EBOOK DETAILS
- Authors: by Martin Cohen
- Format: PDF
- Paperback: 384 pages
- Publisher: For Dummies; 1st edition (May 4, 2015)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 9781118924723
- ISBN-13: 978-1118924723
on Critical Thinking Skills, which is broadly about avoiding
logical fallacies and following the rules of good essay
structure, and a lot more besides. Most other books focus on
these bits of Critical Thinking because they are easy to talk
about, but rather harder to actually get anyone to do. In fact,
like philosophy itself (and Critical Thinking is traditionally a
branch of philosophy), properly understood the only way to
learn the method is to use the skills in practice. So what I try
to offer here is a kind of map or guide book that will come in
handy as you actively start using Critical Thinking in whatever
areas you want to. I include enough of the background to
the academic debates for you to see the ‘why’ as well as the
‘what’, plenty of hands‐on tips and advice so that you have
the ‘how’, and I certainly include some opportunities to try
things out in practical exercises.
Critical Thinking! Now that sounds like a good idea.
Because it’s a kind of souped‐up, laser‐sharp power�ful thinking, just waiting to zap rotten arguments and churn out some pretty brilliant insights instead. And don’t worry if
people tell you that it is a rather high‐level kind of thinking,
and that only a few can do it, mainly tweedy professors who
tell jokes in Latin (dimidium facti qui coepit habet — ‘he who
has begun, has the work half done’), because Critical Thinking
certainly isn’t like that. Critical Thinking is not just for the
tweedy few — but for the curious, the imaginative, the cre�ative many. In fact the only thing that is really deeply mysteri�ous about Critical Thinking is why everyone’s not doing it. But
I’ve got a theory about that, and it is to do with education and
the kind of ways of working that people are corralled into, like
so many sheep — supposedly as a preparation for life outside.
But life outside is rarely just a business of unreflectively fol�lowing set procedures and instructions — but rather some�thing where you need constantly to reflect on what you are
doing, and why — and act not as a machine, but as a person.
So the first skill a Critical Thinker needs to learn is how to
think ‘the unthinkable’, to think outside the box, to ‘free their
mind’ no less.
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