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From skills-for-humanity
Tests whether parts of a product, document, strategy, or brand form a unified whole, surfacing jarring inconsistencies from different contributors. Outputs specific adjustments to align components with the intended identity.
npx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:aesthetic-coherence-checkThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Incoherence is the default product of collaboration without a shared vision. Each part
Surfaces internal contradictions, conflicting requirements, and edge cases in documents, specs, plans, or requirements.
Multi-framework content review with convergent synthesis. Each lens applies a named analytical framework — grounded in published source material, not persona impersonation — to the target content. Parallel dispatch, web research or user-provided references, convergent synthesis, prioritized action list. Triggers: expert panel, expert review, expert audit, panel review, multi-lens review, framework review, content audit, workshop audit, strategy review, get expert feedback, advisory review.
Evaluates existing designs against cognitive science principles using checklists, scoring rubrics, and severity-classified fix recommendations. For design reviews, QA, usability diagnosis, comparing alternatives.
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Incoherence is the default product of collaboration without a shared vision. Each part may be locally defensible — sensible in isolation, reasonable given what that contributor was optimising for — while the whole communicates nothing clearly. A perceptive reader or user feels this before they can name it. This skill makes the incoherence legible so it can be fixed.
Step 1: State the Artefact and Its Intended Identity What is being examined — a product, document, strategy, brand, presentation, process? What identity or effect is it supposed to produce? "Should feel authoritative but approachable" or "Should communicate a single strategic bet" or "Should make a first-time user feel capable in under three minutes." The intended identity is the standard everything else will be measured against.
Step 2: Examine Each Part Break the artefact into its major components. For each: what does it communicate? What does it prioritise implicitly — speed vs depth, confidence vs humility, complexity vs accessibility? What does it assume about the audience or context? Extract these qualities as observations, not evaluations.
Step 3: Compare Parts to Each Other Where do assumptions conflict across parts? A section written for technical readers next to one written for executives. A formal tone in one component, casual in another. A design that prioritises simplicity in navigation but complexity in content. Name the specific conflict, not just that something feels inconsistent.
Step 4: Compare Parts to the Whole Which parts are faithful to the intended identity? Which stray — and in what direction? Is the straying random (different contributors with different instincts) or directional (a competing version of what the thing should be is quietly winning in parts of it)?
Step 5: Identify the Most Jarring Inconsistencies Find 2-3 specific moments where the lack of coherence is most damaging — where a perceptive reader or user would feel something is wrong, even if they can't say why. Prioritise by impact on the intended identity.
Step 6: Recommended Adjustments For each jarring inconsistency: what specific change — to which part, in which direction — would bring it into alignment with the intended identity?
Before proceeding, use the AskUserQuestion tool:
Proceed based on their selection.
Intended Identity: [what the artefact is supposed to be/feel/communicate]
Parts Assessed
| Part | What It Communicates | What It Prioritises | What It Assumes |
|---|---|---|---|
| [component] | [signal it sends] | [implicit value] | [audience/context assumption] |
Inconsistencies
| Inconsistency | What Conflicts | Why It Jars | Recommended Adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|
| [name it precisely] | [the specific conflict] | [effect on the reader/user] | [what to change] |
Overall Coherence Assessment: [unified / partially coherent / incoherent + rationale]
Coherence is not uniformity — contrast and tension can serve a unified vision. The question is whether every element is working toward the same intended identity, even if they take different forms to do it. The most common source of incoherence is not bad judgment but absent shared vision — people optimised locally for different things.
After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/aesthetic-elegance-testing — Test the elegance of the coherent elements/writing-restructure — Restructure incoherent elements/logic-consistency-check — Check logical consistency alongside aesthetic coherence