Critical Thinking - Standards of Thought - Part 2

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The Foundation for Critical Thinking

The Foundation for Critical Thinking

Күн бұрын

Part 2: Dr. Richard Paul defines the universal standards with which thinking may be "taken apart" evaluated and assessed. Excerpted from the Socratic Questioning Video Series.

Пікірлер: 36
@loopuleasa
@loopuleasa 13 жыл бұрын
My mind was blown away. Now I am peeking the pieces up and rearranging them.
@chingon711
@chingon711 14 жыл бұрын
Very revelant and valuable information which people if applied effectively will live much happier lives....Nothing like receiving a straightfoward, detailed answer to a difficult question.
@samuidave
@samuidave 13 жыл бұрын
Dr Paul's cite of H.L. Mencken, which he used to clarify the issue of complexity with regard to critical thinking, was most likely a rephrasing of what Mencken actually said: "There is always an easy solution to every human problem--neat, plausible, and wrong." It appeared in the essay "The Divine Afflatus," originally published in 1917, and reprinted in 1920 and 1949. A little irony, perhaps ;)
@cexino
@cexino 13 жыл бұрын
Dr. Richard Paul is awesome
@amoxtlacatl
@amoxtlacatl 15 жыл бұрын
Absolutely marvelous.
@vincecoulter
@vincecoulter 13 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for sharing this video that has help me think better
@jaimesandoval1988
@jaimesandoval1988 15 жыл бұрын
Very very good information!
@bossscrillaguy
@bossscrillaguy 12 жыл бұрын
Isn't that the purpose? He isn't teaching anything new, he's teaching you to be conscious & mindful to the aspects of critical thinking. Some people are unaware they are critical thinkers & seek terminology to aid them in deeper understanding of this field of thinking.
@cexino
@cexino 13 жыл бұрын
@darnell1897 Exactly the problem I realised as well. We need to teach this stuff very early on to people - this is a foundation that many people lack and so that's where most problems result from.
@Paseosinperro
@Paseosinperro 13 жыл бұрын
great talk
@waketherabble
@waketherabble 15 жыл бұрын
Agreed. The complexity of the process by which the answer is obtained is seperate from and perhaps irrelevant to the answer sought.
@ManicEightBall
@ManicEightBall 14 жыл бұрын
All the time I hear people saying "I'm 98.5% certain that..." an I know they must have made that answer up. Whenever people add statistics to their arguments, I think it's important to listen carefully and critically.
@MartialArtsMaster
@MartialArtsMaster 12 жыл бұрын
@juanfracisco Not in this video he doesn't, but the Foundation for Critical Thinking has released books that make this point quite clear, and it's because of innate human egocentrism as a barrier. That's more Linda Elder's specialty than Richard Paul's, though, since Richard Paul is a philosopher and Linda Elder is a psychologist.
@jaimesandoval1988
@jaimesandoval1988 15 жыл бұрын
I guess, take it as you please.
@TheD2D21
@TheD2D21 15 жыл бұрын
I digress, because even though you may arrive at an answer by using the formula, you must still be able to interpret that answer (complexity); otherwise, the answer is worthless if you don't know what it means, if you don't know how to interpret it.
@Paseosinperro
@Paseosinperro 13 жыл бұрын
@juanfracisco ¿why do say thay are stupit? I find them interesting and useful
@Hythloday71
@Hythloday71 13 жыл бұрын
Relavency is of major importance, many fallacies here, much time could have been spent here. Problematic for me is the imbetween or grading of relavency. Many times i want to point to relavency, or do should i say, but the point is defended successfully by demonstrating 'some' relavency - but then the point is lost because i need to adapt that given the foot print of inflluence, it isn't relavent enought to introduce at this stage - any thoughts ?
@huangtao8042
@huangtao8042 8 жыл бұрын
Is there a part 3?
@CriticalThinkingOrg
@CriticalThinkingOrg 8 жыл бұрын
Dear Huang Tao: Thank you for your question! We'll need to have someone review the footage to make certain everything was uploaded as intended, but in the meantime, you'll find more videos dealing with the standards of thought (or "Intellectual Standards") on our KZfaq channel. Titles are: Critical Thinking and Intellectual Standards Prove: Why Intellectual Standards? Why Teach for Them? Critical Thinking for Children - 3. Standards of Thinking Assess: How to Teach Students to Assess Their Own Work (The first two are more directly about the standards themselves.) You'll also find much more about the standards in the free online library on our website. We hope this helps!
@huangtao8042
@huangtao8042 8 жыл бұрын
+CriticalThinkingOrg thanks for your response
@andersoncouncilpf
@andersoncouncilpf 10 жыл бұрын
He doesn't differentiate between intelligently considered analysis (personal thoughts about anything), and communicating with others. His standards relate to personal analysis of incoming information, which has a different standard than communication - he assumes that honesty is, or should be, a goal in communications, while it often isn't for very practical and very legitimate reasons.
@aristaukulis4275
@aristaukulis4275 9 жыл бұрын
That is a matter of context. He is talking about universal standards. I can imagine situations where exercising critical thinking would be very bad idea. that doesn't change much about standards of critical thinking..
@luckstah
@luckstah 9 жыл бұрын
andersoncouncilpf So if I understand what you're saying, in communications, people often mislead and lie to each other? What are the practical and legitimate reasons for dishonesty in communication?
@JtheFool1337
@JtheFool1337 14 жыл бұрын
@crazy87jim Or more like.. precision and accuracy are not the same thing. =)
@cuzifeelikeit
@cuzifeelikeit 13 жыл бұрын
@EdgePitSwing or uncommon sense
@adicakes
@adicakes 11 жыл бұрын
1:58 what the hell? what was that sentence "the statistics may NOT be accurate?" it was sorta blurred out there. not for any reaosn i can decifer except for wanting to conceal the fact that maybe statistics given to the public are made up. very dubious. with regards to the talk it was wonderful
@MartialArtsMaster
@MartialArtsMaster 13 жыл бұрын
@juanfracisco Do you actually have a reason to say that, based on purposes, questions, information, inferences, implications, etc.? Or are you just angry because his ideas don't conform to yours?
@kyraocity
@kyraocity 2 жыл бұрын
O:10 inaccuracy
@MartialArtsMaster
@MartialArtsMaster 13 жыл бұрын
@juanfracisco You're demonstrating Richard Paul's point, that we angrily attack ideas we don't like instead of rationally critiquing their bad points, or even admitting that they might have something new to teach us. All you do is insult Richard Paul and call his speeches for the weak-minded, while giving no substance as to why you think that to be the case. Are you upset because you're a psychologist and approach things narrowly, while Paul draws from multiple fields?
@peterfaigl
@peterfaigl 10 жыл бұрын
From the likes statistics, 1 in every 40 viewers can't stand accuracy and relevancy? It's worrying adult people can't even agree on the relevance to our lives of the need to practice critical thinking.
@PolchiesZone
@PolchiesZone 6 ай бұрын
The educational standards in the United States of America were dropped due to the large amount of failing grades, which in turn affected our children in the USA. This may have helped refugees or, emigrates, but it sure didn't help our American children.
@MartialArtsMaster
@MartialArtsMaster 13 жыл бұрын
@Shadowslamer What? What does that have to do with Richard Paul's actual argument? You're just demonstrating your own egotism by angrily attacking ideas and calling others pretentious instead of summarizing their arguments first and then calmly explaining why you believe those ideas are misguided.
@joeburns88
@joeburns88 9 жыл бұрын
Don't totally agree with this teacher. Complexity and depth can be addressed with simplicity and simple answers when clarity and direction in an answer is priority. Complexity in a response can be weak due to complexity. Now deep thinking on a question to prepare for a response is very useful and most often essential when doing analysis before giving an answer. Sidebar: It's really hard for professors holding advance degrees to hide their liberal philosophy about life and politics. It's better if they at least try to hide that part of themselves when giving lectures.
@CodexTheodosianus
@CodexTheodosianus 12 жыл бұрын
Juan Francisco i find that you are unreasonable. You can be Rational, and you can be Emotional at the same time. You don't have to be always Rational, because, only Rational is not always to be Rational. There are irrational things that makes us happy, and they are good. There are those which makes us sad, and they are bad, they need to be rationalized. Rationality is always beneficial if you are psychologist, attorney, or just one intelligent person etc. See a shrink, it will help you.
@EdgePitSwing
@EdgePitSwing 13 жыл бұрын
I have to say, this shit is common sense...
@juanfracisco
@juanfracisco 13 жыл бұрын
Human communication is not rational. That´s the hole point why phyloshofy went wrong. Language is not learned and do not use intellectual standarts to be significant. Human behavior responds to incentives and motives of cooperation and competion, and not to rational standarts of what phylosofers call thinking. . He doesn´t explain why humans sometimes don´t agree, netheir, why language is ussualy used not to tell the truth. Phylosophical explains are just rules, not explanations.
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