Mole
Permabanned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
Sure, I agree.
But can the produce of one's critical thinking, when subject to critical thinking itself, also cause cognitive dissonance I wonder?
Once we become good at critical thinking it becomes a satisfying pleasure. But to become good at critical thinking requires practice. They say it takes 10,000 hours of practice to become a master.
There are three stages. The first stage is we learn our spoken culture as babies and children, and we take in the language, manner and mores of our culture intuitively without thinking.
In the second stage we are taken from our intuitive home by State Law and sent to a special institution with specially trained teacher to learn to read and write, to become literate. And we become literate individuals steeped in our own literate culture. And we learn to think counter intuitively.
And in the third stage, having learnt our own spoken and literate cultures, we start to apply our critical thought to them in order to refresh them, extend them and create something new.