Thought-provoking in a sentence as an adjective

This is a fantastic post, very thought-provoking. But also very sad to me.

I find his articles fun to read and thought-provoking. A lot of what he says goes against the conventional wisdom of the startup world or against my own way of doing things.

This is thought-provoking, which is good. However there are significant issues with the approach.

Or perhaps she knew but didn't care and only wanted to write a humorous and potentially thought-provoking blog post. Why are you so quick to defend an algorithm which produced a wrong answer and detract a reasonable and intelligent human being?

There are quite a few indie developers out there that are making engaging, thought-provoking puzzle games. They are typically short, have interesting gameplay mechanics, and inexpensive.

It pretty much demonstrates just how difficult it is to apply mathematics to analyze real-world problems, which is really interesting and thought-provoking IMO. Anyway, my point is, Colin has good taste, and you're doing him a serious disservice. He does good, helpful work, and I hope he doesn't stop, and doesn't straight-up leave, because the community would be worse off.

I read his book, "You are not a gadget", and found it really thought-provoking and inspiring to focus more on real-world stuff I needed to do and less on reading about the ever latest fad that has no impact on my life whatsoever. As always, was it the book or my state of mind/stage in my life during which I read the book that made me change my mind about re-prioritizing?

As a thought experiment, if you take the amounts of money involved in typical fundings and even a lot of exits, and compare it to amounts of money involved in things outside the startup ecosystem, it can be thought-provoking, even if you're comparing apples to oranges. For instance: - The project budgets of large consultancies.

Ultimately, he seems to be dragging Mims' argument to a greater extreme than it is and attacking it on those grounds: I encourage readers to read the original article -- which, at the very least, is interesting and thought-provoking -- and draw their own conclusions.

Thought-provoking definitions

adjective

stimulating interest or thought; "a challenging hypothesis"; "a thought-provoking book"

See also: challenging