Turn abstract themes into source-grounded editorial plans by tracing where an idea, governing approach, or development logic was formed, tested, and later validated in real practice.
This skill is for editorial planning, not final article drafting.
Given a broad theme, produce a topic-planning output that answers:
Apply this five-step method.
Restate the theme in one sentence without slogans. Identify the governing idea, the practical problem it tried to solve, and the kinds of real-world settings where it would likely appear.
Look for the earliest or most formative practical settings where the theme was explored, shaped, or validated. Prefer cases with visible decision logic, clear problems, and strong reporting scenes.
Organize material into:
Prefer scene, person, object, comparison, and timeline marker over abstract explanation alone.
Always include:
Use the structure in references/planning-output-template.md.
Use evaluation logic from references/source-evolution-echo-patterns.md when deciding whether a candidate case is a true source point.
This skill is for topic planning, reporting architecture, and practice-based framing of abstract themes. It is not for full article drafting, line-by-line scripts, or social copy optimization.
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