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Critical thinking is the skill of seeking truth by
evaluating ideas. Learning to think rationally is a course in
intellectual self-defense that every human being needs.
Choosing Your Ideas
What do you believe in and why? Think for yourself and consider what
you believe and ask yourself why you believe it and examine it to
decide for yourself what you really believe.
Adding your personal ideas to your profile is a good way of putting your thoughts down.
Critical Thinking Is For Everyone
Some people believe that critical thinking is based on Descartes'
skepticism which is inherently hostile to some ideas, but critical
thinking is for everyone. Many religious groups encourage critical
thinking (some Christian colleges, for example).
Wikipedia On Critical Thinking
Critical thinking consists of mental processes of discernment, analysis and evaluation. It includes possible processes of reflecting upon a tangible or intangible
item in order to form a solid judgment that reconciles scientific
evidence with common sense. In contemporary usage "critical" has a
certain negative connotation that does not apply in the present case.
Though the term "analytical thinking" may seem to convey the idea more
accurately, critical thinking clearly involves synthesis, evaluation,
and reconstruction of thinking, in addition to analysis.
Critical thinkers gather information from all senses, verbal and/or written expressions, reflection, observation, experience and reasoning. Critical thinking has its basis in intellectual criteria that go beyond subject-matter divisions and which include: clarity, credibility, accuracy, precision, relevance, depth, breadth, logic, significance and fairness.
Overview
Critical thinking is a form of judgment, specifically purposeful and
reflective judgment. Using critical thinking one makes a decision or
solves the problem of judging what to believe or what to do, but does
so in a reflective way. Critical thinking gives due consideration to
the evidence, the context of judgment, the relevant criteria for making
that judgment well, the applicable methods or techniques for forming
that judgment, and the applicable theoretical constructs for
understanding the nature of the problem and the question at hand. These
elements also happen to be the key defining characteristics of
professional fields and academic disciplines. This is why critical
thinking can occur within a given subject field (by reference to its
specific set of permissible questions, evidence sources, criteria,
etc.) and across subject fields in all those spaces where human beings
need to interact and make decisions, solve problems, and figure out
what to believe and what to do.
Within the framework of scientific skepticism, the process of critical thinking involves acquiring information and evaluating it to reach a well-justified conclusion or answer. Part of critical thinking comprises informal logic.
However, a large part of critical thinking goes beyond informal logic
and includes assessment of beliefs and identification of prejudice, bias, propaganda, self-deception, distortion, misinformation, etc. Given research in cognitive psychology, some educators believe that schools should focus more on teaching their students critical thinking skills,
intellectual standards, and cultivating intellectual traits (such as
intellectual humility, intellectual empathy, intellectual integrity,
and fair-mindedness) than on memorizing facts by rote learning.
As defined in A Greek-English Lexicon, the verb krino- means to choose, decide or judge. Hence a krites is a discerner, judge or arbiter. Those who are kritikos have the ability to discern or decide by exercising sound judgment. The word krino- also means to separate (winnow) the wheat from the chaff or that which has worth from that which does not.
Critical thinking is important, because it enables one to analyze,
evaluate, explain, and restructure our thinking, decreasing thereby the
risk of acting on, or thinking with, a false premise. However, even
with the use of critical thinking skills, mistakes can happen due to a
thinker's egocentrism or sociocentrism or failure to be in possession
of the full facts. In addition, there is always the possibility of
inadvertent human error.
Universal concepts and principles of critical thinking can be
applied to any context or case but only by reflecting upon the nature
of that application. Critical thinking forms, therefore, a system of
related, and overlapping, modes of thought such as anthropological
thinking, sociological thinking, historical thinking, political
thinking, psychological thinking, philosophical thinking, mathematical
thinking, chemical thinking, biological thinking, ecological thinking,
legal thinking, ethical thinking, musical thinking, thinking like a
painter, sculptor, engineer, business person, etc. In other words,
though critical thinking principles are universal, their application to
disciplines requires a process of reflective contextualization.
One can regard critical thinking as involving two aspects:
- a set of cognitive skills, intellectual standards, and traits of mind
- the disposition or intellectual commitment to use those structures to improve thinking and guide behavior.
Critical thinking, in the strong sense, does not include simply the
acquisition and retention of information, or the possession of a
skill-set which one does not use regularly; nor does critical thinking
merely exercise skills without acceptance of the results.
Universality
Critical thinking is based on concepts and principles, not on hard and fast, or step-by-step, procedures. [1]
Critical thinking does not assure that one will reach either the truth
or correct conclusions. First, one may not have all the relevant
information; indeed, important information may remain undiscovered, or
the information may not even be knowable. Furthermore, one may make
unjustified inferences, use inappropriate concepts, fail to notice
important implications, use a narrow or unfair point of view. One may
be a victim of self-delusion, egocentricity or sociocentricity, or
closed-mindedness. One's thinking may be unclear, inaccurate,
imprecise, irrelevant, narrow, shallow, illogical, or trivial. One may
be intellectually arrogant, intellectually lazy, or intellectually
hypocritical. These are some of the ways that human thinking can be
flawed.
Human thinking left to itself often leads to various forms of
self-deception, individually and socially; and at the left, right, and
mainstream of economic, political, and religious issues. Further
analysis and resources about this interaction may be found in Roderick
Hindery (2001): Indoctrination and Self-deception or Free and Critical Thought.
Uses
Critical thinking is useful only in those situations where human
beings need to solve problems, make decisions, or decide in a
reasonable and reflective way what to believe or what to do.(Robert Ennis)
That is, just about everywhere and all the time. Critical thinking is
important wherever the quality of human thinking significantly impacts
the quality of life (of any sentient creature). For example, success in
human life is tied to success in learning. At the same time, every
phase in the learning process is tied to critical thinking. Thus,
reading, writing, speaking, and listening can all be done critically or
uncritically. Critical thinking is crucial to becoming a close reader
and a substantive writer. Expressed most generally, critical thinking
is “a way of taking up the problems of life.” (William Graham Sumner, Folkways, 1906)
Irrespective of the sphere of thought, “a well cultivated critical thinker":
- raises vital questions and problems, formulating them clearly and precisely;
- gathers and assesses relevant information, using abstract ideas to interpret it effectively
- comes to well-reasoned conclusions and solutions, testing them against relevant criteria and standards;
- thinks open-mindedly within alternative systems of thought,
recognizing and assessing, as need be, their assumptions, implications,
and practical consequences; and
- communicates effectively with others in figuring out solutions to complex problems.
Effectiveness
Critical thinking is about being both willing and able to think.
Ideally one develops critical thinking skills and at the same time the
disposition to use those skills to solve problems and form good
judgments. The dispositional dimension of critical thinking is
characterological. Its focus in developing the habitual intention to be
truth-seeking, open-minded, systematic, analytical, inquisitive,
confident in reasoning, and prudent in making judgments. Those who are
ambivalent on one or more of these aspects of the disposition toward
critical thinking, or who have the opposite disposition [biased,
intolerant, disorganized, heedless of consequences, indifferent toward
new information, mistrustful of reasoning, imprudence]are less likely
to engage problems using their critical thinking skills. The
relationship between critical thinking skills and critical thinking
dispositions is an empirical question. Some have both in abundance,
some have skills but not the disposition to use them, some are disposed
but lack strong skills and some have neither. Two measures of critical
thinking dispositions are the California Critical Thinking Disposition
Inventory[2] and the California Measure of Mental Motivation[3].
Critical thinking may be distinguished, but not separated, from
emotions, desires, and traits of mind. Failure to recognize the
relationship between thinking, feeling, wanting, and traits of mind can
easily lead to various forms of self-deception, both individually and
collectively. When persons possess intellectual skills alone, without
the intellectual traits of mind, weak sense critical thinking results. Fair-minded or strong sense critical thinking requires intellectual humility, empathy, integrity, perseverance, courage, autonomy, confidence in reason, and other intellectual traits.
Thus, critical thinking without essential intellectual traits often
results in clever, but manipulative, often unethical, thought. In
short, the sophist, the con artist, the manipulator often uses an
intellectually defective but effective forms of thought — serving
unethical purposes. However, whereas critical thinking yields itself to
analytical considerations readily and may be considered largely
"objective", few humans notice the degree to which they uncritically
presuppose the mores and taboos of their society (and hence fail to
discern their own “subjectivity.” and one-sidedness).
Overcoming bias
There is no simple way to reduce one's bias. There are, however,
ways that one can begin to do so. The most important require developing
one's intellectual empathy and intellectual humility. The first
requires extensive experience in entering and accurately constructing
points of view toward which one has negative feelings. The second
requires extensive experience in identifying the extent of one's own
ignorance in a wide variety of subjects (ignorance whose admission
leads one to say, "I thought I knew, but I merely believed").
One becomes less biased and more broad-minded when one becomes more
intellectually empathic and intellectually humble, and that involves
time, deliberate practice and commitment. It involves considerable
personal and intellectual development.
To develop one's critical thinking abilities, one should learn the
art of suspending judgment (for example, when reading a novel, watching
a movie, engaging in dialogical or dialectical reasoning). Ways of
doing this include adopting a perceptive rather than judgmental
orientation; that is, avoiding moving from perception to judgment as
one applies critical thinking to an issue.
One should become aware of one's own fallibility by:
- accepting that everyone has subconscious biases, and accordingly questioning any reflexive judgments.
- adopting an ego-sensitive and, indeed, intellectually humble stance
- recalling previous beliefs that one once held strongly but now rejects
- realizing one still has numerous blind spots, despite the foregoing
An integration of insights from the critical thinking literature and
cognitive psychology literature is the "Method of Argument and
Heuristic Analysis." This technique illustrates the influences of
heuristics and biases on human decision making along with the
influences of thinking critically about reasons and claims.
Classroom applications
The key to seeing the significance of critical thinking in the
classroom is in understanding the significance of critical thinking in
learning. To learn is to think. To think poorly is to learn poorly. To
think well is to learn well. All content, to be learned, must be
intellectually constructed. To learn the content of history, one must
engage in the process of thinking historically.
There are two phases to the learning of content. The first occurs
when learners (for the first time) construct in their minds the basic
ideas, principles, and theories that are inherent in content. This is a
process of internalization. The second occurs when learners effectively
use those ideas, principles, and theories as they become relevant in
learners’ lives. This is a process of application. Good teachers
cultivate critical thinking (intellectually engaged thinking) at every
stage of learning, including initial learning. This process of
intellectual engagement is at the heart of the Oxford and Cambridge
tutorials. The tutor questions the students, often in a Socratic manner
(see Socratic questioning).
The key is that the teacher who fosters critical thinking fosters
reflectiveness in students by asking questions that stimulate thinking
essential to the construction of knowledge.
As emphasized above, each discipline adapts its use of critical
thinking concepts and principles. The core concepts are always there,
but they are embedded in subject specific content. For students to
learn content, intellectual engagement is crucial. All students must do
their own thinking, their own construction of knowledge. Good teachers
recognize this and therefore focus on the questions, readings,
activities that stimulate the mind to take ownership of key concepts
and principles underlying the subject.
In the UK school system, Critical thinking is offered as a subject which 16-18 year olds can take as an A-Level. Under the OCR exam board,
students can sit two exam papers for the AS: "Credibility of Evidence"
and "Assessing and Developing Argument". The full Advanced GCE is now
available: in addition to the two AS units, candidates sit the two
papers "Resolution of Dilemmas" and "Critical Reasoning". The A-level
tests candidates on their ability to think critically about, and
analyze, arguments on their deductive or inductive validity, as well as
producing their own arguments. It also tests their ability to analyse
certain related topics such as credibility and ethical decision-making.
However, due to its comparative lack of subject content, many
universities do not accept it as a main A-level for admissions.[4].
Nevertheless, the AS is often useful in developing reasoning skills,
and the full advanced GCE is useful for degree courses in politics,
philosophy, history or theology, providing the skills required for
critical analysis that are useful, for example, in biblical study.
There is also an Advanced Extension Award
offered in Critical Thinking in the UK, open to any A-level student
regardless of whether they have the Critical Thinking A-level. Cambridge International Examinations have an A-level in Thinking Skills.[5] From 2008, Assessment and Qualifications Alliance will also be offering an A-level Critical Thinking specification;[6]; OCR exam board
have also modified theirs for 2008. Many examinations for university
entrance set by universities, on top of A-level examinations, also
include a critical thinking component, such as the LNAT, the UKCAT, the BioMedical Admissions Test and the Thinking Skills Assessment.
Quotations
William Graham Sumner offers a useful summary of critical thinking:
The critical habit of thought, if usual in society, will pervade all
its mores, because it is a way of taking up the problems of life. Men
educated in it cannot be stampeded by stump orators ... They are slow
to believe. They can hold things as possible or probable in all
degrees, without certainty and without pain. They can wait for evidence
and weigh evidence, uninfluenced by the emphasis or confidence with
which assertions are made on one side or the other. They can resist
appeals to their dearest prejudices and all kinds of cajolery.
Education in the critical faculty is the only education of which it can
be truly said that it makes good citizens.
Dr. Martin Luther King said:
The function of education, therefore, is to teach one to think
intensively and to think critically…The complete education gives one
not only power of concentration but worthy objectives upon which to
concentrate.
See also
References
- van den Brink-Budgen, R. 'Critical Thinking for Students', How To Books, 2000
- van den Brink-Budgen, R. 'Critical Thinking for AS Level', How To Books, 2005
- van den Brink-Budgen, R. 'Critical Thinking for A2 Level,' How To Books, 2006
- van den Brink-Budgen, R. 'The Essential Guide to Critical Thinking', www.ifthen.co.uk 2007
- van den Brink-Budgen, R. 'Critical Thinking - an online course', www.criticalthinkingonline.co.uk 2008
- Facione, P. 2007. Critical Thinking: What It Is and Why It Counts - 2007 Update [1]
- Facione, PA, Facione, NC, and Giancarlo, CA.(2000). The
Disposition Toward Critical Thinking: Its Character, Measurement, and
Relationship to Critical Thinking Skill. Informal Logic, Volume 20, Number 1, pp 61-84. [2]
- B.W. Hamby The Philosophy of Anything: Critical Thinking in Context. Kendall Hunt Publishing Company, Dubuque Iowa, 2007. ISBN 978-0-7575-4724-9
- Vincent F. Hendricks, Thought 2 Talk: A Crash Course in Reflection and Expression, New York: Automatic Press / VIP, 2005, ISBN 87-991013-7-8
- Richard Paul and Linda Elder, 2006. The Miniature Guide to Critical Thinking: Concepts & Tools. Published by the Foundation for Critical Thinking. ISBN 0-944583-10-5
- Twardy, Dr. Charles R. (2003) Argument Maps Improve Critical Thinking. Teaching Philosophy 27:2 June 2004. Preprints: [3] [4]
- Whyte, J. 2003. Bad Thoughts - A Guide to Clear Thinking. Published by Corvo. ISBN 0-9543255-3-2.
- T. Edward Damer. Attacking Faulty Reasoning, 5th Edition, Wadsworth, 2005. ISBN 0-534-60516-8
- Francis Watanabe Dauer. "Critical thinking : an introduction to reasoning"
External links
—http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_thinking
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Critical Thinking Examples
"He who establishes his argument by noise and command shows that his reason is weak."
—Michel Montaigne
"Veritas Omnia Vincit (truth conquers all)"
—Latin Motto
Critical Thinking Skills
"My
personal feeling is that citizens of the democratic societies should
undertake a course of intellectual self-defense to protect themselves
from manipulation and control, and to lay the basis for more meaningful
democracy...
[Intellectual self-defense] means you
have to develop an independent mind - and work on it. Now that's
extremely hard to do alone. The beauty of our system is that it
isolates everybody - each person is sitting alone in front of the tube.
Now it's very hard to have ideas or thoughts under those circumstances.
Some people can, but it's pretty rare. The way to do it is through
organization. So courses of intellectual self-defense will have to be
in the context of political and other organization...
There are also many techniques for
penetrating the veil of propaganda that should become second nature in
dealing with the output of doctrinal institutions (media, journals of
opinion, scholarship). For example, it is quite common for the basic
framework of an article or news report to be hopelessly misleading,
conforming to doctrinal requirements. But within it one can often
discover hints that something else is going on."
—Noam Chomsky, "Necessary Illusions; Thought Control in Democratic Societies"
Center for Media Literacy
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