“It terrifies me, the fragility of these moments in our lives.”
Monday 9 July 2018
Concept and Definition of Critical Thinking
Concept and Definition of Critical Thinking
The Problem
Everyone thinks. It is our nature to do so. But much of our thinking,
left to itself, is biased, distorted, partial, uninformed, or downright
prejudiced. Yet, the quality of our life and that of what we produce,
make, or build depends precisely on the quality of our thought. Shoddy
thinking is costly, both in money and in quality of life. Excellence in
thought, however, must be systematically cultivated.
A Definition
Critical thinking is that mode of thinking — about any subject,
content, or problem — in which the thinker improves the quality of his
or her thinking by skillfully analyzing, assessing, and reconstructing
it. Critical thinking is self-directed, self-disciplined,
self-monitored, and self-corrective thinking. It presupposes assent to
rigorous standards of excellence and mindful command of their use. It
entails effective communication and problem-solving abilities, as well
as a commitment to overcome our native egocentrism and sociocentrism.
To Analyze Thinking
Identify its purpose, and question at issue, as well as
its information, inferences(s), assumptions, implications, main
concept(s), and point of view.
To Assess Thinking
Check it for clarity, accuracy, precision, relevance, depth, breadth, significance, logic, and fairness.
The Result
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 openmindedly within alternative systems of thought, recognizing
and assessing, as needs be, their assumptions, implications, and
practical consequences
Communicates effectively with others in figuring out solutions to complex problems
The Etymology & Dictionary Definition of "Critical Thinking"
The concept of critical thinking we adhere to reflects a concept
embedded not only in a core body of research over the last 30 to 50
years but also derived from roots in ancient Greek. The word
’’critical’’ derives etymologically from two Greek roots: "kriticos"
(meaning discerning judgment) and "kriterion" (meaning standards).
Etymologically, then, the word implies the development of "discerning
judgment based on standards."
In Webster’s New World Dictionary, the relevant entry reads
"characterized by careful analysis and judgment" and is followed by the
gloss, "critical — in its strictest sense — implies an attempt at
objective judgment so as to determine both merits and faults." Applied
to thinking, then, we might provisionally define critical thinking as
thinking that explicitly aims at well-founded judgment and hence
utilizes appropriate evaluative standards in the attempt to determine
the true worth, merit, or value of something.
The tradition of research into critical thinking reflects the common
perception that human thinking left to itself often gravitates toward
prejudice, over-generalization, common fallacies, self-deception,
rigidity, and narrowness.
The critical thinking tradition seeks ways of understanding the mind
and then training the intellect so that such "errors", "blunders", and
"distortions" of thought are minimized. It assumes that the capacity of
humans for good reasoning can be nurtured and developed by an
educational process aimed directly at that end.
The history of critical thinking documents the development of this
insight in a variety of subject matter domains and in a variety of
social situations. Each major dimension of critical thinking has been
carved out in intellectual debate and dispute through 2400 years of
intellectual history.
That history allows us to distinguish two contradictory intellectual
tendencies: a tendency on the part of the large majority to uncritically
accept whatever was presently believed as more or less eternal truth
and a conflicting tendency on the part of a small minority — those who
thought critically — to systematically question what was commonly
accepted and seek, as a result, to establish sounder, more reflective
criteria and standards for judging what it does and does not make sense
to accept as true.
Our basic concept of critical thinking is, at root, simple. We could
define it as the art of taking charge of your own mind. Its value is
also at root simple: if we can take charge of our own minds, we can take
charge of our lives; we can improve them, bringing them under our self
command and direction. Of course, this requires that we learn
self-discipline and the art of self-examination. This involves becoming
interested in how our minds work, how we can monitor, fine tune, and
modify their operations for the better. It involves getting into the
habit of reflectively examining our impulsive and accustomed ways of
thinking and acting in every dimension of our lives.
All that we do, we do on the basis of some motivations or reasons. But
we rarely examine our motivations to see if they make sense. We rarely
scrutinize our reasons critically to see if they are rationally
justified. As consumers we sometimes buy things impulsively and
uncritically, without stopping to determine whether we really need what
we are inclined to buy or whether we can afford it or whether it’s good
for our health or whether the price is competitive. As parents we often
respond to our children impulsively and uncritically, without stopping
to determine whether our actions are consistent with how we want to act
as parents or whether we are contributing to their self esteem or
whether we are discouraging them from thinking or from taking
responsibility for their own behavior.
As citizens, too often we vote impulsively and uncritically, without
taking the time to familiarize ourselves with the relevant issues and
positions, without thinking about the long-run implications of what is
being proposed, without paying attention to how politicians manipulate
us by flattery or vague and empty promises. As friends, too often we
become the victims of our own infantile needs, "getting involved" with
people who bring out the worst in us or who stimulate us to act in ways
that we have been trying to change. As husbands or wives, too often we
think only of our own desires and points of view, uncritically ignoring
the needs and perspectives of our mates, assuming that what we want and
what we think is clearly justified and true, and that when they disagree
with us they are being unreasonable and unfair.
As patients, too often we allow ourselves to become passive and
uncritical in our health care, not establishing good habits of eating
and exercise, not questioning what our doctor says, not designing or
following good plans for our own wellness. As teachers, too often we
allow ourselves to uncritically teach as we have been taught, giving
assignments that students can mindlessly do, inadvertently discouraging
their initiative and independence, missing opportunities to cultivate
their self-discipline and thoughtfulness.
It is quite possible and, unfortunately, quite "natural" to live an
unexamined life; to live in a more or less automated, uncritical way. It
is possible to live, in other words, without really taking charge of
the persons we are becoming; without developing or acting upon the
skills and insights we are capable of. However, if we allow ourselves to
become unreflective persons — or rather, to the extent that we do — we
are likely to do injury to ourselves and others, and to miss many
opportunities to make our own lives, and the lives of others, fuller,
happier, and more productive.
On this view, as you can see, critical thinking is an eminently
practical goal and value. It is focused on an ancient Greek ideal of
"living an examined life". It is based on the skills, the insights, and
the values essential to that end. It is a way of going about living and
learning that empowers us and our students in quite practical ways. When
taken seriously, it can transform every dimension of school life: how
we formulate and promulgate rules; how we relate to our students; how we
encourage them to relate to each other; how we cultivate their reading,
writing, speaking, and listening; what we model for them in and outside
the classroom, and how we do each of these things.
Of course, we are likely to make critical thinking a basic value in
school only insofar as we make it a basic value in our own lives.
Therefore, to become adept at teaching so as to foster critical
thinking, we must become committed to thinking critically and
reflectively about our own lives and the lives of those around us. We
must become active, daily, practitioners of critical thought. We must
regularly model for our students what it is to reflectively examine,
critically assess, and effectively improve the way we live.
Critical thinking is that mode of thinking — about any subject,
content, or problem — in which the thinker improves the quality of his
or her thinking by skillfully analyzing, assessing, and reconstructing
it. Critical thinking is self-directed, self-disciplined,
self-monitored, and self-corrective thinking. It presupposes assent to
rigorous standards of excellence and mindful command of their use. It
entails effective communication and problem-solving abilities, as well
as a commitment to overcome our native egocentrism and sociocentrism. +
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