Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015

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Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 1 Critical Thinking: Present, Past & Future Milo Schield Augsburg College April 5, 2015 St. Paul Critical Thinking Club www.statlit.org/pdf/2015-schield-ctc-slides1.pdf Outline V1 2 Outline We were better at critical thinking; We ve gotten worse. Recent causes Root cause: Aristotle s description of Induction Hume (1746): Induction is invalid and unjustified. Philosophy today: the dark ages No truth. Aristotle resurrected: Induction is conceptual. Why the future will be much better. Past V1 3 We thought critically! January, 1776 Past V1 4 Critical Thinking in America 1858 In proportion to the population of the colonies (2.5 million), it had the largest sale and circulation of any book published in American history. [500,000 copies 1 st year] As of 2006, it remains the all-time best-selling American title Wikipedia: Common Sense 1 st speaker had 60 minutes; 2 nd had 90; 1 st replied for 30 Speakers averaged around 100 words per minute. Families stood, listened, analyzed and evaluated! Present V1 5 Change in Values US Freshman Present V1 6 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Culture. Advocacy journalism rejects objectivity and neutrality Rise of pseudo-science: young-earth creation denial of evolution Confirmation bias in media MS-NBC & Fox News 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 1

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 Present V1 7 Most College Grads do NOT accept Darwinian evolution Present V1 8 Assumptions are Arbitrary. Theory!. Present V1 9 Assumptions are Arbitrary Present V1 10 Assumptions are Arbitrary. Secular humanism Religious humanism Present V1 11 Stance & Perspective: Optional / Elective Humanism is a philosophical and ethical stance that emphasizes the value and agency of human beings, individually and collectively, and generally prefers critical thinking and evidence (rationalism, empiricism) over established doctrine or faith (fideism). humanism refers to a perspective that affirms some notion of human nature V1 12 Recent causes; but not the Root Cause Schools drop diagramming sentences (1960s) Colleges drop logic as GenEd requirement. No evidence that logic improves writing Schools cut back on formal debate Critical thinking: waxes, peaks (1996) and wanes Reading for pleasure declines for school children Decline in academic rigor (Academically Adrift) College is not much harder than high school 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 2

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 The Root Cause Aristotle! Aristotle noted two kinds of reasoning: Deduction: from general to specific Induction: from specific to general. 13 V1 14 Aristotle: the Father of Logic Aristotle was clear on deduction: valid arguments gave true conclusions given true premises. Aristotle was extremely clear on deduction. Aristotle was ambiguous (incomprehensible?) on induction. All men are mortal. Socrates is a man, Therefore, Socrates is mortal. Every deductive argument required a universal premise: Either All X are Y or No X are Y. Where did these universals come from? V1 15 Aristotle: the Father of Logic Inductions generate universals based on particulars. From Some to All. Aristotle was incomprehensible on induction. Induction: Socrates is mortal; Plato is mortal; Therefore all men are mortal. Aristotle said induction was justified if we knew what was true for all subjects. This made him sound like an idiot. It required omniscience! All swans I know are white, so all swans are white V1 16 Need for a Induction All inductions involve universals All men are mortal All acorns come from oak trees All water runs downhill All universals about the causes and natures of things are inductions. Without induction, we have no science, no truth, no virtues, no ethics, no right and wrong. Without induction, all premises are arbitrary. V1 The Fall in Philosophy Hume in 1748 17 V1 The Fall in Philosophy No Certainty 18 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: The problem of causation; The problem of induction We cannot rationally justify the claim that nature will continue to be uniform. The supposition that the future resembles the past is not based on arguments of any kind, but is derived entirely from habit. 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: The problem of causation; The problem of induction Cannot generalize with certainty "induction is the glory of science and the scandal of philosophy" Broad Hume has posed a most fundamental challenge to all human knowledge claims. Kant and Popper 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 3

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 19 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Philosophy V1 20. 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: Problem of induction; Problem of causation.. 1879 Frege: Formal Language for Pure Thought Father of Analytic philosophy Creator of mathematical/symbolic/predicate logic 1903 Moore: Principia Ethica, the naturalistic fallacy Cannot derive an ought from an is 1921 Wittgenstein: the Tractatus: Language limits what can be said meaningfully. This excludes religion, ethics, aesthetics, the mystical... Present V1 21 Change in Values US Freshman. V1 22 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Philosophy No way to validate an ethical statement: Impossible to obtain an ought from an is No way to validate a scientific statement. All statements are conditionally or temporarily true: true until they have been refuted. Induction as invalid/unjustified leads to: Subjectivism Skepticism Relativism Cynicism V1 23 Cultural Relativism V1 24 Relativism: The Religious Response Relativism: No good or bad; no right or wrong; no virtue or vice; no duties; no responsibilities. No sin! 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 4

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 25 Bloom s Taxonomy #2: Top 2 are opinions; Ignored V1 26 Focus on Analysis Treat Synthesis as Opinion. Analysis: To break up decomposition, disintegration, reductionism Synthesis: to put together composition, integration, creation V1 27 Critical Thinking: Problems Teaching V1 28 Ethics reduced to value-clarification What is called critical thinking in the classroom tends to be reductionist (explaining complex phenomena in terms of more elemental events), positivistic (limiting the real to what is physically observable or which can be proved), quantitative (understanding qualities in terms of quantities).. Source: John Bardi: www.personal.psu.edu/jfb9/essay2thinkingcritically.html V1 29 Three Key Problems: Schield (2004) Resolving Three Key Problems in the Humanities. Abstract: The disarray in the humanities reflects their sensitivity to the problems of objectivity, unobservables and induction. Resolving these problems could set a new direction. Copy: www.statlit.org/pdf/2004schieldndih.pdf V1 30 Resolving these problems could Provide a reality-based middle ground that avoids the excess of relativistic subjectivism and dogmatic intrinsicism. Reverse the tide of anti-intellectualism, skepticism and pseudo-science. Lay the foundation for a second renaissance that would outshine the first in its benefits to society Schield 2004 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 5

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 31 3) Solution or Resolution V1 32 2009: The 1 st Book to address the Problem of Induction Solving or resolving the problem of induction An Aristotelian Account of Induction: Creating Something from Nothing by Groarke (2009). Groarke explains how Aristotle offers a viable solution to the so-called problem of induction Professor of philosophy at St. Francis Xavier University, Canada. V1 33 Aristotle mis-understood V1 34 Socrates: Mis-understood In presenting induction, Aristotle spoke of knowing what was true for all members of the group. This made Aristotle sound like the village idiot. It required omniscience of past, present and future! If all swans are white, then all swans are white Groarke says that Aristotle was trying to talk about what was essential to something. If it were essential, it would be true for all members of that group. 1. Always questioning. Sharing opinions. 2. Searching for what is essential about something. V1 35 2010: The 2 nd book to address the Problem of Induction V1 36 2014: The 3 rd Book to address the Problem of Induction The Logical Leap: Induction in Physics. Harriman (2010). Refuting the skepticism that is endemic in contemporary philosophy of science, Harriman offers demonstrable evidence of the power of reason. He argues that philosophy itself is an inductive science. [Most accessible] Shifting the Paradigm: Alternate Perspectives on Induction Editors Biondi and Groarke (2014). essays by experts who argue against the prevailing Humean view of inductive reasoning as an unreliable, enumerative argument. Paolo C. Biondi, Professor Philosophy. U. Sudbury, Canada [Most academic] 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 6

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 37 Two Kinds of Induction Induction is proceeding from particulars to a universal Aristotle s statement is ambiguous two interpretations: Scholastic induction (propositions) [Hume, Analytics] > From particular propositions to universal propositions All swans I ve seen are white, so all swans are white. Socratic induction (Definitions) [Aristotle, Bacon] > From particular things to universal ideas or concepts. What is man? What is truth? What is good? Future V1 38 Critical Thinking The Future will be Better Truth, goodness and beauty will be explored and recast. Philosophy will once again be the queen of the sciences. The humanities will be ascendant. Truth: Concept formation, the nature of knowledge and the field of education will be transformed. Goodness: Ethics will be secularized. The social sciences will merge back under the Humanities. Beauty: Art and literature will be redefined. Organized religion will no longer have a monopoly on goodness, values and virtues. Future V1 Critical Thinking The Future will be Much Better 39 Future V1 40 Will a different Philosophy make that much difference? Induction is the motor of the mind. Scientists manage to ignore the problem of induction. Problem solvers don t worry about this problem. People in the professions don t worry about it. Most individuals ignore the problem of induction. They believe there is a right and wrong, a good and bad. Q. Is there any evidence that resolving the problem of induction will make much difference? A. Yes, Ocassionalism in Islamic civilization today! V1 41 Socrates Averroes Aquinas Aristotle Al-Ghazali Ayatolla V1 The Fall in Islam Rejection of Aristotle and Plato 42 1058-1110 Al-Ghazali The Incoherence of the Philosophers: Most influential Muslim after Muhammad. Asharite doctrine: Occasionalism: As God wills it Yes No 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 7

Critical Thinking: Present, Past and Future 5 April, 2015 V1 Averroes: 1126-1198 43 V1 44 Socrates Bacon???????? Aristotle Hume GE Moore. Yes No V1 45 I look forward to a brighter future for all of mankind V1 46 Critical Thinking Generalizations. Scientific generalizations: Water runs downhill What a thing is (nature) determines what it does (causation) All swans are white (No) Human/Ethical Generalizations: Humans are mortal Reason is man s basic means of survival The right to life is the source of all rights V1 47 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Philosophy Analytic Philosophy (1879 to today): emphasis on clarity and argument (often achieved via modern formal logic and analysis of language) In a narrower sense: The logical-positivist principle that there are no specifically philosophical truths and that the object of philosophy is the logical clarification of thoughts the logical clarification of thoughts can only be achieved by analysis of their logical form The rejection of sweeping philosophical systems in favour of attention to detail, or ordinary language 2015-Schield-CTC-slides.pdf 8

1 Critical Thinking: Present, Past & Future Milo Schield Augsburg College April 5, 2015 St. Paul Critical Thinking Club www.statlit.org/pdf/2015-schield-ctc-slides1.pdf

Outline V1 2 Outline We were better at critical thinking; We ve gotten worse. Recent causes Root cause: Aristotle s description of Induction Hume (1746): Induction is invalid and unjustified. Philosophy today: the dark ages No truth. Aristotle resurrected: Induction is conceptual. Why the future will be much better.

Past V1 3 We thought critically! January, 1776 In proportion to the population of the colonies (2.5 million), it had the largest sale and circulation of any book published in American history. [500,000 copies 1 st year] As of 2006, it remains the all-time best-selling American title Wikipedia: Common Sense

Past V1 4 Critical Thinking in America 1858 1 st speaker had 60 minutes; 2 nd had 90; 1 st replied for 30 Speakers averaged around 100 words per minute. Families stood, listened, analyzed and evaluated!

Present V1 5 Change in Values US Freshman.

Present V1 6 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Culture Advocacy journalism rejects objectivity and neutrality Rise of pseudo-science: young-earth creation denial of evolution Confirmation bias in media MS-NBC & Fox News

Present V1 7 Most College Grads do NOT accept Darwinian evolution. Theory!

Present V1 8 Assumptions are Arbitrary.

Present V1 9 Assumptions are Arbitrary.

Present V1 10 Assumptions are Arbitrary Secular humanism Religious humanism

Present V1 11 Stance & Perspective: Optional / Elective Humanism is a philosophical and ethical stance that emphasizes the value and agency of human beings, individually and collectively, and generally prefers critical thinking and evidence (rationalism, empiricism) over established doctrine or faith (fideism). humanism refers to a perspective that affirms some notion of human nature

12 Recent causes; but not the Root Cause Schools drop diagramming sentences (1960s) Colleges drop logic as GenEd requirement. No evidence that logic improves writing Schools cut back on formal debate Critical thinking: waxes, peaks (1996) and wanes Reading for pleasure declines for school children Decline in academic rigor (Academically Adrift) College is not much harder than high school

The Root Cause Aristotle! 13 Aristotle noted two kinds of reasoning: Deduction: from general to specific Induction: from specific to general. Aristotle was extremely clear on deduction. Aristotle was ambiguous (incomprehensible?) on induction.

14 Aristotle: the Father of Logic Aristotle was clear on deduction: valid arguments gave true conclusions given true premises. All men are mortal. Socrates is a man, Therefore, Socrates is mortal. Every deductive argument required a universal premise: Either All X are Y or No X are Y. Where did these universals come from?

15 Aristotle: the Father of Logic Inductions generate universals based on particulars. From Some to All. Aristotle was incomprehensible on induction. Induction: Socrates is mortal; Plato is mortal; Therefore all men are mortal. Aristotle said induction was justified if we knew what was true for all subjects. This made him sound like an idiot. It required omniscience! All swans I know are white, so all swans are white

16 Need for a Induction All inductions involve universals All men are mortal All acorns come from oak trees All water runs downhill All universals about the causes and natures of things are inductions. Without induction, we have no science, no truth, no virtues, no ethics, no right and wrong. Without induction, all premises are arbitrary.

The Fall in Philosophy Hume in 1748 17 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: The problem of causation; The problem of induction We cannot rationally justify the claim that nature will continue to be uniform. The supposition that the future resembles the past is not based on arguments of any kind, but is derived entirely from habit.

The Fall in Philosophy No Certainty 18 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: The problem of causation; The problem of induction Cannot generalize with certainty "induction is the glory of science and the scandal of philosophy" Broad Hume has posed a most fundamental challenge to all human knowledge claims. Kant and Popper

19 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Philosophy 1748 Hume: Human Understanding: Problem of induction; Problem of causation. 1879 Frege: Formal Language for Pure Thought Father of Analytic philosophy Creator of mathematical/symbolic/predicate logic 1903 Moore: Principia Ethica, the naturalistic fallacy Cannot derive an ought from an is 1921 Wittgenstein: the Tractatus: Language limits what can be said meaningfully. This excludes religion, ethics, aesthetics, the mystical...

20..

Present V1 21 Change in Values US Freshman.

22 Critical Thinking: The Fall in Philosophy No way to validate an ethical statement: Impossible to obtain an ought from an is No way to validate a scientific statement. All statements are conditionally or temporarily true: true until they have been refuted. Induction as invalid/unjustified leads to: Subjectivism Skepticism Relativism Cynicism

23 Cultural Relativism

24 Relativism: The Religious Response Relativism: No good or bad; no right or wrong; no virtue or vice; no duties; no responsibilities. No sin!

25 Bloom s Taxonomy #2: Top 2 are opinions; Ignored.

26 Focus on Analysis Treat Synthesis as Opinion Analysis: To break up decomposition, disintegration, reductionism Synthesis: to put together composition, integration, creation

27 Critical Thinking: Problems Teaching What is called critical thinking in the classroom tends to be reductionist (explaining complex phenomena in terms of more elemental events), positivistic (limiting the real to what is physically observable or which can be proved), quantitative (understanding qualities in terms of quantities). Source: John Bardi: www.personal.psu.edu/jfb9/essay2thinkingcritically.html

28 Ethics reduced to value-clarification.

29 Three Key Problems: Schield (2004) Resolving Three Key Problems in the Humanities. Abstract: The disarray in the humanities reflects their sensitivity to the problems of objectivity, unobservables and induction. Resolving these problems could set a new direction. Copy: www.statlit.org/pdf/2004schieldndih.pdf

30 Resolving these problems could Provide a reality-based middle ground that avoids the excess of relativistic subjectivism and dogmatic intrinsicism. Reverse the tide of anti-intellectualism, skepticism and pseudo-science. Lay the foundation for a second renaissance that would outshine the first in its benefits to society Schield 2004

31 3) Solution or Resolution Solving or resolving the problem of induction

32 2009: The 1 st Book to address the Problem of Induction An Aristotelian Account of Induction: Creating Something from Nothing by Groarke (2009). Groarke explains how Aristotle offers a viable solution to the so-called problem of induction Professor of philosophy at St. Francis Xavier University, Canada.

33 Aristotle mis-understood In presenting induction, Aristotle spoke of knowing what was true for all members of the group. This made Aristotle sound like the village idiot. It required omniscience of past, present and future! If all swans are white, then all swans are white Groarke says that Aristotle was trying to talk about what was essential to something. If it were essential, it would be true for all members of that group.

34 Socrates: Mis-understood 1. Always questioning. Sharing opinions. 2. Searching for what is essential about something.

35 2010: The 2 nd book to address the Problem of Induction The Logical Leap: Induction in Physics. Harriman (2010). Refuting the skepticism that is endemic in contemporary philosophy of science, Harriman offers demonstrable evidence of the power of reason. He argues that philosophy itself is an inductive science. [Most accessible]

36 2014: The 3 rd Book to address the Problem of Induction Shifting the Paradigm: Alternate Perspectives on Induction Editors Biondi and Groarke (2014). essays by experts who argue against the prevailing Humean view of inductive reasoning as an unreliable, enumerative argument. Paolo C. Biondi, Professor Philosophy. U. Sudbury, Canada [Most academic]

37 Two Kinds of Induction Induction is proceeding from particulars to a universal Aristotle s statement is ambiguous two interpretations: Scholastic induction (propositions) [Hume, Analytics] > From particular propositions to universal propositions All swans I ve seen are white, so all swans are white. Socratic induction (Definitions) [Aristotle, Bacon] > From particular things to universal ideas or concepts. What is man? What is truth? What is good?

Future V1 38 Critical Thinking The Future will be Better Truth, goodness and beauty will be explored and recast. Philosophy will once again be the queen of the sciences. The humanities will be ascendant. Truth: Concept formation, the nature of knowledge and the field of education will be transformed. Goodness: Ethics will be secularized. The social sciences will merge back under the Humanities. Beauty: Art and literature will be redefined. Organized religion will no longer have a monopoly on goodness, values and virtues.

Future V1 Critical Thinking The Future will be Much Better 39 Induction is the motor of the mind.

Future V1 40 Will a different Philosophy make that much difference? Scientists manage to ignore the problem of induction. Problem solvers don t worry about this problem. People in the professions don t worry about it. Most individuals ignore the problem of induction. They believe there is a right and wrong, a good and bad. Q. Is there any evidence that resolving the problem of induction will make much difference? A. Yes, Ocassionalism in Islamic civilization today!

41 Socrates Averroes Aquinas Aristotle Al-Ghazali Ayatolla Yes No

The Fall in Islam Rejection of Aristotle and Plato 42 1058-1110 Al-Ghazali The Incoherence of the Philosophers: Most influential Muslim after Muhammad. Asharite doctrine: Occasionalism: As God wills it

Averroes: 1126-1198 43.

44 Socrates Bacon???????? Aristotle Hume GE Moore Yes No

45 I look forward to a brighter future for all of mankind.