WWB Trainer

WWB Key Ideas

~ 4 minutes of short abstracts.

A Living Orientation to TouchstoneTruth. 

What follows is not an introduction to a single essay or topic, but an orientation to the larger project it belongs to.

TouchstoneTruth separates research, synthesis, and practice so each can improve without weakening the larger framework.

This project is built around the belief that ideas deserve time to be tested, refined, and revisited. Structured to preserve continuity, the ideas remain identifiable even as understanding evolves.

The Weekly Column

At the center of the project is the TST Weekly Column. Each week, one idea is explored as a complete edition.

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.

These columns are meant to endure, to be returned to, and to change honestly.

The Research Layer

Beneath each column lives the WWB research layer made up of short, focused tidbits.

In this project, claims are not merely asserted. They are attached to evidence, context, and traceable sources.

These tidbits do the quiet work of grounding ideas in evidence.

The WWB Trainer

Ideas are not only read here—they are revisited.

The WWB Trainer exists to help ideas surface gradually over time, reconnecting related material through repetition and variation.

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

A Philosophy of Journalism

Guided by the philosophy of journalism, it values clarity, sourcing, and restraint over speed or certainty.

Journalism serves truth best when it separates facts, inference, context, and opinion — and makes the relationship between them clear.

Claims are shown alongside their evidence. Corrections are treated as integrity rather than weakness.

The TST Framework

To support clearer reasoning, TouchstoneTruth draws on the TST Framework.

Mind traps are not moral failures. They are predictable patterns of human cognition that can be noticed, named, and reduced.

The framework is composed of 5 thought tools, 4 mind traps, and 3 truth hammers.

The Idea of Ideas

At a deeper level, this work rests on an epistemology known as the Idea of Ideas.

Reality does not owe consistency to our descriptions of it. When our ideas fail, reality is not the thing that moved.

All knowledge here is treated as representational rather than final.

The Material–Spiritual Framework

Closely related is the Material–Spiritual Framework, which helps prevent category errors when thinking about reality, meaning, and human experience.

A ritual may not change the laws of physics, but it can change how a person grieves, remembers, belongs, or endures.

It allows science to remain rigorous and meaning to remain real.

A Living Touchstone

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

A body of work designed to evolve without losing coherence—to preserve not just conclusions, but the reasoning that led to them.

The aim is not to persuade quickly, but to think responsibly over time.

One idea at a time.
Evidence where it belongs.
Revision without erasure.

Return when useful.
Revisit when needed.

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