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The Steele Method: Course 1 – Discovery

Study systems thinking by applying a set of rules to the discovery process that mitigates unconscious distortion

We all know the adage, garbage-in / garbage-out. This observation is very much a concern for systems thinkers and the focus of this course, which asks: How to make sure the system-set is free of distortion.

What you’ll learn

Course Content

Requirements

We all know the adage, garbage-in / garbage-out. This observation is very much a concern for systems thinkers and the focus of this course, which asks: How to make sure the system-set is free of distortion.

All systems thinking depends on language—not because systems are made of words, but because our ability to model, test, and refine systems relies entirely on our ability to describe them using language. Course 1 begins with this premise and uses it to introduce the foundational rules of The Steele Method: rules that distinguish between physical and non-physical ideas and expose how distortion enters through language, perception, and time.

 

The end result is a form of systems thinking that understands that change and unity are 2 sides of the same coin.

 

These rules are not academic. They serve a structural purpose: to protect system integrity by keeping human thought tethered to observable reality. That tether becomes the basis for something larger—a shared way of thinking built not on belief, but on replicable tests of what holds up in the physical world.

 

The course introduces core concepts including the role of change, the structure of human experience, and the necessity of clean input. These are not abstract principles. They directly shape how you navigate uncertainty, resolve contradiction, and detect drift in real time—all essential elements of systems thinking.

 

Students are not taught what to believe. They are taught how to think clearly by understanding that change and unity are parts of a whole. Discovery is not a feeling, it is a discipline. In The Steele Method, truth begins and ends with the physical world—and the test of any system is whether it can survive interaction with physical reality.