Critical Thinking Midterm
Anthropocentrism
Anthropocentrism is a belief that humans are the central or the most significant entity in the universe
Emotions and their role in critical thinking
As critical thinkers, we need to be aware of the dangers of emotions such as anger and fear as barriers to critical thought, and also of the benefits of using emotions such as empathy and compassion to enhance our critical thinking abilities.
Four communication styles
Assertive, Aggressive, Passive, Passive-aggressive Assertive communicators clearly and respectfully communicate their own needs and strive for mutually satisfactory solutions. Aggressive communicators attempt to get their own way by controlling other people through manipulation and control tactics. Passive communicators avoid confrontation and are compliant, often putting their needs after those of others. Passive-aggressive communicators avoid direct confrontation but use devious means to get their own way.
Barriers to critical thinking
Barriers to critical thinking include several types of resistance, including avoidance, anger, cliches, denial, ignorance, conformity, struggling, and distractions.
Characteristics of a skilled critical thinker
Critical thinkers have a collection of skills including Analytical Skills, Effective Communication, Research and Inquiry Skills, Flexibility and Tolerance for Ambiguity, Open-minded Skepticism, Creative Problem Solving, Attention, Mindfulness, and Curiosity, and Collaborative Learning.
Egocentrism
Egocentrism is a perspective that sees the self as the center of all things
Ethocentrism
Ethnocentrism is an uncritical and unjustified belief in the inherent superiority of one's own group or culture
Three levels of critical thinking
Experience, Interpretation, Analysis
Three approaches to faith and reason
Fideism, Rationalism, Critical rationalism Fideism argues that faith transcends reason, and that the divine is revealed through faith and revelation, not reason or empirical evidence. Rationalism argues that religious beliefs should be consistent with reason and evidence. Critical rationalism argues that divine knowledge can derive from both faith and reason, but that both sources should be compatible with one another.
Informative Language
Language that is either true or false
Sources of Knowledge
Rationalists, like the Greek philosopher Plato, claim that most human knowledge and truth derives from reason. Empiricists, on the other hand, claim that truth and knowledge are derived through empirical evidence collected by our physical senses.
Reason
Reason is the process of supporting a claim or conclusion based on evidence. It involves both the disciplined use of intelligence and the application of rules for problem solving.
Rhetorical devices
Use of Euphemisms, Dysphemisms, Sarcasm, Hyperbole to manipulate and persuade
diffusion of responsibility
a social phenomenon that occurs in groups of people above a critical size
Lexical definitions
are the commonly used dictionary definitions for words or terms.
Expressive language
communicates feelings and attitudes; used to generate emotive impact
Doublethink
defined as holding two contradictory views, or "double standards," at the same time, and believing both to be true.
Stipulative definitions
definitions given to new words or terms, or are new definitions of existing words.
group pressure and conformity
influence individual members to take positions that they would never support by themselves
Primary function of language
language is the primary means of transmitting cultural concepts and traditions, including critical thinking skills.
false memory syndrome
our brains often create false memories of events, and these false memories can be as compelling and believable as real memories.
Social Expectations
social error, views not critically analyzed that can result in collective delusion
Ceremonial language
used in prescribed formal circumstances
Directive Language
used to direct or influence actions
Persuasive definitions
used to influence or persuade others.
Precising definitions
used to reduce vagueness. They are split into two subsets: (a) theoretical definitions, used to provide theory, and (b) operational definitions, used to provide standards in data collection.
"one of us / one of them" error
we tend to treat people who are similar to us with respect and those who are different from us with suspicious or worse