"We need to teach kids how to think critically!" - a common call.
One result is perhaps the number of threads here that tell us how physics or mathematics has it wrong, while demonstrating a lack of knowledge of either physics or mathematics.
Critical thinking without context is dangerous. — Banno
Great stuff. Unfortunately, education trends are going in the exact opposite direction. We (to be fair, I only know the American system well) are abandoning content to teach "skills" like critical thinking. And very smart people (see the many in this thread) seem blind to the fact that you must have something to think critically about, and without a knowledge base, you might be thinking, but there is nothing critical going on.
And after my first read through the thread, every post that even slightly disagrees provides no example of how to teach critical thinking separate from content...unless I missed it. — ZhouBoTong
Thank God. Someone understands my point here finally. I was going to lose my mind and l was beginning to think whether l was spewing complete garbage.I don't think that is what Wittgenstein is saying. I think he is saying it is possible to be dogmatic, in the sense of holding some traditionally held "primary theses" about the world (Relativity is correct) and yet still be capable of advancing your knowledge by way of critical thought. Perhaps critical thought doesn't target dogmatic core beliefs initially or directly, but it can eventually penetrate them.
Cognitive load theory assumes that, for example, critical thinking is biologically primary and so unteachable. We all are able to think critically if we have sufficient knowledge stored in long-term memory in the area of interest.
A car mechanic can think critically about repairing a car. I, and I dare say most of you reading cannot. Teaching us critical thinking strategies instead of car mechanics is likely to be useless.
— John Sweller
"We need to teach kids how to think critically!" - a common call.
One result is perhaps the number of threads here that tell us how physics or mathematics has it wrong, while demonstrating a lack of knowledge of either physics or mathematics.
Critical thinking without context is dangerous. — Banno
"We need to teach kids how to think critically!" - a common call.
One result is perhaps the number of threads here that tell us how physics or mathematics has it wrong, while demonstrating a lack of knowledge of either physics or mathematics.
Critical thinking without context is dangerous. — Banno
↪Valentinus
I've no idea of what you are saying. — Banno
There are theories now that history education can be a mish-mash hodepodge of time periods and events, as long as it is taught using "critical thinking" skills. In other words, the aversion to "grand narrative" history is so great, that the basic eras, periods, and change over time is lost to "thinking exercises" or collaborative projects, or whatever else is considered more important than content itself. — schopenhauer1
However, without the basic narrative, there is no way to properly understand it, deconstruct, or do anything else meaningful with it. — schopenhauer1
If you don't understand the Enlightenment, the American Revolution makes little sense. If you don't understand the Reformation, the Enlightenment makes no sense. If you don't understand the Silk Road, you miss out on the globalization that lead to Renaissance, etc. — schopenhauer1
To take things out of context and to just use historical subjects as a means to some some ludicrous critical thinking goal, that has nothing to do with history itself is to create a real disservice. — schopenhauer1
One of the biggest lie that we are all told is that everyone is creative. — Wittgenstein
I wish this was understood by more people (shouldn't it be obvious?)
Ironically in philosophy, the simple things are left unnoticed. The most cryptic philosopher is usually the one who is studied the most too cause it is easy to argue about topics that can be misunderstood easily. — Wittgenstein
They need to know the basics BEFORE getting into the cryptic stuff.
His theory was so ahead of his time that even the mathematicians of the highest calibre struggled to understand its importance — Wittgenstein
Karl Popper has highly-regarded and expansive epistemology called "Critical Rationalism" that is entirely based on the concept of critical thinking. — Pantagruel
One of the biggest lie that we are all told is that everyone is creative. — Wittgenstein
Indeed. I had trouble with it when I first encountered it in 1962. :yikes:
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