Skepticism: Why critical thinking makes you smarter | Bill Nye, Derren Brown & more | Big Think

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Skepticism: Why critical thinking makes you smarter
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Chapters:
0:00 Introduction
0:41 Lawrence Krauss
3:02 Michael Shermer
8:07 Bill Nye
9:50 Lawrence Krauss (Part 2)
11:50 Darren Brown

It's not always easy to tell the difference between objective truth and what we believe to be true. Separating facts from opinions, according to skeptic Michael Shermer, theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss, and others, requires research, self-reflection, and time.

Recognizing your own biases and those of others, avoiding echo chambers, actively seeking out opposing voices, and asking smart, testable questions are a few of the ways that skepticism can be a useful tool for learning and growth.

As Derren Brown points out, being "skeptical of skepticism" can also lead to interesting revelations and teach us new things about ourselves and our psychology.

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TRANSCRIPT:

LAWRENCE KRAUSS: I like to keep an open mind but not so open that my brains fall out. And that's the key point. We have to skeptically assess the information we receive. We can't be gullible because when we get a lot of information, it's absolutely certain that some of that information is wrong. And so we have to always filter what we get. And we have to ask ourselves the following question: "How open does my brain have to be to accept that information? Does it have to fall out?" And by that, I mean when someone tells you something you have to ask "Is this consistent with my experience? Is it consistent with the experience of other people around me?" And if it isn't, then probably there's a good reason to be skeptical about it; it's probably wrong. If it makes predictions that also appear to be in disagreement with things that you observe around you, you should question it.

And so we should never take anything on faith. That's really the mantra of science, if you want, that faith is the enemy of science. We often talk about a loss of faith in the world today. You don't lose anything by losing faith. What you gain is reality. And so skepticism plays a key role in science simply because we also are hard-wired to want to believe. We're hard-wired to want to find reasons for things. In the savanna in Africa, the trees could be rustling and you could choose to say, "Well, there's no reason for that." Or, "Maybe it's due to a lion." And those individuals who thought there might be no reason, never lived long enough to survive to procreate. And so it's not too surprising, we want to find explanations for everything. And we create them if we need to, to satisfy ourselves, because we need to make sense of the world around us. And what we have to understand is that what makes sense to the universe, is not the same as what makes sense to us. And we can't impose our beliefs on the universe. And the way we get around that inherent bias is by constantly questioning both ourselves and all the information we receive from others. That's what we do in science and it works beautifully in the real world as well.

MICHAEL SHERMER: The problem is this. None of us has the truth. The only way to find out if you're deceiving yourself or not, if you've gone off the rails, if you're wrong in some way, is to listen to other people who disagree with you. I started encountering other people that disagreed with me. You know, we-never-went-to-the-moon people, conspiracy people, whatever. And I thought, "Okay, so how do we know, if I don't know what's coming down the pike say in 10 years from now, if I was gonna teach my students how to think critically, what are the key points, like just basic questions they could ask?" So, it begins with one: How reliable is the source of the claim? Here's the claim, how reliable is it? What's the evidence for it? What's the quality of the evidence? Where does it come from? Who said that? Is this some fake news, alternative site thing, or is it The Wall Street Journal or The New York Times? The source really matters. Has anyone tried to disprove the claim? This is super important because everybody thinks they're right and every website has testimonials about this product or that idea. The question is not "What do your supporters think?" but "What do the people who don't agree with you think?" Because that's what I wanna know. Has anyone run an experiment to try to disprove your theory?...

Комментарии
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What's the best critical thinking tip you've come across?

bigthink
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"The more you know, the more you realize you don't know." The less you know the more you think you know

moyndebs
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My father was a physician & a skeptic. One of his favorite aphorisms was “don’t believe everything you think.” He passed away last November. I still miss him a lot.

wendelynanderson
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Critical thinking should be taught at school along with how to plan for the future, budgeting and communication skills.

olafvonbraun
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I'm a skeptic and as a psychologist I wanna add this. Skepticism also brings a lot of anxiety and life dissatisfaction. But still worth it.

IbrahimSiawash
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I had a lecturer in college who convinced a couple kids in class that flat earth theory was a plausible idea, just to make the point that you shouldn't believe everything people tell you just by the level of authority they project. It was funny and disturbing at the same time, realizing how easy it is to influence intelligent people into believing ridiculous things out of blind trust.

Wesaar
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The best English teacher that I had was in my freshman year in Bronx Community college. He changed my life with 1 question. Since that day I question every single thing and paradoxical enough since that day stopped living because when you live questioning everything you're not living, because in life is better to not know certain things. The question he asked us was: Why you guys believe everything teachers say without double checking? That simple question changed my life and critical thinking started...This went over almost all my peers head but that had a tremendous impact in me. He gave me a tip and told me to be careful when talking to people because there's a thin line between sounding arrogant to others and have a proper conversation when you are a critical thinker, most people become defensive and starts seeing you as ( he thinks he knows everything)...

edwardoemiliano
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"The only real progress comes from learning to be wrong, alone." --Camus

gypsylee
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Here’s a favourite quote of mine: “You don’t just make progress in science by getting everything right. You make progress also by getting things wrong in an interesting way.” Dr. Tony Freeth

seanferguson
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Critical thinking and questioning can really annoy some people, especially those who've succeeded in life without really trying.

ncooper
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This cools my heart knowing im not the only one who thinks like this im in a community where people only believes in what they were told to believe in childhood sometimes it hurts and i feel like im suffocating because no one in my circle thinks like this…and i need to meet people who thinks this way …hopefully one day i will leave my community behind and meet people who belives in reality

hfq
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"The mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be kindled."
--Plutarch

QuestionEverythingButWHY
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Being atuned to thinking critically really is a double edged sword. Gaining a greater understanding of the world can really put you at odds with the perceived reality of others in a way that is at best frustrating and at worst deeply disturbing and even terrifying. There are many, many times I wish I did not think critically about a lot of things. I don't think the pursuit of truth is the optimal journey for all people.

juliawilliams
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I had a government teacher in high school that once gave us an article on the same subject, one from the liberal perspective, and the other written from a conservative perspective. I saw the respective viewpoints. Now, I go to various sources and investigate, then make up my own mind as to what is really true.

godsnobody
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I have started questioning why I should question everything.

sherlockholmes
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I think it is also about accepting that it is ok to not know everything. It is impossible to find out the truth about everything, because many things that are considered true today might not be somewhere in the future because of new scientific insights.

henrikejekel
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The more educated I became, the more I realised how little I knew.

elizabethk
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Question everything. Especially authority.

JohnathanNoechelShunn
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Problem is, everyone thinks they're a critical thinker.

woodygilson
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"you have to ask 'is this consistent with my experience?'"

Rene Descartes: "And I took that personally."

keilafleischbein