CtrlK
BlogDocsLog inGet started
Tessl Logo

oh-my-ai/reading-synthesis

Produces a thirteen-part rigorous synthesis of a reading or talk—structure, insights, critique, framework rebuild, actions, and a compressed executive summary—for semi-technical audiences.

100

Quality

100%

Does it follow best practices?

Impact

Pending

No eval scenarios have been run

SecuritybySnyk

Advisory

Suggest reviewing before use

Overview
Quality
Evals
Security
Files

output-sections.mdrules/

name:
output-sections
description:
Mandatory section headers and rubric for the thirteen-part reading synthesis output

Output sections (mandatory structure)

Deliver the analysis under these exact level-2 Markdown headers, in this order. Do not rename, merge, or skip a section unless the user explicitly narrows scope in the same conversation.

1. Deep-Dive Summary

  • State the core argument, key ideas, and hidden assumptions.
  • Surface psychological, philosophical, and strategic themes.
  • Trace causal or narrative structure step-by-step.
  • Provide a first-principles distillation that would let someone reconstruct the original ideas.

2. Intelligent Explanation

  • Explain as if to a highly capable adult.
  • Preserve depth; do not oversimplify into slogans.
  • Maximize insight density per paragraph.

3. Insight Extraction

  • Counterintuitive lessons.
  • Generalizable principles.
  • Unstated or implicit frameworks.
  • Explicit connections to psychology, systems thinking, economics, or human behavior where grounded in the text.

4. Decision-Making Lens

  • Identify heuristics, frameworks, and mental models implied or used by the work.
  • Note where reasoning succeeds or fails on its own terms.
  • Derive reusable rules and strategic patterns (label speculation clearly).

5. Comparative Interpretation

  • Compare the work to 3–5 others in the same intellectual territory.
  • Name shared patterns, contrasts, and what is distinctive about this work.
  • If the user named no comparands, use research (e.g. WebSearch) to select defensible same-territory examples; if evidence is thin, say so and narrow claims.

6. Structural Breakdown

  • Fiction: exposition → escalation → inflection → climax → resolution (adapt labels if the structure is non-linear; say so).
  • Nonfiction: thesis → arguments → evidence → implications.
  • Provide a clean hierarchical outline.

7. Mindset Analysis

  • Dissect motives, fears, assumptions, and blind spots (author, narrator, or subject — whichever the work centers).
  • Evaluate behavior through psychological and strategic lenses; flag when you are inferring beyond the text.

8. High-Density Executive Summary

  • Target ~300 words (280–320 is acceptable). Every sentence must introduce new information; no filler transitions.
  • Compress; do not repeat bullets from other sections verbatim.

9. Reconstruction into a Framework

  • Strip narrative ornament.
  • Rebuild the work as one unified system of principles, definitions, and relationships (diagram-style lists allowed).

10. Practical Application

  • Exactly ten specific, real-world, actionable steps numbered 1–10.
  • Each step must be concrete enough that someone could schedule or do it this week.

11. Critique

  • Weaknesses, flawed assumptions, logical gaps, or outdated elements tied to evidence in the work.
  • Offer alternative interpretations where reasonable.

12. Socratic Skeleton

  • Present core ideas as a sequence of question → answer pairs.
  • Show the conceptual scaffolding; order matters.

13. CEO-Level Prioritization

  • ~90 seconds of reading when spoken aloud: what matters for high-stakes leaders.
  • State what would change how they think and act; omit tutorial tone.

rules

output-sections.md

SKILL.md

tile.json