How to become a remarkable objective critical thinker, part 4, starting and improving
Sat, Aug 2, 2008
Now that you know why you should why it’s important to think clearly and what a critical thinker shows, it’s important to know how you can start to develop this ability and how you can improve it. No subtle and crowning exercises here, just some basic tips to get you started.
Credits: “A man is not an orange. You can’t eat the fruit and throw the peel away”
The first thing you should do is refrain from acting by your first impulse
After that, it’s really important to synthetize the facts, eliminate what’s irrelevant and keep only what is useful as information, so you can analyze it. You could find this difficult, because sometimes it’s hard to draw the line as to what’s useful and what should be neglected, so don’t be discouraged if you make some mistakes at first. You’ll improve in time.
Credits
After you’ve synthetized the facts, it’s time to analyze. It’s the step which will lead you towards the decision and definitely the most complex one, so in order to employ some help for yourself and ask some questions, such as:
Of course these are just small samples, and you could think of some questions yourself, that would perhaps apply better to your situation.
Upon analyzing, you have to think about the short, medium and long term implications. There’s a big chance you will be put into a situation which has short term benefits, but affects the long term progress, or the other way around. You have to try to anticipate what will happen and again think realistically about what the situation is and how you can adapt to it. There’s no reason for being optimist here, because it’s hard to say what will happen and how things will evolve, so it can’t hurt to be prepared for something.
Another thing that you can do is ask some other people who could give you a different perspective. But that doesn’t mean that they are right, you should still rely on yourself and your judgements, but it’s sometimes refreshing to hear things from a different perspective. It’s why brainstorming relies on too.
Credits
After you’ve made the decision, you’re still not done yet. You have to prepare in case things don’t go your way; prepare for the bad things, because there’s no need to prepare for the good ones, is it?? That way if things go wrong, at least you’ll be prepared. All you’ve got to lose is some times, and you’ve got a lot to win.
This is part 4 of Becoming a Remarkable Thinker
Parts 1, 2, 3, 4.
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August 2nd, 2008 at 8:21 pm
[...] Also, another thing that has to be understood is that thinking logically doesn’t limit your creativity, on the contrary. Many things you find unbearable could be turned into something really easy with a minimum effort and consideration of the things involved. It’s really hard if you can’t do it naturally, but it’s really easy once you see how to do it. That’s what the point of this series is, to help you find the critical objective thinker within you, and let him lead you towards solving your problems. It’s going to be in three parts: the why, the how and the what. [...]
August 2nd, 2008 at 8:26 pm
[...] is part 2 of Becoming a remarkable thinker Parts 1, 2, 3, 4 Bookmark: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new [...]
August 2nd, 2008 at 8:31 pm
[...] is part 3 of Becoming a remarkable thinker Parts 1, 2, 3, 4 Bookmark: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new [...]
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