A situation where I had to use critical thinking was the recent presidential election where I had to make a responsible judgment between the political candidates. The election is huge and it is so important to make a good judgment and have a clear understanding of both sides of the election. This decision will ultimately affect one's life enormously. When it came down for me to make my final decision, I used reasonable, reflective, and skillfull thinking to make my decision. I used reason to judge whether each candidate was capable of the job at hand. I also reflected of life experiences that the candidates have had. Critical thinking is necessary to make decisions and judgments like this, decisions that will color the rest of our lives.
A time where I did not think through something critically would be in my calculus class where I was given a problem to solve on the whiteboard in front of my class. When I was given the problem I immediately knew that I needed the quadratic formula in order to solve it. I plugged the numbers into the memorized formula and calculated the answer. Nonetheless, I came out with the correct answer. Here again we see the "what to think" rather than "how to think" circumstance. Not once during this math problem did I need to have a reasonable and reflective judgment.
The word "Intellectualism" carries a sort of negative connotation to me. When I think of an "intellectual" person, I think of a boring, emotionless, close-minded smarty pants. Intellectualism to me seems that it is based solely on facts. I feel that that knowledge is deeper than that. Emotion plays a key role in worthy knowledge.
When I hear the word "logic" the phrase "you can't argue with logic" pops into my mind. Logic carries positive connotations to me and to the greater extent I can say that I agree with that statement; you can't argue with consistency.
"Reason" reminds me of "cause and effect," wherein reason would be the cause that will ultimately lead one to come to a conclusion. This term has positive connotations to me. Reason is a type of thought; it requires thinking. While some may argue, for me emotion is significantly linked to reason and stands for good argument.
What do you mean by "You can't argue with logic". I think the most interesting and fulfilling conversations are argued with logic. Logic doesn't guarantee a correct answer, it's a way of defending your point. Two people can be arguing two very different points and both can still be using logic.
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