- There is an assumption (at least at my college) that students have a lot of trouble performing the act of Critical Thinking.
- I am one of them.
On one question, the teacher asked us about a politician's point of view. We were to choose from a list of statements that supported this politician's point of view. One of the statements was:
- The politician believes society has a moral obligation to care for the poor.
Again, I said "yes."
Then, I was told that the statement spoke of society's obligations, not a government's obligations.
Chagrined, I was. I jumped to an immediate conclusion that caring for the poor was only liberal belief and not a conservative one. Furthermore, I assumed that the monikers "liberal" and "conservative" represented a concrete set of beliefs.
Reality says otherwise. Not all liberals hold the exact same beliefs; nor do all conservatives.
My error in thinking was that I, a left-leaning independent, knew something without questioning where I received that knowledge. In other words, why did I believe that liberals believe society has a moral obligation to tend to the poor?
This is the question that I should have asked before I opened my mouth. Instead of pulling away from my biases and looking at everything objectively, I let an inner sentiment drive me blindly along. Basically, I just parroted a sound bite that I have heard and read countless times without really thinking about it.
So, I caught myself somewhat after the fact making an improper judgement and leaping to a conclusion without giving my assumptions due thought.
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