What it is
A Logical Pathway is a branching argument engine. Each node presents a theological claim with its historical or scriptural anchor. You choose the position you actually hold. The engine follows your logic wherever it leads — surfacing hidden assumptions, flagging contradictions, and eventually reaching a conclusion that your own commitments require.
There are currently eleven active pathways covering the Church, the Papacy, Scripture and Tradition, the Real Presence, the Resurrection, Grace and Justification, the Blessed Virgin Mary, Purgatory, the Sacraments, the Existence of God, and the Canon of Scripture.
How to use it
Go to Logical Pathways in the main navigation. Select a pathway and read the opening claim carefully. Each branch button shows a position you can take. Choose the one that genuinely represents your view — not the one that sounds best.
As you progress, a Logical Debt panel tracks positions that carry costs or create tensions with earlier choices. You cannot dismiss it — it follows you through the pathway.
What the outputs mean
Contradiction node: You have reached a position that is logically incompatible with a commitment you made earlier in the pathway. The engine names both commitments and shows exactly where the conflict lies. You can backtrack and choose differently, or continue and carry the contradiction.
Conclusion node: You have reached a logically stable endpoint. The conclusion shows what your chain of commitments actually requires — not what you might have expected, but what follows necessarily from your choices.
Meta-Analysis: After completing a pathway, a meta-analysis panel shows all the positions that collapsed (contradictions), all that survived, and the necessary characteristics of any stable conclusion you reached.
Tips
Choose honestly. The engine is not trying to trick you — it is following your logic. If you choose a position you do not really hold, the pathway gives you a result you did not earn.
Use the backtrack button freely. The point is to find the position that actually holds, not to win on the first try.
Read the anchor text on each node. This is the historical or scriptural basis for the claim — it is what the argument rests on, and it is worth understanding before you choose.
Known limitations
Pathways are designed for theological positions with clear logical structure. They do not cover every nuance of every tradition — they follow the main lines of argument. If your actual position is more complex than any branch allows, choose the closest one and note the gap.