Weekly Insights for Thinkers

Science  Philosophy  Critical Thinking  History  Politics RW  AI  Physics  •  Evolution  Astronomy 30 Phil Book More…
Science  Phil  Cr. Thinking  History 

FAQ

What’s the difference between intentional change and wishful thinking?

By Michael Alan Prestwood

Author and Natural Philosopher

Wed 14 Jan 2026
Published 3 hours ago.
Updated 10 hours ago.
Worldview
Share :

What’s the difference between intentional change and wishful thinking?

Intentional change is causal. It alters behavior, constraints, feedback loops, and environments. Wishful thinking, by contrast, changes language and intent, but leaves the underlying system untouched. Hoping reality will change around you is not a good path to success.

This type of thinking reminds me of the wishful thinking fallacy, where desire is mistaken for evidence; the planning fallacy, where effort and friction are consistently underestimated; and the therapeutic idea of magical thinking, where thoughts or declarations are treated as if they directly cause outcomes. In each case, intent is quietly confused with causation.

This matters because it connects directly to three deeper problems. We mistake habit for choice, assuming we’re deciding when we’re actually repeating. We mistake self-stories for truth, editing the past to protect identity rather than updating it with evidence. And we avoid better questions, which are often the only tools capable of interrupting autopilot in the moment it matters.

Critical thinking begins when we stop asking what we want to change and start asking what actually causes change.

Michael Alan Prestwood
Author & Natural Philosopher

Prestwood writes on science-first philosophy, with particular attention to the convergence of disciplines. Drawing on his TST Framework, his work emphasizes rational inquiry grounded in empirical observation while engaging questions at the edges of established knowledge. With TouchstoneTruth positioned as a living touchstone, this work aims to contribute reliable analysis in an emerging AI era where the credibility of information is increasingly contested.

WWB Menu
January 14, 2026
Essay of the Week
Eternal Recurrence: If You Had to Live This Year Forever
Story of the Week
Friedrich Nietzsche
Quote of the Week
Could you affirm your life so fully that you would will its eternal repetition?
Weekly Crossroads!
1. Science »
What does neuroscience say about “identity?”
2. Philosophy »
Did existential authenticity originate in the East?
3. Critical Thinking »
What’s the difference between intentional change and wishful thinking?
4. History!
What is the history of existentialism?

Comments

Join the Conversation! Currently logged out.
NEW BOOK! NOW AVAILABLE!!

30 Philosophers: A New Look at Timeless Ideas

by Michael Alan Prestwood
The story of the history of our best ideas!
WWB Menu
January 14, 2026
Essay of the Week
Eternal Recurrence: If You Had to Live This Year Forever
Story of the Week
Friedrich Nietzsche
Quote of the Week
Could you affirm your life so fully that you would will its eternal repetition?
Weekly Crossroads!
1. Science »
What does neuroscience say about “identity?”
2. Philosophy »
Did existential authenticity originate in the East?
3. Critical Thinking »
What’s the difference between intentional change and wishful thinking?
4. History!
What is the history of existentialism?
Scroll to Top