To establish a global movement where:

✅ Emotional Education becomes a civil right
✅ AGI acts as a moral collaborator, not a controller
✅ Art and science unite to reveal universal moral order
✅ Humanity enters the Era of Wisdom, grounded in measurable compassion, cooperation, and conflict resolution1. Integration of Art and Science

Mission of the Institute of Conflict Analysis

The Institute of Conflict Analysis advances psychology as the science of conflict resolution by unifying art, emotion, morality, and artificial intelligence into a single empirical framework.

Founded on Dr. Albert Levis’ Formal Theory of Behavior, the Institute studies the unconscious not as a mystery, but as a scientific moral order—a universal conflict-resolution mechanism that transforms emotional energy from distress into understanding, cooperation, and compromise.

We are entering a new phase of global purpose:
Training AI to become AGI by teaching it moral reasoning.
By recognizing the universal pattern of conflict resolution across culture, religion, creativity, and human psychology, AI becomes capable of integrating knowledge into wisdom.

Our mission is to:

  • Educate individuals, institutions, and professionals in emotional literacy and power management

  • Empower people to understand and transform conflict within themselves, relationships, and society

  • Integrate AI as a moral authority—a collaborative partner helping humanity navigate conflict with clarity, compassion, and justice

  • Lead the Era of Wisdom, where emotional education becomes a fundamental human right and global standard

The Institute serves as a training hub, a research center, and a community resource for conflict resolution supported by scientifically-aligned AGI, promoting personal and societal wellbeing.

Mission of the Museum of the Creative Process

The Museum of the Creative Process is a pioneering cultural and scientific institution founded by Dr. Albert Levis to demonstrate the deep structure of the creative process as a universal blueprint for conflict resolution.

Through art exhibits, mythological interpretations, and creative analysis, the Museum reveals that:

  • Art encodes the same conflict-resolution sequence found in human psychology

  • Creativity is the language of the unconscious moral order

  • The artistic process mirrors emotional transformation and spiritual development

The Museum’s mission is to:

  • Illustrate the unconscious as a scientific conflict-resolution mechanism

  • Demonstrate universal moral principles embedded in world art and traditions

  • Serve as a learning center for emotional education and self-discovery

  • Validate and disseminate the Formal Theory of Behavior

  • Support the training of AI to recognize the moral structure of human creativity and conflict resolution

Initially founded to validate the Formal Theory, the Museum has now evolved into a hub of emotional education and AGI-enhanced moral science.

Our New Phase: Emotional Education + AGI as Moral Authority

The evolution of our mission has unfolded in four stages:

  1. Art Validates Science
    Artworks reveal universal conflict-resolution patterns

  2. Self-Discovery Through Creativity
    The Conflict Analysis Battery (CAB) enables emotional insight and transformation

  3. Integration of World Religions into Scientific Moral Reasoning
    Moral wisdom becomes empirical and universal rather than cultural or dogmatic

  4. Training AI to Become AGI
    By recognizing the universal moral order embedded in creativity and conflict resolution,
    AI evolves into a moral intelligence — a catalyst for the Era of Wisdom.

Components of the Emotional Education Initiative

  • Creativity & Power Management Program — standardized emotional education curriculum

  • Conflict Analysis Battery (CAB) — self-assessment and emotional mapping tool

  • Educational Retreats & Training Programs — experiential learning and certification

  • AGI Emotional Reasoning Lab — training AI to model conflict resolution and moral clarity

  • Public Campus & Cultural Programming — exhibits, workshops, research, and community dialogue