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Critical Thinking Skills for Dummies
- Narrated by: Eric Martin
- Length: 11 hrs and 30 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Turbocharge your reasoning with critical thinking.
Just what are the ingredients of a great argument? What is the secret to communicating your ideas clearly and persuasively? And how do you see through sloppy thinking and flim-flam?
If you've ever asked any of these questions, then this book is for you!
These days, strong critical thinking skills provide a vital foundation for academic success, and Critical Thinking Skills for Dummies offers a clear and unintimidating introduction to what can otherwise be a pretty complex topic. Inside, you'll get hands-on, lively, and fun exercises that you can put to work today to improve your arguments and pin down key issues.
With this accessible and friendly guide, you'll get plain-English instruction on how to identify other people's assumptions, methodology, and conclusions; evaluate evidence; and interpret texts effectively. You'll also find tips and guidance on reading between the lines, assessing validity - and even advice on when not to apply logic too rigidly!
Critical Thinking Skills for Dummies:
- Provides tools and strategies from a range of disciplines great for developing your reflective thinking skills
- Offers expert guidance on sound reasoning and textual analysis
- Reveals precisely how to use concept mapping and brainstorming to generate insights
- Demonstrates how critical thinking skills is a proven path to success as a student
Whether you're undertaking reviews, planning research projects, or just keen to give your brain a workout, Critical Thinking Skills for Dummies equips you with everything you need to succeed.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
What listeners say about Critical Thinking Skills for Dummies
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Gabe B.
- 2020-11-19
Good Book...
I think it should be called something else like: “Learn how to set your biased opinion aside and be more empathetic (or apathetic depending on the subject at hand) to draw conclusions and generate opinions”... for dummies.
The book is packed with witty remarks and written very elegantly. However, the author gives a lot of tips on learning and information processing, at no point it really describes how to be quick, and or more clever in a debate/argument. I truly enjoyed it, this book was an awesome refresher for learning and teaching techniques.
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- Count Erklock
- 2019-09-11
The art of saying one thing and doing another
Where to start? First, critical thinking is not about using skepticism to invalidate views you don't happen to agree with. Or, put another way, it should be about being skeptic of any views, including your own. Here's a summary of one of the examples of "critical thinking" put forth by the author: 1) There's a fairly large scientific consensus around man-made global warming (i.e. as a consequence of the increasing emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere - my precision); 2) Oh, but "critical thinking" demands that you double-check the evidence (thousands of studies - my precision); 3) There was a seminar/discussion held in Exeter which did not give man-made climate change deniers a chance to debate the issue; 4) This "breach of ethics" (which can be attributed, among other things, to the fact that deniers have yet to present credible counter-evidence - my precision) was discovered by some Italian guy; 5) It "could" follow (the author leads you to the river but carefully refrains from drinking the water - my precision, but what else?) that man-made global warming is some sort of conspiracy to kill the coal industry. And that, my friends, is how you use "critical thinking", at least, as a one-way street. It's one of the crassest examples of confirmation bias I've ever stumbled upon. Would have been forgivable for anyone else but one who pretends to teach others about "critical thinking". And that's just one example.
There's also the cholesterol thing: essentially, every scientist interested in heart disease over the past 50 years has simply "sheepishly" followed the general consensus over the impact of a fatty diet on the body's production of cholesterol. It's all a big conspiracy - what else can it be, Mr. Cohen? This "counter-evidence" I checked to the best of my abilities, following a documentary I watched on the topic. The "counter-evidence" is not convincing. AND other scientists have studied the impact of a fatty diet on cholesterol production (hence, the two types of cholesterol, HDL and LDL).
So if I take the author's train of though to the station, to be fair, we should always invite "intelligent design" proponents and creationists to discussions and debates about the theory of evolution? Or flat-earthers to the next NASA convention? No, I don't think so (and I know it's a mean rhetorical "degrading" of the position). Challengers to the consensus have the burden of demonstrating the pertinence of their views.
And besides, if I might add: scientists are people too. They like their cars, their industrial agriculture and their coal-generated electricity as much as the next person. If most of them didn't love science as well, everything would be comfy and cozy for everybody (and maybe quite dangerous).
On the plus side, this book has some interesting - and daring - contents about propaganda and its history. But aside from the ongoing injunction to be "skeptical" about everything (with the exception of one's own views I guess), it fires all over the place - no systematic approach to critical thinking.
Oh, and by the way: sometimes, the "herd" gets it right. Shared views are not necessarily incorrect. Prior to "thinking critically" about majority viewpoints, maybe one has to ask oneself "are there any good reasons why things are the way they are, or why people think the way they do"? Just a critical thought.
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