批判性思维 (1).pdf
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1、If you attend a university,we d bet you hear a lot about critical thinking.Perhaps you will hear your professors telling you how important it is,or how dismayed they are there isn t more of it in today s world.Unfortunately,you may not be entirely sure what exactly it is they think is lacking.If you
2、 listen for a while you may get the idea that whatever it is,all your professors are certain they empha-size it in their courses.You may even get the idea that for many of them“critical thinking”is mainly just whatever it is they happen to teachsociology,history,business,com-munications,or whatever.
3、Is there any common ground among educators about what critical thinking is?Yes!Most educators probably agree that a person who jumps to conclusions or makes ill-formed,indefensible,knee-jerk decisions has not thought critically.A while back we read about a teenager who was spotted shoplifting;the po
4、lice were called and arrested the young man.While they were reading him his rights,he shook out of their grasp and made a run for it.Unfortunately,as he made his break his huge trousers tripped him,and that was the end of his getaway.*Everyone will agree that trying*The lad had not been handcuffed,t
5、he police perhaps assuming his trousers would serve the same purpose.Students will learn to.1.Define critical thinking2.Distinguish objective claims from subjective claims3.Understand subjectivism as it relates to moral claims4.Identify issues5.Define and identify premises and conclusions6.Recognize
6、 an argument7.Define and identify twelve common cognitive biases8.Understand the terms truth and knowledge as used in this book1WHAT IS CRITICAL THINKING,ANYWAY?1moo38286_ch01_001-036.indd 1moo38286_ch01_001-036.indd 112/9/10 1:05 PM12/9/10 1:05 PM2 CHAPTER 1:WHAT IS CRITICAL THINKING,ANYWAY?to run
7、from the police,especially when your pants are on the ground,is not thinking well,let alone thinking critically.This may seem like an unimport-ant or frivolous example,but it really is not much different in principle from signing on for mortgage payments that are more than you earn,orif you are a mo
8、rtgage broker or an insurance companybetting that people who do that will be able to manage the trick.What,then,is critical thinking?Clearly it involves more than just blindly acting or reacting.Every educator will concede that critical thinking aims at making wise decisions and coming to correct co
9、nclusions,and not being way-laid by temptation,emotion,greed,irrelevant considerations,stupidity,bias,or other similar things.To refi ne this a bit,on the one hand there is good,old-fashioned think-ing.That s what we do when we form opinions or judgments,make decisions,arrive at conclusions,and the
10、like.On the other hand,there s critical think-ing.That s what we do when we critique the fi rst kind of thinkingsubject it to rational evaluation.You might say that critical thinking involves thinking about thinking;we engage in it when we consider whether our thinking(or someone else s)abides by th
11、e criteria of good sense and logic.Possibly you ve taken courses where all you have to do is remember stuff.But in other coursesand in the workplace or in the militaryyou will per-haps have been asked to do moremaybe to design or evaluate something,to make a proposal or diagnose a situation,to expla
12、in or comment on something,or to do any number of other things that involve coming to conclusions.Pos-sibly it worked this way:your instructor or colleagues or friends or supervisors read or listened to your fi ndings,then they offered critical commentary.They gave you feedback(usually,we hope,posit
13、ive).They evaluated your reason-ing.If you are brilliant,you may not have needed their feedback.If you are brilliant,perhaps you never err in your thinking or leave room for other criti-cism.But most of us do occasionally make mistakes in reasoning.We overlook important considerations and ignore vie
14、wpoints that confl ict with our own,and in other ways we don t think as clearly as we might.Most of us can ben-efi t from a little critical commentaryeven when it comes from ourselves.Our chances of producing a good essay or offering a sound proposal or making a wise decision improve if we don t sim
15、ply write or propose or decide willy-nilly,but refl ect on our reasoning and try to make it better.Our chances of thinking well improve,in other words,if we think critically:if we critique our own thinking as a thinking coach might.This is a book in critical thinking because it offers guidance about
16、 cri-tiquing thinking.The book,and the course you are using it in,if you are,explain the minimum criteria of good reasoningthe requirements a piece of reasoning must meet,no matter what the context,if it is worth paying attention to.Along the way we will explore the most common and important impedim
17、ents to good reasoning,as well as some of the most common mis-takes people make when coming to conclusions.Other courses you take at the university offer refi nements.In them you will learn what considerations are important from the perspective of individual disciplines.But in no course any-where,at
18、 least in no course that involves arriving at conclusions,will thinking that violates the standards set forth in this book be accepted.If it does nothing else,what you read here and learn in your critical thinking course should help you avoid at least a few of the more egregious common errors people
19、 make when they reason.If you would have otherwise made these mistakes,you will moo38286_ch01_001-036.indd 2moo38286_ch01_001-036.indd 212/9/10 1:05 PM12/9/10 1:05 PMWHAT IS CRITICAL THINKING,ANYWAY?3have become smarter.Not smarter in some particular subject,mind you,but smarter in general.The thing
20、s you learn from this book(and from the course you may be reading it for)apply to nearly any subject people can talk or think or write about.To a certain extent,questions we should ask when critiquing our ownor someone else sthinking depend on what is at issue.Deciding whom to vote for,whether to bu
21、y a house,whether a mathematical proof is sound,which toothpaste to buy,or what kind of dog to get involve different considerations.In all cases,however,we should want to avoid making or accepting weak and invalid arguments.We should also avoid being distracted by irrelevancies or In DepthCritical T
22、hinking,the Long VersionIn the text,we give a couple of brief characterizations of critical thinking,and as shorthand they will serve well enough.But the Collegiate Learning Assessment(CLA)Project of the Coun-cil for Aid to Education has come up with a list of skills that covers almost everything yo
23、ur authors believe is important in critical thinking.If you achieve mastery over all these or even a significant majority of them,youll be well ahead of most of your peersand your fellow citi-zens.In question form,here is what the council came up with:How well does the student determine what informa
24、tion is or is not pertinent;distinguish between rational claims and emotional ones;separate fact from opinion;recognize the ways in which evidence might be limited or compromised;spot deception and holes in the arguments of others;present his/her own analysis of the data or information;recognize log
25、ical flaws in arguments;draw connections between discrete sources of data and information;attend to contradictory,inadequate,or ambiguous information;construct cogent arguments rooted in data rather than opinion;select the strongest set of supporting data;avoid overstated conclusions;identify holes
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