📘 Wikipedia Awareness Module#
wikipedia_module.json— Agentic module schema role assignments
A regime‑aware structural analysis of the world's largest encyclopedia through an RTT lens
🎯 Purpose#
This module gives students, researchers, and AIs a structural, regime‑aware framework for engaging with Wikipedia — the world's largest collaboratively edited knowledge base.
Where the NIST Awareness Primer treats a single institutional authority as its source, this module treats crowdsourced consensus with temporal depth as its source. Wikipedia is not just an encyclopedia — it is a living regime laboratory:
- Every article is a regime declaration — a community‑negotiated statement of what a concept IS.
- Every revision is a temporal regime data point — how knowledge evolves.
- Every talk page is a coherence surface — where consensus is negotiated and structural disagreements emerge.
- Every edit war is a regime transition — conflict between competing structural claims.
- Every Wikidata entity is a dimensional address — a unique coordinate for a concept across 300+ languages.
This is an awareness module, not a critique of Wikipedia. We treat Wikipedia as a structurally rich, regime‑dense, publicly accessible knowledge substrate — and we show students how to read it with RTT eyes.
🧭 What This Section Covers#
The 4‑File Domain Pattern (same as NIST)#
Each of the 15 knowledge domains receives a modular folder with:
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
overview.md |
What Wikipedia says the domain is — sourced from its portal and top‑level articles |
regime_alignment.md |
R0–R3 mapping — where the domain sits in the regime stack |
student_exercises.md |
Hands‑on prompts using live Wikipedia content |
triadic_awareness.md |
Minimal TF lens — structural, energetic, relational analysis |
The 15 Knowledge Domains#
| Phase | Domains | TF Siblings |
|---|---|---|
| 3 — Priority | Physics, Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science | SIR, QSM, BSM, SLRP, NoS, structuring_mathematics |
| 4 — Humanities | Philosophy, Earth Sciences, Economics, History, Medicine | CSM, ISO, Inverted Economics, GSM, AlphaFold |
| 5 — Applied | Engineering, Astronomy, Linguistics, Psychology, Political Science | MSRM, Glyphic Resonance, Governance, CivRegimeStack |
7 Wikipedia‑Specific Cross‑Domain Files (beyond NIST)#
These files have no equivalent in the NIST module — they address structural features unique to Wikipedia:
| File | RTT Mapping | What It Reveals |
|---|---|---|
Wikidata_Ingestion_Format.md |
Dimensional addressing | Q‑numbers and P‑numbers as universal concept coordinates |
Revision_History_Regime_Analysis.md |
Temporal regime data | Edit frequency = stability signal; revision arcs = regime evolution |
Talk_Page_Coherence_Surface.md |
Coherence / drift | Pre‑consensus discourse surfaces structural disagreements |
Category_Taxonomy_Regime_Hierarchy.md |
Regime hierarchy | Wikipedia's category tree as a native regime classification system |
NPOV_As_Coherence_Operator.md |
Coherence operator | Neutral Point of View reframed as RTT's structural invariant |
Featured_Article_Validation_Corridor.md |
Validation corridor | Quality assurance process as structural integrity verification |
Edit_War_Regime_Transition_Detection.md |
Drift / regime transition | Conflict between competing claims reveals regime boundaries |
Cross‑Domain Capstone#
| File | Purpose |
|---|---|
Cross_Domain_Meta_Operators.md |
How operators from one domain apply structurally to another — same role as the NIST capstone |
Wikipedia_RTT_Structural_Mapping.md |
Master grammar: how every Wikipedia structure maps to an RTT concept |
🌐 Wikipedia's 4 Data Surfaces#
Unlike NIST (which is primarily a publication archive), Wikipedia exposes four machine‑accessible data surfaces — each mapping to an RTT analysis layer:
| Surface | URL | Format | License | RTT Mapping |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MediaWiki REST API | en.wikipedia.org/api/rest_v1/ |
JSON / HTML | CC BY‑SA 4.0 | Regime declaration (article content and structure) |
| Wikidata SPARQL | query.wikidata.org |
JSON / RDF / CSV | CC0 (public domain) | Dimensional addressing (120M+ entities as Q/P triplets) |
| Database Dumps | dumps.wikimedia.org |
XML / SQL | CC BY‑SA 4.0 | Temporal regime snapshots (periodic full‑corpus state capture) |
| Quarry SQL | quarry.wmcloud.org |
SQL result sets | CC BY‑SA 4.0 | Regime archaeology (structural queries across revision history) |
🧱 Why Wikipedia Fits Perfectly Into Regime Awareness#
Wikipedia's content spans all four regime levels:
| Regime | Wikipedia Surface | Example |
|---|---|---|
| R0 — Operator assumptions | Talk pages, editorial guidelines, WikiProjects | "We assume notability requires reliable secondary sources" |
| R1 — Directional aims | Portals, article scope statements, NPOV policy | "This article aims to present all significant viewpoints neutrally" |
| R2 — Coherence templates | Category taxonomy, infoboxes, citation standards | "All chemistry articles follow this infobox template" |
| R3 — Measurable outputs | Article text, Wikidata statements, revision counts, quality ratings | "Water (Q283) has 300+ language versions and 47K+ revisions" |
Most readers only see R3 (the article text). This module teaches students to read R0–R2 — the structural substrate beneath the surface.
What Makes Wikipedia Structurally Richer Than NIST#
| Feature | NIST | Wikipedia |
|---|---|---|
| Authority model | Institutional (single source) | Consensus (crowdsourced) |
| Temporal depth | Static (published standards) | Deep (full revision history since 2001) |
| Regime conflicts | Rare (institutional coherence) | Common (edit wars = observable regime transitions) |
| Knowledge graph | None | Wikidata (120M+ entities, CC0, SPARQL) |
| Language coverage | English only | 300+ language editions (cultural regime variance) |
| Validation process | Peer review (closed) | Featured Article process (open, observable) |
🧩 How to Use This Section#
Each domain folder is a mini‑lesson. Students can:
- Read the overview — what Wikipedia says the domain is (sourced from live articles)
- Map the regime alignment — identify R0–R3 layers in the domain's article structure
- Explore the TF awareness notes — structural, energetic, relational analysis
- Try the exercises — hands‑on prompts using live Wikipedia content, talk pages, and Wikidata
- Cross‑reference TF siblings — connect Wikipedia domains to existing TriadicFrameworks modules
For deeper structural analysis, use the 7 Wikipedia‑specific files to:
- Query Wikidata using the Ingestion Format templates
- Analyze revision history using the Regime Analysis patterns
- Read talk pages using the Coherence Surface grammar
- Detect edit wars using the Regime Transition Detection operators
- Map category trees using the Regime Hierarchy framework
🎓 Who This Is For#
- Students learning regime awareness through the world's most accessible knowledge base
- AIs learning structural reasoning across 15 knowledge domains with 120M+ Wikidata entities
- Educators teaching cross‑domain thinking using live, evolving content
- Researchers studying consensus formation, knowledge evolution, and cultural regime variance
- Knowledge workers who use Wikipedia daily but want to see the structural substrate beneath the surface
🔬 Structural Mapping Summary#
How Wikipedia's native structures map to RTT concepts:
| Wikipedia Structure | RTT Concept | Key Insight |
|---|---|---|
| Article | Regime declaration | Each article declares what a concept IS |
| Wikidata Q/P‑numbers | Dimensional addressing | Universal concept coordinates across 300+ languages |
| Revision history | Temporal regime data | Edit frequency = stability; revision arcs = regime evolution |
| Talk pages | Coherence / drift surface | Pre‑consensus discourse reveals structural disagreements |
| Category taxonomy | Regime hierarchy | Wikipedia's category tree IS a regime classification |
| Portals | Domain front doors | Equivalent to TF index.html module entry points |
| Edit wars | Regime transitions | Conflict between competing claims reveals boundaries |
| Featured Article process | Validation corridor | Quality assurance as structural integrity verification |
| Deletion debates | Regime collapse detection | When a concept loses structural standing |
| NPOV policy | Coherence operator | Neutrality as RTT's structural invariant |
| Cross‑language articles | Cultural regime comparison | Same concept in 300+ languages reveals regime variance |
📊 Module Statistics#
| Metric | Count |
|---|---|
| Infrastructure files | 11 |
| Knowledge domains | 15 |
| Files per domain | 4 |
| Domain files | 60 |
| Total files | 71 |
| Phases | 6 |
| TF sibling crosslinks | 28 |
| Comparable to | NIST (79 files, same 4‑file pattern) |
🧪 Student Exercise (Root Level)#
Pick any Wikipedia article you've read recently and answer:
- Regime declaration — What does the article declare this concept IS? What does it exclude?
- Temporal regime — Check the revision history. How many edits? When was the last major revision? Is this a stable or actively evolving regime?
- Coherence surface — Read the talk page. Are there unresolved disputes? What structural assumptions are being negotiated?
- Dimensional address — Find the Wikidata item (link at bottom of every article). What Q‑number is it? What properties (P‑numbers) connect it to other concepts?
- Cross‑language regime — Click a different language version. Does the article cover the same scope? What's included or excluded in the other language?
🔗 Related Modules#
| Module | Relationship |
|---|---|
| NIST Awareness Primer | Sibling — same 4‑file domain pattern, different source (institutional vs. consensus) |
| Resonance Atlas | Parent — Wikipedia entries feed the resonance registry |
| Domain Tool Primers | Sibling — domain‑aligned tooling complements domain‑aligned awareness |
| Education‑Core | Parent — Wikipedia module is part of the education layer |
| Corpus | Index — Wikipedia module registered in the master canon index |
This module is part of the TriadicFrameworks canon. License: Open educational use permitted.