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Week 4 - Identifying Assumptions, Biases, and Common Fallacies

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Activity 1 :: Activity 2 :: Activity 3 :: Activity 4

Key Concepts and Questions 

As you read the text and work through the MindEdge Modules, you'll want to pay particularly close attention to the information regarding the following key concepts:

1.  The ways we assess information:

      • Inert Information: taking into mind information that, though memorized, we do not understand.
      • Activated Ignorance: taking into the mind, and actively using, information that is false though we believe it to be true.
      • Activated Knowledge: taking into the mind, and actively using, information that is true, and understood.

2.    Assessing information by applying the standards:

      • Is the information clear or unclear?
      • Is the information relevant or irrelevant?
      • Is the information fairly gathered and reported or biased?
      • Is the information accurate or inaccurate?
      • Is the information consistently applied or inconsistently applied?
      • Is the information adequate or insufficient?

3.  The relationship between assumptions and inferences:

      • Assumption: Something we take for granted or presuppose. All reasoning is based on assumptions.
      • Inference: A conclusion we make about a situation based on our assumptions.

4.  Assessing assumptions by applying the standards:

      • Is the assumption clear or unclear?
      • Is the assumption justified or unjustified?
      • Is the assumption consistent or contradictory?

5.  Assessing inferences by applying the standards:

      • Is the inference clear or unclear?
      • Is the inference logical or illogical?
      • Is the inference justified or unjustified?
      • Is the inference deeply thought out or superficial?
      • Is the inference reasonable or unreasonable?
      • Is the inference consistent or contradictory?

6.  Understanding media bias and becoming a critical consumer of the news:

      • Understand the basic agenda of the media
      • Use knowledge of logic to deconstruct news stories and reconstruct them with alternative biases and slants
      • Learn how to redefine issues, access alternative sources, and assess assumptions and implications.
      • Learn how to identify low-credibility stories by noticing vested interests.

7.  Three types of thinkers:

      • Uncritical thinkers: intellectually unskilled thinkers
      • Skilled manipulators: weak-sense critical thinkers
      • Fair-minded critical thinkers: strong-sense critical thinkers

8.  The relationship of fallacies to the human mind:

      • We are resistant to recognizing poor reasoning when it supports what we intensely believe.
      • Humans by nature are egocentric, sociocentric and self-interested.
      • Cultivation of intellectual virtues is crucial to human development.
      • Recognizing the most common tricks of persuasion can help us better understand ourselves and others.

 

 

 

 
Copyright 2008, by the Contributing Authors. Cite/attribute Resource. Week 4 - Identifying Assumptions, Biases, and Common Fallacies. (2008, October 10). Retrieved November 21, 2009, from Western Governors University Web site: http://ocw.wgu.edu/liberal-arts/clrps-after-11-1-2008/a63.html. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Creative Commons License