Contention as Memorable Anchor
Disagreements require cognitive effort and create stronger memory traces
"Contention as a memorable anchor" is the observation that contention—structured disagreement between claims—creates stronger memory traces than passive agreement. When you engage with a conflict, you must discriminate, compare, and resolve, all of which are forms of retrieval practice.
This connects learning science to Coscientist's emphasis on surfacing contradictions. The system is not just epistemically safer for prioritizing conflict; it is also pedagogically more effective. You learn more deeply from a well-mapped disagreement than from a smooth summary.
The implication is that rebuttal-first search and document collision are not just verification tools. They are learning tools. The Operator who engages with contention is building durable understanding.