Human Mind
Human Mind
Human Mind
to
Based on
Critical Thinking Concepts & Principles
The Foundation for Critical Thinking
Dear Reader:
To live well is to live as a reasonable and ethical person.
Yet humans are not by nature rational or ethical. Humans are predisposed
to operate in the world in narrow terms of how it can serve them. Their
brains are directly wired into their own pleasure and pain, not that of
others. They do not inherently consider the rights and needs of others.
Yet humans have the raw capacity to become reasonable and ethical persons, to
develop as fair-minded skilled thinkers. But to do so requires:
1. Understanding how the mind works.
2. Using this understanding to develop skills and insights.
This guide addresses the first of these requirements. It lays the conceptual
foundations necessary for understanding the mind, its functions, its natural
propensity toward irrationality, and its capacity for rationality.
It is designed for those interested in developing their potential to be fairminded reasonable persons, concerned with how their behavior affects the
lives of others, concerned to develop their full humanity, concerned with
making the world a more civilized and just place.
It is designed for those willing to transform their thinking to improve their
decisions, the quality of their lives, the quality of their interpersonal relationships, and their vision of the world.
It is intended to provide an initial map to help interested persons begin to
free themselves from the traps their minds have constructed. It points the
way toward mindfulness and self-understanding through critical thinking.
It is, in any case, a beginning place.
Sincerely,
Linda Elder
Richard Paul
www.criticalthinking.org
Table of Contents
We Live in Our Minds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2
Understanding The Human Mind: The Big Picture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3
The Mind's Three Distinctive Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-5
The Dynamic Relationship Between Thinking, Feeling, Wanting . . . . . . . . .6
Behavior: A Product of the Minds Functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7
Thinking as the Key to Feelings and Desires . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-9
Rational Capacities or Egocentric Tendencies Control the Mind . . . . . . . .10
The Problem of Egocentric Thinking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
Distinguish Egocentric from Rational Motives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1214
Feelings That Accompany Egocentrism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15
The Logic of Egocentrism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
The Logic of Rationality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
Distinguishing Egocentric Domination from Egocentric Submission . . . . .18
The Logic of Egocentric Domination and Submission . . . . . . . . . . . . .1920
Pathological Dispositions of the Human Mind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21
Challenging the Pathological Dispositions of the Human Mind . . . . . .2223
Defense Mechanisms of the Mind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2426
Popular Misunderstandings of the Mind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
Emotional Intelligence and Critical Thinking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28
Some Basic Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2931
Second Edition
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As humans
we live
in our
Minds
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Thinking
Feeling
Wanting
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THINKING
FEELING
WANTING
Makes sense of
the world
Tells us how we
are doing
happy
sad
depressed
anxious
stressed
calm
worried
excited
Drives us to act
as we do
judging
perceiving
analyzing
clarifying
determining
comparing
synthesizing
goals
desires
purposes
agendas
values
motives
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I THINK . . .
I FEEL . . .
I WANT . . .
For example, when we think we are being threatened, we feel fear, and we
inevitably want to flee from or attack whatever we think is threatening us.
When we feel depressed, we think that there is nothing we can do to improve
our situation, and we therefore lack the motivation to do anything about our
situation. When we want to improve our eating habits it may be because we
think that our diet is causing us harm and we feel dissatisfied with our diet.
Though we can consider the functions of the mind separately (to better
understand them), they can never be absolutely separated. Imagine them as a
triangle with three necessary sides: thoughts, feelings and desires. Eliminate
one side of the triangle and it collapses. Each side depends on the other two.
In other words, without thinking there can be no feelings or desires, without
feelings no thoughts or desires, without desires, no thoughts or feelings. For
example, it is unintelligible to imagine thinking that something is threatening
you and might harm you, want to escape from it, yet feel nothing in relationship to what you think and want. Because you think you might be harmed
and you want to flee, you necessarily feel fear.
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Thinking
Feeling
Doing
Wanting
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Feelings
Do not correct
themselves
THINKING
If I feel angry because my child is behaving disrespectfully toward me, I cant simply
replace anger with satisfaction, for example. To change the anger to a more positive
emotion, I must change the thinking I am doing in the situation. Perhaps I need to think
about how to teach my child to behave respectfully towards me, and then behave in
accordance with that new thinking. Perhaps I need to think about the influences in my
childs life that might be causing the rude behavior and then try to eliminate those
influences. In other words, I get control of my emotional state through my thinking.
Similarly we cant change a desire without changing the thinking that causes the desire.
Suppose, for example, two people, Jan and John, have been in a romantic relationship
but John has broken off the relationship. Yet Jan still wants to be in the relationship.
Suppose that her desire comes from thinking (that may be unconscious) that she needs
to be in the relationship to be emotionally stable, that she wont be able to function
without John. Clearly this thinking is the problem. Jan must therefore change her thinking so she no longer wants a relationship with John. In other words, until she thinks that
she does not need John to be OK, that she can function satisfactorily without him, that
she doesnt need to be in a relationship with a person who doesnt want to be with her,
she will want to be in the relationship with John. In short, unless her thinking changes,
her desire wont change. She must defeat the thinking that is defeating her.
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THINKING
the key to
Thinking
Feeling
Wanting
YOUR THINKING
controls you
Your emotions
Your decisions
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The Mind
Feelings
Thoughts
Desires
Organized
by
Egocentric
Tendencies
10
or
Rational
Capacities
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Strives to
gain its
selfish
interests
Strives to
validate its
current way
of thinking
RATIONAL THINKING
Considers
the rights
and needs
of others
12
Strives to
see things
as they are
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Egocentricity
Exists in two forms: skilled and unskilled. Both pursue selfish ends.
Highly skilled egocentric persons use their intelligence to effectively rationalize gaining their selfish ends at the expense of others. They skillfully distort information to
serve their interest. They are often articulate in arguing for their ends (which they typically cover with altruistic language). They hide their prejudices well. Nave others
often fail to see their selfish core (masked, as it is, in an ethical or seemingly considerate faade). They often succeed in moving up the social ladder and gain prestigious
jobs and honored positions. Skilled egocentric persons may favor either domination or
submission, but often combine both in effective ways. For example, they may successfully dominate persons below them while they are subtly servile to those above
them. They know how to tell people what they want to hear. They are consummate
manipulators and often hold positions of power.
Unskilled egocentric persons are unsuccessful in pursuing their selfish ends because
many see through them and do not trust them. Their prejudices and narrowness are more
obvious and less schooled. They often have blatantly dysfunctional relationships with
others. They are often trapped in negative emotions that they do not understand.
Unskilled egocentric persons may prefer either domination or submission as a means of
getting what they want, but whichever they use, they are usually unsuccessful at either.
Sometimes they are overtly cruel or play the victim in openly self-pitying ways.
Rationality
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Thoughts
Feelings
Desires
Rational
or
Nonegocentric
Irrational
or
Egocentric
Fair-minded
Self-developing
Selfish
Self-validating
Concerned with
the rights, needs,
desires of others
Works to
improve its own
reasoning
abilities
Unconcerned
with the rights,
needs, and
desires of others
Self-deceptively
functions to
validate its
narrow-minded views
Conscious
Processes
Unconscious
Processes
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Irritability
Anger
UNSUCCESSFUL
Apathy
EGOCENTRIC
THINKING
Alienation
Depression
Resentment
Indifference
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of
Ke
y
e
Vi
ue
sti
o
nt
To gain
selfish interests
at the expense of
the rights, needs,
and desires of
others, and to
validate itself
i
Po
Seeing myself
at the center of the
world and everything
else as a means
to get what
I want
Purpose
How can
I get what
I want and avoid
having to change in
any fundamental way?
ELEMENTS OF
Information
REASONING
on
ce
pt
n
tio
eta
pr
ter
In
The concepts of
pursuing ones selfish
advantage and
validating ones self
Assumptions
lC
ia
nt
se
Es
persons
continually come
to conclusions that
serve, or seem to serve,
their selfish advantage, or
to self-validate
ce
en
er
nf
dI
an
I should be
so placed in
the world that
I get what I want
without having to
change in any
fundamental way
this logic and the others in this miniguide, can be found in the Miniature Guide to
Critical Thinking Concepts and Tools. See page 32.
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of
e
Vi
Ke
y
What is the
best way for me
to develop myself
nonegocentrically and live
a fulfilling and moral life?
ELEMENTS OF
Information
REASONING
on
ce
pt
n
tio
eta
pr
ter
In
lC
ia
Assumptions
nt
se
Es
Knowledge
that enables people
to live and grow
rationally
Nonegocentric
people make
sound judgments
about people, places,
and things that enable
them to live a rational life
and develop their
capacities
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ce
en
er
nf
dI
an
It is
possible
and highly
desirable to live
a life of continual
self-improvement and
moral integrity
ue
sti
o
nt
To develop
ones rational
capacities and live a
life respecting the
rights and
needs of others
i
Po
Looking at life as
requiring the
development of ones
rational capacities
in order to
be fulfilled
Purpose
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DOMINATION
SUBMISSION
Using direct
power
over others
Submitting
to
others
Essential Idea: Two irrational ways to gain and use power are given in two distinct
forms of egocentric strategy:
1) The art of dominating others (a direct means to getting what one wants).
2) The art of submitting to others (an indirect means to getting what one wants).
Insofar as we are thinking egocentrically, we seek to satisfy our egocentric
desires either directly or indirectly, by exercising power and control over others,
or by submitting to those who can act to serve our interest. To put it crudely,
egocentric behavior either bullies or grovels. It either threatens those weaker or
subordinates itself to those more powerful, or oscillates between them in subtle
maneuvers and schemes.
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of
Ke
yQ
ew
Vi
If I can control
others, I will have
more power to use for
my selfish advantage. If I
cannot control others, I will
feel unsuccessful.
How
can I
get others
to submit to
my control?
ELEMENTS OF
Information
REASONING
on
ce
pt
n
tio
eta
pr
ter
In
lC
ia
Assumptions
nt
se
Es
Information
about what renders
people susceptible to
manipulation and
domination
ce
en
er
nf
dI
an
I am more
important than
others, I am
justified in controlling
others in achieving my
own gratification.
nt
To gain
advantage for
myself by seeking
domination over others
ue
sti
o
i
Po
Looking at
controlling others
as the best method
for getting what
you want
Purpose
Inferences
about how
people can
best be controlled
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19
ew
Vi
ELEMENTS OF
Information
REASONING
s
pt
ce
Assumptions
se
nt
ia
lC
on
The only
way I can
gain security is
through submissive
attachment; someone
else more powerful than
me should provide me
with security and
advantage.
ce
en
er
nf
dI
an
Es
How can I
attach myself
to powerful or
prestigious people
to gain security and
advantage for myself?
n
tio
eta
pr
ter
In
20
ue
sti
o
of
nt
To gain
advantage and
security for myself
by submitting to others
in power who can
help me
Ke
y
i
Po
Purpose
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egocentric memory: the natural tendency to forget evidence and information that do not support our thinking and to remember evidence and
information that do
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25
Defense
Mechanisms
Are Used By Our Native Egocentricity, Leading to
Self
Deception
So We Can
Get What
We Want
26
And
/or
Protect
Our
Belief System
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These Misunderstandings:
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27
Intelligence
Emotion
Critical Thinking:
brings intelligence to bear upon our emotional life
enables us to take command of our emotions
enables us to make good judgments
provides us with a satisfactory emotional life
Essential Idea: When our thinking is of high quality, rational emotions
follow. When we develop rational emotions, we think reasonably.
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29
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Pathological Dispositions: Innate tendencies of the human mind created by native egocentrism and leading to systematic distortion of
reality. The pathological dispositions of mind often result in unethical,
harmful thoughts and behavior. These dispositions are the opposite of
intellectual dispositions such as intellectual integrity, intellectual
humility, intellectual perseverance, intellectual courage, intellectual
autonomy, and intellectual sense of justice.
Rationality: The minds appropriate use of evidence and reasoning in
the attempt to see things objectively and act in accordance with what
is reasonable in the situation.
Self-Deception: The natural human tendency to deceive oneself about
ones true motivations, character, or identity. This phenomenon is so
common to humans that the human species might well be defined
the self-deceiving animal. Through self-deception, humans are able
to ignore unpleasant realities and problems in their thinking and
behavior. Self-deception re-enforces self-righteousness and intellectual
arrogance. It enables us to pursue selfish interests while disguising our
motives as altruistic or reasonable. Through self-deception, humans
have justified, and continue to justify, flagrantly unethical acts,
policies, and practices. All humans engage in self-deceptionbut
not to the same degree.
Sociocentrism: An extension of egocentric identity from the self (I
am superior) to the group (We are superior). It occurs naturally in
the human mind and is based on the assumption that ones own social
group is inherently and self-evidently superior to all others (since
we belong to it). When members of a group or society see their
group as superior, and so consider the groups views as self-evidently
correct and their actions self-evidently justified, they have a tendency
to project this superiority into all of their thinking and, thus, to think
closed-mindedly and simplistically. Dissent and doubt are then considered disloyal and irresponsible. Those who question the group are
made the object of suspicion or scorn. There is no society known to the
authors that does not foster sociocentrism under the guise of patriotism.
2004 Foundation for Critical Thinking
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Strategic Thinking
Provides 25 big ideas to be internalized over a 25 week period. Helps the thinker begin to think
strategically about improving ones life through improving ones thinking. (1-24 copies $6.00
each; 25-199 copies $4.00 each; 200-499 copies $2.50 each)
Critical Thinking for Children
Designed for K-6 classroom use. Focuses on explaining basic critical thinking principles to young
children using cartoon characters. (1-24 copies $5.00 each; 25-199 copies $2.50 each; 200-499
copies $1.75 each)
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