Again, no threat to USA, Australia, Germany or France of Italy and most Western nations, of the war spilling over. — boethius
The war could turn nuclear, which is a very serious threat to the Western nations (and the world). Everyone on the planet has a stake in what's going on in Ukraine. — RogueAI
More importantly, there's only increased the threat of war for countries neighbouring Russia and threat of nuclear war due to Western emotional reaction to Ukrainian "worthy victims" and that all actions by Ukrainians are just, none of their lies need be talked about and are "just and noble lies" anyways, and any and all actions against Russia are justified ... even if they are counter productive and even if they harm Ukrainians more rather than help them. — boethius
the sense they were both expressions of empire and the countries propping them up responsible for millions of death across the world. Sure. Pick your favourite mass murderer. — Benkei
OK, then remind me of the premise. If "Critical thinking is something which needs teaching" is the conclusion of a logical argument - not just an assertion - then there should be a premise (or premises) leading logically to it. Remind me what those premises are, because I must have missed them. — Isaac
So because I'm a professor, I should understand the things you think are the case? Why? — Isaac
I haven't once claimed I'm right because I'm a professor. I haven't claimed I'm right at all, in fact. I've said that the evidence to support your position is lacking. — Isaac
If you say "you know it's illegal to burn the Union Jack", and someones say "I'm a professor of Law and actually it isn't", it's not a normal reaction to say "you must be one of those bad professors who are sacked because they don't know what they're talking about!" — Isaac
The normal reaction is to say "Oh really, I was sure it was illegal, weird...". — Isaac
Do you not see how odd it is to claim that something a professor says is wrong because it doesn't tally with what you think you know. — Isaac
You've got no strong reason to believe me. But you didn't, and that's the fascinating bit. You went for believing me, but simultaneously still believing that you know more than I do about the subject. — Isaac
Yes. I've studied how people learn and how they solve problems, particularly very young children and from what I've studied I've no reason to believe that critical thinking skills need teaching. — Isaac
I've every reason to believe that critical thinking is a normal part of human mental processing which is costly and so usually suppressed in situations of scarcity. — Isaac
Now you could just claim I'm lying, and I've done no such study. That would at least make sense. I could present you with all the case studies and papers (although clearly not on this thread - it would be way off topic). What doesn't make any sense is you believing the first claim, but then assuming I must be one of those 'bad' professors because I'm not saying what you think is the case. — Isaac
Are you telling me that nothing of this can be taught to people?
— Christoffer
Yes. Pretty much. Compared to simply removing the conditions of scarcity and allowing people to think for themselves, teaching these skill pedagogically has virtually no measurable effect. — Isaac
There is a need for learning resources to develop critical thinking skills generally and critical thinking about health specifically. Such skills could be taught within the existing curriculum using available ICT technologies. Digital resources for teaching critical thinking about health should be designed so that they can be used flexibly across subjects and easily by teachers and students.
In basic form, teaching epistemology will show students that there's more to a claim, truth, fact or argument, even done by yourself, than just accepting it as plain truth.
— Christoffer
People already know that. I've studied six month old babies who are aware of that. — Isaac
If there's no need for education, why don't you just quit your job then?
— Christoffer
I did, but I was primarily a researcher. Teaching was an annoyance. — Isaac
The method is not relevant. The material causes of those societies being that way are. — Isaac
Then why haven't those nations already done it? What are they natively lacking which has prevented this? — Isaac
One part can be that they don't have any teachers for this type of educational form. So those teachers need to be educated first.
— Christoffer
Why? Why don't they already have the critical thinking skills from their own rich cultural heritage? — Isaac
Just throw the books at them and they'll learn? Yeah, right
— Christoffer
Yeah. Right. — Isaac
Again, you're so sure of your beliefs that you think you can just dismiss any challenges to them with "yeah, right". It is true. I've studied children who have learned everything from reading, writing and maths through to advanced computer skills, science and even basic medicine without any pedagogic teaching whatsoever. Books and time. Nothing more. Throw in access to experts when they're asked for and you have a complete education system. — Isaac
Letting parents teach their own children the same thing they were taught within such nations does not generate anything other than the same servents of those regimes that those parents were taught to be.
— Christoffer
Why not? Are all the parents authoritarian too? People are not as stupid as you paint them. — Isaac
Yes, there are. Nothing about home-education requires children to stay locked in their rooms. — Isaac
As an example, is examining a topic with deduction reasoning part of normal human thought? Have you ever met someone who figured out such methods on their own?
— Christoffer
Yes and yes. — Isaac
And what about those who don't have a high proficiency in logical reasoning? Who tend to always gravitate towards bias or agreeableness of others' opinions without questioning anything. Do you think they will "invent" methods to help them bypass those weaknesses out of thin air?
— Christoffer
Yes, if given the space to do so. You assume there are such people, for a start. People who think with strong biases tend to do so because of the mental cost of thinking more critically. Those whose thinking styles make this harder have a higher cost. No amount of education can fix that. — Isaac
To say that people of the population of the world today can just let "learning" happen on its own is a pure utopian delusion.
— Christoffer
According to whom? — Isaac
Didn't you argue for letting nations just be themselves and solve things themselves?
— Christoffer
No. Not once. — Isaac
Here you mention a lot of interventions by the west
— Christoffer
No, I mention lack of interventions by the west. I'm talking about removing debt, removing pecuniary trade barriers, removing support for corrupt regimes... these are not interventions. These are the lack of intervention. — Isaac
You'd rather develop some convoluted story about how I've managed to become a professor of Psychology yet still hold the (obviously wrong) beliefs rather than simply come to terms with the possibility you might be wrong. — Isaac
Because you are a professor?
— Christoffer
Yes, exactly that. As I said above, it's quite the normal response when someone whom you even strongly suspect of being a professor in a relevant field tells you you might be wrong to assume that you might, in fact, be wrong. It is not normal to assume they must be one of the 'bad' professors because you couldn't possibly be wrong. — Isaac
Yes. I use the same tools as everybody else. It seems they're extremely difficult, if not impossible, to avoid. — Isaac
You are still using your authority as a reason for me to be wrong.
— Christoffer
Yes. That's right. Again, it's quite normal practice (assuming you believe me) to consider the possibility that you're wrong if your conclusions are contradicted by an expert in the field. Note this is true even if you too are an expert in the field. It is not normal practice to assume there must be something wrong with them because they don't agree with you. — Isaac
You asked me, remember? — Isaac
Yes. Again, this is completely normal practice. — Isaac
It has nothing to do with 'authority' it has to do with respect for time spent studying. It's the same respect I extend to other experts with whom I strongly disagree. — Isaac
you claim intellectual superiority because you are a professor
— Christoffer
I've claimed nothing of the sort. We're 173 pages in, I've not even mentioned my qualifications to this point and you asked me what they were. — Isaac
The Aztecs were original in a particular brand of religious sacrifice but a bunch of pussies compared to settler colonialism and all the crap that came with that — Benkei
I'm just praying karma isn't a thing or we're both fucked. — Benkei
Now, I would like to hear you do an argument for how education is not required whatsoever — Christoffer
Whatchoo mean "we" kemosabe? — frank
sources and elaborations — Christoffer
Estimates for native americans killed through deliberate governmental action range from 95 million to 114 million in Canada and the US. Whether that was the US government or proxy governments for colonial powers is a bit academic. It does beat Mao although admittedly over a 500 year time period. — Benkei
I think COPD is a bigger killer than lung cancer isn't it? — frank
"Antiquity historians" had to do with folks who keep talking of the Roman empire again and again. — Olivier5
Good thing it's not — Olivier5
The European Union must cut its heavy reliance on derivatives clearing in London in the same way as the bloc is ending its dependency on Russian energy due to the war in Ukraine, EU financial services chief Mairead McGuinness said on Wednesday.
The EU has agreed to allow clearing houses in Britain, such as the London Stock Exchange's LCH arm, to continue serving banks and asset managers in the bloc until June 2025 to give time to build up clearing capacity inside the EU.
LONDON, April 4 2022 (Reuters) - The European Union said on Monday it has widened access for U.S. exchanges and clearing houses to investors in the bloc, a move which contrasts with Brussels' intention to shut off clearing houses in London in 2025.
Ah yes...and don't forget Finlandization. The wonderful term that the Germans invented to describe our relationship with our beloved Eastern neighbor. Just look how nicely the Presidents of Russia and Finland (the one that looked like Conan O'Brien) hold hands with a glass of champange. Just twelve years ago:The Finnish story is not just "fighting the Russians".
It is fighting the Russians, then mutually agreeing war is not a good thing, and burying the hatchet, and learning to live as neighbour's with mutual respect (at least for a time) and mutual benefit wherever possible. Finland even paid war reparations to the Soviet Union. That price for independence was also paid, yet I never see mentioned. — boethius
It's not their lives. Zelensky (and his government) decide how to proceed. Western governments decide in what way to assist. Ukrainian children die. They didn't get a say in the matter. If you think that's moral, that's your lookout, but I don't see how. I don't see anyone asking the Ukrainian children if they'd rather lose both parents and remain governed by Zelensky, or retain their family and be governed by a Putin puppet. — Isaac
Poland’s population in 1939: —————————————————————————————— • Ethnic Poles: 22,700,000 • Jews: 3,400,000 • Other minorities: 9,000,000 —————————————————————————————— = 35,100,000 Poland’s World War 2 population losses: ——————————————————————————————————————— • Jewish: 3,100,000 • Ethnic Poles: 2,000,000 • Other minorities: 500,000 ——————————————————————————————————————— = 5,600,000 Included in these losses: ——————————————————————————————————————————— • At German hands: 5,150,000 • At Soviet hands: 350,000 • At Ukrainian Nationalist hands: 100,000 ——————————————————————————————————————————— = 5,600,000
President Kekkonen used to invite world leaders and other officials to his private sauna at the height of the Cold War — Sauna Diplomacy, the Finnish Recipe
.These are a set of five Finnish high relief wood carvings of a traditional Finnish Sauna or 'Taking Sauna". Almost everyone in Finland either has a wood burning sauna in their back yards or has access to a sauna. The "taking sauna" is a part of Finnish culture
Just look how nicely the Presidents of Russia and Finland (the one that looked like Conan O'Brien) — ssu
Ok, let's make it super clear. The conclusion is originally more: "Teaching critical thinking is needed to help people see past authoritarian propaganda." So, dividing them into two inductive arguments: — Christoffer
Is “democracy” really America’s cause? Is “autocracy” really America’s great adversary in the battle for the future?
Not all autocrats, after all, are our enemies, nor are all democrats our reliable friends.
This authoritarian mindset is an unavoidable consequence of the American education system. Indeed, while so-called education reformers insist on more tests, pushing schools to emulate the Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean educational systems, they miss a big piece of the puzzle: educators in those countries consider their systems a failure. Despite performing better than American children on certain international standardized tests, Chinese educators have noted that Chinese students have also demonstrated a “lack of social and practical skills, absence of self-discipline and imagination, loss of curiosity and passion for learning.”
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