WWB Trainer

WWB Key Ideas

~ 4 minutes of short abstracts.

What you’re listening to is a random set of thoughts related to the larger, living project.

Rather than chasing completeness, each piece aims for clarity at the time it is written — and openness to better clarity later.

At the center is the TST Weekly Column.

Essays and articles do different work. Articles usually look outward and explain. Essays look inward and explore. The TST Column leans into the essay tradition: reflective, honest, and open to refinement.

Beneath each column lives a quieter layer—the research.

Short pieces. Tidbits.

Tidbits are the smallest working units of the Living Touchstone project — focused facts, stories, explanations, quotes, or timeline entries tied directly to evidence and sources.

Ideas here are not only read once and forgotten.

They are meant to resurface through the Weekly Wisdom Builder and the WWB Trainer.

The TST Trainer allows ideas to be experienced in different contexts, helping patterns emerge naturally across philosophy, science, history, and critical thinking.

All rests on journalism.

Speed can inform, but it can also distort. Understanding often requires slowing down long enough to test sources, compare claims, and see connections.

To help with clearer reasoning, this project uses the TST Framework.

Good thinking begins when confidence becomes accountable to evidence.

At a deeper level is epistemology, my Idea of Ideas.

Better ideas do not eliminate uncertainty. They manage it more honestly.

Closely related is the Material–Spiritual Framework.

The Material–Spiritual Framework gives spiritual experience a place without letting untested metaphysical claims override shared reality.

Together, these pieces form what I call a Living Touchstone.

Return when useful.

Listen again when the noise grows loud.

Done. Refresh for another set.

TST Trainer
(c) 2025-2026 TouchstoneTruth.
Writing and coding by Michael Alan Prestwood.
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