Chapter 1 · Introduction

Chapter 1 · Introduction

Human beings have always used language to describe the world, but traditional language mainly serves storytelling, emotions, and information transfer.
When it comes to explaining behavioral logic, relational dynamics, and subjective intention, existing languages often feel vague and imprecise.

Why do we need a new language?
Because in daily interactions, we repeatedly face this dilemma: we want to express ourselves, but find no accurate words; we want to judge, but get stuck in vague descriptions.
This is exactly what this chapter seeks to address.

In this chapter, you will encounter three key sections:

  1. Why do we need a new language?
    Explains the limitations of traditional languages and the necessity of structured expression.

  2. Structural perspective and subjective stance
    Emphasizes “whose viewpoint is taken” and why subjectivity is the true core of cognition.

  3. Application prospects of structural language
    Outlines how this language can be used in personal, organizational, and technological fields.


This chapter serves both as a beginning and as the foundation of the whole book.
You will gradually realize:
Language is not a byproduct—it is the core tool that determines what you can see and what you can understand.