CCIAF

Cross-Civilization Intelligence and Action Framework

Every serious decision has a when.
Most advisory work leaves it unexamined.

Strategic consultancies map what to do and how to structure it. Risk intelligence firms map the external environment. Neither addresses the timing dimension of consequential decisions — when to act, when to wait, and what kind of period is actually unfolding for this person or institution.

CCIAF is a structured methodology for timing intelligence, drawing on five cross-civilizational analytical traditions, reconciled through the founder's calibrated decision logic into a single recommendation with a stated confidence rating.

Volume I — The Argument  ·  Completed 2026  ·  Available on request

The Problem

The timing dimension of high-stakes decisions receives almost no systematic treatment in any professional advisory discipline.

A board considering a capital allocation decision, a founder timing a launch, a political office planning a campaign — each has access to frameworks for what to do and how to structure it. What none of them has is a framework for determining whether the timing of that decision is working with or against a broader cycle they have not yet been able to see.

The same is true at the individual level. Career transitions, strategic partnerships, major financial moves — timing considerations that no existing advisory methodology addresses with any rigour.

CCIAF does not replace structural analysis, risk intelligence, or domain expertise. It addresses the layer every other advisory discipline leaves implicit: a systematic reading of the timing conditions surrounding a decision, derived from traditions that spent centuries developing exactly this kind of analysis.

Precedent

A practice with a long record.

The record runs to 2,500 years. The Abbasid caliph al-Mansur elected the founding moment of Baghdad in 762 CE with Mashallah ibn Athari and Naubakht — the same tradition CCIAF draws on for the Timing layer. Roman emperors from Tiberius onward embedded timing counsel inside the apparatus of state; the French royal court maintained two practitioners simultaneously. The same pattern appeared in American finance — Evangeline Adams maintained a clientele at the highest levels of Wall Street and industry, the engagements private by design and publicly denied when convenient. A retainer for timing counsel operated inside the Reagan White House. None of these engagements were announced at the time.

In each case the engagement was private — not because the practice was indefensible, but because the asymmetry of the insight was part of its value. The principal who understood timing conditions their counterparts did not saw no reason to publish the advantage. CCIAF's posture of discretion is not a business decision; it is continuous with how this category of counsel has operated across every civilization that developed it.

The Architecture

Five analytical layers. One calibrated decision logic. A single recommendation when traditions disagree.

The framework operates through five distinct layers, each derived from a different civilizational tradition and each answering a different question. The Conflict Resolution Codex — the founder's calibrated decision logic, developed over a decade of practice — reconciles the five into a single recommendation with a stated confidence rating. The traditions agree on the energies of the time; the value of the framework lies in the interpretive judgement that translates those energies into a decision for the case at hand.

Read our Research Paper for a detailed explanation of the framework's intellectual foundations.

Layer I
Identity
"What are you made of?"
BaZi Four Pillars · Numerology · Natal birth chart (tropical and Vedic systems) — elemental composition and enduring capacities
Layer II
Timing
"What time is it for you?"
BaZi Pinnacles & Lucky Pillar · Vedic dashas · Islamic firdaria · Hellenistic profections — multi-year and annual cycle analysis
Layer III
Action
"What to do today?"
28 Lunar Mansions · Electional timing — day-resolution guidance for high-stakes decisions
Layer IV
Interpretation
"What does it mean?"
Empirical psychometric anchor (NEO PI-R / Big Five inventory) · Jungian archetypal mapping — empirical–symbolic synthesis for behavioural translation
Layer V
Risk Awareness
"What to anticipate."
For individuals: constitutional vulnerability windows under traditional symbolic frameworks. For institutions: stress periods derived from founding-date analysis. Senior engagements only, with explicit written disclaimer.

The Conflict Resolution Codex is the framework's primary intellectual contribution and remains the founder's private intellectual property. The five traditions broadly agree on the underlying energies of a given period; their disagreements live in interpretation and in the weight each carries in a particular case. Reconciling those disagreements is where advisory judgement, accumulated practice, and contextual wisdom do their work — and is precisely why the Codex is not published, audited externally, or open to client revision. Clients receive a single recommendation, a stated confidence rating, and a brief reasoning summary. The underlying calibration remains with the founder.

The Source Traditions

Five traditions. Each contributing what the others cannot.

Each tradition was developed over centuries within a specific cosmological and intellectual context, with extensive cross-pollination between them — Hellenistic into Persian into Sanskrit, BaZi across East Asia. CCIAF extracts the mechanisms each tradition developed with the most rigour, assigns them bounded roles, and reconciles their outputs through the founder's calibrated decision logic.

Hellenistic and Persian Tradition
Mediterranean foundations through medieval Persian synthesis
Hellenistic foundations (Ptolemy, Vettius Valens) extended through the Persian medieval synthesis (Abu Ma'shar, Al-Biruni). Lord of Year and profections — the most operationally precise system for determining which period is active and what it governs. Primary contribution to the Timing and Action layers.
Vedic Tradition
South Asia · classical period through medieval codification
Vimshottari and planetary dasha systems — multi-decade unfoldings of temperament, codified in the Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra and refined across two millennia. Reads disposition as cycle, not as static trait. The longest-horizon character-trajectory instrument in the synthesis.
Islamic Tradition
Persian and Andalusian · 800 – 1300 CE
Firdaria and the 28 lunar mansions (manazil al-qamar) — contributions to both the Timing and Action layers. Uniquely rigorous at both the multi-year and day-resolution ends of the temporal spectrum.
Chinese BaZi
East Asia · classical codification through Song-Ming refinement
BaZi Four Pillars — elemental composition and structural capacity, codified across the Yuan Hai Zi Ping and San Ming Tong Hui classical canon. Produces the Identity Layer's foundational profile with a precision no other tradition approaches at the constitutional level.
Jungian Psychology & Empirical Psychometrics
Switzerland · 20th century — calibrated against modern personality science
Archetypal cartography and individuation form the symbolic-depth side of the interpretive layer. The empirical side is the NEO PI-R Big Five inventory — the most rigorously validated personality model in modern psychology — administered through a certified licensing partner under appropriate publisher terms. The two are read against each other in interpretation, providing an empirical anchor for the symbolic identity work.

The Founder

Minhaaj Rehman

Minhaaj Rehman is a data scientist and systems thinker whose consulting practice has spanned technology strategy, organizational decision-making, and applied research across multiple industries and cultural contexts. That work raised a question no existing advisory methodology adequately addressed: how to treat timing as a structured variable in consequential decisions — not as intuition, not as market analysis, but as a layer of its own with its own analytical logic.

The answer required working across five intellectual traditions simultaneously — not as a scholar of any single one, but as a practitioner using each under pressure. Cross-cultural exposure over time made it clear that each tradition — Chinese BaZi, Vedic dasha systems, Hellenistic and Islamic period frameworks, Jungian synthesis — is internally coherent and yields real signal. What was missing was not another tradition; it was a calibrated decision logic for reconciling their disagreements case by case. That logic is the Conflict Resolution Codex, and it is CCIAF's primary intellectual contribution.

He is the founder of Psyda Solutions and the originator of CCIAF. His applied work in AI, behavioural science, and cross-cultural intelligence informs both the framework's architecture and the contextual intelligence layer that accompanies it in client engagements.

Engagement

Three tiers. Each designed for a different decision context and depth of engagement.

CCIAF engagements are by introduction and referral. A written briefing memorandum is prepared before any meeting — the document does the substantive analytical work in advance so the meeting can go straight to depth, interpretation, and the client's specific questions. Pricing is not published; it reflects the scope of each engagement and is discussed privately.

For engagements concerning an individual subject, intake includes the NEO PI-R Big Five personality inventory by default, administered through a certified licensing partner under appropriate publisher terms. The empirical psychometric output is read alongside the framework's symbolic identity layer and forms part of every individual engagement brief. Mundane engagements (countries, companies, and other institutional entities) do not include the Big Five — psychometric assessment applies to persons, not institutions. Clients may opt out of the assessment on request.

CCIAF is a single-principal advisory practice. Engagement capacity is deliberately limited and a small number of clients are taken on at any one time. Continuity arrangements are addressed in writing for retainer and senior engagements. This structure reflects how timing intelligence has historically been held — not in institutions, but in practitioners whose calibration is personal, accumulated over years, and non-transferable.

Client information — including birth data, founding-date data, and decision context — is held under strict confidentiality. It is not shared, sold, or used for any purpose other than the engagement itself. Full handling terms are set out in the privacy policy.

Tier I · The Election
Single Decision
For individuals and institutions facing one specific high-stakes decision with a material timing dimension.

Typically engaged by founders, fund principals, board directors, family-office decision-makers, and senior officials facing one consequential decision with material timing exposure.

  • Written intelligence brief — full five-layer analysis
  • Ranked timing windows with stated confidence ratings
  • One private session for interpretation and questions
  • No ongoing commitment required
Tier II · Retainer
Ongoing Advisory
For individuals and institutions for whom timing intelligence is a persistent strategic variable across multiple decisions.

Typically engaged by family enterprises, institutional investors, venture and private-capital principals, multi-asset family offices, and offices of state where timing is a continuous variable across decisions.

  • Monthly written intelligence briefings
  • Quarterly in-depth strategic sessions
  • Access to tier-gated apps for electional timing
  • Electional guidance for decisions as they arise
  • Direct written access between sessions
Tier III · Senior
Bespoke Engagement
For long-term relationships where the full depth of the framework — including the Risk Awareness layer — is warranted.

Long-term engagements with heads of family businesses, sovereign and institutional principals, and individuals at the scale where the framework's full depth is warranted. By introduction only.

  • All five layers including Risk Awareness
  • Generational and institutional lifecycle analysis
  • Proton infrastructure for end-to-end encrypted communication and confidentiality
  • Bespoke scope, depth, and engagement terms
  • Conducted at venue agreed individually
  • By invitation and introduction only
  • This tier mirrors the historical function of the embedded advisor — present, trusted, and never publicly acknowledged

Enquiries

If CCIAF addresses a decision you are currently facing, a single written note is sufficient to begin a conversation.

No standard intake form. No sales-funnel discovery call. A brief description of your context — who you are, what you are navigating — is enough to begin a working conversation. Enquiries are reviewed individually; CCIAF engages with a small number of clients at any one time.

Please enter your name.
Please enter a valid email address.
Please describe your context.

To request Volume I — The Argument, include a short note on your background and what brought you to this work. The treatise is distributed privately to those for whom it is directly relevant.

Further Reading

Authoritative Sources for Each Tradition

Primary texts and scholarly references — by tradition
Hellenistic and Persian Tradition
  • Ptolemy, Tetrabiblos. Trans. F. E. Robbins. Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, 1940.
  • Vettius Valens, Anthology. Trans. Mark Riley (online edition); also Robert Schmidt, Project Hindsight.
  • Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi, On the Great Conjunctions. Ed. and trans. Keiji Yamamoto and Charles Burnett. Brill, 2000.
  • Abu Ma'shar, The Abbreviation of the Introduction to Astrology. Trans. Charles Burnett. Brill, 1994.
  • Al-Biruni, The Book of Instruction in the Elements of the Art of Astrology. Trans. R. Ramsay Wright. Luzac, 1934.
  • Chris Brennan, Hellenistic Astrology: The Study of Fate and Fortune. Amor Fati, 2017.
  • Benjamin Dykes, Persian Nativities series (translations of Masha'allah, Abu Ali, Abu Bakr). Cazimi Press, 2009–2010.
Vedic Tradition
  • Parashara, Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra (BPHS). Trans. R. Santhanam. Ranjan Publications, 1984.
  • Varahamihira, Brihat Jataka. Trans. Bangalore Suryanarain Rao; also V. Subrahmanya Sastri editions.
  • Varahamihira, Brihat Samhita. Trans. M. Ramakrishna Bhat. Motilal Banarsidass, 1981.
  • David Pingree, Jyotihsastra: Astral and Mathematical Literature. Otto Harrassowitz, 1981.
  • Hart de Fouw and Robert Svoboda, Light on Life: An Introduction to the Astrology of India. Penguin / Lotus Press, 1996.
Islamic Tradition
  • Masha'allah ibn Athari, On Reception. Trans. Benjamin Dykes. Cazimi Press, 2008.
  • Al-Qabisi, The Introduction to Astrology. Ed. and trans. Charles Burnett, Keiji Yamamoto, Michio Yano. Warburg Institute, 2004.
  • Ibn Arabi, selections from Al-Futuhat al-Makkiyya ("The Meccan Revelations"). Trans. William C. Chittick et al. SUNY Press editions.
  • Liana Saif, The Arabic Influences on Early Modern Occult Philosophy. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
  • George Saliba, Islamic Science and the Making of the European Renaissance. MIT Press, 2007.
  • Edward S. Kennedy, Astronomy and Astrology in the Medieval Islamic World. Variorum / Ashgate, 1998.
Chinese BaZi
  • Yuan Hai Zi Ping 淵海子平 (Song dynasty). Foundational classical text on BaZi (Four Pillars).
  • San Ming Tong Hui 三命通會 (Ming dynasty, Wan Minying). Comprehensive BaZi encyclopedia.
  • Di Tian Sui 滴天髓 (Tang–Song; later annotations). Core analytical canon.
  • Ho Peng Yoke, Chinese Mathematical Astrology: Reaching Out to the Stars. RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.
  • Joseph Needham, Science and Civilisation in China, Vol. 2: History of Scientific Thought. Cambridge University Press, 1956.
  • Richard J. Smith, Fortune-tellers and Philosophers: Divination in Traditional Chinese Society. Westview, 1991.
Jungian Psychology
  • C. G. Jung, Psychological Types (Collected Works, Vol. 6). Princeton University Press, 1971.
  • C. G. Jung, The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (Collected Works, Vol. 9, Part I). Princeton University Press, 1968.
  • C. G. Jung, The Structure and Dynamics of the Psyche (Collected Works, Vol. 8). Princeton University Press, 1969.
  • C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections. Recorded and edited by Aniela Jaffé. Pantheon, 1962.
  • Marie-Louise von Franz, Number and Time: Reflections Leading toward a Unification of Depth Psychology and Physics. Northwestern University Press, 1974.
  • Murray Stein, Jung's Map of the Soul: An Introduction. Open Court, 1998.
Empirical Psychometrics — the Big Five (NEO PI-R)
  • Paul T. Costa Jr. and Robert R. McCrae, NEO PI-R Professional Manual. Psychological Assessment Resources, 1992.
  • Robert R. McCrae and Paul T. Costa Jr., Personality in Adulthood: A Five-Factor Theory Perspective, 2nd ed. Guilford Press, 2003.
  • Lewis R. Goldberg, "The Development of Markers for the Big-Five Factor Structure." Psychological Assessment, 4(1), 1992. Foundational paper for the IPIP open-source instrument family.
  • Oliver P. John, Laura P. Naumann, and Christopher J. Soto, "Paradigm Shift to the Integrative Big Five Trait Taxonomy." In Handbook of Personality: Theory and Research, 3rd ed., Guilford Press, 2008.

These references point to the source traditions CCIAF draws on; they are not endorsements of every position taken in those works. CCIAF's own argument and citation apparatus is set out in Volume I — The Argument.