FemMecha
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- Apr 23, 2007
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Over the years I've come to realize that the majority of education I encountered over the years is based on backwards reasoning. This was true of religious systems, but also the analysis of my major subject area. It is true of most political ideologies and even scientists who begin with a hypothesis and then have an ego investment in proving it correct. When I learned the true nature of this process and how much it permeates everything I've encountered, I get discouraged about the possibility of knowing what's true and having a fundamentally different approach to analyzing reality.
This is a quick link I found for the purpose of starting this thread, although in the past I had opportunity to listen to some neuro-linguists discuss this issue on tape. "The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives" by Leonard Mlodinow also addresses this issue. Humans desire to see patterns and have rational cause and effects for the way things are in reality. We look at someone successful or impoverished and we backwards reason how these states are the rational outcome of choices. The book I refer to describes statistically how many outcomes are actually random, but we provide them with rational explanations. There are many psychological experiments documented in the book to demonstrate this is exactly what we do.
In what ways have you encountered backwards reasoning in your education? How have you used it, and how do you work to break away from it?
This is a quick link I found for the purpose of starting this thread, although in the past I had opportunity to listen to some neuro-linguists discuss this issue on tape. "The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives" by Leonard Mlodinow also addresses this issue. Humans desire to see patterns and have rational cause and effects for the way things are in reality. We look at someone successful or impoverished and we backwards reason how these states are the rational outcome of choices. The book I refer to describes statistically how many outcomes are actually random, but we provide them with rational explanations. There are many psychological experiments documented in the book to demonstrate this is exactly what we do.
changing minds said:Backwards Reasoning
Think backwards. Start from what you want and then seek supporting logic.
If you cannot find sufficient reason then you may abandon the decision. Or you may resort to fallacy, particularly when you are more concerned with persuading than being logically correct.
In what ways have you encountered backwards reasoning in your education? How have you used it, and how do you work to break away from it?