Visualization Techniques: Mapping Divination Systems
BY NICOLE LAU
"A picture is worth a thousand words"βand in Dynamic Divination Modeling Theory, a well-designed visualization is worth a thousand data points. The human brain processes visual information 60,000 times faster than text. Complex systems with 15 variables, 5 feedback loops, and 3 scenarios become instantly comprehensible when visualized properly.
This article provides a complete visual toolkit for DDMTβ12 visualization techniques optimized for divination questions and system dynamics.
Core Visualization Principles
Principle 1: Match Visualization to Question
β’ Comparison β Bar chart, Radar chart
β’ Trend β Line chart, Area chart
β’ Relationship β Network diagram, Causal loops
β’ Distribution β Histogram, Box plot
β’ Flow β Sankey diagram, Stock-flow
β’ Hierarchy β Tree diagram, Mind map
Principle 2: DDMT Color Conventions
β’ Green: Positive, growth, virtuous cycles
β’ Red: Negative, decline, vicious cycles
β’ Blue: Neutral, balancing, stable
β’ Orange: Warning, threshold approaching
β’ Purple: Spiritual, consciousness
β’ Grey: Uncertainty, unknown
12 Essential Visualizations
1. Variable Polarity Bar Chart
Purpose: Show which variables are supportive vs. challenging
Design: Green bars (positive) extend up, red bars (negative) extend down from zero line
Use: Initial reading assessment, comparing readings
2. Stock-Flow Trajectory
Purpose: Show resource changes over time
Design: Line chart with critical threshold (dashed), confidence interval (shaded), color zones (green/orange/red)
Use: Resource planning, crisis prediction, intervention timing
3. Causal Loop Network
Purpose: Map circular causality and feedback loops
Design: Nodes (variables), arrows (+/- polarity), loop highlighting (R+/R-/B)
Use: Complex systems, identifying leverage points
4. Scenario Radar Chart
Purpose: Compare scenarios across dimensions
Design: 6-8 axes radiating from center, polygon per scenario, overlap shows similarity
Use: Multi-dimensional decisions, showing trade-offs
5. Sankey Flow Diagram
Purpose: Show resource flows between domains
Design: Ribbons connecting nodes, width = flow amount, color = resource type
Use: Resource allocation, identifying waste
6. Timeline with Inflection Points
Purpose: Show past-present-future trajectory
Design: Horizontal timeline, events as circles, decision points as stars, branching paths
Use: Long-term planning, scenario divergence
7. Heat Map
Purpose: Show variable intensity over time
Design: Grid (rows=variables, columns=time), color-coded cells (dark green to dark red)
Use: Tracking many variables compactly
8. Probability Distribution
Purpose: Show range of outcomes from Monte Carlo
Design: Histogram with bell curve, mean/median lines, confidence interval shading
Use: Quantifying uncertainty, risk assessment
9. Mind Map
Purpose: Organize multi-system insights
Design: Central question, branches per system, sub-branches for insights, convergence connections
Use: Multi-system readings, identifying convergence
10. Matrix Grid
Purpose: Compare scenarios across criteria
Design: Rows=scenarios, columns=criteria, color-coded scores, totals
Use: Structured decisions, weighted criteria
11. Convergence Venn Diagram
Purpose: Show system overlap and divergence
Design: 3 circles (Tarot/I Ching/Astrology), center = convergence zone (bright green)
Use: Assessing convergence visually, communicating confidence
12. Dashboard (All-in-One)
Purpose: Combine multiple visualizations
Design: 4 quadrants (bar chart, line chart, network, radar), header (question/convergence), footer (decision/actions)
Use: Complex decisions, presenting to others, documentation
Best Practices
1. Start Simple, Add Complexity
Begin with bar chart, add line chart if needed, then network diagram. Don't start with dashboard.
2. Use Consistent Visual Language
Same colors, scales, fonts across all visualizations creates coherence.
3. Annotate Liberally
Every chart needs title, axis labels, unusual data point annotations. Assume viewer has no context.
4. Test with Others
Show to someone unfamiliar. If they can't understand in 30 seconds, redesign.
5. Iterate
First version is never perfect. Create, review, refine. Save iterations (V1, V2, V3).
Example: Complete Visualization Set
Question: Should I accept VP offer at startup?
Visualization 1 - Bar Chart: 10 variables, 7 positive (green), 3 negative (red), average +4.2
Visualization 2 - Line Chart: Energy stock depletes from 6/10 to 2/10 in 8 weeks (crosses orange threshold Month 2, red threshold Month 3)
Visualization 3 - Network: 3 loops identified, burnout spiral (R-) currently dominant, leverage point = rest
Visualization 4 - Radar: Scenario A (accept now) strong on Financial/Purpose but weak on Health/Timing. Scenario B (wait 18mo) balanced across all dimensions.
Visualization 5 - Dashboard: All four visualizations combined, header shows 100% convergence on "NOT NOW", footer shows decision "Decline offer, wait 18 months"
Result: Visual analysis makes decision obvious. All charts point to same conclusion.
Key Learnings
1. Visualization is thinking, not just presentation
Creating diagrams forces clarity. The act of visualizing is analytical.
2. Different questions need different visualizations
Match tool to question type. Bar for comparison, line for trends, network for relationships.
3. Color is information, not decoration
Green/red/blue encode meaning. Consistent use enables instant pattern recognition.
4. Uncertainty must be visible
Confidence intervals, probability cones, transparency show divination is probabilistic.
5. Dashboards enable holistic understanding
Single chart shows one aspect. Dashboard shows complete system.
Visualization transforms DDMT from abstract to concrete, from data to insight, from confusion to clarity. This is how you map divination systems visually.
Related Articles
Organizational Development Γ Mystical Modeling: Business Applications
Complete formal integration of organizational development and mystical modeling with seven bijective correspondences:...
Read More β
Behavioral Economics Γ Dynamic Divination: Biases and Corrections
Complete formal integration of behavioral economics and divination with seven cognitive bias mappings and debiasing p...
Read More β
Complexity Science Γ Esoteric Traditions: Unified Framework
Complete formal integration of complexity science and esoteric traditions with five bijective correspondences: (1) Em...
Read More β
Cybernetics Γ Mysticism: Feedback and Self-Regulation
Complete formal integration of cybernetics and mysticism with five bijective correspondences: (1) Sensor β Awareness ...
Read More β
Game Theory Γ Divination: Strategic Decision Modeling
Complete formal integration of game theory and divination with four bijective correspondences: (1) Players β Spread P...
Read More β
Control Theory Γ Astrology: Steering Life Systems
Complete formal integration of control theory and astrology with rigorous mathematical mappings: Four bijective corre...
Read More β