Critical Thinking

January 6, 2011

 

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To think critically means to draw inferences in accordance with the rules of reason. In short, it means reasoning critically, or reasoning in the right way. The right way follows the rules of reason. What are these rules?

The rules go by many descriptions. Here is one way to understand them, however, very simply:

General Rule: When arguing your point (which we call the conclusion of your argument), use a cogent, strong argument.

Indeed there is only one rule. But the meat of this rule lies in our understanding of the following terms:

  • Argument
  • Strong versus Weak Arguments

An argument isn’t a spat. An argument is simply defined in this way:

  • Argument = Premises + Conclusion

A strong, cogent argument is one in which the premises support their conclusion.

  • Strong Argument = An argument in which the premises support their conclusion.
  • Weak Argument = Any argument that isn’t strong.

So what is it for a set of premises to support their conclusion?

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Straw Man: A Fallacy!

January 5, 2011

Congratulations to the Straw Man,
…………who has been named the fallacy of the week.

To create a “straw man” is to misrepresent your opponent’s argument–not necessarily by misunderstanding it completely, but by depicting your opponent’s argument as being weaker than it actually is.

For instance,

Mary: I think it should be harder for people to purchase a firearm. The laws are too loose.

John: You’re completely irrational. If it were up to you, everyone would be walking around in body armor and hunting would be illegal.

Of course, Mary didn’t argue that everyone should be armored, or that hunting should be illegal. So John created a straw man out of Mary.


Classical A/theism Debate in New Age Format!

December 29, 2010

Opponents Creating  Straw Men of Each Other: Watch the Battle!

In this first video, theists commit the straw man fallacy by making fun of atheists. The proponents of theism are also guilty of committing other fallacies of irrelevance with the use of sarcasm, personal attacks and guilt by association.

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In this second video, atheists respond with a video in which many of the same fallacies are committed. Very entertaining, to say the least! Can you spot the fallacies used?

Keep in mind that what is happening here, as we step back to look at the structure of second the opponent’s argument in relation to the first, is an argument from analogy and a reductio ad absurdum, as well. This means that the second argument has the following structure:

  • You say that atheists are evil because this historical figure was an atheist and he was evil. Hence we should not be atheists.
    (Guilt by association!)
  • But if that is a good way to argue, then so is this!
    (Analogous argument: Hitler believed in God and Hitler was evil, so we shouldn’t believe in God.)
  • But that is a horrible way to argue. It is fallacious.
    (If your argument is good, then so is mine; but mine is really bad, so clearly yours is absurd too!)
  • Hence your conclusion must be false.
    (I have reduced your view to absurdity — reductio ad absurdum.)

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Arguments from Analogy

October 14, 2010


Argument Examples

October 14, 2010

Arguments from Cause & Effect and Classification


What is a Fallacy?

August 10, 2010


Arguments From Narration

April 22, 2010

These are quite easy to spot, actually. A clear example can be found here.

The telling feature is, as you might have guessed, a narration–but not just any kind of narration. The point here is that the narration involved is meant to support the main thesis / conclusion of the argument. It serves as a good reason to accept the conclusion.

Can you tell which thesis / conclusion is being argued here? Were there any other argument forms that you could spot in the article? Could there be an argument from analogy present here, as well?


Begging the Question: Fallacy

January 3, 2010

Begging the Question

A form of circular reasoning in which a conclusion is derived from premises that presuppose the conclusion. Normally, the point of good reasoning is to start out at one place and end up somewhere new, namely having reached the goal of increasing the degree of reasonable belief in the conclusion. The point is to make progress, but in cases of begging the question there is no progress. source

Examples:

  • “Women have rights,” said the Bullfighters Association president. “But women shouldn’t fight bulls because a bullfighter is and should be a man.” source
  • “Women write the best novels because men do not write novels as well.” source
  • The soul is simple because it is immortal, and it must be immortal because it’s simple. source

Insofar as the conclusion of a deductively valid argument is “contained” in the premises from which it is deduced, this containing might seem to be a case of presupposing, and thus any deductively valid argument might seem to be begging the question. source


Inside Drama Behind the Times’ Wiretapping Story

October 21, 2009

By Eric Lichtblau
Posted Wednesday, March 26, 2008, at 7:08 PM ET


This article is adapted from Eric Lichtblau’s upcoming book, Bush’s Law: The Remaking of American Justice, to be published next Tuesday, April 1, by Pantheon. He and fellow New York Times reporter James Risen won a 2006 Pulitzer Prize for breaking the story of the National Security Agency’s wiretapping program.

For 13 long months, we’d held off on publicizing one of the Bush administration’s biggest secrets. Finally, one afternoon in December 2005, as my editors and I waited anxiously in an elegantly appointed sitting room at the White House, we were again about to let President Bush’s top aides plead their case: why our newspaper shouldn’t let the public know that the president had authorized the National Security Agency, in apparent contravention of federal wiretapping law, to eavesdrop on Americans without court warrants. As New York Times Editor Bill Keller, Washington Bureau Chief Phil Taubman, and I awaited our meeting, we still weren’t sure who would make the pitch for the president. Dick Cheney had thought about coming to the meeting but figured his own tense relations with the newspaper might actually hinder the White House’s efforts to stop publication. (He was probably right.) As the door to the conference room opened, however, a slew of other White House VIPs strolled out to greet us, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice near the head of the receiving line and White House Counsel Harriet Miers at the back.

For more than an hour, we told Bush’s aides what we knew about the wiretapping program, and they in turn told us why it would do grave harm to national security to let anyone else in on the secret. Consider the financial damage to the phone carriers that took part in the program, one official implored. If the terrorists knew about the wiretapping program, it would be rendered useless and would have to be shut down immediately, another official urged: “It’s all the marbles.” The risk to national security was incalculable, the White House VIPs said, their voices stern, their faces drawn. “The enemy,” one official warned, “is inside the gates.” The clichés did their work; the message was unmistakable: If the New York Times went ahead and published this story, we would share the blame for the next terrorist attack.

More than two years later, the Times‘ decision to publish the story—a decision that was once so controversial—has been largely overshadowed by all the other political and legal clamor surrounding President Bush’s warrantless wiretapping program: the dozens of civil lawsuits; the ongoing government investigations; the raging congressional debate; and the still-unresolved question, which Congress will take up again next week, of whether phone companies should be given legal immunity for their cooperation in the program. Amid the din, it’s easy to forget the hits that the newspaper took in the first place: criticism from the political left over the decision to hold the story for more than a year and from the right over the decision to publish it at all. But the episode was critical in reflecting the media’s shifting attitudes toward matters of national security—from believing the government to believing it less.

After all, the fear and trauma that gripped the country in the months and years after 9/11 gripped the media, too; the country’s outrage was our outrage. Coverage of 9/11 and its aftermath consumed all else for reporters in Washington. As federal officials scrambled to avert the much-feared “second wave” of attacks, reporters likewise scrambled to follow any hint of the next possible attack and to put it on the front page—from scuba divers off the coast of Southern California to hazmat trucks in the Midwest and tourist helicopters in New York City. One example of the shift: On Sept. 12, 2001, another major newspaper was set to run a story on the extraordinary diplomatic maneuverings the U.S. Secret Service had arranged with their Mexican counterparts to allow Jenna Bush, then 19, to make a barhopping trip south of the border. (She had just been charged with underage drinking in Texas.) A few days earlier, a scoop about a presidential daughter’s barhopping trip getting special dispensation from the Secret Service and a foreign government might have gotten heavy treatment. But the story never ran, and the Secret Service’s maneuverings remained a secret until now. In the weeks and months after 9/11, there was no longer an appetite for such stories.

At the same time, in the first few years after 9/11, stories that have now become frequent front-page fodder—about water-boarding of terrorism detainees and other aggressive interrogations tactics, about CIA “black site” prisons overseas, or about covert eavesdropping or other surveillance programs that stretched the limits of the law—simply didn’t get written by most of the mainstream media. If we had known about them, which in most cases we didn’t, there would have been a reluctance to publicize them in those early days of the war on terror.

I wasn’t immune to the shifting in attitudes after 9/11. In early 2003, then-Attorney General John Ashcroft appeared at a congressional hearing I was covering and announced, with dramatic aplomb, the unsealing of indictments against two Yemeni men, including a radical cleric accused of personally delivering $20 million to Osama Bin Laden. There was more: The cleric, Ashcroft revealed, said he had received money for jihad from collection at the notorious al-Farooq mosque in Brooklyn. I didn’t wait for a break to rush out the door of the hearing room and call our assignment editor, who would soon be preparing the story list for the next day’s front page. “This is big,” I told the editor. “Ashcroft says Bin Laden was getting money from a mosque in Brooklyn.”

Sure enough, the story ran at the top of the front page of the next day’s paper. But among my colleagues in the paper’s New York metro section, there was much less enthusiasm: The story, our Brooklyn reporter thought, was overblown, the evidence of an actual link between the Brooklyn mosque and al-Qaida thin. His skepticism was borne out: While the Yemeni cleric was ultimately sentenced to 75 years in prison on terrorism charges related to his support of Hamas, the sensational charge that the Brooklyn mosque was used to raise money for al-Qaida and Bin Laden had melted away to all but nothing by the time the case concluded.

For me, the story about the Brooklyn mosque, along with others, like the justice department’s wobbly case against “dirty bomber” Jose Padilla, were eye-openers. By 2004, I had gained a reputation, deservedly or not, as one of the administration’s toughest critics in the Justice Department press corps; the department even confiscated my press pass briefly after I wrote an unpopular story about the FBI’s interest in collecting intelligence on anti-Iraq war demonstrations in the United States. To John Ashcroft and his aides, my coverage reflected a bias. To me, it reflected a healthy, essential skepticism—the kind that was missing from much of the media’s early reporting after 9/11, both at home in the administration’s war on terror and abroad in the run-up to the war in Iraq.

That shared skepticism would prove essential in the Times‘ decision to run the story about Bush’s NSA wiretapping program. On that December afternoon in the White House, the gathered officials attacked on several fronts. There was never any serious legal debate within the administration about the legality of the program, Bush’s advisers insisted. The Justice Department had always signed off on its legality, as required by the president. The few lawmakers who were briefed on the program never voiced any concerns. From the beginning, there were tight controls in place to guard against abuse. The program would be rendered so ineffective if disclosed that it would have to be shut down immediately.

All these assertions, as my partner Jim Risen and I would learn in our reporting, turned out to be largely untrue. Jim and I had already learned about much of the internal angst within the administration over the legality of the NSA program at the outset of our reporting, more than a year earlier in the fall of 2004. Still, the editors were not persuaded we had enough for a story—not enough, at least, to outweigh the White House’s strenuous arguments that running the piece would cripple a vital and perfectly legal national-security program. It was a difficult decision for everyone. I went back to writing about more mundane terrorism and law-enforcement matters, poking around discreetly to find out what had happened to the NSA’s eavesdropping program. Risen went on sabbatical to write a book about intelligence matters. Then, one night in the spring of 2005, he called me out to his home in suburban Maryland and sat me down at his computer. There on the computer screen was a draft of a chapter called simply “The Program.” It was about the NSA’s wiretapping operation. “I’m thinking of putting this in the book,” he said. I sat and stared at the screen in silence. “You sure you know what you’re doing?” I asked finally. He shrugged.

Risen spoke with our editors about what he was contemplating, and so began weeks of discussions between him and the editors that ultimately helped to set the story back on track. Risen’s book was a trigger, but we realized we weren’t in the paper yet. We still had to persuade the editors that the reasons to run the story clearly outweighed the reasons to keep it secret. We went back to old sources and tried new ones. Our reporting brought into sharper focus what had already started to become clear a year earlier: The concerns about the program—in both its legal underpinnings and its operations—reached the highest levels of the Bush administration. There were deep concerns within the administration that the president had authorized what amounted to an illegal usurpation of power. The image of a united front we’d been presented a year earlier in meetings with the administration—with unflinching support for the program and its legality—was largely a façade. The administration, it seemed clear to me, had lied to us. And we were coming closer to understanding the cracks. By the time we met with White House officials in December 2005, Keller had all but made up his mind: The legal concerns about the program were too great to justify keeping it out of public view. The only real question now was not whether the story would run, but when.

That decision was helped along by a chance conversation I had soon after our White House meeting. The administration, I was told, had considered seeking a Pentagon Papers-type injunction to block publication of the story. The tidbit was a bombshell. Few episodes in the history of the Times—or, for that matter, in all of journalism—had left as indelible a mark as the courtroom battle over the Pentagon Papers, and now we were learning that the Bush White House had dusted off a Nixon-era relic to consider coming after us again. The editors in New York had already decided they would probably print the story in the newspaper for that Friday, Dec. 16, 2005, but when word of the Pentagon Papers tip reached them, they decided they would also post it on the Internet the night before. That wasn’t routinely done at that time on “exclusive” stories because we would risk losing the scoop to our competitors, but the editors felt it was worth the risk. The administration might be able to stop the presses with an injunction, but they couldn’t stop the Internet.

Phil Taubman called us into his office to hear the official word: We were publishing the story, Keller told us. Smiles washed over the room. Rebecca Corbett, who edited the story and had been a strong champion of it, inquired about the play it would get. There’d been talk of a modest one-column headline on the front page. She wanted to know whether we might be able to get two columns, maybe even three. This seemed like a story that would have legs. Keller demurred. He wanted the story to speak for itself; we would be discreet without looking as if we were poking the White House in the eye with a big, screaming headline about NSA spying. This wasn’t the moment to quibble over the size of the headline. After all this time, after all the White House’s efforts to derail it, we were happy to see the story in the paper at all; in the back of the A section, among the bra ads, would have been fine.

Eric Lichtblau is a reporter in the Washington bureau of the New York Times. He covers the Justice Department for the Times.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2187498/

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Copyright 2009 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC


Michael Barone Makes Stuff Up

October 21, 2009

September 22, 2009 2:09 pm ET – by Eric Boehlert
Source

Barone’s recent Washington Examiner column is awash in casual misinformation, as the conservative writer claims liberals just can’t handle criticism. That all the mini-mobs were doing this summer were raising substantive differences with Obama’s policies. And c’mon, why are Democrats so thin-skinned. Are they afraid of democracy? Of dissent?

Yadda, yadda, yadda. Just the usual nonsense.

But then Barone (surprise!) started making stuff up:

But it’s interesting that the two most violent incidents at this summer’s town hall meetings came when a union thug beat up a 65-year-old black conservative in Missouri and when a liberal protester bit off part of a man’s finger in California. These incidents don’t justify a conclusion that all liberals are violent. But they are more evidence that American liberals, unused to hearing dissent, have an impulse to shut it down.

Oh my, suddenly conservative martyr Kenneth Gladney is 65-years old? I have to say that this story of the supposed “union thug” beat-down  keeps getting better and better over time. It’s just another classic round of right-wing telephone tag masquerading as journalism. And in this game of tag, Barone is definitely it.

I doubt the columnist even cares what the actual facts of the story are. But on the off chance he does, he ought to post a correction because, as far as I can tell, in the context of the health care debate, no “65-year-old black conservative in Missouri” was ever beaten up this summer. Period. Barone just made that part up.

What did happen this summer was that Lou Dobbs and right-wing blogosphere, desperate for proof union thuggery, helped peddle the questionable tale of Gladney, who is a black conservative from Missouri. The exaggerated claim was that outside a town hall forum, Gladney had been brutally beaten (nearly to the point of death, according to some comically embellished accounts) and that a union thug was to blame. `Wingers even had YouTube video of the bloody beating to prove it.

The problem was when you watched the clip, viewers saw Gladney get pulled to the ground before he popped right back up less than two seconds later. Viewers saw Gladney walking around after the incident without an obvious scratch on his body, and in no apparent pain.

But within hours, and then days, the tale improved greatly. Soon Gladney showed up in a wheelchair at a right-wing rally thrown on his behalf. Why? because he was viciously beaten!!! Or something.

So yeah, the whole tale has been vastly improved over time in order to suit the right-wing mantra of how violent liberals are. And sure, if Barone wants to peddle that nonsense in his column, he’s free to do so. And Lord knows he’s peddled worse junk over the years.

But here’s where the correction comes in and I’m not sure how Barrone is going to avoid this one. He wrote that the black conservative victim in Missouri was 65-years-old. (Oh, the humanity!) In fact, Gladney, according to the St. Louis Post, is 38 years old. Barone was only off by 27 years. And yes, it’s a big deal becuase the supposed age of the (supposed) victim is supposed to send Barone’s readers into shock. (They’re beating up seniors!)

Question: Does Barone, and the Washington Examiner, do corrections? Or are facts for suckers.

UPDATED: Sadly, Gladney’s martyr-like website is down due to lack of payment. The Washington Independent’s David Weigel also notes that it’s been a whole month since union thugs supposedly beat Gladney within an inch of his life, and yet not one of his attackers have been charged with a crime; a vicious crime conservatives claim was captured right on tape!! Guess the St. Louis PD doesn’t see it that way.

Copyright © 2009 Media Matters for America. All rights reserved.


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