Different situations demand skill in different components of critical thinking. Part of critical thinking is being able to assess what skills are required in a given situation and how to respond if you don't have them.
Logic If an argument is to provide good reasons for an audience to accept its conclusion, then it has to satisfy at least the following two conditions: 1. the premises must all be plausible to the intended audiences 2. the conclusion must follow from the premises
Argument Analysis Now, we're also assessing the truth or falsity of the premises themselves.
Background Knowledge Arguably the most important pillar. Do we have a good reason to accept the premise? "If you want to argue about how to address climate change you need to learn something about the scientific, economic, political and ethical issues that bear on the question." If you want to make an argument about a speaker, you need to investigate the work and character of that speaker.
Writer, Please watch the lectures then write this critical paper: 1. Sara Aye - Co-Founder & Executive Director, Greater Good Studio: https://vimeo.com/290378608
- Elizabeth Talerman - Partner, Brand and Organizational Strategy, Nucleus & Miguele Issa - Strategist / Designer, Nucleus: https://vimeo.com/310865752
- Albert Shum - CVP of Design Experiences & Devices Group, Microsoft: https://vimeo.com/297322956
- Construdivism
Sample Solution