

#9: Thinking Critically About Critical Thinking
31 snips May 22, 2024
Drs. Derek and Laura Cabrera dive into the nuances of critical thinking, exploring its strengths, weaknesses, and inherent biases. They challenge traditional logic, advocating for a multivalent approach to grasp reality's complexities. The hosts discuss how bias influences research and the importance of cultivating critical thinking as a vital skill. They highlight the connection between critical thinking and creativity, emphasizing the need for perspective shifts and a versatile toolbox to improve problem-solving abilities.
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Critical Thinking Implies Bias
- Critical thinking inherently involves bias by highlighting certain aspects and ignoring others.
- This selective focusing means critical thinking itself is a form of bias.
Critical Thinking's Bivalent Logic Problem
- Most critical thinking taught is based on bivalent logic which is binary: true or false.
- This logic poorly matches nature's multivalent reality with more than two possibilities.
Multivalent Logic Surpasses Bivalence
- Bivalent logic handles two choices but cannot handle multivalence which is more common in reality.
- Multivalent logic includes bivalent, but bivalent cannot include multivalent logic.