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Index
Cover Half Title Title Page Copyright Page Preface to the Fifth Edition Table of Contents CHAPTER 1 THINKING: AN INTRODUCTION
The Need for Critical Thinking Skills
The Twin Pillars of Knowing and Thinking What We Really Need to Know Thought and Knowledge A Working Definition of Critical Thinking What’s Critical about Critical Thinking? Changing How People Think: Should It Be Done? Commercialization of Schools as a Threat to Critical Thinking
Empirical Evidence That Thinking Can Be Improved
Is Critical Thinking a Byproduct of a Good Education? Transfer of Training
Learning to Think Critically: A Four-Part Model
A Skills Approach to Critical Thinking The Disposition for Effortful Thinking and Learning Transfer of Training Metacognitive Monitoring
Intelligence and Thinking Skills
The Nature of Intelligence The Measurement of Intelligence
Becoming a Better Thinker: The Quick and Easy Way
Two Types of Thinking—Fast and Slow Bounded Rationality
Thinking about Thinking
Thinking as a Biological Process Thinking as Imagery and Silent Speech
Critical Thinking: Hollywood Style
Becoming a Better Thinker: A Skills Approach
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 2 THINKING STARTS HERE: MEMORY AS THE MEDIATOR OF COGNITIVE PROCESSES
Memory: The Acquisition, Retention, and Retrieval of Knowledge
Memories are Stored in Associative Networks
What We Believe About Memory is (Mostly) Wrong
Change Blindness Blindness Memory without Awareness The Illusion of Truth Classical Conditioning Varieties of Memory Working Memory Long-Term Memory General Principles to Improve Learning and Remembering
Acquisition
Strategies that Promote Learning
Retention
The Constructive Nature of Memory Stereotypes and Prejudice Inference and Distortion Real and False Memories
Retrieval
Forgetting Chunking
Metamemory Mnemonics
Pegwords and Images Rhymes Method of Places First Letters Mnemonic Principles External Memory Aids Remembering Events
Biases in Memory
Confirmation Bias Vivid, Dramatic, Personal, and Familiar Long-Term Accuracy is Sometimes Excellent
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 3 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THOUGHT AND LANGUAGE
Thought and Language
Psycholinguistics Underlying Representation and Surface Structure Implications and Inference The Role of Inference in Advertisements Rules for Clear Communication Analogy and Metaphor Using Analogies as an Aid to Understanding Using Analogies to Persuade
Words and their Meanings
Definitions and the Control of Thought The Power of Labels and Categories Prototypical Thinking
Language: Tool or Master of Thought?
The Direction and Misdirection of Thought Emotional Language and Name Calling Ambiguity, Vagueness, and Equivocation Etymology and Reification Bureaucratese and Euphemism The Perils of Polite Speech Framing with Leading Questions and Negation Contrast and Context Anchoring Barometers of Thought
Comprehension: The Reason for Language
Strategies for Comprehension Re-representation Questioning and Explaining Concept Maps Spatial Representation of Thought General Guidelines and Principles
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 4 REASONING: DRAWING DEDUCTIVELY VALID CONCLUSIONS
Logical and Psychological
Pragmatism and Logic When Logic and Belief Collide
Inductive and Deductive Reasoning Linear Ordering
Linear Diagrams Confusing Truth and Validity “If, Then” Statements Tree Diagrams “If, Then” Reasoning in Everyday Contexts Confirmation Bias Permission and Obligation Schemata “If, and Only If” Chained Conditionals “If, Then” Reasoning in Legal Contexts “If, Then” Reasoning as Therapy for Children with Attention Deficit Disorder
Combinatorial Reasoning Syllogistic Reasoning
Circle Diagrams for Determining Validity Reasoning with False Premises Syllogisms in Everyday Contexts Circle Diagrams can Capture Complex Relationships Missing Quantifiers Changing Attitudes with Syllogisms Common Errors in Syllogistic Reasoning Illicit Conversions
Probabilistic Reasoning
Bounded Rationality
Reasoning in Everyday Contexts
Reasoning with Diagrams Reasoning Gone Wrong Motivated Reasoning
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 5 ANALYZING ARGUMENTS
The Anatomy of an Argument
Premises Conclusions Assumptions Qualifiers Counterarguments
Diagramming the Structure of an Argument
Guidelines for Diagramming Arguments Using Argument Structure when Writing and Speaking
Actively Open-Minded Thinking
Historical Evidence
Evaluating the Strength of an Argument
Acceptable and Consistent Premises Credibility The Credibility Crisis Premises that Support the Conclusion Missing Components Sound Arguments
How to Analyze an Argument A Template for Writing Sound Arguments
Reasoning and Rationalizing How People Reach Different Conclusions from the Same Evidence
Persuasion and Propaganda
The Psychology of Reasons
Explaining as Knowing
Twenty-One Common Fallacies Distinguishing between Opinion, Reasoned Judgment, and Fact
Visual Arguments
How to Change Beliefs
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 6 THINKING AS HYPOTHESIS TESTING
Understanding Hypothesis Testing
Explanation, Prediction, and Control Inductive and Deductive Methods Operational Definitions Independent and Dependent Variables Measurement Sensitivity
Populations and Samples
Biased and Unbiased Samples Sample Size Variability
Science versus Science Fiction
Amazing and Not True
Determining Cause
Isolation and Control of Variables Three-Stage Experimental Designs Using the Principles of Isolation and Control Prospective and Retrospective Research Correlation and Cause Illusory Correlation Validity Convergent Validity Illusory Validity Reliability
Thinking about Errors
Experience is an Expensive Teacher Anecdotes
Self-Fulfilling Prophecies Occult Beliefs and the Paranormal
Conspiracy Theories
Thinking as an Intuitive Scientist Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 7 LIKELIHOOD AND UNCERTAINTY: UNDERSTANDING PROBABILITIES
Probabilistic Nature of the World
Likelihood and Uncertainty Odds The Laws of Chance How We Explain Chance Events Degrees of Belief It’s a Miracle (or Maybe Just Statistics)
Factors Affecting Judgments about Likelihood and Uncertainty
The Search for Meaning Overconfidence
Using Probability
Games of Chance Computing Probabilities in Multiple Outcome Situations Conjunction Error—Applying the “And Rule” Cumulative Risks—Applying the “Or Rule”
Expected Values Subjective Probability
Base-Rate Neglect Gambler’s Fallacy
Making Probabilistic Decisions
Combining Information to Make Predictions Thinking with Frequencies The Problem of False Positives Nonregressive Judgments
Risk
Assessing Risks Biases in Risk Assessment
Statistical Use and Abuse
On the Average Precision Significant Differences Extrapolation
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 8 DECISION MAKING: IT IS A MATTER OF CHOICE
Making Sound Decisions
A Framework for Decision Making Good Decisions and Subjective Utility Descriptive and Prescriptive Processes
Pitfalls and Pratfalls in Decision Making
Failure to Seek Disconfirming Evidence Overconfidence Availability Heuristic Representativeness Heuristic Wishful Thinking (Pollyanna Principle) Entrapment Psychological Reactance Liking Reciprocity Mere Exposure Effect Emotional States Unconscious Influences Nudging a Decision
Evaluating Consequences
Assessing Desirable and Undesirable Consequences Elimination by Aspects
Preparing a Worksheet
Framing the Decision Generating the Alternatives Listing the Considerations Weighing the Considerations Weighing the Alternatives Calculating a Decision The Problem with Numbers Dilemmas in Decision Making
Post-decision Commitment and Evaluation
Cognitive Dissonance Foot-in-the-Door Perspective Taking Hindsight and Forethought
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 9 DEVELOPMENT OF PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS
What is a Problem? Anatomy of a Problem
Situation Awareness
Stages in Problem Solving
Incubation Persistence
Well-Defined and Ill-Defined Problems Problem Planning and Representation
Multiple Statements of the Goal Representation of the Problem Space Select the Best Representation
Problem-Solving Strategies
Means–Ends Analysis Working Backwards Generalization and Specialization Random Search and Trial-and-Error Rules Hints Split-Half Method Brainstorming Contradiction Analogies and Metaphors Consult an Expert Crowdsourcing Select the Best Strategy
Problem-Solving Problems
Functional Fixedness and Mental Set Misleading and Irrelevant Information World View Constraints
Chapter Summary Terms to Know
CHAPTER 10 CREATIVE THINKING
Defining Creativity
Lateral and Vertical Thinking Creative Genius or Pedestrian Process? Sensitivity, Synergy, and Serendipity Creativity as Investment Theory: Buy Low; Sell High Creativity as a System Creativity as a Group Process Creativity as a Cognitive Process Stretching and Rejecting Paradigms The Problem of Problem Definition Selecting Relevant Information Generation, Exploration, and Evaluation Insight and Incubation Analogical Thinking Making the Familiar Strange Remote Associations Test
Encouraging Creativity
The Person, the Problem, the Process Personality Factors Persistence, Conscientiousness, and Curiosity Creativity as a Goal Types of Motivation
Strategies for Creative Thinking
Basic Principles Quantity Breeds Quality Creative Ideas Checklist Attribute Listing Crovitz’s Relational Algorithm Plus, Minus, Interesting Activating Inert Knowledge Browsing Visual Thinking Putting it All Together Chapter Summary
Terms to Know
CHAPTER 11 THE LAST WORD
Framework for Thinking
What is the Goal? What is Known? Which Thinking Skill or Skills will Get You to Your Goal? Have You Reached Your Goal? A Desirable Outcome
Can Critical Thinking Save the World? Going Forward
Appendix: List of Critical Thinking Skills Bibliography Index
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