Become a more sophisticated thinker with THINKING CRITICALLY, which teaches you a surefire process for developing the thinking abilities you need for academic and career success. First, you'll build your confidence by learning and practicing basic skills related to your personal experiences. Next, you'll progress to the types of reasoning skills required for abstract contexts -- such as your academic courses. Activities and writing assignments invite your active participation and prompt you and your peers to critically examine each other's thinking. Thought-provoking and current readings from a wide variety of thinkers engage you in thinking about complex issues from different perspectives. Along the way, monitor your own progress as a critical thinker with self-assessment activities.
This book is not bad. The downside is, it's too long for the little amount of information in it. The authors explains common sense ideas in details. I think the first 10 chapters could have been summarized into 2 or 3 chapters.
Chapter 11 (reasoning critically) is the best part in the book, it's very useful and I really learned so much from this chapter. I could even say, chapter 11 changed my way of thinking. I am sure all people need to consider the reasoning methods and avoid the reasoning fallacies described in this chapter.
This was one of the more "OK" textbooks I've had in non-major courses. It wasn't dynamite but it illustrated the points the instructor seemed to be trying to make for us, the students. It wouldn't be a bad book for most people to read at some point, honestly.
Thinking Critically is a college textbook by Dr. John Chaffee. I read the eighth edition, published in 2006. We all know what thinking is, so what is critical thinking? Critical thinking is where you explore your thinking process to clarify your understanding and make intelligent decisions. Over 2500 years ago, the Greek Philosopher Socrates said, "The unexamined life is not worth living." It is a statement that still holds up today.
One way to think critically is to make goals. Let's say you have a test in a course you're taking. How do you prepare for it? With a series of goals in mind, you can create a checklist to follow. Maybe you should study your notes. The point is that a goal allows you to organize your thoughts, and that is a necessary step to critical thinking.
I enjoyed the book. Thanks for reading my review, and see you next time.
I was hoping to get more educational ideas from this than I did. There were a couple of good chapters on constructing arguments and reasoning critically that I may be able to use, but the rest was pretty basic stuff - and not very engaging at that.
An appreciably comprehensive textbook on the theme of critical thinking. Well researched and provides many real life examples. Maybe a little too long though.
This text was informative, but basic. Great for those who are looking at evolving their critical thinking skills for the first time, but a bore for those who have given the topic any consideration in the past. I did learn, however, a few key terms I did not previously have a word for and a lot about the role of language.