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Concise Guide to Critical Thinking

Lewis Vaughn

$105.95

Paperback

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English
Oxford University Press Inc
27 May 2024
Lewis Vaughn's Concise Guide to Critical Thinking, third Edition, offers a clear and compact introduction to critical thinking and argumentative writing. Based on his best-selling text, The Power of Critical Thinking, this affordable volume strikes a unique balance for instructors. While it is more succinct than the leading comprehensive texts, it covers more key content, and does so more effectively, than any of the briefer critical thinking handbooks. In addition to six core chapters on identifying, evaluating, and devising deductive and inductive arguments, the text features:
*Extensive coverage of scientific reasoning, with chapters on inductive reasoning, causal arguments, scientific theories and inference, and scientific method and theory evaluation. 
* A chapter on obstacles to critical thinking
* A chapter on fallacies and rhetorical persuaders
* A substantial chapter on writing argumentative essays

Throughout the text, Vaughn places emphasis on evaluation of evidence, authority, and credibility. Students don>'t just learn about critical thinking; they learn the skills necessary to think critically. Each chapter reinforces these skills with numerous exercises, including review questions, writing assignments, and self-assessment quizzes.
By:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   3rd Revised edition
Dimensions:   Height: 241mm,  Width: 168mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   590g
ISBN:   9780197768365
ISBN 10:   0197768369
Pages:   392
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Preface Chapter 1. Critical Thinking, Facts, and Feelings WHY IT MATTERS Critical Thinking Skills Test CLAIMS AND REASONS REASONS AND ARGUMENTS ARGUMENTS IN THE ROUGH Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 2. Obstacles to Critical Thinking PSYCHOLOGICAL OBSTACLES Is It Wrong to Believe without Good Reasons? Self-Centered Thinking Group-Centered Thinking Implicit Bias Resisting Contrary Evidence Left-Wing Right-Wing Bias Looking for Confirming Evidence Preferring Available Evidence Motivated Reasoning Homophily Mere Exposure Effect Illusion-of-Truth Effect False Consensus Effect THE DUNNING-KRUGER EFFECT The Internet versus Critical Thinking PHILOSOPHICAL OBSTACLES Subjective Relativism Social Relativism Skepticism Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 3. Identifying and Evaluating Arguments ARGUMENT BASICS No Arguments, Just Fluff JUDGING ARGUMENTS UNCOVERING IMPLIED PREMISES The Smart Way to Argue Online ASSESSING LONG ARGUMENTS Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 4. Deductive Argument Patterns COMMON FORMS Modus Ponens Modus Tollens Hypothetical Syllogism Disjunctive Syllogism Invalid Argument Forms Valid and Invalid Argument Forms REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 5. Inductive Arguments and Statistics ENUMERATIVE INDUCTION Sample Size Representativeness Mean, Median, and Mode OPINION POLLS How Survey Questions Go Wrong ANALOGICAL INDUCTION Relevant Similarities Relevant Dissimilarities The Number of Instances Compared Diversity Among Cases Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 6. Evidence and Experts EXPERTS AND NONEXPERTS Fact and Opinion JUDGING EXPERTS Hierarchy of Reliability EXPERTS AND PERSONAL EXPERIENCE I Just Know! Impairment Expectation Eyewitness Testimony and Wrongful Convictions INNUMERACY AND PROBABILITY Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 7. Fake News TAXONOMY OF MISINFORMATION A Fake News Masterpiece TELLING FAKE FROM REAL Read Laterally The Ethics of Sharing Fake News Read Critically Use Google and Wikipedia Carefully Check Your Own Biases Trustworthy Fact-Checkers FAKE IMAGES Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 8. Advertising: Commercial and Political HOW ADVERTISING WORKS INTERNET ADVERTISING OLD SCHOOL ADVERTISING TRICKS POLITICAL ADVERTISING Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 9. Causal Arguments TESTING FOR CAUSES Agreement or Difference Both Agreement and Difference Correlation CAUSAL CONFUSIONS Misidentifying Relevant Factors Mishandling Multiple Factors Coincidence, Birth Dates, and US Presidents Being Misled by Coincidence Confusing Cause with Temporal Order Confusing Cause and Effect The Deadly Post Hoc Fallacy NECESSARY AND SUFFICIENT CONDITIONS Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 10. Inference to the Best Explanation EXPLANATIONS AND INFERENCE Darwin and the Best Explanation THEORIES AND CONSISTENCY THEORIES AND CRITERIA Testability Fruitfulness Scope Simplicity Conservatism TELLING GOOD THEORIES FROM BAD A Doomed Flight An Amazing Cure Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 11. Judging Scientific Theories WHAT SCIENCE IS AND IS NOT THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD TESTING SCIENTIFIC THEORIES Nonintervention (Population) Studies JUDGING SCIENTIFIC THEORIES Copernicus Versus Ptolemy Climate Change Is It Too Late to Prevent Climate Change? If the World Is Warming, Why Are Winters and Summers Still Very cold?? SCIENCE AND WEIRD THEORIES MAKING WEIRD MISTAKES Leaping to the Weirdest Theory Mixing What Seems with What Is Misunderstanding the Possibilities JUDGING WEIRD THEORIES Crop Circles Eyewitness Testimony and Extraordinary Things Talking with the Dead Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 12. Fallacies and Persuaders FALLACIES: IRRELEVANT PREMISES Genetic Fallacy Composition Division Appeal to the Person How to Respond to Ad Hominem Attacks Equivocation Appeal to Popularity Appeal to Tradition Appeal to Ignorance Can You Prove a Negative? Appeal to Emotion Red Herring Straw Man Two Wrongs Make a Right FALLACIES: UNACCEPTABLE PREMISES X Begging the Question False Dilemma Decision-Point Fallacy Slippery Slope Hasty Generalization PERSUADERS: RHETORICAL MOVES Innuendo Euphemisms and Dysphemisms Stereotyping Ridicule Rhetorical Definitions Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Chapter 13. Critical Thinking and Extremism PARTISAN BLINDNESS Whose Pants Are on Fire? Political Bias and Consistency CONSPIRACY THEORIES Challenging Conspiracy Thinking Key Words Exercises Self-Assessment Quiz Writing Assignments Appendix A: Answers to Exercises Appendix B: Answers to Self-Assessment Quizzes Appendix C: Answers to Critical Thinking Skills Test Notes Glossary Credits Index

Lewis Vaughn is the author or coauthor of numerous books, including Bioethics, Fifth Edition (2022), The Power of Critical Thinking, Seventh Edition, (2021), Philosophy Here and Now, fourth Edition (2021), and Living Philosophy, third Edition (2020), all published by Oxford University Press.  He also publishes Doing Ethics, Fifth Edition (2018) with W.W. Norton.

Reviews for Concise Guide to Critical Thinking

"The book is comprehensive in taking up crucial aspects of critical thinking. I particularly applaud the inclusion of chapter two to help readers grasp the all-too-easy to make mistakes that impede critical thinking. The opening chapter does a great job of giving students a clear sense of not only what the rest of the book offers but also a clear sense of the meaning and purview of critical thinking. The last chapter is also vital, as ethics is all too often ignored as a vital component of critical thinking."" -Jeffrey Nall The topic (obstacles to critical thinking) is itself a major strength. Too many critical thinking books focus on logic without taking adequate time to explore the skills and psychological biases that influence our capacity to think critically. The inclusion of subjective relativism is particularly important given the uncritical acceptance of this profoundly misguided ideology."" -Jeffrey Nall This is one of the better * if not the bestintroductory texts to critical thinking I have read in quite some time. Main strengths are the clarity and concise nature of the writing throughout the text, the material covered, and the general tone (not overly technical, not pandering)."" -John Ludes *"


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