Thinking Skills: Critical Thinking and Problem Solving

(singke) #1

30 Unit 2 Critical thinking: the basics


of belief or opinion. An argument that the Earth
is not flat makes practical sense only if
someone – past or present – thinks that it is
flat, or needs proof that it is.

Evaluating argument
We have seen then that an argument is a
complex claim, made up of simpler claims –
the reasons (premises) and the conclusion. It
is a good argument if the reason or reasons
justify the conclusion. It is a poor argument if
they do not. Evaluating argument means
distinguishing good ones from bad ones.
Much of the content of this book is about the
critical evaluation of reasoned argument. But
here is a taste of what it is like.

We have established that [3] is a weak
argument; a bad one. Compare it with [1]:
the argument that since ships appear to sink
out of sight as they sail away, the Earth
cannot be flat. Is [1] a good argument, or
not? Would it persuade you that the Earth’s
surface was curved if you had previously
believed it was flat?

Activity


Commentary
Argument [1] might seem like a strong
argument now, because we already accept that
the Earth is not flat. But, as we also know from
history, arguments like [1] were not enough to
convince the general public straight away.
People needed more reasons if they were
going to give up a belief that had persisted for
centuries. Judged critically it becomes clear
that [1] is no better than [3], because [1] also
argues from appearances. If the flat
appearance of the Earth does not mean that it
is flat, then surely the appearance of ships
sinking does not prove that they are dropping
out of sight; nor that the curvature of the
Earth is the cause of this appearance. It could
be some kind of optical illusion; a kind of
mirage perhaps. It isn’t a mirage: it is perfectly

However, it would be wrong to think that
the two meanings of ‘argument’ are completely
divorced from one another. As stated at the
beginning of the chapter, arguments typically
exist to persuade, and it is clear that in a dispute
like [2] each of the participants is trying to
change the mind of the other. In [1] there is no
context given, but the argument being made is
obviously aimed at some real or imagined
opposition. Why else would its author feel any
need to give reasons to support the claim? You
don’t hear people nowadays arguing that the
Earth is spherical, because it is no longer
disputed. Arguments of the first kind occur
typically when some opposition to the
conclusion has been expressed or is anticipated.
Conversely, most arguments of the second
kind have some elements of reason-giving in
them. Even in [2], which is predominantly a
quarrel, both men are arguing on the grounds
of what they claim to see – the evidence of
their senses.
Bart: Anyone can see the Earth is flat.
Kris:... my eyes . . . tell me the Earth is
round.

If we wanted to interpret Bart’s words as an
argument, we could write it as follows:
[3] The Earth looks flat (to me); therefore it
is flat.

You may not think much of this argument now
because you happen to know that, because of
the size of the Earth, appearances are
misleading. The Earth does look flat. Therefore
the premise of [3] is true; but the conclusion is
not. So the conclusion does not follow from the
reason. [3] is an argument, but it is a bad one.
In some textbooks the impression is given
that critical thinking is concerned only with
arguments of type [1], and not with argument
in the sense of dispute. But for reasons just
given, we cannot understand the full meaning
and purpose of arguments if we ignore their
most obvious context. Much of our reasoning –
perhaps all of it – arises in or from differences
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