> Putting ideas into words doesn't have to mean writing, of course. You can also do it the old way, by talking. But in my experience, writing is the stricter test.
As pg brings it up, writing is one of the many ways to shape ideas and even change them. But I wouldn’t go so far to say it’s the stricter test.
Each way of expressing and sharing ideas will test it in different ways.
Writing may look for conciseness, flow and completeness while talking about it can validate ideas for collaborative building.
Going a step forward, I’d suggest that putting Ideas into Action IS the stricter test.
As pg brings it up, writing is one of the many ways to shape ideas and even change them. But I wouldn’t go so far to say it’s the stricter test.
Each way of expressing and sharing ideas will test it in different ways. Writing may look for conciseness, flow and completeness while talking about it can validate ideas for collaborative building.
Going a step forward, I’d suggest that putting Ideas into Action IS the stricter test.