WFGY/ProblemMap/Inverse_Atlas/figures/README.md
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🖼️ Figure Notes

The visual companion layer for the current Inverse Atlas MVP

This page explains the role of the current core figures used in the Inverse Atlas project.

These figures are not decoration.

They are the visual compression layer of the current MVP.
They help make the framework easier to understand, easier to teach, and easier to discuss.

At the current stage, the figure set performs five important jobs:

  • establish the public visual identity of Inverse Atlas
  • make the governance shift easier to see
  • make the runtime order easier to follow
  • clarify the difference between default design and inverse design
  • explain how Inverse Atlas fits inside the broader atlas family

This page exists so the visual layer can be read as a coherent system rather than a pile of image files.


🔎 Core Entry Links


📦 Current Figure Assets

The current Inverse Atlas public figure layer uses five core figures:

  1. Main Hero
  2. Order Shift
  3. Design Contrast
  4. Governance Map
  5. Family Positioning

Together, these five figures form the official first visual layer of the current MVP.

They should be understood as the public visual companion set for the current Inverse Atlas release.


🧭 The Shortest Reading Order

If someone is new to the project and only wants the cleanest visual reading path, use this order:

  1. Main Hero
  2. Order Shift
  3. Design Contrast
  4. Governance Map
  5. Family Positioning

This order works well because it moves from:

  • first contact and identity
  • to conceptual contrast
  • to design contrast
  • to governance structure
  • to family-level positioning

In simple terms:

  • first feel the project
  • then see the shift
  • then understand the design difference
  • then understand the runtime logic
  • then understand where it fits

That is the cleanest beginner sequence.


🌟 Main Hero

Open Main Hero

This figure is the visual entry point of the current release.

Its job is not to explain every part of the methodology.
Its job is to establish public identity, gravity, and first-contact presence.

A strong hero figure matters because Inverse Atlas is not only a folder of artifacts.
It is also a named methodology line, and the project needs one image that can hold that role.

Best use

Use this figure when you need a first-contact visual.

Good for

  • README opening section
  • project landing pages
  • release announcements
  • first-contact previews
  • visual anchors for public discussion

Main takeaway

This figure gives Inverse Atlas a recognizable public face.


⚖️ Order Shift

Open Order Shift

This figure is the fastest conceptual contrast figure in the set.

Its job is to show the core shift between:

  • default answer-first generation
  • legitimacy-first governed generation

This figure is not mainly about system detail.
It is about contrast.

It helps readers understand the deepest move in the framework:

generation is not a default right
generation is an authorized act

Best use

Use this figure when you want to explain the basic intuition of Inverse Atlas as quickly as possible.

Good for

  • README pages
  • short presentations
  • social posts
  • first-contact explanations
  • overview slides

Main takeaway

This is the figure that most quickly shows why Inverse Atlas is not just another prompt trick.


🧱 Design Contrast

Open Design Contrast

This figure explains the difference between default AI design pressure and inverse-governed design pressure.

Its role is to make one important thing easier to see:

Inverse Atlas is not simply a stricter tone.
It is a different design logic.

This figure is especially useful because many readers still misclassify the project too early.
Without a design contrast figure, they may think they are looking at:

  • a prompt pack
  • a cautious wrapper
  • a style adjustment layer

This figure helps stop that misunderstanding.

Best use

Use this figure when you want to explain why the framework should be read as a governance design rather than only as a runtime trick.

Good for

  • README theory sections
  • packaging explanations
  • product positioning discussions
  • anti-misclassification sections
  • “what this is not” explanations

Main takeaway

This figure helps the reader distinguish between surface caution and structural governance design.


🗺️ Governance Map

Open Governance Map

This figure shows the operating flow of the Inverse Atlas runtime logic.

Its job is to make the internal governance sequence visually legible.

That includes the current core structure around:

  • problem constitution
  • world alignment
  • collapse or route estimate
  • neighboring-cut review
  • resolution authorization
  • repair legality
  • public emission control

It also connects the runtime flow to the legal output states.

This figure matters because runtime logic can sound abstract in plain text.
A strong governance map makes the framework feel like an actual operating order rather than a pile of vocabulary.

Best use

Use this figure when you want to explain how Inverse Atlas works internally.

Good for

  • runtime-related pages
  • paper explanation sections
  • technical walkthroughs
  • artifact onboarding
  • structure explanations

Main takeaway

This is the figure that turns the idea into a readable operating process.


🌉 Family Positioning

Open Family Positioning

This figure is the family-level positioning figure.

Its job is to show that Troubleshooting Atlas and Inverse Atlas are not duplicates.

Instead, they belong to different layers of the broader atlas family:

  • Troubleshooting Atlas is route-first
  • Inverse Atlas is legitimacy-first

This figure is extremely important because it prevents one of the most common misunderstandings:

that Inverse Atlas is merely a softer or stricter version of the forward atlas

It is not.

It is a different layer with a different question.

Best use

Use this figure when you want to explain how Inverse Atlas relates to Troubleshooting Atlas and why both lines are needed.

Good for

  • dual-layer positioning pages
  • Twin Atlas pages
  • family-level architecture explanations
  • bridge prefaces
  • README family-positioning sections

Main takeaway

This is the figure that shows why two atlas lines are needed.


📝 What Each Figure Contributes in One Line

If you want the shortest possible memory aid, use this:

That is the fastest correct summary of the current visual layer.


📄 How These Figures Relate to the Paper

The figures and the paper should be understood as companions.

The paper provides:

  • the formal framing
  • the conceptual definitions
  • the runtime logic
  • the dual-layer explanation
  • the evaluation direction

The figures provide:

  • visual compression
  • faster intuition
  • clearer onboarding
  • better structural memory
  • easier communication of the same ideas

So the figures are not secondary decoration for the paper.

They are the visual expression of the same MVP framework.

If you are reading the paper, the figures help the architecture click faster.
If you are seeing the figures first, the paper helps stabilize what the visuals actually mean.


🤝 How These Figures Relate to the Runtime Artifacts

The figure set also has a direct relation to the runtime layer.

The runtime artifacts provide the operating surface:

  • runtime law
  • demo behavior
  • evaluator judgment
  • case pressure

The figures provide the visual explanation of that surface.

A simple way to remember it is:

  • runtime files make the system act
  • figures make the system visible

That is why the figure layer matters even for readers who mainly care about text artifacts.


🌌 How These Figures Relate to the Larger Atlas Family

These figures belong to Inverse Atlas first.
But they also matter for the broader family.

Main Hero

Helps establish Inverse Atlas as a real public methodology line.

Order Shift

Helps establish why a legitimacy-first layer is needed at all.

Design Contrast

Helps clarify that Inverse Atlas is not just a style adjustment.

Governance Map

Helps show that Inverse Atlas has internal operating logic, not only slogans.

Family Positioning

Helps establish the conceptual basis of the Twin Atlas direction.

This is why the figure layer already has value beyond one folder.

It gives public shape to the inverse side of the atlas family.


If you want the cleanest way to reuse these figures across documentation, use this pattern:

Use Main Hero

when you need first-contact identity

Use Order Shift

when you need a fast conceptual introduction

Use Design Contrast

when you need anti-misclassification support

Use Governance Map

when you need runtime explanation

Use Family Positioning

when you need family-level positioning

This reuse pattern keeps the visual language consistent across pages.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1

Treating the figures as decoration only.

They are structural communication tools, not just illustrations.

Mistake 2

Using Family Positioning before the reader understands the basic contrast.

For many readers, family-level explanation works better after the core shift is already visible.

Mistake 3

Using Governance Map without explaining that the output states are legal modes.

Without that explanation, the figure may look like a generic state chart instead of a governance map.

Mistake 4

Using the figures as if they already prove the full bridge layer is complete.

They help prepare the architecture visually.
They do not by themselves prove that every future layer is already finished.

Mistake 5

Letting technical file names become the main user-facing language everywhere.

The files can keep technical names.
The displayed links and descriptions should stay human-readable.


🌱 If You Only Show Two Figures First

If you must choose only two figures for a new reader, start with:

  1. Main Hero
  2. Order Shift

Why?

Because that pair gives the fastest combination of:

  • public presence
  • conceptual difference

If you have room for a third figure, add:

  1. Governance Map

That three-figure sequence gives the strongest first impression.


📚 Where to Go Next

If you want the operational artifact side, go to:

Runtime Artifacts

If you want the paper companion, go to:

Paper Notes

If you want the conceptual relation between the forward atlas and Inverse Atlas, go to:

Dual-Layer Positioning

If you want the current honesty boundary, go to:

Status and Boundaries

If you want the route-first counterpart, go to:

Problem Map 3.0 Troubleshooting Atlas

If you want the paired family view, go to:

Twin Atlas

If you want the future handoff direction, go to:

Bridge


🌱 Final Note

The current figure set is already enough to function as a real visual companion layer for the Inverse Atlas MVP.

That matters.

It means the project is not only explainable in text, but also communicable in visual form.

At the same time, the figure layer should still be read with the same honesty boundary as the rest of the MVP:

strong enough to teach, explain, and anchor the framework

but not yet a claim that every future architectural layer is already complete.