faq-en

Q: How does the Jo Nagamine’s Maya Logic System (MLS) differ from general Mayan calendar fortune-telling?

A: The critical difference is that MLS is a strategic and logical framework for enhancing the Reproducibility of Action, specifically excluding ‘fortune’ or ‘divination.’ MLS reconstructs ancient wisdom from an engineer’s perspective, offering a tool for analyzing and designing objective action logic, not based on emotion or fate. This allows analysis results to be used as a space for subjective strategic planning.

Q: What are the Five Analytical Layers of MLS, and what is their structural hierarchy?

A: The five analytical layers are a systematic approach that analyzes the energy inherent in an individual ‘from the surface to the depth.’ This structure, based on the flow of Trecena (Energy Flow), includes the analysis of internal conflicts and supporting energy dynamics. This allows for a multi-layered structural understanding, rather than a single, flat interpretation.

Q: How does analyzing the positive side (Manifestation of Light) and the negative side (Shadow Challenge) in MLS lead to strategic decision-making?

A: This bipolar analysis is crucial for facilitating ‘awareness’ in the user’s decision-making process. Knowing the Manifestation of Light (strengths and opportunities) provides awareness to confirm the direction of action. Simultaneously, logically understanding the Shadow Challenge (risks and pitfalls) provides awareness of countermeasures needed. This comprehensive awareness enables more realistic and precise strategic decisions.

Q: What does the unique MLS concept of ‘NAWAL’ mean, and how is it derived?

A: NAWAL is an ancient Mayan term, but MLS interprets it as a ‘lens for viewing the individual.’ The NAWAL analysis result serves to highlight the individual’s inherent strengths and challenges. By viewing the person through this lens, MLS provides a framework for understanding their action logic objectively, free from emotional bias.

Q: How did MLS reconstruct ancient Mayan knowledge into an ‘algorithm’? Can you explain the logical conversion process?

A: The algorithms for the cycles and relationships within the ancient Mayan calendar are known. The key point of the MLS reconstruction is the logical conversion process of these known results into the two aspects: ‘Positive Side’ and ‘Negative Side’ for application in modern strategy. This strategic conversion allows the system to move beyond divination and function as a tool to enhance the Reproducibility of Action.

Q: By excluding fortune-telling and favorable/unfavorable judgments, what does MLS gain?

A: The goal is to use the analysis result as a ‘constraint, or lens’ to encourage ‘subjective and proactive action’ from the user. While fate-based judgments tend to foster passivity, MLS presents objective facts (constraints). This allows the user to view the analysis as a strategic lens for self-directed action, maximizing proactive behavior based on personal responsibility.

Q: How does integrating ‘Person Analysis (Who)’ and ‘Day Analysis (When)’ lead to optimal action design?

A: This integration serves to efficiently narrow down action choices and planning. Integrating the inherent constraints revealed by Person Analysis with the day’s energy from Day Analysis allows for the selection of the optimal action for that specific individual. Furthermore, understanding the negative side (Shadow Challenge) simultaneously allows for the consideration of specific countermeasures, increasing the strategy’s success rate.

Q: What kind of long-term strategies are possible by analyzing the long-term life cycle (approx. 26/52-year cycles)?

A: The long-term life cycle is understood as a continuous ‘flow’ of challenges connecting the past, present, and future. This allows current situations and challenges to be analyzed as influences carried over from past life cycles. Moreover, by considering the trajectory toward the future generational cycles, it enables the objective setting of long-term strategic turning points and growth themes, transcending short-term events.

Q: How was developer Jo Nagamine’s background utilized in constructing this system?

A: Nagamine is an ‘engineer’ involved in the construction and compilation of algorithms for ancient systems. This technical background was fundamental in establishing the logical and mathematical structure of MLS, which excludes emotion and ambiguity. As a result, the system functions as a modern strategic framework that allows anyone to achieve highly reproducible strategic action design.

Q: What new perspectives or abilities can users gain by learning MLS?

A: Users gain two core abilities: logical thinking and strategic self-understanding. By adopting an objective framework for self-perception, free from emotion, they can understand their own and others’ actions through ‘logic,’ make decisions based on long-term strategic planning, and avoid being swayed by emotional reactions. This is one of the most crucial business skills in the unpredictable modern era.