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TST Weekly Column with WWB Research

Societal Blindness: Key Ideas

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TouchstoneTruth Weekly Column
Wed 21 Jan 2026
TST Weekly Column
21 Jan
This week:
When evidence threatens identity, even obvious truths can be ignored.
WEEKLY AUDIO
Listen to the column, or the research behind it.
The TST Weekly Column is a collection of standalone pieces—timeless ideas viewed through the lens of the present. One clear idea each week, built and refined over time through reason, evidence, and lived experience.

WWB Research

Weekly Wisdom Builder

Wed 21 Jan 2026 Edition
— Research & Learning —

Stories: Science Philosophy Critical Thinking History Big Bang Metaphysics Evolution Biases Futurism Ancient History Ethics Reasoning

1 Essay + 6 Tidbits
1 Weekly Focus
The research, stories, and questions that inform this week’s column.
This Week:
— Societal Blindness —
Nicolaus Copernicus belongs in the history books because he ushered in modern cosmology by confronting societal blindness.
Greetings!

This week I chose Copernicus because we live in a moment when large masses of people refuse to see reality. We live in a time when the truth is so clearly right in front of us, but so many cannot, or refuse to see it. Copernicus lived in such a time and this is that story.

–Michael Alan Prestwood
6 Key Ideas
Weekly Crossroads
A few minutes of key ideas!
The research & wisdom reminders.

1 Story of the Week »

Nicolas Copernicus
born 1473
Lived 1473 to 1543, aged 70.
Nicolaus Copernicus lived quietly, worked carefully, and changed the universe without ever seeing the revolution he began.

2 Quote of the Week »

“The movement of the planets agrees best with actual observations.”
Nicolaus Copernicus judged ideas not by tradition or authority, but by how well they fit the evidence.

3 Science »

Did Copernicus prove that Earth moves around the Sun?
Nicolaus Copernicus did not prove heliocentrism—he built a model that explained the sky better than any alternative available at the time.

4Philosophy »

Did Copernicus remove humanity from the center of the universe?
Nicolaus Copernicus didn’t remove humanity from the center of the universe—he removed the assumption that centrality equals importance.

5Critical Thinking »

Why do intelligent people defend bad ideas?
Intelligence doesn’t protect us from false beliefs—worldview attachment does the real work.

6History!

Was Copernicus famous during his life?
Nicolaus Copernicus became world-changingly famous after his death—but lived most of his life in relative obscurity.
Inspired?
Take the deep dive.
Article of the Week
History
Article
The Universe Before the Telescope
Astronomy
For most of human history, the cosmos was not something we studied from afar—it was something we lived beneath. With only the naked eye, our ancestors tracked patterns, told stories, and searched for meaning in the sky. The universe before the telescope was intimate, mysterious, and profoundly human.
That’s the whole rhythm!
1 Weekly Idea • 6 Research Tidbits • An Archive to Dive Deeper 
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