Critical Thinking Review 1-5
Critical Thinking Review 1-5
Critical Thinking Review 1-5
The goal of critical thinking is to challenge and question our beliefs and coming to our most
fallacy free conclusions as we can possibly come to and to make decision that are wise. The
purpose of critical thinking is to come to correct conclusions
Claim: when a belief (judgment, opinion) is asserted in a declarative sentence, the result is a
claim
Beliefs and claims
When we come to a conclusion, we have a belief
A belief is propositional (can be expressed in a declarative sentence)
These beliefs become claims, statements and assertions
Factual opinion/belief/claim = objective opinion/belief/claim = opinion/belief/ claim whose
truth is independent of whether anyone thinks it is true.
Not taking claims at face value
Separate fact from opinion
Objective and subjective
Objective claim: whether it is true or not is independent of whether people think it is or
isn’t
E.g., ‘God exists’ or ‘there is life on Mars’
Subjective claim: whether a subjective claim is true or not is dependent on whether
people think it is or not
E.g., ‘Obama is one cool daddy depends on who you ask’
Objective opinions are factual opinions but that doesn’t mean they are right
Recognize logical flaws
Fallacies, biases, appeal to emotion
Consider context
What are the speaker’s interests? Who would like me to believe this?
Biases
Cognitive biases
Skew our apprehension of reality and interfere with our ability to think clearly, process
information accurately, and reason objectively
We tend to evaluate an argument based on whether or not we agree with it rather than
think of it logically
Belief bias (the conclusion sounds reasonable, so the reasoning must be good)
Tendency to evaluate reasoning by the believability of its conclusion
Confirmation bias (pay attention to anything that confirms your position, while disregarding
what doesn’t)
Tendency to attach more weight to evidence that supports our viewpoint
Availability bias/heuristic
Assigning a probability to an event based on how easily or frequently it is thought of
E.g. Judging from the news, violent crime is rampant
False consensus effect—assuming our opinions and those of the people around us are
shared by society at large; all my friends coted NDP, they are sure to win
Bandwagon effect (People tend to agree with those around them)
The tendency to align our beliefs with those of other people
Negativity bias (easier to make people hate the alternative and support you via elimination
than love your proposal)
We tend to give greater weight to evidence that are scary, negative, produces fear
rather than positive evidence (plane crash speaks more than thousands of safe flights).
As critical thinkers, we are not just trying to be pragmatic, we want to understand
things and seek the truth
Loss aversion bias (people judge a loss harsher than a win for equal amounts) (e.g. losing
$100 vs. winning $100)
We are far more resistant to losing something and see things in a way that tries to
maintain what we are losing. We want to recognize this trait
In-group bias
‘We are liberals because we care about the poor and the environment; they are
conservatives because they are uneducated rednecks that watch Fox News’
You are less critical of opinions from people whom you form a group with. (heat fans
tend to agree with heat fans) (Ops disagree with other ops). We show more animosity
towards groups with an opposing mindset
Fundamental attribution error (other people characteristic flaw, me circumstance)
‘I was late because of car problems. She is lazy’
Have one understanding of the behavior of people of the in-group and another for
people not in the in-group
The tendency to not appreciate that others’ behavior is as much constrained by events
and circumstances as our own would be if we were in their position
Obedience to authority (we tend to not argue with those who we think have authority over
us)
Overconfidence effect
People tend to overestimate themselves
A lot of people tend to be overconfident. It is good to be uncertain
Better-than-average illusion
Most people will describe themselves as better than average, which is impossible
The best defense against these biases is to make it a habit to think critically and to be
especially critical of arguments and evidence that seem to accord with what we already
believe
Exercise: Biases
Fundamental attribution
Confirmation
Obedience to authority
Belief bias (the reason is not so strong but you like the conclusion)
Better-than-average illusion
Negativity bias (others are wrong, doesn’t mention you are right)
In-group bias
Over-confidence
Purposes of definitions
Lexical definition: the definition that tells us what the word originally means (Dictionary
definition)
Stipulative (规定的) definition: making a definition before the case. You cannot decide for
yourself what words mean. Everybody must be behind your definition in order for it to be
accepted. Précising definitions: when we try to reduce vagueness and ambiguity. These can
be stipulative as well. Example: the word ‘minor’ has different meanings (alcohol age)
(voting age)
Persuasive or rhetorical definitions: used to persuade or slant some one’s attitude or point
of view toward whatever the ‘defined’ term refers to
Emotive meaning consists of the positive and negative associations of words
Types of definitions
Definition by example: giving examples or pointing at something
Definition by synonym: giving another word or phrase that means the same as the term
being defined
Analytical definition: specify the features that a thing must possess in order for the term
being defined to apply it (almost all dictionary definitions are analytic)
Credibility
Consists primarily of attitudes and basic questions to ask yourself in order to help you
become a better critical thinker
Credibility: when someone makes a claim, we begin to consider how true the claim is.
Should we take this claim with a grain of salt or should we just believe what you are told?
Questions about the source
Questions about the content
Credibility always comes in degrees. Just because we are suspicious about the claim or the
source of the claim doesn’t mean we get to say it is false
Assessing claims
Background info and observation
Do the claims contradict information I know on the subject?
Is the claim DISPROVED by personal experience (does it go against previous experience)
Credibility of source
Interested parties (a person who stands to gain from our belief in a claim is known as
an interested party, and interested parties must be viewed with much more suspicion
than disinterested parties, who have no stake in our belief one way or another)
Irrelevant aspects (confidence, age, gender, etc.) (will not affect the assessing claims)
Expertise (education and experience are often the most important factors, followed by
accomplishments, reputation, and position, in no particular order)
Is the person making the claim going to profit from you believing the claim? We get
extra skeptical if we think that the person will profit whether it is monetary or simply in
terms of power. Example: advertisements, politicians
It doesn’t mean they are lying, we are simply trying to be better judges and we should
be careful of how we interpret the claim
Ramping up our level of skepticism is what credibility is all about
Media
Different sources have different inherent advantages and disadvantages
Content of the claim
We do it by comparing it to our background knowledge (how different or similar is this
claim to what I previously knew)
The more knowledge you have in an area, the more credibility you have
How can we be more perceptive?
What hurts us from being more perceptive?
-If we are dogmatic (being sure you know everything)
-Biases, pride
-Willful ignorance
-Emotions
What helps us be more perceptive?
-Double checking
-Caring about people
-Being interested in other human beings
Rhetorical devices
Euphemism and dysphemism 委婉
A neutral or positive expression used in place of one that carries negative associations
He kicked the can, he is a junkie
Dysphemism: opposite of a euphemism (‘eating animal flesh’ sounds worse than eating
meat
Weaselers (vague)
A considerable sector of the population disagrees with this policy
They are often inserted into claims in order to try and protect the claim from criticism
by watering it down somewhat
E.g., ‘up to’ is a common weaseler
List of common weasel words
-helps, supports, is useful (friendly, but no real value added)
-better, improved, gains (does not say how much)
-acts, works, effective, efficient (action, but no quantitative value)
-seems, appears, looks, is like (gives impression, not real change)
-many, most, virtually, almost all ('lots' but no real quantity)
-up to, from, at least, as many as (talk about the best case)
Down player
Downplayers attempt to make someone or something look less important or less
significant
Of course a first-year student would defend left-wing policies
Trying to discredit the people
Stereotypes
A cultural belief or idea about a social group’s attributes usually simplified or
exaggerated. It can be positive or negative
Of course my Nona’s pasta tastes than this Canadian crap
Innuendo 暗讽 含沙射影
Uses the power of suggestion to disparage (say something bad about) someone or
something. Innuendos rely on neutral (even positive) phrasing to insinuate something
derogatory
I am so happy that you are dating again. Bob is… nice and nobody expects you to find
prince charming right away. What matters is that you are putting yourself out there
Loaded questions (question is already assume something)
Loaded questions can be a form of an innuendo if they are implying something negative
The question contains a statement in it: ‘why do you think contemporary music is so
bad?’
Ridicule/Sarcasm
Using humor to undermine someone’s position: ‘start a war in Azerbaijan? Why don’t
we stick to wars in countries you can spell?
Widely used to put something in bad light
Hyperbole (exaggeration) 夸张
Overdone exaggeration often used to sway a person in a certain direction. Make them
feel some type of way
The Ottawa police is basically the Stasi
Proof surrogate
There is no doubt that, it is well known, studies show…
Suggesting there is evidence or authority for a claim without actually citing the
authority or evidence
Repetition 叠言
Propaganda, advertisements
Rhetorical definitions, explanations and analogies
Loaded definitions, explanations or analogies
Rhetorical definitions: employ rhetorically charged language to express or elicit an
attitude about something. Example: “Defining abortion as the murder of an unborn
child”
Rhetorical analogy: likens two or more things to make one of them appear better or
worse than another; make sure the same standard of measurement is used when
comparing the items and make sure the items are comparable
Demagogues fan the flames of the fanaticism and use extreme rhetoric to propagate false
ideas and preposterous theories
4 rhetoric techniques used by demagogues are:
Otherizing: Divides people into two groups - us and them.
Demonizing: Trying to induce loathing of someone or something by portraying the
person or thing as evil.
Xenophobia: The fear or dislike of what is foreign or strange.
Hate mongering: Try to stimulate an audience's fear, resentment and hatred.