Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
I said we were operating with a different definition of critical thinking. Your posts reinforced that assessment. So before you start asking for a citation to support something and then complaining I didn't provide it, I can't give you a citation because you are arguing something I haven't said.
Blu: "does teaching critical thinking have significant and long-lasting effects on a student's application of critical thinking"
How can someone use critical thinking skills they don't have? How can you test if teaching critical thinking skills leads to critical thinking in a population that doesn't have those skills?
Blu: "Rhetoric was designed to be appealing by using legitemate syllogisms to direct the dialectic toward a specific conclusion. I can use Rhetoric to draw my opponent into Skepticism, and he is trying to use Rhetoric to draw me into, say, Creationism. This is different than sophistry or open debate formats."
Fine, but that isn't critical thinking, that is persuasion. The ideal critical thinker wouldn't be persuaded by the rhetoric you describe.
Blu: "Critical thinking is done in arts and humanities"
Well if this is your definition, I need examples. If you are talking about analyzing the symbolism in "The Old Man and the Sea" then we are not using the same definition. If you are talking about behavior science, then you have a common misconception that science is restricted to physical analyses.
Critical thinking means looking for the fallacies, the supporting evidence, the logical analysis. It means exactly what you are trying to ask if it leads to using it. Your own sentence belies your own interpretation of the meaning, "Does teaching critical thinking have significant and long-lasting effects on a student's application of critical thinking?"
How about we use some different labels here to overcome our different use of these terms?
Instead of critical thinking substitute scientific analysis, where scientific analysis refers to using the scientific process. What is the evidence and what conclusions can you logically infer from that evidence?
Blu: "does teaching critical thinking have significant and long-lasting effects on a student's application of critical thinking"
How can someone use critical thinking skills they don't have? How can you test if teaching critical thinking skills leads to critical thinking in a population that doesn't have those skills?
Blu: "Rhetoric was designed to be appealing by using legitemate syllogisms to direct the dialectic toward a specific conclusion. I can use Rhetoric to draw my opponent into Skepticism, and he is trying to use Rhetoric to draw me into, say, Creationism. This is different than sophistry or open debate formats."
Fine, but that isn't critical thinking, that is persuasion. The ideal critical thinker wouldn't be persuaded by the rhetoric you describe.
Blu: "Critical thinking is done in arts and humanities"
Well if this is your definition, I need examples. If you are talking about analyzing the symbolism in "The Old Man and the Sea" then we are not using the same definition. If you are talking about behavior science, then you have a common misconception that science is restricted to physical analyses.
Critical thinking means looking for the fallacies, the supporting evidence, the logical analysis. It means exactly what you are trying to ask if it leads to using it. Your own sentence belies your own interpretation of the meaning, "Does teaching critical thinking have significant and long-lasting effects on a student's application of critical thinking?"
How about we use some different labels here to overcome our different use of these terms?
Instead of critical thinking substitute scientific analysis, where scientific analysis refers to using the scientific process. What is the evidence and what conclusions can you logically infer from that evidence?