The sub title of In Evidence We Trust is The need for science, rationality and statistics. The subtitle could have been The need for critical thinking. Critical thinking / rational thinking includes scientific thinking, and statistical / probabilistic thinking is a component of scientific thinking. Critical thinking as conceptualized by cognitive scientists has been examined in an array of contexts, and the work of various cognitive scientists led the Stanovich Research Lab to develop the first comprehensive measure of rationality: Comprehensive Assessment of Rationality (CART- 2016).
Rationality consists of two broad categories-
instrumental and epistemic rationality. Rational thinking skills are
important. They are as important as intelligence. Intelligence and rationality
are often dissociated. Research demonstrates that intelligence is often a
weak predictor of rationality. This has been shown over a wide range of
studies. Intelligence is important, but there is more to good thinking than
intelligence. Intelligence reflects reasoning abilities across a wide variety
of domains, particularly novel ones. In addition, intelligence reflects general
declarative knowledge acquired through acculturated learning. Rationality
reflects appropriate goal setting, goal optimization, and holding
evidence-based beliefs.
Myths
About Critical Thinking
Critical thinking (rational thinking) is good thinking; it involves forming appropriate goals, goal optimization and forming evidence based beliefs. Two common myths associated with critical thinking are emotion prevents critical thinking and critical thinking is synonymous with formal logic. Full article
Critical
Thinking in Modern Society
Educators often pay lip service to the idea of teaching “critical thinking.” But, when asked to define critical thinking, answers are often weak and ambiguous. Common responses to the defining critical thinking include: “teaching them how to think,” “teaching them formal logic,” “teaching them to be thinkers,” “teaching them how to think for themselves,” or “teaching them how to solve problems.” They already know how to think; logic is only a portion of what is needed to increase critical thinking, independent thinking doesn’t necessarily imply critical thinking and teaching them how to solve problems are hard to measure assertions. Full article
Chapter 2 from In
Evidence We Trust features short articles on critical thinking. Some of the articles focus on the rationality
intelligence dichotomy. Also included in this chapter are interviews with Keith
Stanovich and the Stanovich Research Lab (Keith Stanovich, Richard West and
Maggie Toplak). In the interviews with Stanovich, he discusses the development
of an RQ Test. In the interview with the Stanovich lab, rationality and
intelligence are discussed.
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