A Deep Dive into Axiomatic Design -- Part I: Problem Formulation
Pith reviewed 2026-06-29 21:23 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
First-level functional requirements in axiomatic design should not legitimately vary across designers given identical customer needs and constraints.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Problem formulation that converts customer needs and constraints into a minimum set of independent first-level FRs is the most critical step in axiomatic design. First-level FRs are defined such that they should not legitimately vary across designers for the same inputs, because they follow directly from the needs while satisfying the independence axiom. Common difficulties include introducing unnecessary dependencies, misidentifying the minimum set, or confusing FRs with design parameters, all of which produce downstream failures. The paper offers concrete guidance drawn from Suh's texts to avoid these errors and notes that large language models can assist with information gathering but can
What carries the argument
The first-level functional requirements (FRs): the minimum independent set of functions that satisfy given customer needs and constraints, derived without designer-specific variation.
If this is right
- Designers facing identical needs converge on the same first-level FRs, reducing subjectivity at the problem-formulation stage.
- Avoiding common pitfalls in FR formulation prevents the creation of coupled or over-specified designs that fail later.
- Large language models can retrieve and organize information but cannot replace the human judgment required to establish the minimum independent FR set.
- Well-posed first-level FRs serve as a stable foundation for subsequent decomposition and design-parameter selection.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If first-level FRs are fixed by needs alone, then axiomatic design could serve as a more objective benchmark for evaluating AI-generated design proposals.
- The emphasis on independence at the first level may extend to other design theories that begin with requirement translation.
- Testing the claim would require controlled experiments in which multiple designers receive identical need statements and compare their resulting FR sets.
Load-bearing premise
The principles and definitions drawn from Suh's three books apply universally and without modification to all design contexts, including those involving large language models.
What would settle it
Two designers independently producing different minimal independent first-level FR sets for the exact same customer needs and constraints, both satisfying the independence axiom, would falsify the claim that such FRs should not legitimately vary.
Figures
read the original abstract
Problem formulation translating customer needs and constraints into a minimum set of independent first-level functional requirements, is arguably the most critical step in every design framework, including axiomatic design yet it is frequently misunderstood or underestimated in practice. This paper focuses exclusively on problem formulation in axiomatic design it clarifies what first-level FRs are (and are not), explains why they should not legitimately vary across designers given the same needs and constraints, and highlights intrinsic difficulties and recurring pitfalls that lead to design failure. The discussion is grounded primarily in Nam P.Suh's three books. The Principles of Design, Axiomatic Design Advances and Applications, and Complexity Theory, and it offers practical guidance to help designers formulate well-posed first-level FRs. Finally, the paper briefly revisits problem formulation in the era of large language models and discusses what such tools can (and cannot) contribute at the first level.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript provides a conceptual clarification of problem formulation in axiomatic design, with emphasis on translating customer needs and constraints into a minimum set of independent first-level functional requirements (FRs). It argues, drawing primarily from Suh's three cited books, that these first-level FRs are uniquely fixed by the given needs and constraints and therefore should not legitimately vary across designers; it identifies intrinsic difficulties and pitfalls, offers practical guidance for formulating well-posed FRs, and briefly revisits the topic in the context of large language models.
Significance. If the interpretive clarification holds, the work could help standardize early-stage design practice and reduce downstream failures by making explicit the definitional constraints on first-level FRs. The direct grounding in Suh's primary texts and the provision of practical guidance constitute modest strengths for an educational or methodological contribution; the brief LLM discussion adds limited timeliness but introduces no new claims.
minor comments (3)
- The abstract asserts that first-level FRs 'should not legitimately vary across designers' yet provides no independent argument or counter-example analysis beyond the adopted definitions; this point should be explicitly framed as a direct consequence of Suh's framework rather than an additional result.
- The manuscript states it 'focuses exclusively on problem formulation' but then includes a section on large language models; the relationship of the LLM discussion to the exclusive focus should be clarified in the introduction or abstract.
- Specific citations or page references to the three Suh books are not supplied for the key definitions and principles invoked; adding such references would strengthen traceability of the clarifications.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of the manuscript and for recommending minor revision. The work focuses on clarifying the formulation of first-level functional requirements in axiomatic design, drawing directly from Suh's primary texts, and we are pleased that the grounding, practical guidance, and timeliness of the LLM discussion are noted as strengths.
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper grounds all claims about first-level FRs and their non-variation in Nam P. Suh's three independent books as external references. No equations, fitted parameters, predictions, or self-citations by the present author appear. The non-variation statement follows directly from the adopted external definitions rather than any internal reduction or self-referential construction. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks with no load-bearing steps that collapse to the paper's own inputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Principles and definitions of first-level functional requirements as presented in Nam P.S. Suh's books (The Principles of Design, Axiomatic Design Advances and Applications, Complexity Theory)
Reference graph
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