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THINKING IS DRIVEN BY QUESTIONS, NOT ANSWERS – PART 5 CRITICAL THINKING SERIES: WHAT QUESTIONS DO THE BEST CRITICAL THINKERS ASK?

Disclaimer: Good Day, Readers.  WealthBuildingPowers blog is a financial literacy/competency blog and does not provide specific investment recommendations.  

I have no particular talent.  I am merely extremely inquisitive. Albert Einstein

STYRON’S INTRODUCTION

I suffered from insomnia most of my adult life. When I am pondering critical decisions, I often tell people I will sleep on them. Translation- I will wake up at some early morning hour (typically between two and three AM) and think through dozens of questions about the topic. The questions move me closer to a decision. Sometimes the answer is much more research is required. Sometimes these questions show me the answer. My questions are not nearly as logical as the below examples, but this methodology has benefited me for decades.

My advice, skip insomnia – BE INQUISITIVE!

CRITICAL THINKING SERIES – PART 5. What questions do the best Critical Thinkers ask?

Jim Leemann, Ph.D.

Questions?  Questions?  Questions?  Questions are the lifeblood of Critical Thinking and learning.  All of us ask questions throughout the day to navigate life.  Although, more often than not, we do not ask enough questions or the questions we ask fail to surface the answers we are seeking.  As Drs. Richard Paul and Linda Elder describe in their Critical Thinking – Learn the Tools the Best Thinkers Use“Thinking is not driven by answers but by questions.”  

Part 5: What questions do the best Critical Thinkers ask?

In this blog we will explore the importance of questions in thinking, questioning your questions, “Dead Questions,” categories of questions, and how to become a Socratic questioner.

The Importance of Questions in Thinking

It is safe to say when a field of study stops asking or allowing questions and pursuing answers, ultimately, the field becomes extinct or paralyzed in its current state.  For example, we have witnessed over the past two and a half years the marginalization and even cancelation of individuals who have questioned the efficacy of the COVID vaccines and boosters.  Even though we keep being told to “follow the science,” the only science we were allowed to follow is that which was promulgated by the National Institutes of Health.  Not only is this not “science,” this is not Critical Thinking.  More questions, not less questions, should have been asked.  Failing to allow for more questions has resulted in tens of thousands of physicians and medical science researchers continually defending the propaganda answers they have been giving to the public.  So, what is the price we will pay for the censorship of legitimate questions after learning the answers to questions that were not allowed to be asked or answered?  The price we will pay will come in the next epidemic or pandemic that comes to our shores when a significant percentage of Americans refuse to listen to their physicians or public health professionals.  Herein lies the importance of asking questions and allowing robust answers to be debated.

Questioning Your Questions

The questions you ask are a reflection of yourself and the topic, person, or issue you are questioning.  Think back to the last time you met someone for the first time.  What were the questions you asked of this person(s). What exactly did you want to know about this person?  Your questions reveal a great deal about your values and perspectives as Drs. Paul and Elder posit.

Different questions serve different purposes.  Drs. Paul and Elder provide the following series of questions to explore our understanding of the elements of reasoning and intellectual standards in questioning or questions.

In light of the significance and importance of the decision to go to college, one would do well to use these questions to question one’s questions.

Dead Questions

According to Drs. Paul and Elder, Dead Questions are those questions we ask that fail to provoke any stimulating thoughts.  Typically, Dead Questions reveal the person asking the question is not thinking or lacks questioning ability.  Questioning is what stimulates our thinking and learning.  Failing to do so, indicates that one’s mind is not thinking.

Categories of Questions

Prior to discussing how to question deeply, here is a framework you can use to categorize questions into questions of Fact, Preference, or Judgment.  By categorizing questions, this allows you to figure out the reasoning you will use to answer the question.

Questions of Fact

Questions of Fact require evidence and reasoning within a system, which leads to one right answer that produces knowledge.  A disagreement over Facts can usually be resolved quickly by turning to the source or reference and agreeing on the answer.  Questions of Fact involve what is or is not true, what happened or did not happen, what exists or does not exist.

Questions of Preference

Questions of Preference result in as many answers as there are human preferences and typically involve answers of subjective opinion.  Questions of Preference seek a level of agreement, frequency, importance, or likelihood from who is responding to the question.  Questions of Preference can often involve asking for what one would prefer among a range of answers.

Questions of Judgment

Questions of Judgment require an element of reasoning, but unlike questions of Fact, they may have more than one defensible answer.  Because of the range of answers found in these types of questions, we want to seek the best answer within the range of possibilities.  Judgment questions require the individual to consider alternative ways of reasoning and to provide supporting evidence of their answer.

How to Become a Socratic Questioner

Socrates was a famous Greek philosopher who developed an education approach by using a disciplined series of questions that allowed his students to discover answers by examining different ideas more closely and evaluating the validity of the topic.  Drs. Paul and Elder state that one of the primary goals of Critical Thinking is to establish a disciplined approach that presents a powerful inner voice of reasoning to monitor, assess, and repair our thinking, feelings, and actions.  Socratic questioning allows our inner voice to flourish.

Drs. Paul and Elder present five ways to generate Socratic questions systematically.  The five ways include using your knowledge of the elements of thought, types of questions, universal intellectual standards of thought, of prior questions, and of disciplines and domains.

Elements of Thought

Using your knowledge of the elements of thought to focus on questions based on: Purpose, Information, Inferences, Concepts, Assumptions, Implications, Point of View, and the Question.

All of our thoughts reflect an agenda or purpose.  Questions that focus on purpose in thinking include:

All of our thoughts presuppose an information base.  Questions that focus on information in thinking include:

All of our thoughts require the making of inferences. Questions that focus on inferences in thinking include:

All of our thoughts involve the application of concepts.  Questions that focus on concepts in thinking include:

All of our thoughts rest upon other thoughts, which are taken for granted or assumed.  Questions that focus on assumptions in thinking include:

All of our thoughts are headed in a direction or have implications.  Questions that focus on implications in thinking include:

All of our thoughts take place within a point of view.  Questions that focus on a point of view in thinking include:

All of our thoughts are responsive to a question.  Questions that focus on the question in thinking include:

Types of Questions

Approaching questions systematically allows you to realize all thought has three functions according to Drs. Paul and Elder: to express a subjective preference, to establish an objective fact within a well-defined system, or to determine the best of competing answers using reasoned judgment.  Questions you can use to determine the type of question at hand include:

Universal Intellectual Standards of Thought

Approaching questions systematically, you should recognize whether you or those you are working with are failing to use the universal intellectual standards of thinking.  Questions you can use to specifically target the universal intellectual standards of thought include:

Recognize that thinking is always more or less clear.  Questions that focus on clarity in thinking include:

Recognize that thinking is more or less precise.  Questions that focus on precision in thinking include:

Recognize that thinking is always more or less accurate.  Questions that focus on accuracy in thinking include:

Recognize that thinking is always capable of straying from the relevant task, problem, or issue under consideration.  Questions that focus on relevancy in thinking include:

Recognize that thinking can remain at the surface or can probe the depth required for the question at hand.  Questions that focus on depth in thinking include:

Recognize that thinking can be more or less broad or narrow-minded and that breath of thinking requires the thinker to reason within more than one point of view.  Questions that focus on the breath in thinking include:

Prior Questions

When faced with a complex question that seems insurmountable, it can be beneficial to think backward by asking yourself questions that need to be answered before you can tackle the complex question.  These questions are known as “Prior” questions.  Constructing a list of prior questions begins with writing down the complex question and then crafting as many questions as you can that need to be answered before you can answer the complex question.  As you prepare the prior question, be sure to remain focused on the original complex question.  The key to your prior questions is to gain insight into how to think through addressing the complex question.

Disciplines and Domains of Thinking

Complex questions more often than not will cross over into multiple domains and disciplines.  Drawing upon your prior questions, explore the domains and disciplines you have encountered in answering those questions.  Domains and disciplines you might encounter could include Economic, Political, Social/Sociological, Psychological, Biological, Educational, Religious, Cultural, etc.  Questions that focus as an example on these domains and disciplines in thinking include:

Economic

Political

Social/Sociological

Psychological

Biological

Educational

Religious

Cultural

Therefore, when undertaking a complex question open yourself up to the various domains and disciplines that need to be targeted and addressed.  The above domains and disciplines are simply a sampling of what you might encounter when addressing a complex question.

In closing, questions are essential to your practice of Critical Thinking.  As Drs. Paul and Elder state, “you think only as well as the questions you ask.”

For a deeper understanding of Critical Thinking, I invite you to explore the following reference sources by Drs. Richard Paul and Linda Elder, published by Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, MD:

Bio: Jim Leemann, Ph.D.

Dr. Leemann has had a 45-year career that has included being in the forefront of the safety, occupational health, and environmental fields in both the private and public sector. In addition, for 22 of those years, Dr. Leemann was an adjunct assistant professor teaching a variety of environmental and public health courses in the country’s oldest school of public health. In addition to holding a bachelor’s degree in microbiology master’s degrees in industrial hygiene and environmental engineering, his doctorate is in systemic management, which he has used to apply systems thinking methods to address organizational management problems.  

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I am a proud nerd (as my beautiful wife and daughter have told me) investment and finance blogger with an N.C.  State, Chemical Engineering, University Rutgers, MBA and Harvard University, Advanced Management education.

I left a corporate career because I desired to make a difference as a speaker and writer.  I was blessed to be coached and mentored by strong women and men in my family and professional life.  It is my time to serve and give back.

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I started my first business at ~13 years of age (a small but brilliantly created plant nursery). I am a successful investor in stocks, options, real estate and am happy to share my finance and investment lessons.  I am NOT a licensed financial advisor.  Please do not construe my suggestions on this blog as recommendations for your situation.  As an investor, you must establish your risk/loss tolerance.  Investment in any asset involves risk, including complete loss. 

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