Defining the Thought Hexahedron: The Cyclical Framework of Intelligence in the Thought Operating System —Kakushin Structural Theory | Fourth of the Six Foundational Pillars

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

This paper defines the Thought Hexahedron, one of the Six Foundational Pillars in the philosophical framework of Kakushin Structural Theory. The Thought Hexahedron is a structural model of thought generation, composed of seven components—FQ (Fundamental Question), CQ (Curiosity), PQ (Poetic Quality), AQ (Alignment & Articulation), the Perfectional Plane, SQ (Structural Quotient), and the Return Axis—that together form a self-circulating cognitive system. As an internal framework of the Thought Operating System, it demonstrates how thought functions not merely as static logic or knowledge, but as a dynamic, recursive structure. This paper explores its complementary relationship with Mindflight Cognition (a model of discontinuous cognitive leaps), and illustrates its real-world application through a case study on a hot dog business concept. Ultimately, the Thought Hexahedron offers a redefinition of thought as something that “rotates” and deepens—transforming it into a designable model of cyclical intelligence.

Article activity feed