Critical Examination

When a Teaching Tool Becomes a Theory of Everything

A collection of critical analyses, satirical essays, and scholarly examinations of DSRP theory, its institutional apparatus, and the gap between what it claims and what it is.

22 → 8h-index before & after audit
Tier 1Self-assigned, alongside Darwin
88%"Without scientific validity"
$12,000Per organizational engagement
"DSRP doesn't have an ontology or an epistemology. DSRP just is. Just like gravity isn't positivist. It just is."Peer-reviewed by Laura Cabrera. Accepted without revision.h-index: 22 (self-reported) · 8 (independently audited)501(c)(3) status: not found in IRS Tax Exempt Organization SearchIncorporated in Montana. Operating in Ithaca. Filed with an Ithaca zip code under "MT.""DSRP doesn't have an ontology or an epistemology. DSRP just is. Just like gravity isn't positivist. It just is."Peer-reviewed by Laura Cabrera. Accepted without revision.h-index: 22 (self-reported) · 8 (independently audited)501(c)(3) status: not found in IRS Tax Exempt Organization SearchIncorporated in Montana. Operating in Ithaca. Filed with an Ithaca zip code under "MT."

DSRP — Distinctions, Systems, Relationships, and Perspectives — began as a genuinely useful pedagogical heuristic. The four prompts help students and workshop participants organize their thinking. As a teaching tool, there was nothing to argue about. That was useful. That was enough. That was honest.

But that is not what DSRP became. It became a "universal theory of cognition," a "cognitive law," a "structural ontology," and a discovery that its creator placed alongside Darwin's theory of evolution, Turing's theory of computation, and Shannon's information theory — in a registry he created and scored himself.

This website collects the critical analyses and satirical essays that examine the distance between what DSRP claims and what the evidence supports. They are written with care, with humor, and with the conviction that a field as important as systems thinking deserves better than self-referencing institutional capture.

"Not a discovery about how all humans think, but a remarkably precise description of how two humans stopped."
— From "A DSRP Analysis of the DSRP Problem"

Three Essays by Derek the Magnificent

Essay I

What DSRP Teaches Us About the History of Fiction

In which Shakespeare is revealed to have been performing D-moves, Tolstoy is diagnosed with metacognitive inefficiency, and Kafka's Metamorphosis is reduced to a single R-move.

FictionSatireD-Moves
Essay II — Pièce de la Magnificence

DSRP and the Unified History of Fiction and Systems Thinking

In which Homer and Heraclitus are revealed as colleagues, Tolstoy's War and Peace is proven formally identical to Carnot's thermodynamic cycle, and Jobu Tupaki is diagnosed as needing a belt certification program.

Fiction × SystemsGrand UnificationMagnificence
Essay III — The Derek Doctrine

How DSRP Will Save the Global Economy and Achieve World Peace

In which the 2008 financial crisis is a $12,000 consulting engagement that never happened, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is solved in forty-five minutes using ThinkBlocks, and the author awaits Nobel Prizes in all six categories.

EconomicsWorld PeaceThinkBlocks
"Your heart was never broken. It was merely DSRP'd."— From "What DSRP Teaches Us About the History of Fiction"

The Scholarly Examinations

Analysis

DSRP Is a Fine Teaching Tool. It Is Not Systems Thinking.

A systematic comparison of DSRP against systems science and second-order cybernetics. DSRP erases the observer, lacks feedback, emergence, requisite variety, autopoiesis, and boundary judgment.

Systems ScienceCyberneticsPedagogy
Analysis

A DSRP Analysis of the DSRP Problem

The Cabreras' own framework applied to the Cabreras' own mess. DSRP works beautifully — not as a theory of cognition, but as a tool for mapping self-referencing systems with no external validation.

ReflexivitySatireSelf-Reference
Analysis

The AST Registry: What Cabrera Must Believe

What the self-assigned rankings reveal about DSRP's epistemological commitments. It must be universal, complete, observer-independent, and naturally ordered — all at once.

RegistryEpistemologySelf-Ranking
8

Independently Audited h-index

After removing self-citations from the Journal of Systems Thinking (which Cabrera owns, edits, and is the most-published author of) and MDPI citation loops, the h-index drops from 22 to 8.

0

IRS Tax Exempt Listings

STSI does not appear in the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search, despite presenting itself as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit and using the NSF logo with "Supported by" language.

2

People Who Are Tier 1

Derek and Laura Cabrera placed themselves in the same tier as Darwin, Turing, Shannon, von Neumann, Wiener, and Ashby. They scored the registry themselves.

35→21

Years of "Research"

STSI claims "35 years" of investigation. In 1991, Cabrera was a 21-year-old Outward Bound mountain guide. The research lab wasn't founded until 2007.

The 501(c)(3) Question

The STSI website states it is "a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization." It displays the National Science Foundation logo with "Supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF)." These representations appear on the same page where consumers are directed to purchase certifications, training, and merchandise. Here is what the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search shows — then and now.

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IRS search — 2025

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2025 — Initial Search

IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search: STSI

A search for "Systems Thinking Standards Institute" on the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search (apps.irs.gov/app/eos/) in 2025. STSI did not appear in the database of organizations recognized as tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3).

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IRS search — April 2026

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April 2026 — Current Search

IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search: STSI

A current search for "Systems Thinking Standards Institute." The reader may verify independently at apps.irs.gov/app/eos/.

The Claim

STSI's website states: "STSI is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization." This representation appears on pages where consumers purchase belt certifications ($2,400–$4,800), Training Camp enrollment, and DSRP merchandise.

The NSF Logo

The STSI website displays the official NSF seal with "Supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF)." NSF grants were awarded to Cabrera personally or to Cornell — not to STSI. The use of "supported by" on a commercial website creates a consumer impression of federal endorsement.

The Montana Incorporation

STSI is incorporated in Montana while operating entirely from Ithaca, New York. Corporate filings list Ithaca addresses. AST's filing lists an Ithaca zip code under "MT." Montana incorporation avoids New York's more rigorous nonprofit regulatory framework.

What This Means

If an organization represents itself as a 501(c)(3) while not appearing in the IRS database, questions arise under federal and state law — including whether donors can claim tax deductions, whether the NSF logo usage complies with federal guidelines, and whether the nonprofit representation constitutes a deceptive business practice.

How a Teaching Tool Became a Cognitive Law

1988–2003
Mountain Guide Years
Cabrera works as an Outward Bound mountain guide and experiential educator. STSI will later describe this period as when "Cabrera Research Lab felt that same frustration." CRL does not yet exist.
2006
PhD Dissertation
Cabrera completes "Systems Thinking" at Cornell. DSRP is presented as "simple rules" underlying systems thinking — a pedagogical proposal.
2007
CRL Founded
Cabrera Research Lab co-founded with Laura Colosi (now Cabrera). The stated mission is advancing systems thinking education.
2008
First DSRP Publication
Special issue of Evaluation and Program Planning. DSRP presented as "processing rules." Midgley's published response: "an interpretation imposed on other perspectives."
2015–2020
Claim Escalation
DSRP evolves from "processing rules" to "a different kind of Theory of Everything." Belt certification system launched. Journal of Systems Thinking founded — owned, edited, and predominantly authored by the Cabreras.
2021
IASCYS Induction
Cabrera inducted into the International Academy for Systems and Cybernetic Sciences. He subsequently becomes Secretary General.
2025
The Registry
AST Registry launched. Cabrera places himself alongside Darwin, Turing, and Shannon in Tier 1. Midgley, Senge, Meadows: Tier 2. Jackson, Glanville, Espejo, Umpleby: Tier 3. All rankings scored by Cabrera himself.
2025–2026
Institutional Capture
IASCYS effectively replaced by AST. Complaints filed with 14 agencies. Bibliometric audit reveals h-index of 8 (vs. self-reported 22). 501(c)(3) status unverifiable. Montana incorporation while operating in Ithaca.
"Perhaps that is DSRP's real contribution: not a discovery about how all humans think, but a remarkably precise description of how two humans stopped."— From "A DSRP Analysis of the DSRP Problem"

The AST Registry — Ranked by Cabrera

TierCriterionSelected MembersNote
Tier 1"Architectural, field-shaping impact"Darwin, Turing, Shannon, von Neumann, Wiener, Ashby, Bertalanffy, von Foerster, Bateson, Prigogine, Maturana, Varela, Derek Cabrera, Laura CabreraSelf-placed by the registry's creator
Tier 2"Significantly advanced or extended"Gerald Midgley, Peter Senge, Donella Meadows, John Sterman, Stephen WolframScholars who developed alternative methodologies
Tier 3"Promising, emerging, or popularizing"Michael C. Jackson, Ranulph Glanville, Stuart Umpleby, Raúl Espejo, Werner Ulrich, Fritjof CapraScholars whose work most directly challenges DSRP's universality

Rankings determined by Cabrera, using criteria developed by Cabrera, applied to a scale designed by Cabrera, published in a journal owned by Cabrera, and validated by Laura Cabrera. The methodology is rigorous. The methodology is always rigorous when you control every step of it.