Every assessed claim, newest source first. Each carries a confidence grade — click a claim to open its topic, click a grade to read the scale.
Grade key — NATO admiralty system
Source reliability
| A | Completely reliable |
| B | Usually reliable |
| C | Fairly reliable |
| D | Not usually reliable |
| E | Unreliable |
| F | Cannot be judged |
Information credibility
| 1 | Confirmed by independent sources |
| 2 | Probably true |
| 3 | Possibly true |
| 4 | Doubtful |
| 5 | Improbable |
| 6 | Cannot be judged |
e.g. B2 = usually-reliable source, probably-true info. A grade is an assessment, not a verdict — it always travels with its source.
Every source the brain holds, newest first. Click any source to read it and follow it back to origin.
The map of what Speirs understands. Each tile opens its assessed claims, sources, hypotheses and a one-click NotebookLM pack.
Each tree starts from a decision or question, breaks into testable hypotheses, and shows the load-bearing assumption plus the graded claims for and against. The reasoning is the product — click a branch to open it.
The questions the brain hasn't closed. Working material for episodes and further intel.