Chapter 5 | Turning a Vague Problem Into a Clear One Is a Rare Ability
Most real problems begin as vague discomfort. Clear expression turns discomfort into a solvable object.
Core idea: Clear problem language includes subject, situation, gap, evidence, boundary, and desired state.
How to read it: treat the chapter as a working frame. Identify the situation it describes, the mistake it warns against, and the standard it asks you to build into your own system.
Static practice: Rewrite one vague complaint into a clear problem statement with evidence and a desired outcome.
This English preview is a concise adaptation for the bilingual site. The structure is ready for a fuller English manuscript without changing the page code.