thrigma
Thrigma is a term used in speculative theory to describe a triadic framework in which three interdependent components jointly determine the behavior of a system. In thrigma models, each component both influences and is influenced by the others, producing dynamics that cannot be reduced to a pairwise or linear relation. The concept emphasizes balance and reciprocal causation, with stability arising from a negotiated interaction among the three parts rather than from any single element.
Etymology and usage: The term is a modern neologism, not tied to a single canonical definition. It
Principles: Triadic symmetry (all three parts are essential), reciprocal influence (causal loops among the parts), emergent
Applications: In organizational design thrigma can model governance among three roles (leader, facilitator, stakeholder). In design,
Variants: Primary thrigma focuses on a single triad; extended thrigma maps networks of interconnected triads; contextual
See also: triad, triadic relation, systems thinking, cycle dynamics.
Because thrigma is a relatively new or contested term, definitions vary by source and application, and readers