This unique text for undergraduate courses teaches students to apply critical thinking skills across all academic disciplines by examining popularpseudoscientific claims through a multidisciplinary lens. Rather than merely focusing on critical thinking, the text incorporates the perspectives ofpsychology, biology, physics, medicine, and other disciplines to reinforce different categories of rational explanation. Accessible and engaging, itdescribes what critical thinking is, why it is important, and how to learn and apply skills that promote it. The text also examines why critical thinkingcan be difficult to engage in and explores the psychological and social reasons why people are drawn to and find credence in extraordinary claims.
From alien abductions and psychic phenomena to strange creatures and unsupported alternative medical treatments, the text uses examples from a wide rangeof pseudoscientific fields and brings evidence from diverse disciplines to critically examine erroneous claims. Particularly timely is the text’sexamination of how, using the narrative of today’s “culture wars,” religion and culture impact science. The authors focus on how the human brain, rife withnatural biases, does not process information in a rational fashion, and the social factors that prevent individuals from gaining an unbiased, criticalperspective on information. Authored by a psychologist and a philosopher who have extensive experience teaching and writing on critical thinking andskeptical inquiry, this work will help students to strengthen their skills in reasoning and debate, become intelligent consumers of research, and makewell-informed choices as citizens.
KEY FEATURES:
- Addresses the foundations of critical thinking and how to apply it through the popular activity of examining pseudoscience
- Explains why humans are vulnerable to pseudoscientific claims and how critical thinking can overcome fallacies and biases
- Reinforces critical thinking through multidisciplinary analyses of pseudoscience
- Enlightens using an engaging, entertaining approach
- Features teaching resources including an Instructor’s Guide and PowerPoint slides
CONTENTS
Foreword: Brains, Hearts, Guts, and Genitals by Eugenie C. Scott, PhD
Preface
Acknowledgments
1: Why Do We Need Critical Thinking?
2: What Is Science?
3: What Is Pseudoscience?
4: What Is Critical Thinking?
5: Why Can’t We Trust Our Brains?
6: Why Can’t We Trust Our World?
7: Aliens, Abductions, and UFOs
8: Psychic Powers and Talking to the Dead
9: Unknown Animals and Cryptozoology
10: Evaluating Health Claims in Alternative Medicine
11: Alternative Medicine for Physical Health
12: Pseudoscience in Mental Health
13: The Relationship Between Science and Religion
14: Conclusions and Recommendations
Afterword: Science and Humility by Scott Lilienfeld, PhD
Index
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- Release Date: March 8, 2016
- Paperback / softback
- 304 Pages
- Trim Size: 7in x 10in
- ISBN: 9780826194190
- eBook ISBN: 9780826194268