Contents*
INTRODUCTION
I. FOUNDATIONAL PAPERS
1. Critical Thinking as Applied Epistemology: Relocating Critical Thinking in the Philosophical Landscape
Mark Battersby
2. Argumentation as Inquiry
Sharon Bailin
3. The Problem with Percy: Epistemology, Understanding, and Critical Thinking
Sharon Bailin
4. Reason Appreciation
II. THE APPROACH
5. Inquiry: A Dialectical Approach to Teaching Critical Thinking
III. CONDUCTIVE REASONING
6. Guidelines for Reaching a Reasoned Judgment
7. Conductive Argumentation, Degrees of Confidence, and the Communication of Uncertainty
IV. ASPECTS OF THE APPROACH
8. Assessing Expert Claims: Critical Thinking and the Appeal to Authority
Mark Battersby
9. Fallacy Identification in a Dialectical Approach to Teaching Critical Thinking
10. Critical Inquiry: Considering the Context
11. Critical Thinking and Cognitive Biases
12. DAMed If You Do; DAMed If You Don’t: Cohen’s “Missed Opportunities”
V. APPLICATION OF THE APPROACH
13. Beyond the Boundaries: The Epistemological Significance of Differing Cultural Perspectives
14. Teaching Critical Inquiry in Science: The Role of Dialectical Context in Scientific Reasoning
15. Applied Epistemology and Argumentation in Epidemiology
Mark Battersby
VI. TEACHING
16. The Competent Layperson: Re-envisioning the Ideal of the Educated Person
Mark Battersby
17. Critical Thinking as Inquiry in Higher Education
18. Fostering the Virtues of Inquiry
VII. CRITICAL THINKING AND CREATIVITY
19. Is Argument for Conservatives? or Where Do Sparkling New Ideas Come From?
Sharon Bailin
VIII. NEW DIRECTIONS
20. Enhancing Rationality: Heuristics, Biases, and The Critical Thinking Project
Mark Battersby
*All papers are jointly authored unless otherwise indicated.