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OVERVIEW: The way to well-written science
How to do the Course
PART I: Paragraphs and Sentences
SET A: Paragraphs: The Maps Behind Them
SET B: Paragraphs: Using Maps to Meet Readers' Expectations
SET C: Paragraph Coherence and Cohesion
SET D: Sentences
SET E: Scientific Sections (including Methods)
SET F: Scientific Sections: The Discussion
SET G : Scientific Sections: The Introduction
SET H : The Paper as a Whole
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Critical
thinking is the active, skillful deployment of ways of thinking which contribute
to truth or accuracy in judgment.
To
understand critical thinking better, consider some of the things that uncritical
thinkers do. An uncritical thinker:
- accepts
things purely on faith
- thinks that
a person's beliefs are "true for them" and can't be mistaken or
criticized
- doesn't seek
evidence or challenge beliefs.
By
contrast, a critical thinker asks questions
like:
- What
am I being asked to accept?
- Should
I accept it or not?
- Why?
What are the arguments and how strong are they?
The Skepto meter

If we accept everything
as a strong reason and anything as a good basis then we're completely gullible. But
if we won't accept any reasons at all and reject every source of information
then we're too skeptical.
Why it is important
to apply critical thinking to your OWN arguments
Critical thinking
is not something we only apply when we are analysing someone else's papers or
arguments. It is extremely important to also take a hypercritical approach to
your own thinking, both when formulating ideas about your results while doing
experiments, and when you come to write them up. The primary reason for this
is a well-known, but little understood, characteristic of humans: that we can
be very blind to the deficiencies of our own thought processes. This blindness
might be driven by a desire to obtain a result or merely by what may even be
an instinct to find patterns in our world.
I became very much
aware of my own problems in this area early on in my career, when I was studying
cell structure, mostly via microscopy. There were so many times when I thought
I had discovered some fascinating pattern, only, upon repeat of the experiment,
to find that the pattern itself did not repeat. In the first few iterations
of this phenomenom I thought that there must have been some change in the circumstances
(e.g. different culture conditions) that was making the pattern disappear, and
so Iwould try to find what it was about the original experiment that had allowed
the pattern to occur.
After many painful
attempts at this, I eventually realised that the patterns that come and go are
often not the product of experimental variations, but could have their source
in the fluctuations of my mind! There were some days when I just felt "over-eager"
and it was then that my brain was most vulnerable to fashion some pattern that
was most probably never there.
This drive to see
patterns that do not exist can cause problems not only experimentally, but when
one is writing or thinking. As an example, of this, in the years that I have
been thinking about the principles behind good writing, I still also have many
"over eager" moments. These typically take the form of some new realisation
which suddenly appears to me as the vital key to the whole process. On later
reflection, it's not that the new insight turns out to incorrect, but its significance
within the scheme of things tyipcally shrinks to a surprising degree.

Content of this page drawn in whole or part from the Austhink Rationale Exercises with permission from Austhink.
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