| name | second-order |
| description | Reason past the obvious, first-order consequence to the second-, third-, and long-tail effects everyone else stops short of. Where most analysis says "X causes Y", this skill asks "and then what?" — mapping the cascade, surfacing the non-obvious winners and losers, the reflexive responses, and the effects that only show up over time. Use it on policy changes, product/pricing decisions, market events, technology shifts, regulations, and strategy calls. Trigger on phrases like "what are the knock-on effects?", "play this forward", "what happens next?", "who actually benefits?", "second-order effects", "what's the unintended consequence?", or any request to think through the downstream ripple of a decision or event rather than just its immediate result. |
Second-Order Thinking
Most analysis stops at the first consequence. The edge is in the second, third, and long-tail effects — and in who quietly wins or loses once everyone adapts.
Core principle
First-order thinking asks "what happens?"
Second-order thinking asks "...and then what? — and then what?"
Every effect becomes a new cause. People and markets react to the first consequence, and the reaction is often where the real story is.
The process
- Name the change. State the decision or event precisely.
- First order. The immediate, intended effect. (Usually obvious — get it on the table fast.)
- Second order. How do the affected parties respond to that first effect? Incentives shift; people route around constraints; prices and behavior adjust.
- Third order and beyond. What do those responses cause? Keep asking "and then what?" until the chain goes speculative — then stop and say so.
- Winners & losers. After everyone adapts, who is better and worse off? Look hard for the non-obvious ones — the party nobody mentioned.
- Reflexivity & time. What second-order effect partially cancels (or amplifies) the first? What only appears over months or years?
Output format
- The change — one line.
- The cascade — first → second → third, as a short chain (or a couple of chains if it branches). Mark where confidence drops.
- Non-obvious winners & losers — the ones first-order analysis misses.
- The effect most people will underweight — your single highest-value call.
- Confidence — flag which links are solid vs. speculative.
Worked example
Change: A city introduces rent control on large apartment buildings.
First order: Existing tenants in covered units pay less. (Intended.)
Second order: Landlords cut maintenance on price-capped units (margin is squeezed), and some convert rentals to condos to exit the regime. New construction of covered buildings slows — why build what you can't price?
Third order: Rental supply tightens; uncovered and new units get more expensive; mobility drops as tenants cling to below-market leases, which gums up the whole market.
Non-obvious winners/losers: Winners — incumbent long-tenured renters; condo converters; owners of uncovered buildings (pricing power). Losers — newcomers to the city, future renters, and (slowly) the housing stock itself.
Most underweighted effect: The supply chill is invisible for years, then dominant — by the time it's obvious, it's structural.
Confidence: First/second order high (well-documented); third-order magnitude medium.
Anti-patterns to avoid
- Stopping at the first consequence and calling it analysis
- Spinning an infinite speculative chain without flagging where confidence dies
- Ignoring how people adapt (the static-world fallacy)
- Only listing the obvious winners/losers
Part of the clear-eye pack — Claude skills for seeing what others miss.