
Asking the Right Questions : A Guide to Critical Thinking
by Browne, M. Neil; Keeley, Stuart M.Rent Textbook
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | p. ix |
The Benefit and Manner of Asking the Right Questions | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Critical Thinking to the Rescue | p. 2 |
The Sponge and Panning for Gold: Alternative Thinking Styles | p. 3 |
An Example of the Panning-for-Gold Approach | p. 4 |
The Myth of the "Right Answer" | p. 6 |
The Usefulness of Asking the Question: "Who Cares?" | p. 7 |
Weak-Sense and Strong-Sense Critical Thinking | p. 7 |
The Satisfaction of Panning for Gold | p. 8 |
The Importance of Practice | p. 8 |
The Right Questions | p. 8 |
Critical Thinking Is a Social Activity | p. 9 |
Values and Other People | p. 9 |
Primary Values of a Critical Thinker | p. 11 |
Thinking and Feelings | p. 12 |
Keeping the Conversation Going | p. 13 |
Creating a Friendly Environment for Communication | p. 15 |
Wishful Thinking: Perhaps the Biggest Single Obstacle to Critical Thinking | p. 16 |
What Are the Issue and the Conclusion? | p. 18 |
Kinds of Issues | p. 19 |
Searching for the Issue | p. 20 |
Searching for the Author's or Speaker's Conclusion | p. 21 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 22 |
Clues to Discovery: How to Find the Conclusion | p. 22 |
Critical Thinking and Your Own Writing and Speaking | p. 24 |
Narrowing Your Issue Prior to Writing | p. 24 |
Cluing Your Reader into Your Conclusion | p. 25 |
Practice Exercises | p. 25 |
Sample Responses | p. 26 |
What Are the Reasons? | p. 28 |
Initiating the Questioning Process | p. 30 |
Words That Identify Reasons | p. 32 |
Kinds of Reasons | p. 32 |
Keeping the Reasons and Conclusions Straight | p. 33 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 34 |
Reasons First, Then Conclusions | p. 34 |
Critical Thinking and Your Own Writing and Speaking | p. 34 |
Exploring Possible Reasons before Reaching a Conclusion | p. 35 |
Identify Major Publications That Cover Your Issue | p. 35 |
Helping Your Readers Identify Your Reasons | p. 36 |
Practice Exercises | p. 36 |
Sample Responses | p. 37 |
What Words or Phrases Are Ambiguous? | p. 39 |
The Confusing Flexibility of Words | p. 40 |
Locating Key Terms and Phrases | p. 41 |
Checking for Ambiguity | p. 42 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 43 |
Determining Ambiguity | p. 43 |
Context and Ambiguity | p. 45 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 45 |
Ambiguity, Definitions, and the Dictionary | p. 46 |
Ambiguity and Loaded Language | p. 47 |
Limits of Your Responsibility to Clarify Ambiguity | p. 49 |
Ambiguity and Your Own Writing and Speaking | p. 50 |
Keeping Your Eye Out for Ambiguity | p. 50 |
Practice Exercises | p. 51 |
Sample Responses | p. 52 |
What Are the Value and Descriptive Assumptions? | p. 55 |
General Guide for Identifying Assumptions | p. 57 |
Value Conflicts and Assumptions | p. 58 |
From Values to Value Assumptions | p. 59 |
Typical Value Conflicts | p. 60 |
The Communicator's Background as a Clue to Value Assumptions | p. 60 |
Consequences as Clues to Value Assumptions | p. 61 |
More Hints for Finding Value Assumptions | p. 62 |
Finding Value Assumptions on Your Own | p. 63 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 64 |
Values and Relativism | p. 64 |
Identifying and Evaluating Descriptive Assumptions | p. 65 |
Illustrating Descriptive Assumptions | p. 65 |
Clues for Locating Assumptions | p. 66 |
Avoiding Analysis of Trivial Assumptions | p. 69 |
Assumptions and Your Own Writing and Speaking | p. 69 |
Practice Exercises | p. 70 |
Sample Responses | p. 71 |
Are There Any Fallacies in the Reasoning? | p. 73 |
A Questioning Approach to Finding Reasoning Fallacies | p. 75 |
Evaluating Assumptions as a Starting Point | p. 75 |
Discovering Other Common Reasoning Fallacies | p. 78 |
Looking for Diversions | p. 83 |
Sleight of Hand: Begging the Question | p. 85 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 85 |
Summary of Reasoning Errors | p. 86 |
Expanding Your Knowledge of Fallacies | p. 87 |
Fallacies and Your Own Writing and Speaking | p. 87 |
Practice Exercises | p. 87 |
Sample Responses | p. 89 |
How Good Is the Evidence: Intuition, Personal Experience, Case Examples, Testimonials, and Appeals to Authority? | p. 91 |
The Need for Evidence | p. 92 |
Locating Factual Claims | p. 94 |
Sources of Evidence | p. 94 |
Intuition as Evidence | p. 96 |
Personal Experience as Evidence | p. 97 |
Case Examples as Evidence | p. 97 |
Testimonials as Evidence | p. 98 |
Appeals to Authority as Evidence | p. 100 |
Problems with Citers Citing Other Citers | p. 103 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 103 |
Evidence and Your Writing and Speaking | p. 103 |
Anticipating Critical Readers | p. 103 |
Determining Whether You Need More Evidence | p. 104 |
Your Academic Writing and Evidence | p. 104 |
Practice Exercises | p. 105 |
Sample Responses | p. 106 |
How Good Is the Evidence: Personal Observation, Research Studies, and Analogies? | p. 108 |
Personal Observation as Evidence | p. 108 |
Research Studies as Evidence | p. 109 |
Problems with Research Findings | p. 110 |
Generalizing from the Research Sample | p. 114 |
Biased Surveys and Questionnaires | p. 115 |
Critical Evaluation of a Research-Based Argument | p. 117 |
Analogies as Evidence | p. 118 |
Identifying ahd Comprehending Analogies | p. 119 |
Evaluating Analogies | p. 120 |
Using Evidence in Your Own Writing | p. 122 |
Research and the Internet | p. 123 |
Practice Exercises | p. 124 |
Sample Responses | p. 125 |
Are There Rival Causes? | p. 127 |
When to Look for Rival Causes | p. 128 |
The Pervasiveness of Rival Causes | p. 128 |
Detecting Rival Causes | p. 130 |
The Cause or A Cause | p. 130 |
Rival Causes for Differences between Groups | p. 131 |
Confusing Causation with Association | p. 133 |
Confusing "After This" with "Because of This" | p. 134 |
Explaining Individual Events or Acts | p. 135 |
Evaluating Rival Causes | p. 136 |
Rival Causes and Your Own Communication | p. 137 |
Exploring Potential Causes | p. 137 |
Narrowing Down Your List of Potential Causes | p. 138 |
Practice Exercises | p. 138 |
Sample Responses | p. 139 |
Are the Statistics Deceptive? | p. 141 |
Unknowable and Biased Statistics | p. 142 |
Confusing Averages | p. 143 |
Concluding One Thing, Proving Another | p. 145 |
Deceiving by Omitting Information | p. 146 |
Risk Statistics and Omitted Information | p. 147 |
Using Statistics in Your Writing | p. 148 |
Practice Exercises | p. 150 |
Sample Responses | p. 150 |
What Significant Information is Omitted? | p. 152 |
The Benefits of Detecting Omitted Information | p. 153 |
The Certainty of Incomplete Reasoning | p. 153 |
Questions That Identify Omitted Information | p. 155 |
The Importance of the Negative View | p. 157 |
Omitted Information That Remains Missing | p. 158 |
Missing Information in Your Own Arguments | p. 158 |
Using This Critical Question | p. 159 |
Practice Exercises | p. 159 |
Sample Responses | p. 160 |
What Reasonable Conclusions Are Possible? | p. 162 |
Assumptions and Multiple Conclusions | p. 163 |
Dichotomous Thinking: Impediment to Considering Multiple Conclusions | p. 163 |
Two Sides or Many? | p. 164 |
Searching for Multiple Conclusions | p. 165 |
Productivity of If-Clauses | p. 166 |
Alternative Solutions as Conclusions | p. 166 |
The Liberating Effect of Recognizing Alternative Conclusions | p. 167 |
All Conclusions Are Not Created Equal | p. 168 |
Summary | p. 168 |
Practice Exercises | p. 169 |
Sample Responses | p. 170 |
Final Word | p. 171 |
Index | p. 173 |
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