you could take any position really and feed it into Houdini, Rybka, Stockfish, Critter or any strong chess engine to see i how it likes your move compared to it's best move (or perhaps you both work out the same best move).
Otherwise you could play 7 moves or so deep in any opening you're familar with and apply the process and after that run it in a chess engine like those above.
Also you could collect some Grandmaster Games play them forward a little maybe 4-20 moves or whatever lights your fancy and then see if you play the same next move as the GM. Alternatively put that position again into a chess engine if you don't have strong player to seek answers or opinions on.
Hey all. I just got the book today and I think it's going to help me a ton. I also plan to take lessons in the near future. But what I was wondering is, are there any sets of puzzles that you can use this method on to find the correct move. Well, I know I could with any position, but I mean something that will tell me if I analyzed it correctly.
Thanks for any help.