少点错误 11月05日 06:21
如何具体化问题以找到有效解决方案
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文章探讨了在解决问题时,将模糊的困境具体化的重要性。作者强调,仅仅列出困难点是不够的,关键在于提出“有用的具体”细节,通常需要包含“谁”、“做了什么”、“何时何地”等要素。例如,将“想吃甜食”具体化为“下午会想吃甜食”,将“卡在数学题”具体化为“看到题目眼睛就发花,然后就去看脸书”。这种具体化有助于深入分析问题根源,并制定可行的解决方案。文章还指出,解决方案也需要具体化,以便大脑能够模拟并评估其可行性,避免流于空泛的意图。

🎯 **具体化问题是关键:** 文章指出,在面对困难时,仅仅列出问题本身是不够的,更重要的是要将问题具体化。例如,将“我需要吃得更好”具体化为“我下午会想吃糖”,将“我被数学题难住了”具体化为“当我看到数学题时,我的眼睛会发花,然后我就不自觉地去看脸书了”。这种具体化能帮助我们更清晰地识别问题的核心,从而更容易找到针对性的解决方案。

🌟 **“有用的具体”包含要素:** 作者强调,“有用的具体”通常需要包含“谁”、“做了什么”、“何时何地”等信息。例如,描述任务“掉坑”时,可以具体说明是“爱丽丝提到‘有人应该做X任务’,然后我们就去讨论别的事情了,之后爱丽丝、鲍勃和查理都没有记住去做这个任务”。这些细节信息有助于我们构建问题发生时的模型,从而更容易进行深入分析和后续数据收集。

💡 **解决方案也需具体化:** 文章提出,解决方案同样需要具体化,以便大脑能够进行模拟并评估其可行性。例如,模糊的解决方案“我会少吃糖”不如具体的“当我注意到想吃糖的时候,我会吃点我喜欢的其他食物来代替”更有效。具体化的解决方案能够让我们更清晰地规划执行步骤,并利用直觉判断其潜在的成功率。

🔍 **识别“真空”的重要性:** 除了关注已发生的问题,识别“真空”——即本应发生但未发生的情况——也同样重要。例如,当有人说“我只有和别人聊天时才能产生想法”时,需要进一步追问“当你试图自己产生想法时会发生什么?”。识别这些未被注意到的行动“真空”或机会点,能够拓宽我们寻找解决方案的视野。

Published on November 4, 2025 10:15 PM GMT

Or: "Who, what, when, where?" -> "Why?"

 

In "What's hard about this? What can I do about that?", I talk about how, when you're facing a difficult situation, it's often useful to list exactly what's difficult about it. And then, systematically brainstorm ideas for dealing with those difficult things.

Then, the problem becomes easy.

But, there is a secret subskill necessary for this to work. The first few people I pitched "What's hard about this and what can I do about that?" to happened to already have the subskill, so I didn't notice for awhile.

The subskill is "being a useful kind of 'concrete.'"

Often, people who are ostensibly problem-solving, will say things that are either vague, or concrete but in a way that doesn't help. (This doesn't just apply to "why is this hard?", it's more general).

Here's some examples of vague things:

Here are some examples of somewhat-concrete-but-not-that-helpful things you might say, about each of those, if you were trying to ask "what's hard about that?"

Here are some more helpfully concrete things:

(I'm going to come back to "I only get ideas when I talk to other people and they basically give me the ideas", because the problem there is a bit differently shaped)

Usefully concrete things typically have at least a "who", a "what [happened]" and a "when and/or where". When you have those things, it's a lot easier to notice which followup questions are useful. Such as:

The Who/What/Where gives you enough concrete detail to start forming a model of:

This puts you in a much better position to start investigating and gathering followup data. You know who was involved, you know what situation they were in, that's specific enough to pay more attention the next time you end up in that situation.

By contrast, if I ask "why do you love sugar so much?" (as opposed to "why do you get sugar cravings in the afternoon?"), the answer-space is wider and less obviously useful. "Because... my mom fed me too much sugar and I got used to it?". "Because it tastes good?". It suggests some kind of essentialist answer instead of a mechanistic answer.

"Why do I get sugar cravings in the afternoon?" suggests that either something specifically interesting is happening in the afternoon, or, maybe it's happening a few hours earlier every day. Or, something about my biochemistry is just real "afternoon-sugar-craving" shaped, but at least that can prompt some followup questions about why is my biochemistry like that.

Noticing the empty space

What's wrong with "I only get ideas when I talk to other people and they basically give me the ideas?". It's located where the problem isn't. You talk to people, you either come up with or get new ideas. Great.

I was recently talking to someone who said the "only get ideas around others" sentence. I asked "what happens when you try to have ideas?" and at first they sort of shrugged and moved on without answering the question, and eventually I pinned them down and they said "I... guess I don't try to have ideas?"

And then I asked "what do you expect would happen, if you tried?"

And they said "I dunno, I wouldn't have any. It wouldn't work"

And I asked "Can you be more specific about that? What wouldn't work?". They didn't quite know how to answer the question, I tried to explain something like "what cognitive motions do you think you'd do, if you were trying to have ideas? What questions would you ask yourself? What places would you look?"

Eventually they said "okay, I guess yeah upon reflection I basically just haven't tried even at all and when I try even at all, things come up like 'I'd look for books or papers to read that might have interesting concepts I could build on' or 'I'd ask why I don't understand something that feels confusing."

In this case it was hard to get started down the journey, because there was no specific time that they might have gone and tried to generate novel ideas. 

Noticing a vacuum is harder than noticing when something goes wrong. But, when you're going to try and articulate your problem, you can notice if you have failed to state a situation where the problem is occurring, and widen your search space.

(There's a similar-but-less-extreme version with Alice, Bob and Charlie. Where first, there was an opportunity to, say, decide who was doing Task X, or write it down to remember later, or something, and they just didn't notice that as an inflection point at all)

Problem solutions also need a Who/What/Where/When, and maybe also "How?"

Dumb/vague solutions: 

There's no way that'll actually work reliably. A somewhat better set:

The reason problem solutions should be concrete is partly so it's easier to form a plan to actually do them. i.e. who is actually doing what? When is it time to do that?

But, another reason to do it is that, if something is sufficiently concrete, your brain can actually simulate it, and then you get to leverage your fast intuitions may immediately get a sense of whether it'll work. For example, when I look at the above statements, I immediately imagine:

To deal with each of those, I'd ask "Okay, what's hard about this situation, and what can we do about it?". But, it's much easier to ask that question when you can clearly visualize the situation, and your imagined interventions on it.



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问题解决 具体化 思维模型 决策 Problem Solving Concretization Thinking Models Decision Making
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