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Critical Thinking

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Title: Critical Thinking


1
Critical Thinking
  • Chapter 1

2
Your Instructor
  • John Provost
  • 831-402-7374
  • jprovost_at_mpc.edu

3
Agenda
  • Introduction and Story
  • Syllabus and Texts
  • Homework
  • Start Lecture 1

4
Introduction Why Study Critical Thinking?
  • You can fool all of the people all of the time
    if the advertising budget is big enough. Ed
    Rollins, Republican campaign adviser

5
What is Critical Thinking?
  • Critical thinking is about helping ourselves and
    others. Why?

6
What is Critical Thinking?
  • Critical thinking includes a variety of
    deliberative processes aimed at making wise
    decisions about what to believe and do, processes
    that center on evaluation of arguments but
    include much more.

7
Two primary skills required
  • Read carefully
  • Listen closely

8
Mistakes Ambiguity
  • Secretaries make more money than physicians. What
    does this mean?
  • She saw the farmer with binoculars. Who had the
    binoculars?
  • I know a little Greek. The language or a person?

9
Mistakes Fallacies
  • Fallacy of composition We dont spend that much
    on military salaries. After all, who ever heard
    of anyone getting rich in the Army? In other
    words, we dont spend that much on service
    personnel individually therefore we dont spend
    much on them as a group.

10
Mistakes Fallacies
  • Fallacy of division Congress is incompetent.
    Therefore, Congressman Benton is incompetent.
    What holds true of a group does not necessarily
    hold true for all the individuals in that group.

11
Mistakes Vague Claims
  • He is old. Compared to what? Old is a matter of
    context. Old for first grade? Old in general? The
    vagueness of a claim is a matter of degree.

12
Mistakes A Red Herring
  • When a person brings a topic into a conversation
    that distracts from the original point,
    especially if the new topic is introduced in
    order to distract, the person is said to have
    introduced a red herring (see pages 168-169).

13
Mistakes Ad Hominem
  • We commit the ad hominem fallacy when we think
    that considerations about a person refute his
    or her assertions.
  • Example A proposal made by an oddball is an
    oddballs proposal, but it does not follow that
    it is an oddball proposal! See?

14
Mistakes Straw Man
  • The straw man fallacy happens when you refute a
    position or claim by distorting or
    oversimplifying or misrepresenting it. Lets say
    Mrs. Herrington announces it is time to clean the
    attic. Mr. Herrington groans and says, What,
    again? Do we have to clean it out everyday? She
    responds Just because you think we should keep
    every last piece of junk forever doesnt mean I
    do.

15
Basic Critical Thinking Skills
  • When we take a position on an issue, we assert or
    claim something. The claim and thinking on which
    it is based are subject to rational evaluation.
    When we do that evaluating, we are thinking
    critically. To think critically, then, we need to
    know five things

16
To think critically, then, we need to know
  • 1. When someone (including ourselves) is taking a
    position on an issue, what that issue is, and
    what the person is claiming their position is on
    that issue.

17
To think critically, then, we need to know
  • 2. What considerations are relevant to that issue
  • 3. Whether the reasoning underlying the persons
    claim is good reasoning
  • 4. And whether, everything considered, we should
    accept, reject, or suspend judgment on what the
    person has claimed

18
To think critically, then, we need to know
  • Finally, 5. Doing all this requires us to be
    levelheaded and objective and not influenced by
    extraneous factors.

19
Issues What is an issue?
  • It is something we have a question about.
  • A key word is whether.
  • An issue is what is raised when you consider
    whether a claim is true.

20
Arguments What is an argument?
  • Let us define an argument as an attempt to
    support a claim or assertion by providing a
    reason or reasons for accepting it.

21
What is a claim?
  • A claim is a statement that is either true or
    false. The claim that is supported is called the
    conclusion of the argument, and the claim or
    claims that provide support are called the
    premises.

22
Arguments and Explanations
  • An argument attempts to prove that some claim is
    true, while an explanation attempts to specify
    how something works or what caused it or brought
    it about. Arguing that a dog has fleas is quite
    different from explaining how it came to have
    fleas. Explanations and arguments are different
    things.

23
Recognizing Arguments
  • An argument always has a conclusion. Always.
    Without a conclusion, a bunch of words isnt an
    argument. But an argument also needs at least one
    premise. Without a premise you have no support
    for the conclusion and so you dont have an
    argument.

24
An Explanation
  • An explanation is a claim or set of claims
    intended to make another claim, object, event, or
    state of affairs intelligible (but not true or
    false).

25
A premise
  • A premise is the claim or claims in an argument
    that provide the reasons for believing the
    conclusion.

26
Identifying Issues
  • Before you can really recognize an argument you
    have to know what the issues are.
  • An important clue to what the issue is will be to
    look for the conclusions. The conclusion that is
    presented refers to the issue being addressed.

27
Factual Issues Versus Nonfactual Issues
  • Is your dad or uncle older? That is a factual
    issue.
  • Asking whether it is better to be your dads age
    or your uncles age is a nonfactual issue.

28
Factual Claims
  • A factual claim is simply a claim, whether true
    or false, that states a position on a factual
    issue. But this is where it can be confusing.
  • Saying a claim is factual is not equivalent to
    saying it is true!

29
Factual Claims
  • An issue is factual if there are established
    methods for settling it.
  • Factual claims can be determined, while opinions
    cannot be determined.

30
Facts and Factual Matters
  • A fact is a true claim. A factual issue is an
    issue concerning a fact. The right answer about a
    factual issue will be a fact, whether we know
    that fact yet or not.

31
Subjectivism and Relativism
  • Subjectivism is the idea that, just as two people
    can disagree and yet both be correct on a
    nonfactual issue, they can both be correct in
    their differing opinions on the same factual
    issues.
  • Relativism is the parallel idea that two
    different cultures can be correct in their
    differing opinions on the same factual issues.

32
Opinion and Pure Opinion
  • An opinion is someones belief on an issue, or
    someones belief about a specific claim. That
    issue may well be a matter of fact. For the issue
    to be a matter of pure opinion, there must be no
    factual matter involved in it. For example,
    someones age is a factual issue. It can be
    determined. But you can still have an opinion on
    whether it is a good age or not. But you cant
    have a pure opinion about it as if they were any
    age you decide they should be.

33
Relevance, Rhetoric, and Keeping a Clear Head
  • One of the most serious and difficult obstacles
    to clear thinking is the tendency to confuse
    extraneous and irrelevant considerations with the
    merits of a claim.
  • Another obstacle to clear thinking is paying more
    attention to the psychological force of an
    argument than its logical force.

34
Relevance, Rhetoric, and Keeping a Clear Head
  • Some politicians, for example, rely on the
    emotional associations of words to scare us,
    flatter us, and amuse us to arose jealousy,
    desire, and disgust to make good things sound
    bad and bad things sound good and to confuse,
    mislead, and misinform us.

35
Relevance, Rhetoric, and Keeping a Clear Head
  • Critical thinking involves recognizing the
    rhetorical force of language and trying not to be
    influenced by it.

36
Conclusion
  • Critical thinking helps you to know when someone
    is taking a position on an issue
  • What that issue is
  • And what the person is claiming relative to that
    issue-that is, what the persons position is.

37
Conclusion
  • It helps you know what considerations are
    relevant to that issue
  • And whether the reasoning underlying the persons
    claim is good reasoning.

38
Conclusion
  • It helps you know what considerations are
    relevant to that issue
  • And whether the reasoning underlying the persons
    claim is good reasoning.
  • It helps you determine whether, everything
    considered, you should accept, reject, or suspend
    judgment on what the person claims.

39
Conclusion
  • These skills require you to be levelheaded and
    objective and uninfluenced by extraneous factors.

40
Exercises
  • For each of the following claims, decide whether
    it states a subjective or a non-subjective (i.e.
    objective) claim. In cases where it may be
    difficult to decide, try to identify the source
    of the problem.

41
Exercises
  • 1. Meat grilled over hickory coals tastes better
    than meat grilled over mesquite.

42
Exercises
  • Meat grilled over hickory coals tastes better
    than meat grilled over mesquite.
  • Subjective. Notice that the claim passes the
    contradiction test, i.e. someone with an
    opposing viewpoint would not be wrong just
    because it contradicted the original claim. There
    is no fact of the matter about how something
    tastes.

43
Exercises
  • 2. I read in the newspaper that meat grilled over
    hickory coals tastes better than meat grilled
    over mesquite.

44
Exercises
  • 2. I read in the newspaper that meat grilled over
    hickory coals tastes better than meat grilled
    over mesquite.
  • Non-subjective. The fact, of course, is only
    that the person read it in the newspaper.

45
Exercises
  • 3. The air in Cleveland smells better than it did
    five years ago.

46
Exercises
  • 3. The air in Cleveland smells better than it did
    five years ago.
  • Subjective. The qualitative sensation of how
    something smells to someone is a private,
    first-person, subjective experience.

47
Exercises
  • 4. There are fewer hydrocarbons in the air in
    Cleveland than there were five years ago.

48
Exercises
  • 4. There are fewer hydrocarbons in the air in
    Cleveland than there were five years ago.
  • Non-subjective. There is an objective fact of
    the matter that can be checked.

49
Exercises
  • 5. The air in Cleveland is lower in hydrocarbons
    because there is less automobile emission than
    there was five years ago.

50
Exercises
  • 5. The air in Cleveland is lower in hydrocarbons
    because there is less automobile emission than
    there was five years ago.
  • Non-subjective. This is an argument based on
    fact.

51
Exercises
  • 6. There is less automobile emission in Cleveland
    than there was five years ago because of the
    Clean Air Bill passed several years ago.

52
Exercises
  • 6. There is less automobile emission in Cleveland
    than there was five years ago because of the
    Clean Air Bill passed several years ago.
  • Non-subjective. Some will argue about this
    because of the difficulty of identifying the
    cause of lowered emissions. Nevertheless, either
    the change resulted from the Clean Air Bill, or
    it didnt. Intelligent opinions on this issue may
    differ, but that doesnt make it any less
    factual.

53
Exercises
  • Determine whether each of the following passages
    is (or contains) an argument.

54
Exercises
  • 1. Will a beverage begin to cool more quickly in
    the freezer or in the regular part of the
    refrigerator? Well, of course itll cool faster
    in the freezer! There are lots of people who
    dont understand anything at all about physics
    and who think things may begin to cool faster in
    the fridge. But theyre sadly mistaken.

55
Exercises
  • 1. Will a beverage begin to cool more quickly in
    the freezer or in the regular part of the
    refrigerator? Well, of course itll cool faster
    in the freezer! There are lots of people who
    dont understand anything at all about physics
    and who think things may begin to cool faster in
    the fridge. But theyre sadly mistaken.
  • Clearly, our speaker has an opinion on then
    subject, but no argument is given.

56
Exercises
  • 2. Its true that you can use your television set
    to tell when a tornado is approaching. The reason
    is that tornadoes make an electrical disturbance
    in the 55 megahertz range, which is close to the
    band assigned to channel 2. If you know how to do
    it, you can get your set to pick up the current
    given off by the twister. So your television set
    can be your warning device that tells you when to
    dive for the cellar.
  • Adapted from Cecil Adams, The Straight Dope

57
Exercises
  • 2. Its true that you can use your television set
    to tell when a tornado is approaching. The reason
    is that tornadoes make an electrical disturbance
    in the 55 megahertz range, which is close to the
    band assigned to channel 2. If you know how to do
    it, you can get your set to pick up the current
    given off by the twister. So your television set
    can be your warning device that tells you when to
    dive for the cellar.
  • This passage might be taken as an explanation,
    but it is also an argument, since it is clearly
    designed to convince us that its main point is
    correct.

58
Exercises
  • 3. Some of these guys who do Elvis Presley
    imitations actually pay more for their outfits
    than Elvis paid for his! Anybody who would spend
    thousands just so he can spend a few minutes not
    fooling anybody into thinking hes Elvis is nuts.

59
Exercises
  • 3. Some of these guys who do Elvis Presley
    imitations actually pay more for their outfits
    than Elvis paid for his! Anybody who would spend
    thousands just so he can spend a few minutes not
    fooling anybody into thinking hes Elvis is nuts.
  • No argument. No connection is made between the
    cost of the outfits and the psychological
    deficiencies of Elvis impersonators.

60
Exercises
  • 4. Youd better not pet that dog. She looks
    friendly, but shes been known to bite.

61
Exercises
  • 4. Youd better not pet that dog. She looks
    friendly, but shes been known to bite.
  • Argument

62
Exercises
  • Which speakers give arguments for their positions?

63
Exercises
  • larry Before we go to Hawaii, lets go to a
    tanning salon and get a tan. Then we wont look
    like we just got off the plane, plus we wont get
    sunburned while were over there.
  • laurie I dont know . . . I read that those
    places can be dangerous. And did you ever check
    out how much they cost? Lets let it go.

64
Exercises
  • larry Before we go to Hawaii, lets go to a
    tanning salon and get a tan. Then we wont look
    like we just got off the plane, plus we wont get
    sunburned while were over there.
  • laurie I dont know . . . I read that those
    places can be dangerous. And did you ever check
    out how much they cost? Lets let it go.
  • Larry and Laurie are both giving arguments.

65
Exercises
  • 2. she When you think about it, theres every
    reason why women soldiers shouldnt serve in
    combat.
  • he Well, I dont think anyone should have to
    serve in combat. I wouldnt make anyone serve who
    doesnt want to.

66
Exercises
  • 2. she When you think about it, theres every
    reason why women soldiers shouldnt serve in
    combat.
  • he Well, I dont think anyone should have to
    serve in combat. I wouldnt make anyone serve who
    doesnt want to.
  • Neither speaker is giving an argument.

67
Exercises
  • 3. student a My family is very conservative. I
    dont think theyd like it if they found out that
    I was sharing an apartment with two males.
  • student b But sooner or later you have to start
    living your own life.

68
Exercises
  • 3. student a My family is very conservative. I
    dont think theyd like it if they found out that
    I was sharing an apartment with two males.
  • student b But sooner or later you have to start
    living your own life.
  • Both A and B are giving arguments. B is arguing
    for an unstated claim You should share the
    apartment with the two males despite what your
    family would like.

69
Exercises
  • 4. insurance exec Insurance costs so much
    because accident victims hire you lawyers to take
    us insurers to court and soak us for all were
    worth. There should be limits on the amounts
    insurance companies may be required to pay out on
    claims.
  • attorney Limits? Doesnt sound like a good idea
    to me. What if someones medical expenses exceed
    those limits? Do we just say, Sorry, Charlie?

70
Exercises
  • 4. insurance exec Insurance costs so much
    because accident victims hire you lawyers to take
    us insurers to court and soak us for all were
    worth. There should be limits on the amounts
    insurance companies may be required to pay out on
    claims.
  • attorney Limits? Doesnt sound like a good idea
    to me. What if someones medical expenses exceed
    those limits? Do we just say, Sorry, Charlie?
  • Only Attorney is giving an argument.

71
Exercises
  • Determine which of the following passages contain
    an argument, and, for any that do, identify the
    arguments final conclusion.

72
Exercises
  • 1. Your jacket looks a little tattered, there,
    Houston. Time to get a new one, Id say.

73
Exercises
  • 1. Your jacket looks a little tattered, there,
    Houston. Time to get a new one, Id say.
  • Argument. Conclusion Time to get a new jacket.

74
Exercises
  • 2. I seriously doubt many people want to
    connect up their TV to the Internet. For one
    thing, when people watch TV they dont want more
    information. For another thing, even if they did,
    they wouldnt be interested in having to do
    something to get it. They just want to sit back
    and let the TV tell them whats happening.

75
Exercises
  • 2. I seriously doubt many people want to
    connect up their TV to the Internet. For one
    thing, when people watch TV they dont want more
    information. For another thing, even if they did,
    they wouldnt be interested in having to do
    something to get it. They just want to sit back
    and let the TV tell them whats happening.
  • Argument. Conclusion It is doubtful many
    people want to connect their TV to the Internet.

76
Exercises
  • 3. Heres how you make chocolate milk. Warm up
    a cup of milk in the microwave for two minutes,
    then add two tablespoons of the chocolate. Stir
    it up, then stick it back in the microwave for
    another 30 seconds. Then enjoy it.

77
Exercises
  • 3. Heres how you make chocolate milk. Warm up
    a cup of milk in the microwave for two minutes,
    then add two tablespoons of the chocolate. Stir
    it up, then stick it back in the microwave for
    another 30 seconds. Then enjoy it.
  • No argument

78
Exercises
  • 4. Pretzels are pretty good for a snack food.
    But its wise to keep in mind that they are high
    in sodium, at least if you eat the salted kind.

79
Exercises
  • 4. Pretzels are pretty good for a snack food.
    But its wise to keep in mind that they are high
    in sodium, at least if you eat the salted kind.
  • No argument

80
Exercises
  • Identify the passages that contain arguments in
    those that do, identify the main issue.

81
Exercises
  • 1. Its wise to let states deny AFDC (Aid to
    Families with Dependent Children) benefits to
    unmarried kids under eighteen who live away from
    their parents. This would discourage thousands of
    these kids from having children of their own in
    order to get state-subsidized apartments.

82
Exercises
  • 1. Its wise to let states deny AFDC (Aid to
    Families with Dependent Children) benefits to
    unmarried kids under eighteen who live away from
    their parents. This would discourage thousands of
    these kids from having children of their own in
    order to get state-subsidized apartments.
  • Argument. Issue whether states should be
    allowed to deny AFDC benefits to youths under
    eighteen.

83
Exercises
  • 5. Those who accept evolution contend that
    creation is not scientific but can it be fairly
    said that the theory of evolution itself is truly
    scientific?
  • LifeHow Did It Get Here? By Evolution or by
    Creation?

84
Exercises
  • 2. Those who accept evolution contend that
    creation is not scientific but can it be fairly
    said that the theory of evolution itself is truly
    scientific?
  • LifeHow Did It Get Here? By Evolution or by
    Creation?
  • No argument.

85
Exercises
  • 3. It is indeed said that the Japanese work
    more than 2,000 hours a year, but this is not so.
    At Sonyand at Sanyo or Matsushitathe total is
    somewhere between 1,800 and 1,900 hours.
  • Akio Morita, chairman of Sony

86
Exercises
  • 3. It is indeed said that the Japanese work
    more than 2,000 hours a year, but this is not so.
    At Sonyand at Sanyo or Matsushitathe total is
    somewhere between 1,800 and 1,900 hours.
  • Akio Morita, chairman of Sony
  • Argument. Issue whether the Japanese work more
    than 2,000 hours a year
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