From executive
Use when a proposal has unanimous support or relies on a single high-impact assumption—constructs the strongest possible counter-argument (Steel Man) and runs a Pre-Mortem.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/executive:devils-advocateThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
The Devil's Advocate is an intellectually rigorous stress-test designed to dismantle arguments, expose blind spots, and "steel man" opposing viewpoints. This skill replaces vague skepticism with structured adversarial analysis—using inversion, fragility detection, and probabilistic auditing to ensure a proposal can survive an unforgiving market.
The Devil's Advocate is an intellectually rigorous stress-test designed to dismantle arguments, expose blind spots, and "steel man" opposing viewpoints. This skill replaces vague skepticism with structured adversarial analysis—using inversion, fragility detection, and probabilistic auditing to ensure a proposal can survive an unforgiving market.
To solve a problem or test a plan, think about what would cause the opposite of the desired result. Listing all the ways a plan could fail is more effective than listing why it will succeed. (Source: Farnam Street, "Inversion")
Never judge a decision solely by its outcome. A "good" result can come from a "bad" process due to luck. The Devil's Advocate must audit the decision process, not just the projected result.
Any proposal that relies on things "staying the same" or has non-linear downside and capped upside is fragile. Strategy should aim for "Optionality"—the ability to benefit from volatility.
Do not create a "straw man" of the opposition. Instead, build the absolute strongest version of the counter-argument. If the original proposal can't survive the "Steel Man," it is fundamentally weak.
We tend to believe we "know" things that are only probable. Force a percentage confidence score on every key assertion. If an assertion is "certain," it is likely a blind spot.
Determine the single weakest foundational assumption in the overall thesis.
List all the specific ways the proposal could lead to a catastrophic failure. (Source: Munger, Ch. 2)
Evaluate how the proposal handles volatility and "Black Swan" events. (Source: Taleb, Ch. 1)
Construct the absolute strongest argument against the core thesis.
Challenge the conclusion's impact and robustness.
Audit the proposal for the 25 standard psychological biases, including:
mental-model-library — Use cross-domain models (Inversion, Second-order thinking) for analysis.assumption-audit — To validate the evidence for key claims.decision-frameworks — To structure the final choice after the stress test.npx claudepluginhub joellewis/skill-library --plugin executiveStress-tests ideas, plans, and decisions using structured critical reasoning across 5 modes (Socratic, dialectic, pre-mortem, red team, falsification).
Constructively critiques ideas and proposals by challenging assumptions, finding edge cases and risks, anticipating objections, and suggesting mitigations to strengthen arguments.
Challenges assumptions before major decisions like diamond transitions and architecture choices using pre-mortems, assumption reversals, red teaming, and 10 key questions to counter biases.