Becoming A Critical Thinker Master Student
Becoming A Critical Thinker Master Student
Becoming A Critical Thinker Master Student
Publisher, Humanities: Patricia A. Coryell Sponsoring Editor: Shani Fisher Development Editor: Julia Giannotti Editorial Assistant: Amanda Nietzel Senior Project Editor: Rosemary Winfield Editorial Assistant: Paola Moll Manufacturing Coordinator: Susan Peltier Senior Art and Design Coordinator: Jill Haber Senior Composition Buyer: Chuck Dutton Marketing Manager: Edwin Hill Marketing Assistant: Bettina Chiu Cover credit: Copyright Nick Koudis / Getty Images (lightbulb on blue background) and copyright Masterfile Royalty Free. Text credits: Chapter 3, pages 6163, Strategy for Group Discussion is reprinted with the permission of the copyright holder, MindPower, Inc. Chapter 7, page 177, material in the numbered list is copyright Quintessential Careers and is reprinted with permission. Photo credits: Chapter 1, page 2: John Birdsall / The Image Works. Chapter 2, page 14: Digital Vision Royalty-free / Getty Images. Chapter 3, page 44: John McKenna / Alamy. Chapter 4, page 70: AP Images. Chapter 4, page 72: collage by Brian Reardon / Photodisc / Getty Images. Chapter 5, page 102: Keith Leng / Alamy. Chapter 6, page 136: T.R. Tharp / Corbis. Chapter 7, page 166: Darrin Klimek / Digital Vision Royalty-free / Getty Images. Chapter 7, page 170: Comstock / Fotosearch. Chapter 7, page 175: VStock / Alamy. Chapter 7, page 180: Flip Schulkel / Corbis. Chapter 7, page 190: Courtesy of The Advertising Archive. Chapter 7, page 192: Najlah Feanny / Corbis. Chapter 7, page 206: Frank Sinatra photo (left) Bettmann / Corbis; Ozzfest punk singer photo (right) Tim Mosenfelder / Corbis.
Copyright 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system without the prior written permission of Houghton Mifflin Company unless such copying is expressly permitted by federal copyright law. Address inquiries to College Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Company, 222 Berkeley Street, Boston, MA 02116-3764. Printed in the U.S.A. Library of Congress Control Number: 2007939713 ISBN: 978-0-618-96960-9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9EB09 08 07 06 05
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
any people have contributed to the sixth edition of this book. I would especially like to thank Julia Giannotti and Shani Fisher for their thoughtful suggestions during the development of this edition and Alison Fields for her careful attention to the details of the production process. I also wish to acknowledge the contributions of the following professors, whose advice has been of great help to me in preparing this or previous editions of the book:
Marcia Anderson, Metropolitan State University (MN) Robert Arend, San Diego Miramar College (CA) Judy Bowie, DeVry University (IL) Joel R. Brouwer, Montcalm Community College (MI) Susan F. Corl, Louisiana State University, Eunice (LA) Marilyn Corzine, Southwest Florida College of Business (FL) Ozzie Dean, DeVry Institute of Technology, West Hills (CA) Kathleen J. Fitzgerald, Columbia College (MO) Catherine Gann, Missouri Western State College (MO) Glennon Graham, Columbia College, Chicago (IL) Fran Gray, Southwest Florida College of Business (FL) Gail Herring, McLennan Community College (TX) Melvin A. Jenkins, Indiana University of Pennsylvania (PA) Martha Johnson, Texas A&M University (TX) John Kowalczyk, Ferris State University (MI) Patsy Krech, The University of Memphis (TN) Kevin J. Kukla, SUNY Oswego (NY) Cynthia H. LaBonne, Fairleigh Dickinson University (NJ) Carol E. Lacey, Metropolitan State University (MN) Nancy L. LaChance, DeVry Institute of Technology, Phoenix (AZ) Marcel Lebrun, Plymouth State University (NH) Joe LeVesque, Northwood University (TX) Hakim J. Lucas, Medgar Evers College (NY) Evelyn Martinez, Pima Community CollegeDesert Vista Campus (AZ) Louise L. Myers, Naugatuck Valley Community College (CT) Linda J. Nelson, Davenport University (IN)
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Acknowledgments
Rebecca R. Noel, Plymouth State University (NH) Sharon Occipinti, Florida Metropolitan UniversityTampa (FL) Mary OShaughnessy, DeVry Institute of Technology, Long Beach (CA) Jim Pollard, Spokane Falls Community College (WA) Diane Rielly, Naugatuck Valley Community College (CT) Margie Robertson, Manatee Community College (FL) Anita Rosenfield, DeVry Institute of Technology, Pomona (CA) Marni Sanft, Utah Valley State College (UT) Penny Schempp, Western Iowa Tech Community College (IA) Matt Schulte, Montgomery College (MD) Andrew Scoblionko, DeVry Institute of Technology (NJ) Karen Sookram, Doane College (NE) Jeffrey D. Swanberg, Rockford Business College (IL) Eric Sun, Macon State College (GA) Mary Vacca, Briarcliffe College (NY) Lynn E.Walker, Katherine Gibbs School, New York City (NY) Joyce White, Mayville State University (ND) Sheri L. Yarbrough, Kennedy-King College (IL)
CONTENTS
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1
2 2
Handling unpleasant or complex tasks Taking charge of your mind Studying efficiently Understanding what you read Keeping a journal Building good habits
QUIZ
5 6 8 9 9 10 11
Fundamentals of Thinking
What is intelligence? What is thinking?
good thinking! THE STORY OF ALBERT EINSTEIN 15
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14 14 17
Key principles of thinking Truth is discovered, not created 17 A statement cant be both true and false at the same time and in the same way 19
good thinking! THE STORY OF ELIZABETH LOFTUS 21
All people make mistakes, even experts 22 Ideas can be examined without being embraced 22 Feeling is no substitute for thinking 23 Identifying facts and opinions Checking facts and testing opinions Consult everyday experience 28 Consider the opinions likely consequences 29 Consider the implications 29 Think of exceptions 30 Think of counterexamples 30 Reverse the opinion 31 Look for relevant research 31
24 27
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Evaluating evidence
good thinking! THE STORY OF FAYE ABDELLAH 35
32 36 38 39
Dare to change your mind A comprehensive thinking strategy Step 1: Identify facts and opinions 38 Step 2: Check the facts and test the opinion(s) Step 3: Evaluate the evidence 39 Step 4: Make your judgment 39
QUIZ
42
Persuasive Communication
What is persuasion? Opportunities in the classroom 44 Opportunities in the workplace 45 Opportunities in the community 45 Opportunities in relationships 46 How is persuasion achieved? Respect your audience 47 Understand your audiences viewpoint(s) 47 Begin on a point of agreement 47 Acknowledge unpleasant facts and make appropriate concessions 47
good thinking! THE STORY OF DALE CARNEGIE
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Apply the Golden Rule 48 Keep your expectations modest 49 Strategy for persuasive writing Step 1: State what you think about the issue and why you think it 50 Step 2: Consider how those who disagree might react to your view 50 Step 3: Arrange your ideas and write a draft of your presentation 51 Step 4: Check your draft for matters of style 52 Step 5: Check your draft for grammar, usage, punctuation, and spelling 52 good thinking! THE STORY OF GEORGE ORWELL 53 Overcoming errors in grammar Make your subjects and predicates agree 54 Choose correct pronoun case 54 Avoid sentence fragments 55 Avoid mixed constructions 55 Make pronoun references clear and accurate 56 Distinguish adverbs from adjectives 56 Choose proper comparatives and superlatives 56
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Contents
Overcoming errors in usage Strategy for persuasive speaking Step 4: Create note cards 59 Step 5: Rehearse using a tape recorder or a camcorder 60 Strategy for group discussion
QUIZ
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57 59
61 68
Becoming an Individual
What is individuality? Acknowledging influences
good thinking! THE STORY OF VIKTOR FRANKL
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70 70 71 73 78 78
Understanding attitudes Four empowering attitudes Attitude 1: Theres always room for improvement Attitude 2: Criticism, including self-criticism, has value 79 Attitude 3: Effort is the key to success 79 Attitude 4: Other people are as important as I am Recognizing manipulation Biased reporting 81 Dishonest appeals to emotion 82 Stacking the deck 83 Suppressing dissent 84 Repetition 84 Resisting manipulation Step 1: Be prepared 85 Step 2: Ask questions 85
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80 81
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Step 3: Be imaginative 88 Step 4: Check sources 90 Habits for individuality Be wary of first impressions
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Be honest with yourself 93 Fight confusion 93 Produce many ideas 93 Acknowledge complexity 95 Look for connections among subjects 95 Consider other viewpoints 96 Base your judgments on evidence 96
QUIZ
100
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Contents
Evaluating Arguments
What is an argument?
good thinking! THE STORY OF MELVIL DEWEY
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102 103 104 106 106
Conducting Internet research Use a search engine 106 Develop a resource list 107 Conducting an interview Avoiding plagiarism Three steps to avoid plagiarism 111 How to correctly quote and paraphrase Revisiting evidence Anecdotes and cases-in-point 118 Published reports 118 Eyewitness testimony 119
good thinking! THE STORY OF DOROTHEA DIX
119 Expert testimony 120 Experiments 120 Statistical studies 121 Surveys 121 Research reviews 121 Evaluating complex arguments Step 1: Identify facts and opinions 122 Step 2: Check the facts and test the opinions Step 3: Conduct research 125 Step 4: Evaluate the evidence 126 Step 5: Make your judgment 127 A caution about bias
QUIZ
121 125
127
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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136 136
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Preconceptions 139 Pretending to know 139 Either/or thinking 140 Errors of judgment Double standard 142 Irrelevant criterion 143
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Contents
Overgeneralizing or stereotyping Hasty conclusion 144 Unwarranted assumption 145 Failure to make a distinction 146 Oversimplification 147 Errors of reaction Explaining away 151 Shifting the burden of proof 152 Attacking the person 152 Straw man 153 Errors can multiply
QUIZ
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143 144
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Contents
Where can statements of fact be confirmed? 193 How widely shared is this opinion? What do authorities on the subject think of it? 193 Is the reasoning behind the opinion logical? 193 Does the evidence support the opinion? 194 Thinking critically about television programming Thinking critically about movies Characters 203 Setting 203 Plot 203 Theme 203 Thinking critically about music Thinking critically about magazines Thinking critically about newspapers
QUIZ
195 202
TO THE IN STRUCTOR
hen first published in 1989, this book was designed to meet a then-unmet needto provide an introduction to critical thinking for students whose programs of study did not require or allow for a standard, philosophical introduction to critical thinking. This design permitted greater latitude than would have been possible with a standard text. I was able to omit some topics that would have been expected in a standard text. A notable example is the distinction between inductive and deductive thinking, which many thinkers, including a fair number of logicians, have come to regard as a distinction without a meaningful difference. They believe that the terms inductive argument and deductive argument are essentially artificial and tend to obscure the fact that most arguments include both inductive elements (movements from the particular to the general) and deductive elements (movements from the general to the particular). The greater latitude also permitted the inclusion of topics that are thought to belong to fields other than philosophy or logic. For example, the subject of Chapter Four is individuality and the role that habits and attitudes commonly associated with psychology play in shaping our thinking. I have also been able to address more expansively the various applications of critical thinking (see Chapter Seven). Over the years, some instructors in standard critical thinking courses have found that this book is more appropriate for their students than one of the many standard critical thinking texts. Where their syllabi have required coverage of a topic not covered here (such as the inductive/ deductive distinction), they have provided their students with supplementary material or created Internet research assignments. The sixth edition continues the same general chapter arrangement of the last edition but includes a number of noteworthy changes: A new Chapter One, Strategies for Effective Learning, has expanded resources for student success. The section on plagiarism in Chapter Four has been expanded to include exercises that help students develop a practical understanding of the difference between legitimate and illegitimate use of other peoples thoughts and words. The Good Thinking profiles have been revised and expanded. Several profiles have been moved to the website; a number of
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To the Instructor
new profiles have been added to the chapters; and exercises have been added that invite students to apply the lessons of the various profiles to their own lives. A number of group activities have been added to give students practice in transferring individual thinking skills to situations in which cooperative effort is necessary to solve problems and make decisions. Cartoons have been added to provide humorous reinforcement of important principles and concepts. A section on supplemental exercises, arranged by chapter, has been added to the student website: college.hmco.com/pic/ruggiero6e. Encourage your students to visit the website to find additional activities, practice quizzes, a Guide to Analyzing Issues, and more!
IN THIS CHAPTER
Planning your days Dealing with frustration Handling unpleasant or complex tasks Taking charge of your mind
Studying efficiently
Keeping a journal
CHAPTER 1:
ow much you will benefit from this book, your other textbooks, and your overall educational experience will depend on your ability to learn. You may have heard that this ability cant be acquired; it is something you either have in your genes or you dont. That view is wrong! While it is true that some people learn more easily than others and seem to have an inborn talent that helps them be successful, theres another important factor that isnt found in peoples genesthe strategies or tricks that enhance learning. Anyone can master these strategies and make learning easier and more enjoyable. In this chapter youll learn a number of simple yet powerful strategies.
good thinking!
THE STORY OF FRANK AND LILLIAN GILBRETH This remarkable husband and wife team, both of whom were born in 1868, became pioneers in the science of time management. As a young apprentice, Frank studied master bricklayers and noted that they all used different motions. He also noted that each of their assistants had an individual way of placing the bricks and mortar; some did less bending, reaching, and lifting than others and were more efficient. Gilbreth realized that having all the workers imitate the more efficient ones would result in a considerable cost saving, so he fitted each scaffold with a shelf for the bricks and mortar and had the bricks stacked conveniently. Ultimately his hanges reduced the number of motions required to lay a brick from eighteen to four and one-half. Gilbreth then became a building contractor and, later, a management engineer. Eventually, Frank met and married Lillian, who had studied literature but then obtained a Ph.D. in industrial psychology. Both lectured at Purdue University and worked as management consultants, helping a wide variety of workers, including surgeons, save time, improve performance, and reduce fatigue. Their basic approach was to film workers at the jobs and then conduct exacting motion studies to determine optimum motion patterns. Frank Gilbreth died in 1924. After his death, Lillian continued to use their approach to help injured individuals become productive despite their handicaps and to improve household efficiency. She died in 1972. This amazing couple made all their contributions while raising twelve children. Their best-selling book, Cheaper by the Dozen, was made into a classic movie that is still shown from time to time on TV. A more recent version of their story starred Steve Martin.
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
For more information on the Gilbreths, see http://gilbrethnetwork.tripod.com/ bio.html and/or http://access.tucson.org/~michael/hm_2.html.
it reveals wisdom: The realization that having something go wrong presents an opportunity, even an invitation, to set it right. The habit of viewing frustration as opportunity has rewarded countless inventors and other creative people. Here are a few of their success stories: In 1853 24-year-old Levi Strauss traveled to San Francisco with bolts of heavy cloth from his brothers dry goods company in
CHAPTER 1:
good thinking!
THE STORY OF ART FRY Art Fry was a chemical engineer employed in the product development department of 3M Corporation. However, his best-known breakthrough idea didnt occur in the workplace but in his church choir. Fry enjoyed singing in his churchs choir and, like members of choirs everywhere, was in the habit of marking the scheduled hymns with little pieces of paper. This way he would be able to turn to the appropriate hymn quickly and be ready to sing when the choirmaster gave the signal. Unfortunately, the little pieces of paper had a way of falling out, leaving him to hurriedly flip through the pages searching for the correct song. Fry thought that there must be a way to get the slips of paper to stick to the page so that they wouldnt fall out, yet not tear the page when they were removed. He remembered a peculiar adhesive a fellow researcher had concocted a few years earlier. At that time no one had been able to think of a use for it. Fry checked the files, got the formula, and made a batch of the adhesive. It turned out to be too strong for his purposes. So he experimented with the formula and finally produced a glue that was like the little bears porridge in the Goldilocks story not too strong, not too weak, but just right. He took the idea to management and got approval to test-market the sample product, and the Post-It was born.
New York. He hoped miners would buy the material to use for their tents. Unfortunately, few miners were interested. But Strauss was not defeated by the experience. He tried to think of a more profitable use for the cloth. Realizing how hard the job of mining was on miners clothes, he decided the heavy cloth would make sturdy work pants. Thus was born the famous product named after himLevi jeans. On a hot summer day in 1904 Ole Evinrude and Bessie Cary went on a picnic to an island two and one-half miles from the shore of Lake Michigan. When they finished eating, she said shed love to have a cold dish of ice cream for dessert. So Ole rowed to the mainland, got the ice cream, rowed back to the island and presented Bessie with . . . a dripping, runny mess. Why Ole didnt take Bessie with him to get the ice cream is not known. What is known is that his frustration over the experience led him to invent the first commercially successful outboard motor. In 1935 Paul Sperry took his cocker spaniel for a walk. The ground was covered with snow and ice, and Sperry had difficulty keeping his footing. But the dog had no such difficulty. Sperry turned
CHAPTER 1:
And the longer you procrastinate, the more that feeling nags at you. There is a simple solution to this situation. Put unpleasant tasks high on your list of priorities. Whenever possible, tackle them immediately. If a task is not only unpleasant but also complex, break it into a number of parts, and work on one part at a time. Lets say the task is to write a term paper and you will have to spend considerable time doing library research, analyzing your findings, and composing your paper. Instead of regarding the assignment as one giant task, think of it as a number of smaller tasks. Then devote time each day to one of those smaller tasks. For example, each time you visit the library for another purpose, consult one information source for your term paper. Later, when you have completed your research, devote a little time each day to the remaining tasks: evaluating your data, making an outline, and writing the paper. Before you know it, the term paper will be finished. The advantage of this approach is that when due dates arrive and others are moaning, I dont think Ill finish on time. Why, oh why didnt I start earlier? youll be calm, confident, and self-satisfied.
CHAPTER 1:
fellow students after class and asked them a question, only to realize that they were just as confused as you?It happens all the time. When one student dares to ask for clarification other students are likely to be grateful. And the instructor is likely to regard the one who asks as conscientious. Be that student! Similarly, if you encounter a confusing passage while reading a textbook, dont just hope that the passing of time will clarify its meaning. Instead, reread the passage ALOUD, listening to the words. The addition of sound to sight will often break through the confusion. Be alert for insights. Insights are relatively rare and they arrive unexpectedly. Whats more, they seldom pay us a return visit, so its important to be ready to capture them when they come. Keep a pencil and paper handy at all times. (If you prefer, carry a micro-tape recorder or send a text message to yourself on your cell phone.) Whenever an interesting idea occurs to you whether about a course youre taking, a relationship, or anything important to yourecord it immediately. Dont be shy about recording your ideas when you are in a group of people. No one will think it odd if you say, Excuse me, Ive just thought of something important I dont want to forget.
Studying efficiently
Would you believe that A and B students often spend less time studying than C and D students?Its true. The fact illustrates an important principle of learningthe amount of time spent studying is less important than the circumstances. Heres how to get the most from your studying: 1. Choose the right time. If you are a morning person who jumps out of bed eager to meet the days challenges, try to make that time of day your study time. On the other hand, if you are a night owl arrange your schedule accordingly. 2. Choose a suitable place. The best place is the one with the fewest distractions. Youll study more efficiently in a quiet corner of the library than in the campus snack bar. If theres not too much activity in and around the parking lot, consider studying in your car. 3.Choose favorable conditions. Dont confuse favorable with enjoyable. For example, you may enjoy having the TV blaring or having your iPod playing, but, for learning, quiet beats noisy every time. (It should go without saying that even a little alcohol diminishes the effectiveness of studying.) You may have to experiment a little to find what works best for you. But the payofffaster, more efficient learningis well worth the effort.
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Keeping a journal
Keeping a journal
We rather quickly forget most of what we learn. This is especially true of what we learn from lectures and textbooks. Yet there is a way to increase the amount of material we retainkeep a journal of our learning experiences. A journal doesnt require a great investment of time, just a little investment at appropriate times. One such time is immediately after each class and each study session. Heres what to do: Buy a middle-sized spiral or bound notebook to serve as your journal for the semester. Keep it with you whenever you attend class or study. If possible, when each class ends, instead of rushing out with the other students, stay in your seat for a few minutes, take out your notebook, and write down in a sentence or two the most
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CHAPTER 1:
important lesson you just learned. In some cases, the lesson will be something said during the instructors lecturefor example, some clarifying explanation of a passage in the textbook. In other cases, it may be an insight that occurred to you while participating in class discussion, or one that another student expressed. Similarly, whenever you are approaching the end of a study sessionfor example, reading a chapter in the textbooktake a few minutes out to record in your journal, in your own words, the points that are too important to forget. From time to time, especially (but not only) before exams, read through your journal and refresh your recollection.
exercise 1
Wise people learn from other peoples experiences as well as from their own. Good Thinking! profiles offer such learning opportunities. Even if the fields of endeavor differ from yours, you can profit from the way the individuals approached their challenges. You can learn from the personal qualities that were displayed as every challenge was conquered. This exercise and similar ones in subsequent chapters and on the website will help you apply the lessons contained in the profiles to your own life. What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Frank and Lillian Gilbreth and Art Fry presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life. If you wish, use a separate sheet of paper.
Note: Another Good Thinking! profile and exercise may be found online.
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quiz
Write your answers to these quiz questions on a separate sheet of paper.
1. Success is not just a matter of having good genes. True or false? 2. State the three axioms of efficiency. 3. Explain the meaning of the Japanese saying, Bad news is good news. 4. Why is it a good idea to tackle unpleasant tasks first? 5. Summarize the strategies for taking charge of your mind. 6. List the three ways to get the most out of studying. 7. The most obvious activities in reading are running your eyes across the page
and recognizing words. What are the other important elements?
8. What benefit will you derive from keeping a journal? 9. What is the purpose of the Good Thinking! profiles? 10. Complete this sentence: To benefit from the strategies for learning presented
in this chapter, youve got to . . . Answers to this quiz may be found online.
Fundamentals of Thinking
Intelligence is, most importantly, something you do. Thinking is a purposeful mental activity. You control it and not vice versa. These five reliable ideas provide the foundation for thinking. Facts are amply documented ideas. Opinions are open to dispute. Facts can be misunderstood. Opinions can be mistaken. Both need to be tested. Evidence is information that supports an opinion but not all evidence is equally reliable. Changing your mind in response to evidence is a mark of courage and integrity. This four-step strategy will make your thinking consistently effective.
IN THIS CHAPTER
Key principles of thinking Identifying facts and opinions Checking facts and testing opinions Evaluating evidence
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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CHAPTER 2:
Fundamentals of Thinking
What is intelligence?
n a scene from the movie Forrest Gump, Forrest was sitting on a bench next to an old man who asked him rudely, Are you stupid? Forrest gave the man his most dignified look and responded politely, Stupid is as stupid does, sir. This wasnt just a clever comeback; it was and is a profound truth. Intelligence isnt just something we have. It is, more importantly, something we do. If this sounds strange to you, it could be because youve learned to associate intelligence only with factual knowledge. In this association, the human mind is little more than an information warehouse, the size of each persons warehouse is determined genetically and cant be expanded, and the most intelligent people are walking encyclopedias who can answer all the questions in class or win all the prizes on game shows. Now theres nothing wrong with acquiring and storing information. It certainly beats ignorance. But the human mind has another, more exciting functionusing information to solve problems, resolve issues, and meet everyday challenges in living. From this perspective, the human mind is much more than an information warehouse. It is an idea factory, and the key to its success is a different kind of knowledge, performance knowledge. Factual knowledge is knowing about. Performance knowledge is knowing how, sometimes referred to as know-how. The terms are roughly equivalent, respectively, to book smart and street smart. Both factual knowledge and performance contribute to intelligence, so it is unfortunate that they are thought to be in opposition to each other. But it is even more unfortunate that performance knowledge has been ignored since it is more active and dynamic. It also plays a greater role in our responses to everyday challenges. In that sense, it is the more practical measure of intelligence. The main ingredient in performance knowledge is thinking skill. And here is the best news of allwhatever your present level of thinking skill, it can be raised. And as you raise it, you become more intelligent!
What is thinking?
Imagine that you are staring into space, picturing yourself heading for the airport. You see yourself ready for a months cruise in the Caribbean, your pockets stuffed with cash. Would this mental process be thinking?
What is thinking?
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF ALBERT EINSTEIN Few people deserve the title genius more than Albert Einstein. His theory of relativity is one of the greatest intellectual achievements in human history. Academically, however, Einstein was less than mediocre. One teacher told him he would never amount to anything. Eventually, he was asked to leave school. After spending some time traveling in Italy, Einstein applied to the Zurich Polytechnic School. He failed the admissions exam, and was required to return to high school for a year before being accepted. On graduating from Zurich he was rejected for an assistantship because no professor would give him a recommendation. He managed to get a job as a tutor but was soon fired. Some years later, while working at odd jobs, Einstein submitted a doctoral thesis to the University of Zurich, but it was rejected. He eventually got a job in the patent office. In his spare time, he continued his studies, quietly earned a doctorate, and began publishing his scientific findings. Finally, after many years in relative obscurity, his work won him the recognition he deserved. If Einstein had accepted his teachers assessment of his intelligence, he would undoubtedly have lost the motivation to pursue his studies, and the world would be unimaginably poorer. For more information on Albert Einstein, see www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/ 1921/einstein-bio.html.
Now imagine that youre discussing politics with friends. Its always the same with politicians, you say. Theyre full of promises until theyre elected. Then they develop chronic amnesia. Would you be thinking in this case? Thinking, as we will define it in this book, is a purposeful mental activity. You control it, not vice versa. For the most part, thinking is a conscious activity. Yet the unconscious mind can continue working on a problem after conscious activity stopsfor example, while you sleep. Given this definition, your ruminations about a Caribbean cruise are not thinking but daydreaming; you are merely following the drift of your fantasies. On the other hand, your discussion of politics could constitute thinking, as long as you arent just repeating something youve said or heard before. Thinking is sometimes regarded as two harmonious processes. One process is the production of ideas (creative thinking), accomplished by widening your focus and looking at many possibilities. The other process is the
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CHAPTER 2:
Fundamentals of Thinking
The New Yorker Collection 1994. Donald Reilly from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved.
evaluation of ideas (critical thinking), accomplished by narrowing your focus, sorting out the ideas youve generated, and identifying the almost reasonable ones. Both processes can be improved by training and practice. Our discussion in this chapter and throughout the book will include some approaches for producing ideas, but its main focus will be evaluating ideasthat is, critical thinking. Chances are you received little or no critical thinking instruction in high school. Your teachers were not to blame for this. In many cases they, and their teachers before them, were denied such training, largely because of the theory that thinking cant be taught or that some subjects teach it automatically. Such erroneous ideas resisted correction for most of the twentieth century. Thinking can be taught, and not just to gifted students but to all students. No course automatically teaches thinking, though any course can teach it when teachers make thinking skills a direct objective and give students regular practice in producing and evaluating ideas.* Such instruction benefits students in their studies, their careers, community service, and personal relationships. According to psychologist Albert Ellis, [People] can live the most self-fulfilling, creative, and
* In An Experiment in the Development of Critical Thinking, Edward Glaser cited more than 340 studies. In subsequent decades hundreds more studies on critical and creative thinking were published. Notable among the researchers on creative thinking are Sidney Parnes, J. P. Guilford, and E. Paul Torrance. More recent researchers on thinking and intelligence include Howard Gardner, Robert Sternberg, and David Perkins.
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Thinking is like building a house or a skyscraperthe success of the enterprise depends on the firmness of the foundation. The foundation of thinking, of course, is not concrete and steel but principlesideas that have survived rigorous testing and proved trustworthy. The following principles of thinking are among the most important:
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CHAPTER 2:
Fundamentals of Thinking
to tell is to consider what the new view of truth implies about everyday issues. If truth is created by each person, then . . . . . . Galileos assertion that the sun is the center of the solar system, a view that shocked most people of his time, is not true for everyone but just for those who want to believe it. . . . those who believe that the earth is flat, the Holocaust never happened, and Saddam Hussein was a benevolent leader of his people are correct. And so are those who take opposite views. . . . when a drunk falls into an empty swimming pool thinking that it is full, water will suddenly appear and save him from a hard landing. . . . the standard courtroom oathI swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truthis outdated. Witnesses should be allowed to testify to their own personal truth and no ones truth should be considered superior to anyone elses. Moreover, since defendants pleas of not guilty are equal to prosecutors claims of guilt, all court cases should be dismissed. . . . it is a waste of time for archeologists to dig for proof of lost civilizations, for medical researchers to search for the causes and cures of diseases, for historians to pore over dusty manuscripts for clues to the past, and for students to read textbooks like this one. Instead, they should simply decide what they want to believe andpresto!it will become reality. . . . all your incorrect answers on past true/false tests should be marked correct and your grade-point average raised accordingly. As even these few examples make clear, the notion that truth is created by each individual does not hold up under scrutiny. In contrast, everyday experience confirms the principle that truth is discovered.
exercise 2
Throughout this century, a famous painting entitled The Man with the Golden Helmet was believed to be the work of the Dutch master Rembrandt. Some years ago it was proved to have been painted by someone else. Some people would say that the truth about this painting changed. Do you agree? Explain.
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exercise 3
Examine each of the following cases in light of what youve learned about truth in this section. State your view and explain why you hold it. Ira is a journalist. Will the belief that he can create his own truth make him more or less likely to value accuracy in his reporting?
Bruce is prejudiced toward minorities and women. Which of the following beliefs would be more helpful in overcoming his prejudice: the belief that truth is subjective and created; or the belief that truth is objective and discovered? Explain your reasoning.
Most students can use additional motivation to learn. Will the belief that they can create their own truth help or hinder their motivation? Explain.
A statement cant be both true and false at the same time and in the same way
This principle is known as the principle of contradiction. The following examples demonstrate the validity of this principle: Statement: My roommate borrowed my sweater without permission. Comment: If this statement were both true and false at the same time in the same way, it would mean that you simultaneously gave your permission and didnt give your permission. That is impossible. You must either have given your approval or not given it. This example confirms the principle of contradiction. Statement: During World War II the Nazis killed millions of Jews in concentration camps. Comment: Either the Nazis did this horrible deed or they didnt. Since there is no way they did it and didnt do it, this example also supports the principle of contradiction.
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Statement: Capital punishment is a deterrent to crime. Comment: If capital punishment was once a deterrent but no longer is, the statement would be true for one time but not for the other. If capital punishment is a deterrent for some people but not for others (for the reflective, lets say, but not for the impulsive), the statement would be true in one way but not in the other. Neither situation challenges the principle of contradiction, which stipulates that a statement cannot be both true and false at the same time and in the same way. Statement: Edgar is richer than Clem. Comment: If Edgar has more money than Clem, but Clem surpasses him in moral character, then the statement would be both true and false but not in the same way. It would be true in one sense and false in another. (To be a contradiction, it would have to say Edgar has more money than Clem and does not have more money than Clem.) Thus, this example also confirms the principle of contradiction. A note of caution: The principle of contradiction applies whenever opposing statements make exactly opposite assertionsfor example, she is versus she isnt, he did versus he didnt, they have versus they havent. In such cases, it is certain that one statement must be true and the other false. However, when the assertions made are not exactly opposite but merely different, both could be false. For example, if you say Sally got the highest mark on the exam and I say Luke got the highest mark, it is possible that we are both mistaken. (Bertha or Juwan may have gotten the highest mark.)
exercise 4
Classify each of the following exchanges as (a) an actual contradiction or (b) a near contradiction. Briefly explain each choice. Mavis: Big time college sports are corrupt. Cora: Youre absolutely wrong, Mavis.
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Karen: There are very few real heroes today. Hanna: I think there are more today than there have ever been.
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exercise 4 (cont.)
Brad: Look at that new Lincoln across the street. Clara: That isnt a Lincolnits a Mercury.
good thinking!
THE STORY OF ELIZABETH LOFTUS The majority of men and women engaged in scholarly research dont get invited to the talk shows or have stories written about them in popular magazines, even when their work has a significant effect on peoples lives. Psychologist Elizabeth Loftus is an exception. One reason is that her research has challenged some longstanding beliefs about human memory. Another is the relevance of that research to some prominent controversies of the last decade or two. The traditional view is that memory is like a videotaped record of events etched into the grooves of our minds. According to this theory, a particular record may become hidden, even from ourselves, but it is never lost. Given our desire and, in some cases, the assistance of people experienced in recovering such data, we can recover any memory, however traumatic. And what we recover will be accurate to the smallest detail. A number of researchers have challenged this traditional view of memory, but none as effectively as Loftus. She devised her own research projects and proved that real memories can be altered, and that fictitious memories can be created. In experiments with children and adults she first showed them short films and later discussed their recollections of what they saw. In one experiment, by merely asking Did you see a bear? or Did you see a boat? she was able to make them remember details that were not present in the film. In another case, by using the word smash instead of hit she was able to change peoples estimate of the speed of cars AND to create a memory of broken glass where there had been none. For more information on Elizabeth Loftus, see Elizabeth Loftus and Katherine Ketcham, Witness for the Defense (New York: St. Martins Press, 1991), or Elizabeth Loftus, Eyewitness Testimony (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996).
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finished our second holes for the day, while nobody else had finished one. He promptly fired both of us for loafing along with another chap who had been doing three holes a day. In his first day on the job he had fired his three best men (LAmour, 105). The problem with following feelings, urges, and impressions is not that they always lead us astray. (They dont.) The problem is that they arent consistently reliable. Sometimes they advise us well and sometimes they dont. In LAmours example, the new bosss mistake was to act on his immediate impression instead of examining it critically. Rather than mindlessly following your feelings, think about them carefully and decide whether they deserve to be followed.
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Example: More Americans are victimized by chronic laziness than by workaholism. Comment: Some people will disagree, and others may ask, Why does the author think this? What reasons does he or she have for holding this view rather than some competing view? The person making the statement should provide answers to such questions. 4. If it is not clear whether a statement is a fact or an opinion, treat it as an opinion. Remember another important point about opinion. As used in critical thinking, the term opinion refers only to matters of judgment, not to matters of taste or personal preference. The ancient Romans used to say that there is no way to argue profitably or think critically about matters of taste. Their view is as wise today as it was a couple of millennia ago. Do you favor a slender figure or a full figure? Do you find long or short hair more appealing? Do you prefer fitted jeans or ones with the crotch down around the knees? Do you regard the Lincoln Town Car as beautiful or ugly? Do you enjoy sitcoms more than soap operas? All of these are matters of personal preference or taste which cannot be supported by facts. As long as you express matters of taste as matters of taste you need not defend them, even if others find your tastes odd. Thus you should say I prefer long hair rather than Long hair is more attractive than short hair, I prefer the look of the Lincoln Town Car rather than The Lincoln Town Car is the most stylish car on the road, and I enjoy sitcoms more than soap operas rather than Sitcoms are superior entertainment.
exercise 5
On a separate sheet of paper, indicate whether each of the following statements is a. clearly a fact. b. possibly a fact, but not clear without documentation. c. an opinion. d. a personal preference expressed as a personal preference. e. a personal preference incorrectly expressed as an opinion. Remember that it is sometimes difficult to separate facts and opinions. There may be room for disagreement over some answers, so be prepared to explain your choices. 1. I find blue-eyed redheads appealing. 2. The Chevrolet Camaro is the most stylish car on the market.
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exercise 5 (cont.)
3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. All religions share the same fundamental truths. Darwins theory of evolution continues to be controversial. Pornography is an insult to women. Black people are the victims of crime more often than white people. Prostitution should be legalized. People who need organ transplants greatly outnumber organ donors. The publicity given to suicides leads to most copycat suicide attempts. Comic books are as instructive about life as novels are. Most students who drop out of school lack the intelligence to succeed. Surgical procedures have been performed on fetuses while they were still in the uterus.
exercise 6
Now take the statements in the previous exercise and do as follows: For each that you classified b, state one or more reliable sources that could be cited to support the statement (assuming that the statement is factual). For each that you classified as b, possibly a fact, write questions that might be raised about the statement. If you classified any statement e, rewrite it as a personal preference rather than as an opinion.
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The idea of testing opinions may seem odder than checking facts because it has become fashionable to think of opinions as something sacred and above criticism. Many people reason, I have a right to my opinion therefore my opinion must be right. They would be shocked to learn that for centuries before our time, opinion was not so highly regarded. Almost 2,000 years ago the Greek philosopher Epictetus wrote: Here is the beginning of philosophy: a recognition of the conflicts between men, a search for their cause, a condemnation of mere opinion . . . and the discovery of a standard of judgment. [Emphasis added.] Nineteenth-century British author Sir Robert Peel termed public opinion a compound of folly, weakness, prejudice, wrong feeling, right feeling, obstinacy, and newspaper paragraphs. American author John Erskine sarcastically termed opinion that exercise of the human will which helps us to make a decision without information. American philosopher George Santayana observed that people are usually more firmly convinced that their opinions are precious than that they are true. And one humorist suggested that many opinions that are expressed ought to have been sent by slow freight instead. If you reflect on these skeptical views of opinion, you will appreciate that they underline an important realitynot all opinions are equally sound. Some are wise, others are foolish, and most fall somewhere between the two extremes. Unfortunately, most of us tend to forget this when forming opinions. Armed with little more than a sketchy news report, an assertion by a celebrity, or a fleeting impression, we may form opinions on complex subjects, such as the causes of child abuse, the reason why dinosaurs became extinct, or the health benefits of the latest diet. Some time ago, a roving reporter took his tape recorder into the street and asked passersby, How serious is racial tension in New York? Among those who responded were a porter, two teachers, a truck driver, a film editor, a security guard, and a secretary. Chances are that at least some of these people lacked sufficient knowledge to form an opinion, but that didnt stop them from expressing one. (Perhaps they never heard the old saying, Its better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to express your thoughts and remove all doubt.) To be a critical thinker, you will need to develop the habit of testing opinionsyour own as well as other peoplesbefore trusting them. Here are seven effective ways of doing so.
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Think of exceptions
This approach is useful when you are evaluating an opinion that expresses a general rule. The more exceptions you can think of, the more suspect the opinion is. Carl Rogers, a famous psychologist, wrote: One of the basic things which I was a long time in realizing, and which I am still learning, is that when an activity feels as though it is valuable or worth doing, it is worth doing (Rogers, 22). To test this idea think of activities that someone might feel are worth doing but really arent. Here are just a few: shoplifting, lying on a rsum, expressing to an instructor your negative assessment of his teaching ability. Here is another example of thinking of exceptions. A commonly expressed opinion is, If you are strongly motivated, you can be anything you want to be. A notable exception is Michael Jordans attempt to be a major league baseball player. He certainly did not lack motivation, and his basketball career proved he was a gifted athlete. Despite these advantages, however, he was unable to succeed in baseball. Jordans case raises questions about the soundness of the opinion.
Think of counterexamples
Suppose an author is arguing that parents should not give children responsibilities until they are in their teens, and supports her argument with a number of case histories like this one: I know a person who was given responsibilities such as picking up his clothes and toys at age 3; taking out the garbage at age 6; and raking leaves, washing dishes, and doing laundry at age 10. Today hes in his mid-thirties and resents having had all those chores. A counterexample would be the case of someone (perhaps you) who had similar responsibilities in childhood and now regards the experience as valuable. The more counterexamples you identify, the more justified you are in wondering about the reasonableness of the authors opinion. Scholars in every field use the technique of finding counterexamples. Some time ago the issue of repressed memory was in the news. People undergoing therapy suddenly recalled horrible incidents of physical or sexual abuse they had supposedly suffered as children. Some therapists said they were suffering from traumatic amnesia and that victims of multiple instances of abuse were more likely to suffer from it than were victims of a single instance. This opinion sounded logical. But at least one critical thinker offered some powerful counterexamplesslaves, survivors of concentration camps in World War II, and victims of torture and political persecution. She noted that all these people suffered intense abuse for years yet never for a moment forgot it (Hagen, 39). These counterexamples did not disprove the idea that memories of abuse can be repressed, but they
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exercise 7
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This exercise will give you an opportunity to apply the above techniques. Evaluate these opinions using one or more of the approaches explained above. If you wish, do this work on a separate sheet of paper. A famous movie actress explained her decision to nurse her child until she was 2 years old: Thats a particular philosophy I have . . . allowing her to make her own decisions. I feel she is a better judge than I am.
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exercise 7 (cont.)
No doubt youve seen the bumper sticker that expresses this opinion, Guns dont kill people; people kill people.
A New Age author tells his readers: You are the only thing that is real. Everything else is your imagination.
State and evaluate an opinion you have heard expressed (or expressed yourself) about a current local, national, or international issue.
Evaluating evidence
As we have noted, evidence is reliable information that supports an opinion. The most common kind of evidence, the kind we will discuss here, is reasons. (Other kinds of evidence are discussed in Chapter Five.) A reason is the basis for thinking or doing something and is commonly signaled by the word because. A child may say, I hit Tommy because he made a face at me. A parent may say, I sent my child to a private tutor because she was doing poorly in English. A prospective car buyer may explain, I am considering a hybrid model because I do a lot of traveling and need an economical vehicle. In some cases, the word because
Evaluating evidence
is implied rather than stated. For example, Tawana may say, I will never confide in Maria again. I once shared a secret with her and she blabbed it all over campus. Or a voter may say, I certainly will not vote for that candidate for president. I dont like his mustache. A moments reflection on these few examples will reveal that some reasons are good and others arent. Poor grades in English are a good reason for seeking a tutor, improved gas economy is a good reason for buying a car, and past betrayals are a good reason for not trusting someone. On the other hand, the fact that someone made a face is not a good reason for hitting him, and disliking a mustache is not a good reason to reject a candidate. (Incidentally, the mustache example is not as far-fetched as it sounds. Some historians regard it as a factor in Thomas Deweys loss of the presidency to Harry Truman in 1948.) In some cases a reason will be good but not sufficient to support the thought or action. Suppose that an executive position is open in a company and Martha and Bill are in contention for it. One member of the group who will make the decision says, I am in favor of giving the position to Martha rather than to Bill because our company doesnt have enough women in upper management. The reason for promoting Marthaincreasing the number of women in upper managementis certainly good. However, it would be sufficient only if Marthas qualifications were equal or superior to Bills. Here are some additional examples, together with comments to demonstrate how to evaluate reasons:
Example: That exam wasnt fair because it tested us on material that we were specifically told we werent responsible for. Comment: The reason, if accurate, is both good and sufficient. Teachers have an obligation to keep their word. Example: That story about Britney Spears is probably false. After it appeared in a supermarket tabloid, no other newspaper or broadcast agency reported it. Comment: The reason for suspecting that the story is false is both good and sufficient. Supermarket tabloids have a reputation for exaggeration and misstatement. It is therefore reasonable to be suspicious about their stories, particularly when other news sources do not confirm them. Example: Management acted properly in installing surveillance cameras in the employee lounge and restrooms because they have a right to identify troublemakers in the firm. Comment: The reason offeredmanagements right to identify troublemakers might justify installing surveillance cameras in work areas, but not in areas in which employees have the right of privacy. So the reason is neither good nor sufficient.
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Example: Taking money from my employers petty cash fund isnt really stealing. My employer pays me less money than the person I replaced. He has also given me more responsibilities. And if I didnt take that money, I wouldnt be able to pay my bills. Comment: The reasons offered would support looking for another job but not stealing from the employer. As used here, the reasons are an attempt to justify behavior that is both unethical and criminal. It is challenging enough to evaluate reasons when they are stated directly, but the challenge is even greater when they are left unstated. Unfortunately, the latter happens fairly often. The person may regard the opinion or action as self-supporting or may believe there is no need to justify it to other people. In addition, people sometimes hide the real reasons for their behavior, even from themselves. For example, a teenager may persuade himself that he smokes cigarettes because he enjoys doing so when the real reason is fear that his peers will laugh at him if he doesnt smoke.
exercise 8
In each of the following cases, decide whether the reason offered is both good and sufficient to support the opinion or action. Your Honor, I believe I was justified in hitting my wife. She kept nagging me about getting a job.
I didnt sign that petition. The person who asked me to sign refused to support my proposal last year.
I oppose government funding for abortions. It requires taxpayers to finance a procedure that many of them believe is a moral outrage.
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exercise 8 (cont.)
Students who are caught cheating should receive a failing grade in the course. Cheating is a serious violation of scholarly integrity.
Women should not take their husbands names when they marry. Doing so is a sign of subjugation.
The New Yorker Collection 1986. Richard Cline from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF FAYE ABDELLAH There are many different reasons for choosing ones lifes work. Faye Glenn Abdellahs was the experience of watching helplessly as the dirigible Hindenburg exploded in 1937, killing thirty-six people and severely burning many others. She was 18 at the time, the Americanborn daughter of an Algerian father and a Scottish mother, and she decided right then to become a nurse. After gaining a nursing certificate, she earned her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees at Columbia University and began teaching at Yale. Abdellahs devotion to improving the field of nursing and the care of patients was so intense that it sometimes got her into trouble. At Yale she argued for better textbooks and, when the Dean refused to follow her suggestion, she organized a textbook-burning event in the Yale courtyard. (As a punishment, she was required to pay for the textbooks out of her rather meager salary.) Years later, she again got into trouble when she informed a nursing home accrediting organization that the conditions in many nursing homes were worse than the conditions for the animals at the San Diego Zoo. (The organization responded by having her escorted from the event.) In 1949 Abdellah joined the U.S. Public Health Service, which in time became a part of the U.S. Navy. As a senior officer, she received research and consultation assignments in Japan, Australia, China, and Russia, among other countries. In the U.S. in the 1970s, she founded the Office of Long-Term Care, which monitored conditions in the nations nursing homes. In time, she became Chief Nurse Officer of the Public Health Service and Deputy Surgeon General of the U.S. under C. Everett Koop. She holds the naval rank of Rear Admiral. Over her long career, Admiral Abdellah has been a strong advocate for making nursing a science, raising standards in nursing homes, overcoming fetal alcoholism, and putting patients at the center of concern in the medical community. She has authored 150 research articles and several books. For more about Faye Glenn Abdellah, do a Google search.
It is easy to identify people who harbor this belief. They treat all their opinions as if they were convictions and all their convictions as unquestionable. They are quick to disagree with views that differ from theirs but take offense when anyone disagrees with them. And they refuse to acknowledge the insights of individuals on the other side of an issue. Lets be honest. Changing our minds is seldom, if ever, enjoyable. We cant help being a little embarrassed, even if the change occurs privately rather than publicly. Although we gain more than we lose when we exchange a weak idea for a strong one, we may feel the loss more acutely.
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exercise 9
On a separate sheet of paper, state your present opinion on each of the following issues and your reason(s) for that opinion. Next, consider alternative viewsperhaps by going to the library, conducting interviews, or researching on the Internetand keep a record of your sources. Then decide how reasonable your view is. If it is not as reasonable as it could be, revise it. 1. Should athletes be required to meet the same entrance standards as other students? 2. Should the federal government pass laws to prohibit pornography on the Internet? 3. Should schools or companies have policies limiting use of the Internet to school or work related activities?
Lets see how this process of changing ones mind works in an actual situation. For many years Jennifer considered astrology a good guide to everyday living. Her reasons were that numerous newspapers, magazines, and television treated it seriously and that many well-known, educated people used it as a guide to their decision making. But then she was involved in a discussion with someone she respected. That person asserted that astrology is not only unscientific but also illogical. Jennifer left that discussion wondering whether her view of astrology was reasonable.
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Seeking more evidence, Jennifer visited the library and found a number of books and articles, some supporting astrology and others rejecting it. She also checked the Internet, and interviewed a professor of psychology and a professor of comparative religion. Finally, she consulted the Yellow Pages and called a local astrologer. After evaluating her reading and discussion, Jennifer changed her initial view. Her revised view and her supporting reasons are as follows: Many well known, educated people believe in astrology. Even so, I think its an ineffective guide to everyday living. One reason is that astrology is based on superstitions of a primitive time. For example, because the planet Mars appears red, it has been associated with blood and aggression. Another reason is that astrology continues to say that planets influence us at the moment of birth even though science has shown beyond question that the moment of conception is a more important time. A third reason is that astrologers offer no answer to this question: If the planets Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto were discovered after 1780, werent all horoscopes before that time necessarily wrong? By having the courage to change her mind when the evidence called for it, Jennifer was able to adopt a more realistic view of astrology.
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exercise 10
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In recent years health experts have become concerned about the increasing numbers of Americans who are significantly overweight or obese. By publicizing their concerns, the experts sparked a national debate about the cause(s) of this phenomenon. The following essay blames the fast-food industry. Read it carefully, and then apply the four-step comprehensive thinking strategy, using a separate sheet of paper. Shame on Fast-Food Merchants By Elena Rodriguez Obesity is no joke. It has been linked to heart conditions, high blood pressure, sleep apnea, diabetes, and respiratory problems. And one in five Americans qualifies as obesethat is, 30 percent heavier than the normal weight for
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exercise 10 (cont.)
ones height. The increase in obesity among children over the last decade or so is especially alarming. Who is to blame for this increase? To some extent, the people themselves for eating fattening foods and not getting enough exercise. In the case of children, parents share some responsibility for allowing kids to snack continuously. But a good share of the blame must go to the fast-food industry, particularly to restaurants such as McDonalds, Burger King, and Wendys. The fast-food industry rejects that argument, and that comes as no surprise. If the courts were to uphold it, the dollar settlements would be huge (no pun intended). Their position would be believable if they just sat between the golden arches or whatever and waited for people to walk in and place an order. But they dont do that. They ADVERTISE. Translation: they use all kinds of slogans and gimmicks to entice people in, especially young people. Think of all the scenes of good times and friendship you have seen in fastfood ads, with trim, athletic people chattering happily or singing jingles and dancing. (Not a bulging size 3X in sight!) Think, too, of the mouth-watering pictures of burgers and fish fillets, steam rising, ketchup oozing, and the accompanying invitation to supersize your order. (Never a reference to mega-milligrams of salt, mounds of sugar, or artery-clogging fat!) When youve got all those images firmly in mind, youll realize why the fastfood industry bears the main responsibility for the current obesity problem because their ads deceive the public.
exercise 11
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Not everyone accepts the view that the fast-food industry is to blame for the rise in obesity. For example, the following essay disputes that charge. Read the essay carefully and then apply the four-step comprehensive thinking strategy, using a separate sheet of paper. (Note: If you strongly agreed with the first essay, you will probably be tempted to reject this essay automatically. Resist that temptation and give it a fair hearing. If the author presents good reasons for changing your mind, dare to do so.) McDs Fault? Give Me a Break By Shandon Jackson Time was when people were held accountable for their behavior. Now no one is. Rude, obnoxious people blame their parents for their offenses. Semiliterate ignoramuses blame their teachers. Incompetent workers blame their employers.
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exercise 11 (cont.)
People who destroy their lungs by smoking blame cigarette manufacturers. Given this blame someone else mentality, it was predictable that sooner or later overweight people would blame fast-food vendors. The lawsuits that have been filed against fast-food restaurants are pure frivolity, totally without merit. Anyone with a smidgeon of common sense knows that fast-food is fattening and lacking in nutritional value. Restaurants shouldnt have to post signs announcing the fact, any more than stove manufacturers should have to warn buyers that hot surfaces burn. Do fast-food advertisements make our mouths water? Of course. Ads for diamonds and Porsche convertibles tempt us, too, but so what? Sales pitches are meant to sell us things we may not need or may not be good for us, and they do so by exaggerating. The Romans invented a wonderful rule to cover such cases. Its called caveat emptor, let the buyer beware. Thats a polite way of saying, If someone snookered you, take a good look in the mirror, say shame on you to the person who looks back, and then get on with your life. Thats still good advice. If we dont put a stop to frivolous lawsuits, before long short people will be suing their parents for depriving them of tall genes, chocoholics will be suing Hershey for causing their skin to break out, couch potatoes will be suing sofa manufacturers for enlarging their butts, and defeated politicians will be suing the voters for frustrating their ambitions. Enough is enough.
exercise 12
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What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Albert Einstein, Elizabeth Loftus, and Faye Abdellah presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
Note: Another Good Thinking! profile and exercise may be found online.
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quiz
Write your answers to these quiz questions on a separate sheet of paper.
1. This book focuses on evaluating ideas and also includes some approaches
for producing them. True or false?
4. Explain the error in this statement: I create my own truth. What I believe to
be true is true for me.
5. State the principle of contradiction. Then explain how this principle aids us
in critical thinking.
7. Is it useful to argue about matters of taste? Explain. 8. Changing ones mind signals a lack of conviction. True or false? Explain your
answer.
10. State and briefly explain the four steps of the comprehensive thinking strategy presented in this chapter. Answers to this quiz may be found online.
Persuasive Communication
Persuasion is the art of getting people to give a fair hearing to ideas that differ from their own. Persuasion is achieved by discussing issues honestly and fairly. This section shows how. This five-step strategy will help you write more persuasively. Learn to recognize and avoid these common grammatical errors. Learn to recognize and avoid these common errors in usage. This five-step strategy will help you speak more persuasively. This strategy will help you contribute more effectively to group discussion.
IN THIS CHAPTER
What is persuasion?
Strategy for persuasive writing Overcoming errors in grammar Overcoming errors in usage Strategy for persuasive speaking
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n Chapter Two you learned to become a better thinker. Now learn how to express your thoughts more confidently and effectively. The two activitiesproducing insights and communicating them to othersare essential to academic, business, and personal success. There are four broad kinds of communication: description, narration (telling a story), exposition (reporting facts), and persuasion. This chapter will focus on persuasion.
What is persuasion?
Many people define persuasion as convincing others. Lets examine that view. Have you ever had someone say, in the middle of a disagreement with you, Youre so right. I see the issue clearly now. I dont know how I could have reached such a silly conclusion. Thanks for helping me see my error. You probably havent. People dont abandon their beliefs that easily. Thats why its a mistake to think of persuasion as convincing other people that your view is right and theirs is wrong. Heres a more realistic definition: Persuasion is the art of getting people to give a fair hearing to ideas that differ from their own. Opportunities to be persuasive arise every day in the classroom, in the workplace, in the community, and in relationships with other people.
What is persuasion?
that you understand the significant factors about the Civil War and that you have formed a reasonable opinion about them. Class discussions provide additional opportunities to be persuasive. Lets say your sociology class is discussing the possible relationship between divorce and juvenile delinquency. The discussion will focus not only on what the textbook author says but also on what you and the other students think about what the author says. Your chance to speak represents an opportunity to persuade your classmates and instructor that your view has merit.
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organization or church council. In any of these roles you are bound to encounter disagreement. Even issues of seemingly slight significance can stir passions and generate spirited debate. Should Little Leaguers buy T-shirts with logos or complete uniforms? Would Saturday afternoon or Sunday morning be the best time for a sale? Community, in the larger sense, goes beyond neighborhood and municipality. As a citizen of a state, a nation, and the world, you probably have views on the social, economic, and political issues of the day, and every day brings opportunities to express your views to other people.
Opportunities in relationships
Relationships with family, friends, and coworkers offer numerous opportunities for persuasion. For example, a close friend may be considering dropping out of school after receiving a disappointing grade, or a business associate may be angry with you for a perceived offense. Perhaps someone in your family is in the habit of drinking and driving. A young child may be inconsiderate of his friends and playmates.
exercise 13
Describe three recent opportunities you have had to be persuasive. Comment on whether you were successful in getting a fair hearing for your ideas and, if so, why.
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Beginning your presentation on a point of agreement establishes an atmosphere of mutual respect and puts your audience at ease. In such an atmosphere, they will be more inclined to give your viewpoint a fair hearing. In contrast, beginning on a point of disagreement can make your audience defensive and reluctant to consider your ideas.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF DALE CARNEGIE Dale Carnegie became one of the best-selling authors of all time, but he didnt start out with that goal in mind. When he graduated from college, he went to New York City in the hope of becoming an actor. To support himself, he began teaching a communications course for adults. Carnegie quickly determined that his students greatest needs were in the ability to express ideas, to assume leadership, and to arouse enthusiasm among people. To help his students develop these abilities, he studied the lives of successful people, identified the principles and strategies they followed, and used their stories as teaching materials. Over the years, Carnegie expanded and refined these teaching materials. Eventually he assembled them into a book, which he titled How to Win Friends and Influence People. An instant success, it has sold tens of millions of copies in thirty-eight languages. The principles of positive relationships and successful living that Carnegie taught are surprising in their simplicity. Here is a small sampling in his own words: Dont criticize, condemn or complain. Become genuinely interested in other people. Make the other person feel importantand do it sincerely. If you are wrong, admit it quickly and emphatically. Try honestly to see things from the other persons point of view. Let the other person save face. For more information on Dale Carnegie, see Dale Carnegie, How to Win Friends and Influence People (New York: Pocket Books, 1990).
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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exercise 14
Describe a situation in which a speakers or writers honesty and fairmindedness helped to persuade you or someone you know. Explain how the person demonstrated those qualities.
exercise 15
Describe a situation in which one or more of the qualities of persuasion mentioned above were lacking. Explain what happened as a result.
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facts and opinions, checked the facts and tested the opinions, evaluated the reasons, and taken a position on the issue you will be ready for the first step in writing.
Step 1: State what you think about the issue and why you think it
What you think about the issue will be the main idea of your paper; why you think it will be the supporting material. Amateur writers sometimes consider it a waste of time to write these ideas out. I know what I think and why I think it, they ask, so why bother stating it? The answer is that our thoughts are often less clear and precise and our reasons less substantial than we imagine them to be. Writing them down brings our thoughts into focus and gives us a chance to refine them, if necessary. It also provides a visual reminder of our purpose in writing and keeps our attention on what we are writing. Use this format for your statement: I think _______ because _______. The following examples illustrate this format. (The views expressed in these examples may or may not be reasonable and the reasons may or may not be valid and sufficient.)
I think the penalties for white collar crime should be stiffened because such crime does more harm to more people than street crime and because individuals with wealth and status should be treated no differently than ordinary people. I think an international effort is needed to protect the worlds rainforests because many nations lack the power to resist logging conglomerates and because the depletion of the rainforests threatens to have worldwide climatic effects.
In some cases, of course, there may be only a single reason; in others, many reasons. Be sure to express all important reasons in your statement.
Step 2: Consider how those who disagree might react to your view
Dont assume your view is so insightful that all reactions to your view will be positive. Those who disagree are sure to raise some objections. To identify your readers objections, put yourself in their place and ask how they would react to your main idea and to each of your reasons. Write out each objection and decide whether it has merit. If it doesnt, explain why. If it does, revise your view to eliminate the objection. (If your analysis of the issue was done carefully, such revisions will usually be minor.) In performing this step, keep in mind that if your response to a challenge is inadequate, it may prompt another objection, as the following example illustrates. Some years ago the U.S. Justice Department filed
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Follow the arrangement described above and prepare a rough draft. Do this at a single sitting without worrying about matters of style, grammar, spelling, or punctuation. Generally, your paragraphs should be a modified version of the arrangement shown here, with the introduction and the main idea statement in one paragraph and each of the reasons and the conclusion in a separate paragraph.
Step 5: Check your draft for grammar, usage, punctuation, and spelling
Some computer programs check for spelling and grammar errors, but even the best ones will miss some errors, especially the use of an incorrect sound-alike wordfor example, using principle in place of principal or preserve instead of persevere. Use your spellchecking program but do your own proofreading as well. The two sections that follow will explain the most common errors in grammar and usage and how to detect and correct them. Before we turn to that topic, however, lets address a rather obvious question: What connection do errors in grammar, usage, punctuation, and spelling have with the subject of persuasion or the larger subject of critical
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF GEORGE ORWELL George Orwell was the pen name of the English author Eric Blair. Born in Burma (now know as Myanmar), he went to college in England, then returned to Burma and worked as a police officer. Later he fought in the Spanish Civil War. Orwell, one of finest prose writers of the twentieth century, is best known for his novels Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four. In Politics and the English Language, his most famous essay, he showed how bloated, lifeless expression numbs the mind and leaves us vulnerable to manipulation. He also offered these timeless rules for avoiding such language: Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print. Never use a long word where a short word will do. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out. Never use the passive where you can use the active. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent. Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous. For more information on George Orwell, see www.k-1.com/Orwell/index.cgi/ about/biography.html.
thinking? Your immediate answer may be that such errors have no connection at all; in other words, they are merely annoyances and distractions that readers (or listeners) will overlook when they become engrossed in your ideas. This is incorrect. Persuasion, as we have defined it, is the art of getting people to give a fair hearing to ideas that differ from their own. The challenge of persuading others lies in the fact that they seldom want to give such a hearing to opposing ideas. In fact, their first impulse may be to find an excuse for dismissing such ideas. Errors in grammar, usage, and punctuation and spelling provide that excuse. They invite your reader to think, If this person is careless about the relatively simple matter of writing and spelling correctly then his/her ideas are not likely to have much value. Is that assessment fair or logical? No. But it is a huge obstacle to persuasion. Overcoming that obstacle is an important step in writing and speaking persuasively.
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usually considered as individual units. Use the word number when referring to persons, places, or things usually considered as individual units. Thus, you would speak of an amount of sand, an amount of rain, but a number of people, a number of cars. The same rule applies using the words less and fewer and the words much and many. Less refers to a smaller amount (less sand or rain); fewer refers to a smaller number (fewer people or cars). Much refers to a larger amount (much sand or rain); many refers to a larger number (many people or cars).
Between, among. Use between when two persons, places, or things are involved. Use among when more than two are involved. Thus you would speak of an agreement between Bill and Mary, or one among Bill, Mary, and Sally. Can, may. Can means able to do something, as in He can run a four-
minute mile. May means having permission, as in May I leave class early today?
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guide, sense of right and wrong in ethical matters. Conscious is an adjective meaning mentally awake, aware.
Could have, could of. Could have is standard English. Couldve is an ac-
ceptable contraction commonly used in speaking but not in writing. Could of is never correct. This same rule applies to would have and should have.
Each other, one another. Each other is used in references to two people;
one another, in references to more than two people. Thus, it would correct to say John and Agnes respect each other and The members of the chess club enjoyed competing with one another.
Lay, lie. These words are both verbs. Lay means to place or put, and
its progression is lay (present tense), laid (past tense), have or had laid (perfect tense). Lie means to rest or recline, and its progression is lie (present tense), lay (past tense), have or had lain (perfect tense). The confusion between them is explained by the fact that the present tense
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of lay and the past tense of lie are identical. It is correct to say I now lay [place] the book on the table, I laid it there yesterday, and I have laid it in the same place every day this week. It is also correct to say I lie down now, I lay down yesterday, I have lain down for a nap every day after lunch for years. However, to say He laid down for a nap is to use the wrong verb.
Principal, principle. When used as a noun, principal means the person
in charge of a school. When used as an adjective, it means main or primary, as in The principal reason for attending college is the pursuit of knowledge. Principle is always a noun and means rule, as in I am learning the principles of economics.
Provided, providing. One meaning of provided is cared for, as in My parents provided well for our family. Another meaning is with the provision that, as in Ill go provided that Mary does. Providing means furnishing, as in Sam is responsible for providing refreshments. Providing is never an acceptable substitute for provided. Reason is that, reason is because. The accepted expression is reason is that. The other expression is redundant because the word reason and the word because have the same meaning. Thus, you should say The reason I volunteered is that it was my turn. Set, sit. This pair of verbs is similar to lay, lie (see above). Set means
to place or put and its principal parts are the same in every tense: I set the fork down now, I set it down yesterday, I have set it down this way for years. Sit means to rest or recline, and its principal parts are sit, sat, sat: I sit in this chair, I sat here yesterday, I have sat here every evening since I bought the chair. To say someone set down in a chair is incorrect.
Through, threw. Through means between or in one side and out the
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other. Threw is the past tense of the verb throw, as in She threw the ball to her teammate.
Use, usage. Use may be either a verb or a noun. As a verb it rhymes with news and means to employ or put into service. As a noun it rhymes with noose and means the employment or application of something, such as a tool or a math formula. Usage is a very specialized noun and its most common use concerns language, as in Modern English usage frowns on the use of slang in formal writing. The word usage is not an acceptable substitute for usethus it is a mistake to say, Johns usage of his celebrity to gain favors is offensive. Who, whom. Who and whom are pronouns referring to people. When the word will be the subject of a verb, choose who. Otherwise, choose whom. It would be correct to say, The man who runs the restaurant is
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exercise 16
Following are some additional pairs/groups of words that are often confused. Look up each of pair or group in a good dictionary and, on a separate sheet of paper, explain how they differ in meaning and or/ usage. Accept/except, affect/effect, anyway/any way, awful/awfully, censor/censure/ censer, flaunt/flout, healthy/healthful, imply/infer, like/as, personal/personnel, propose/purpose, real/really, regardless/irregardless, since/sense, stationary/ stationery, than/then, to/too/two.
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dont have the text of the speech in front of you, you cant succumb to the temptation of reading it. In creating your note cards, use key words rather than sentences so that you wont be tempted to read. Write large and limit the number of points per card so that you can move from point to point without lowering your head and squinting. (If you will be using visual aids, such as overhead slides or PowerPoint, be sure to add appropriate cues in your notes.)
The most meaningful material becomes meaningless if the speaker cannot be heard or if he or she runs words together in a way that makes people in the audience turn to one another and ask what was said. Maintaining a moderate pace. Pace is the speed at which you speak. Most people have a tendency to speak fast when they become nervous, so you may have to speak at a pace that seems too slow in order to have it be just right. By practicing, you will be able to develop a sense of what is appropriate Achieving vocal variety. What bores an audience most? Sameness, which suggests lifelessness. This effect occurs when the speakers volume, pitch, pace, and inflection never change. To
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Leave private agendas outside. From time to time you may find yourself working in a group with someone you dont care for. You may have had trouble with the person in a past meeting or your personalities may just clash. Dislike for the person may tempt you to be disagreeable and even sarcastic. Such reactions hinder the groups efforts and make meetings unpleasant for everyone. You have an obligation to the group to give your best, so refuse to let your feelings toward anyone influence your behavior or your response to his or her ideas. Cooperate with the leader. Keep in mind that the group leader has spe-
cial obligations such as maintaining order, keeping discussion positive, and ensuring that all members are heard from and all perspectives considered. When the leader attempts to meet those obligations, be understanding and cooperative.
Listen to others. It is impossible to respond meaningfully to what oth-
ers say in a discussion unless you first understand what they say, and the only way to understand is to listen attentively. To that end, whenever another group member has the floor, look at that person and be attentive, whether you agree or disagree. Dont permit yourself to be distracted by other people or your own thoughts. And avoid doing anything that causes others to be inattentive.
Understand before judging. If you are uncertain whether you under-
stand a particular view, ask the person who expressed it. For example, say, Ann, Im not sure I heard you correctly. Are you saying that . . . ? Then listen carefully to her answer. Base your evaluation on what she said rather than on careless assumptions about what she meant.
Be balanced. Many of the views expressed in discussion are of mixed quality. That is, they are partly valid and partly invalid, somewhat wise and somewhat foolish. Thus, the most reasonable response will often be to agree in part rather than to agree completely or disagree completely. To be sure your evaluation is fair, take special care to find the flaws in views you agree with and the merits of views you disagree with. Be courteous. When views clash and discussions grow heated, its easy to forget the rules of civility. Whenever that happens, bad feelings usually follow and group accomplishments are threatened. To avoid such outcomes, make it your habit to give no offense to others and to be slow to take offense yourself. Monitor your contributions. Be aware of how often you contribute to
the discussion. If you tend to speak a lot, make an effort to limit your contributions to matters you regard as important. On the other hand, if you seldom say anything, start contributing more often. (If others express your ideas before you get a chance to, you can always express
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exercise 17
The fact that many elementary and secondary school students have learning deficiencies has prompted a search for remedies. Some people believe the problem lies with poor teaching and propose that elementary and secondary schoolteachers salaries be based on their students performance on standardized tests. Other people strongly object to this proposal and reject the idea it is based on. The following essays take opposing views on the issue. Read each essay carefully. Then apply to each the four-step comprehensive thinking strategy you learned in Chapter Two. Use a separate sheet of paper for this exercise. If the Student Hasnt Learned, the Teacher Hasnt Taught By Greta Von Hoffman Compared to their counterparts in other countries, U.S. students are mediocre academically. Thats not pleasant to acknowledge, but its been documented in international competitions for years. To cite but one example, thirty-four nations participated in the 1999 Trends in International Math and Science Study (TIMSS) competition. U.S. students scored nineteenth in math, behind Singapore, Korea, Japan, Canada, and even behind Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Latvia. And they did only slightly better in science, scoring eighteenth. The problem is not confined to math and science. The deficiencies of U.S. students in geography and Englishtheir native language!are legendary. What could cause such embarrassing deficiencies? Not a lack of fundingthe U.S. invests more money per pupil than almost any other nation. Not a lack of technologythere are more computers in U.S. schools than in any other schools in the world, with the possible exception of Japan. Surely not a national genetic deficiency.
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exercise 17 (cont.)
What, then? To say it bluntly, half-hearted or downright incompetent teaching. The old saying, If the student hasnt learned, the teacher hasnt taught, isnt just a clever sloganits a profound truth. Many teachers are more concerned with collecting a paycheck than in expanding students knowledge. Others are hanging in until they are eligible for retirement. Unfortunately for their students, their retirement is still ten or more years away. A considerable number of teachers have had more education courses than content courses. What good is it to know how to teach math or history or biology if you have only a nodding acquaintance with the subject of math or history or biology? Its like having a non-athlete coach a sport or someone who cant drive a car teach driver education. Watch out world. To reform a system with such fundamental problems will not be easy. No single solution can possibly do it. That said, one small but important step would be to base teachers pay on their performance. Teachers whose students perform exceptionally well should receive a generous pay increase. Those whose students perform poorly should receive nothing except a warningProduce better results or look for another job. And thenthis is most importantthe schools should make good on the warning. Such a regime will encourage the good teachers, weed out the poor ones, send a message to colleges of education to prepare their students better, and invite talented people to enter the field. As I said, this isnt the entire solution, but it would be a wonderful first step. Lets Not Scapegoat Teachers By Pyadhammo Bikkhu Given this countrys resources, our education system should be the finest in the world. And our students performance should be unquestionably superior to other industrialized nations. The fact that the system is badly flawed and our students are, to put it mildly, less than superior is a scandal of major proportions. No reasonable person would deny this fact. The blame for this situation is usually placed on teachers and the standard solution is to hit them in the pocketbook as a punishment. Chief among the ideas proposed is to pay teachers according to the results they achievethat is, the grades their students receive on national or international tests of competency. At first thought, this all sounds very reasonable. However, it is not reasonable at all but the shabbiest kind of scapegoating. Moreover, it would be counterproductive. To begin with, students academic deficiencies are not clearly the fault of teachers. Other candidates for blame include the school
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exercise 17 (cont.)
administrators, media, parents, and students themselves. Lets look at each of these groups. Administrators have more control over what is taught and the way it is taught than most people realize. They usually have a major say in curriculum development, classroom schedules, textbook selection, and grading. Teachers are often required to spend valuable time on self-esteem, values clarification, sex education, environmentalism, and other politically correct topics, and this sharply diminishes the time they have to spend on academic subjects. Also, administrators often create a lot of bureaucratic busy work that further erodes instructional time. And, as if that werent enough, when teachers attempt to maintain control of their classrooms, they get little or no support from principals and superintendents. The media deserve a large share of the blame for student deficiencies because they have created a mass culture in which feeling good ranks above obtaining knowledge and learning self-discipline. The media also ridicule virtually every value conscientious teachers and parents try to instill in students. Not every parent is conscientious, of course, and those that arent tend to approve and even model the harmful attitudes that block students from learning. Finally, and every bit as important, there are the students themselves. The most admirable parents, enlightened school administrators, and dedicated teachers cannot make students learn if the students choose not to do so. And many students make that choice. In light of these considerations, the idea of punishing teachers by taking away their salary raises is grossly unfair. Teachers pay is already the lowest among the professions, as little as $29,000 to start in some states. Thats after four years of hard work and $75,000 or so of education loans to be repaid. To expect teachers to work for such wages and have their salary advancement tied to factors over which they have no control is absurd. For all these reasons, the idea of paying teachers according to students performance should be tossed in the wastebasket where it belongs.
exercise 18
In the previous exercise you analyzed two essays that addressed the question of whether elementary and secondary schoolteachers salaries should be based on students academic performance. Now select the essay you decided was most reasonable and evaluate it for
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exercise 18 (cont.)
persuasiveness, using as your guideline the strategy for persuasive writing presented in this chapter. If you see any room for improvement in persuasiveness, explain below what changes you would make.
exercise 19
Describe a situation in which you attempted to be persuasive, for example, a situation at work or in college. Revisit that situation, apply the guidelines for persuasion, and explain how you would approach the situation if it were occurring now. (Feel free to substitute a present situation for a past one if you wish.)
exercise 20
Contemporary feminism is divided into two broad and conflicting viewpoints, which Christina Hoff Sommers terms gender feminism and equity feminism. Some feminists consider these terms inaccurate; nevertheless, the terms have become representative of the ongoing debate and are therefore useful search terms. Feminists generally included in the gender camp include Gloria Steinem, Andrea Dworkin, Catherine MacKinnon, and Patricia Ireland. Equity feminists include Christina Hoff Sommers, Tammy Bruce, Wendy McElroy,
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exercise 20 (cont.)
and Camille Paglia. Investigate the differences between the two groups. Then decide which side you are more inclined to agree with and, on a separate sheet of paper, write a persuasive composition presenting your view. Be sure to list the sources you consulted. (Note: If you are unsure how to proceed in your investigation, see Chapter Four for help.)
exercise 21
In light of what you learned in this chapter about persuasion, what would you say is your greatest difficulty in persuading others? Think of one or more occasions in which you experienced this difficulty. Then meet with a group of two or three classmates and discuss your individual difficulties and the ways in which this chapter will help to overcome them. During this meeting make a special effort to apply the strategy for group discussion.
exercise 22
What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Dale Carnegie and George Orwell presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
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quiz
Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Define persuasion as the chapter defines it. Name four places where you can find opportunities to be persuasive. The strategies of persuasion guarantee that you will be successful. True or false? Explain. If persuasion occurs at all, it occurs immediately after you present your ideas. True or false? Explain. Why is it important to eliminate errors in grammar and usage from your persuasive writing and speaking? The challenge of persuading others is greater in spoken communication than in written communication. True or false? Explain. People who are quiet by nature should be content to let others talk during group discussions. True or false? In grammar the term mixed construction means mixing foreign phrases with English. True or false? In what ways is persuasive speaking more difficult than persuasive writing? List the five steps for persuasive writing.
Becoming an Individual
Individuality is the quality or qualities that set one person apart from others. The first step in becoming an individual is to admit that other people have shaped you. Attitudes are beliefs that are expressed indirectly, for example through tone of voice, mannerisms, or actions. These attitudes will help you become a critical thinker and make you more successful in all your endeavors. Common devices of manipulation include biased reporting, dishonest appeals to emotion, stacking the deck, suppressing dissent, and repetition. This four-step approach will help you resist being manipulated by others. These habits provide you with an additional way to become more of an individual.
IN THIS CHAPTER
What is individuality?
Acknowledging influences
Understanding attitudes
Recognizing manipulation
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Resisting manipulation
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What is individuality?
he term individuality is easily defined: it is the quality or qualities that set one person apart from others. However, the question of when and how a person becomes an individual is a little harder to answer. The popular notion is that we are all individuals from conception and anything we think, say, or do expresses our individuality. Lets examine this idea to see if it makes sense. If everyone were unique, imitation would be rare. Indeed, it might not exist at all. Wed find little similarity in dress, speech patterns, and mannerisms, let alone viewpoints. Yet even a casual glance at people reveals a different picture. Count the number of young mens feet in unlaced high top sneakers. Tally the number of designer labels on male or female jeans. Notice how many businessmen wear suits, shirts, and ties in the current style. See how many businesswomen have hemlines precisely where this years fashion experts declared they should be. Note speech patterns, observe mannerisms, and listen to opinions on issues from abortion and capital punishment to taxation and welfare reform. Youre likely to see much more sameness than difference. Such observations suggest that the popular notion of individuality is shallow. People are not born with individuality but with the potential to develop it. Likewise, peoples actions and words may not express individuality at all but mindless conformity. In short, individuality takes effort.
Acknowledging influences
The first step in becoming an individual is to admit that other people have shaped you. Theres no shame in thisit is an unavoidable consequence of living in society. When we were children, we learned by imitating other people. This happened first with our parents and relatives and later with our teachers and peers. The way we think and speak and act, even today, naturally reflects those childhood lessons. And though our imitation is less conscious and obvious in adulthood, it is no less real. Another powerful influence is the popular culture disseminated by the communications and entertainment media, notably television. During
What is individuality?
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF VIKTOR FRANKL Viktor Frankl (19051997), a renowned Viennese psychiatrist, was influenced by two older Viennese psychiatrists, Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler. Freud believed the sex drive is the strongest psychological drive in human beings; Adler believed it is the drive for power. But Frankl eventually formed a different viewthat the strongest drive in human beings is the drive to find meaning in life. His evidence came not only from the psychiatrists couch but also from his experiences as an inmate in Nazi concentration camps where his wife, father, mother, and brother perished. The experience of camp life included near-starvation, lack of warm clothing, disease, hard labor, and unspeakable brutality. In such conditions, Frankl found, the sex drive and the drive for power were quickly suppressed. But the drive to find meaning in the suffering, a reason for living, remained strong. Amid the horrors of the camps, many inmates put aside selfishness and displayed compassion and kindness toward their fellow inmates. Some even forgave their captors. Frankl survived the camps, largely because of his determination to tell the stories of decency and nobility he witnessed and to teach others the lessons he learned about finding meaning in ones life, regardless of ones circumstances. The best known of Viktor Frankls books, Mans Search for Meaning, presents these stories and lessons. To date more than nine million copies are in print in numerous languages. For more information on Viktor Frankl, see Viktor Frankl, Mans Search for Meaning, 3d ed. (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984), or do a Google search for Viktor Frankl.
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our formative years, most of us saw thousands of hours of television. Small children have difficulty distinguishing between commercials and program content, so we no doubt gave the claims of used car salespeople the same trust we gave the weather reports. In time we learned that not all the people who appear on the screen are equally believable. Yet by then most of us had become accustomed to relaxing our minds while watching TV, so we remainedand remainvulnerable to the influences of the people who control what we watch. Over the years those influential people have numbered in the thousands. They include the screenwriters who created TV dramas and comedies, the actors who brought the scripts to life, the newscasters
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who reported the news, and the pundits and commentators who told us what it meant. Those people may have intended to do nothing more than entertain or inform us. But, whatever their intentions, they were also planting ideas and shaping our thinking and behavior in subtle but significant ways. Suppose that you open todays newspaper and the headlines say that a well-known person led a protest march, a politician resigned in disgrace, and a snowstorm blanketed the Midwest. You may take it for granted that those stories represent the most important events that occurred in the past twenty-four hours. But stop and think about that. The editors who selected those stories have their own ideas of what is newsworthy, and their ideas may be debatable. For example, many editors follow the principle, If it bleeds, it leads, which may not be the most responsible principle to follow. Consider, as well, that in choosing their stories, editors also chose to ignore many other stories. Did you read about the historic conference in Washington, D.C., featuring a Catholic priest, a Protestant minister, a Black Muslim, a Hindu, a rabbi, and a Buddhist talking about their common spiritual and social values? (This event took place in November 2000.) Chances are you didnt hear about it because most editors around the country decided it wasnt newsworthy. The same pattern exists in book and magazine publishing. Authors are free to take any view they want about any subject. But what editors select for publication is what they think the public should know or what will sell. Given all these influences, it is almost certain that many of the ideas, attitudes, and values you consider your own actually came from other people. Wait a minute, you may be saying. How could I ever mistake other peoples ideas for my own? The following sequence of events illustrates how this happens. Youre watching your favorite TV series and one of the characters expresses an offhand opinion about a controversial issue, but you dont pay much attention because you have little interest in the issue and you are busy concentrating on the story line. A few days later, you are listening to a radio talk show while doing some chores and you hear someone express the same opinion. It sounds familiar to you, but you are too involved in what you are doing to think further about it. The following week youre sitting with a couple of friends and the discussion turns to the very same issue. Your friends disagree about it
Understanding attitudes
and then ask you where you stand. Not wanting to admit that you havent really thought much about it, you say the first thing that comes to mindthe opinion you heard others express. Once you express the opinion, of course, you stop thinking of it as an opinionit becomes your opinion, the right opinion. And the more often you express it, the more convinced you will be of its soundness, and the more passionate you will be in defending it. All this for an idea you never examined critically but merely heard others say! Acknowledging that you have beenand continue to beinfluenced by other people will motivate you to be more critical of your own ideas and more willing to reject them when they prove unworthy. It will also help you to appreciate the wisdom in C. M. Wards observation: There are times when the greatest change needed is a change of my viewpoint.
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exercise 23
On a separate sheet of paper make a list of the people who have most influenced you and the specific effects their influence has had (example: my mothers warnings made me suspicious of strangers). Aim to identify some less obvious influences, including some that you have never recognized before (example: your imitation of the dress and manner of a celebrity).
Understanding attitudes
Attitudes are beliefs that are expressed indirectly. We are seldom as aware of our attitudes as we are of our other beliefs. Some peoples tone of voice, mannerisms, or actions reveal that they believe they are more important than other people. They may never say to anyone, I am more important than you, and perhaps they dont even think those words to themselves, but their attitude is expressed in the way they treat other people. For example, they may demand kindness, sensitivity, and loyalty from others but never reciprocate; they may break dates or change plans whenever they wish but resent their friends doing so; or they may expect apologies but never offer them. Our attitudes are strongly influenced by our culturethat is, by the moral code, religious beliefs, political perspective, and social customs we were introduced to at home and in our community. There is nothing mystical about this influence. It can be explained by the fact that cultures differ in the behaviors they approve and disapprove and in the strength of their convictions about those behaviors.
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It is well known that students in many Asian countries have a more respectful attitude toward parents and teachers than American students typically have. Some observers believe this attitude is responsible for the unusually high level of academic achievement among Asian students. Similarly, the Old Order Amish have a stricter moral and social code than most other Americans and, perhaps not coincidentally, a much lower incidence of crime. Over the last half-century, a new kind of culturepopular culture has emerged in a number of western countries, particularly in the United States. The entertainment and communications media disseminate this popular culture, and its values are very different from those of traditional culture. The result has been a culture war that popular culture seems to be winning. Consider, for example, the changes in the publics attitude toward sex and violence in media. Traditionally, most people strongly opposed the use of vulgar language and graphic depictions of sex and violence. Audiences were offended when damn was used in Gone with the Wind. Navels had to be covered in shows such as I Dream of Jeannie. Depictions of two people in bed, even a married couple, were outlawed for decades. Then filmmakers and television writers began to push limits by breaking one taboo after another. As such material became more common and familiar, the publics attitude changed. Today many people not only tolerate but expectin some cases cravea steady diet of the scandalous and the sensational. And not just from dramatic shows but also from the news! This change is but one indication of popular cultures powerful influence on our attitudes. Evaluating your attitudes is an important step in becoming a critical thinker. Before you can decide whether your attitudes are responsible and beneficial you must identify them. And doing so can be difficult if you are not aware that you have them. The following exercises are designed to help you identify your attitudes about some matters important in college, at work, and in personal relationships.
exercise 24
PART I
Record your first thought about each of the following subjects in the space provided. Respond directly and honestly. Dont screen out any ideas or change them to fit what you think others might want you to say. If you turn in these exercises, be sure to save them when your instructor returns them to you.
Understanding attitudes
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exercise 24 (cont.)
Keeping promises
Being on time
Manners
Personal appearance
Success in life
Free speech
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exercise 24 (cont.)
Discipline
Apologizing
Excellence
PART II
Now evaluate what you recorded in Part I. In each case decide whether your reaction is positive, constructive, and beneficial. If it is not, explain what reaction would be better. Write your evaluation next to each entry.
exercise 25
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Have you ever made, or heard others make, any of the following statements? If so, describe the occasion. Then identify the attitude each statement suggests. This course doesnt matter because its not required for my major.
Understanding attitudes
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exercise 25 (cont.)
Its only fair for the instructor to put something on the test if she said we were responsible for knowing it.
The reason Im doing poorly is that the teacher doesnt like me.
Students who take part in class discussions are just trying to impress the teacher.
exercise 26
Describe your reactions to the following situationsthat is, what you would typically think, say, and do. Then identify the attitude that prompts that response. You express a point of view in a conversation and a friend disagrees with you.
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exercise 26 (cont.)
Youre listening to someone you dont like. Hes talking to a group of your friends, and they seem interested in what hes saying.
You begin reading a book or an article on a subject you feel strongly about. Then you realize the authors view strongly opposes yours.
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modest talent who really want to learn something and are willing to work hard often surpass more talented people who lack their desire and initiative. And with achieving a hard-earned goal comes the exciting realization that their talent was greater than they imagined. According to Thomas Edison, one of the greatest inventors of all time, Genius is 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration. Making this your attitude will bring out the best that is in you and, in the process, produce the healthiest kind of self-esteemearned self-esteem.
Recognizing manipulation
All these quotations embody the attitude that other people are as important as we are and therefore deserving of the same level of respect we wish for ourselves. Far from being a mark of weakness, this attitude will gain you respect and admiration.
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Recognizing manipulation
Manipulation is a form of influencing. What distinguishes it from other forms is that it uses dishonest means. Among the most common of those means are biased reporting, dishonest appeals to emotion, stacking the deck, suppressing dissent, and repetition. Lets look at each in turn.
Biased reporting
A number of books have been written on the subject of biased reporting, including Bias and Arrogance by Bernard Goldberg and William McGowans Coloring the News. But the book that provides the most useful insights is Bob Kohns Journalistic Fraud. Kohn focuses his analysis on a single newspaper, the New York Times, because it has long been regarded as the journal of record and because it is the single most influential news source in the western world. In this country alone, more than 650 other newspapers subscribe to the Timess news service, and many broadcast news organizations lean heavily on its news reports. As Kohn notes, codes of journalistic ethics used to require that opinion be confined to the editorial page. A 1923 code stated: News reports should be free from opinion or bias of any kind. A journalism textbook written the same year taught that a news article should tell what happened in the simplest, briefest, most attractive and accurate manner possible; it should draw no conclusions, make no gratuitous accusations, indulge in no speculation, give no opinions. For years, the New York Times endorsed that standard, promising to give the news impartially, without fear or favor, regardless of party, sect or interests involved. According to Kohn, the Times, and many other news agencies, no longer follow that standard. As a result, much of todays news unfairly favors the particular news agencys or individual reporters point of view. Such bias can take a variety of forms, notably the following:
Biased headline. Lets say the Senate votes 93 to 7 in favor of a health
care bill. A fair headline would be Senate Passes Health Care Bill. A reporter or editor who disapproved of the vote might substitute this biased headline: Opinion Divided on Health Care Bill.
Biased lead. The term lead refers to the opening sentence or sentences of a news story. A fair lead simply states who did what, as well as when and where the event occurred. An unfair lead injects opinion
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in an attempt to influence the readers reaction to the news. For example, if a government commission issued a proposal and the reporter didnt like it, he or she might begin, In a move sure to create controversy. . . . The bias in this case is that instead of reporting, these words predict a future event which may or may not occur.
Biased reporting of polls. Fair reporting is evenhanded in presenting
the results of polls. In contrast, biased news reporting is inconsistent. If the news agency agrees with the results, it puts the story on the front page. If it disagrees, it buries the story or, in extreme cases, omits it altogether. In some instances, a news organization will itself commission a poll or study and, when the results are disappointing, decline to publish it.
Biased handling of quotations. Readers have a right to expect that the
quotations used in news stories will fairly depict the range of viewpoints on the subject. Unbiased reporters strive to meet that standard. However, biased reporters try to advance their own personal opinions. One way is to include numerous strong quotations on their side of the issue and only one or two, preferably weak, quotations on the other side. A more blatant approach is to include no opposing quotations at all and thus create the impression that no responsible person would take the opposing side of the issue. The most dishonest approach is to twist a quotation so that it seems to say something very different. For example, if the quotation were I initially had some reservations about the program, but after examining it closely I believe it is excellent, a dishonest reporter might merely say that the person expressed some reservations about the program. Even journalists who sincerely desire to report objectively are sometimes tricked into using biased material. As former activist Tammy Bruce explains in her book The New Thought Police, reporters get much of the information they use in their news accounts from the press releases sent to them by publicists, activists, and politicians. According to Bruce, such people dont even call the propaganda they write press releases any more. They call them news releases to make them sound like objective information. Keep in mind that biased reporting is not limited to one political, religious, or philosophical perspective. It is no less manipulative if done by people on your side of the issue than if done by people on the other side.
Recognizing manipulation
government; to values and beliefs more than to concepts or ideas; to freedom and liberty more than to constitutional guarantees. Emotional language has great valueit has the power to elevate our vision, reinforce important principles, and inspire responsible action. Virtually all of the great writers and speakers in history have used emotional language for such purposes, and we are fortunate for that. Without such language, communication would be mechanical, lifeless, dull, and ineffective. Unfortunately, emotional language can also be used to manipulate us. Devious people would prefer to have others accept what they say uncritically and to act in conformity with their wishes. They choose language to elicit positive emotional responses to ideas and people they support and negative emotional responses to those they oppose. Such attempts at deception can be found in every area of life, but they are especially prominent in politics. Former White House advisor Dick Morris says that todays political speeches are like collections of greatest hitsthe speakers do studies to find out what they public wants to hear and then say it. It is not always easy to tell when an appeal to emotion is dishonest. However, you can be reasonably sure that it is dishonest when writers or speakers routinely use highly favorable terms to describe their side of the issue and highly unfavorable ones for the opposing side. Dishonest speakers will call people who agree with their position moderate, centrist, progressive, or pragmatic and call people who disagree radical, extremist, divisive, or partisan. Deceptive writers will excuse serious mistakes by leaders they approve of while condemning minor mistakes in others. They will ascribe high intelligence and noble motives to those who agree with them and low intelligence and devious motives to those who disagree.
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view and a relative unknown to represent the unfavored view. If, by chance, the relative unknown seems to be getting the better of the discussion, the host will give him or her less time to speak.
Suppressing dissent
For all its deviousness, stacking the deck at least acknowledges that there is an opposing view. Suppressing dissent, on the other hand, creates the impression that there is no opposing view. A good illustration of the effectiveness of this technique is a personal experience Tammy Bruce describes in The New Thought Police. Bruce is a gay feminist who was once the President of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW). In her ten years as an activist, she had no difficulty getting her essays published in the Los Angeles Times. Whatever she submitted was always accepted. Then Bruce became disturbed at what she perceived to be the unfair treatment of Dr. Laura Schlessinger by other gay activists. She composed a short commentary expressing that view. The Times held it for three weeks and when she called to ask what was happening, she found an editor had decided not to publish it, essentially because it was on the wrong side of the issue. Next, Bruce submitted the commentary to the New York Times, where she got an enthusiastic reception. However, they edited it in such a way that it was against Dr. Schlessinger rather than for her. She refused to accept the changes, so the commentary was never published. The newspapers refusal to publish Bruces commentary as she wrote it amounted to a suppression of dissent. As a result, readers of those newspapers were led to believe, erroneously, that no one in the gay community supported Dr. Schlessinger.
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Repetition
One of the simplest and most effective techniques of manipulation is simple repetition. The more familiar an idea is, the more people tend to believe it. Realizing this, spinmeisters and hucksters repeat their lies and distortions over and over to trick us into accepting them. Of course, honest people also repeat what they believe to be true. In either case, we have to decide whether what is repeated is true. For example, during the election campaign of 2004, Senator John Kerrys opponents kept repeating, Its impossible to tell where he stands because he takes both sides of every issue. And after Saddam Hussein was deposed, President Bushs opponents repeated, Bush lied about weapons of mass destruction. In both cases, the people who made these statements were trying to persuade others. The public had to decide whether the statements represented honest persuasion or manipulation.
Resisting manipulation
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exercise 27
On a separate sheet of paper, list some examples of manipulation. Include, if you can, one example of each type discussed above. The examples may be from past or present experience.
Resisting manipulation
Given the number of individuals and groups eager to manipulate you and the many means at their disposal, it is important to have an active strategy for resisting their efforts. The following strategies are especially helpful:
Step 1: Be prepared
Manipulation does the greatest harm when you are unaware it is occurring. Therefore, the surest way to avoid its influence is to expect to encounter it whenever you read a book, magazine, or newspaper, whenever you see a movie or TV show, and whenever you listen to the radio, visit the Internet, or engage in a discussion. This doesnt mean you need to be suspicious of everyone, just be aware that misinformation and lies can be spread in much the same way that computer viruses are spreadby honest people who have themselves been fooled. Being prepared means remaining alert for signs of manipulation. For example, when you read or watch the news look for biased reporting. When you watch a talk show (or even a drama or sitcom) look for dishonest appeals to emotion, stacking the deck, and repetition. Suppression of dissent is hardest to detect. Instead of looking for what is present, you must look for what is absentthat is, what has been purposely omitted. Keep in mind that there are two (or more) sides to every controversy. Whenever you are presented with only one side, you may reasonably conclude that the other has been suppressed.
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become a habit. Here are some sample situations and kinds of questions you might ask:
SITUATION
You are sitting with some friends in the campus cafeteria. One of your friends is expressing dissatisfaction. She says: Im disappointed with the instructors at this collegethey seem content to offer uninteresting courses. For example, they stand at the lectern and lecture all period without enthusiasm for their material. On the rare occasions when they open discussion to the class, they call on the same few students. The rest of us have to sit squirming, waiting for the boring ordeal to be over. As she is speaking, ask yourself these questions: How likely is it that your friend knows all or most of the instructors at this university? How likely is it that all or most of the instructors teach strictly by lecture and without enthusiasm? Why are the same few students always called on (assuming this claim is accurate)? Do these students raise their hands and show an interest in the questions? Do other students, including your friend, ever volunteer a comment or question? Are all but a few students at this college really so bored, or is your friend projecting her reaction on them? Is it possible that the students who squirm have overly negative attitudes? Is it the instructors responsibility to make a class interesting? Do the students bear any responsibility? While driving through a rather rundown neighborhood, you pass a house with a sign advertising psychic services. It reads: Madam X. Palm readings, Tarot cards, Your future foretold! As you drive by, ask yourself: What could a psychic accomplish if she used her powers to better herself? Wouldnt she be able to make a fortune at the racetrack or in the stock market or the lottery and afford to live in the most exclusive section of town? So why isnt she living in a better section of town? Could it be that she has too much integrity to use her powers for her own advantage? Might she instead be a charlatan?
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QUESTION
SITUATION
QUESTION
SITUATION
While reading the newspaper, you notice this advertisement: Good news! Due to the unprecedented success of our giant end-of-year furniture sale, we have extended it for ten days. You pause in your reading and ask yourself: How would the store have looked after a successful sale? Would the stock be noticeably depleted?
QUESTION
Resisting manipulation
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Would the store be empty of furniture? If they did sell most of the furniture, why do they need to extend the sale? And where are they getting the furniture for the extended period? Was the sale, instead, such a flop that they were left with a store full of merchandise and they have to extend the sale to get rid of it? If so, why didnt the furniture sell? Were the prices too high? Is the quality too low? How do competitors prices compare?
SITUATION
You are reading a magazine article about the violence that sometimes occurs at heavy metal rock concerts. The author says that its unfair to blame the violence on the musicians or the music, and then asserts that human beings are naturally violent. You ask yourself: What other kinds of musical events might be compared with heavy metal rock concerts? Square dances, polka or bluegrass festivals, or operatic performances? Have I ever seen a newspaper headline such as Riot Mars Pavarotti Performance or Rowdy Polka Contestants Attack Bystanders? If violence is due to human nature, then shouldnt it be found in all societies and all groups within a society? How common are incidents of group violence in Europe, Asia, or Africa? For that matter, how common is violence among Amish groups in the United States?
QUESTION
exercise 28
On a separate sheet of paper, identify a recent situation involving something you saw, heard, or read that you might have probed more deeply. Ask appropriate questions about the situation in the manner shown above. Note: The next exercise will build on this one.
Step 3: Be imaginative
Two ways to be imaginative were illustrated in Step 2. One was creating a mental picture of how the store would look after a successful sale. The other was producing relevant examplesthe examples of the racetrack, stock market, and lottery in one situation, and musical events, newspaper headlines, and comparisons with Europe, Asia, and the Amish in the other situation. Another way to be imaginative is to create realistic scenarios. Suppose the issue in question is whether or not television has had a
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF NELLIE BLY Her real name was Elizabeth Cochrane and she was born in 1867 in Pennsylvania. When she was 6 years old her father died and her mother had to raise Elizabeth and her fourteen brothers and sisters by herself. At 16 Elizabeth moved to Pittsburgh to find work. One day in 1885 she read a newspaper article advancing the traditional argument that a womans place is in the home. She wrote a response which so impressed the editor that he hired her. She then took the name Nellie Bly and began her remarkable career. Nellie had an active, inquiring mind that served her well in her specialty, investigative reporting. She wrote articles on marriage and divorce, and helped to initiate important legal reforms. She traveled in Mexico and wrote about exposing the political corruption and widespread poverty. She had herself committed to a New York asylum for ten days so that she could expose the terrible conditions and the inhumane treatment of the inmates. Later she traveled around the world hoping to set a new speed record. (She succeeded.) Nellie left journalism to marry an industrialist. When he died ten years later, she took over control of his company and won praise for her enlightened treatment of her employees. At a time when workers typically labored long hours in unhealthy sweatshops for low pay, she provided her workers with health care, libraries, and gymnasiums. Eventually, Nellie returned to reporting. While she was on holiday in Europe, the First World War broke out, and she immediately volunteered to be a war correspondent for the New York Journal. She became the first female correspondent to cover a war from the front lines. After the war, Nellie returned home and wrote a newspaper column until her death of pneumonia in 1922.
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harmful effect on communication in families. Here are three realistic scenarios you might imagine: 1. Its dinner time and the family is gathered at the dining room table. The television set is positioned so that everyone can see. All eyes are glued to the set. The only sounds that can be heard, other than those coming from the TV, are the occasional comments: Pass the potatoes, Is there any more meat in the kitchen? At one point someone says, Guess what happened to me today? And everyone else says in unison, Sshhhh.
Resisting manipulation
2. Its dinner time and the family is gathered in the living room, each behind a TV tray. No one looks at or speaks to the others. 3. Dinner is over, the dirty plates are in the dishwasher, and each member of the family has headed to a different corner of the house and his or her own TV set. These scenarios would suggest questions and insights about the effect of television on communication in families. A fourth way to be imaginative is to construct a new viewpoint. This approach works well in situations in which you are being pressured to adopt one of two positions on an issue, neither of which is completely satisfactory. For example, lets look at the issue of whether the Ten Commandments should be displayed in public school classrooms. The Pro viewpoint: The Ten Commandments SHOULD be displayed because they are honored in two of the worlds great religions, Judaism and Christianity; they express the religious and moral sentiments of the vast majority of Americans; and they provide an ethical dimension that many think has been sadly lacking in recent decades. The Con viewpoint: The Ten Commandments SHOULD NOT be displayed because they are not honored by people of other faiths and those of no faith; their presence in the classroom would give favored status to Judaism and Christianity, status the Constitution forbids; and the ethical dimension the Commandments provide is necessarily a form of religious doctrine. By being imaginative, you could construct a view that may be more reasonable than either the pro or the con view.
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The Ten Commandments SHOULD be displayed, along with any similar codes from other religious or philosophical traditions, including agnostic or atheistic, because knowledge of the principles that have guided human conduct in various times and places is as valuable as knowledge of diverse cultures and customs and because the display of many codes would favor none.
exercise 29
Apply your imagination to the situation you identified in the previous exercise, using one of the techniques discussed in Step 3. In other words, create a mental picture, produce relevant examples, create a realistic scenario, or construct a new viewpoint.
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exercise 30
While reading an essay, you encounter this statement: Each individual creates his or her own morality. The moment a person decides that a behavior is acceptable, it becomes acceptable for that person and no one else has any business criticizing the behavior. On a separate sheet of paper, create several realistic scenarios that could help you decide whether this viewpoint is reasonable. Then decide what those scenarios suggest about the viewpoint.
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exercise 31
Visit and explore the three websites mentioned abovethat is, Hoaxbusters, Urban Legends, and Truth or Fiction. Explain below which you find most helpful and why.
A taxicab driver who prided himself on his ability to spot (and avoid) suspicious people related this experience. While passing a posh hotel, he noticed someone waving for his attention. The man was dressed in a suit, an expensive-looking topcoat, and a fedora, and he carried a leather briefcase. The drivers impression couldnt have been more positive, so he stopped and picked him up. A few minutes later, the man opened his briefcase, took out a pistol, and said, Give me all your money. Not all first impressions are mistaken, but many are. The person who seems self-absorbed and rude may turn out to be exactly the opposite when you get to know her. The person you take an instant dislike to may, in time, become your best friend. On the other hand, the one you reactive most positively to at first may eventually disappoint you. Sadly, many love at first sight relationships have ended in divorce court.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF STEPHANIE KWOLEK Many a police officers and soldiers life has been spared because of a bullet-stopping Kevlar vest. Kevlar has also proved useful for bridge cables, auto brakes, boats, parachutes, truck and bicycle tires, skis, gloves, and spacecraftin all, about 200 specific applications. The credit for this remarkable material goes to a woman who took a job as a chemist in DuPonts research laboratory in order to earn money for medical schoolStephanie L. Kwolek. Kwoleks interest in science was nurtured by her father, who encouraged her to explore the wooded areas near Pennsylvania home. In growing up, she had many other interests, notably fashion design and teaching math to neighborhood children. When she finished college with a chemistry degree she joined DuPont and began working in the Pioneering Research Library, attempting to find new ways of making polymers. The result was hundreds of thousands of polymers that could not be made by the old methods, including Orlon and Lycra. One particular project involving high-performance fibers was offered to a number of researchers, but they all declined. Kwolek, however, accepted and began a variety of experiments. In each case, she sent the resulting material to the laboratory for testing. One material produced such amazing results that she sent it back to the lab several times to be sure they were not in error. That product was Kevlar. Stephanie Kwolek never did make it to medical school, but the patent Stephanie Kwolek received for Kevlar, as well as those for sixteen other inventions, won her entry into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1995. Some time later, an interviewer asked Kwolek to explain what qualities made her so successful. She cited her love of chemistry and her dogged refusal to give up when faced with a challenge. For more on Stephanie Kwolek, see http://web.mit.edu/invent/www/ima/kwolek_ intro.html.
The problem does not lie in forming first impressions. (We couldnt avoid doing so even if we wanted to.) It is, instead, in trusting them so much that you close your mind to later perceptions. This habit increases your vulnerability to manipulation and the pressure to conform. The solution to this problem is to give as much consideration to subsequent impressions and to be willing to change your mind when experience warrants your doing so.
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Fight confusion
Like everyone else, critical thinkers are sometimes confused. What sets critical thinkers apart is that they respond actively to confusion. For example, if the meaning of a sentence escapes them, instead of just accepting confusion, they consider a number of possible meanings and then choose the most likely one. And if a question arises and they dont know the answer, they look in a reference book or check with an authority to find it. How might you apply this approach? Suppose you are somewhat puzzled by this proverb: The girl who cant dance says the band cant play. You might wonder if the reference here is just to dancing or to other situations as well. Just how broad is its meaning? Then you would consider how the proverb might apply to other situations, such as a small boy having trouble catching a ball and blaming the thrower or a student having trouble with a course and blaming the teacher. Finally, you would conclude that the proverb refers to any situation in which people tend to blame others for their own shortcomings.
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ten three-cent stamps bought fifty or 100. (Perhaps they believed the stamps would increase in value.) It got even sillier. One man entering a post office saw the sign Sorry, were temporarily out of three-cent stamps. He grumbled in displeasure and said as he walked away, Ive driven to four post offices and theyre all out of stamps. Now Ive got to try a fifth. Apparently he never considered other options. He could have walked up to the window, bought some four-cent stampsplenty were availableand mailed his letters. To avoid such embarrassing mistakes, produce lots of ideas before embracing any specific one. Extend your effort to identify possibilities. A helpful technique is springboarding. Heres how it works: Think of an idea and write it down. Dont worry about writing complete sentences; a word or short phrase will do. Resist the urge to dwell on details. Use one idea to What Attitudes? propel you to others. To disinterest in class and hostility to the teacher and . . . keep the process going, Are There More? end each item in your list disapproval of students who speak and uncooperawith the word and. tiveness in class discussion and disrespect for other Lets say that the substudents and . . . ject you are addressing How Are Attitudes Revealed? is students attitudes in smirking and whispering while others are talking and class. Your list of ideas arriving late for class and making rude remarks and might be as shown in the doing unrelated things like cleaning nails and . . . box on this page. The cue questions are in boldface. Why Do Students Do These Things? Note how asking questo maintain a tough image and to hide fear of failtions helps you to coning and to make teachers uncomfortable and . . . tinue springboarding. What Are Some Favorable Attitudes? Here is an additional cooperativeness and willingness to listen to others tip: Be open to ideas at viewpoints and patience when the discussion gets all times. You may find complex and . . . that insights occur to you How Are These Attitudes Revealed? when you dont expect looking at the person speaking and waiting for her to themwhile you shower, finish before you speak and refraining from side diswalk from class to class, cussions and emphasizing the positive and . . . or fall asleep at night. Perhaps you said to yourThis list could be continued. You could think about self on some of these how some students develop positive attitudes and occasions, Ive got to reothers develop negative ones. Or you might explore member this idea, and how teachers can effectively deal with students who found later that you had have negative attitudes. forgotten it.
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The New Yorker Collection 2005. Leo Cullum from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved.
Keep a pen and paper or a micro-tape recorder handy to record ideas as they come to you. Send yourself a text message on your cell phone. Chances are youll be rewarded with many more ideas.
Acknowledge complexity
In controversial issues the truth is often complex. Unfortunately, those are the very issues in which we are tempted to oversimplify. For example, when the issue of the integrity of politicians arises, we may immediately think Theyre all crooks and hypocrites. Actually, this thought is inaccurate and irresponsible. Some politicians may be dishonest and hypocritical but many, arguably most, arent. Moreover, the challenge of balancing the needs of different constituencies may create the appearance of dishonesty where it does not exist. Fairness demands that each politician be judged individually and on the basis of careful analysis, not preconceived notions. Before you judge any issue, consider whether it may be more complex than it appears. And if it is, make your judgment reflect that complexity.
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In reality, the principles, concepts, and strategies learned in one subject often apply to other subjects as well. Moreover, most serious problems touch many subject areas. AIDS, for example, creates not only medical challenges but psychological, legal, and moral challenges as well. The more open you are to the relationships that exist among subjects, the more you will be rewarded with new insights.
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exercise 32
Using the approaches you learned in this and previous chapters, evaluate each of the following passages. In the space provided state and briefly support your conclusion. Im fascinated with the future because the future is where were going to spend the rest of our lives.
A television commercial for a used car sales agency says, Well cosign your loan even if youve had a bankruptcy. Thats because we take the trouble to handpick and inspect these cars before you even see them . . . . We guarantee financing because we only sell quality cars.
A guest on a self-help radio program says, In my counseling practice, I advise my clients to replace all their negative thoughts with positive ones. In other words, if they think Im impatient, they should say, No, Im patient. Im clumsy becomes Im graceful, and Im a poor athlete becomes Im an excellent athlete. I tell them that whatever they believe themselves to be, they will be.
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exercise 33
When Budweiser Dry beer was introduced, a series of television commercials appeared with the tag line Why ask why? Try Bud Dry. The structure of the ad was to raise a few questions, such as The Mona Lisa has no eyebrows. Why? and Chickens have no lips. Why? and then to recite the slogan, Why ask why? Try Bud Dry. Was this advertisement manipulative? If so, in what way? What harmful effect, if any, might it have had?
exercise 34
On a separate sheet of paper express a tentative opinion about each of the following issues. Then ask pertinent questions about what you have written, apply the techniques of imagination, and check the sources of your information. If your information is inadequate, do further research on the Internet or in the library. Finally, revise your view, as necessary, to make it reasonable. Can animals think? Should gambling be legalized? Should teachers be allowed to spank elementary school children who misbehave in school? Do smokers tend to discount the evidence that smoking can kill them? Should the government assume control of the Internet, deciding who can have access and under what conditions? Is it wrong to criticize another persons view of a controversial issue? Is it acceptable to subject animals to painful experiments in order to find cures for diseases? Is it possible for atheists to be as moral as religious believers?
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exercise 35
What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Viktor Frankl, Nellie Bly, and Stephanie Kwolek presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
exercise 36
In light of what you learned in this chapter, what do you believe is the greatest obstacle to individuality facing young people today? Meet with a group of two or three classmates and discuss your individual answers to this question and the reasoning that underlies those answers. During this meeting make a special effort to apply the strategy for group discussion.
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quiz
Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
What is the first step in becoming an individual as explained in this chapter? Most of us were, and still are, vulnerable to the influences of other people. True or false? Explain your answer. What is an attitude? The chapter uses the term culture war. Define that term and identify the parties to the conflict. State the four empowering attitudes discussed in the chapter. How does manipulation differ from other influences? Name two forms of manipulation and explain why we should resist them. Identify the steps in the strategy suggested for resisting manipulation. List three habits for individuality and explain why each is important. Answers to this quiz may be found online.
Evaluating Arguments
An argument is the presentation of a point of view in the hope of persuading others. These tips will help you find information in the library. These tips will help you find information on the Internet. These tips will help you acquire information in meetings with knowledgeable people. Plagiarism is passing off other peoples ideas or words as ones own. It both steals and deceives. This expanded discussion of evidence will help you ask the right questions when you analyze arguments. This section reveals how conducting research fits into the thinking strategy discussed in Chapter Two. In evaluating an argument, the greatest obstacle to critical thinking is your own bias.
IN THIS CHAPTER
What is an argument?
Avoiding plagiarism
Revisiting evidence
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Evaluating Arguments
What is an argument?
he word argument is sometimes used in the sense of quarrel that is, a dispute characterized by angry exchanges. We will use the term differently, to mean the statement of a point of view and the evidence that supports it in a way intended to be persuasive to other people. Candidates for political office argue when they present their positions on issues. Lawyers argue when they try cases in court. Scholars in various academic fields argue when they offer new theories or interpretations. Students argue when they take a position on an issue in class discussion or answer an essay question that calls for judgment. An argument expresses a line of reasoning, which may be thought of as a kind of equation, such as a plus b equals c. In a verbal argument, a and b would be statements (called premises) that are presented as true; c would be the conclusion that is represented as following logically from those statements. If the statements presented as true are indeed true, and the conclusion follows logically from them, then the argument is sound. If one or more of the statements (premises) are false, the argument is not sound, even though the conclusion may follow logically from those statements. An example using mathematical calculations will make these distinctions clearer: Example: Statement A: Our business took in $10,000 in receipts last week. Statement B: Our business also had $8,000 in payroll and expenses. Conclusion C: Therefore, our net profit for the week was $2,000. Comment: If the figures of $10,000 and $8,000 are correct, the profit is in fact $2,000. But suppose that one of the figures is inaccurate, for instance, that the receipts were only $9,500. In that case, the conclusion is mistaken, even though the calculation made with the stated figures is correct. Arguments can vary in length from a single sentence to a brief essay or even to a 100,000-word book. The simplest kinds of arguments consist of stating what we think and why we think it. More complex arguments contain a network of assertions or claims, together with supporting data. Chapter Two discussed simple arguments; this chapter will focus on complex arguments. Logic offers numerous rules for deciding whether an argument is sound. Those rules are beyond the scope of this book. We will continue to focus on the most fundamental testwhether the argument can be demonstrated to be more
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Step 1: Identify facts and opinions Step 2: Check the facts and test the opinions Step 3: Evaluate the evidence Step 4: Make your judgment
Step 1: Identify facts and opinions Step 2: Check the facts and test the opinions Step 3: Conduct research Step 4: Evaluate the evidence Step 5: Make your judgment
We will return to the revised strategy later in the chapter, after discussing library and Internet research and expanding our treatment of evidence. Lets begin with research.
The New Yorker Collection 2002. Sidney Harris from cartoonbank.com. All Rights Reserved.
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good thinking!
THE MELVIL DEWEY STORY Imagine how difficult it would be to use a library if there were no system for shelving the books. If you wanted a particular book, youd have no idea how to find it. It might be on the top shelf of aisle one, the bottom shelf of aisle forty, or anywhere in between. The larger the library, the more difficult it would be to use. A large university library would be virtually impossible to use. The situation was never that bad, but up until 1876 the system in use was inflexible and cumbersome. Each book had a designated place on the library shelves. A book on astronomy might be between a book on woodworking and another on medieval architecture. Then Melvil Dewey, a student assistant in the Amherst College library, had the creative idea that brought him fame and the appreciation of library users everywhere. Deweys creative idea was to invent a new shelving system, which came to be known as the Dewey Decimal System. When he left Amherst, he installed the system in Columbia University and then in the New York State Public Library. The Dewey Decimal System has ten main divisions: 000 is Computers, Information, and General Reference; 100, Philosophy and Psychology; 200, Religion; 300, Social Sciences; 400, Language; 500, Science; 600, Technology; 700, Arts and Recreation; 800, Literature; 900, History and Geography. Each division has a series of subdivisions. Deweys system makes it possible to manageand to useany library more flexibly and efficiently. Today it is used in more than 135 countries and has been translated into more than thirty languages. It is also proving useful in classifying Internet resources. Deweys devotion to improving things also led to other achievements. He is credited with establishing the first library school, reforming library standards, and (with others) founding the American Library Association. In addition, he was a pioneer in creating job opportunities for women. For more information on Melvil Dewey, see www.oclc.org/dewey/resources/ biography/.
information sources. The most important library source is the professional staff that works there. Ask your campus librarian to help you identify the sources listed below and answer any other research questions. For a broad overview of a subject: an encyclopedia. An encyclopedia is a compendium of information about a wide variety of topics and is
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popular magazines.
For specialized periodicals: an appropriate index. Specialized in-
dexes provide information on articles in scholarly journals comparable to the information Readers Guide provides about popular articles. For government publications: a state or federal monthly catalog. State and federal governments publish more documents than any other publishing source.
For abstracts of scholarly works: an appropriate data base or abstract service. These sources offer summaries of scholarly articles in various
fields.
For library holdings: your librarys computer catalog. This source is
your key to the books, tapes, monographs, and other materials available in your library. If you are looking for a specific title that is not available in your library, your librarian will usually be able to obtain it from another library. You can also visit your colleges official website.
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exercise 37
To use many of the information sources listed above youll need to ask your campus librarian. Carry out that direction for each of the sources and record your librarians response.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF LARRY PAGE AND SERGEY BRIN This story could well be titled, From Research Project to Empire. It began when two young graduate students met at Stanford University. Larry Page, the son of a computer science professor, and Sergey Brin, the Russian-born son of a mathematics professor, didnt much care for each other at first. Eventually, they collaborated on a research paper with the daunting title, The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web-Search Engine. That effort led them to found one of the most successful companies in recent history, known around the world by the odd-sounding name Google. (The term is a modification of googol, a math term meaning one followed by 100 zeroes.) When Google was founded in 1998, there were a number of competing search engines in use, but, as Brin points out, they did not focus exclusively on information searching or the order in which the results were presented. Page and Brin gave special attention to these concerns; they also developed a system that determines the best and most useful websites. In doing so, they faced a number of challenges, notably how to ensure that the search results were relevant to the search term and objectivepresenting a full range of viewpoints on an issue. Their cash investment in the fledging company matched their time investment. As Page recalls, We had to use all of our credit cards and our friends credit cards and our parents credit cards. But Google has been well worth the effort. It is the number one search engine in the world, with an estimated 65 million daily users. Brin sums up the company philosophy as follows: Google is all about getting the right information to people quickly, easily, cheaplyand for free. We serve the world all countries, at least 100 different languages. Its a powerful service that most people probably couldnt have dreamed of twenty years ago. Its available to the rich, the poor, street children in Cambodia, stock traders on Wall Streetbasically everybody.
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For more information on Larry Page and Sergey Brin, see www.kottke.org/plus/ misc/google-playboy.html or do a Google search on each individuals name.
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For news: www.foxnews.com www.ap.org www.cnn.com For informed opinion: www.liberalreview.com www.townhall.com (Click on columnists and then on any of the featured columns or on any persons name.) www.jewishworldreview.com (Click on any of the names in the Insight column toward the bottom of the home page.) www.prospect.org www.frontpagemag.com www.blueagle.com (This site lists 700 columnists, many cartoonists, and links to political websites.)
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For quotations: www.toinspire.com For legal information: www.legalengine.com www.law.com www.nolo.com For health and medicine: www.nih.gov www.medlineplus.gov For checking the quality/credibility of a website: One problem in doing research on the Internet is that, unlike newspapers, magazines, and books, it is not subject to editorial scrutiny. Anyone can publish anything, and there is a greater risk of receiving erroneous information. To minimize that risk, consult http://www.wordtrack.com.au/web/ internet/evaluating.html, which provides a number of evaluation tools; also, Janet E. Alexander and Marsha Ann Tates Web Wisdom: How to Evaluate and Create Information Quality on the Web (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates), 1999. A helpful tip: Some Internet searches will take you to sites that seem objective but really serve to sell you products and services. Such sites end in .com, which stands for commercial. (Note: The ending .com does not necessarily signify a lack of objectivity.) You can eliminate commercial websites from your Google searches by adding at the end of your search term the minus sign followed (without a space) by .com. For example, if your search term were vitamin therapy you would type vitamin therapy .com without using the quotation marks.
exercise 38
Visit the Internet Public Library (IPL) at www.ipl.org/ and examine the resources available there. Compare this information with the list of online resources mentioned by your librarian in Exercise 37. Report the results of your investigation in the space provided below.
Conducting an interview
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exercise 39
This exercise is designed to help you become familiar with search engines. Go to Google (www.google.com) and click, in turn, on each of the blue words on the home page. As you read each of the pages that appear, click on key words to learn more about Googles offerings. List below the features you find most useful.
exercise 40
Go to the Google home page again. In the search box, type the words free online encyclopedia and then click the search button. Then click on each of the first ten search results (more, if you wish) and decide which ones you find most helpful. Repeat this procedure with the phrases free online almanac and government publications. Record your decisions below and add the websites to your personal resource list.
Conducting an interview
Your research neednt be limited to the library and the Internet. A number of instructors at your college may have expertise on your topic. If you decide to interview one or more of them, call to make an appointment and state what you want to interview them about and how long you will need. Here are some tips for conducting the interview.
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1. Arrive on time and dont overstay your welcome. 2. Ask for permission to tape the interview so the instructor will not have to wait while you take notes. 3. Avoid asking questions calling for a yes or no answer. Instead, ask What do you think about . . . ? and What is the basis for your thinking . . . ? 4. Pay attention to the instructors answers and ask follow-up questions where appropriate. On the rare occasions when you cant find appropriate people with expertise at your college, use your ingenuity. For a medical issue, call the state public health department or the county medical association. The telephone directory will list the numbers of these agencies. Ask to be referred to an expert in your area.
Avoiding plagiarism*
Once ideas are put into words and published, they become intellectual property, and the author has the same rights over them as he or she has over a material possession such as a house or a car. The only real difference is that intellectual property is purchased with mental effort rather than money. Anyone who has ever wracked his or her brain trying to solve a problem or trying to put an idea into clear and meaningful words can appreciate how difficult mental effort can be. Plagiarism is passing off other peoples ideas or words as ones own. It is doubly offensive in that it both steals and deceives. In the academic world, plagiarism is considered an ethical violation and is punished by a failing grade for a paper or a course, or even by dismissal from the institution. Outside the academy, it is a crime that can be prosecuted if the person to whom the material belongs wishes to bring charges. In the eyes of the law, stealing ideas and/or the words used to express them is as criminal as stealing the computer on which they were recorded. Some cases of plagiarism are attributable to intentional dishonesty, others to carelessness. But many, perhaps most, are due to misunderstanding. The instructions Base your paper on research rather than on your own unfounded opinions and Dont present other peoples ideas as your own seem contradictory and may confuse students, especially if no clarification is offered. Fortunately, there is a way to honor both instructions and, in the process, to avoid plagiarism.
* This section is used with permission. Copyright 2002, 2007 by MindPower, Inc.
Avoiding plagiarism
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from your own. Begin by keeping a record of each source of information you consult. For an Internet source, record the website address, the author and title of the item, and the date you visited the site. For a book, record the author, title, place of publication, publisher, and date of publication. For a magazine or journal article, record the author, title, the name of the publication, and its date of issue. For a TV or radio broadcast, record the program title, station, and date of transmission.
Step 2. As you consult each source, note the ideas you want to refer to
in your writing. If the authors words are unusually clear and concise, copy them exactly and put quotation marks around them. Otherwise, paraphrasethat is, restate the authors ideas in your words. In written material, write down the number(s) of the page(s) on which the authors passage appears. If the authors idea triggers a response in your mind such as a question, a connection between this idea and something else youve read, or an experience of your own that supports or challenges what the author sayswrite it down and put brackets (not parentheses) around it so that you will be able to identify it as your own when you review your notes. Here is a sample research record illustrating these two steps: Adler, Mortimer J. The Great Ideas: A Lexicon of Western Thought (New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1992) Says that throughout the ages, from ancient Greece, philosophers have argued about whether various ideas are true. Says its remarkable that most renowned thinkers have agreed about what truth isa correspondence between thought and reality. 867 Also says that Freud saw this as the scientific view of truth. Quotes Freud: This correspondence with the real external world we call truth. It is the aim of scientific work, even when the practical value of that work does not interest us. 869 [I say true statements fit the facts; false statements do not.] Whenever you look back on this record, even a year from now, you will be able to tell at a glance which ideas and words are the authors and which are yours. The first three sentences are, with the exception of the directly quoted part, paraphrases of the authors ideas. The fourth is a direct quotation. The final sentence, in brackets, is your own idea.
Step 3. When you compose your paper, work borrowed ideas and words
into your writing by judicious use of quoting and paraphrasing. In addition, give credit to the various authors. Your goal here is to eliminate all doubt about which ideas and words belong to whom. In formal
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presentations, this crediting is done in footnotes; in informal ones, it is done simply by mentioning the authors name. Here is an example of how source material can be worked into a composition. The first paragraph contains the quoted and paraphrased material from Mortimer Adler. (You would insert a footnote or endnote number at the end of that paragraph and the note would provide the necessary citation.) The second paragraph adds your own original commentary on the Adler material.
Mortimer J. Adler explains that throughout the ages, from the time of the ancient Greeks, philosophers have argued about whether various ideas are true. But to Adler the remarkable thing is that, even as they argued, most renowned thinkers have agreed about what truth is. They saw it as a correspondence between thought and reality. Adler points out that Sigmund Freud believed this was also the scientific view of truth. He quotes Freud as follows: This correspondence with the real external world we call truth. It is the aim of scientific work, even when the practical value of that work does not interest us. This correspondence view of truth is consistent with the common sense rule that a statement is true if it fits the facts and false if it does not. For example, the statement the twin towers of New Yorks World Trade Center were destroyed on September 11, 2002 is false because they were destroyed the previous year. I may sincerely believe that it is true, but my believing in no way affects the truth of the matter. In much the same way, if an innocent man is convicted of a crime, neither the courts decision nor the worlds acceptance of it will make him any less innocent. We may be free to think what we wish, but our thinking cant change reality.
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rule is to quote only when a statement is so well and concisely expressed that a paraphrase would add unnecessary length and/or lose the force of the original. Such instances are rare. Most passages can be stated as wellsome can actually be improvedby being paraphrased. Statements that should be quoted rather than paraphrased: No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. Aesop What we think, we become. Buddha
Avoiding plagiarism
It is impossible for a man to learn what he thinks he already knows. Epictetus Statements that should be paraphrased, with suggested paraphrasing: As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. Proverbs 23-7 (Paraphrase: As the Book of Proverbs reminds us, we are what we think.) He does not believe who does not live according to his belief. Thomas Fuller (Paraphrase: Thomas Fuller thought that to be genuine, belief must be practiced.) Note that the source of the material is stated in the paraphrase, so that appropriate credit is given for the idea. Problem 2: Converting the authors words to your words. Constructing a paraphrase is mentally taxing because it involves thinking of alternative ways to express ideas. It is tempting to say, The way the author said is it is the only way, and to settle for a quotation. But if you do that youll find your paper covered in quotation marks. Not wanting to appear so obviously imitative, you may decide to leave the quotation marks off. Dont! You will be committing plagiarism! To solve this problem put forth a little effort and invest a little imagination and find alternative ways to express an idea. Here is an example of an effective paraphrase of a passage from Shelby Steeles book, White Guilt. (For the purpose of this exercise, five passages that appear on different pages are joined together, with ellipses between them.)
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Original Passage . . . This new black consciousness [of the 1960s] led blacks into a great mistake: to talk ourselves out of the individual freedom we had just won for no purpose whatsoever except to trigger white obligation . . . . The goal of the civil rights movement had escalated from a simple demand for equal rights to a demand for the redistribution of responsibility for black advancement from black to
Paraphrase Shelby Steele contends that blacks in America have allowed whites to overcome their guilt for the evils of slavery and discrimination by treating blacks as victims and taking over all responsibility for black peoples advancement. This he regards as a serious error because no group in human history has been lifted into excellence or competitiveness by another group.
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Note: (1) The first four words make clear that the author is paraphrasing Steele. (2) Some individual key words that appear in the original, such as advancement and responsibility, also appear in the paraphrase. Such repetition is often unavoidable and does not constitute plagiarism. (3) The only group of words that is repeated appears in quotation marks. To omit the quotation marks would have constituted plagiarism. (4) Although the paraphrase embraces the entire idea expressed in the original, it is more compressed. This is a typical feature of paraphrasing.
white America, from the victims to the guilty. This marked a profoundand I believe tragicturning point in the long struggle of black Americans for a better life . . . . Black militancy, then, was not inevitable in the late sixties. It came into existence solely to exploit white guilt as a pressure on white America to take more responsibility for black advancement . . . . Thus, since the sixties, black leaders have made one overriding argument: that blacks cannot achieve equality without white America taking primary responsibility for it. Black militancy became, in fact, a militant belief in white power and a correspondingly militant denial of black power . . . . But this sad symbiosis overlooks an important feature of human nature: human beings, individually or collectively, cannot transform themselves without taking full responsibility for doing so. This is a law of nature. Once full responsibility is accepted, others can assist as long as it is understood that they cannot be responsible. But no group in human history has been lifted into excellence or competitiveness by another group. Shelby Steele, White Guilt: How Blacks and Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era (New York: HarperCollins, 2006), 45, 58, 59, 60, 62.
Avoiding plagiarism
Problem 3: Constructing ideas of your own to blend with paraphrased and quoted material. If the subject is unfamiliar or complex, you may wonder what you can possibly add to what the authors you consulted have said. Using the Shelby Steele passage as an example, here are some ways you might solve this problem. After your paraphrase of his ideas, elaborate on Steeles views by mentioning some of the evidence he offers in the book to support them. Offer the views of other authors who share Steeles perspective and the evidence they use to support their views. Discuss the views of authors who disagree with Steele on this issue and the evidence they use to support their views. Make sure you exercise the same care in paraphrasing, quoting, and citing your sources. Present your evaluation of the issue, explaining which author(s) you agree with and which you disagree with, in each case presenting your reasons for thinking as you do. Your evaluation makes the composition or research paper uniquely your own. It represents your thinking and your expression. The more carefully you approach itexplaining thoroughly, providing evidence, anticipating and answering objectionsthe better its quality will be.
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exercise 41
On a separate sheet of paper, write an effective paraphrase of each of the following passages, using direct quotation only when the authors phrasing is unusually clear and concise. Then compare your paraphrase with that of a classmate. If you detect any suggestion of plagiarism in either paraphrase, work together to revise it. Be prepared to explain your evaluation in class.
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PASSAGE 1
In the first part of this [the twentieth] century, we adopted the principle of mass-producing low-quality education to create a low-skilled work force for mass-production industry. Building on this principle, our education and business systems became very tightly linked, evolving into a single system that brilliantly capitalized on our advantages and enabled us to create the most powerful economy and the largest middle class the world had ever seen. The education system, modeled on industrial organization, was crafted to supply the work force that the industrial economy needed. Americas systems of school organization and industrial organization were beautifully matched, each highly dependent on the other for its success, each the envy of the world.
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exercise 41 (cont.)
But most of the competitive advantages enjoyed at the beginning of the century had faded away by midcentury, and advances in technology during and after the war slowly altered the structure of the domestic and world economy in ways that turned these principles of American business and school organization into liabilities rather than assets. . . . Our country is locked in a time warp, wedded to a worldview and to strategies long since outmoded by events . . . Though the top executives of our best firms are among the most ardent advocates of school reform, the vast majority of American employers do not want more than eighth-grade-level skills in the people that they hire for their front-line work force. Ray Marshall and Marc Tucker, Thinking for a Living: Education and the Wealth of Nations (New York: Basic Books, 1992), xvixviii.
PASSAGE 2
. . . Any attempt to restore a mans inner strength in the [World War II Nazi concentration] camp had first to succeed in showing him some future goal. Nietzsches words, He who has a why to live for can bear with almost any how, could be the guiding motto for all psychotherapeutic and psychohygienic efforts regarding prisoners. Whenever there was an opportunity for it, one had to give them a whyan aimfor their lives, in order to strengthen them to bear the terrible how of their existence. Woe to him who saw no more sense in his life, no aim, no purpose, and therefore no point in carrying on. He was soon lost. The typical reply with which such a man rejected all encouraging arguments was, I have nothing to expect from life any more. What sort of answer can one give to that? What was really needed was a fundamental change in our attitude toward life. We had to learn ourselves and, furthermore, we had to teach the despairing men, that it did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being questioned by lifedaily and hourly. Our answer must consist, not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual. Viktor E. Frankl, Mans Search for Meaning, 3rd. ed. (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984), 846.
PASSAGE 3
[Note: In this book, the author argues that the contemporary diversity movement, which divides rather than unites people, is out of touch with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.s vision of Americans united by values and principles despite
Avoiding plagiarism
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exercise 41 (cont.)
injustice and discrimination. When he uses the italicized form diversity, he is referring to that movement.] Diversity is big. Its everywhere. Schoolchildren are taught to celebrate it; high courts weigh and scrutinize it; corporate personnel offices assiduously seek it out; unions that once feared it now robustly champion it; artists offer searching introspections of diversity in their own lives; museums exhibit it; restaurants serve it; churches worship it; and tourists vacation in it . . . Is diversity better suited to the pursuit of good character? Not if good character means putting aside stereotypes and treating individuals as individuals. Does diversity assist in the pragmatists project of promoting many different kinds of excellence? Is seems more closely associated with lower admissions standards, grade inflation, undemanding undergraduate majors, and a falling off in what we expect high schools to teach college-bound students. Does diversity play its part in passing on a valuable legacy to a new generation? Only if one considers the perpetuation of racialist categories a legacy worth having. Does diversity help the young on their way to making the world anew? Is seems rather to insist that the future will be patterned on the divisions of the pastor on new divisions adopted in reaction to the old. Peter Wood, Diversity: The Invention of a Concept (San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2003), 16, 1367.
exercise 42
Meet with a group of two or three classmates and discuss whether each of the following passages would be better quoted or paraphrased. Where disagreements arise, have the person who argues for paraphrasing construct a paraphrase for the groups consideration. During this meeting make a special effort to apply the strategy for group discussion you learned in Chapter Three. Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind. Albert Einstein Opportunity is missed by most because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. Thomas Edison Nobody can make you feel inferior without your permission. Eleanor Roosevelt A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking. Steven Wright No man is free who is not master of himself. Epictetus The deepest human defeat suffered by human beings is constituted by the difference between what one was capable of becoming and what one has in fact become. Ashley Montagu
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Revisiting evidence
Chapter Two defined evidence as reliable information offered in support of an opinion. In that chapter, we noted that there are various kinds of evidence, but we focused on just onethe reasons people offer for thinking and acting as they do. The term reasons can also be used in a broader, more general way to cover all forms of evidence. There is nothing wrong in using the term that way. However, you will find it helpful to become familiar with the more specific terms, as well. Doing so will enable you to ask pertinent questions whenever you analyze arguments. Following are eight other kinds of evidence, together with the appropriate questions to ask about each.
Published reports
Published reports are found in newspapers, broadcasts, books, and magazines and on the Internet. This kind of evidence is very common but not always reliable. There are some careless and dishonorable reporters who allow their biases to influence their reporting. And even conscientious reporters can make mistakes. The chance for error is especially
Revisiting evidence
great when the information is acquired in haste or from second- or third-hand accounts. Never assume that a report is accurate just because it appears in print or is broadcast. To test a published report, ask: What information sources, if any, are cited in the report? If sources are cited, they can often be checked quite easily, especially if they have a website. (A trip to Google will reveal that.) Remember, though, that verifying the source does not establish the sources accuracy.
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Eyewitness testimony
Eyewitness testimony is a report of what someone observed firsthand. Such testimony is popularly regarded as highly reliable. After all, there is something very persuasive about a seemingly honest person who says, I saw it happen, and goes on to provide the details of who, how, and where. However, research has shown that eyewitness testimony is sometimes false. Perception can be blinded by preconceived notions and the memory of an earlier event can be corrupted by subsequent events. To test eyewitness testimony, ask: Does the person have anything to gain by misrepresenting the facts? Were the conditions favorable to observationfor example, did the event occur in the daytime or at night, in good weather or bad (snow, rain, or fog)? Did the event occur slowly or quickly? Was it expected or unexpected? Was the person in a state of mind conducive to accurate observation? Sober or drunk? Tired or well rested? Calm or emotional (for example, fearful)? Could the persons memory have been confused by something that occurred after the event but before the testimony was given?
Expert testimony
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This kind of testimony has the advantage of being informed by extensive knowledge of the subject and understanding of what is typical in most cases. Such testimony is therefore highly reliable. However, experts often disagree in their assessments. Even when they agree they can be mistaken, so this generally reliable testimony cannot be taken at face value. To test expert testimony, ask: Does the person have specific expertise in the subject in question? (It is not uncommon these days for experts to offer opinions far outside their areas of expertise.) Does the experts view represent the majority or minority view among experts in the field? In other words, do other experts agree with the person in question?
Experiments
One kind of experiment is the kind performed under controlled circumstances, such as in a laboratory. Another kind is the field experiment, in which observation is conducted in natural surroundings. For example,
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF DOROTHEA DIX Many famous people identified their goals early in lifein some cases, before puberty. However, Dorothea Dix did not find hers until she was 39 years old. The occasion was a visit to a womens detention center in Massachusetts, where she had volunteered to give a Sunday school lesson. There she found individuals suffering from retardation and mental illness housed with criminals and living in unimaginable deprivation and filth. When she questioned the conditions, she was told that the mentally ill neither required nor deserved better treatment. At that time (1841), this was the prevailing view. Dorothea was unprepared for this experience. She had, to be sure, experienced hardship herself. Having grown up in a household with an ill mother and an abusive father, she had spent most of her own childhood caring for her younger brothers. At age 15 she had taken on the responsibility of running a school for young girls. Later she was a tutor and a writer of childrens books, but at age 34 she contracted tuberculosis and spent most of the next five years recuperating. Then came her visit to the prison, which so outraged her that she made the reform of prisons and poorhouses her lifes cause. She visited other facilities around the state of Massachusetts, took copious notes, and presented her findings to the legislature, where she eventually won support for the cause. Not satisfied with that success, she ignored her own continuing poor health and extended her crusade to every state east of the Mississippi and the U.S. Congress. Then she visited thirteen European countries and fought for similar reforms. Dixs dedication to the cause of the mentally ill and other social outcasts led to the founding of many mental hospitals, schools for the mentally disabled and the blind, and nursing programs. She has been called the most effective advocate of humanitarian reform in American mental institutions during the nineteenth century. Yet she remained humble about her achievements, refusing to put her name on her publications and shunning the spotlight. Dorothea Dix died in 1887 in one of the hospitals she helped to found. For more information about Dorothea Dix, do a Google search.
one might observe a group of children at play, participants at a political convention, or Amish farmers raising a barn. For the results of the observation to be reliable, the observer must not have influenced the behavior of the group. Also, the period of observation must have been of reasonable duration.
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Statistical studies
Statistics usually refers to quantitative information obtained about every individual in a group or category. Examples of statistics are the percentage of deaths caused by drunken driving, the comparative college admissions scores of various racial and ethnic groups, and the voting records of members of Congress. If the statistical sources are reputable, the statistics will generally be trustworthy. But it is prudent to check that they are quoted accurately. To test statistical evidence, ask: Is the source of the data reliable? How long ago were the statistics compiled? Have conditions changed since then?
Surveys
This type of information is a subdivision of statistics. However, it is obtained in a special wayby a sampling of the group. The sample may be random or systematic (for example, every fiftieth name in the phone book). It may also be done in person, by telephone, or by mail. A sample can be reliable even though a very small number of individuals were contacted, but only if certain conditions were met. All members of the group must have had an equal chance of being contacted. Also, the questions must have been clear, unambiguous, and unbiased. Keep in mind that the way survey questions are phrased can influence the responses. To test a survey, ask: Was the sample representative of the larger group? Were the questions clear and objective? Did enough people respond for the survey results to be trusted?
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Research reviews
Research reviews examine the general body of research information on a topic. It is not uncommon for such a review to cover dozens, even hundreds, of independent research studies. A research review is a highly reliable form of evidence if it covers all significant research studies and is free of bias. To test a research review, ask: Were any important studies omitted?
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opinions, (2) Check the facts and test the opinions, (3) Conduct research, (4) Evaluate the evidence, and (5) Make your judgment. Now that we have completed our discussion of evidence and the techniques of research, we will examine each of these steps, expanding on what was noted in Chapter Two and demonstrating how the new step fits in the overall strategy.
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exercise 43
Apply the procedure in Step 1 to the following argument. (Note that specific directions are given after the article.) A Days Pay for a Days Work Every year during football or basketball season, some college in the country makes headlines when one of its athletes is suspended for violating his amateur status by receiving money. Self-righteous windbags around the country then rant on about the importance of protecting college athletics from professionalism and ensuring that athletes place education before sports. Not only
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exercise 43 (cont.)
is that view hypocritical, its also absurd. The best thing that could happen to college athletics would be for the myth of amateurism to be exposed and the NCAA to abandon its regulation prohibiting pay for play. To begin with, college athletes have only one reason for going to college to get a chance to play professional sports. They couldnt care less about an education. Many of them cant read and write, so the courses they take are just warmed-over junior high school subjects. The idea that their education is going to better their position in life is a cruel deception on them. Few others besides athletes are foolish enough to buy such a notion. Some people argue that if college athletes were paid for playing sports, they would be corrupted. Surely it wouldnt be any less corrupting than the present situation, in which they receive money under the table and in the process violate ethics and the law. And it would spare universities that are supposed to represent societys highest values the embarrassment and shame that accompany unfavorable newspaper headlines. The only sensible course of action for the NCAA, and for that matter the Olympic Committee, to take is to discard the phony distinction between amateur and professional. Let colleges run their athletic programs as moneymaking ventures (as many of them now do, dishonestly). Allow them to recruit the best players they can without having to enroll them in academic programs. And permit the players to earn salaries and work full time at their sports. The players will be happier, the teams will perform better, and everyones consciences will be a lot clearer. State the controlling idea of the article.
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As we saw in Chapter Two, these approaches for checking facts and testing opinions are often sufficient to demonstrate the strengths and weaknesses of a brief, simple argument. However, more complex arguments usually require additional research. The next step in our strategy addresses that challenge.
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You will already have consulted the basic resources listed in the sections of this chapter on conducting library and Internet researchthat is, an encyclopedia, an almanac, a newspaper archive, and/or a general magazine index. Now consult the other sourcesindexes to specialized periodicals, catalogs of government publications, databases, abstract services, and your librarys computer catalog. Also search the Internet and/or the resources on your personal list. After identifying articles, books, and tapes that challenge the argument you are analyzing, obtain and examine them.
Aspects of the Issue Is boxing a sport? Is the intention in boxing to injure the opponent? Is boxing dangerous? Can the risk of injury be overcome by training? Can the risk of injury be overcome by protective gear? Would outlawing boxing deny minorities a way out of poverty?
Note that on the boxing spreadsheet you can tell where the disagreements lie simply by looking next to each aspect of the issue. There is no disagreement on the danger of boxing, some disagreement on the aspect of intentional harm, and considerable disagreement on the other four aspects. You may be wondering, Why spend time breaking the issue into its various aspects when I will eventually have to form an overall view? Why not deal with the entire issue immediately? The answer is that in a complex issue, there can be many insights, and they are seldom all
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be unable to provide lab experience at home. Finally, the author argues that children who are homeschooled are deprived of opportunities for socializing with peers. Thus, in his view, they are woefully unprepared to relate to people of other religions and cultures. Now suppose that you know little about homeschooling other than what you just read. Suppose, too, that you have graduated from public school, believe your experience there was positive, and therefore support traditional classroom education. Given these facts, your bias would be almost imperceptiblenothing more, really, than a slight leaning. Not enough to put you on alert, yet enough to cause you to accept the authors assessment at face value and not bother to investigate the opposing viewpoint. If even a slight, subtle bias can keep you from thinking critically, it is not hard to imagine what a more substantial bias will do. Incidentally, in the homeschooling issue (as in all controversial issues), there is another side to be considered. Creative homeschoolers have discovered ways to overcome or compensate for the lack of laboratories and other limitations. Homeschooled students often score as well as, and in some cases better than, public and private school graduates, and are as respectful of other people as are traditional graduates. No one has yet formulated an anti-bias serum, so inoculation is not a choice. The best you can do is to recognize bias when it arises and develop ways of resisting it. Following are the most common types of bias and suggestions for dealing with them:
Bias toward what confirms your personal view. We all tend to be protective of our opinions. This is true whether we reason them out or borrow them from others. Whenever we encounter information that confirms one of our opinions, our automatic reaction is to accept it. Similarly, we tend to reject information that challenges our opinion. Suggestion: Keep in mind that we all make mistakes from time to time. The sooner we find out weve made one, the better off we are. And the best way to find a mistake early is to be open to ideas that challenge our own. Bias toward familiar ideas. Suppose you walked into a cafeteria and had the choice of sitting with people you know or with strangers. Which would you choose? No doubt you would choose people you know because youd feel more relaxed and comfortable with them. Its the same way with ideas. All of us tend to be more accepting of ideas weve heard before than we are of new ideas. Suggestion: Remember that familiarity has little significancethe order in which we hear ideas and the frequency of our hearing them are matters of chance. The fact that weve heard something repeated a dozen times
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exercise 44
Many campuses have adopted speech codes to ensure an atmosphere of respect and civility. However, these codes have given rise to controversy. Some see them as helpful and even necessary. Others regard them as an exercise in foolishness or, worse, a violation of their constitutional rights. Analyze this issue using the five-step approach detailed in this chapter and present your findings on a separate sheet of paper. Following are two opposing viewpoints on this issue to get you started: Campus Speech Codes Are Reasonable By Priscilla Prentice A generation ago, rage was an uncommon word. Today it is not only commonit comes in a number of varieties. We have road rage, in which drivers become furious at fellow motorists for real or imagined violations of the rules of the road. We have air rage, in which passengers on airplanes take out their frustrations on other passengers or flight attendants and have to be restrained. And we have sports-event rage, characterized by fans leaping onto the playing field and pummeling someone, usually a player or official or, in the case of little league competitions, the coach who didnt give little Johnny or Sally sufficient playing time. We also have campus rage, which may be defined as the practice of intimidating and harassing students or faculty one doesnt like. Typically, the victim of this kind of rage is a member of a minority groupfor example, homosexuals, African Americans, Latinos, or Muslims. Campus rage tends to be expressed in epithets and insults rather than in physical assaults, so the wounds it causes are invisible. But they are no less real or less lasting for that fact. Campus speech codes are a sensitive and sensible response to campus rage. They make understandable to everyone at what point commentary on an idea or
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exercise 44 (cont.)
issue ends and attacks on individuals begin, marking the latter as impermissible. When such codes are well written, they also inform everyone exactly what the penalties will be for violations. The only people who should be against campus speech codes are irresponsible individuals who dont care about other peoples feelings. I mean people who have something to fear from themthe kind of people who scrawl hate messages on buildings; use ugly, demeaning terms to describe other human beings; and spread stereotypes and vicious rumors. To be fair, some honest people are against speech codes. But their arguments are flawed. The most significant of those arguments is that campus speech codes violate the right to free speech. There is an element of truth albeit a small onein that argument. Any regulation, rule, or law sets a limit on behavior. For example, a traffic light makes us stop when we want to continue going forward. The designation one-way street restricts our freedom to go the other way. Airport security requirements require us to submit to questions we would rather not answer and searches we would rather not submit to. But responsible people dont object to these restrictions because they understand that the restrictions serve a purpose that is higher and more important than any individuals convenience. Campus speech codes should be viewed in the same light. They do limit our right to free speech in a minor way. Yet they do so in order to honor another, equally important right: the potential victims right to the pursuit of happiness. The idea behind campus speech codes is simply thisjust as no one is allowed to assault others physically, no one should be permitted to assault others verbally. Nothing could be more reasonable than that. Campus Speech Codes Are Intolerable By Zachariah Brescia Campus speech codes come wrapped in idealistic language. They supposedly aim to create an environment where fairness reigns, no ones feelings are ever hurt, and everyone feels comfortable. What could possibly be wrong with that? Plenty. To begin with, campus speech codes are not about fairness at all but privilege. And they are not about soothing feelings but suppressing ideas that dont pass the test of Political Correctness. Anyone who takes the unpopular side of an issue is shouted down or assigned an ugly label. Those who speak against affirmative action are branded racists. Those who oppose gay marriage are called homophobes. Those who speak out against abortion are branded antichoice. (So much for being concerned about peoples feelings.) On most campuses, it is permissible to say all men are rapists, George W. Bush is a war criminal, and the United States deserved what happened on
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September 11, 2001, but not to challenge those ideas. Similarly, denouncing religion is acceptable, whereas praising orGASP!professing a religious belief is considered an outrage. The punishment doesnt end with name calling and denunciation either. The Politically Correct crowd have also borrowed a tactic from their ideological mentors, the communists. The tactic is called re-education, but its real meaning is brainwashing. For example, on many campuses people who challenge the liberal dogma of Diversity are required to undergo diversity training, which consists of sitting silently and being persuaded of ones error. An even more creative trick is to establish free speech zones on campus that is, special places where people can go whenever they want and say whatever they want. At first thought, this sounds perfectly reasonable. Only when you ponder the idea for a while and ask pertinent questions do you realize whats happening. Question: Where will these free speech zones be? In front of the administration building? At the fountain in the center of campus? Behind the sewage treatment plant? Question: Will the number and size of these zones ever change? For example, if the people who use the zones vigorously question Politically Correct ideas, will the zones get fewer and fewer and smaller and smaller? Questions such as these expose the nature of the game being played. Speech code advocates are pretending to give something to the campus community (free speech zones) when they are really taking something away (free speech). Listen carefully and youll be able to hear the Founding Fathers turning over in their graves. (Incidentally, Founding Fathers is politically incorrect because it omits mothers.) When those wise men wrote the U.S. Constitution they were espousing the free expression of ideas, even ones that some people find offensive. They believed that the way to conquer bad ideas is not by suppression but by countering them with good ideas. If they were with us today, they would condemn campus speech codes. And so should we. Note: For another issue-analysis exercise like this one, visit the website.
exercise 45
Analyze the following issue using the five-step approach detailed in this chapter. In conducting your research, be especially careful to find and examine viewpoints that differ from the one presented. Using a separate sheet of paper, write a composition presenting your findings.
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exercise 45 (cont.)
A Disservice to Everyone By Bruce Malone Talk-show TV often displays a mindlessness thats as amazing as it is appalling. One show, for example, featured teenagers who had decided to drop out of high school. The program began with the teens presenting their reasons for quitting, then proceeded to have their parents, a guest expert, and the host try to persuade them to stay in school. Finally, the teens were given a chance to answer the arguments of their elders. If the shows host and producers thought they were helping solve the problem of high school dropouts, they were mistaken. Appearing on television is an honor few people receive, even if they have made significant contributions to society. Yet those teens received just that honor for threatening to drop out of school. Their foolishness was dignified and they were made to feel like celebrities. Worse, by being allowed to have the last word on the issue, they were given an advantage over the adults. The chances that those teens changed their minds after the program are slim to none. They very likely had the show videotaped and ran the tape over and over, showing their friends how they held their own in the debate. They may even fantasize that a career in television awaits them. Its not hard to imagine them becoming the heroes of the neighborhood. Such programs make the jobs of parents and teachers more difficult. Popular culture has already convinced many young people that they know more than their elders, that their opinions have special value, and that learning is a waste of time. Television shows that reinforce such nonsense are surely not a public service. If anything, they are a public disservice. Note: For another issue-analysis exercise like this one, visit the website.
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exercise 46
What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Melvil Dewey, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, and Dorothea Dix presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
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quiz
Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
2. What is the most important resource available in any library? 3. What contribution did Melvil Dewey make to critical thinking? 4. A search engine is a large machine librarians use to find books that have
been improperly shelved. True or false? Explain.
6. List the three steps you can take to avoid plagiarism. 7. List three kinds of evidence and the questions appropriate for testing each. 8. Where is the central opinion in an article usually found? 9. Explain how and relationships, but relationships, and therefore
relationships differ.
10. List the five steps in the approach for evaluating complex issues.
Copyright Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
11. When you evaluate an argument, the greatest obstacle to critical thinking
is the complexity of the issue. True or false? Explain. Answers to this quiz may be found online.
IN THIS CHAPTER
Errors of judgment
Errors of reaction
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Errors of perception
Errors of perception are not blunders made while examining issues. They are faulty ways of seeing reality, preventing us from being open-minded even before we begin to apply our critical thinking. The following are especially serious:
Errors of perception
Mine is better thinking is natural and often harmless. Even so, this kind of thinking creates distance between people through a winlose mentality, which can easily create an obstacle to learning from others. To prevent this from happening, remember that opening your mind to ideas from other people can broaden your perspective and lead to fresh insights. Give every idea a fair hearingeven an idea that challenges your own.
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Selective perception
In one sense, we see selectively most of the time. Lets say you and two friends, a horticulture major and an art major, walk through a shopping mall. You want to buy a pair of shoes; the others are just taking a break from studying. The same reality exists for each of you: stores, potted plants, people passing by. Still, each of you focuses on different things. While you are looking for shoe stores, one friend notices plants. The other studies faces for interesting features. Later, one of you says, Hey, did you see the big new store in the mall? The others say no. Though the store was before all of your eyes, two of you screened it out. That kind of selective perception is often harmless. Another kind of selective perception takes place when we focus on things that support our current ideas and reject anything that challenges them. Suppose someone thinks that a particular ethnic group is stupid, violent, cheap, or lazy. Then stupid behaviors will capture that persons attention. And if his bias is strong enough, he will completely miss intelligent behaviors from members of that group. Hell see only evidence that supports his prejudice. You can break the habit of selective perception by looking and listening for details you havent seen before. Also press yourself to balance your perception. If you find yourself focusing on negative details, look for positive ones, and vice versa.
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THE STORY OF PAUL VITZ Paul C. Vitz is a professor of psychology and the author of many articles and several books, including Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism. The story behind this book illustrates how a simple question can lead to new insights. For much of his life, Vitz had been an atheist, but at age 38 he embraced religion and became interested in the historic tension between psychology and religion. He learned that even in intellectual and academic circles, atheism did not become respectable until about 1870 . . . and it continued to be restricted to small numbers of intellectuals into the twentieth century. From his training as a psychologist he also knew that many atheists are famous for arguing that [religious] believers suffer from illusions, from unconscious and infantile needs, and from other psychological deficits. Freud, for example, argued that belief in God is nothing more than a projection of the believers desire for security. As he reflected on these facts, he began to wonder whether this projection theory might apply to atheists as well as to believers, or perhaps even apply better to atheists than to believers. Eager to find out, he decided to study the lives of famous atheists and famous religious believers and see if any interesting patterns emerged. The atheists he chose included Freud, Nietzsche, Hume, and Sartre; the theists included Pascal, Berkeley, de Tocqueville, Kierkegaard, and Buber. This study revealed that every famous atheist had a weak, dead, or abusive father, and almost every theist had a positive relationship with his father. After analyzing the data, Vitz concluded that the projection theory of religious belief is not only unscientific but also a form of the error in thinking known as ad hominem in other words, it focuses on the believer personally rather than on the evidence for and/or against religious belief. Vitz writes as follows: Since both believers and nonbelievers in God have psychological reasons for their positions, one important conclusion is that in any debate as to the truth of the existence of God, psychology should be irrelevant. A genuine search for evidence supporting, or opposing, the existence of God should be based on the evidence and arguments found in philosophy, theology, science, history, and other relevant disciplines. It should also include an understanding of religious experience. Paul Vitzs research could pave the way for a more scholarly approach to the study of religion. For more information on Paul Vitz, see Paul Vitz, Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism (Dallas, TX: Spence Publishing Co., 1999).
Errors of perception
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Preconceptions
A preconception about the majority or the minority. Preconception tends
to follow our affections. If we feel more comfortable with the majority on our side, we may take for granted that the majority view is correct. If we identify with the underdog and love the challenge of confronting superior numbers, we may make the same assumption about the minority view. Each of these choices can occur with little or no awareness that we are making up our minds in advance. And in each case we put feelings of comfort and personal preference above the evidence. Critical thinking means deciding issues on their merits rather than on the number or the celebrity status of the people on the opposing sides.
A preconceived view of change. According to an old joke, conserva-
tives have never met a new idea they liked, and liberals have never met a new idea they didnt like. Each observation contains an element of truth. Some people find even small changes, like returning home from school and finding the furniture rearranged, very upsetting. Major changes, like moving across the country, can be even more disturbing. New ideas can have a similar effect on such people. Old beliefs provide a sense of comfort and security. When those beliefs are challenged, people may feel that reality has been pulled out from under them. Thats probably why ancient rulers killed the bearers of bad news. Its also one reason why persuading others can be difficult. Unfavorable preconceptions about change may be older and more common than favorable ones. Yet the latter seem to be increasing today, perhaps because technology is advancing so rapidly. Some people think that old ideas, old beliefs, and old values are of little use today. For them, new is always better. Neither perspective is consistent with critical thinking. Some new ideas are clearly better than the old ones they replace. Progress has in fact occurred in every area of life, including science, technology, education, and government. Yet this reality has another, less beneficial side. New ideas can contain serious flaws that go unnoticed at first. Time and experience can prove that the supposed great leap forward was actually several steps backward. To avoid preconceptions about change, know your own mental habits. Also resist the temptation to accept first impressions.
Pretending to know
Some people believe that confessing ignorance makes them look ineffective, so they pretend to know things. After a while, pretending
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becomes a habit that hinders critical thinking. Suppose someone says on several occasions, Ive read quite a few books on psychology. Also suppose the truth is different and hes never read a book on the subject. The idea will become so familiar that he might take it for the truth. Whats more, hell begin to confuse his guesses about psychology with real knowledge. Practice staying aware of your statements and remaining alert for pretense. Whenever you find it, acknowledge the truth and resolve not to lie to yourself or others again.
Either/or thinking
This error of perception means taking only extreme positions on an issue when other positions are possible. For example, one person thinks that accepting evolution means rejecting the idea of creation. Another person thinks that being Republican means taking a conservative stance on every issue. Yet its possible to believe in evolution and creation. You could believe that God created the universe and planned for it to evolve over millions of years. (You could also be a Republican without always taking a conservative stand.) Either/or thinking hampers critical thinking. This error prompts us to take extreme, unreasonable views. To avoid either/or thinking, look for times when there seem to be only two possible views. Ask yourself, Are these the only possibilities? Could another view be more reasonable perhaps one that includes elements of both? An example is the debate over crime prevention. Some elected officials argue for banning assault weapons and registering handguns. The National Rifle Association argues for getting criminals off the street. You might ask, Why not take both actions and add others, such as building more prisons, as well?
exercise 47
Consider each of the following situations, being alert for errors of perception. Such errors are often implied rather than stated directly, so you are likely to find hints rather than clear-cut evidence of error. Using a separate sheet of paper, identify whatever hints you find and explain why you believe they point to an error of perception.
A.
In April of 2007, NFL quarterback Michael Vick pleaded guilty to charges related to his involvement in an illegal dog fighting operation. He also
Errors of perception
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exercise 47 (cont.)
admitted he personally helped kill a number of dogs after they lost their fights. When Vick was first charged, Marvin and Oscar were discussing the news reports. Marvin took the position that if Vick was guilty of the charges, he should receive the maximum penalty provided by law. Oscar questioned the news reports, arguing that star athletesespecially black star athletes are often falsely accused.
B.
In a classroom discussion on the subject of terrorism, Ethel claimed that moderate Muslims around the world are not speaking out forcefully enough against Muslim terrorists. I know that if acts of terrorism were committed by Jews or Christians, the Jewish and Christian communities around the world would loudly denounce their actions, she said. The fact that Muslims remain silent is a scandal.
C.
Claude believes that efforts to improve the health care system in the U. S. are completely misguided. He supports this belief with statistics showing the serious problems in the health care systems in Canada, England, France, Sweden, and Cuba.
exercise 48
Consider each of the six errors of perception. Think of a time when youve committed each one and describe the situation. Explain how you reacted and what events followed. Then decide how you might have avoided each error and how the consequences might have been different. Mine is better thinking
Selective perception
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exercise 48 (cont.)
Gullibility and skepticism
Preconception
Pretending to know
Either/or thinking
Errors of judgment
Errors of judgment occur in the process of sorting out and assessing evidence. They prevent us from reaching the most reasonable conclusion. The following errors of judgment are among the most common:
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Double standard
This error consists of using one standard of judgment for our ideas and an entirely different, more demanding standard for ideas that conflict with ours. People who employ a double standard ignore inconsistencies, contradictions, and outrageous overstatements in arguments they agree with. Yet they nitpick their opponents arguments. They even use different vocabularies. Allies are described as imaginative, forceful, and brutally honest. Opponents with the same qualities are labeled utopian, belligerent, or mean-spirited.
Errors of judgment
Critical thinking demands a single standard of judgment for both those who agree and those who disagree with us.
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Irrelevant criterion
This error consists of criticizing an idea because it fails to do what it wasnt intended to do. Say that a chief executive proposes a new reward program for employees cost-saving ideas in his company. Supervisors argue against the program because it doesnt increase the percentage of women and minorities in the company. In this case, the supervisors are invoking an irrelevant criterion. The point is not that fairness to women and minorities is unimportant. Rather, fairness is a different issue and should not be made the measure of the reward program. You can avoid the mistake of using irrelevant criteria. When you evaluate an idea, set aside all separate issues and agendas, no matter how important they are or how committed you feel about them.
Overgeneralizing or stereotyping
Generalizations are judgments about a class of people or things. Political pollsters are generalizing when they say, Most voters dont care much about either presidential candidate. Though such a statement covers tens of millions of people, its a fair one if based on a representative sample of those people. Generalizations dont have to be based on a scientific sampling in order to be fair. They need only be based on a reasonable number of contacts with a reasonable number of people in the group. For example, your instructor might say, My present students are more willing to participate in class than my students were last year. Or you could say, The people in my neighborhood are friendly. Overgeneralizations are unfair generalizations. They exceed whats appropriate to conclude from our experiences. Suppose a professor teaches only advanced French literature and sees only a small, unique group of students. If she says something about the students at this college based solely on her experience, she is thinking uncritically. Or consider a first semester student who has contact with only five instructors. This person would be overgeneralizing if he judged the faculty at this school. Stereotypes are overgeneralizations that harden into convictions shared by many people. There are stereotypes of people: fundamentalists, politicians, feminists, psychiatrists, rock musicians. And there are stereotypes of places and things: New York City and San Francisco, marriage and farming. Overgeneralizations and stereotypes hinder critical thinking by blinding us to important differences among individual people, places, and things.
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THE STORY OF MARTIN SELIGMAN One day when Martin Seligman was a young graduate student working in the experimental psychology lab at the University of Pennsylvania, the laboratory dogs were behaving strangely. Instead of responding to the stimuli as they had previously done, they were lying still. Pondering the situation, Seligman decided they must have inadvertently been taught to be helpless. Since there was no historical data that could be used to solve the problem, Seligmans professor suggested that Seligman and his partner Steve Maier undertake their own research. Seligman and Maiers research revealed the phenomenon now known as learned helplessness. By illustrating how animals or people become emotionally paralyzed when they believe that their efforts in a particular situation are futile, this and subsequent studies revealed the error of the reigning stimulusresponse theory. They also presented a formidable challenge to behaviorisms mechanistic view of the mind. Meanwhile, a much larger challenge was taking shape in the field of psychologyacademic psychologists were being outnumbered by clinical psychologists. Seligman noted that psychology was fast becoming almost synonymous with mental illness, and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) was becoming concerned exclusively about mental disorders, rather than health. Seligman realized that learning about mental and emotional problems was necessary and useful, but believed that this emphasis had done harm as well. As he observed, People want more than just to correct their weaknesses. They want lives imbued with meaning . . . The time has finally arrived for a science that seeks to understand positive emotion, build strength and virtue, and provide guideposts for finding what Aristotle called the good life. Seligman began studying the science of how people could add meaning to their lives. He developed a discipline he called Positive Psychology; this is arguably his greatest contribution to his profession. For more information on Martin Seligman, see his Learned Optimism (New York: Free Press, 1990) and Authentic Happiness (New York: Free Press, 2002).
Hasty conclusion
Hasty conclusions are those drawn without enough evidence. Consider this case: A student often leaves the door to his room open and many people have access to the room. One day he discovers an expensive pen is missing from his desk. He concludes that his roommate took it. This
Errors of judgment
is a hasty conclusion. Its possible that his roommate stole the pen. Its also possible that someone else stole it. Or perhaps he lost or misplaced the pen. In many cases, two or more conclusions are possible. Critical thinking means having a good reason for choosing one over the others. If no such reason exists, suspend judgment and seek more evidence.
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Unwarranted assumption
Assumptions are ideas we take for granted. They differ from conclusions in an important way: Assumptions are implied rather than expressed. In many cases we make them unconsciously. Consider this exchange: Sally: You say that discrimination against women is a thing of the past. Thats just not true. Ralph: It certainly is true. I read it in a magazine. Ralph may not be aware of it, but he is assuming that whatever appears in a magazine is necessarily true. This assumption takes too much for granted, so it is unwarranted. Theres nothing necessarily wrong with assumptions. Making them allows us to conduct our daily activities efficiently. When you got up this morning, you assumed there would be enough hot water to take a shower. If you drove to school, you probably assumed that your car would start and your instructors would hold classes. Unless there was a good reason not to make these assumptionsfor example, if you knew your water heater was brokenthey would be valid. The assumptions that hinder critical thinking are unwarranted assumptions. They prevent us from asking useful questions and exploring possibilities. For example, if a student assumes that it is the teachers job to make class interesting, she is unlikely to ask herself, What responsibility do my fellow students and I have to make class interesting? Here are some common unwarranted assumptions:
Unwarranted Assumption Peoples senses are always trustworthy. Having reasons proves that one has reasoned carefully. Conviction constitutes proof. Familiar ideas are more valid than unfamiliar ideas. Why Unwarranted Senses are imperfect and can mislead us. Some reasons are not thought out at all but simply borrowed from others. It is possible to be passionately committed to a mistaken idea. If we hear a false statement often enough, it becomes familiar and we naturally regard it as true.
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(continued) Unwarranted Assumption If one event occurs soon after another, it must have been caused by the other. The way things are is the way they are supposed to be. Whatever hasnt been done is impossible to do. Why Unwarranted Sometimes the closeness in time is merely coincidental.
Because we humans are an imperfect species, what we invent or establish is almost always open to improvement. According to Edward Karsner and James Newman, the first steam vessel to cross the Atlantic carried, as part of its cargo, a book which proved that it was impossible for a steam vessel to cross anything, much less the Atlantic (Larrabee, 91). The author of that book obviously assumed that what hadnt yet been done couldnt be done. All day long, every day of our lives, we read and hear other peoples ideas. Those we hear only once may be quickly forgotten, but those we hear many times are reinforced, especially when we repeat them in our own words. In time we may mistakenly regard them as uniquely ours. Nations and cultures can be as easily mistaken as individuals. History is filled with examples, such as the popular notion that high self-esteem is correlated with success and low selfesteem with failure. Harold Stevenson and James Stigler tested this idea in a study of elementary students from Japan, Taiwan, China, and the United States. All the Asian students outperformed the Americans academically yet scored lower in self-esteem (Stevenson). Moreover, in 1990 a group of scholars, many of them favorably disposed to the self-esteem theory, reviewed the research on self-esteem and found, in the words of sociologist Neil Smelser, the associations between self-esteem and its expected consequences are mixed, insignificant, or absent (Kohn, 274).
Because assumptions are unstated and often unconscious, they are difficult to detect. When you look for assumptions in your own thinking and writing, go beyond what you consciously thought or wrote. Ask yourself, What am I not expressing but merely taking for granted?
Errors of judgment
The Distinction The distinction between the person and the idea Why Necessary
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Critical thinkers judge an idea on its own meritsnot on the celebrity status or expertise of the person expressing it. Though experts usually have more informed views than novices, experts can be wrong and novices can have genuine insights. Some people pile assertion upon assertion without evidence. If these people are articulate, the casual thinker may be persuaded. Critical thinkers judge ideas on how well supportedand supportablethey are. This is more important than how well the idea is expressed. Were naturally attracted to the familiar. Its easy to believe that reasoning is valid merely because weve heard it many times. Critical thinkers, however, are not swayed by familiarity. Uncritical thinkers tend to think that once they have determined a persons philosophical, political, or religious perspective, they need not consider the merits of the persons argument. Such thinkers are fond of saying Ive got her peggedshes a liberal (or a Democrat or a Republican) and then closing their minds to the persons ideas. Critical thinkers know that an argument deserves to be considered on its merits, regardless of who advances it. Uncritical thinkers tend to ignore this distinction. They might say something always occurs when the evidence supports only often, or they might say it never occurs when the evidence supports only seldom. Critical thinkers are careful to make the distinction.
The distinction between familiarity and validity The distinction between categorizing the person and evaluating the argument
Oversimplification
Theres nothing wrong with simplifying. In elementary school especially, teachers simplify their subjects. Professionals such as engineers and chemists simplify to communicate with people untrained in their fields. Oversimplification differs from simplification. Oversimplification omits essential information or ignores complexity. Consider this idea: High school teachers have it made. Theyre through at three oclock every day and work only nine months of the year. Though there is some truth to this statement, its inaccurate. Teachers often prepare four or five classes a day, grade homework, keep records, chaperone activities, and advise organizations. These activities often occur outside the normal eight-hour day. In addition, teachers are often required to take summer courses. Oversimplification distorts reality and confuses discussion.
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exercise 49
Consider each of the seven errors of judgment. Think of a time when youve committed each one and describe the situation. Explain how you reacted and what events followed. Then decide how you might have avoided each error and how the consequences might have been different. Double standard
Irrelevant criterion
Overgeneralizing or stereotyping
Hasty conclusion
Unwarranted assumption
Errors of judgment
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Oversimplification
exercise 50
Read each of the following passages carefully, looking for errors of judgment. Remember that such errors are sometimes implied rather than stated directly. When you find an error, explain it in the space provided.
A.
Sue: My English instructor makes us rewrite any composition that contains more than three errors in grammar or usage. And shes always demanding that we do better in our writing. I think she dislikes us. Ellen: I know what you mean. The professors at this college seem to think its Harvard.
B.
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Morris: Did you notice all the people using food stamps in the grocery store this morning? Olaf: Yeah. It seems everybody has them these days. Its the fashionable thing to plead poverty. Morris: That one woman was dressed well, too. Ill bet her lazy husband was waiting for her outside in a big fancy car. Olaf: It makes me sick, people like that leeching on society. Darwin had the right idea: survival of the fittest. If people cant survive on their own, let them suffer.
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exercise 50 (cont.)
C.
Times change, and values in one age are different from values in another. Parents fail to realize this. Thats why they keep harping about avoiding alcohol and drugs and postponing sexual involvement. They think that what was right for them is right for us.
D.
Boris: Can you believe the price of textbooks? The average amount I spent for a book this semester was $80, and a good half of my books are paperbacks. Elaine: Everybodys complaining about it. When the cost of books keeps going up and up, theres only one explanation: The authors and publishers are getting greedy. Boris: Yeah, and you know one of my instructors has the nerve to make us buy a book he wrote. And get this: He teaches Ethics! Elaine: Wow.
E.
Zeb: Did you read the latest about Senator Fosdick? The candidate running against him claimed he knowingly received illegal campaign contributions. Clarissa: How ironic. Senator Fosdick has been talking about campaign reform for years. Now it turns out hes as big a crook as the rest of them. What a hypocrite.
F.
Cynthia: A study has shown that as the speed limit has been raised, theres been an increase in traffic fatalities. Mark: Speed limits dont cause traffic fatalities. Careless drivers do.
Errors of reaction
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exercise 50 (cont.)
G.
Abdul: Any athlete who physically attacks his coach shouldnt just receive a fine. He should be arrested and charged with assault. Simon: I disagree. No player attacks a coach without good reason. Besides, coaches are too negative, telling players what to do and yelling at them when they make mistakes. That behavior invites physical attack.
H.
Saul: Hey, Paul, why so glum? Paul: I cant believe it. I got a D on that paper after I spent four hours on it. The instructor must really have it in for me.
I.
Juwan: Ever since I arrived on campus last month, Ive been appalled by the manners of the students here. Theyre unbelievably boorish. Samantha: Right. And the townspeople are so unfriendly. I dont know why I ever picked this college. Juwan: Oh, Im not sorry I came. The professors are helpful and encouraging. They go out of their way to explain things.
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Errors of reaction
Errors of reaction occur when we express a viewpoint and someone reacts negatively. They are defensive reactions that preserve our self-image and provide an excuse to maintain our view. The following errors of reaction are the most common.
Explaining away
Ron has been a marijuana smoker for several years. He maintains that marijuana is harmless. Last night he and a group of friends were talking, and one of them mentioned
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that his health instructor had distributed an article from the Journal of the American Medical Association. That article reported the results of a clinical study of marijuana use. It concluded that contrary to what is frequently reported, we have found the effect of marijuana to be not merely that of a mild intoxicant which causes a slight exaggeration of usual adolescent behavior, but a specific and separate clinical syndrome. The main effects the study noted were disturbed awareness of the self, apathy, confusion and poor reality testing. Rons reply was heated. Those articles are written by a bunch of guys who never smoked a joint. Theyre guessing, fantasizing, or worse, making up scare stories for parents to feed their kiddies. Ive smoked pot for years, and I can tell you its had no effect on me. Ron found the prospect of being wrong about marijuana and the possibility of injuring himself too unpleasant to consider. This is understandable. Still, critical thinking would suggest that he at least read the article and examine the evidence. Instead, he resorted to a tactic long used in uncritical thinking: explain it away. When people explain away challenges to their ideas, they dont change reality. They just postpone dealing with it. The longer they postpone, the more painful the experience. If you wish to avoid such results, face unpleasant ideas directly and honestly.
Errors of reaction
Melissa argues that it makes no sense for students to vote while theyre away at college. The process of obtaining an absentee ballot is time consuming, she says. And with so many people voting, a students vote isnt that important. Agnes challenges Melissas view. I voted by absentee ballot last year, she says, and the process was simple. Agnes adds that some elections are close enough to be decided by a few thousand votes. Whats more, hundreds of thousands of college students are eligible to vote. Now Melissa is embarrassed. The weakness of her view has been exposed in front of other students. She launches an attack on Agnes. You have no business lecturing me about right and wrong. Just last week you cut Fridays classes so you could go home early, and then you lied to your instructors about being sick. Stop being a hypocrite, Agnes. Even if this attack on Agnes is true, it has nothing to do with the issue of college students voting. Its merely a way for Melissa to save face. How would Melissa respond if she practiced critical thinking? She would focus on Agness idea rather than on Agnes as a person. And since the idea seems reasonable, Melissa would probe it further before dismissing it. She could say, Perhaps Im mistaken. What steps are needed to vote by absentee ballot? Then if Agness answer showed that the process was simple, Melissa could respond, I guess youre right. By acting this way, Melissa would not lose face. In fact, the other students might be impressed at her flexibility and willingness to admit a mistake.
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Straw man
This error involves make-believe. Specifically, the error means pretending others have made statements that they didnt make, and then denouncing them for making the statements. Imagine this situation: Someone has proposed that your schools attendance policy be revised to permit unlimited absences from class without penalty. You argue against the proposal, claiming that students who attend class sporadically slow the pace of learning for others and degrade the quality of class discussion. Then someone responds to your argument as follows: I take exception to your view. You say that adults should be treated as children, that students must leave their constitutional rights at the college gate, and that individuals whose work obligations sometimes force them to miss class are inferior creatures deserving of punishment. Those stirring words, which bear no relation to reality, constitute the error of straw man. They attribute to you something you did not say. To avoid the error of straw man, listen to or read others arguments carefully. Focus your criticism on what was actually said or clearly implied.
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In all these errors of reaction, ego gets in the way of critical thinking. Its in your long-term interest to acknowledge error and learn from it. Doing so promotes knowledge and wisdom.
exercise 51
Consider each of the following situations, being alert for errors of reaction. Such errors are often implied rather than stated directly, so you are likely to find hints rather than clear-cut evidence of error. Using a separate sheet of paper, identify whatever hints you find and explain why you believe they point to an error of reaction.
A.
A woman named Elvira Arellano was deported to Mexico, leaving her young son behind. Unlike her, he is a citizen because he was born in the U.S. In discussing this case, Rowena stated her belief that the law should be changed so that only individuals born to parents who are legally in the U.S. should receive automatic citizenship. Raoul responded, You are saying that Elviras son and thousands of others like him are lacking in dignity and unworthy of basic human rights. That is a shameful view to hold.
B.
One of the many proposals for tax reform is the flat tax, which would do away with many of the present categories of deduction and tax everyones income at the same ratefor example, 10 percent. Thus, someone who earned $25,000 a year would pay $2,500 in taxes, and someone who paid $250,000 would pay $25,000. In a campaign debate one candidate for the U.S. Senate endorsed the flat tax, and his opponent immediately accused him of being an elitist who was more concerned with the interests of the wealthy than the interests of common working people.
C.
In a classroom discussion about the situation in the Mideast, Bertrand made the following statement: Recent history has proven that the U.S. is too quick to reject diplomacy and wage war. The world would be safer and more peaceful today if our leaders had resisted the urge to attack Iraq and, instead, had sat down with Saddam and with the leaders of Iran and Syria and given trust and reason a chance. I challenge those who disagree with me to disprove the wisdom of this approach to international relations.
exercise 52
Consider each of the four errors of reaction. Think of a time when you committed each and describe the situation. Explain how you reacted and what consequences followed. Then decide how you might have avoided each error and how the consequences might have been
Errors of reaction
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exercise 52 (cont.)
different. (If you cant think of an error of your own, identify one you encountered through reading or observation.) Explaining away
Straw man
exercise 53
Many logicians use the traditional term logical fallacies to refer to the errors in thinking discussed in this chapter. In some cases, they also use different terms for the specific errors discussed here. Because others may use those terms in discussing issues with you, it is helpful to be familiar with them. Do a Google search using the search term logical fallacies and visit at least five websites, taking note of the terms and descriptions of specific fallacies. Then compare those terms and descriptions with the ones used in this chapter, noting similarities and differences. Finally, meet with a group of two or three classmates, compare your findings, and prepare a group report to the class.
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exercise 54
Reflect on the following observation, then record your thoughts in the space provided.
OBSERVATION
Psychologist Abraham Maslow explained the hierarchy of human needs by using the figure of a pyramid (see illustration). The lower needs, he believed, must be met before the higher needs are pursued. At the bottom of his pyramid are physiological needs (food, clothing, shelter). Then comes the need for belongingness and love. Above that comes self-esteem, then aesthetic and intellectual needs. At the top, representing the highest need, is self-actualization.
Selfactualization Aesthetic and intellectual needs The need for self-esteem Belongingness and love Physiological needs (food, clothing, shelter)
Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl challenged this order. He argued that selftranscendenceforgetting about self and seeking challenging tasks to add meaning to ones existenceis the highest human need. He also believed that selfactualization cannot be pursued but comes only by achieving self-transcendence. Several decades have passed since these two views were first presented, and in the United States Maslows has been more influential.
REFLECTION
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exercise 55
Should illegal aliens be accorded the same rights as U.S. citizens? The debate over this issue has become intense since the 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center. Analyze this issue using the five-step approach detailed in Chapter Five. Following are two opposing viewpoints on this issue to get you started. Laws Are Meant to Be Observed By Kareem Ali An alien in a country is a person who lives there but whose home is in another country. An illegal alien is one who entered the country where he is living without having gone through the established legal process for doing so. Substituting the term undocumented worker is an exercise in linguistic sleight-of-hand, the equivalent of calling a shoplifter a non-paying customer. To paraphrase Shakespeare, you can call a rose by another name but it remains a rose. Illegal is not a pretty word, but it accurately defines a situation in which a law is broken. Entering a country without fulfilling the requirements set by that country is as illegal as taking an item from a store without paying for it. The law makes provision for people to come to this country and become citizens or, if they wish, simply to work or study for a time and then to return home. The process is orderly and fair. Of course, time and paperwork are involved but that is unavoidable. It is certainly not an excuse for people to flout the law. The number of illegal aliens in the United States is estimated at between eight and thirteen million individuals. To be sure, most simply wish to pursue a better
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exercise 55 (cont.)
life. But some are criminals or terrorists who pose a threat to our citizens and our way of life. A movement has arisen in this country to ignore or even approve illegal immigration. Supporters of that movement believe that people here illegally should be granted the same rights as those who honored the immigration laws and even the rights of citizenship, including voting rights. Some even would approve in-state tuition preferences. This would mean that an illegal immigrant in California would pay significantly less to attend college there than a U.S.-born citizen of Nevada or Oregon! Despite their good intentions, people who approve illegal immigration are undermining our legal system, supporting the individuals engaged in smuggling in immigrants (many of whom are also drug smugglers), creating a burden on the American taxpayer, and threatening homeland security. Their efforts should be strongly opposed. Send Me Your Poor By Maria Maloney To begin with, the term illegal alien is abhorrent. Illegal suggests that the persons existence is somehow suspect. And calling human beings aliens puts them in the same category as imaginary beings from another planet. Thats offensive! Lets be clear about this. This issue concerns flesh and blood people like you and me who have fled poverty or oppression in search of a better life. True, they didnt fill out all the forms required by the immigration bureaucracy and get the required visa, but thats not reason enough to imprison or deport them. The vast majority of undocumented individuals in the United States are hardworking people. Not only are they willing to perform menial work that others wont domany companies are eager to employ them. And heres another dirty secret: some of the politicians who shout the loudest about securing our borders conveniently ignore the immigration status of the nannies, maids, and gardeners they hire. Debate about undocumented individuals often focuses on whether they are entitled to the rights enjoyed by U.S. citizens. Some writers have argued for denying them drivers licenses, voting rights, access to healthcare facilities, and education. That position is exclusionary, vindictive, and inhumane. What makes a country great is not the size of its military arsenal, the extent of its natural resources, or the monetary wealth of its citizens. No, what makes a country great is the depth of its compassion towards the poor and needy. If America wishes to merit the title great, it must accept all who reside within its borders regardless of how they happen to have arrived.
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All Americans would do well to remember the words inscribed on our Statue of Liberty: Give me your tired, your poor,/ Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,/ The wretched refuse of your teeming shore./ Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,/ I lift my lamp beside the golden door!
exercise 56
Analyze ONE of the following arguments using the five-step approach detailed in Chapter Five. In conducting your research, be especially careful to look for any errors in thinking and examine viewpoints that differ from the one presented.
DISPLAY THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
Let me make it clear at the outset that I am not insensitive to the feelings of religious minorities. My great-grandparents came to this country from Ireland as young children in the 1890s. They attended public schools in New York City. Their teachers often read from the King James (Protestant) Bible and even led the children in the recitation of the Protestant version of the Lords Prayer. If Catholics (like my grandparents) or Jews objected, they were told to get used to it. That wasnt acceptable then and its not now. Nevertheless, I am in favor of posting the Ten Commandments in every public school classroom in this country. Is this a contradiction? Not at all, because I favor posting other religious/moral codes alongside the Ten Commandments. Does that mean the Muslim, Buddhist, Hindu, and Native American equivalents of the Ten Commandments? Absolutely. The codes of atheistic or agnostic groups, such as Secular Humanists, too? Of course. If this approach were taken, no students or parents would have reason to be offended. No ones beliefs would be excluded. No one would be given prominence. Some would argue that having no religious or moral codes on the wall is better than having many of them there. I say that the very purpose of the school is to lead students out of ignorance and into knowledge. Banishing all codes dignifies ignorance. Religion has been among the most powerful forces in human history. So have moral codes. Putting reminders of both in prominent places in institutions of learning may not be a panacea. But if students happen to look at them, they might notice how similar most of them are. A few students might even get around to thinking about the connection between morality, law, and a safe society. I can think of worse things.
THE HIGH COST OF POLICING THE WORLD
No sensible person would deny that the U.S.-led attack on Iraq has benefited the people of that country. Saddam and his brutal followers were a cancer that
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exercise 56 (cont.)
needed to be excised. Unfortunately, the success of that operation is likely to embolden the militaristic-minded to see it as the model for dealing with problems in other countries, in other words, for the United States to become the police force of the world. Here are four good reasons for such thinking to be rejected. First, for the United States to take on the role of the worlds police force would divert attention from domestic problems. These include needed improvements in public education, poverty, and joblessness in the inner city; homelessness and substance abuse; the destruction of the environment; and the limitations of present health insurance coverage. Second, the use of U.S. troops in foreign policing operations would put them in harms way. The nature of such operations puts restrictions on a soldiers ability to defend himself or herself. Whereas in military actions they can attack the enemy, in police actions they can only react, and even then may use only minimal force. Moreover, if members of the armed services are suitable in the role of police officers (a debatable matter), the place to use them is not in foreign lands but in the United States for the protection of our northern and southern borders. Third, for the United States to police the world would place an immense financial burden on taxpayers. It is expensive enough to deploy troops in a single foreign campaign. The cost of doing so in many places at the same time would be prohibitive. Fourth, if the United States assumed the role of police force to the world, the worlds reaction would be to hate us even more than at present. The only thing worse than a meddler in others affairs is an armed meddler. And that is just what we would be.
HOW THE MEDIA DISTORT REALITY
TV and movie apologists are forever telling us that we have no business criticizing them because they are only holding a mirror up to reality. Many people buy that explanation, but they shouldnt. It would be more accurate to say the media hold a magnifying glass to carefully selected realitiesnamely, the most outrageous and sensational events of the day, such as the tragic deaths of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Princess Diana, or the trials of celebrities such as O. J. Simpson, Kobe Bryant, and Michael Jackson. Consider how this happens. The first platoon of media people report the latest sensational story as it unfolds, squeezing each new development for all the airtime or newsprint it will yield. Meanwhile, agents and attorneys are negotiating the sale of movie and TV rights to the story. The sleazier the story, the greater the payoff. After the movie is produced, every situation comedy, detective show, and western drama builds an episode around the successful theme. In this way a single despicable, disgusting actreal or imaginedcan generate months of sensational media fare.
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exercise 56 (cont.)
In short, the media exploit our social problems for ratings, feed us a steady diet of debasing material, celebrate irresponsible behavior, and then have the audacity to blame parents and teachers for the social problems that result.
exercise 57
What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Paul Vitz and Martin Seligman presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
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quiz
Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
1.
Explain each of the following terms and describe how errors in the category affect the thinking process: Errors of perception Errors of judgment Errors of reaction
2.
Define each of the following errors, and explain when it occurs in the thought process: Double standard Shifting the burden of proof Unwarranted assumption Mine is better thinking Gullibility and skepticism Irrelevant criterion Pretending to know Attacking the person Oversimplification Preconception for or against change Straw man Explaining away Selective perception
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Hasty conclusion Overgeneralizing or stereotyping Failure to make a distinction Preconception Either/or thinking
IN THIS CHAPTER
Thinking critically about . . . everyday problems . . . relationships . . . careers . . . ethical judgments . . . commercials . . . print advertising . . . the Internet . . . TV programming
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exercise 58
List all the situations, processes, procedures, and implementations that have caused you annoyance, aggravation, or frustration recently. Add to this list the complaints your have heard others make about such things.
exercise 59
Select one of the items you listed in the previous exercise and apply the problem-solving approach explained in this section. Record all your thoughts. (If the space provided is insufficient, continue your work on a separate sheet of paper.)
exercise 60
Two main causes of divorce are carelessness in selecting a marriage partner and ignorance of the demands of marriage and parenthood. In many cases, the home, the school, and the church are not meeting the challenge of preparing young people for marriage. Treat this situation as a problem and solve it on a separate sheet of paper, using the problem-solving approach explained in this section. Use a separate sheet of paper for this exercise.
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exercise 61
Do an Internet search using the search term community outreach [name of your city and state]; for example, use community outreach Boston MA. Examine the websites your search produces, noting programs that address problems that interest you. On a separate sheet of paper, write a brief description of each of those problems and be prepared to share your descriptions in class.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF OPRAH WINFREY Sages have always taught that hardship and suffering need not conquer us but can, instead, inspire us to achieve. There is no better example of that wisdom than the life of Oprah Winfrey. Born out of wedlock and molested as a child by a cousin, an uncle, and a friend of her family, by age 13 she became so rebellious that she was sent to a detention home. However, no beds were available, and Winfrey went to live with her father, whom she recalls as not accept[ing] anything less than what he thought was my best. His strict discipline succeeded in bringing out her exceptional talent. Since she got her first broadcasting job at age 17, Winfreys life has been a series of achievements. In 1984 she began hosting AM Chicago; in 1985 the show was renamed The Oprah Winfrey Show; and by 1986 it was the number one syndicated talk show in America. Since then the show has remained at the top of the TV ratings. She has won Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for her acting role in The Color Purple, and critical acclaim for her role in Native Son. She became the first woman to own and produce her own talk-show. She founded a successful magazine and book club. Time magazine named her one of the most influential people of the twentieth century. Oprah Winfreys contributions to society have gone far beyond having a television show. She has been active in the movement to keep children safe from predators and has given millions of dollars to education and leadership programs in this country and around the world. Winfrey credits her success to education and to being honest with herself. Although she is the first African-American woman to become a billionaire, and remains one of the wealthiest women in the world, her life and work are not about making money. She says that money has never been the focus. . . . I would do this job, and take on a second job to make ends meet if nobody paid me. Just for the opportunity to do it. Her real mission in life is to help people change their lives for the better. And her central message is, It doesnt matter who you are, where you come from. The ability to triumph begins with you. Always. For more about Oprah Winfrey, see www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/ win0bio-1.
are so absorbed in themselves and their rights that they ignore other peoples rights. Such people need to give less attention to asserting their rights and more to accepting their responsibilities.
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Responsibility is an important ingredient in relationships. For example, teachers are responsible for making lessons clear and challenging, offering constructive criticism, and testing and grading fairly. Students, in turn, are responsible for completing assignments on time, paying attention in class, and accepting criticism graciously and thoughtfully. Similarly, friends and family members have the mutual responsibility of giving support, encouragement, and loyalty, as well as consolation in times of sorrow.
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5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
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12.
13.
14.
15.
wait to say these words, the harder it is to say them. Develop the habit of saying them as soon as you realize you were wrong. And if you feel you were only partly wrong, apologize for that part. Forgive when you are wronged. Forgiving others can be even more difficult than apologizing, particularly if the other person has not apologized for having wronged you. But without forgiveness, resentments remain, prevent relationships from healing, and harm you. A character in Mitch Alboms novel The Five People You Meet in Heaven explains why: Holding anger is a poison. It eats you from inside. We think that hating is a weapon that attacks the person who harmed us. But hatred is a curved blade. And the harm we do, we do to ourselves (Albom, 141). Be a peacemaker. When people you know and care about are having difficulties in their relationships, and one or both discuss the problem with you, it is often difficult to know what to say. The wrong words may worsen the situation and even cause one or both people to resent you. If you cant say something that will promote understanding and healing, say only I care about both of you and I hope you find a way to restore your relationship. Meet your responsibilities to others. In all your relationships, be aware of your obligations to the other people and do your best to meet those obligations. Look for opportunities to be kind. To be worthy of the greatest respect from those around you, follow Charles Kingsleys advice and live each day in such a way that when you close your eyes at night you can honestly say, I have made one human being at least a little wiser, a little happier or a little better this day.
exercise 62
Review the fifteen guidelines for successful relationships and list the ones which you are in the habit of observing and the ones on which you still need to work.
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exercise 63
Consider your most significant teaching/learning or business (that is, employer/employee) relationships and decide which one is least successful. Describe what is wrong with that relationship and explain which of the guidelines for successful relationships can help to improve it. (Note: In some situations, several rules will apply.)
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Merely loving something about a field may not qualify you for candidacy in a program of studies. You may also need to demonstrate, through academic achievement or in some other way, that you have certain aptitudes or skills. The occupation may involve more or different tasks than you are aware of. And some of them you may find boring or unfulfilling. The job market in the field may be poor. Thus, after devoting many years to formal education and incurring tens of thousands of dollars in expense, you may not be able to find employment in the field. The practice of law is seldom as glamorous as courtroom dramas make it seem. Many lawyers spend little, if any, time in the courtroom; their jobs consist mostly of working with legal documents such as contracts. And even courtroom lawyers spend more time poring over law books than questioning witnesses or delivering dramatic summations to juries. In addition, the preparation to be a lawyer is long and demandingfour years of college, followed by the rigors of law school. Numerous careers associated with law, such as police officer, court reporter, and paralegal, require considerably less preparation. One could also be a journalist specializing in legal matters. Not everyone who loves animals can meet the science requirements for veterinary medicine. Even those who can meet them may have difficulty gaining acceptance to a veterinary science program because relatively few colleges offer that specialty. Yet there are many other careers that people who love animals might considerfor example, animal trainer, animal breeder, or veterinary technician. Similarly, someone who likes to help people has many more career choices than social worker, including nurse, guidance counselor, and occupational therapist. And someone who loves food should not limit his or her focus to the career of chef but also consider other food-related careers, such as nutritionist or restaurant manager, or a position in the sales or marketing division of a food company.
A sensible approach
The most sensible approach to choosing a career is to assess your interests, identify some broad career areas that seem suited to your aptitudes and skills, and then investigate those areas and decide which you should consider. The best starting point for your investigation into career possibilities is your campus career center. Peter Vogt of MonsterTRAK.com, the college division of the career website Monster.com, offers seven reasons for be-
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exercise 64
Visit your campus Career Center and ask for an explanation of the various services provided there. Then in the space below record what you learned and the name of the person you spoke to.
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exercise 65
Visit the U.S. Department of Labor website and examine the Occupational Outlook Handbook. Begin by checking the search tips in the middle of the home page. Then examine the various features and record your findings in the space provided.
exercise 66
Visit the Minnesota Careers website, take the interest-assessment test, and read the information about the occupations associated with your descriptive term. Record your findings in the space provided.
exercise 67
Visit the Career and College Planning Web Resources list at http://www.khake.com/page51.html, scan the links, and click on those that might be useful to you. List below the ones that you decide are most useful.
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exercise 68
Visit Google and conduct a search using the search term personal interest assessment. Sample at least three of your findings and decide how useful they are. Describe each below and explain your assessment of each.
* For a more detailed treatment of this subject, see Vincent Ryan Ruggiero, Thinking Critically About Ethical Issues, 6th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2004).
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actions, and that is irresponsible. That is precisely why an international court found the Nazis guilty of crimes against humanity and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 required the owners of establishments that serve the public to treat all patrons equally. Many similar examples could be cited. Robbery, sexual harassment, spousal abuse, rape, child molestation, and murder may be prompted by powerful feelings, urges, and impulses. Nevertheless, they harm others and violate their rights. That is why they are against the law.
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good thinking!
THE STORY OF CHIARA LUBICH When the bombs were dropping on her native Trent in Italy during World War II, young Chiara Lubich and her companions sat huddled in bomb shelters reading the Gospel. Certain phrases had special meaning for them, especially Love one another as I have loved you. They decided that love is supposed to be lived, and not just talked about. Thus began the Focolare (hearth) Movement. The name is apt, for this movement warms and nurtures the cause of brotherhood. The movements main focus is the spirituality of unity. Members combine passion for their own religious beliefs with deep respect for people of different beliefs and no beliefs. The movement has developed dialog relationships not only with the members of the various Christian denominations, but also with Jews, Buddhists, Muslims, and Hindus, as well as agnostics and atheists. These relationships go far beyond listening politely to one another. They aim at discovering common values and finding ways to express those values together. The Focolare Movement has established little towns that serve as models for a new humanity. There are twenty such towns and they are found on every continent. The people who live and visit there subscribe to the law of reciprocal love. In Brazil and Argentina the movement developed an economic system known as the economy of sharing. In this system, participating businesses use one-third of their profits for capital reinvestment, one-third to raise the standard of living of the less privileged, and one-third for structures such as community centers in which the values of sharing and harmonious living are taught. More than 700 businesses are now participating in those and other countries. In 1977 Chiara Lubich was awarded the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion. For more information on Chiara Lubich, see www.rc.net/focolare/chiara.htm.
when they do not. The three criteria are obligations, moral ideals, and consequences. Lets look more closely at each: Obligations. Human relationships create various kinds of obligations, all of which place requirements or restrictions on peoples behavior. Contractual obligations require people to honor whatever terms they have agreed to honor. Employment obligations make demands on both employers and employees. Professional obligations require that clients
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or patients interests be served. Obligations of friendship demand mutual support, encouragement, and the keeping of confidences. Marital obligations demand mutual love and honor and faithful devotion in sickness and in health.
Moral ideals. Moral ideals, also known as virtues, are standards of excellence in behavior. There are many such ideals, the best known of which are justice, fairness, and honesty. Other important ideals include kindness, compassion, and forgiveness. Consequences. This is the broadest of the criteria for making ethical judgments. All actions produce consequences. Some consequences are positive, others negative. Some impact the person who takes the action, others the people who are acted upon. (The effects may be physical, emotional, spiritual, social, and/or economic.) Similarly, some consequences occur immediately, whereas others are delayed for months and even years.
various consequencessubtle as well as obvious, long-term as well as immediatethat each action would likely have on the people involved. Caution: Be sure to consider all possible actions and not just the one you prefer. Also, resist the temptation to ignore unpleasant consequences.
Step 3. Decide which action honors the obligations and the moral
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ideals and produces the most desirable consequences for the various people involved. In cases where a conflict exists between two obligations, two ideals, or an obligation and an ideal, decide which is the more important. Also, when you must choose between two good actions, choose the one that represents the greater good. Similarly, when your only choice is between two harmful actions, choose the one that does less harm.
A sample case
Luke, a senior journalism student, is facing a dilemma. Earlier this term, his final semester, he was given the major assignment of doing a feature story on an interesting person of his choosing. The assignment is due tomorrow. However, he hasnt yet decided whom to interview, let alone conducted the interview and written the story. (One reason is that he
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his case to the instructor and hope for a lenient penalty. One clear consequence is that he could take satisfaction in his honesty and willingness to accept responsibility for his laziness. Beyond that, the consequences are uncertain. He could receive a low passing grade and graduate on time, or he could fail the course and have to wait until next year to graduate. If Luke submits the article he found on the Internet as his own and his deception is not discovered, he would graduate on time. However, if the instructor discovered the plagiarism, Luke could fail the course and even (depending on the colleges conduct code) be expelled. Creating an imaginary person and writing a bogus feature story is more likely to fool Lukes instructor than plagiarizing an article. However, the consequences of this action could be harmful in the long-term. Luke might be tempted to adopt it as a strategy for meeting deadlines after he graduates and is working as a journalist. And if he gave in to that temptation, he would run the risk of ruining his career. (If this seems overly dramatic, be assured that it is not. In recent years, a number of journalists have suffered professional disgrace when their dishonesty was discovered.)
Step 3. In this case, the ethical judgment is clear: both plagiarizing and
creating a bogus story are unethical responses to the situation. Although we might understand how a weak person might choose one of these responses, there is no way to justify either response ethically.
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exercise 69
Select one of the following ethical issues and examine it using the three-step approach for evaluating ethical issues. Record all your work on a separate sheet of paper.
A.
Harry and Ruth are a financially successful married couple aged 53 and 50, respectively. Harry is the president of his own company. Once a fashion designer, Ruth no longer works but maintains an active social schedule. They live in a large house on Lake Michigan in suburban Chicago. Recently, Ruths 80-year-old mother, Angela, suffered a fall in her modest apartment, where she had lived alone for the last ten years since her husband died. Because Angela suffers from osteoporosis, the doctors recommended that she no longer live alone. As an only child, Ruth had to decide whether to let her mother move into her home or move her to an assisted living facility. After talking the situation over with Harry, Ruth decided on the assisted living facility.
B.
Lawrence Preston is a first-term congressman. The theme of the campaign that got him elected was to take government out of the hands of the special interest groups and return it to the people. Since taking office, however, he has been under considerable pressure from several special interest groups to endorse bills he believes are against the best interests of his constituents. He has asked two senior members of his party for their advice and they said: Look at it this way, Larry. In order to represent your constituents interests, youve got to stay in office. And youll never get re-elected without the support of the special interest groups. So youd better do as they say for a while. Postpone being a hero for a few terms. He decides to take their advice.
C.
Ramona is a 35-year-old police woman who looks no older than 25. Her latest assignment is to go undercover and pose as a student at a university because the police suspect that a major drug operation is being run there. After a month on the job, she has made a number of friends among the students and faculty. Though she has no evidence that any of them are involved in the drug operation, she begins to feel guilty about not being able to be honest with them. Is it morally acceptable for her to continue on the assignment?
exercise 70
Find an ethical issue currently being discussed on campus. Analyze the issue, using the three-step approach for evaluating ethical issues. Detail your findings below.
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exercise 70 (cont.)
Bandwagon
This technique creates the impression that everyone is buying the product or service. It appeals to the viewers urge to conform.
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Glittering generality
Here the advertiser uses words and phrases to imply excellence and uniqueness. Few specifics are offered. Amazing new discovery, now a stunning breakthrough, and unheard-of softness are examples of glittering generality.
Empty comparison
This technique uses words such as better, bigger, and more (as in more economical) without completing the comparison. What, for example, does greater cleaning power mean? Greater than last year? Greater than the competition? Such a statement seems to make a serious claim. And yet we cant hold the advertiser responsible for it because we arent sure just what is being claimed.
Meaningless slogan
Most large companies have slogans designed to create a positive impression. These create pleasant images but promise little. United Airlines slogan, Fly the friendly skies, was designed to associate that airline with friendliness. AT&TThe Right Choice tried to link the act of choosing a telephone company with AT&T. Another slogan is Michelin . . . because so much is riding on your tires, and with these words we see pictures of adorable babies. The aim: to have viewers associate buying Michelin tires with protecting their children.
Testimonial
A testimonial is an endorsement for a product or a service. Actors, musicians, sports figures, and other well-known people are paid substantial sums of money to appear in commercials, lending their credibility and celebrity status to products. The words they speak may be written by someone else, and viewers often know this. Even so, advertisers still hope well associate the celebrity with the product or service.
Transfer
One kind of transfer involves objects instead of people. For example, the Statue of Liberty or the flag could be shown with a product or service. These symbols arouse strong positive feelings in many people. Advertisers want viewers to transfer those feelings to the product. Another common kind of transfer is the voice-over. Here the celebrity never appears in the commercial but acts as off-camera narrator. Even if the viewer cannot name the speaker, the voice may be familiar and make the message more appealing A less obvious use of transfer is the party scene, in which we see people enjoying themselves. The intended message is that the featured producta beer or wine coolermade the occasion enjoyable.
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Misleading statement
This technique uses words that invite viewers to make an erroneous interpretation. Such statements appear to promise something but in reality do not. Long distance telephone ads used to include such statements. One such commercial promises Eight cents a minute for calls over ten minutes. Thats a 50 percent saving. That invites thinkers to conclude that they will save 50 percent on every call. But the ad does not say what calls under ten minutes cost. Is it eight cents? Eighteen cents? Twenty-eight cents? We cant be sure. Another commercial says we can talk up to twenty minutes for ninety-nine cents. Were tempted to think thats a rate of less than five cents a minute. But wait. If the ninety-nine cents is a flat rate, then a five-minute call would cost almost twenty cents a minute and a twominute call would cost almost fifty cents! Thats quite a difference. The standard commercial break consists of four 15-second commercials. The average hour of television has forty-four commercials. If you watch four hours of television a day you encounter 176 appeals designed to short-circuit your critical thinking and create an artificial desire or need. Your best safeguard against this manipulation is to use your critical thinking skills.
exercise 71
Watch at least two hours of television. Pay close attention to the commercials. For this assignment the programs themselves are unimportant. If you wish, do some other activity between commercial breaks. Or tape the program first. As you observe each commercial, note the product or service advertised, the scenes shown, and the people on camera. Also listen for the narrator, music, and other sounds.
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exercise 71 (cont.)
Next, select three of the commercials you observed. On a separate sheet of paper, describe each commercial and then analyze it by answering the following questions: Does the commercial motivate the viewers to think or merely appeal to their emotions? Explain. What hopes, fears, or desires is the commercial designed to exploit? How? What attitudes and values does the commercial promotefor example, attitudes about success and happiness? How does the commercial promote them? Do you share these attitudes and values? Does the commercial use propaganda techniques? How? Would you classify this commercial as fair or unfair persuasion? Whats the evidence for your view?
exercise 72
Calculate the average attention shifts occurring during commercials. Proceed as follows, doing all your work on a separate sheet of paper: 1. Watch any half-hour or hour program. When a commercial break occurs, keep your eyes focused on the television set. Each time a new image appears on the screen, make a tally on the page. (Use a separate sheet of paper for this tally.) When the next commercial appears, resume your tally on a new line. 2. At the end of the program, divide the number of lines (that is, the number of commercials) into the grand total of stroke tallies. The answer will be the average attention shifts occurring during commercials for that program. Record your findings. 3. Comment on your findings. Were you surprised at the number of attention shifts per commercial? Explain. What possible reasons might advertising agencies have for changing images at that rate? Which of those reasons seems most likely? Explain.
exercise 73
This exercise extends the analysis of commercials you did in the previous exercise. Television commercials in the 1950s and 1960s were one minute long and contained relatively few images. Typically, one or more people talked about the product as they displayed it. In the 1970s and 1980s commercials were thirty seconds long and contained more images. Todays commer-
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exercise 73 (cont.)
cials are fifteen seconds in length and contain considerably more images. What effect, if any, could this change have had on academic performance? Job performance? Personal relationships? Explain your thoughts carefully.
exercise 74
In past years the following slogans were popular. Reflect on them and decide if any of them are in any way objectionable. For each one you object to, write a brief explanation of your reaction. Use a separate sheet of paper for this exercise. Just do it. (Nike slogan) Image is everything. (Canon slogan) Life is shortplay hard. (Reebok slogan) On planet Reebok there are no rules. Why ask why? Try Bud Dry. (Budweiser slogan)
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Voice asks, What should I drink? Narrator says, Give your brain a rest. Try some Sprite. Though we carry over 160,000 passengers a day, we serve each of them one at a time. (US Airways slogan) Red Wolf is here. Follow your instincts. (Red Wolf beer slogan) We measure success one investor at a time. (Dean Witter slogan)
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techniques that print ads use are more limited. They cannot use sound or depict motion. They are strictly visual and static. Advertisers know how to make a print ad effective. Every detail must contribute to the overall message. They take great care in choosing every word and picture. Analyzing print ads involves studying these choices. Always ask yourself whether the statements made in print ads make sense. Suppose an auto ad says, Due to unprecedented demand, we are discounting hundreds of cars in our lot. But think about it. If the demand were high, the prices wouldnt be changed. The reality must be that too few people are buying. Also read the fine print. No doubt youve gotten more than one credit card ad that says: Why pay an adjustable rate of 17.9 percent or 18.9 percent when you can pay a low FIXED rate of only 4.9 percent? You may even have gotten some that say NO INTEREST. Both offers certainly sounds like great deals . . . until you look at the fine print and learn that the rate is fixed or non-existent for three months. And after that? Presumably the skys the limit. Look critically at the pictures in print ads, too. Their effect can be even more powerful than words. Cigarette ads have been especially clever in depicting smokers as physically attractive people having a wonderful time as they puff. Other ads are equally clever. A perfume ad pictured a man and a woman in a highly aroused state. The caption read, Unleash your fantasies. The unspoken promise was that using the perfume would heighten sexual fulfillment. Some ads are truly offensive. Another perfume ad showed a beautiful but frightened woman with several men clinging to her. The caption read No one could protect her from herself. And a jeans ad showed a woman being backed into a fence by cowboys. The implied meaning of these ads was that women enjoy being assaulted. Some critics say most advertising is dishonest at best. They are especially troubled by the ads directed at the most vulnerable individuals, children. Defenders of advertising deny the charge, claiming that advertising is simply honest persuasion.
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exercise 75
Visit the magazine section of your campus library. Skim at least a halfdozen magazines, looking for interesting print ads. Dont limit yourself to magazines you already know. The wider your assortment, the more varied the ads youll find. Next, select two ads and describe each one. Then analyze them by answering the questions below. If you wish, attach a photocopy of the ads. Does the advertisement motivate the viewers to think or merely appeal to their emotions? Explain. What hopes, fears, or desires, if any, is the ad designed to exploit? How does it appeal to them? What attitudes or values, if any, does the ad promotefor example, attitudes about success? How does it promote them? Do you share those attitudes and values? What propaganda techniques, if any, are used? Explain how they are used. Would you classify this ad as fair or unfair persuasion? Whats the evidence for your view?
FIRST AD
Description:
Analysis:
SECOND AD
Description:
Analysis:
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How widely shared is this opinion? What do authorities on the subject think of it?
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Knowing whether an opinion is shared by a majority or a minority will not tell you how reasonable it is. Minority opinions are not necessarily inferior. Many great insights can be traced to a single individuals advancing an unpopular view. But for every minority view that eventually is proven right, several are proven wrong. To put it simply, the odds favor the consensus views of informed people. Identify the full range of opinions on the issue by consulting other Internet websites that deal with the topic in question. (Also, consult print and broadcast media sources.) Hesitate to accept any opinion that is rejected by most informed people, as well as any opinion about which informed people are sharply divided.
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gullibility and skepticism, preconception, pretending to know, either/or thinking. Errors of judgment: double standard, irrelevant criterion, overgeneralizing or stereotyping, hasty conclusion, unwarranted assumption, failure to make a distinction, oversimplification. Errors of reaction: explaining away, shifting the burden of proof, attacking the person, straw man.
exercise 76
We tend to take airline safety for granted. But when a serious accident or terrorist attack occurs anywhere in the world, the public begins questioning how safe air travel is in this country. The issue has many facets, including the age and condition of aircraft, the quality of maintenance, and the adequacy of air traffic control procedures and equipment. Investigate this issue on the Internet, using Google and the resource list you developed in Chapter Four. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, report the sites you consulted and what you found there. Finally, apply the critical thinking strategy you have been using throughout this book. State your conclusion and the reasoning that led you to it.
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exercise 77
The issue of term limits concerns whether elected officials at the local, state, and/or national levels should be allowed to remain in office indefinitely or be limited to, say, two or three consecutive terms. Investigate this issue on the Internet, being careful to consider both pro and con arguments. Next, on a separate sheet of paper, report the sites you consulted and what you found there. Finally, apply the critical thinking strategy explained in this chapter to evaluate your findings. State your conclusion and the reasoning that led you to it.
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exercise 78
Although sex education has been a part of most elementary and secondary curriculums for many years, it remains controversial. There has been sharp division on a number of matters including these: Is sex education helping to solve the problem of teen pregnancy or aggravating it? Do the methods and materials used in sex education support or challenge community standards? Should parents be given a larger role in the development of sex education programs? Investigate these and related questions on the Internet, being careful to consider both pro and con arguments. Next, on a separate sheet of paper, report the sites you consulted and what you found there. Finally, apply the critical thinking strategy explained in this chapter to evaluate your findings. State your conclusion and the reasoning that led you to it.
exercise 79
Imagine that youve decided to buy a new car and need to find the best terms on an auto loan. Search the Internet, identify a number of lenders, and compare the terms they offer. Summarize your findings on a separate sheet of paper. Then decide which lender would be the best one for you and explain your reasoning in a brief composition.
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In 1961 Newton Minow, then chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, called television a vast wasteland. Twenty-five years later his judgment was essentially the same. In Minows view and those of other critics, television seriously underestimates the viewers intelligence. Other critics of television programming argue that it also creates mental habits and attitudes that hinder learning. These critics advance the following arguments: By keeping young people away from books, television denies them opportunities to develop imagination. Television aims programming at the lowest common denominator. This deprives young people of intellectual challenge. By feeding young people a steady diet of slang and clichs, television hinders their language skills. Television limits game show questions to who? what? where? and when?seldom how? and never why? This creates the impression that knowledge of trivia is the only knowledge worth having. It also implies that careful analysis of issues is unnecessary or boring. Television uses the narrative approach for most of its programming. Examples are soap operas, sitcoms, movies, and dramatic series. By doing so, television denies young people exposure to critical thinking. (Such thinking is more commonly expressed in analysis than in narrative.) Television fills the roster of talk shows with celebrities rather than authorities. By doing so, television creates the impression that its not what you know but how well you are known thats important. It also promotes misinformation. For example, a television interviewer asked an actress, Did your role in that television drama give you any insights into adoption fraud? (Thats about as sensible as asking an actor who played a surgeon how to perform an appendectomy, or asking an actor who played an auto mechanic how to overhaul an engine.) Not surprisingly, the actress did not hesitate to offer her opinion. Jerry Mander has analyzed why television has failed to live up to expectations. In Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television, he claims that television has a number of inherent limitations that cannot easily be overcome. For one thing, it is an artificial environment that viewers have no hand in creating. Even on newscasts, we see only what others decide to show us, and always from their particular perspective and according to their priorities. For every item included in the news, thousands are excluded.
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exercise 80
Select a television game show and watch it one or more times. Note the way the game is played, the kinds of questions asked, and the time allowed for responses. Also note background effects such as music, lights, or revolving wheels and any other significant details about the show. Then analyze what youve seen. Answer these and any other relevant questions: How intellectually demanding is the show? What is its appeal to viewers?
What habits or attitudes could this show develop or reinforce in regular adult viewers? In children? Will these habits and attitudes help or hinder life in school, on the job, and at home?
Next, on a separate sheet of paper write a composition of at least several paragraphs expanding on your findings.
exercise 81
Select a television sitcom and watch it for one or more episodes. Then analyze what you saw. Answer these and other relevant questions: How original was the story line? Can you remember any other show youve seen with a similar plot?
What attitudes and values did the show encourage? Do you share them?
Did the characters rise above stereotypes: the dumb blonde, the know-it-all teenagers, and so on? Explain.
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exercise 81 (cont.)
Would you have laughed if the show had had no laugh track? How original were the jokes?
Next, on a separate sheet of paper write a composition of at least several paragraphs expanding on your findings.
exercise 82
Choose a television dramaa soap opera, detective or western show, or a movie. To help yourself think critically, pick a show you dont normally see. Watch the show and then analyze what you saw. Answer these and any other relevant questions: Which characters did the show present favorably? What was the main action taken by each of those characters during the show?
Think about the characters you chose in the above question. What view would each express on the following topics? Reasoning with others
Violence
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Sexual relationships
Marriage
Authority
Success
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exercise 82 (cont.)
Did the show include any incidents of violence and/or destruction? If so, describe them and explain whether their depiction was essential to the plot.
Were people or principles betrayed during the show? If so, describe each incident and explain whether the betrayal was presented in a positive or a negative light.
Did the show emphasize antagonism or harmony? Were issues resolved peacefully or violently? Explain.
On a separate sheet of paper write a composition of at least several paragraphs explaining whether the show you watched promoted desirable attitudes and habits.
exercise 83
Skim the television talk-show listings. Then select a show and watch it. Analyze what you saw, answering these and any other relevant questions: What was the shows theme or discussion topic?
What fields did the guests represent: show business, education, particular professions, or others? Are the guests associated with specific attitudes, values, behaviors? If so, describe those attitudes, values, or behaviors.
What was the reason each appeared on the show? For example, an author may have published a new book or an actress may have starred in a justreleased film.
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exercise 83 (cont.)
What kinds of questions did the host ask? Professional questions? Personal questions? Questions that seemed outside the persons expertise?
Were any specific attitudes and values encouraged? If so, what were they?
How much time did the host allow for each answer? Did the guest have an opportunity to elaborate on answers? How much time was devoted to each guest?
Next, write a composition of at least several paragraphs on a separate sheet of paper. Focus on this question: Would regular viewing of talk shows like the one you watched be good preparation for the probing discussions conducted in college classrooms?
exercise 84
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Watch the evening newscast on FOX News Channel (this is not the same as the Fox channel that shows situation comedies and movies). Then watch the newscast on one of the following: CNN, CBS, NBC, ABC. Compare their presentations of the news. Answer these and any other relevant questions: How much time, on average, was given to each news story?
What details did the newscasters focus on? What questions did they pass over? Did you want answers to any of the latter questions?
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exercise 84 (cont.)
How were the newscasts similar? Look, for example, at the numbers and genders of the newscasters, construction of the studio sets, and each shows format. How were the shows different?
Did the news reports offer different perspectives on the events reported on?
On a separate sheet of paper write a composition explaining which network you would recommend to someone looking for a fair and objective presentation of the news. Be sure you offer reasons for your choice.
exercise 85
Consider the observations and judgments of the various kinds of television programming from the previous exercises. Decide what changes would improve television programming. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, write a letter to the Federal Communications Commission. State your ideas for improving programming and give reasons for acting on those ideas.
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Characters
Every story has one or more main characters, and often a number of secondary ones. The way the characters are presented will influence the audiences reaction to them.
Setting
The elements of setting are time, place, and the circumstances in which the story takes place.
Plot
The plot is the sequence of events that occurs in the story. The essential element in a movie plot is conflict. A challenge or problem confronts the characters and they struggle to solve it. The conflict may be external or merely within the characters mind.
Theme
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The theme of a movie is the message or lesson it offers. The theme is almost never stated directly, though the dialogue may contain statements that clearly imply it. In addition to the basic elements, movies have three other elements not found in written literaturethe performances of the actors, sound effects, and visual effects. Sound effects include background music as well as dialogue. Visual effects are created by moving the camera in for close-up shots or out for distance shots, as well as by varying the lighting and camera angles. In thinking critically about movies, it is important to evaluate each of the elements and make a balanced judgment. Seldom will a movie be uniformly excellent in all elements. The characters, for example, may be richly drawn and the plot plausible and ingenious. Yet the acting may be poor and the theme an insult to the viewers intelligence.
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The Golden Globe and Academy Awards reflect these distinctions. Rarely will a film sweep the awards. And even when it succeeds in doing so, or comes close, critical thinking will sometimes reveal serious weaknesses. Consider, for example, the film that won a host of Academy Awards in the year 2000, American Beauty. (The awards included Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Screenplay, and Best Cinematography.) The film is the story of Lester Burnam (played by Kevin Spacey) in the throes of a mid-life crisis. He quits his job, becomes obsessed with and nearly seduces his daughters teenage girlfriend, and begins smoking marijuana purchased from his daughters boyfriend. Only after he dies does he gain the (unoriginal) insight that our lives are quite small and insignificant compared to the vastness of the cosmos. In the opinion of some reviewers all four adults are seriously disturbed. Lesters neighbor is a homophobic Marine with secret homosexual urges. The neighbors browbeaten wife is nearly catatonic. Lesters wife puts work above family and cheats on her husband with a fellow real estate agent, who is shallow and self-absorbed. In contrast, all the teenagers are both pure of heart and wise. In fact, the drug pusher boyfriend has the controlling insight of the film, which Lester has to die to realize. To sum up, American Beauty portrays adults as contemptible if not corrupt, especially those who represent discipline, order, and responsibility. Teenagers, on the other hand, are wonderful. Among the questions critical thinking raises about this film are these: Are the characterizations of adults and teenagers plausible? How reasonable is the theme?
exercise 86
Visit the Rotten Tomatoes website at www.rottentomatoes.com or another site that reviews current movies. Then follow the directions for EITHER A or B below:
A
Access the complete list of current box office film titles. Scan the list of films and find one that you have seen. Click on that title and access the excerpts from reviews. Find two that agree with your assessment of the film and two that disagree. Then click on each of the review excerpts, access the full review, and read it. On a separate sheet of paper, write a brief paper answering these questions: Did the reviews help you deepen your insight into the meaning and/or quality of the film? What are your strongest points of agreement and disagreement with the reviewers?
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exercise 86 (cont.)
B
Click on the various film titles and read the plot synopses. (Note: The synopses are available in both brief and full format.) Then, on a separate sheet of paper, write a brief composition that answers this question: Do you find more similarities or dissimilarities of plot and theme? Explain your answer with specific references to the films.
exercise 87
Select a movie you have recently seen; or, if you wish, rent a video and watch it. Then evaluate the film on a separate sheet of paper. Follow this format: 1. State the name of the film. 2. Identify the main and important secondary characters and the setting. 3. Explain the plot and identify what you believe to be the theme. 4. Judge the films strengths and weaknesses.
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Elvis Presleys Blue Suede Shoes to the present, rock and roll has undergone several transformations, notably to acid rock and then heavy metal. And other music forms have become popularreggae, for example, and rap. The differences between 1940s music and todays music go beyond the overall sound or the beat. Because no amplification existed then, the loudest jazz band was much quieter than todays groups. In those days, too, singers still crooned ballads in the manner of Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. Lyrics were meant to be understood and the singers voice was regarded as another fine instrument to be used with precision to produce pleasant, melodious sounds. Singers wore hair styles no different from those of business people. All that has changed. A more significant difference than these is the ideas and attitudes conveyed by the lyrics themselves and the mannerisms that accompany them. Todays lyrics and stage antics would have been unimaginable fifty years ago. Many popular videos celebrate the destruction of property, rape, child abuse, incest, sadism, murder, and suicide. Onscreen images depict these behaviors in graphic detail. And the average age of the audience that watches them is between 14 and 16. Critics of contemporary music have charged that it is undermining the fundamental values of society and causing antisocial attitudes and behavior, including crime. Spokespeople for the music industry tend to dismiss such criticism, claiming that musicians are only exercising their right of free expression and no one can be harmed by that. The exercises that follow will give you an opportunity to examine this issue.
exercise 88
Go to iTunes or another online music store and examine a selection on new releases. Note the cover designs, song titles, and lyrics. Listen to releases from major groups. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, list each group you examined and record your observations.
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exercise 89
Analyze your findings about the music you researched. Answer these and any other relevant questions: On the basis of your inquiry, would you say the music conveys positive values and attitudes? Why or why not?
Suppose that people applied the messages in the song lyrics to their lives. In what specific ways would their behavior be affected? Would the consequences be desirable or undesirable?
On the basis of your analysis in the previous two exercises, write a brief composition that answers the following questions: Are the complaints against popular music justified? If not, why not? If so, what action do you recommend? Who should take that action? Government? The music industry? Use a separate sheet of paper for this composition.
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Among the most common criticisms of news and/or general interest magazines are the following: The editorial biases of news magazines often result in a lack of objectivity in reporting, particularly on issues related to bias. A secular bias, for example, might prejudice the treatment of religion; a liberal political bias might prejudice the treatment of conservative proposals or programs. General interest magazines often promote shallowness and superficiality by focusing on the details of celebrities lives, particularly scandalous details. Many magazines allow their choice and treatment of subject matter to be influencedand often compromisedby their advertisers. Many magazines tend to reinforce the values of popular culturein particular, impulsiveness, self-indulgence, and instant gratificationrather than the values of traditional culture. The following exercises invite you to apply critical thinking and decide whether these charges are valid. To complete these assignments you may decide to visit a newsstand, a library, or a bookstore.
exercise 90
Examine the current editions of several news magazinesTime, Newsweek, and U.S. News and World Reportor one written from a particular ethnic perspective. Select a single news item and compare the treatment it is given in each magazine. Decide which magazines treatment is most biased and which is least biased. Support your findings. Present your decision and explanation:
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exercise 91
Check the covers of the current issues of magazines such as Cosmopolitan, McCalls, Esquire, Redbook, and Psychology Today. (Feel free to include any other magazine to which you subscribe or in which you are interested.) Compare the titles of the articles listed on the covers. Do these titles raise any questions about the magazines themes, focuses, or editorial perspectives? Explain your findings.
exercise 92
Examine an edition of each of the following publications: The Star, The National Enquirer, and People. Read the articles, the special sections, and the advice columns. Sample the ads and look closely at the photographs. Then answer these questions: Suppose that a stranger to this country were to draw a conclusion about our societys attitudes and values just from reading these publications. What conclusion do you think she would draw? What about these periodicals leads you to this conclusion?
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exercise 91 (cont.)
Do you think these publications merely reflect our societys attitudes and values or do they also help shape those attitudes and values? Explain.
On a separate sheet of paper, write a brief composition explaining what changes in format and emphasis you would recommend to improve these publications.
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exercise 93
Choose the largest newspaper in your area or a newspaper serving a larger audience, such as USA Today. Read the main editorial of the day. Also read any news story mentioned in the editorial. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, answer the following questions: What position does the editor take on the issue? What support does he or she offer for this position? What other positions could be taken on the issue? How might those positions be supported? Before answering these questions, you may wish to research the issue by visiting the library or interviewing experts. What are the editorials strengths and weaknesses? What position is most reasonable in light of the evidence? Present your response in a composition of at least several paragraphs. Another option is to write your response as a letter to the editor. If you do this, consider sending the letter to the newspaper.
exercise 94
Select an opinion column or a letter to the editor that interests you. Examine it critically. If appropriate, research the issue further. Then, on a separate sheet of paper, write a composition of at least several paragraphs stating and supporting your position on the issue. You may agree with the article or letter in the newspaper, disagree with it, or agree in part. Attach either a summary or a copy of the original article or letter.
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exercise 95
What lessons can you draw from the Good Thinking! profiles of Oprah Winfrey and Chiara Lubich presented in this chapter? Explain how you can use each of those lessons in your career and/or personal life.
213
quiz
Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
List the four steps used in solving a problem. How many guidelines are offered for successful relationships? Briefly explain the one you find most helpful to you personally. In choosing a career, only one factor is importantwhat you would like to do. True or false? Explain. State and briefly explain each of the three criteria for making ethical judgments. Newton Minow believes that television has improved significantly over the past quarter-century. True or false? Explain. Explain two common criticisms of magazine publishing. The first newspaper was published in the nineteenth century. True or false? Explain. Identify two criticisms commonly made of popular music. Define each of the following terms: Bandwagon Glittering generality
Empty comparison Meaningless slogan Testimonial Transfer Stacking the deck Misleading statement
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10. Explain two criticisms commonly made of print advertising. 11. The function of most commercial websites is to provide a public service.
True or false? Explain.
EPILO GUE
215
216
Epilogue
That man is the richest whose pleasures are the cheapest. Henry David Thoreau To read without reflecting is like eating without digesting. Edmund Burke Remember, no one can make you feel inferior without your consent. Eleanor Roosevelt Trend is not destiny. Lewis Mumford Success is a journey, not a destination. Ben Sweetland Many peoples tombstones should read Died at 30. Buried at 60. Nicholas Murray Butler Victory has a hundred fathers, but defeat is an orphan. Count G. Ciano A cathedral, a wave of a storm, a dancers leap, never turn out to be as high as we had hoped. Marcel Proust Men are not punished for their sins, but by them. Elbert G. Hubbard Never has a man who has bent himself been able to make others straight. Mencius Free will does not mean one will, but many wills in one [person]. Flannery OConnor The offender never forgives. Russian proverb No matter which side of an argument youre on, you always find some people on your side that you wish were on the other side. Jascha Heifetz
WORKS CITED
Adler, Mortimer J. The Great Ideas: A Lexicon of Western Thought. New York: Macmillan, 1992. Albom, Mitch. The Five People You Meet in Heaven. New York: Hyperion, 2003. Bruce, Tammy. The New Thought Police. New York: Prima Publishing, 2001. Carnegie, Dale. How to Win Friends and Influence People. New York: Pocket Books, 1990. Cerf, Christopher, and Victor Navasky. The Experts Speak. New York: Villard, 1998. Curtsinger, Bill. Close Encounters with the Gray Reef Shark. National Geographic (January 1995), 4567. Dyer, Wayne, Your Erroneous Zones (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1976), 9091. Frankl, Viktor. Mans Search for Meaning. 3rd ed. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1984. Goldberg, Bernard. Bias. Washington, DC: Regnery, 2002. Arrogance. New York: Warner Books, 2003. Hagen, Margaret A. Whores of the Court: The Fraud of Psychiatric Testimony and the Rape of American Justice (New York: HarperCollins, 1997), 39. Harris, Errol E. Respect for Persons. Ddalus (Spring 1969). Hoe, Philip Chew Kheng, editor. A Gentlemans Code: According to Confucius, Mencius and Others. Singapore: Graham Brash, 1984. Kohn, Alfie. The Truth about Self-Esteem.Phi Delta Kappan (December 1994), 272283. Larrabee, Harold A. Reliable Knowledge, revised ed. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1964. LAmour, Louis. Education of a Wandering Man. New York: Bantam Books, 1989. Loftus, Elizabeth. Witness for the Defense. New York: St. Martins Press, 1991. . Eyewitness Testimony. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.
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Works Cited
Mander, Jerry. Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television. New York: Quill, 1978. McGowan, William. Coloring the News. San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2001. Pisar, Samuel. Of Blood and Hope. New York: Little, Brown, 1980. Rogers, Carl. On Becoming a Person. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1961. Samenow, Stanton. Inside the Criminal Mind. New York: Times Books, 1984. Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr. The Disuniting of America: Reflections on a Multicultural Society. New York: Norton, 1992. Sowell, Thomas. Race and Culture. New York: Basic Books, 1994. Steele, Shelby. White Guilt. New York: HarperCollins, 2006. Stevenson, Harold, and James Stigler. The Learning Gap. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992. Tavris, Carol. Anger: The Misunderstood Emotion. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1982. . The Mismeasure of Woman. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1992. Marshall, Ray and Marc Tucker. Thinking for a Living: Education and the Wealth of Nations (New York: Basic Books, 1992). Underhill, Jack. New Age Quiz. Life Times, no. 3, 6. Vitz, Paul. Faith of the Fatherless. Dallas: Spence, 1999.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The following books on critical thinking and related subjects can help you deepen your understanding and expand your skill. Adams, James. Conceptual Blockbusting. New York: Norton, 1979. Adler, Mortimer. Intellect: Mind over Matter. New York: Macmillan, 1990. . How to Read a Book. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1972. Barker, Evelyn M. Everyday Reasoning. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: PrenticeHall, 1981. Barry, Vincent E., and Joel Rudinow. Invitation to Critical Thinking. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1998. Browne, M. Neil, and Stuart M. Keely. Asking the Right Questions: A Guide to Critical Thinking. 7th ed. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: PrenticeHall, 2004. Cederblom, J. B., and David W. Paulsen. Critical Reasoning. 5th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2001. Chaffee, John. Thinking Critically. 8th ed. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2006. Damer, Edward. Attacking Faulty Reasoning. 5th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2005. DeBono, Edward. Lateral Thinking. New York: Harper & Row, 1970. Engel, Morris S. With Good Reason: An Introduction to Informal Fallacies. 6th ed. New York: St. Martins Press, 2000. Fischer, David Hackett. Historians Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought. New York: Harper Perennial, 1970. Fisher, Alec. The Logic of Real Arguments. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Gilovich, Thomas. How We Know What Isnt So: The Fallibility of Reason in Everyday Life. New York: Free Press, 1991. Goldberg, Bernard. Bias. Washington, DC: Regnery, 2002. Gould, Stephen Jay. The Mismeasure of Man. New York: Norton, 1981. Govier, Trudy. A Practical Study of Argument. 5th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2001.
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Bibliography
Halpern, Diane. Thought and Knowledge. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2002. Hoaglund, John. Critical Thinking. Newport News, VA: Vale Press, 1995. Hofstadter, Richard. Anti-Intellectualism in American Life. New York: Vintage, 1963. Johnson, Ralph, and J. A. Blair. Logical Self-Defense. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1994. Kohn, Bob. Journalistic Fraud: How The New York Times Distorts the News and Why It Can No Longer Be Trusted. Nashville, TN: WND Books, 2003. Kytle, Ray. Clear Thinking for Composition. 5th ed. New York: McGrawHill, 1988. Langer, Ellen J. Mindfulness. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1989. Lazere, Donald. American Media and Mass Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987. Mander, Jerry. Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television. New York: Quill, 1978. Mayfield, Marlys. Thinking for Yourself: Developing Critical Thinking Skills through Reading and Writing. 5th ed. Boston: Heinle & Heinle, 2003. Moore, Noel, and Richard Parker. Critical Thinking. New York: McGrawHill, 2003. Moore, W. Edgar, and others. Creative and Critical Thinking. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1984. Nickerson, Raymond S. Reflections on Reasoning. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 1986. Nisbett, Richard, and Lee Ross. Human Inference: Strategies and Shortcomings of Social Judgment. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1980. Paul, Richard, and Linda Elder. Critical Thinking. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2001. Perkins, David. Archimedes Bathtub: The Art and Logic of Breakthrough Thinking. New York: Norton, 2000. Postman, Neil. Amusing Ourselves to Death. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985. Rosenthal, Peggy. Words and Values. New York: Oxford University Press, 1984. Ruggiero, Vincent Ryan. The Art of Thinking. 4th ed. New York: HarperCollins, 2004.
Bibliography
. Beyond Feelings: A Guide to Critical Thinking. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield, 2004. . Thinking Critically about Ethical Issues. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield, 2004. . Warning: Nonsense Is Destroying America. Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1994. Scriven, Michael. Reasoning. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1997. Seech, Zachary. Open Minds and Everyday Reasoning. 2nd ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2005. Siegel, Harvey. Relativism Refuted. Norwell, MA: Kluwer, 1987. Sutherland, Stuart. Irrationality: Why We Dont Think Straight! New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1994. Thornton, Bruce S. Plagues of the Mind: The New Epidemic of False Knowledge. Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, 1999. Toulmin, Stephen. The Uses of Argument. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Toulmin, Stephen E., Richard Rieke, and Alan Janik. An Introduction to Reasoning. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1997. Von Oech, Roger. A Whack on the Side of the Head. New York: HarperCollins, 1993. . A Kick in the Seat of the Pants. New York: Harper & Row, 1986. Weaver, Richard. Ideas Have Consequences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948. Weddle, Perry. Argument. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1978.
221
INDEX
Abdellah, Faye Glenn, 36 ad hominem, 138 adjectives, 5657 Adler, Alfred, 70 adverbs, 5657 advertising commercials, 185188 print, 189191 advice, giving, 172 agreement points of, in persuasion, 47 of subject and predicate, 54 Albom, Mitch, 174 Alexander, Janet E., 108 almanacs, 105 American Beauty (film), 204 amount, number, 57 and relationships, 122123 and/therefore patterns, 123 anecdotes, 118 Anger: The Misunderstood Emotion (Tavris), 96 apologies, 173174 arguments avoiding bias in, 127129 checking facts in, 125 definition of, 102103 evaluating complex, 121127 evidence for, 118121, 126127 identifying facts and opinions, 122124 making judgments in, 127 relationships and patterns in, 122123 research for, 103, 125126 strategies for, 103 summaries in, 123 testing opinions in, 125 assertions, vs. evidence, 147 assumptions, unwarranted, 145146 attacking the person, 152153 attitudes cultural influences on, 7374 definition of, 73 four empowering, 7881
understanding, 7378 audience identifying objections of, 5051 respecting, 47 understanding viewpoint of, 47 bandwagon, 185 between, among, 57 bias in arguments, 127129 being alert for, 85 in magazines, 208 in reporting, 8182 in television programming, 197 toward familiar ideas, 128129 toward personal opinions, 128 toward personal preferences, 129 Bias and Arrogance (Goldberg), 81 Bly, Nellie, 88 Brin, Sergey, 106 Bruce, Tammy, 82, 84 Buckham, Matthew Henry, 80 burden of proof, shifting, 152 but relationships, 122123 but/therefore patterns, 123 can, may, 57 careers campus career centers, 176177 interest-assessment tests for, 177 Internet resources for, 177 persuasion and, 45 thinking critically about, 175179 Carnegie, Dale, 48 cases-in-point, 118 case study method, 118 Cerf, Christopher, 22 change, preconceptions about, 139
characters, 203 classroom, persuasion in, 45 Coloring the News (McGowan), 81 commercials basic appeals in, 185 common techniques for, 185187 thinking critically about, 185189 common knowledge, 25 community, persuasion in, 4546 comparatives, 5657 comparisons, empty, 186 complexity of issues, 95 of tasks, 56 compliments, 172 concentration skills, 68 conclusions in arguments, 102 in persuasive writing, 51 Confucius, 80 confusion refusing to tolerate, 78 responding actively to, 93 connections, looking for, 9596 conscience, conscious, 57 consequences ethical judgments and, 182 of opinions, 29, 39 contradiction, principle of, 1920 conviction, in opinions, 3637, 145 could have, could of, 57 counterexamples, for testing opinions, 3031, 39 courtesy, in group discussions, 62 creative thinking, 16 criterion, irrelevant, 143 critical thinking avoiding bias, 127129 careers and, 175179
223
224
Index
Dix, Dorothea, 119120 double standard, 142143 Dyer, Wayne, 29 dysfunctional relationships, 170 each other, one another, 57 Edison, Thomas, 80 effort, success and, 7980 Einstein, Albert, 15 either/or thinking, 140, 202 Ellis, Albert, 1617 emotional language, 83 emotions dishonest appeals to, 8283 purging negative, 173 empty comparisons, 186 encyclopedias, 105, 107 Epictetus, 28 errors. See judgment errors; perception errors; reaction errors; thinking errors Erskine, John, 28 ethical judgments, 179185 applying criteria for, 182 feelings as basis for, 179180 principle of respect for persons, 180182 sample case, 182183 evidence anecdotes and cases-inpoint, 118 vs. assertions, 147 basing judgments on, 9697 evaluating, 3235, 39, 103, 126127, 194 experiments, 120121 expert testimony, 120 eyewitness testimony, 119 published reports, 118119 reasons, 3235, 118 research reviews, 121 statistical studies, 121 surveys, 121 Evinrude, Ole, 4 examinations, persuasion in, 4445 examples, producing relevant, 87 exceptions, for testing opinions, 30, 39 experiments, 120121 expert opinions, mistakes and, 22 expert testimony, 120 explaining away, 151152 exposition, 44 eyewitness testimony, 119 Faber, Frederick W., 172 facts checking, 27, 39, 125, 193 in complex arguments, 103, 122124 definition of, 24 on Internet, 192194 vs. opinions, 2427, 38 in persuasion, 47 in print journalism, 210211 factual knowledge, 14 Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism (Vitz), 138 false rumors, 90 familiar ideas, bias toward, 2223, 128129, 145, 147 feelings ethical judgments and, 179180 sensitivity to others, 173 vs. thinking, 2324 first impressions, being wary of, 91 forgiveness, 174 Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television (Mander), 185, 196 Frankl, Viktor, 71 Freud, Sigmund, 70 frustration, dealing with, 25 Fry, Art, 4 Gates, Bill, 51 generalizations, 144 gentlemans code, 8081 Gide, Andr, 136 Gilbreth, Frank and Lillian, 3 Glasgow, Arnold H., 80 glittering generality, 186 Goldberg, Bernard, 81 Golden Rule, 48, 172 Google, 106 gossiping, 173 government publications, 105 grammar errors, 53, 5457 group discussions, 6163 gullibility, 137
critical thinking (cont.) changing ones mind and, 3638 checking facts, 27, 39, 125, 193 commercials and, 185189 comprehensive strategy for, 3839 ethical judgments and, 179185 evaluating attitudes, 74 evaluating evidence, 3235, 39, 126127 identifying facts and opinions, 2427, 38, 122124 imaginative thinking, 8889 importance of, 1617 Internet and, 192194 journals for, 38 magazines and, 207210 movies and, 202205 music and, 205207 newspapers and, 210211 in persuasive writing, 4950 print advertising and, 189191 for problem solving, 166170 relationships and, 170175 television and, 195202 testing opinions, 2832, 39, 125, 193194 See also thinking criticism, 79, 172 cultural influences, 7374 culture war, 74 curiosity, reactivating, 8587 Dalton, Sky, 166 Declaration of Human Rights (United Nations), 181 Declaration of Independence (U.S), 181 description, 44 Dewey, Melvil, 104 Dewey Decimal System, 103104 dictionaries, 107 dishonest appeals to emotion, 8283 dissent, suppression of, 84, 85 distinctions, failure to make, 146147
Index
habits building good, 10 for individuality, 9197 Harris, Errol E., 181 hasty conclusions, 144145 Hazlitt, Henry, 167 headlines, biased, 81 health and medicine resources, 108 Heimlich, Henry, 166 Henry, John, 80 hoaxes, 90 honesty, with self, 93 How to Win Friends and Influence People (Carnegie), 48 ideas bias toward familiar, 128129, 145, 147 examining unfamiliar, 2223 in persuasive writing, 50, 5152 producing many, 9395 unwarranted assumptions and, 146 imaginative thinking, 8789 implications, of opinions, 29, 39 improvement, 7879 impulsiveness appeal, 185 individuality attitudes and, 7378 definition of, 70 habits for, 9197 influence of others and, 7173 recognizing manipulation and, 8184 resisting manipulation and, 8590 influences acknowledging, 7073 recognizing manipulation, 8184 See also manipulation; persuasion Information Please Almanac, 105 informed opinion, 107 insights being alert for, 8, 63, 95 producing many ideas for, 9495 instant gratification appeal, 185 intelligence, 14 interest-assessment tests, 177 Internet career resources on, 177 conducting research on, 106109 evaluating facts and opinions, 192194 evaluative tools for, 108 identifying site creators, 192 identifying site function, 192 resource lists for, 107108 search engines, 106107 thinking critically about, 192194 thinking errors and, 193194 interviews, research, 109110 irrelevant criterion, 143 Jordan, Michael, 30 Journalistic Fraud (Kohn), 81 journals for critical thinking, 38 for learning experiences, 910 judgment errors, 142151, 194 double standard, 142143 failure to make distinctions, 146147 hasty conclusions, 144145 irrelevant criterion, 143 overgeneralizing/ stereotyping, 143 oversimplification, 147 unwarranted assumptions, 145146 judgments in arguments, 127 ethical, 179185 evidence for, 9697 Kerry, John, 84 kindness, 174 Kingsley, Charles, 174 Klein, Joel, 51 knowledge, types of, 14, 25 Kohn, Bob, 81 Korzybski, Alfred, 137 Kwolek, Stephanie, 92 LAmour, Louis, 2324 lay, lie, 5758
225
leads, biased, 8182 learning strategies building good habits, 10 controlling mental activities, 68 dealing with frustration, 25 efficient study skills, 8 journals, 910 planning, 2 reading comprehension, 9 for unpleasant and complex tasks, 56 legal information, 108 less, fewer, 57 library research basic information sources, 103105 Dewey Decimal System, 104 listening skills, 7, 62, 173 Loftus, Elizabeth, 21 logic, in arguments, 102 logical fallacies, 155 Lubich, Chiara, 181 magazines common criticisms of, 208 library searches of, 105 thinking critically about, 207210 Mander, Jerry, 185, 196197 manipulation biased reporting, 8182 dishonest appeals to emotion, 8283 repetition, 84 stacking the deck, 8384 strategies for resisting, 8590 suppressing dissent, 84 Mans Search for Meaning (Frankl), 71 Maurois, Andr, 173 McGowan, William, 81 McNamara, Frank, 5 meaningless slogans, 186 media biased reporting, 8182, 85 influences of, 7173, 74 magazines, 207210 newspapers, 210211 online sources, 107 See also television mental pictures, 87 Mestral, George de, 5
226
Index
in print journalism, 210211 skimming for central, 122 testing, 2832, 39, 125, 193194 See also viewpoints Orwell, George, 53 other people acknowledging, 172 importance of, 8081, 170 influences of, 7173 overgeneralizations, 144 oversimplification, 147 Page, Larry, 106 paraphrasing, 111117 party scene, in commercials, 186 peacemaking, 174 Peel, Sir Robert, 28 perception errors, 136142, 194 either/or thinking, 140 gullibility and skepticism, 137 mine is better thinking, 136137 preconceptions, 139 pretending to know, 139140 selective perception, 137 performance knowledge, 14 periodicals, 105 personal experience, testing opinions with, 2829, 39 personal preferences, bias toward, 129 persuasion achieving, 4649 advertising and, 190 applying Golden Rule in, 48 audiences viewpoint in, 47 definition of, 44 in group discussions, 6163 modest expectations in, 49 opportunities for, 4446 opposing facts and viewpoints in, 47 points of agreement in, 47 persuasive speaking, 5961 persuasive writing, 4959 arranging ideas in, 5152 grammar errors in, 52, 5457 identifying audience objections in, 5051 preparing rough draft, 5253 statement of main ideas in, 50 usage errors in, 53, 5759 writing style for, 52 Phelps, William Lyon, 80 physical mannerisms, 60 Pisar, Samuel, 166 plagiarism, 110117 definition of, 110 quoting and paraphrasing and, 111117 steps for avoiding, 111112 using your own ideas, 115 planning strategies, 2 plot, 203 polls, biased reporting of, 82 popular culture, 71, 74 preconceptions, 139 predicate, agreement with subject, 54 preparation for group discussions, 61 for resisting manipulation, 85 pretending to know, 139140 principal, principle, 58 principle of respect for persons, 181182 print advertising, 189191 problem solving being alert for problems, 167 critical thinking and, 166 expressing the problem, 167 listing solutions, 168 selecting and refining solutions, 168 procrastination, 56 pronoun case, 5455 pronoun references, 56 provided, providing, 58 public opinion, 28 published reports, 118119 punctuation, 52 questions interview, 110 in problem solving, 167169 for resisting manipulation, 8587 for thinking errors, 138
mind daring to change, 3538 taking charge of, 68 mine is better thinking, 136137 Minow, Newton, 196 misleading statements, 187 mistakes, in expert opinions, 22 mixed constructions, 55 Moon, Robert, 5 moral ideals, 182 Morris, Dick, 83 movies elements of, 203 thinking critically about, 202205 much, many, 57 music, thinking critically about, 205207 narration, 44 Navasky, Victor, 22 news. See media newspapers library searches of, 105 thinking critically about, 210211 New Thought Police, The (Bruce), 82, 84 New York Times Index, The, 105 note cards, 5960 note taking, 7, 111 obligations, ethical judgments and, 180182 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 177 Of Blood and Hope (Pisar), 166 often, always, 147 op-ed pages, 210211 opinions allowing for differences in, 173 changing ones, 3638 in complex arguments, 103, 122124 considering reverse, 31, 39 definition of, 24, 26 expert, 22 vs. facts, 2427, 38 on Internet, 192194 media influence on, 7273 online sources for informed, 107
Index
quotations biased reporting and, 82 online sources for, 108 in research papers, 111117 reaction errors, 151156, 194 attacking the person, 152153 explaining away, 151152 shifting the burden of proof, 152 straw man, 153 Readers Guide to Periodical Literature, 105 reading comprehension, 9 reason is that, reason is because, 58 reasons, evaluating, 3235, 118, 145 reference materials, 105, 107 reflecting, 9 relationships definition of, 170 guidelines for successful, 172174 persuasion in, 46 principles of positive, 47 responsibility in, 170172 thinking critically about, 170175 repetition, manipulating with, 84 reports, published, 118119 research for arguments, 103, 125126 avoiding plagiarism, 110117 Internet research, 106109 interviews for, 109110 library research, 103105 note taking for, 111 research reviews, 121 for testing opinions, 31, 39 types of evidence, 118121 responsibility, 170172, 174 reviewing, 9 Rogers, Carl, 30 rudeness, 173 Santayana, George, 28 scenarios, creating realistic, 8789 Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 29 Schlessinger, Laura, 84 scholarly works, 105 Scott, Arthur, 166 search engines, 106107 seldom, never, 147 selective perception, 137 self-criticism, 79 self-esteem, earned, 80 self-improvement, 7879 self-indulgence appeal, 185 Seligman, Martin, 144 Semmelweiss, Ignaz, 25 sentences avoiding fragments, 55 mixed constructions, 55 using variety, 52 wordy, 52 set, sit, 58 setting, 203 shifting the burden of proof, 152 skepticism, 137 skimming, 9 slogans, meaningless, 186 solutions, in problem solving, 168 sources checking, 90 keeping record of, 111 quoting and paraphrasing, 111117 See also research spelling, 52 Sperry, Paul, 45 springboarding, 95 stacking the deck, 8384, 187 statements in arguments, 102 facts vs. opinions in, 2427 misleading, 187 true and false, 1920 statistical studies, 121 stereotyping, 143 Strauss, Levi, 34 straw man, 153 study skills, 8. See also learning strategies subject-predicate agreement, 54 success, effort and, 7980 summaries, 123 superlatives, 5657 suppression of dissent, 84, 85 surveys, 121
227
taste, matters of, 26 Tate, Marsha Ann, 108 Tavris, Carol, 96 television bias in program selection, 197 commercials, 185189 impact on learning, 196 inherent limitations of, 196197 news coverage on, 196, 197 thinking critically about, 195202 See also media testimonials, 186 theme, 203 therefore relationships, 122123 thinking comprehensive strategy for, 3839 definition of, 1417 discovering truth and, 1719 examining unfamiliar ideas, 2223 vs. feeling, 2324 identifying facts and opinions, 2427 intelligence and, 14 key principles of, 1724 making mistakes and, 22 principle of contradiction and, 1921 before speaking, 173 See also critical thinking thinking errors, 17 on Internet, 193194 judgment errors, 142151 multiplying of, 157 perception errors, 136142 reaction errors, 151156 three kinds of, 136 See also specific errors through, threw, 58 time management, 3 for efficient studying, 8 planning your days, 2 transfers, in commercials, 186 truth, discovering, 1719 unwarranted assumptions, 145146 usage errors, 52, 5759 use, usage, 58
228
Index
Vitz, Paul C., 138 Vogt, Peter, 176177 voice-overs, 186 Ward, C. M., 73 web sites. See Internet Web Wisdom: How to Evaluate and Create Information Quality on the Web (Alexander, Tate), 108 who, whom, 5859 Winfrey, Oprah, 171 workplace, persuasion in, 45 World Almanac, The, 105 writing. See persuasive writing writing style, 5253
verbal mannerisms, 60 viewpoints bias toward personal, 128 considering other, 47, 96 constructing new, 89 understanding audience, 47, 5051 See also opinions