Move beyond traditional behavioral analysis and rediscover the study of knowing. Learn how to use actionable inquiry to transcend trauma and choose what creates genuine ease and joy in your life.

Pragmatism is about moving from the 'why' toward the 'how'—it’s about turning on the lights to see what choices you actually have and trusting what you know to create ease and joy.
Traditional psychology often focuses on the study of behavior to determine what is "right" or "wrong" or to diagnose why a person is struggling based on universal labels. In contrast, pragmatic psychology returns to the roots of psychology as the "study of knowing." It moves away from asking "why" something is happening and instead focuses on "what works" to create ease and joy. It empowers individuals to trust their own knowledge and look for practical choices that lead to tangible improvements in their lives.
The script uses Aristotle’s "four causes" to explain the architecture of change, specifically within Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). The "material cause" represents the raw thoughts and behaviors being worked on, while the "formal cause" is the mental blueprint or schema that shapes those thoughts. The "efficient cause" refers to the actual techniques and strategies used to create change. Most importantly, the "final cause" is the desired outcome or practical benefit. In a pragmatic approach, if your mental blueprint is not leading to a functional "final cause" like health or ease, you use therapeutic strategies to redesign that blueprint.
Focusing exclusively on immediate, measurable outcomes—referred to as "Success as a Product"—can lead to treating mental health like a retail commodity. This "quick fix" mentality may manage symptoms to keep a person productive without addressing root causes. Furthermore, a strictly pragmatic approach without a moral framework can become solipsistic, making individuals feel solely responsible for their mental state while ignoring broader social or environmental factors, such as systemic inequality or poverty, that contribute to their struggles.
Pragmatic inquiry is built on three core principles designed to turn reflection into action. The first is an emphasis on "actionable knowledge," which means starting with a desire to solve a real-world problem rather than engaging in abstract debates. The second is "interconnectedness," recognizing that experience, knowing, and acting are a continuous loop where each informs the other. The third is "inquiry as an experiential process," which suggests that there is no boundary between everyday life and research; every time you stop to consider the consequences of a different choice, you are conducting a pragmatic inquiry.
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
