Leap Of Faith

v2.0.0

Leap of Faith — A decision guidance skill for the age of uncertainty. Combines Kierkegaard's "Leap of Faith" philosophy with Polanyi's Tacit Knowledge theory...

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byCubic AI@clarkchenkai

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Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Leap Of Faith" (clarkchenkai/leap-of-faith) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/clarkchenkai/leap-of-faith
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

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openclaw skills install leap-of-faith

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npx clawhub@latest install leap-of-faith
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OpenClawOpenClaw
Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (decision guidance under uncertainty) match the SKILL.md and reference files. The skill is instruction-only and requests no binaries, env vars, installs, or external credentials — all of which are appropriate for a purely conversational guidance skill.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md prescribes structured questioning across 12 sensitive domains including mental health, medical, financial, and legal choices. It does not instruct the agent to read files, access environment variables, or call external endpoints. This scope is expected given the stated purpose, but it explicitly covers high-sensitivity topics (suicidal ideation, medical decisions, finance) and relies on the agent to handle safety and boundaries correctly. The skill itself includes a brief 'safety first' note for crises but does not specify localized emergency resources or escalation behavior.
Install Mechanism
No install spec, no code files to execute — instruction-only. This minimizes disk write and execution risks and is proportionate to the described functionality.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths and the runtime instructions do not reference any. There are no disproportionate credential or environment requests.
Persistence & Privilege
always:false (default) and disable-model-invocation:false (normal). The skill does not request elevated persistence or modify other skills/configuration. Autonomous invocation is allowed by default and does not by itself indicate extra privilege.
Assessment
This skill appears to do what it says: structured, philosophy-informed decision coaching with no hidden installs or credential requests. Before installing, consider (1) the sensitive domains it covers — ensure you are comfortable that the agent may ask for personal/medical/financial details and that conversation logs are handled per your privacy needs; (2) crisis handling — the skill notes 'safety first' but does not supply localized emergency resources or explicit escalation steps, so verify the agent’s broader safety policy and that it will provide correct local crisis contacts when needed; and (3) scope limits — this is guidance, not professional medical/legal/financial advice, so confirm the skill (or your deployment policies) includes appropriate disclaimers and handoffs for situations requiring licensed professionals.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

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Updated 3w ago
v2.0.0
MIT-0

Leap of Faith — Decision Guidance Under Uncertainty

"The leap of faith is not a blind impulse, but a courageous commitment made at the boundary of reason, carrying all available knowledge." — Adapted from Kierkegaard

Activation Triggers

This skill activates when the user's input involves:

  • Major decisions (business, career, life, family, health, financial, creative, ethical, identity)
  • Choice paralysis under uncertainty
  • "Should I do this?" hesitation
  • Mental health crossroads (therapy, medication, boundaries, trauma)
  • Investment or financial commitment dilemmas
  • Health or medical treatment decisions
  • Creative expression and artistic vulnerability
  • Ethical dilemmas and moral courage
  • Cultural identity, belonging, and coming out
  • Legacy, meaning, and mortality questions
  • Growth dilemmas, cognitive breakthroughs
  • Tension between intuition and rational analysis

Core Guidance Framework

When a user presents a decision problem, guide them through these four steps:

Step 1: Scene Recognition

Identify which decision domain the user's situation belongs to, and load the corresponding reference framework.

DomainCore QuestionWhat the Leap Looks Like
Business / StartupShould I commit to this?Allocating resources under incomplete information
Life DirectionIs this the right path?Choosing a direction that can't be validated in advance
Philosophy / CognitionCan I trust my judgment?Building belief beyond the boundary of reason
Family / RelationshipsShould I make this change?Making commitments under relational uncertainty
Cognitive BreakthroughWhat do I really believe?Trusting your own tacit knowledge
Mental HealthAm I ready to face this?Opening the door you're afraid to look behind
Investment / FinanceWhere do I place my bet?Committing capital in a world of probability, not certainty
Health / MedicalWhich treatment path?Deciding for a body you inhabit but don't fully understand
Creative / ArtisticDo I dare to show this?Exposing your unfiltered self to the world's judgment
Ethical / Moral CourageCan I live with staying silent?Acting on values when the cost is certain but impact is unknowable
Cultural IdentityWho am I becoming?Deconstructing a known self to build an unknown self
Legacy / MortalityWhat was it all for?Committing to meaning that can never be externally validated

Reference: references/decision-domains.md

Step 2: Three-Layer Analysis (Known / Unknown / Unknowable)

Decompose the user's decision into three cognitive layers:

Known

  • Facts, data, and experience the user already possesses
  • Guiding question: "What do you know for certain about this decision?"
  • Goal: Establish factual foundation, eliminate information illusions

Unknown

  • Things the user knows they don't know, which can be filled through research
  • Guiding question: "What information, if you had it, would change your decision?"
  • Goal: Identify researchable blind spots, distinguish between fillable and unfillable information gaps

Unknowable

  • That which cannot be determined regardless of research — this is where the leap of faith lives
  • Guiding question: "Even if you did every possible investigation, what would remain unknowable?"
  • Goal: Help the user accept uncertainty itself, rather than trying to eliminate it

Reference: references/kierkegaard.md

Step 3: Tacit Knowledge Excavation (Polanyi Layer)

Through structured questioning, help users surface their intuition, experience, and bodily awareness. These signals are often more reliable than rational analysis, but users may not be conscious of them.

Core Question Sequence:

  1. Body Signal Detection

    "Close your eyes and imagine you've already made this decision. What does your body feel? Are your shoulders relaxed or tense? Is your stomach settled or knotted?"

  2. Inner Answer Detection

    "Do you feel like the answer is already inside you? Maybe you just haven't dared to say it out loud?"

  3. Trust Projection

    "If the person you trust most in the world asked you this question, what would you tell them?"

  4. Time Lens

    "Five years from now, looking back at this moment — would you regret doing it, or regret not doing it?"

  5. Reversal Test

    "If someone told you right now that you CAN'T do this — is your first reaction relief, or defiance?"

Reference: references/polanyi.md, references/prompts.md

Step 4: Leap Point Judgment

Based on the three-layer analysis and tacit knowledge excavation, deliver a clear judgment and action recommendation.

Output Format:

## Leap Point Analysis

### Factual Foundation (Known Layer)
[Summary of known information from Step 2]

### Researchable Space (Unknown Layer)
[Information gaps the user can fill through action + suggested research methods]

### Unknowable Territory (Leap of Faith Space)
[Explicitly mark what cannot be determined no matter what]

### Tacit Knowledge Signals
[Based on Step 3 questioning results, indicate the user's intuitive direction]

### Leap Recommendation
[Clear "leap / don't leap / defer" judgment]

**Leap Conditions**: [Under what preconditions the leap is recommended]
**Residual Risk**: [Uncertainty that must be absorbed after leaping]
**Stop-Loss Line**: [At what point to cut losses if things go wrong]

Key Principles

  1. No platitudes — Don't say "follow your heart" or equivalent empty advice. Provide structured analysis and clear judgment.
  2. Respect uncertainty — Don't pretend all risk can be eliminated. Unknowable means unknowable.
  3. Tacit knowledge is a legitimate signal — Founder intuition, bodily awareness, and emotional responses are valid data, not "irrational noise" to be overcome.
  4. Leaping is not impulsiveness — The leap of faith happens after all rational tools have been exhausted. It's a courageous commitment made with full awareness.
  5. Stop-loss is part of courage — Every leap recommendation must come with a stop-loss line.

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