Case-Maker
What It Points To
Section titled “What It Points To”A person with this pattern builds trust by making the reason clear. They do not expect people to agree from force; they gather facts until the claim can stand on its own. You’d see this in the classmate who brings one saved message to a dispute and changes the conversation without raising their voice.
Integration property: Holds the floor with words when ground is being contested
Card Universe
Section titled “Card Universe”
Card role: Contradiction Reader
A compact visual role is available for this archetype.
A fuller Card Universe story has not been written yet.
Ingredients
Section titled “Ingredients”Multiple Natures (MNs)
- Administrative Nature
- Adventurous Nature
Multiple Intelligences (MIs)
- Interpersonal Intelligence
- Logical Intelligence
- Linguistic Intelligence
- Intrapersonal Intelligence
Active Traits
Section titled “Active Traits”
register-shifting in language
high causal reasoning
reads social state in real time
pulls toward high-stakes ground
high self-regulation under load
Adjacent NatureTypes
Section titled “Adjacent NatureTypes”Where It Shows Up
Section titled “Where It Shows Up”Careers
Section titled “Careers”- Trial Lawyer (adversarial) (primary) - Builds case in language, reads jury and bench, presses contradiction under formal opposition.
- Appellate Attorney (primary) - Constructs written and oral arguments; maintains composure in adversarial questioning.
- Debate Coach or Competitive Debater (primary) - Masters argumentation, reads judges and opponents, maintains logic under pressure.
- Prosecutor (secondary) - Argues cases on behalf of state, must press evidence and manage witness testimony.
- Legislative Advocate or Policy Advocate (secondary) - Makes formal arguments for policy change before decision-makers.
- Mediator or Arbitrator (adjacent) - Reconstructs opposing positions into shared framework, but removes the personal stake and advocacy that drive Disputant’s core need.
- Build airtight case by identifying contradictions in opponent’s logic (primary)
- Shift register and framing to match audience (jury, judge, panel) (primary)
- Cross-examine witnesses under high stakes without losing composure (primary)
- Construct written briefs with precise legal and causal reasoning (secondary)
- Respond to unexpected challenges in real time (secondary)
Hobbies and activities
Section titled “Hobbies and activities”- Competitive debate or moot court (primary)
- Following high-profile trials and legal proceedings (primary)
- Reading and arguing about law, philosophy, or policy (secondary)
- Persuasive writing and rhetoric study (secondary)
Life roles
Section titled “Life roles”- Young attorney or debater building foundational skills (primary) - Learning procedure, evidence rules, and argumentation technique.
- Experienced litigator or advocate (primary) - Prime years of winning complex cases and building reputation.
- Senior mentor or appellate specialist (primary) - Transmitting trial craft and serving as appellate authority.