Review: Summary of the Findings

Matrix showing Functional Names

An overview of the Primary Hierarchies is shown here including the influences from the Root Hierarchy. This layout is unusual in that the hierarchy is horizontal from left to right (rather than vertical as shown in the next Topic). In this way, PH-levels with the same level number are aligned vertically.

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  PH•L1 PH•L2 PH•L3 PH•L4 PH•L5 PH•L6 PH•L7
Action-PH1 Make Movements Follow Procedures Use
Techniques
Deploy Responses Devise Interventions Determine
Choices
Allow Spontaneity
Inquiry-PH2 Collect
Data
Define Concepts Arrange
Comparisons
Agree
Measurements
Construct
Relations
Justify
Judgements
Channel Wonder
Change-PH3 Introduce Variations Specify Alterations Determine Improvement Ensure Sustenance Organise Adaptation Generate Representations Envisage Transformation
Experience
-PH4
Enable Sensations Focus Images Contain Emotions Embrace
Ideas
Develop Intuitions Integrate Identifications Open the Imagination
Communic'n
-PH5
Produce Stimuli Establish Signals Interpret Significance Appreciate Symbols Agree
Names
Assign
Meaning
Sustain
Openness
Purpose
-PH6
Pursue Tactical Objectives Set
Strategic Objectives
Install Internal Priorities Own
Principal Objects
Share
Social Values
Adhere to
Value Systems
Activate
Ultimate Values
Willingness
-PH7
Keep
Trying
Question
Beliefs
Enable
Seeing
Welcome
Participation
Tolerate
Risk
Value
Learning
Extend
Trust
  all depend on all depend on all depend on all depend on all depend on all depend on all depend on
Functional Aspect RL1-
Action
RL2-
Inquiry
RL3-
Change
RL4-
Experience
RL5-
Commun'n
RL6-
Purpose
RL7-
Willingness

All in All—Once Removed

If we start from any Level in a Primary Hierarchy, it is evident that it activates all Root Levels and therefore all Primary Hierarchy Levels. That is why it can be so hard to focus on the particular "necessary" Root Level during the exposition.

As an example, the diagram below examines L3 in PH• that is emanated by RLn.
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Note that:

  1. Each Level in a Primary Hierarchy corresponds to a necessary Root Level, and
  2. Use of that Root Level means using elements from its emanated Primary Hierarchy, and
  3. Each emanated Primary Hierarchy has 7 Levels, each with a necessary input from the 7 Root Levels, therefore:
  4. Each Level in a Primary Hierarchy draws on all 7Root Levels «once removed».

Exploration

Initially posted: 2-Aug-2013. Amended: 11-Apr-2014. Last updated: 11-Sep-2023.