The New Critical Thinking: An Empirically Informed Introduction

Lyons, J. and Ward, B. (2017) The New Critical Thinking: An Empirically Informed Introduction. Routledge: New York. ISBN 9781138687479

Full text not currently available from Enlighten.

Abstract

Why is it so hard to learn critical thinking skills? Traditional textbooks focus almost exclusively on logic and fallacious reasoning, ignoring two crucial problems. As psychologists have demonstrated recently, many of our mistakes are not caused by formal reasoning gone awry, but by our bypassing it completely. We instead favor more comfortable, but often unreliable, intuitive methods. Second, the evaluation of premises is of fundamental importance, especially in this era of fake news and politicized science. This highly innovative text is psychologically informed, both in its diagnosis of inferential errors, and in teaching students how to watch out for and work around their natural intellectual blind spots. It also incorporates insights from epistemology and philosophy of science that are indispensable for learning how to evaluate premises. The result is a hands-on primer for real world critical thinking. The authors bring over four combined decades of classroom experience and a fresh approach to the traditional challenges of a critical thinking course: effectively explaining the nature of validity, assessing deductive arguments, reconstructing, identifying and diagramming arguments, and causal and probabilistic inference. Additionally, they discuss in detail, important, frequently neglected topics, including testimony, the nature and credibility of science, rhetoric, and dialectical argumentation. Key Features and Benefits: Uses contemporary psychological explanations of, and remedies for, pervasive errors in belief formation. There is no other critical thinking text that generally applies this psychological approach as we do. Assesses premises, notably premises based on the testimony of others, and evaluation of news and other information sources. No other critical thinking textbook gives detailed treatment of this crucial topic. Typically, they only provide a few remarks about when to accept expert opinion / argument from authority. Covers argument evaluation before argument identification. Other textbooks generally reverse the order, and focus on the use of premise and conclusion indicator words as the primary tool for argument identification. Carefully explains the concept of validity, paying particular attention in distinguishing logical possibility from other species of possibility, and demonstrates how we may mistakenly judge invalid arguments as valid because of belief bias. Instead of assessing an argument’s validity using formal/mathematical methods, provides one technique that is generally applicable: explicitly showing that it is impossible to make the conclusion false and the premises true together. Uses frequency trees and the frequency approach to probability more generally, a simple method for understanding and evaluating quite complex probabilistic information Uses arguments maps, which have been shown to have significantly improve students’ reasoning and argument evaluation.

Item Type:Books
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Lyons, Professor Jack
Authors: Lyons, J., and Ward, B.
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Humanities > Philosophy
Publisher:Routledge
ISBN:9781138687479

University Staff: Request a correction | Enlighten Editors: Update this record