Robert H.
Ennis, Author
of The Cornell
Critical Thinking Tests
"Critical
thinking is reasonable, reflective thinking that is focused on deciding what to
believe and do."
A
SUPER-STREAMLINED CONCEPTION OF CRITICAL THINKING
Robert H.
Ennis, 6/20/02
Assuming that critical thinking is
reasonable reflective thinking focused on deciding what to believe or do, a
critical thinker:
1. Is open-minded
and mindful of alternatives
2. Tries to be
well-informed
3. Judges well
the credibility of sources
4. Identifies
conclusions, reasons, and assumptions
5. Judges well
the quality of an argument, including the acceptability of its reasons,
assumptions, and evidence
6. Can well
develop and defend a reasonable position
7. Asks
appropriate clarifying questions
8. Formulates
plausible hypotheses; plans experiments well
9. Defines terms
in a way appropriate for the context
10. Draws
conclusions when warranted, but with caution
11. Integrates all
items in this list when deciding what to believe or do
Critical
Thinkers are disposed to:
1. Care that
their beliefs be true, and that their decisions be justified; that is, care to
"get it right" to the extent possible. This includes the dispositions
to
a. Seek alternative hypotheses, explanations, conclusions, plans,
sources, etc., and be open to them
b. Endorse a position to the extent that, but only to the extent that,
it is justified by the information that is available
c. Be well informed
d. Consider seriously other points of view than their own
2. Care to
present a position honestly and clearly, theirs as well as others'. This
includes the dispositions to
a. Be clear about the intended meaning of what is said, written, or
otherwise communicated, seeking as much precision as the situation requires
b. Determine, and maintain focus on, the conclusion or question
c. Seek and offer reasons
d. Take into account the total situation
e. Be reflectively aware of their own basic beliefs
3. Care about the dignity and worth of
every person (a correlative disposition). This includes the dispositions to
a. Discover
and listen to others' view and reasons
b. Avoid intimidating or confusing others with their critical thinking prowess,
taking into account others' feelings and level of understanding
c. Be concerned about others' welfare
Critical Thinking Abilities:
Ideal critical
thinkers have the ability to
(The first three items involve elementary clarification.)
1. Focus on a question
a. Identify or
formulate a question
b. Identify or formulate criteria for judging possible answers
c. Keep the situation in mind
2. Analyze arguments
a. Identify
conclusions
b. Identify stated reasons
c. Identify unstated reasons
d. Identify and handle irrelevance
e. See the structure of an argument
f. Summarize
3. Ask and answer questions of
clarification and/or challenge, such as,
a. Why?
b. What is your main point?
c. What do you mean by…?
d. What would be an example?
e. What would not be an example (though close to being one)?
f. How does that apply to this case (describe a case, which might well appear
to be a counter example)?
g. What difference does it make?
h. What are the facts?
i. Is this what you are saying: ____________?
j. Would you say some more about that?
(The next two involve the basis for the
decision.)
4. Judge the credibility of a source.
Major criteria (but not necessary conditions):
a. Expertise
b. Lack of conflict of interest
c. Agreement among sources
d. Reputation
e. Use of established procedures
f. Known risk to reputation
g. Ability to give reasons
h. Careful habits
5. Observe, and judge observation
reports. Major criteria (but not necessary conditions, except for the first):
a. Minimal
inferring involved
b. Short time interval between observation and report
c. Report by the observer, rather than someone else (that is, the report is not
hearsay)
d. Provision of records.
e. Corroboration
f. Possibility of corroboration
g. Good access
h. Competent employment of technology, if technology is useful
i. Satisfaction by observer (and reporter, if a different person) of the
credibility criteria in Ability # 4 above.
(The next three involve inference.)
6. Deduce, and judge deduction
a. Class logic
b. Conditional logic
c. Interpretation of logical terminology in statements, including
(1) Negation and double negation
(2) Necessary and sufficient condition language
(3) Such words as "only", "if and only if", "or",
"some", "unless", "not both".
7. Induce, and judge induction
a. To
generalizations. Broad considerations:
(1) Typicality of data, including sampling where appropriate
(2) Breadth of coverage
(3) Acceptability of evidence
b. To explanatory conclusions (including hypotheses)
(1) Major types of explanatory conclusions and hypotheses:
(a) Causal claims
(b) Claims about the beliefs and attitudes of people
(c) Interpretation of authors’ intended meanings
(d) Historical claims that certain things happened (including criminal
accusations)
(e) Reported definitions
(f) Claims that some proposition is an unstated reason that the person actually
used
(2) Characteristic investigative activities
(a) Designing experiments, including planning to control variables
(b) Seeking evidence and counter-evidence
(c) Seeking other possible explanations
(3) Criteria, the first five being essential, the sixth being desirable
(a) The proposed conclusion would explain the evidence
(b) The proposed conclusion is consistent with all known facts
(c) Competitive alternative explanations are inconsistent with facts
(d) The evidence on which the hypothesis depends is acceptable.
(e) A legitimate effort should have been made to uncover counter-evidence
(f) The proposed conclusion seems plausible
8. Make and judge value judgments:
Important factors:
a. Background
facts
b. Consequences of accepting or rejecting the judgment
c. Prima facie application of acceptable principles
d. Alternatives
e. Balancing, weighing, deciding
(The next two abilities involve
advanced clarification.)
9. Define terms and judge definitions.
Three dimensions are form, strategy, and content.
a. Form. Some
useful forms are:
(1) Synonym
(2) Classification
(3) Range
(4) Equivalent expression
(5) Operational
(6) Example and non-example
b. Definitional strategy
(1) Acts
(a) Report a meaning
(b) Stipulate a meaning
(c) Express a position on an issue (including "programmatic" and
"persuasive" definitions)
(2) Identifying and handling equivocation
c. Content of the definition
10. Attribute unstated assumptions (an
ability that belongs under both clarification and, in a way, inference)
(The next two
abilities involve supposition and integration.)
11. Consider and reason from premises,
reasons, assumptions, positions, and other propositions with which they
disagree or about which they are in doubt -- without letting the disagreement
or doubt interfere with their thinking ("suppositional thinking")
12. Integrate the other abilities and
dispositions in making and defending a decision
(The first
twelve abilities are constitutive abilities. The next three are auxiliary
critical thinking abilities: Having them, though very helpful in various ways,
is not constitutive of being a critical thinker.)
13. Proceed in an orderly manner
appropriate to the situation. For example:
a. Follow problem solving steps
b. Monitor one's own thinking (that is,
engage in metacognition)
c. Employ a reasonable critical thinking checklist
14. Be sensitive to the feelings, level
of knowledge, and degree of sophistication of others
15. Employ appropriate rhetorical
strategies in discussion and presentation (orally and in writing), including
employing and reacting to "fallacy" labels in an appropriate manner.
Examples of
fallacy labels are "circularity," "bandwagon," "post
hoc," "equivocation," "non sequitur," and "straw
person."
Dewey, John
Critical thinking is "active,
persistent, and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of
knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it and the further
conclusions to which it tends (Dewey 1933: 118)."
Glaser
(1) an
attitude of being disposed to consider in a thoughtful way the problems and
subjects that come within the range of one's experiences, (2) knowledge of the
methods of logical inquiry and reasoning, and (3) some skill in applying those
methods. Critical thinking calls for a persistent effort to examine any belief
or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the evidence that supports it and
the further conclusions to which it tends. (Glaser 1941, pp. 5-6).
Abilities include: "(a) to recognize problems, (b) to find
workable means for meeting those problems, (c) to gather and marshal pertinent
information, (d) to recognize unstated assumptions and values, (e) to
comprehend and use language with accuracy, clarity and discrimination, (f) to
interpret data, (g) to appraise evidence and evaluate statements, (h) to
recognize the existence of logical relationships between propositions, (i) to
draw warranted conclusions and generalizations, (j) to put to test the
generalizations and conclusions at which one arrives, (k) to reconstruct one's
patterns of beliefs on the basis of wider experience; and (l) to render accurate
judgments about specific things and qualities in everyday life." (p.6)
MCC General Education Initiatives
"Critical thinking includes the
ability to respond to material by distinguishing between facts and opinions or
personal feelings, judgments and inferences, inductive and deductive arguments,
and the objective and subjective. It also includes the ability to generate
questions, construct, and recognize the structure of arguments, and adequately
support arguments; define, analyze, and devise solutions for problems and
issues; sort, organize, classify, correlate, and analyze materials and data;
integrate information and see relationships; evaluate information, materials,
and data by drawing inferences, arriving at reasonable and informed
conclusions, applying understanding and knowledge to new and different
problems, developing rational and reasonable interpretations, suspending
beliefs and remaining open to new information, methods, cultural systems,
values and beliefs and by assimilating information."
Nickerson, Perkins and Smith (1985)
"The ability to judge the
plausibility of specific assertions, to weigh evidence, to assess the logical
soundness of inferences, to construct counter-arguments and alternative
hypotheses."
Moore and Parker, Critical Thinking
Critical Thinking is "the careful,
deliberate determination of whether we should accept, reject, or suspend
judgment about a claim, and the degree of confidence with which we accept or
reject it."
Delphi Report
"We understand critical thinking
to be purposeful, self-regulatory judgment which results in interpretation,
analysis, evaluation, and inference, as well as explanation of the evidential,
conceptual, methodological, criteriological, or contextual considerations upon
which that judgment is based. CT is essential as a tool of inquiry. As such, CT
is a liberating force in education and a powerful resource in one's personal
and civic life. While not synonymous with good thinking, CT is a pervasive and
self-rectifying human phenomenon. The ideal critical thinker is habitually
inquisitive, well-informed, trustful of reason, open-minded, flexible,
fair-minded in evaluation, honest in facing personal biases, prudent in making
judgments, willing to reconsider, clear about issues, orderly in complex
matters, diligent in seeking relevant information, reasonable in the selection
of criteria, focused in inquiry, and persistent in seeking results which are as
precise as the subject and the circumstances of inquiry permit. Thus, educating
good critical thinkers means working toward this ideal. It combines developing
CT skills with nurturing those dispositions which consistently yield useful
insights and which are the basis of a rational and democratic society."
A little reformatting helps make this definition more comprehensible:
We understand critical thinking to be
purposeful, self-regulatory judgment which results in
· interpretation
· analysis
· evaluation
· inference
as well as explanation of the
· evidential
· conceptual
· methodological
· criteriological
· contextual
considerations upon which that judgment
is based.
Francis Bacon (1605)
"For myself, I found that I was
fitted for nothing so well as for the study of Truth; as having a mind nimble
and versatile enough to catch the resemblances of things … and at the same time
steady enough to fix and distinguish their subtler differences; as being gifted
by nature with desire to seek, patience to doubt, fondness to meditate,
slowness to assert, readiness to consider, carefulness to dispose and set in
order; and as being a man that neither affects what is new nor admires what is
old, and that hates every kind of imposture."
A shorter version is "the art of being right."
Or, more prosaically: critical thinking is "the skillful application
of a repertoire of validated general techniques for deciding the level of
confidence you should have in a proposition in the light of the available
evidence."
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