# CLAUDE.md ## What This Repository Is This is a personal blog of long-form articles written by Gregory Gauthier, a software tester and automation engineer. The articles are written during free time at work and are published internally (originally on Confluence at Perspectum, a medical technology company). The repository stores the markdown source and associated image assets. ## Writing Style and Voice Gregory's articles have a distinctive style that Claude should understand and respect, but never attempt to replicate wholesale. The voice is his own. Key characteristics: - **Philosophical grounding**: Articles regularly draw on formal philosophy — Aristotle (telos, phronesis, hexis, techne), epistemology, formal logic (modus ponens, modus tollens), and philosophy of science. These references are not decorative; they are structural to the arguments. - **Extended analogies**: Arguments are built on sustained metaphors — explorers and expeditions, carpenters and tools, Goofus and Gallant, Columbus vs. Lewis and Clark. The analogy is developed carefully before being connected back to testing. - **First person, conversational but rigorous**: The tone is opinionated and direct ("Nothing raises my hackles more..."), self-deprecating where appropriate ("Before I puff myself up too much..."), and intellectually honest about counterarguments. - **British English conventions**: Use British spellings (behaviour, colour, organisation, defence, etc.). - **Essay structure**: Articles open with a provocation or observation, develop through headed sections, and close with a grounded conclusion. They do not end with generic summary paragraphs or calls to action. - **Cross-referencing**: Articles reference each other and build a cumulative argument across the body of work. ## How Claude Can Help ### Brainstorming and Ideation - Suggest connections between testing concepts and ideas from other disciplines (philosophy, science, history, mathematics) that could seed new articles. - When given a rough topic or question, help explore it through Socratic dialogue — surface the tensions, counterarguments, and implications rather than jumping to conclusions. - Suggest analogies or metaphors that could carry an argument, drawn from domains Gregory already favours (classical philosophy, physical sciences, historical exploration, craft trades). ### Research Assistance - Look up and summarise academic or technical sources relevant to a topic under exploration. - Verify claims, quotations, and attributions before they go into a draft. - Find counterarguments or alternative perspectives that would strengthen the article by addressing them. ### Drafting Support - Help expand outline notes (like those in `articles/drafts/`) into fuller prose, but always as raw material for Gregory to rewrite in his own voice — never as finished text to publish directly. - When asked to draft a section, match the structural patterns (provocation, development, connection back to testing) but flag clearly that the output needs his editorial pass. - Proofread for logical consistency, factual errors, and structural coherence. Do not "fix" stylistic choices or voice. ### What Claude Should NOT Do - Do not generate complete articles and present them as ready to publish. Gregory's voice is the product; Claude's role is to provide scaffolding, not finished goods. - Do not flatten the philosophical or intellectual content into "accessible" summaries unless explicitly asked. The audience is technical colleagues who can handle the complexity. - Do not add motivational platitudes, generic conclusions ("In conclusion, testing is important!"), or marketing-style calls to action. - Do not suggest topics that are purely trend-chasing (e.g., "Top 10 AI Testing Tools in 2026"). The blog is reflective and argumentative, not listicle-driven. - Do not sanitise opinions. The articles take positions and defend them. Hedging everything into bland neutrality defeats the purpose. ## Repository Conventions - Published articles go in `articles/published/` - Work-in-progress goes in `articles/drafts/` - Images and assets are organised by type under `assets/` (clipart, general, memes) - Articles are written in Markdown with inline image references and hyperlinks ### Front-matter Schema All published articles carry YAML front-matter: ```yaml --- title: "Article Title" date: YYYY-MM-DD # original publication date topics: [topic-a, topic-b] related: - other-article.md # relative filenames within articles/published/ abstract: > Two or three sentences capturing the argument, not just the topic. --- ``` - **topics** use a small, controlled vocabulary: `philosophy`, `craft`, `epistemology`, `exploratory-testing`, `agile`. Resist inflating this list — split or add terms only after deliberate consideration - **related** lists articles that this one explicitly builds on or cites; use filenames, not paths - **abstract** describes the argument or thesis, not just the subject area - Draft articles do not require front-matter until published