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Learn how filters allow certain criteria to flow through, barriers keep others out, and impediments hinder critical thinking. Recognize and address various impediments and barriers to ensure mindful and reflective thinking.
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Filters, Barriers, and Impediments Hindrances to critical thinking
Filters • Allow things that meet certain criteria to flow through while preventing others • Color or shape what comes through • Can be a useful sorting mechanism • Can be a feature of mindful and reflective thinking • But also screen out valuable input if they aren’t applied mindfully
Barriers • Keep out rather than let in • May indicate the presence of non-critical, manmade, or enculturated thinking patterns • Can be useful in some circumstances • Require some kind of monitoring • Can be removed, sometimes with heavy lifting • Unless monitored carefully, usually a hindrance to mindful, reflective thinking
Impediments • Often involve walls or total blockages • Often involve non-critical instead of critical standards of thinking, so they may inhibit mindful thinking • Often are reflexive and habitual, so they contradict or replace reflective thinking • Must be understood before they can be thought around
Nosich’s Impediments • Pictures formed from the news media • Pictures formed from entertainment and pop culture • All-or-nothing thinking/black and white • Us vs. them • Stereotyping • Fear
Nosich’s Impediments • Educational practices (see p. 21) • Egocentrism • Developmental Thinking • Previous Commitments • Personal Experiences • Denial
The Difference Between. . . • Impediment-free thinking • Highly unusual • Not likely to happen when subject is significant AND • Impediment-aware thinking • Means you are working mindfully • Lets you make allowances for your barriers and impediments