Critical Thinking, Introducing Link of the Day
I like to know what I am talking about. I have strong opinions and I like to imagine they are based in fact. I trust my gut instincts implicitly, but label them as such in conversation. I have had two embarrassing lapses in the recent past, where I have parroted something I had heard, only to regret it upon further examination.
The first incident was based on the movie “What the #$*! Do We (K)now!?” The K in parenthesis should have been enough to discredit the movie for me, but I was unaware of it until four seconds ago. During one scene in the movie a story is told about how the future “Native Americans” were unable to see Colombus’ ships for some amount of time, because nothing in their experience gave them the ability to grasp it. The ships were invisible because it was beyond their power to comprehend them. I liked that story. I would use it as a metaphor to be slagging on someone. “Her husband is an asshole, but she is like the indians unable to see columbus’ boats!” Finally I was called out on it. The story does not stand up for a second to critical thinking. Plus it just isn’t true. So, I ate my words and moved on.
Then I watched “Zeitgeist” (and learned how to pronounce it!) I was troubled by the 9-11 conspiracy angle. If there were no plane parts left inside the Pentagon, because they had burned up in the fire, how were they able to identify the bodies? I used the phrase “looked like a controlled demolition” here and there in public. I felt ill at ease thinking these things, let alone talking about them. Don’t get me wrong, I see this administration for the bunch of bastards they are and would not put something like the conspiracy theories past them. I just happened upon this page, and felt like the idiot I was. I know better than to take only one source as authoritative (unless it is Sam Harris). I did in this instance, but I made sure to get back to everyone I had spoken with about it and apologized. I still like Zeitgeist, though!
These experiences brought me to this link:
The Critical Thinking Field GuideĀ
It is my first Link of the Day, and going by the way I add content to my sites, it might be my last.
The stakes are too high in this Idiotocracy to get lazy with my thinking. We live in a time where the Discovery Channel and History Channel devote airtime to UFO sightings and talk about Angels. Lots of Nostradomus junk has been on the air lately. I will remember to think critically about the nonsense I hear.
The ultimate conspiracy theory is that the government is behind the conspiracy theories. They produce them to create a feeling of doubt and helplessness in us. That one I like! I can’t promote it, though, after reading how to think critically.




























