Install
openclaw skills install counterfactual-thinkingApply counterfactual thinking to explore "what if" alternative histories and understand causation. Use when the user needs to analyze past decisions, understand what truly caused an outcome, learn from mistakes without hindsight bias, or evaluate whether different choices would have led to better results.
openclaw skills install counterfactual-thinkingCounterfactual thinking asks "What if things had been different?" It constructs alternative histories — scenarios where a key variable changed — to understand causation, learn from the past, and make better decisions going forward. Used by historians (what if D-Day had failed?), safety engineers (accident root cause analysis), strategists (what if we'd entered the market earlier?), and psychologists (regret and learning). It separates what was necessary from what was contingent, revealing where interventions would have mattered most.
Analyze the current topic or situation under discussion using counterfactual thinking. Explore alternative histories to illuminate causation and extract lessons. Apply this framework to whatever the user is currently working on or asking about.
Before exploring alternatives, nail down what actually happened:
For the top 3-5 pivotal moments, construct detailed alternative histories:
Repeat for Counterfactuals 2-5.
This dual exercise prevents both complacency ("things went fine") and excessive regret ("we should have done everything differently").
The counterfactuals reveal what actually caused the outcome:
A critical check — separate what we know now from what was knowable then:
Counterfactual thinking is not about regret or wishful thinking — it's a rigorous tool for understanding causation. By asking "what would have happened if..." we discover what actually mattered, what was luck, and what lessons transfer to the future. History happened once; counterfactuals let us run the simulation again.