analysis of facts, with certain levels of rigor and problem-solving abilities, to form a judgment
Critical thinking is the practice of carefully analyzing facts and information with rigor and problem-solving skills to form well-reasoned judgments. It matters because it helps you make better decisions and avoid accepting claims without proper examination.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Critical thinking is the process of analyzing available facts, evidence, observations, and arguments to reach sound conclusions or informed choices. It involves recognizing underlying assumptions, providing justifications for ideas and actions, evaluating these justifications through comparisons with varying perspectives, and assessing their rationality and potential consequences. The goal of critical thinking is to form a judgment through the application of rational, skeptical, and unbiased analyses and evaluations. The use of the phrase critical thinking can be traced to John Dewey, who used the phrase reflective thinking, and the excellence of critical thinking in which a person can engage varies according to the individual’s knowledge base on which both depend. According to philosopher Richard W. Paul, critical thinking and analysis are competencies that can be learned or trained. The application of critical thinking includes self-directed, self-disciplined, self-monitored, and self-corrective habits of the mind. Critical thinking is not a natural process; it must be induced, and ownership of the process must be taken for successful questioning and reasoning. Critical thinking presupposes a rigorous commitment to overcoming egocentrism and sociocentrism , which leads to a mindful command of effective communication and problem solving.
History
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).