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.

The TST Trainer turns ideas into practice. It brings important concepts back into view through repetition, variation, and reflection.

At the center is the TST Weekly Column.

What you’ve read is meant to linger. A good idea should not vanish into the stream. It should be revisited, tested, challenged, and refined as part of a larger search for truth.

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 is where the Living Touchstone project becomes practice: short prompts, recurring ideas, and steady work toward clearer thinking.

All rests on journalism.

Journalism is strongest when it resists turning complex realities into premature moral certainty.

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

Good thinking depends on three kinds of practice: thought tools that organize ideas, mind traps that warn us about distortion, and truth hammers that test public claims.

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

Empirical ideas answer most directly to observation, measurement, and material reality.

Closely related is the Material–Spiritual Framework.

When spirituality makes claims about the material world, evidence matters. When it expresses meaning, identity, or value, interpretation matters.

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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