Root-based system design
There are two ways to instruct a language model. Both work. They produce very different results.
Al-Kursi is the structured way. You write rules, steps, templates. You tell the model exactly what to do and in what order. The output is predictable. It works until the task falls outside the rules.
Al-Arsh is the root way. You give one principle — a seed — and let the model grow the response from it. No steps. No templates. The output adapts to the context because the principle is deeper than any rule.
The names come from Ayat al-Kursi (2:255). Al-Kursi is the footstool — where knowledge rests in fixed form. Al-Arsh is the throne — what carries everything without being bound by it. One contains. The other supports.
Below you can test both approaches side by side. Same task. Same model. Different root.
Enter a task and see both approaches respond
Al-Kursi — Structure
Al-Arsh — Root
How it works
Define the principle — the living seed from which the system grows. One root, infinite expressions.
Context feeds the root. The system adapts, finds its path, and strengthens with each interaction.
The outcome is not manufactured — it emerges. Natural, context-true, and stronger than any template.