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possibilitam

Possibilitam is a theoretical framework for analyzing the structure and dynamics of possible states of affairs as they relate to what can become actual. It treats possibility not merely as a binary property but as a landscape of gradated potentials that agents may navigate through actions, constraints, and probabilistic factors.

The term is a neologism formed from Latin possibilitas (possibility) with the suffix -itam to denote a

Core concepts in possibilitam include distinguishing feasibility, potentiality, and actuality; defining the possibilitam as the set

Researchers may use modal logic, probabilistic reasoning, and dynamic systems to represent transitions within the possibilitam,

Critics argue that the concept risks overextending modal notions into normative or causal claims, that measuring

domain
of
study.
It
has
appeared
in
contemporary
discussions
within
modal
logic,
decision
theory,
and
cognitive
science
since
the
early
2010s,
often
in
interdisciplinary
contexts
dealing
with
agency
under
uncertainty.
or
space
of
feasible
states
given
constraints;
and
describing
processes
of
“possibilization”
by
which
decisions
or
events
reduce,
expand,
or
reconfigure
that
space.
In
formal
treatments,
possibilitam
is
sometimes
modeled
with
graded
or
quantitative
modalities
that
assign
degrees
of
possibility
or
plausibility
to
alternative
outcomes.
focusing
on
how
actions
influence
the
trajectory
from
possible
states
to
actual
outcomes.
Applications
span
AI
planning
under
uncertainty,
risk
assessment,
ethics
of
technology,
and
strategic
decision
making,
where
designers
map
and
steer
the
evolution
of
feasible
futures
rather
than
predict
a
single
outcome.
the
boundaries
of
the
possibilitam
is
epistemically
difficult,
and
that
practical
models
may
oversimplify
complex
constraints.
Related
concepts
include
possible
world
semantics,
modal
logic,
possibilism,
contingency,
and
counterfactual
reasoning.