Your Deceptive Mind: A Scientific Guide to Critical Thinking Skills

by Steven Novella

Streaming video, 2011

Status

Available

Call number

153.4

Collections

Publication

Teaching Company (2011), DVD-ROM, 12 hours, 24 lectures, 238 pages

Description

Science. Nonfiction. HTML: No skill is more important in today's world than being able to think about, understand, and act on information in an effective and responsible way. What's more, at no point in human history have we had access to so much information, with such relative ease, as we do in the 21st century. But because misinformation out there has increased as well, critical thinking is more important than ever. These 24 rewarding lectures equip you with the knowledge and techniques you need to become a savvier, sharper critical thinker in your professional and personal life. By immersing yourself in the science of cognitive biases and critical thinking, and by learning how to think about thinking (a practice known as metacognition), you'll gain concrete lessons for doing so more critically, more intelligently, and more successfully. The key to successful critical thinking lies in understanding the neuroscience behind how our thinking works - and goes wrong; avoiding common pitfalls and errors in thinking, such as logical fallacies and biases; and knowing how to distinguish good science from pseudoscience. Professor Novella tackles these issues and more, exploring how the (often unfamiliar) ways in which our brains are hardwired can distract and prevent us from getting to the truth of a particular matter. Along the way, he provides you with a critical toolbox that you can use to better assess the quality of information. Even though the world is becoming more and more saturated information, you can take the initiative and become better prepared to make sense of it all with this intriguing course..… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member sami7
Excellent set of lecture on how your mind (You*) deceives you. Loved the examples & delivery. Definitely worth a revisit every now and then.
LibraryThing member LisCarey
This is a good, fairly interesting look at the ways our minds play tricks on us, both in the limitations of our physical anatomy (our eyes have a blind spot in the center, and our brains fill that in with what's around it, which can sometimes be wrong) and the biases built into our brains due to
Show More
the fact that we evolved in situations where snap decisions on limited information could save lives.

Novella talks about conspiracy theories, the dangers of believing your own theories on too little evidence, confirmation bias, and other ways our brains lead us astray. At times he gets overly dogmatic and repetitive, but it's mostly interesting and useful look at the ways we need to be aware of our own brains' ability to deceive us.

I bought this audiobook.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

238 p.

Local notes

1: Necessity of Thinking about Thinking. 2: Neuroscience of Belief. 3: Errors of Perception. 4: Flaws and Fabrications of Memory. 5: Pattern Recognition: Seeing What’s Not There. 6: Our Constructed Reality. 7: Structure and Purpose of Argument. 8: Logic and Logical Fallacies. 9: Heuristics and Cognitive Biases. 10: Poor at Probability: Our Innate Innumeracy. 11: Toward Better Estimates of What’s Probable. 12: Culture and Mass Delusions. 13: Philosophy and Presuppositions of Science. 14: Science and the Supernatural. 15: Varieties and Quality of Scientific Evidence. 16: Great Scientific Blunders. 17: Science versus Pseudoscience. 18: Many Kinds of Pseudoscience. 19: Trap of Grand Conspiracy Thinking. 20: Denialism: Rejecting Science and History. 21: Marketing, Scams, and Urban Legends. 22: Science, Media, and Democracy. 23: Experts and Scientific Consensus. 24: Critical Thinking and Science in Your Life

Similar in this library

Page: 0.1584 seconds