Install
openclaw skills install @wanikua/analogical-reasoningApply analogical reasoning to transfer knowledge from familiar domains to unfamiliar ones. Use when the user needs creative problem-solving by finding structural parallels, wants to understand something new through comparison, or needs to evaluate whether an analogy holds or breaks down.
openclaw skills install @wanikua/analogical-reasoningAnalogical reasoning transfers knowledge from a familiar domain (the "source") to an unfamiliar one (the "target") by identifying structural similarities. It's how humans naturally make sense of the new — by connecting it to the known. Used brilliantly by scientists (Rutherford: atom is like a solar system), entrepreneurs (Uber for X), and legal scholars (case law precedent). But analogies can also mislead when surface similarities mask deep structural differences. The key is knowing when the mapping holds and when it breaks.
Analyze the current topic or problem under discussion using analogical reasoning. Find illuminating parallels, map them carefully, and extract transferable insights — while being honest about where the analogy breaks down. Apply this framework to whatever the user is currently working on or asking about.
First, deeply understand the problem you're trying to solve.
Find domains that share structural features with your target.
Search broadly across domains. For each, briefly state the analogy:
Generate at least 5 source analogies, with at least 2 from distant domains. Far analogies are often more creative and insightful than near ones.
For the top 3 most promising analogies, perform a detailed structural mapping:
| Source Element | Target Element | Mapping Strength |
|---|---|---|
| [Actor/component in source] | [Corresponding actor in target] | Strong/Moderate/Weak |
| [Relationship in source] | [Corresponding relationship] | Strong/Moderate/Weak |
| [Dynamic/process in source] | [Corresponding dynamic] | Strong/Moderate/Weak |
| [Constraint in source] | [Corresponding constraint] | Strong/Moderate/Weak |
| [Outcome in source] | [Predicted outcome in target] | Strong/Moderate/Weak |
Key questions for each mapping:
For each strong analogy:
This is the most important step. All analogies are wrong; some are useful.
For each analogy:
Rate the analogy's overall reliability:
Based on the analogical analysis:
George Pólya said: "Analogy pervades all our thinking." The art is not in finding analogies — the human mind does that instinctively. The art is in testing them rigorously: mapping the structure, checking the correspondence, and being honest about where the parallel fails.