Question
How do I practice definitions in thinking?
Quick Answer
Pick a word you use constantly in your work or thinking — something like 'quality,' 'success,' 'productive,' or 'fair.' Write down your operational definition: what specific, observable conditions must be true for that word to apply? Then ask a colleague or partner to do the same for the same.
The most direct way to practice definitions in thinking is through a focused exercise: Pick a word you use constantly in your work or thinking — something like 'quality,' 'success,' 'productive,' or 'fair.' Write down your operational definition: what specific, observable conditions must be true for that word to apply? Then ask a colleague or partner to do the same for the same word. Compare. The gap between your definitions is the gap between your reasoning.
Common pitfall: Assuming that because you and someone else use the same word, you share the same concept. This is the most common and most invisible failure in collaborative thinking. You can build an entire argument, strategy, or relationship on a shared word that maps to completely different meanings — and never notice until the structure collapses.
This practice connects to Phase 2 (Atomicity and Decomposition) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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