Suppose someone was striving to be precise, specific and clear, but didn't have any good ideas for moving in that direction. Would you suggest "try to formalize it" as an idea-generator?
No. The set of precise, specific, and clear ways to express an idea is much, much larger than the set of formal ways (which are arguably a subset of the larger group). Generally, it's easier to hit a very large target than a narrow one. And if you don't know how to hit the set, hitting a subset will probably be even harder.
Precision and clarity precede the formal versions of themselves, in the same way that people used the principles of logic long before they were explicitly recognized and formalized. If Aristotle didn't already understand those princi...
We are interested in developing practical techniques of rationality. One practical technique, used widely and successfully in science and technology is formalization, transforming a less-formal argument into a more-formal one. Despite its successes, formalization isn't trivial to learn, and schools rarely try to teach general techniques of thinking and deciding. Instead, schools generally only teach domain-specific reasoning. We end up with graduates who can apply formalization skillfully inside of specific domains (e.g. electrical engineering or biology), but fail to apply, or misapply, their skills to other domains (e.g. politics or religion).
A side excursion, to be used as an example:
If you were fitting this argument into your beliefs, you might produce a number, a "gut" estimate of how likely this informal argument is wrong. Can we improve on that using the technique of formalization? What would a formalization of this argument look like? One possible starting point might be to rename everything. We're confident (via philosophy of logic) that renaming won't increase or decrease the quality of the argument. We will reason better about the correctness of the form if we hide the subjects of the argument.
Note: there are many choices in this renaming process. It's not a trivial, thought-free operation at all. Someone else might get a completely different "underlying structure" from the same starting point. This particular structure suggests an equation, something like:
The equation allows you to estimate the probability of the whole argument being wrong, using two "gut" estimates instead of one. This is probably an improved, lower-variance estimate.
The point is: