Brittleness serves as a critical indicator for assessing whether reservoirs can form complex fracture networks. While methods based on brittle mineral content or rock mechanical parameters are widely used, their lack of integration between mineralogy and mechanics introduces limitations. A single evaluation parameter cannot accurately assess shale brittleness. There is a need for a universally applicable method that comprehensively considers mineral composition, mechanical properties, and brittleness variations in shale evaluation. This study uses Longmaxi shale in the Sichuan Basin as an example, establishing a mineral disorder index based on shale mineral composition and mechanical characteristics, incorporating the influence of confining pressure to establish a shale brittleness index. Results indicate varying weights of brittleness contributions from different minerals, ranked in descending order: pyrite, quartz, calcite, dolomite, feldspar, and clay. Greater complexity in mineral combinations correlates with lower shale brittleness indices. Typically, single mineral disorder indices show a positive correlation with internal mineral disorder indices. Confining pressure exhibits an inversely proportional relationship with shale brittleness indices, with brittleness at 30, 50, and 70 MPa confining pressures being 0.737, 0.586, and 0.451 times those without confining pressure, respectively. This method guides current brittleness research and reservoir production enhancement.