Critical Thinking: Does it Matter? | Bart Millar | TEDxYouth@SAS

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2024
  • There is a fair share of stupid and ignorant people in this world. The wall between ‘being trusting’ and ‘being a victim’ is thin and in his talk, Millar explores how and why people fall prey to bad ideas, leaving themselves or others to suffer.
    Bart Millar is a generalist who is fascinated with history, science and psychology, and the results when they intersect. On many occasions, especially while watching the news, Bart has wondered “How can people be so dumb?” Being a teacher for psychology, economics and robotics at SAS has afforded him unique insight into this topic.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Komentáře • 65

  • @thomass6757
    @thomass6757 Před 4 lety +10

    So let me get this straight: Critical thinking good. Thank you for that.

  • @mattjohnson1291
    @mattjohnson1291 Před 6 lety +7

    Although this video doesn't explain how to critically think all that well, it DOES prove the point that it does matter (which is the title and purpose of the TED Talk for youth-- who usually need convincing and awareness about this topic). I agree with many comments on this video about wanting more on how he suggests we think critically-- It would help us to improve after having an understanding of it being important.

  • @shannonb1195
    @shannonb1195 Před 4 lety +6

    A small percentage of people are born with a natural critical thinking tendency. To those people, watching this video and checking the comments is useful to try to understand that the thinking patterns of others really just cant be improved intuitively, and that most people really do have to have critical thinking skills literally 'taught' to them. Its not stupidity: Its the way the vast majority of human brains work for sime reason.

  • @multifamilyrealestate4677

    "Truly incompetent people are too incompetent to even recognize their own incompetence". Dunning-Krueger

  • @pk-pj4sz
    @pk-pj4sz Před 2 lety +3

    Critical thinking is absolutely critical to think

  • @lugcass9706
    @lugcass9706 Před 3 lety +3

    Ellen White never never predicted that the world is going to end in any of the years he said. May be too much critical thinking can end up with lying.

  • @MargaretLeonard
    @MargaretLeonard Před 8 lety +3

    Way to go, Bart! Proud to be one of your former students.

  • @norbertherriott9761
    @norbertherriott9761 Před 3 lety +2

    Bart lays out philosophical points about non-critical thinker and the reason that they think badly. If you know about critical thinking; it is a great battle between critical thinkers vs non-critical thinkers.

  • @williebrooks2982
    @williebrooks2982 Před rokem +1

    Great presentation, informative, inlighting, a great class, you make me better. Many Thanks Sir!🎈🎈

  • @eltouristoduo
    @eltouristoduo Před 6 lety

    something somewhat related to this, but carried much farther and broader, has the most profound implications for all humanity you can possibly imagine that impacts the very foundations of civilization which is built on culture

  • @michaelswhitcomb
    @michaelswhitcomb Před 2 lety +2

    In complex situations, choose the solution with the fewest steps. That is the correct definition. The other is lazy thinking, which is sort of perfect.

  • @multifamilyrealestate4677

    Occoms Razor "All things being the same in any given situation; the simplest solution is usually the correct one".

  • @honesty1234
    @honesty1234 Před 6 lety

    Well said.

  • @sammark5658
    @sammark5658 Před 7 lety +5

    a good example of critical thinking: don't believe anything by title! !

  • @alipiofernandes1
    @alipiofernandes1 Před 8 lety +36

    He is not talking about critical thinking...

    • @billyrayvalentine5079
      @billyrayvalentine5079 Před 7 lety +5

      That's exactly what I was thinking. I mean it started pretty good when he mentioned thinking badly but then it simply went no where. No definitions, no talk about critical thinking barriers or determining credibility or anything along those lines. Just the basic don't believe everything you hear speech. How disappointing...

    • @Callusny
      @Callusny Před 7 lety +6

      It is. He is mostly giving examples but they do show the lack of critical thinking.

    • @matthewmiller5949
      @matthewmiller5949 Před 6 lety +1

      he is and he is not most of it seems to be examples

    • @discomutt1503
      @discomutt1503 Před 5 lety +2

      Look at the title.

  • @sledgehammer378
    @sledgehammer378 Před 4 lety +2

    When you see search results turning up with the same TEDx talks results repeatedly, it's time to apply some actual critical thinking.

  • @edigarmafi8483
    @edigarmafi8483 Před 7 lety

    this guy is great, it's good to know theirs still people like this in the world. Unfortunately common sense is lost on some people like I don't know cough right wingers cough

  • @she4444
    @she4444 Před 3 lety +2

    He needs to be more of a critical thinker with his research. William Miller set the dates, and Ellen White didn't get any visions until after the dates failed. And Bart Millar quoted the wrong dates. So unprofessional.

  • @katforgiven6411
    @katforgiven6411 Před 2 lety +1

    I wouldn’t trust this guy, because Ellen White did NOT say the world was going to end!!

  • @michaelswhitcomb
    @michaelswhitcomb Před 2 lety

    His definition of Occam's razor is wrong. He's quoting Sherlock Holmes via Mr. Spock.

  • @georgegalamb7523
    @georgegalamb7523 Před 6 lety +3

    In my opinion, he is confusing "critical thinking" with "commonsense". Every one of those misguided people and situations of which he have mentioned was due to: lack of commonsense. Critical thinking requires much higher-level thinking abilities and skills than commonsense does.

  • @bradleyhall1746
    @bradleyhall1746 Před 6 lety +7

    This was a very dry attempt at a clever comedy routine.. This was extremely pessimistic at best and only very loosely related to critical thinking much in the same way that talking about puddles addresses weather... less so, really.. I'm extremely disappointed..

  • @stephanmentens9644
    @stephanmentens9644 Před 3 lety

    The inflation of TED talks....

  • @nacholibre1962
    @nacholibre1962 Před 7 lety +11

    He lost me at four minutes in. Not an effective presentation. Poor intro and rambling on about Italian con men and snake oil., etc. Get to the point or get off the stage!

  • @tishaddams1762
    @tishaddams1762 Před 5 lety +1

    Well that was useless that didn't explain critical thinking

  • @simbanyashanu7069
    @simbanyashanu7069 Před rokem

    Your facts on Ellen White are not correct. Ellen White never got a vision about the end of the world

  • @ninjacat508
    @ninjacat508 Před 7 lety +6

    15 minutes of my time wasted on this video, ggrrrr!

    • @orenoyen
      @orenoyen Před 4 lety

      Tracey Nowell thanks for this comment!!!

  • @boldsign
    @boldsign Před 7 lety +22

    If America had been taught to use critical thinking sooner, Donald Trump would have not been elected president.

    • @colt4667
      @colt4667 Před 7 lety +11

      Hillary would not have gotten the nomination either. Nor would Bill or Barack.

    • @-webster3120
      @-webster3120 Před 6 lety +2

      we could go all the way back to Kennedy or perhaps further.

    • @robertkemp185
      @robertkemp185 Před 5 lety

      If you were good at critical thinking you would voted for Trump. America needs to change the status quo where politicians are not accountable to people.

    • @MarkWrightPsuedo
      @MarkWrightPsuedo Před 5 lety +9

      Let's do some real critical thinking. Notice your assumption--that those who voted for Donald Trump could not have possibly done any critical thinking, else they naturally would not have voted for him. Let's explore that critically. How do you actually know that? Are you familiar with the voting habits of millions of voters? Can you not imagine perspectives that would have found him a better choice? Have you spoken with anyone who has voted for him and asked why? Are you sure you're thinking through this objectively? Are you engaged in emotional reasoning rather than empirical reasoning? What do you actually know about all of the candidates? How did you vote? Did you do a compare and contrast? Read any of the works from the candidates? Did you set up criteria that was important to you? Or did you vote from the gut? Vote based on a feeling? Just how much thought did you honestly put into voting? You see, critical thinking is a process. A process of questions that explore reasoning. It's aim is to gather better insight than you had before.