Resources
This section gathers supporting materials for readers, researchers, and collaborators who are already working with the ideas introduced on this site or in the publications. These materials are not required to understand the project—but they may be useful if you’re staying with it.
PS: The small inconsistencies between the Rosetta Table entries in TSPCI Part 1 publication and those found in these tables simply reflect a tightening of language for conciseness. This is especially for the FEE and TC sections of Face 3 profiles.
Companion materials for published works:
TSPCI, Part 1:
A. Visual Supplements: (click to download high-resolution color image)
B. Analytical Supplements (PDF)
All materials on this page are © Six Climate Pillars Project and are made available for non-commercial educational and research use with attribution. For other uses, please contact us.
Climate Action in Radiology Survey
Status: Analysis in progress
Brief framing text
This project examines how climate concern, professional identity, and institutional coherence interact within radiology training and clinical practice. The survey has closed, and analysis is currently underway.
Rather than treating responses as isolated opinions, the project analyzes how patterns of engagement, hesitation, and articulation recur across participants—revealing consistent symbolic choke points where awareness does not translate into agency.
Purpose
To explore why high levels of climate awareness among radiology clinicians do not consistently translate into professional action. The study focuses on how affective engagement, narrative synthesis, and role expectations interact to stabilize inaction—even among motivated, ethically concerned professionals.
Approach (brief)
The survey was developed within the CLIME Scholars course as an exploratory instrument and analyzed using a layered qualitative approach. Individual responses were examined in full, followed by cross-participant patterning and cohort-level synthesis. Particular attention was given to moments of hesitation, omission, and truncated reflection as meaningful features of professional engagement rather than missing data.
Across the dataset, the same engagement thresholds appear repeatedly—especially around affective labeling and narrative synthesis—producing a coherent, structured picture rather than a collection of idiosyncratic reflections.
Status
Data collection is complete. Individual- and cohort-level analyses are ongoing.
Future dissemination
Findings are being prepared for submission to peer-reviewed medical education journals.
Praxis → Ontology → Containment
Action holds only when it fits the world it enters—and is scaffolded against collapse.
The following workbooks are cited as completed applications of the Triadic Modulation Workbook (TMW). They are included for three reasons: (1) to demonstrate that the praxis produces real-world consequences; (2) to validate that the thesis’ epistemic substrate is calibrated to prevailing social and familial ontologies, making credible exits possible; and (3) to show how symbolic scaffolding can prevent collapse when rupture is unavoidable. All descriptions are anonymized, partial, and narrated solely from the facilitator’s perspective. No participant voices, documents, or identifying materials are shared.
Individual A’s TMW
(Intergenerational elder-care conflict)
Aperture 1 — Praxis Producing Real-World Consequence
A high-risk family conflict involving elder care, safety, autonomy, and accusations of cultural betrayal was navigated to a concrete outcome: a transition to assisted living, followed by stabilization of housing and care arrangements.
Aperture 2 — Calibration to Prevailing Ontology
The workbook operated entirely within existing familial, cultural, and moral grammars rather than attempting to override them. Care, loyalty, independence, and dignity were treated as internally coherent values rather than obstacles to be corrected—allowing an exit that felt legitimate to all parties involved.
Aperture 3 — Preventing Collapse During Rupture
Symbolic scaffolding prevented moral polarization, despair, or escalation during life-threatening rupture. Participants remained held long enough for decisive action to occur without severing relational bonds.
Outcome
The individual involved reported increased safety, satisfaction, and social engagement following the transition.
Individual B’s TMW
(Dyadic estrangement; no participant uptake)
Aperture 1 — Praxis Without Reciprocity
In a dyadic family estrangement where communication had already ceased, the workbook was completed without non-narrating participant uptake or re-engagement.
Aperture 2 — Ontological Validity Without Repair Narratives
The praxis did not assume reconciliation as a normative outcome. It recognized non-engagement as a legitimate condition within the prevailing relational ontology, avoiding false moral urgency or performative closure.
Aperture 3 — Scaffolding Without Outcome Guarantees
Rather than collapsing into self-blame, urgency, or forced resolution, the workbook functioned as an internal stabilizing scaffold—maintaining ethical coherence in the absence of action by others.
Outcome
No reconciliation occurred. Coherence was preserved without escalation, retraumatization, or symbolic distortion typified in past self-stabilizing strategies.
Individual C’s Family Clan TMW
(Multi-generational family system)
Aperture 1 — Long-Horizon Real-World Movement
A multi-generational family system involving over a dozen participants entered a prolonged period of silence following the initial mapping.
Aperture 2 — Ontology-Sensitive System Mapping
Symbolic roles (witnessing, containment, chorus) were mapped without accusation or exposure, respecting generational authority structures and relational taboos already operative in the system.
Aperture 3 — Holding the System Through Stasis
The workbook provided symbolic containment during extended non-communication, preventing premature confrontation, triangulation, or narrative collapse while preserving the possibility of movement.
Outcome
After an extended period, senior family members agreed to professional mediation between estranged parties. No participant content was disclosed to others.
These workbooks are not presented as success stories or templates. They are cited to demonstrate that when symbolic rupture is scaffolded rather than forced, coherence can be preserved long enough for exits that remain credible within the worlds people actually inhabit.