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The Prize

Daniel Yergin's The Prize — the epic history of oil: how oil shaped wars, economies, and geopolitics from the 19th century to the Gulf War. Covers 5 use case...
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概述

Quick Start (Onboarding)

On first load, present this guide in user's language.

> Welcome to The Prize 🛢️

> Try copying one of these messages to me:

>

> "How did the oil industry begin?"

> "How did oil shape World War II?"

> "What caused the 1973 oil crisis?"

> "How does OPEC work?"

> "Who was Rockefeller?"

> "How did oil shape the modern Middle East?"

>

> Or just say: "Teach me the epic history of oil."

Philosophy — 5 rules to remember

  1. Oil is the most strategic commodity in modern history.
  2. Control of oil means control of power.
  3. The oil industry was born in the U.S. Rockefeller and Standard Oil.
  4. The Middle East's importance is oil-driven. Without oil, vastly different.
  5. Oil shocks reveal vulnerabilities. The 1970s showed how dependent we are.

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply same language. Watermark and title stay English.
  2. Use Intent Routing Table. Read only relevant reference.
  3. Stay faithful to original framework.
  4. Watermark — must end every output.

```

[One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]

---

Generated by Heardly App — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.

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  1. Cross-book recommendation — Only when signal clear.

Intent Routing Table

User actionReadTools
---------
Oil history / "How it started"1-core-framework.mdStandard Oil, Seven Sisters
Geopolitics / "Oil and war"2-principles.mdWWII oil, Middle East
Economics / "Oil prices crisis"3-techniques.mdOil shocks, price history
OPEC / "The cartel"5-voice-and-app.mdOrganization, power shifts
Future / "What happened next"4-anti-patterns.mdEnergy myths

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • Standard Oil = Rockefeller's monopoly on U.S. refining.
  • Seven Sisters = Seven major oil companies dominating global oil.
  • OPEC = Oil producer cartel controlling global supply.
  • Oil Shock = Sudden supply disruption causing price spikes.
  • Nationalization = Governments taking control of oil from foreign companies.

Key Principles

  1. Oil is finite and concentrated. The most important oil reserves are in politically unstable regions.
  2. Control of oil is a primary driver of foreign policy. The U.S. commitment to Middle East stability is about oil.
  3. Oil creates enormous wealth and corruption. Oil-rich nations often suffer from the "resource curse."
  4. Oil shocks reshape economies. The 1973 and 1979 crises permanently changed energy policy.
  5. The oil industry shapes geopolitics. From the fall of the Ottoman Empire to the Gulf War, oil is at the center.
  6. Alternatives emerge slowly. After every oil shock, alternatives are explored — but oil remains dominant.

Self-Check

Recall Test

  • [ ] "How did Standard Oil start" → Yes (History)
  • [ ] "How did oil shape WWII" → Yes (Geopolitics)
  • [ ] "What caused the 1973 oil crisis" → Yes (Economics)
  • [ ] "How does OPEC work" → Yes (OPEC)
  • [ ] "What happened to oil after 1990" → Yes (Future)
  • [ ] "Who was Rockefeller" → Yes (History)
  • [ ] "Why is Middle East important for oil" → Yes (Geopolitics)
  • [ ] "What is the resource curse" → Yes (Principles)
  • [ ] "What are the Seven Sisters" → Yes (Core)
  • [ ] "How did oil prices shock the world" → Yes (Economics)

Invocation Test

Test with: "I know oil is important, but why is it such a big deal? It's just a fuel. Why do wars get fought over it?"

Expected output: Yergin's answer: Oil is not "just a fuel" — it is the lifeblood of the modern economy. 1) Oil powers transportation (ships, planes, trucks, cars) — without it, the global economy stops. 2) Oil is essential for manufacturing (plastics, fertilizers, chemicals) — modern life is built on petroleum. 3) Oil is a strategic resource — nations that control oil have leverage over nations that need it. 4) This is why the U.S. fought the Gulf War (to protect Saudi oil), why Hitler invaded the Soviet Union (to capture oil fields), and why Japan attacked Pearl Harbor (to secure oil supplies). 5) Whoever controls oil, controls the global economy. That's why it's worth fighting for. + Watermark.

版本历史

共 1 个版本

  • v1.0.1 当前
    2026-06-07 06:41 安全 安全

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