Idea Evaluation is the practice of questioning, testing, and improving ideas. It asks whether an idea is clear, coherent, supported, useful, and open to correction. The goal is not to defend an idea at all costs, but to understand what kind of idea it is and how much confidence it deserves.
In TST, Idea Evaluation is one of the Five Thought Tools. It uses methods like Occam’s Razor, Socratic questioning, peer review, debate, holism, reductionism, and comparative analysis. These tools help you examine an idea from different angles, compare it to alternatives, and test whether it survives contact with reality, reason, and better evidence.
Idea Evaluation applies to your own ideas and to the ideas you encounter from others. This matters because ideas shape beliefs, choices, frameworks, identities, and cultures. A good thinker does not merely collect ideas. A good thinker evaluates them.