Critical
thinking is the art of thinking about thinking in such a way as to:
1.
identify
its strengths and weaknesses, and recast it in improved form (where necessary).
The first characteristic requires the thinker to be skilled in analytic and
evaluative thinking. The second requires the thinker to be skilled in creative
thinking.
Thus, critical thinking has three dimensions: the analytic, the
evaluative, and the creative.
Here are
each of the creative acts implicit in analytic thought.
1. Purpose,
goal, or end in view: Whenever we reason, we reason to some end, to achieve
some purpose, to satisfy some desire or fulfill some need. If we create goals that
are unrealistic or contradictory to other goals we have, the reasoning we use
to achieve our goals is problematic.
2. Question at issue (or problem to be
solved): Whenever we attempt to reason, there is at least one question at
issue, at least one problem to be solved. If we are not clear about the
question we are asking, or how the question relates to our basic purpose or
goal, we will not be able to find a reasonable answer to it, or an answer that
will serve our purpose.
3. Point of
view or frame of reference: Whenever we reason, we must reason within some
point of view or frame of reference. This point of view or frame of reference
is created by the mind. Any defect in our point of view or frame of reference
is a possible source of problems in our reasoning. Our point of view may be too
narrow minded, may be based on false or misleading analogies or metaphors, may
not be precise enough, may contain contradictions, and so forth.
. 4. The
information we use in reasoning: Whenever we reason, we are reasoning about
some stuff, some phenomena. Any defect in the experiences, data, evidence, or
raw material upon which our reasoning is based is a possible source of
problems. Information is not given by nature, it is constructed by human minds.
5. The conceptual dimension of our reasoning:
All reasoning uses some ideas or concepts and not others — ideas or concepts
created by the mind. Any defect in the concepts or ideas (including the
theories, principles, axioms, or rules) with which we reason is a possible
source of problems. Concepts and ideas are not given to us by nature. They are
constructs (i.e. creations) of human minds.
6.
Assumptions — the starting points of reasoning: All reasoning must begin
somewhere, and must take some things for granted. Any defect in the starting
points of our reasoning, any problem in what we are taking for granted, is a
possible source of problems.
7. Our
inferences, interpretations and conclusions: Reasoning proceeds by steps called
inferences. Any defect in the inferences we make while we reason presents a
possible problem in our reasoning. Information, data, and situations do not
determine what we shall deduce from them.
8.
Implications and consequence Thus, our reasoning has implications, ideas that
follow from our reasoning, things that might happen if we reason in this or
that way, if we make this or that decision. The implications of our reasoning
are an implicit creation of our reasoning.
Three conditions contribute to a high
level of creative thought:
1. A minimal
level of innate intellectual capacity (though it need not be extraordinary).
2. An environment that stimulates the
development of that capacity.
3. A
positive response and inner motivation on the part of the person thus born and
situated.
The role
that intellectual discipline, external support, and internal commitment
typically play in the development of great thinkers, artists, dancers, and
composers. In each case, notice how much attention, tutoring, dedication, and
special training each of these thinkers had.
Leonardo Da Vinci
Charles Darwin
Albert Einstein
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