The field's own most-cited review (Schad et al., 2016) calls paradox research predominantly qualitative and notes it "generally lacks empirical evidence." The studies that *do* examine the polarity-management procedure itself are the weakest in the set: small-n, no-control quasi-experiments in narrow clinical settings (for example Sorour, 2023, twelve head nurses) whose outcome measures are partly circular - "polarity-map scores improve after polarity-map training." Borrowing the paradox-mindset correlations or the breadth of the paradox literature to lift this to a higher grade would be exactly the laundering this library exists to prevent. So the evidence supports the *idea* of a both/and orientation; it does **not** support the *map as a method* for improving decisions. **Transfer caveat:** all of the evidence is from human subjects (survey respondents and clinical training cohorts); none studies tension mapping performed by or with an AI agent, so the evidence is transferred from human contexts and not validated for AI-augmented use. The skill ships honestly as a structure for managing a genuine polarity, with a load-bearing "do not use it on a solvable problem" wall, never as a measured decision-improver. Full grading, excluded figures, sources, and the distinctness proof: `evidence/dossier.md`.

## Examples

See `references/EXAMPLE.md` for a completed both/and polarity map on a real decision.
