by gg3 » Wed 15 Mar 2006, 06:57:58
Bobcousins is basically right on target, plus or minus an error that Rogerhb amplified somewhat.
First of all, one of the main points in the article that led off this topic is that the scientific method is the most reliable means that humans have ever developed for producing accurate knowledge.
In essence, scientific method comes down to: observe, hypothesize, test, publish, repeat/refine. The key point is testing (i.e. everything else hinges on the testing stage), but here one needs specialized knowledge: how to operationalize variables, and how to determine significance (or lack thereof) of relationships.
The linked article uses the term "critical thinking" for something that encompasses scientific method plus a number of other skills; these plus some others comprise what I call "general method," as in, "general method for obtaining and using knowledge."
---
I basically agree with what Bobcousins said, but here's where I differ (and believe his posting goes into error mode):
"You can't access directly what goes on in the neural network."
Yes, you can (access directly).
And Rogerhb, "To think critically you have to concentrate on a problem dispassionately and avoid emotion, pre-conceived ideas or leaping to conclusions."
No, you shouldn't (avoid emotion etc.).
First of all, emotional state data *is* the primary feedback system in the neural network. By this I don't mean the obvious observables such as "happy/sad/angry/inspired," etc., but the more subtle variations that most humans aren't trained to recognize. By analogy, non-artists aren't trained to recognize subtle differences in color: those colors are objectively real in the sense that they represent different wavelengths of light; most people aren't trained to make the subtler distinctions.
To the best of our knowledge, emotions are highly correlated with (one is tempted to say "identical with" but that would be exceeding the data) various chemicals such as neuropeptides in the brain. These chemicals have effects on the flow of signals between neurons, thus they influence cognitive processing of information.
Every feedback system is an output looped back to an input; so to the extent that you can detect the output, you have additional information about the system. Perhaps not *complete* information, but *more* information than you would otherwise have. Thus, emotions enable you to access directly what is going on in the network; and thus, emotions shouldn't be "avoided" any more than any other source of data should be avoided. This paragraph sums up my criticism of Bob and Roger.
In a practical sense...
If you practice concentrative and mindfulness meditation, you gain access to a higher-resolution degree of perception of the workings of your own brain/mind. This is not new-age bullsh--, this is simply a matter of training yourself to observe how your own brain/mind works, in much the same way that artistic or musical training refine one's perceptual ability to distinguish colors or pitches and rhythms.
If you understand how your subtler emotional state systems work, you gain a better understanding of the feedback system that shapes your cognitive outputs.
Note, in most humans, "emotion leads and reason follows," by which I mean, a person has an emotional response to a data-set, and then uses reason to explain the connections among the elements from premises to conclusions. In the best cases, emotion is being utilised to arrive at a hypothesis and then reason cross-checks the result and applies corrections as needed. In the worst cases, which happen to occur most often and for the majority of the species, an emotional conclusion is "rationalized" by whatever means are needed; for example bigotry justified by some rationalization about the individuals who are targets of the hatred, etc.
Similiarly, "intuition," often dismissed a-priori, is nothing more than massively parallel processing that occurs outside of conscious awareness. Hameroff's & Penrose's theory of consciousness ("orchestrated objective-reduction", often abbreviated as "Orch-OR") includes the point that consciousness is discontinuous due to the way the nerve cells in the brain operate, but is perceived as continuous in much the same manner as a movie made up of discrete still pictures is perceived as continuous. (However, Hameroff & Penrose operationalize this nicely in terms of specific measurable neural events: their theory is not merely an analogy here, it includes detailed descriptions of how those neural events occur. Some of those descriptions have led to specific predictions, and some of those have been verified experimentally in neuroscience) So we can make the inference from Hameroff & Penrose that intuition may involve events that occur during the neural operations that are not represented in the flow of what we perceive as continuous consciousness.
And the point of the above paragraph is, intuition is not a flawed method of thinking that should be dismissed out of hand. As well, neither should emotion be dismissed out of hand. The truly objective way to deal with these and other nonrational or irrational thought processes is to take them as a source of data or meta-data. Instead of "I feel X about subject Q, therefore X is bias, therefore reject X in favor of not-X," do this: "I feel X about subject Q. Does this give me a basis to ask questions about Q that I wasn't asking before? Does this indicate a preference for one or another outcome with respect to Q? Do the implications of X indicate a basis for another testable hypothesis about Q?" And then of course you can ask, "If I feel X, and it leads in direction Y, then what would occur if I felt not-X or opposite-of-X? What direction would that point in, and what hypotheses would that suggest?"
One can do the same operations with respect to intuitive outputs, and outputs from other irrational or nonrational cognitive processes. Good scientists are not averse to doing this, and some of them do it quite deliberately. The key to maintaining a scientific attitude about all of this is to take the subjective data and meta-data as inputs to hypothesis-formation about whatever is the object under study.
---
The fact that scientific method produces accurate knowledge, does not guarantee wisdom. For this we have to include a diversified tool-set, which necessarily includes artistic, philosophical, religious, and other elements that may or may not operate within the scientific paradigm. However, none of these fields of the human creative endeavors, by itself, guarantees wisdom; rather, one must necessarily use more than one tool to build the greater whole. About this there are few convergent answers, but there are the ingredients for the evolution of wisdom on the part of individuals and societies. One knows the tree by its fruits.