Self-Directed Learning - Independent Learning
Mastering the Power of Learning.
You first you
learn how to learn. Second, you
need to
learn
everything valuable that will
increase your
knowledge and
your
understanding of yourself and the world around
you. Third, you should
never stop
learning, if you do, then you will
underutilize the most power machine on
the planet, the human
brain.
Ask questions and
have goals. To
teach
yourself is to
free yourself.
Skills
-
Instructions -
Life is After School Program -
Mistakes
Active
Learning is a method of
learning in which students are
actively or
experientially involved in the learning
process and where there are
different levels of
active learning, depending on student involvement.
Lifelong
Learning is the ongoing,
voluntary, and
self-motivated
pursuit of knowledge for either personal or
professional reasons. Therefore, it not only enhances social inclusion,
active citizenship, and personal development, but also
self-sustainability,
Innovation, as well as
competitiveness and employability.
Intrinsically
Motivated Learning (PDF) -
Intelligent Adaptive Curiosity (PDF)
Do it Yourself
Resources
-
DIY Biology -
Citizen Science -
Human Search Engine
Coyote Teaching
approach seeks to spark
curiosity and create a self-directed learning
experience that teaches the student how to
seek answers on their own
versus becoming dependent on a teacher.
Teach
Myself.
Learning for Life
designed to
prepare
youth for the complexities of contemporary society and to enhance
their self-confidence,
motivation, and
self-esteem, and for careers.
Learning for Life.
Become a Lifelong Learner
-
Becoming a Learner for Life
"Don't let schooling interfere with your education." -
Mark
Twain
Live, Learn, Love and Progress
-
Growth Mindset
Constructionism is when individual learners construct
mental models in
order to understand the world around them. Constructionism advocates
student-centered,
discovery learning where students use
information they
already know to
acquire more knowledge. Students learn through
participation in
project-based learning where they
make connections
between different ideas and areas of knowledge facilitated by the teacher
through coaching rather than using lectures or step-by-step guidance.
Further, constructionism holds that learning can happen most effectively
when people are active in making tangible objects in the real world. In
this sense, constructionism is connected with experiential learning and
builds on Jean Piaget's epistemological theory of constructivism.
Training.
Self-Regulated Learning refers to learning that is guided by
metacognition (
thinking about
one's thinking), strategic action (planning, monitoring, and
evaluating personal progress against a standard), and motivation to learn.
"Self-regulated" describes a process of
taking control of and
evaluating
one's own learning and behavior.
-
Self Directed Learning.
Reflective
Practice is the ability to reflect on an action so as to engage in a
process of
continuous learning. According to one definition it involves
"paying critical attention to the practical values and theories which
inform everyday actions, by examining practice reflectively and
reflexively. This leads to developmental insight". A key rationale for
reflective practice is that
experience alone does not necessarily lead to
learning; deliberate reflection on experience is essential.
Inference is the act
or process of deriving
logical conclusions from premises known or assumed
to be true. The laws of
valid
inference are studied in the field of
logic.
Autodidacticism is the act of learning about a subject or subjects in
which one has had little to no formal education. Many notable
contributions have been made by autodidacts. "everyone starts out as a
self-teaching autodidact"
Self Made Scholar -
Art of Self Education
Education needs to
be a process that
facilitates learning and the
acquisition of knowledge,
skills,
values, and
good habits.
Purpose of Education
Polymath is a person whose expertise spans a
significant number of
different subject areas and is known to draw on complex bodies
of knowledge to solve specific problems.
Multipotentiality is an educational and psychological term referring
to the ability and preference of a person, particularly one of strong
intellectual or artistic curiosity, to excel in
two or more different
fields.
Independent Learner is a
student who is
Information Literate,
and pursues information related to personal interests.
An Independent Learner appreciates literature and
Other Creative Expressions of
Information and strives for excellence in
information seeking and knowledge generation.
Master of Independent Learning is an expert
analyzer
of Information
with
a passion and a desire to acquire
knowledge so that learning and understanding continues
to thrive for as long as human life exists.
Teaching Yourself and being self-taught and self-educated
is not just an option, it is absolutely necessary.
Curiosity - Passion - Wonder
Interest is having a sense of concern,
fascination and curiosity about someone or something. Having a
reason and a
purpose for wanting something done that is of
importance or of consequence. Being
enthusiastic about learning
something interesting.
Interest is a feeling that causes
attention to focus on an object,
event, or process.
Inspiration -
Motivation -
Investigation -
Active Learning -
Explore
Pique My Interest is to arouse, stimulate
or excite curiosity.
Sparked My Interest is
to ignited interest or fuel interest.
Curiosity is a state in which you want to
learn more about
something. Eager to
investigate and learn or learn more. (sometimes about others' concerns). Having curiosity
aroused or to be
eagerly interested in learning more.
Homo Quaerens is Latin for "
human
curiosity".
The drive to learn, to
invent, to explore, and to
study
continuously. The
sudden awareness of what you don’t know and
the immediate desire to fill that gap. The brain continuously
calculates which path or action is most likely to gain us the
most knowledge in the least amount of time. Curiosity peaks when
subjects had a good guess about what the answer is but weren’t
quite sure.
"Learning can
sometimes be like you're trying to solve a mystery by
following
all the clues."
Wonder is to have a
desire or a wish
to know something. A
state in which you
want to learn more about something.
Wonderment is the feeling aroused by
something strange and surprising. Wonder can also mean to doubt something or
or to express doubtful
speculation. I Wonder if
that's True?
Wonderful.
Awe is an overwhelming
feeling of wonder or
admiration. A feeling of profound
respect for someone
or something.
Awesome is something
inspiring awe, admiration or wonder.
Something very good and of the highest quality.
Inspiration.
Intrigue is cause to be
interested or curious. Fascinated.
Fascination is the state of being intensely interested. A feeling
of
great liking for something wonderful and unusual. The capacity to
attract intense interest.
Captivation
is the state of being intensely interested. A feeling of great liking for
something wonderful and unusual.
Captivated
is being strongly attracted to something or filled with wonder and
delight.
Riveting is something
fascinating, interesting and engrossing that is capable of
arousing and
holding your attention.
Enchantment is a feeling of
great liking for something wonderful and unusual.
Amazement is to
fill with wonder or
astonishment. The feeling that accompanies something extremely
surprising.
Passion is a
feeling of
intense enthusiasm
towards or compelling
desire for someone
or something. Passion can range from eager interest in something or
admiration for an
idea, proposal, or
cause, to an enthusiastic enjoyment of an interest or activity. A strong
attraction, excitement, or emotion towards a person.
Finding Your
Passion.
Entranced is being filled with wonder and
delight or a feeling of extreme
pleasure or
satisfaction.
Engaged is having
one's
attention, mind or energy
occupied and involved. To carry out or
participate in an activity.
Involved is to be connected by
participation, association or use.
Xenophilia is an affection or liking for unknown or foreign objects,
manners, cultures or people.
Charmed is
attractiveness that interests, pleases or stimulates. Pleasing or
delighting. Something believed to bring good luck or believed to have
magical force.
Be
careful and be aware of the things that motivate you.
Delight is a feeling
of extreme pleasure or satisfaction. Something or someone that
provides a source of
happiness.
Give pleasure to or be pleasing to. Take delight in and make the most of
something.
Delighted is being greatly
pleased and filled with wonder and delight.
Pleased is feeling pleasurable satisfaction
over something by which you measure your self-worth. Experiencing or
manifesting pleasure.
Satisfaction
is the contentment one feels when one has fulfilled a desire, need, or
expectation. State of being
gratified or
satisfied. Act of fulfilling a desire, need or appetite. Satisfaction in
law is the payment of a debt or fulfillment of an
obligation. Compensation for a
wrong.
Eager is having or showing keen interest or intense desire
and prompt
willingness to
accomplish something or to
know
something. A positive feeling of wanting to push ahead with something,
sometimes being impatient or expecting.
Engaged and Focused.
Arousal is to
cause
to be
Alert and energetic. Cause to
become awake or
conscious.
Reward-Based Learning -
Mistakes
Concern is to think strongly
about something and having something on the mind of. Something that interests you because it is
important or that it affects you some way.
A feeling of
sympathy for someone or something.
Consider is to think about something
carefully and to
look at
something
attentively and carefully
in order to
study
and
judge something
accurately, and
in
regards to someone's well-being.
Learn is
to gain
knowledge and
skills through
experience and
reading. To get to know
something or become
aware of
something, sometimes accidentally.
To commit valuable knowledge and information to
memory
and to learn things by heart. To be a student of a certain
subject. To find out and determine something with certainty, usually by making
an
inquiry or other efforts.
Learning Methods
-
Inspiration.
Discernment
is the
cognitive condition of
someone who
understands. The
mental ability to understand and
discriminate between
relations. The trait of
judging wisely and
objectively.
Determine
is to
explain
something after a
calculation,
investigation,
experiment, survey, or
study. Decide upon definitely; give a
value. Reach, make, or come to a
decision about something. Settle
conclusively; come to terms. Find out, learn, or
detect with certainty,
usually by making an
inquiry or other
effort.
Detect is to determine the
existence, presence, or the
fact of something.
Observe.
Determination is to closely
examine the
properties of something through
research so that an
opinion or judgment
may be reached after
consideration. The act of
making up your mind about
something and
deciding or
controlling something's outcome or nature.
Persistence.
Noticing is to express
recognition of the presence
or the existence of something.
Paying Attention. A short
critical review.
Recognition is coming to
understand something
clearly and
distinctly.
An acceptance as of a claim as
true
and
valid.
Recognize.
Realize is to be fully
aware or
cognizant of something.
To
perceive an idea
or
situation mentally. To make
something real or concrete or to give
reality or substance to something. Realization is coming to understand something
clearly and
distinctly.
Describe
is to give a description of something or to
give an account or
representation of
something in words. To classify or apply the appropriate name to
something.
Examine is to consider in
detail and subject to an
analysis in order
to discover essential features or
meaning. The act of conducting
a controlled test or
investigation. Observe, check out, and
look
over carefully or inspect.
Question or
examine thoroughly and
closely.
Mull it over: meaning to think
about; to consider; to ruminate about; reflect deeply on a
subject.
Scholarly Method is the body of
principles and
practices
used by scholars to make their claims about the world as valid and
trustworthy as possible, and to make them known to the scholarly public.
It is the
methods that systemically advance the teaching, research, and
practice of a given scholarly or academic field of study through rigorous
inquiry.
Scholarship is noted by its significance to its particular
profession, and is creative, can be documented, can be replicated or
elaborated, and can be and is peer-reviewed through various methods.
Perceive
-
Detect -
Observe -
Learning Methods
Investigate is the work of inquiring into something thoroughly and
systematically.
To conduct an inquiry or an
investigation of
something and too
question or
examine something thoroughly and
closely. An investigation can be an exploratory action or
expedition.
Science is an
Adventure.
Journalism -
Search
Engines
Research is a systematic
investigation to establish facts. Attempt to find out in a systematically
and scientific manner.
Research
-
Awareness -
Memory
Studied is produced or marked by conscious design or premeditation.
To
consider in detail a subject for analysis in order to
discover essential features or meaning. To give careful
consideration to something.
To be a student of a certain subject.
To
learn by
reading books. To
think intently
for a length of time.
Study is to consider in
detail and subject
to an
analysis in order to
discover essential features or
meaning.
Learn by
reading books. Applying the mind to
learning and
understanding a subject, especially by reading.
Attentive consideration and meditation. A written
document describing the
findings of some individual or
group. A detailed critical inspection or a formal or official
examination. Someone who
memorizes quickly and easily, as the lines for a
part in a play. A composition intended to develop one aspect of the
performer's technique. To be a student and follow a
course of
study or be enrolled at an
institute of
learning.
Teaching
-
Instruction -
Training -
Rehearsal
-
Mistake Learning
Human
Search Engine -
Self Directed Learning -
Questioning
The Case for Curiosity-Driven Research: Suzie Sheehy (video and text)
Personal Learning Network is an informal
learning network that
consists of the people a learner interacts with and derives knowledge from
in a personal learning environment. In a PLN, a person makes a connection
with another person with the specific intent that some type of learning
will occur because of that connection.
Remember,
formal
learning, or learning in a school, is just one type of
learning method. It would be
dangerous and ignorant to call self-directed learning "
informal
learning". When you define the "
education
objective", and define what being a Trained Teacher is
supposed to be, you will discover that any style of learning is no
different then any other style of learning as long as you learn in the way
that you like, and not in a way that someone else likes.
It would be ignorant to say that self-directed learning is
voluntary. That's like saying that eating is voluntary, you
don't have to eat, but if you don't eat you die. You don't have
to learn, but if you don't learn you die. And just because
something is labeled non-voluntary or
Compulsory, does not say why it is important or why you need
this more then other knowledge. The sooner you learn to
learn on your own, the better your life will be.
Social Learning.
"There are many things that seem too big and too complex
to figure out, but that's how they all seem at first."
Discover is to
determine the existence, presence, or fact of
something. To get
to know or
become aware of something,
sometimes accidentally or
unexpectedly. To
make a discovery
or make a new finding. To
make known to the
public information that was previously known only to a few people or that
was meant to be kept a
secret. To
see
something for the first time.
Discovery Observation is the act of
detecting something new,
or something "old" that had been unrecognized as meaningful.
Observe -
Experience.
Explore is to
inquire into a subject and examine something in detail. To
travel to
through an unfamiliar place or area in order to learn about or familiarize
oneself with it.
Exploration is the act of searching for the
purpose of
discovery of
information or resources.
Exploration is the act of
searching for the
purpose of discovery of
information or resources.
Pilgrim
is a traveler who has come from afar and may be on a journey to a holy
place.
Pilgrimage is a journey,
often into an unknown or foreign place, where a person goes in search of
new or expanded meaning about their self, others, nature, or a higher
good, through the experience. It can lead to a personal transformation,
after which the pilgrim returns to their daily life.
Pioneer is to open up and explore a new area. Take the lead or initiative in.
Participate in the development of.
Leading the way. Trailblazing. To initiate or participate in the
development of.
Serendipity is an unexpected discovery.
Finding something interesting while
looking for something else.
Serendipity (wiki).
To explore is the
default mode of
every human being. The only problem with exploring is when you have no
clear understanding of your
purpose, or,
when you have no idea what you're looking for, or, what you will do when
you do find what you were not looking for. So it's not just about having
purpose, it's understanding the
variables
and understanding
randomness, and never
expecting
what you think you know. That's exploration.
Searching for Ideas
(innovation) -
Creativity -
Love -
Motivation
-
Interest
Searching is being
diligent and
thorough in
inquiry or
investigation. Having keenness
and forcefulness and penetration in
thought, expression, or intellect. Exploring thoroughly. Try to locate
or discover, or try to establish the existence of something.
Adventure -
Openness to Experience
-
Games -
Information Resources
Prospect is to search for
something desirable. Explore for useful or valuable things or substances,
such as minerals. The
possibility of future success.
A Mans Reach should Exceed his Grasp, for what is
Heaven for? Sometimes you have to go beyond what you see and what
is known. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. A
calculated risk is
sometimes necessary. Dammed if you do, Dammed if you don't. But wait, if
you succeed or fail, what will you learn? What is your goal? Will you be
able to except the
consequences? Will you be able to handle the
glory? Is this your fate, or
just a bad decision? Either way, what
choices do you have? Will there be another time? Will you have another
opportunity?
Pandora's Box was not about
curiosity, because curiosity did not kill
the cat,
ignorance did. If you're curious about something, you need to
have an idea what will happen if you start asking questions or
experimenting something or start looking for something, because you may
get more than you bargained for. Sometimes starting the process of
discovery needs a
well thought out
plan, because some problems can be really big and beyond your
abilities, so you either have lots of help from other people or you have
lots of time and resources to carefully plan and approach this problem
that you want to solve. To
open a can of worms
is to examine or attempt to solve some problem, only to inadvertently
complicate it and create even more trouble.
Forbidden Fruit is a metaphor for
self-control that allows you to
avoid doing things that are extremely
risky, especially when
you're only something because you like to do it or that you anticipate
enjoyment from this particular activity. But enjoyment is not a
measurement of reality or value. So this is more than just temptation,
especially when you don't understand the word temptation or the thing that
you believe is tempting you.
Self
control is an important skill to have, but only when you can
accurately measure the
choices that you
make and how good they are and how the bad they are.
Confidence.
BK101 is a Gold Mine, and you're the
prospector. If you don't dig, then you don't
learn, and no gold will be found. This isn't no
click bait,
this is the biggest fish that you will ever see in your life. And the
worlds biggest fish is a symbol for
everything that you still
don't know. Don't limit your mind based solely on just your own time,
but base it on the time that your ancestors gave you, and base it on the
time that you will pass on to future generations, which could very well be
your future self on some level. You reap what you sow, you
sow what you reap.
Prospector is someone who explores an area
for mineral deposits.
Miner is a
laborer who works in a mine. (and this mine is called BK101, which is a
metaphor of everything that you still
don't know.)
Intelligence -
Morality
Ambitious is having a strong desire for success or achievement. Requiring
full use of your
abilities or resources. Aspirational.
Persistent is
determination in doing something despite
difficulty or delay in
achieving
success. A
continuous and connected period of time. The act of persisting or
persevering; continuing or
repeating
behavior.
Determination is devoting full strength and
concentrated attention to. Strongly
motivated to succeed. Shape or influence;
give direction to.
The quality of being
determined to do or achieve something;
firmness of purpose.
Deciding or controlling something's outcome or nature. The act
of making up your mind about something.
Find out, learn, or
determine with certainty, usually by
making
an inquiry or other effort.
Goals -
Will Power -
Determine
-
Motivation
(inspiration)
Deliberated is to think about
something carefully and weighing the negatives against the positives.
Discussing the pros and cons of an
issue in ore to accurately measure
value
and the
utility of a subject.
Deliberate is
something carefully thought
out in advance and discussing the
pros and cons of an issue.
Dedication is the act of
binding yourself
intellectually or emotionally to a
course of
action. Faithful to a cause.
Goals.
Energetic is working hard, enterprising or ambitious drive. A healthy
capacity for vigorous activity. Possessing or exerting or
displaying
energy.
Aggressive is having or
showing determination and energetic pursuit of your
ends. Sometimes you have to be aggressive when learning, because some
things will not come easy, especially knowledge and information
that you need. People will try to keep it from you. But if you
are determined, it will be almost impossible to stop you.
Because that is life, and life cannot be stopped. Even through
all the mass extinctions, life has always found a way.
Pursuit is to
carry out or participate in
and be involved in an activity.
Activism
-
Goal.
Methods of obtaining Knowledge:
Sensing (
observation
or
experience) This may be
more or less sophisticated, ranging direct personal sensation, to
instrument-augmented sensation
to controlled
experimentation.
Reason or logic. Taking other
knowledge as data, by logical operations new knowledge can be inferred.
For example, the theoretical construct, the electron, is derived by
logical inferences from observations and experiment.
Modelling a situation sometimes
allows those with a hands-on viewpoint to learn how-to do something. This
pragmatic approach is often seen in computer programming.
Testimony. Knowledge based on the
acceptance of testimony involves accepting what others say.
Authority.
Knowledge based on authority may rely upon the reputation of an
individual. Authority may have a political basis in the sense that some
political process, perhaps involving status as well as simple voting, peer
review, or comment. This is familiar to participants in academia.
Revelation. In obtaining
knowledge there are two main kinds of knowledge that one can obtain.
Fallible knowledge which is likely to fail
or make errors.
Infallible knowledge which
is incapable of failure or error.
Thinking -
Self Organized Learning Environment
Extract Your Own Meaning is to
reason by deduction or
principle, or construe, which is
to make sense of; assign a
meaning to.
Free-Thought is a
philosophical viewpoint which holds that positions regarding
truth should be formed on the
basis of
logic,
reason, and
empiricism, rather than
authority,
tradition,
conformity, revelation, or other
dogma. The cognitive application of
freethought is known as "freethinking", and practitioners of freethought
are known as "freethinkers".
Knowing -
Intelligence -
Problem Solving
The
Beatles - Think For Yourself (youtube)
Self-Organized Learning Environment
Contemplated is to look at
something thoughtfully and observe deep in thought. Consider something as a
possibility and Reflect deeply on a subject.
Philosophy.
"Sometimes we learn more by
looking for an answer to a question than we
do from learning the answer itself."
Journey
"Everyone is born with an
adventurous spirit, but our lives get
complicated and there are many distractions, so we lose our
natural instinct to explore. So we have to manually activate our
love for exploring, which isn't bad, we just have to remember to
do it once a day. We need to look at life as free as a new born
baby. If your not exploring what's
important and valuable,
things that you can learn from, then exploring becomes
unimportant."
Develop is to make
something new,
such as a product or a mental or
artistic creation. Gain through
experience. Become technologically advanced. Change the use of and make
available or usable. Create by training and teaching. Grow,
progress,
unfold, or evolve through a process of evolution, natural growth,
differentiation, or a conducive environment. Cause to grow and
differentiate in ways conforming to its natural development. Grow
emotionally or mature. Move one's pieces into strategically more
advantageous positions.
Child
Development -
Product Development
Tested is to
prove something to be
useful or correct. Tested and proved to be
reliable, tried and true, well-tried.
Put to the
test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to.
Examine someone's knowledge of something.
Determine the presence or properties of (a substance).
Research -
Testing Mistakes to Avoid
Performance is
doing something
successfully using knowledge as distinguished
from merely possessing it. A process or manner of functioning or operating
effectively.
Progress -
Process
Evolve is a process in which something passes by degrees to a different
stage, especially a more advanced or mature stage.
Evolution.
Potential is
having possibilities. The inherent
capacity for coming into
being or happening or being true.
A tentative insight into the natural world; a concept that is
not yet verified but that if true would explain certain
facts
or phenomena.
Condition of Possibility is framework for the possible
appearance of a given list of entities.
"Learning should just
flow, no
dams, no restrictions, just discovering where learning and knowledge
will take us."
Related Subjects -
Learning Methods -
Learning at Birth -
Intelligence -
Logic
-
Focus -
Online Schools -
Knowledge Management -
Database Management -
Documenting -
Record Keeping
-
Self-Efficacy
-
Do It Yourself -
Problem Solving -
Time Management -
Spatial intelligence
-
Bodily-Kinesthetic -
Media Literacy -
Information
Literacy -
Science -
Liberal
Arts -
Questioning -
Creativity -
Ideas -
Inspiration -
Navigating the Internet -
Human
Search Engine -
Methods for Learning -
Home Organized Education.
Hackerspace - Hackers
Don't ever assume that everyone knows what the word "
Hacker"
means. The definition of Hacker has been hacked itself. When I hear the
work Hacker, I'm thinking that some person has some computer hardware and
software skills, but how much knowledge they have is unknown. So the word
Hacker really describes very little about a person, it only says they have
some computer skills, and that's it. Just because someone taught
themselves how to work on their own car doesn't mean that they're a
Hacker. A computer programmer with a college degree isn't a Hacker. And
anyone who self-taught themselves to the same level of knowledge is also
not a Hacker. We should stop using the word Hacker when describing a
person who is "
A Self-Taught Learner." Let's just say that someone is
learning, or self-teaching, or exploring, or researching, or computer
programing. Instead of using the term 'Hacker Space', we should call it
a
Makerspace or "Science Space" or
Learning Space. Your Personal Space to
Explore your Ideas, a Space to Build your Inventions, a Space to Learn and Discover.
A place that supply's the Tools and the Resources for Creative Minds.
Development Rules.
Hacker is a person who enjoys exploring the limits of what is possible, in
a spirit of playful cleverness.
A hacker is one who enjoys the intellectual challenge of
creativity. Someone who likes overcoming and circumventing
limitations of
programming systems, and tries to extend their
capabilities.
A hacker is not just about
computers, even though computers
are one of our most important tools that we have, it is still
just one of many
tools that people can use.
Repurpose.
Security Hacker is someone who seeks to breach defenses and exploit
weaknesses in a computer system or network. Hackers may be motivated by a
multitude of reasons, such as profit, protest, challenge, recreation, or
to evaluate system weaknesses to assist in formulating defenses against
potential hackers. The subculture that has evolved around hackers is often
referred to as the computer underground.
Note:
I'm more worried about the
Human Brain
Hacking that goes on from the media and schools, that kind of hacking
does more damage then anything else. People who hack computers actually
shows the irony of our reality. So you have to ask yourself, how much of
your mind has been hacked? Do you know how to scan the human mind for
viruses?
White Hat refers to an
ethical computer hacker,
or a computer security expert, who specializes in penetration testing and
in other testing methodologies that ensures the security of an
organization's information systems. Ethical hacking is a term meant to
imply a broader category than just penetration testing. Contrasted with
black hat, a malicious hacker, the name comes from Western films, where
heroic and antagonistic cowboys might traditionally wear a white and a
black hat respectively. While a white hat hacker hacks under good
intentions with permission, and a black hat hacker, most often
unauthorized, has malicious intent, there is a third kind known as a grey
hat hacker who hacks with good intentions but at times without permission.
White hat hackers may also work in teams called "sneakers and/or hacker
clubs", red teams, or tiger teams.
Hacker Hobbyist are individuals who enjoy the intellectual challenge
of creatively overcoming limitations of software systems to achieve novel
and clever outcomes.
Hacker Programmer
(wiki).
Hobbyist is a person
who is interested in a subject or an activity
in their
spare time, something other than their main occupation.
Maker Culture is a contemporary culture or subculture representing a
technology-based extension of
DIY Culture
that intersects with hacker culture, sometimes less concerned with
physical objects as it focuses on
software, and revels in the
creation of new
devices as well as tinkering with existing ones. The maker culture in
general supports
open-source
hardware. Typical interests enjoyed by the maker culture include
engineering-oriented pursuits such as
electronics, robotics,
3-D
printing, and the use of
Computer Numeric Control tools, as well as
more traditional activities such as
metalworking,
woodworking, and, mainly, its
predecessor, the traditional
arts and
crafts. The subculture stresses a cut-and-paste approach to
standardized hobbyist technologies, and encourages cookbook re-use of
designs published on websites and maker-oriented publications. There is a
strong focus on using
and learning practical skills and applying them to reference designs.
Jury Rig
refers to temporary repairs made with only the tools and materials that happen to be on hand.
How to Deal With a Bad Repair
Hackerspace is a community-operated workspace where people
with common interests, often in computers, machining, technology, science,
digital art or electronic art, can meet, socialize and collaborate.
Cooperate
and not Compete.
Hacker
Spaces (wiki) -
List
of Hacker Spaces (wiki)
Hac DC -
Do it Yourself
Resources -
Science Fairs (work
shops)
Reverse Engineering
is the processes of
extracting knowledge or
design information from
anything man-made and then re-producing it or re-producing anything based on
the extracted information. The process often involves disassembling
something and then analyzing its components and workings in detail, such
as with a mechanical device, electronic component, computer program, or
biological, chemical, or organic matter.
Hacker Space is a place where your voice and your ideas can be heard.
A learning environment, a
networking environment and an
open source environment. A community
workshop.
An interactive library.
A collaboration space. A collection of unique and diverse
individuals who like exploring knowledge, solving problems,
researching ideas, and expressing themselves creatively. A place
where a person can share and have access to tools,
machines,
software,
Electronic Test Equipment, knowledge, books, ideas, skills,
materials and resources. A place where a person can learn about
the power of
collaboration
by using the talents and skills
of other people collectively to solve problems and create new advances in
technology. A place where you can have your own project area
with a large
work bench for
fabrication and
prototyping.
Workbench is study table at which manual work is done. Workbenches
should be at a comfortable height for working with provisions for seated
or standing work. And also have a way to fix the work piece to the surface
so that it may be worked with both hands. And have provisions for
mounting, storing and accessing tools. Workbenches are made from many
different materials including metal, wood, stone, and composites depending
on the needs of the work, and can range from simple flat surfaces to very
complex designs that may be considered
tools in themselves.
Maintenance -
Tinkering -
Tinkering Course
When you combine the talent and skills of many people, you
create more potential. When you have an idea that you can
quickly get feedback and insight on, you don't have to waste
time wondering about the possibilities. We don't want to judge
other peoples ideas until we learn and understand what they want
to achieve.
MIT’s Largest
Hackathon innovates on software and hardware projects.
Science Tools and
Resources
MIT Media Lab:
24 research groups on more than 350 projects that range from
digital approaches for treating neurological disorders, to a
stackable, electric car for sustainable cities. Annual operating
budget: approx. $60 million.
Public Lab
is a community where you can learn how to investigate
environmental concerns. Using inexpensive DIY techniques, we
seek to change how people see the world in environmental,
social, and political terms.
Shenzhen:
The Silicon Valley of Hardware (Full Documentary) | Future
Cities | WIRED (youtube)
Work Shops
for Inventors and Makers
Original Equipment Manufacturer is a company that makes a
part or subsystem that is used in another company's end product.
For example, if Acme Manufacturing Co. makes power cords that
are used on IBM computers, Acme is an OEM.
Spiderwort
-
Phacktory -
3D Printing
This Scientist makes Ears out of Apples: Biohacker Andrew
Pelling: (video and Interactive Text)
Creative Commons is an international network devoted to
educational access and expanding the range
of
creative works available for others
to build upon legally and to share.
Science Commons was a creative commons project for designing
strategies and tools for faster, more efficient web-enabled scientific
research. The organization's goals were to identify unnecessary barriers
to research, craft policy guidelines and legal agreements to lower those
barriers, and develop technology to
make research data and
materials easier to find and use. Its overarching goal was to speed
the translation of data into discovery and thereby the value of research.
10,000-Hours Rule - Time needed to Learn a Complex Skill
The Ten Thousand Hours Rule is not
really a rule, it's just what people have witnessed and
documented as being the
average amount of time that it takes for
the average person to become really good at something, like
playing the
piano, playing sports or acquiring other
coordination skills.
Everyone starts out as a Novice or as a Beginner, and then it's up to
the individual
if they want to put in the necessary time and
effort that's needed
to become an
expert or
a
professional. There
are definitely more effective ways and more efficient ways to train and
learn new skills. You could waste a lot of time and effort if you are not
sure how to learn something new or complex. This is why many people
benefit from having a
coach, and
also benefit from having access to
education resources, tools and the time needed to practice.
The
quantity of time that you spend
practicing,
training and
learning is extremely
important. But remember that proficiency levels will vary from person to
person. So don't make comparisons. Your level of proficiency is always
temporary, whether the
proficiency
that you're seeking is relevant or not relevant to your immediate needs.
There are many factors involved in determining proficiency
levels, like physical or mental limitations, good teaching
methods,
good coaching, access to valuable knowledge, information and tools,
having a good memory,
inspiration, and having the time and the
dedication. Practicing right
before you go to sleep, and learning one hour
before you go to sleep could help improve
memory and learning new skills. You can become really
good at something, but if you stop practicing for a while, your
proficiency level will decrease and you will not become great.
You should also determine the value of your proficiency, like
being a surgeon compared to being a professional sports player.
The bottom line is, it could take a long time to become really
good at something, and if time is all you have, then you should
spend your time
effectively and efficiently as possible, and learn the most
important things first. Practice makes perfect, but not always,
for
chess players, practice only accounted for 34% of what
determined the rank of a master player.
Focus -
Goals.
If you
practice 2 hours a day, that's 730 hours a year, it will
take about 13 years to master a skill.
If you
practice 4 hours a day, that's 1,460 hours a year, it
will
take about 7 years to master a skill.
If you
practice 6 hours a day, that's 2,190 hours a year, it
will
take about 4.5 years to master a skill, on
average of
course.
Reading Speed.
Guy Plays
Table Tennis Every Day for a Year and goes from beginner to
expert in just one year (youtube)
How to get better at the things you care about: Eduardo Briceño (video
and interactive text)
Accelerated Learning: How To Get Good at Anything in 20 Hours (youtube)
-
Expert in a Year.
Training is learning new
skills and
acquiring
knowledge and
information that is needed to perform a particular
task effectively, efficiently,
productivity and accurately.
Training is
Teaching
yourself or teaching other people to
improve and be good at something and
also help develop physical and mental
competencies in a particular area
of
expertise. Training also helps a
person to understand the
responsibilities of a particular job so
that the actions they perform are done by
procedure
and as required to assure the highest quality possible.
Work Experience.
Practice is a
learning method where
a person or persons
rehearse a behavior or action
over and
over again for the purpose of improving and mastering a skill or an
ability that accomplishes a goal or achieves a particular result. Sports teams practice their skills and knowledge
in order to prepare themselves for real games. Playing a
musical instrument
well takes a lot of
time,
effort and practice.
Routines
-
Brain Plasticity -
Human Nature
Deliberate Practice refers to a special
type of practice that is
purposeful and
systematic. While regular
practice might include mindless repetitions, deliberate practice requires
focused attention and is conducted
with the specific
goal of
improving performance.
Practice Makes Perfect is used to
convey that regular exercise of an activity or skill is the way to become
proficient in it, especially when encouraging someone to persist in it.
Practice does not always make perfect.
Only perfect practice makes perfect, which means that the benefits of good
coaching
should not be overlooked. -
Vince LombardiPeak Performance
is a state that is also known as peak experience, the zone of
optimal functioning and flow.
It refers to a moment when an individual puts it all together, when they
are in the zone, when everything flows, and when they achieve an
exceptional performance.
Retraining is the
process of
learning a new or the same old
skill or trade
for the same group of personnel. Refresher/Re-training is required to be
provided on regular basis to avoid personnel obsolescence due to
technological changes & the tendency to forget. This short term
instruction course shall serve to re-acquaint personnel with skills
previously learnt (recall to retain the potentials) or to bring one's
knowledge or skills up-to-date (latest) so that skills stay sharp.
Work
Experience -
Certification Renewal.
Memory training builds upon strategy use. Training makes participants
adopt various strategies to manage the task, which then affects the
outcome of the training.
Active Recall is a principle of
efficient learning, which
claims the need to actively stimulate
memory during the learning process.
It contrasts with passive review, in which the learning material is
processed passively (e.g. by reading, watching, etc.).
Spaced Repetition is a
learning technique that incorporates
increasing intervals of time between subsequent review of previously
learned material in order to exploit the psychological
spacing effect. Alternative names
include spaced rehearsal, expanding rehearsal, graduated intervals,
repetition spacing, repetition scheduling, spaced retrieval and expanded
retrieval.
Want to Learn a new Skill? Take some Short Breaks. Study suggests our
brains may use
short rest
periods to strengthen memories. Researchers found that taking
short breaks, early and
often, may help our brains learn new skills.
Testing Effect is the finding that
long-term memory is
increased when some of the learning period is devoted to retrieving the
to-be-remembered information through testing with proper feedback. The
effect is also sometimes referred to as retrieval practice,
practice
testing, or test-enhanced learning.
Memory Consolidation is distinguished into two specific
processes, synaptic consolidation, which is synonymous with late-phase
long-term potentiation and occurs within the first few hours after
learning, and systems consolidation, where hippocampus-dependent
memories become independent of the hippocampus
over a period of weeks to years. Recently, a third process has become the
focus of research, reconsolidation, in which previously-consolidated
memories can be made labile again through reactivation of the memory
trace.
Cooperative.
Engram in neuropsychology is the means by which memories are stored as
biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain (and other neural tissue)
in response to external stimuli.
Brain
Plasticity - "Neurons that fire together, wire together." -
"Practice makes Perfect".
Skill is an
ability that has been acquired by
training that gives you the ability to do something well with
expertise. An
ability to produce
solutions in some
problem domain.
Skill is learning to
carry out a task with
pre-determined results
often within a given amount of time, energy, or both.
Learning.
Proficient is having or showing knowledge
and skill and aptitude. Having good technique or proficiency in a
practical skill.
Professional.
Sub-Skills are
skills that are part of a larger skill.
System Integration is defined as the process of bringing
together the component
subsystems into one system and ensuring that the
subsystems function together as a
system.
Subset is part of a larger group of
related things.
Talent is a person who possesses unusual
innate ability in some
field or
activity.
Natural talent is an innate or
inborn gift for a specific activity, either allowing one to demonstrate
some immediate skill without practice, or to gain skill rapidly with
minimal practice.
Mastery is having
comprehensive knowledge or skill in a subject or accomplishment.
Control or superiority over someone or something.
Efficient -
Effective.
Acquisition is an ability that has been
acquired by training. The cognitive process of acquiring skill or
knowledge.
Merger.
Get the Hang of It means to eventually
learn how to do something by practicing and having conscientiousness
determination and diligent effort. To learn how to handle something with
some skill, or to get the knack for doing something and doing it well by
working hard. To get possession of something, or to succeed in getting
something, or reaching out for something by continually working towards a
goal.
Figuring it Out.
"You
don't have to be great in order to get started, but you have to get
started if you want to be great."
Specialist Degree is hierarchically above the
Master's
Degree and below the Doctorate.
Prodigy.
Certify is to
officially recognize someone or something as possessing certain
qualifications or meeting certain standards.
Validate.
Certification is an official document attesting to a status or
level of achievement. The action or process
of providing someone or something with an official document attesting to a
status or level of achievement.
Certification refers to the confirmation of certain
characteristics of an object, person, or organization. This confirmation
is often, but not always, provided by some form of external review,
education, assessment, or audit. Accreditation is a specific
organization's
process of certification.
Diver
Certification certifies that the person has completed a course of
training as required by the agency issuing the card. This is assumed to
represent a defined level of skill and knowledge in underwater diving.
Accreditation is the process in which certification of
competency, authority, or credibility is presented.
Degree.
License refers to that permission as well as to the document
recording that permission.
Professional.
Thought Leader can refer to an individual or firm that is
recognized as an authority in a specialized field and whose
expertise is sought and often rewarded.
Not Always an Expert -
Smart -
Knowledgeable -
Competence
Programing (behavior) -
Simulation - VR
20 Minutes Per Day Rule:
Even spending just 20 minutes a day doing something valuable can
still add up.
20
minutes a day exercising, 20 minutes a day reading, 20 minutes a
day making phone calls, 20 minutes a day researching,
20 minutes a day meditating, 20 minutes a day organizing, 20
minutes a day learning something new, and so on.
Routines -
Learn to
Unicycle in 2 Hours and 38 minutes (youtube)
The speed at which you learn is based on
previous
learned abilities that are related to a new skill that you
are trying to learn. The more abilities you have that are
related to a new skill that you are trying to learn, the faster
you will learn. Learning some of the basic skills of a
particular process, will also help you learn faster. You
shouldn't have to rush learning, and you shouldn't have to
struggle trying to learn something new. Learning is a process
that every human is born with, but if you don't learn to
understand the process of learning, starting with knowing the
How, What, Where, When and Why you are learning, is the first
step.
If you practice a slightly modified version of a task that you
want to master, then it's possible to learn more and faster than
if you just keep practicing the exact same thing multiple times
in a row. Make small variations in practice sessions.
Iteration is the act of
repeating a process, either to
generate an unbounded sequence of outcomes, or with the aim of approaching
a desired goal, target or result. Each repetition of the process is also
called an "iteration", and the results of one iteration are used as the
starting point for the next iteration.
Logically Ordered Steps in the Correct Sequence
Sometimes it takes me months and years to learn things that
should only take few hours or minutes. That is why I teach, to
save people time, which leaves more time for people to enjoy
life much more then I did, and I enjoyed a lot, even with all
that wasted time it took for me to learn important lessons.
The average student spends around
20,000
Hours in School. And they end up not being experts of
anything, why is that?
How Skill Expertise Shapes the Brain Functional Architecture:
An FMRI Study of Visuo-Spatial and Motor Processing in
Professional Racing-Car and Naïve Drivers.
Mental Function might actually be Enhanced in Winter
Arctic cognition is a study of cognitive performance in summer and
winter at 69°N.
How many hours a day do you have to
spend reading in order to become a Doctor in 6 years? It's estimated that a student would need to read 4 hours a day
(book study) and take another 4 hours a day of class time, hands
on instructions and laboratory work. About 40 hours per week.
First you have to start out with a good High school Education.
Then take a 2-4-year undergraduate degree program. The take the
Medical College Admission Test (MCAT), which is a
computer-based standardized examination for prospective medical
students in the United States, Australia. Then spend 4 years
in medical school. And then complete 3-7 years of residency
training. Then take
United States Medical Licensing Examination, which is
administered by the National Board of Medical Examiners. Now
you're a Doctor.
10 Books every Pre-Med should read while not studying -
On Becoming a Doctor: Everything You Need to Know about Medical
School, Residency, Specialization, and Practice.
How long does it take to lose a skill, and
how much should I keep practicing a skill to keep it fresh in my head?
When you stop practicing for some time, how long does it take to get back
to the same skill level? How long does it take to relearn a skill? If you
stop practicing a skill that took you years to learn, how much skill do
you lose? If you stop doing a skilled activity after years of training,
how long will it take to get back to the same skill level? When you stop
doing a skilled activity, how long will it be before your skills get
rusty? How long does it take before you lose the competitive edge when you
stop a particular job? How long will it take before you regain your edge?
How often do you have to practice in order to stay sharp? How long does it
take to regain a skill you once lost?
It depends
on the skill, and the skill level, motor skill, memory skill and so
on.
Mistakes - Failure
Mistake is a
wrong action
attributable to
bad judgment,
ignorance or
inattention. An
understanding or a
realization that
something is
not correct. A
mistake can be a failure to
anticipate,
a failure to
perceive or a failure to
carry out a task.
Fail
is falling short of a
goal or
expectation. An event that does not
accomplish its intended
purpose. Lack of
success. A
loss.
Flub
is an embarrassing mistake or something badly or clumsily done. To make a
mess of, destroy or ruin something.
Blunder is
to commit a socially awkward or
tactless act or a fault or make a serious mistake.
Regrets.
Oh No is an excited expression of
alarm, shock,
concern, or resentment about a
problem or
error.
Uh-Oh is an informal term used when you
realize that you are in a bad situation, or that you have made a mistake.
Accident is an unfortunate mishap, especially one
causing damage or injury.
Anything that happens suddenly or
by chance
without an apparent
cause or reason.
Inadvertently is doing something without knowledge or intention.
Unknowingly being an
accessory to a
crime.
Inadvertent is
something happening by
chance, unexpectedly or
unintentionally. Accidental.
Inadvertence is an unintentional omission resulting from
failure to notice something. The trait
of
forgetting or
ignoring your responsibilities.
To Err is Human means that it is
natural for human beings to make mistakes and that nobody is a totally
perfect person. "To Err
Is Human, to Learn is Divine."
Errors.
Sometimes you don't notice things right away, and
you don't
always get it right the first time. You can make
the same mistake over and over again
before you realize that you are making a mistake. That is the process of
Learning.
Even though it took you a long time to learn and
figure something out, you
still realized it and you were still able to learn. Some mistakes can
reveal something valuable and informative, so not all mistakes are bad,
especially when a mistake helps you to
make better decisions now and
make better decisions in the future. So now what? How do
you maintain this knowledge? How do you
preserve this
knowledge? Should you make copies? And should you pass on this knowledge?
There's no such thing as
Failure, there's only Learning. You
learn what works and
you learn what doesn't work. Don't consider mistakes or an
Error as failure,
because most mistakes can help us understand what's good and what's not
so good. A mistake is a process of learning. Without mistakes it
would be almost impossible to know
Right from Wrong. Don't
look at mistakes as failure, just see them for what they are, an
idea that didn't work out the way you thought it would, and
hopefully, you will learn
the
reasons why
something did not work.
Learning
Opportunities are everywhere. Never miss out on an Opportunity to
Learn something valuable. The brains
memory has enormous capacity for knowledge.
No
Regrets -
No Blaming
-
No Passing the BuckIf you don't
learn from your mistakes, then your
mistakes will come back to
haunt
you forever, in ways that you will not even be aware of. You have to move
on and get pass your mistakes, don't leave them hanging around. It's much
more than just
Forgiving yourself, you have
to
learn from mistakes and
make changes
and updates to your way of thinking and doing. People who are able to look
back on the past and understand what happened have
hindsight.
"If a
person dwells on the past, they rob the present. But if a person ignores
the past, they rob the future. The seeds of our destiny are nourished by
the experiences of our past."
Relevance -
Chaos Theory.
Sometimes you don't
know how
risky something
is until after you've taken that risk, that's when you
realize just how risky
something was. But hopefully you learned something. But the sad fact is,
people don't always learn, or do they fully understand the mistakes they
make. We have horribly underestimated the importance of
learning.
Live and learn, but if you don't learn, then all you will be doing is
living a lie and never
progressing.
Don't confuse
failing with Failure. Failure is realizing that you made a
mistake.
Failing is when you do nothing to
stop the mistake from
happening again. So the only time that you can become a failure
is when you allow known mistakes to continue, especially
when you have the power and the ability to stop these mistakes
from happening again, then you are a failure. But still not
broken. Fail = Future Always Involves Learning.
Sometimes
you don't take
good advice because you don't
fully
understand the meaning of
that advice. Sometimes something bad has to happen in order for you to
realize how important that
advice was and how
valuable that
information is. This is why it's extremely important to explain things and
give real life examples of things
so that a person has a better chance of understanding the importance and
the value of that information. If I tell you to look both ways before you
cross the street, you might not do it, until you get hit by a car. That's
when you finally learn the importance of looking both ways before you
cross the street. But looking both ways is not just for streets. You
have to look both ways with everything. From looking at things from
your point of view and from
someone else's point of view. You need to be the driver and the
pedestrian. You need to be the leader and the follower. You need to be
aware of what is outside of you and also be aware of
what is inside of you.
You need to be aware of your thoughts and feelings and not just be aware
of what is happening around you. And in order for your
awareness to continually
improve and get better, you have to
keep
learning and keep increasing what you know. The more knowledgeable you
are about yourself and the world around you, the more awareness you will
have.
"I did not make a mistake, the mistake made me, made me realize that I did
something wrong, so I made the correction and moved on. You only make a mistake when you
have made the same
mistake twice, or when you have ignored the facts. Now that's when you make a
real mistake. And those are the types of mistakes that do the most damage
to yourself and the world."
Like the
deleted scenes in a movie that the
public never sees, some scenes or mistakes have very little relevance on
the
story of your life.
Circumstances -
Coincidence -
Consequence"
Everyone
is fallible to some degree, and everyone is vulnerable to making mistakes
and errors."
“Mistakes are always forgivable, if
one has the courage to admit them.” –
Bruce
Lee“When you repeat a mistake it is not a mistake anymore: it
is a decision.” –
Paulo
CoelhoTo err is human
means that everyone makes mistakes.
Forgiveness.
Trial
and Error is trying different things to solve a problem.
Coming up with creative ways of
problem solving. It is characterized by repeated, varied
attempts which are continued until success, or until the agent stops
trying.
Error Types.
"Even when I think that I'm doing my best, I can still end up making a
mess, but I keep learning, so the messes become less and less."
Failure Analysis is the
process of
collecting and
analyzing
data to determine the
cause of a
failure, often with the goal of determining corrective actions or
liability.
Quality Control Failure
Reporting (best parctice)
Failure Rate is the frequency with which an engineered system or
component fails, expressed in failures per unit of time. It is often
denoted by the Greek letter λ (lambda) and is highly used in reliability
engineering.
Planned
Obsolescence.
Famous People who Persevered don't give
up to early.
Every opportunity to explore an idea is also
an opportunity to fail or make a mistake. But as long as you don't keep
making the same mistakes, every
exploration is an
opportunity to learn. And learning is progress,
progress is advancing, and
advancing is improving. Learning is essential for living a good life.
Without learning, how would you know what a good life is?
Editing (update) -
Validate
(making sure)
Praising -
Regret
Error-full Generation
-
Learning
from Mistakes
The Benefit of Generating Errors during Learning
Desirable Difficulties Perspective on Learning
Learning
Methods (ways to learn)
Desirable Difficulties Perspective on Learning (PDF)
Decoding the Brain’s Learning Machine. In studies with monkeys,
researchers report that they have uncovered significant new details
about how the cerebellum -- the '
learning
machine' of the mammalian brain -- makes predictions and learns from
its mistakes, helping us execute complex motor actions such as accurately
shooting a basketball into a net or focusing your eyes on an object across
the room.
Anna Karenina Principle describes an endeavor in which a
deficiency in any one of a number of factors dooms it to failure.
Consequently, a successful endeavor (subject to this principle) is one
where every possible deficiency has been avoided.
Older People less apt to Recognize they've made a Mistake. New
research shows older people recognize errors less often than younger
people. The finding offers new insight into how aging adults perceive
their decisions and view their performance.
Innovations (ideas)
Things Happen for a Reason
(causality)
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't
work." (
Thomas
Edison) -
And since Thomas Edison, the world has found a million things
that don't work and a million ways that don't work. The last 117
years has been like one crazy experiment after an other.
Sacrificing millions of people and destroying the enormous
potential that every human has. As of 2016, we have learned so
much about ourselves and the world, and that realization is
slowly beginning to grow. It's time we put our lessons learned
into practice. Millions of people are dying every year from
things that we can avoid. We need to take
communication more seriously.
Without the transfer of information, life does not exist. We
have the ability to solve every problem that we have. But just
having abilities is useless unless we take action and use our
abilities accurately and effectively. We are not fully
addressing the multitude of social problems that we have. We
need to address these issues by communicating more in our
schools and in our governments. We need to improve education and
make education more accessible and affordable to everyone. And
at the same time, we need to improve our governments, and we
need to improve all the different ways that we communicate. We
have the technology, and we also have a skilled workforce of
educated people, people who are either sitting idol or being
under utilized doing some other job or function. There needs to
be a clear plan on how this will work. We can clearly calculate
every step that we need to take for the next 100 years or even
the next 1000 years.
China is using this process in the renewable energy revolution.
But here in America we will focus more on the power of the mind
as well as the energy that will
sustain us for the next millennium.
If at First you don't Succeed, Try, Try Again,
is an idiom that says to always continue to keep trying even after an
initial failure or setback, since success does not usually occur
immediately. Don't let a first-time failure stop further attempts. Don't
give up too easily. Sometimes persistence pays off in the end.
Narcissistic Mortification is the primitive terror of self
dissolution, triggered by the sudden exposure of one's sense of
a defective self, death by
embarrassment. Mistakes happen, accidents happen, learn as
much as you can and move on. No
Guilt and no
Shame,
just learning, learning is a lot more productive and a lot more
healthier for everyone.
Play the odds
as best as you can, and remember there are no guarantees, but
you can definitely increase your chances of
success.
Luck -
Odds -
Victim (not your
fault)
It's good to have a
Conscience, you realize
something is wrong, or
perceived as wrong, or
verified as
wrong?
Justice, not revenge, forgiveness, not hate. Life is long, don't
carry any unnecessary baggage. Travel light and travel tight.
Is there a
Single Point of Failure? No, there's only a very important
aspect of a particular function, that when removed, creates a
problem that needs to be solved. Failure only happens when you
don't
solve a problem, or understand a problem accurately.
Everything in life can be disrupted, but that doesn't mean that
it has to stay disrupted. We have choices, we have options, and
we have potential. When things go wrong it is sometimes a good thing because you
can learn a lot of things when things go amiss. Things that you
would have not learned if everything went smoothly. So when
things go perfect it sometimes works against you because if
gives you a false sense of security and makes you believe that
everything is working OK. But when things go bad it forces you
to examine the process more closely, so you learn more, which
prepares you more for when things go bad. So your trouble
shooting becomes less labor intensive because you can now rule
out certain factors, which will give you more time to check for
other possible causes of your problem, thus problem solving
takes less time. So don't get
frustrated
when things go wrong, because it may turn out to be something
very beneficial, and a great opportunity to learn something important.
Inferior (lacking knowledge)
“You never make the same mistake
twice. The second time you make it, it is no longer a mistake.
It is a choice”
"No matter how many mistakes you make or how slow you progress,
you are still way ahead of everyone who isn’t trying."
"Turning over a rock and finding nothing is still progress, as
long as it's documented so that others will not waste their time
turning over the same rocks."
"You can’t start the next chapter of your life if you keep
re-reading your last one."
"If you only go so far then you will never go far enough. If the
changes needed don't happen soon enough or quick enough, then
you will fail."
"Things turn out best for people who make the best out of the
way things turn out."
Be Persistent, but not stubborn or narrow minded.
Be Determined, but still be aware of your
Priorities and Purpose.
Be
Ambitious, but still maintain
Balance and
Morality.
Persistent -
Determination -
Will Power -
Inspiration
Giving up is not giving in. Not being able to reach your goals
does not mean defeat. You're just suspending operations until more
information is available. Information that would allow you to
continue or information that would prove you should no longer
continue.
There is no failure in making an effort or an attempt, unless
good planning was ignored. The act of conducting a controlled
test or investigation takes time, patience and thorough
Planning.
Knowing your Limits when Reaching for the Top (adventures)
Avoiding Fear
Every mistake that is made is either from the lack of knowledge,
or from the misunderstanding of knowledge that a person has.
No one is stupid or completely ignorant, every single person on
the planet either lacks certain knowledge, or misunderstands the knowledge they
have. But there's only one way for anyone to realize what knowledge
they are lacking, or to realize what knowledge they are misunderstanding,
which is for every person to have 24/7 access to the worlds most valuable knowledge and information,
along with the guidance and instructions on how to use the
worlds most valuable knowledge and information effectively and
efficiently as possible. This way people can learn everyday and grow wiser
everyday. A world full of educated people is a world full of potential,
a potential to solve every problem on the planet.
"You can learn a lot things
from your mistakes, but only when you finally stop denying the
fact that you've made a mistake."
"No matter how many mistakes you make or how slow you progress,
you are still way ahead of everyone who isn’t trying."
"Do, or do not, there is no try", meaning..define " Try or Trying "...what did you do?
I tried to do this...I did this...
Experimenting
and Examining, or trying something new in order to gain
experience, is essential for learning, as long as it's safe.
If it is not safe then you must prove that the information that
you claim to be seeking is
extremely important, important enough for you to justify the
risk,
the danger and the consequences. Live and learn.
The reasons that you had for doing something might not be the
same reasons that you end up with. Things change and so do
reasons, so be prepared to
Think Outside the Box.
Creativity (imagination)
Why is
Punishment,
or just the
Fear of Punishment, bad for
Risk Takers?
Narcissists don't learn from their mistakes because they don't think they
make any. When most people find that their actions have resulted in an
undesirable outcome, they tend to rethink their decisions and ask, 'What
should I have done differently to avoid this outcome?' When
narcissists face the same
situation, however, their refrain is, 'No one could have seen this
coming!' In refusing to acknowledge that they have made a mistake,
narcissists fail to learn from those mistakes, a recent study has found.
Figure it Out
Sometimes it's better to
figure
stuff out on your own, but not always. Sometimes you can learn more by
looking for the answer yourself than you would if someone
else just gave you the
answer, but not
always, because it's
relative. You learn more from
solving a problem yourself than you
would if someone else just solved the problem for you, but not
always.
Problem solving skills are extremely valuable, but so is
getting
accurate answers to
questions, answers to questions that
would save you lots of time and lower the amount of
mistakes
that you may have to make. Yes you need problem solving
skills, but you also need to know how to effectively use the
enormous amount of resources and knowledge that other people
have. Everyone is
standing on the shoulders of giants, and everyone has
benefited from the efforts of others. So it's extremely
important to know how those giants made their advancements, but
it is also extremely important to use those advancements
effectively and efficiently as we can. We need to keep
advancing and developing, and we also need to keep learning
and honing our
skills.
Wisdom does not come from age or from growing old, wisdom only comes
from learning. So what did you learn today?
“We learn more by looking for the answer to
a question and not finding it than we do from learning the
answer itself.”
Lloyd Alexander. (but not always, or can it apply to
every situation).
It's for your
own good? This statement can only be true if someone fully
understood the lesson that was being taught and figured out what they were
actually learning. Making mistakes is not a
good learning method that you can count on. Some things need to be
thoroughly explained. Thoroughly or
completely
is everything
necessary to the full
quantity or entire extent, point, distance, area, volume or degree.
Total is the whole amount.
Learning is a process that everyone should fully understand, and
everyone should fully understand that the process of learning
should continue your entire life. But for this to happen,
everyone needs access to the most valuable knowledge and
information that the world has to offer. And everyone should be
given
instructions
on how to use knowledge and information effectively and
efficiently as possible. If this were to happen, then the world
would continually improve, and every problem would be solved.
Desirable
Difficulty is a
learning task that
requires a considerable but desirable amount of effort, thereby improving
long-term performance. Research suggests that while difficult tasks might
slow down learning initially, the long term benefits are greater than with
easy tasks. However, to be desirable, the tasks must also be
accomplishable. Many tasks give the illusion of learning because they are
too easy.
Impossible? It's only impossible if you can correctly calculate that it
is impossible, being verified by testing and
experiments. But even then, how can you be sure that the
experiments were done correctly? Or if they were done with the same
information? So when you hear someone say it's impossible, you
tell them, it's only impossible until all possibilities have
been explored. Just because something is impossible does not
mean that I will not learn anything valuable from exploring the
possibility. Even if it does turn out that this one thing is in
fact impossible, it's only for the current moment in time
because you have suspended the research for now.
Perry
Como "It's Impossible" (youtube)
"I don't have all the answers, but I do
have more answers then most people, and I'm always learning, so
my ability to answer more questions is always increasing."
There is no replacement for learning, learning is something that
you have to do. If you don't keep learning, then you will suffer
from your own ignorance, and most likely, make other people
suffer from your
ignorance.
If
someone tells you that
your idea, or your desired goal,
can not
be reached, then plainly ask them to please share those facts
that proves their statement to be true, because if they can not
produce the facts that proves the goal can not be achieved, or
was already attempted and here's the results, or that they want
to discourage you and here are the reasons, then let them know
that you will continue to search for those facts, to either
confirm the idea was just, or just a waste of time.
Don't ever believe that a Problem is to
big to solve. A lot of
problems always look to big and complicated at first, but once
you start taking the necessary steps in order to
solve the
problem and understand it, you will discover that every problem
can be solved, you just have to learn how to solve it. Every day
is a step closer, as long as you take that step every day.
Though things will look complicated and almost impossible to
figure out, don't worry, everything starts out that way. But as
soon as you learn more and experience more, the things that you
thought were impossible, will become possible."
How can someone tell you what you can't do when that person hasn't done it
themself? It can't be done, why?
If the question '
why ' does not go far
enough, or if you stop asking questions after a certain point, you may
fail to see the whole picture and limit your ability to accurately define
the actions that you must make. Asking
Questions
is a lot easier then coming up with excuses why you didn't ask questions
in the first place.
Asking Questions is the first step to Understanding. When things don't make sense, or look weird, or seem unfamiliar,
or if things are not known to you, or fully understood, you have
to
question it, even
if it does turn out to make sense, it's always a good idea to
confirm your suspicion and your doubts.
The Blind Leading the Blind.
Conforming is adhering to established
customs, rules,
styles, standards of conduct or doctrines. But if you don't feel
comfortable or if something doesn't feel right to you, then you
must
question why things
are done this way. What is the
point?
Just because everyone else is doing it, or it seems popular or
normal, doesn't necessarily make it right or good.
You need to
confirm with evidence or facts that what you are
doing is right, or even needed, this is called learning.
You need to be certain, you must specify or identify, and
establish beyond doubt or question, that what you see is correct.
Regrets - Remorse
Regret is a negative
conscious and
emotional reaction
to personal past acts and behaviors. Regret is often a feeling of sadness,
shame, embarrassment,
depression, annoyance, or guilt, after one acts in a
manner and later wishes not to have done so.
I feel bad about the mistakes that I made that
caused people harm, that's because
I have a conscience
and I also
empathize
and
sympathize when
it comes to peoples suffering. But not every mistake that you make causes
other people harm. So
I have no regrets
about those types of mistakes that I made. It's better to make up for
the mistakes that you made than to let those mistakes stop you from learning
or stop you from making up for the damage that you caused. Having no
regrets is not saying that you don't have a
conscience, It says that
you learn from your mistakes and then you move on.
Guilt is remorse caused by feeling
responsible for some offense.
Guilt is a cognitive or an
emotional experience that occurs when a person believes or
realizes—accurately or not—that he or she has compromised his or her own
standards of conduct or has violated a moral standard and bears
significant responsibility for that violation. It is closely related to
the concept of remorse.
Lying.
Shame is
the pain and regret that you feel when you
realize that you did something
wrong or made a horrible
mistake that causes you to feel
dishonor,
inadequate and
guilty. (knowing that
you did something wrong is a good thing, not correcting what you did wrong
is a bad thing. When you correct the wrong that you did the feeling of
shame should stop).
Sin.
Measures of guilt and shame are used to determine an individuals
propensity towards the
self-conscious feelings of guilt or shame. Comparison of the self's
action with the self's standards.
Not to be confused
with
insecurity
or
social anxiety.
Embarrassment
is an
emotional state that is
associated with mild to severe levels of discomfort, and which is usually
experienced when someone
commits a socially
unacceptable or frowned-upon act that was witnessed by or revealed
to others. Usually, some perception of loss of honor or dignity or other
high-value ideals is involved, but the embarrassment level and the type
depends on the situation.
Embarrassment can be personal, caused by unwanted attention to private
matters or personal flaws or mishaps or
shyness. Some causes of
embarrassment stem from personal actions, such as being caught in a lie or
in
making a mistake. Personal embarrassment is
usually accompanied by some combination of
blushing,
sweating,
nervousness,
stammering, and fidgeting. Sometimes the embarrassed person tries to mask
embarrassment with smiles or nervous laughter, especially in etiquette
situations.
Embarrassing is something that cause you to feel shame or physical
discomfort. Something hard to deal with, like some annoying irritation.
Apologize for
making a mistake and live up to it, and show that you are willing to make
amends.
Regretting can be a huge waste of time
because you will never be able to calculate all the different
scenarios that could have happened
if your decision was different. Regret or '
What
If' will never tell the whole
story, or whether that one decision changed your life in any way.
So it is what it is, and the only logical reaction is to learn
from it and move on. Wishing things could have been different is
like wishing your life away. You have already lived the life
that you were wishing for when you find yourself dreaming of
things that you wished for. It's hard to know what things to
appreciate in your life when they only way to know that you
appreciate something is when it's gone. Keep going, this ride is
far from being over.
Relative (good or bad is hard to tell).
There's no need to
punish yourself
for the
mistakes you've made. No need to create your own
Private Hell and to
Suffer Within. No need for
guilt or
Regret. What you need to do is to learn from your
mistakes,
so that you can avoid repeating the same mistakes, and learn to
make better decisions. So there is no need for
Remorse,
Shame,
Contrition,
Revenge
or
Penance. I made a mistake and I will correct it, and I will
always remembered what I have learned. I have a
Conscience, and I will use it to avoid mistakes, and not use
it to punish myself. I have
Morals, and I also have
The Ability
to Learn and to
Forgive.
There is no need to
Over React
or
to
Blame.
One of the biggest regrets a person could have is the
regret that they
stopped learning. It's not a regret if you can still change something. The
only regret is that you regretted something that you can still change,
like going back to school.
Remorse is an
emotional expression of personal regret felt by a person after they have
committed an act which they deem to be shameful, hurtful, or violent.
Remorse is closely allied to guilt and self-directed resentment.
Remorseful is feeling or expressing pain or
sorrow for
sins or offenses.
Having a conscience.
Lament is to express grief verbally or a
cry of sorrow and grief. Regret strongly.
Repentance
is the activity of reviewing one's actions and feeling contrition or
regret for past wrongs. It generally involves a commitment to personal
change and the resolve to live a more
responsible and
humane life.
Unrepentant.
Repent is to turn away from sin and feel
remorse for and feel sorry for and be contrite about.
Penitence is to feel remorse for your past
conduct. Having a
conscience.
Penance is repentance of
Sins.
Penance is remorse for your past conduct. Atone for some
wrongdoing.
Jonah is
called upon by God to travel to Nineveh and warn its residents to repent
of their
sins or face divine wrath.
Instead, Jonah boards a ship to Tarshish. Caught in a storm, he orders the
ship's crew to cast him overboard, whereupon he is swallowed by a giant
fish. Three days later, after Jonah agrees to go to Nineveh, the fish
vomits him out onto the shore. Jonah successfully convinces the entire
city of Nineveh to repent, but waits outside the city in expectation of
its destruction. God shields Jonah from the sun with a plant, but later
sends a worm to cause it to wither. When Jonah complains of the bitter
heat, God rebukes him. In Judaism, the story of Jonah represents the
teaching of teshuva, which is the ability to repent and be
forgiven by God.
Absolution is the condition of being
formally
Forgiven by a priest
in the sacrament of penance. The act of absolving or remitting; formal
redemption as pronounced by a priest in the sacrament of penance.
Absolving is to let off the hook. Grant
remission of a sin to.
Atone is to make
amends for.
Pardon -
Forgiveness.
Amends is something done or
paid in expiation of a wrong. Set straight or right.
Contrition is repentance for sins one has committed. The remorseful
person is said to be contrite.
Self-Compassion is extending
compassion to one's
self in instances of perceived inadequacy, failure, or general suffering.
Being composed of three main components –
self-kindness, common humanity, and
mindfulness.
Redemption is the act of refraining from sins that are known
to cause more harm then good, It is stopping oneself from doing
evil.
Don't confuse Acceptance with Understanding
Acceptance is only a pause in time, you can come back
later after you have learned more about the subject and
understand just what exactly is happening, then and only then do
you adapt to that
Reality.
Adapting is to
change and
modify oneself to new or different
conditions. Make fit for, or
change to suit a new purpose.
Adaptation is to enhance the fitness and
survival of
individuals by
adapting, learning and changing to ones environment.
I have been ashamed of myself a
few times in my life. I have done things and said things that
were incredibly stupid, and they were not even close to being
logical. So what causes a person to lose control, or to lose
awareness, or to lose their understanding of things. You can
easily say that I never
learned the right things at the right
time that would give me the skills and
self-control and
awareness that a person needs. I never learned how, and I never
learned why? So I'm thankful I felt shame, at least I knew I
made a mistake. It seems that shame makes us aware that we have
a
Conscience. Some people never feel shame about the mistakes
they make. It's not that they don't feel shame, they just don't
feel shame when they should. Shame comes from being able to see
yourself as the other person, as well as being able to know how
it feels to be victimized yourself, which mostly comes from
memories of being
victimized. So I know what being victimized
feels like, so I can apply that feeling as reference to what
people feel like when they are victims of my ignorance. But not
all people
learn the same way, or do we have access to the right
information and knowledge.
Knowledge
Knowledge is
knowing
certain
facts and
descriptions. Knowledge is being
aware of
information that helps
you to
understand someone or
something. Knowledge is having
skills and information that were acquired through
experience, or
by education, or by perceiving,
discovering or
learning. Knowledge is the
psychological result of
perception,
learning and
reasoning.
Knowledge is
knowing facts,
truths, or
principles
that came from studying,
general
erudition or from an
investigation.
Knowledge is an
acquaintance or
familiarity gained by
sight,
experience, or
report. Knowledge is the perception of fact or truth
and having a clear and certain mental
apprehension. Knowledge is the
awareness of
a fact or circumstance. Knowledge is the
cognitive condition of
someone who understands, knows and
comprehends the nature or
the
meaning of something. Knowledge is to become aware of
something through the
senses.
Knowledge is understanding something well enough in order to accomplish a
particular task.
Knowledge is the
information that helps you to
understand yourself and understand the world around you. Knowledge is the
collection of facts that you can use to make good
decisions. Knowledge is
the accumulation of your experiences that helps you to navigate the world
and react to the current reality. Knowledge is your
control center that
helps you to manage all the signals from your bodies
senses and the
signals from your environment. Knowledge is an important utility that
helps you to create amazing tools and technology. Knowledge is the
foundation of who you are and the structure that you can build on to grow
and develop. Knowledge is the key that unlocks the energy and the power
within you.
Category: Knowledge (wiki).
Knowledge
is
skills
learned
through
experience, whether
the experience comes from
doing, watching,
reading or
listening.
Knowledge is to have the
ability to
process and
understand
information
correctly and
accurately and
then knowing how to use that information
effectively in order to accomplish a
goal. Knowledge is a collection of
valuable memories.
Information is any type of
signal that can be
interpreted and
understood as a
collection of
verified
facts or
data that are
correct and free
from
error so that
conclusions may be drawn.
Information can be in
the form of words, letters, numbers, diagrams, symbols or
digital matter.
Information
can also be knowledge acquired through study or experience or instruction.
A
signal is any
nonverbal action or
communication that
encodes a
message.
Information Data Processing -
Data Analysis.
Wisdom is the ability to apply knowledge and
Information into the correct
action to achieve a
goal,
or to
solve a
problem.
Wisdom is showing good
reasoning and good
judgment by
measurement or
research.
Wisdom is also understanding the future and
the different
events that might happen. Being
aware of
trends,
because some
changes might be indications that bigger changes
are coming, so good
preparation
and planning is needed. Wisdom is understanding how all your
actions
and inactions effect yourself and the world around you. Wisdom is
understanding
value.
Genius is
knowing how to
maximize your actions so that you can continually
progress,
while at the same time, lower your
risks,
vulnerabilities and decay.
Intelligence
is fully
understanding knowledge, information and
wisdom.
Searching for truth,
looking for answers,
and always
learning.
Intelligence is the ability to use knowledge and
information together to
learn more about yourself and the world around you, and also continually
acquiring more abilities and more skills so that you can increase your
potential and creativity.
Artificial Intelligence
-
Self Directed Learning.
Knowing is to be
cognizant or aware of a fact or a specific piece of
information; possess knowledge or information.
Be aware
of the truth of something; regard as true beyond any doubt. Be familiar or acquainted with a person or an object. Not
the same as
conscious or
awareness. Have
firsthand knowledge of states, situations, emotions, or sensations.
Highly educated; having extensive information or understanding.
Acknowledge
-
Recognize.
Nous or Noesis is
a term from classical philosophy used for describing the faculty of the human mind
necessary for
understanding what is true or real. English words such as
"
understanding" are sometimes used and the word is sometimes equated to
intellect or intelligence.
Know -
What
do you Know? -
I
know -
Pretending
to KnowFirst there's information, and then there's knowing how to
process and understand the information, then there's knowing
what correct action to take based on the information, knowledge
and your experience. Input - Process - Output.
Processing is to perform mathematical and
logical operations on
data
according to instructions or prescribed procedures in order to
obtain the required
information.
Process -
Science -
Process -
Thinking
Epistemology studies the
nature of knowledge, the
rationality of belief, and justification.
Ancient Knowledge.
Epistemic Modal Logic
is a subfield of modal logic that is concerned with reasoning
about knowledge.
Knowledge
by Acquaintance. I am acquainted with many people and things,
which I know very little about.
Most knowledge is
abstract
and exists only in the
mind.
Social Knowledge -
Knowledge Economy -
Consuming Knowledge
Sociology of Knowledge is the study of the
relationship between human thought and the social context within which it
arises, and of the effects prevailing ideas have on societies.
Open Knowledge
- "If you want true knowledge to be common, you must make common knowledge
true" "If you want common knowledge to be true, you must make true
knowledge common".
Knowledge Gap -
Knowledge Divides -
Knowledge Preservation
Knowledge Base -
To Know or Not to Know?
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning is the field of
artificial
intelligence (AI) dedicated to representing information about the
world in a form that a computer system can utilize to solve complex tasks
such as diagnosing a medical condition or having a dialog in a natural
language. Knowledge representation incorporates findings from psychology
about how humans solve problems and represent knowledge in order to design
formalisms that will make complex systems easier to design and build.
Knowledge representation and reasoning also incorporates findings from
logic to automate various kinds of reasoning, such as the application of
rules or the relations of sets and subsets. Examples of knowledge
representation formalisms include semantic nets, systems architecture,
Frames, Rules, and ontologies. Examples of automated reasoning engines
include inference engines, theorem provers, and classifiers.
Knowledge Representation is the field of artificial
intelligence (AI) dedicated to
representing information about the world in
a form that a computer system can utilize to solve complex tasks such as
diagnosing a medical condition or having a dialog in a natural language.
Knowledge Visualization
(mind maps)
Intuition knowledge is the ability to acquire knowledge
without proof, evidence, or conscious reasoning, or without understanding
how the knowledge was acquired.
Beyond the Senses.
Knowledge
Retrieval seeks to
return information in a structured form,
consistent with human cognitive processes as opposed to simple lists of
data items.
Knowledge Acquisition is the process used to define the
rules and ontologies required for a
knowledge-based system.
Knowledge Extraction is the creation of knowledge from
structured (
relational databases, XML) and unstructured (text, documents,
images) sources. The resulting knowledge needs to be in a machine-readable
and machine-interpretable format and must represent knowledge in a manner
that facilitates
inferencing.
Information Extraction -
Enlightenment
(knowing enough)
Tacit Knowledge is the kind of knowledge that is
difficult to transfer
to another person by means of writing it down or verbalizing it.
Explicit Knowledge is knowledge that can be readily articulated,
codified, accessed and verbalized and
easily transmitted to others.
Brain waves reflect different types of learning. For the first time,
researchers have identified neural signatures of
explicit and implicit learning.
Explicit is something precisely and
clearly communicated or readily observable; leaving nothing to
implication. In accordance with fact or the primary meaning of a term.
Explicit Learning (implicit).
Extrinsic is not forming an essential
part of a thing or arising or originating from the outside.
Subliminal
Intrinsic is
belonging
to a thing by its very nature.
Meta-knowledge is knowledge about
knowledge used to create
methods of planning, modeling, tagging, and modification of a domain
knowledge.
Procedural Knowledge is the
knowledge exercised in the
performance of some task.
Procedures.
Inert
Knowledge is information which
one can express but not use. The
process of understanding by learners does not happen to that extent where
the knowledge can be used for effective problem-solving in realistic
situations. An example for inert knowledge is vocabulary of a foreign
language which is available during an exam but not in a real situation of
communication. An explanation for the problem of inert knowledge is that
people often encode knowledge to a specific situation, so that later remindings occur only for highly similar situations. In contrast so called
conditionalized knowledge is knowledge about something which includes also
knowledge as to the contexts in which that certain knowledge will be
useful.
Knowledge Spillover is an exchange of
ideas among individuals. In
knowledge management economics, knowledge spillovers are non-rival
knowledge market costs incurred by a party not agreeing to assume the
costs that has a spillover effect of stimulating technological
improvements in a neighbor through one's own
innovation. Such
innovations often come from specialization within an industry.
Body of Knowledge is the
complete set of concepts, terms and
activities that make up a professional domain, as defined by the relevant
learned society or
professional association. It is a type of knowledge
representation by any
knowledge organization.
Structured
knowledge is used by members of a discipline to guide their
practice or work. The
prescribed aggregation of knowledge
in a particular area, is what an individual is expected to have mastered
to be considered or certified as a practitioner, including the
systematic collection of activities and
outcomes in terms of their values, constructs, models, principles and
instantiations, which (a) arises from continuous discovery and validation
work by members of the profession and (b) enables self-reflective growth
and reproduction of the profession (Romme 2016). A
set of accepted and
agreed upon standards and nomenclatures pertaining to a field or
profession (INFORMS 2009). A
set of knowledge within a
profession or
subject area which is generally agreed as both essential and generally
known (Oliver 2012).
Domain of Knowledge is valid knowledge used to refer to an
area of human endeavor, an autonomous computer activity, or other
specialized discipline.
Knowledge Organization
- KM -
Knowledge Management
Self-Knowledge -
Basic Knowledge
Outline of Knowledge familiarity with someone or something,
which can include facts, information, descriptions, and/or skills acquired
through experience or education. It can refer to the theoretical or
practical understanding of a subject. It can be implicit (as with
practical skill or expertise) or explicit (as with the theoretical
understanding of a subject); and it can be more or less formal or
systematic.
Tribal Knowledge is any information or knowledge that is
known within a tribe but often unknown outside of it. A tribe may be a
group or subgroup of
people that share a common knowledge. With a
corporate perspective, "Tribal Knowledge or
know-how is the collective
wisdom of the organization. It is the sum of all the knowledge and
capabilities of all the people.
Traditional Knowledge refers to
knowledge systems embedded in the
cultural traditions of regional, indigenous, or local communities.
Knowledge Transfer
is the practical problem of transferring knowledge from one part of the
organization to another.
Memory
General Knowledge has been defined in differential
psychology as "culturally valued knowledge communicated by a range of
non-specialist media" and encompassing a wide subject range.
Common Knowledge is
knowledge that is
known by everyone or
nearly everyone, usually with
reference to the community in which the term is used. Common knowledge
need not concern one specific subject, e.g., science or history. Rather,
common knowledge can be about a broad range of subjects, such as science,
literature, history, and entertainment. Often, common knowledge does not
need to be cited. Common knowledge is distinct from general knowledge. In
broader terms, common knowledge is used to refer to information that a
reader would accept as valid, such as information that many users may
know. As an example, this type of information may include the temperature
in which water freezes or boils. To determine if information should be
considered common knowledge, you can ask yourself who your audience is,
are you able to assume they already have some familiarity with the topic,
or will the information’s credibility come into question. Many techniques
have been developed in response to the question of distinguishing truth
from fact in matters that have become "common knowledge". The scientific
method is usually applied in cases involving phenomena associated with
astronomy, mathematics, physics, and the general laws of nature. In legal
settings, rules of evidence generally exclude hearsay (which may draw on
"facts" someone believes to be "common knowledge"). "Conventional wisdom"
is a similar term also referring to ostensibly pervasive knowledge or
analysis.
Descriptive Knowledge is the type of knowledge that is, by
its very nature, expressed in declarative sentences or indicative
propositions. This distinguishes descriptive knowledge from what is
commonly known as "know-how", or procedural knowledge (the knowledge of
how, and especially how best, to perform some task), and "knowing of", or
knowledge by acquaintance (the knowledge of something's existence).
Nomothetic and idiographic describes two distinct approaches
to knowledge, each one corresponding to a different intellectual tendency,
and each one corresponding to a different branch of academe. Nomothetic is
based on what Kant described as a tendency to generalize, and is typical
for the natural sciences. It describes the effort to derive laws that
explain types or categories of objective phenomena, in general.
Idiographic is based on what Kant described as a tendency to specify, and
is typical for the humanities. It describes the effort to understand the
meaning of contingent, unique, and often cultural or subjective phenomena.
Knowledge Value stated “All wish to know but none wish to
pay the price".
Internet.
Constructivism in philosophy of education is a philosophical viewpoint
about the nature of knowledge.
Gnosticism "having
knowledge", gnosis (variously interpreted as knowledge, enlightenment,
salvation, emancipation or 'oneness with God') may be reached by
practicing
philanthropy
to the point of personal poverty and diligently searching for wisdom by
helping others. The world of God is represented by the upper world and is
associated with the soul and perfection. The world of God is eternal and
not part of the physical. It is impalpable and timeless.
Gnosis taught the
deliverance of man from the constraints of earthly existence through
insight into an essential relationship, as soul or spirit, with a
supramundane place of freedom.
Gnosticism is the salvation through knowledge.
Gnosis is the Greek noun for knowledge.
"Knowledge is multi dimensional with
many
layers. So if you only see the surface of what is known, then you
will never understand knowledge enough in order to use it effectively or
efficiently enough to solve problems or make positive improvements in
life. This is one of the main reasons for improving education."
"If
we
value the pursuit of knowledge, we must be free to follow wherever that
search may lead us. The free mind is
not a barking dog, to be tethered on a ten-foot chain." -
Adlai Stevenson Speech at the University of Wisconsin, Madison (8
October 1952).
Curious
-
Inspired -
Intelligence -
EducationKnowledge
and information is mostly
abstract and exists only in your mind. I can show you a
Human made object that you can touch,
feel, smell, taste, see and hear. But the knowledge and information that
creates your senses exists only in your mind. I can write down everything
that explains how and why the object exists, but only the human mind can
make sense of the words and what they mean, so even then, that knowledge
and information is mostly abstract and exists only in your mind.
Knowledge Palace -
Knowledge College
"Great knowledge often
comes from the humblest of origins."
"Knowledge is love and light
and vision." -
Helen
Keller (born with the ability to see and hear, but at 19 months old
she contracted an unknown illness that left her both deaf and blind for
the rest of her life).
World Without
Words.
"Knowledge is something that
can not be easily explained, it's abstract, nonobjective,
subjective and non-subjective."
Knowledge does not come with age,
knowledge comes from
learning.
Experience does not guarantee
learning, or that understanding will take place. And not every
experience will benefit you. Though the lesson was given,
there's no sure way to tell if the knowledge was correctly
understood. Knowledge comes from learning, and associating what
you have learned with the appropriate experiences and knowledge
that you have acquired up to this point. Accumulating and
building, becoming more aware and more wiser, all because you
continue to learn, and not from growing older.
Knowledge is like knowing the
equation and the
formula that will give you
the most accurate answer to a problem. If you don't have certain
knowledge, then you don't have an equation that will give you the most
accurate answer. Thus you will most likely never solve your problem, and
the problem will never go away.
What if you were in the ocean on a raft that was sinking
and you did not know how to swim, you would be overcome with fear and
anxiety with knowing that you would drown and die. But what if you knew
how to swim and could see the shore, you would not be afraid and would
simply abandon the raft and swim to shore and live. That is why having
useful knowledge, information and skills is so valuable. Without
knowledge, information and skills, you will eventually drown.
Be a Consumer of Knowledge
If you
never stop learning, you will become a little smarter everyday.
You will continually
improve things.
You
will become better at solving problems. You will become an even
better
person then you were the day before. You will become more
knowledgeable about
yourself and the world around you, to a point where nothing will seem
impossible. You will be incredibly
intelligent with unlimited abilities
and unlimited potential. Knowledge and information will
accumulate into a
beautiful
system of
love and
awareness.
Binging on valuable
knowledge and information is probably one of the most beautiful addictions
that you can ever have.
Binge is a
period of time that is devoted to a particular activity with very little
interruptions or distractions.
Binge-watching is the practice of watching content for a long time
span, usually without taking many breaks.
Cramming for a Test.
Harvesting Knowledge
-
Filtering -
Making Knowledge
Digestible
Knowledge gives you Power, Power gives you Control, Control
gives you Freedom, Freedom gives you Potential, Potential gives
you Endless Possibilities.
Live, Learn, Love and Progress.
The more you know, the more you understand.
The more you understand, the more control you have.
The more control you have, the more power you have.
The more power you have, the more freedom you have.
The more freedom you have, the more potential you have.
The more potential you have, the more possibilities you have.
The more possibilities you have, the greater your life can be.
There will always be more, as long as you
keep learning the
right things at the right time.
Food goes in the
mouth using the process of eating. Information and
knowledge goes in the brain using the
process of learning. Food gives you the
energy to live, and knowledge and information gives you the ability to
harness energy. Without food, a human will starve. Without knowledge and
information, a human will starve life.
Schools today are just a primer.
You don't finish school, because school is just an introduction.
80% of the worlds most important knowledge and information is
outside the classroom. So the real learning comes after school.
But that's only if you have access to the worlds most valuable
knowledge and information, and, have a firm understanding about
what you should be learning, and when you should learning it.
Learning Economy -
Healthy Consumption"Consuming the fruit from the tree of knowledge is good
for you, except when it has pesticides."
Pursuit is to
seek and
gain with
effort, or to
accomplish a
goal over a period of time. To
continue to
investigate,
explore, or discuss a topic, idea, or argument. To
continue or
proceed along a path or route. To
engage in a supporting
activity or course of action. A search for an alternative that meets
cognitive criteria. The action of following something or something in an
effort to overtake or to capture something.
Feed the Brain Information and Knowledge
You must
consume more than just
food and
water daily, you also need to consume
knowledge and
information daily.
Learning should be as easy as eating food. And consuming knowledge should make you feel good.
Healthy food and
exercise makes you healthy and strong.
Healthy
knowledge makes your mind strong and increases your potential.
You need healthy food to live.
You also need healthy knowledge to live. You
need clean water to live. You also need clean information to
live. Either you find clean information or learn how to
filter
information to make sure that it's free from errors, or
viruses.
Unclean information creates mistakes that don't need to
be made. If you want healthy food you may need to grow it
yourself. If you can't find healthy knowledge then you have to
learn how to create your own healthy knowledge.
Unhealthy food
will cause unhealthy body, unhealthy knowledge will create an
unhealthy mind with
unhealthy behaviors. You need to consume
knowledge and information, so you you need to know what knowledge
and information is important.
Accumulate -
You are what you
Read -
Language Controls Thoughts
Your Brain needs Knowledge and information, so please don't
forget to
Feed the Mind.
It's your brain, feed it -
9 Great
Ways to "Feed Your Brain" - Marc David (youtube)
Food
increases growth, so does knowledge.
Feed in Seymour -
Little Shop Of
Horrors - Feed Me (Got It) (youtube)
Why would you fill your
car with gas and then let it run without driving it anywhere? Then why
would you eat and not use that energy to learn something new or to do
something
constructive?
Information and knowledge needs to be clean and edible so that
it can be easily consumed. And just like food, you have the eat
the right foods in the right amounts at the right times. Imagine
eating a food and having the energy from that food stay with you
forever, that is what knowledge is, that is why learning the
right things at the right time is so extremely important.
Life Long
Learning is the same as Life Long Eating.
Learning everyday is like eating
everyday. You eat to live,
you learn to live, you learn to live
better. Not learning how to improve yourself, or not learning
how to make yourself more knowledgeable about yourself and the
world around you, is like
eating everyday but never doing
anything valuable, never working or
never doing anything productive or
meaningful, or never doing things that enhance or improve your
life, so you're pretty much just waiting to die, which is a total waste. So
please keep learning.
A Mind is a terrible thing to waste (wiki) -
Information Diet
(overload)
When feeding the hungry and starving you must also feed them
knowledge and information that would educate people enough so
that they will be able to solve their own problems without
having to depend on others. Making them self-reliant and
self-sufficient, as well as, give them the abilities to help
others who are also experiencing difficulties. This is the
intelligent thing to do; this is
the right thing to do. Invest in education and not just
agriculture.
Energy from food diminishes in a few days. Knowledge stays in
the memory for life. And this knowledge has the potential to
create energy. Feed the mind, not just the body. Some of the
energy from food should be used for learning, if not, then the
energy from the food is wasted, and an opportunity is lost.
"If you don't eat, you will eventually die from starvation, if
you stop learning, you will eventually die from lack of
education, like the
tens of
thousands of people who die every single day from things they could have
avoided. If they had the necessary knowledge, they would have lived
full lives."
If you can learn to read on your own, from a tablet pc
or other ways, then you could have access to the worlds most valuable
knowledge and information. From there, you could learn how to use
knowledge and information effectively to reach your goals, and learn
things that are needed that would improve your life continually. Things
may start out slow, but every day that you take a step, is a step closer
to fulfilling your goals and creating a healthy and happy life. You must
learn something new and valuable everyday. Your brain has
incredible memory bank, and if you
keep depositing more valuable knowledge everyday, you will have built and
saved an enormous wealth of knowledge, And your personal bank of knowledge
never closes, and you can carry your wealth of knowledge where ever you
travel, and the knowledge yours to keep, no one could ever take it from
you or steal it from you. This is why
Knowledge is the worlds most perfect currency.
Summer School - Homework - After School
Summer School is a school, or a
program that provides
lessons and
activities during the
summer vacation.
Homework is
a set of
tasks assigned to students by their teachers to be
completed
outside the class. Common homework assignments may include a quantity or
period of
reading to be performed, writing or typing to be completed, math
problems to be solved,
material to be reviewed before a test, or other
skills to be practiced. The effect of homework is debated. Generally
speaking, homework does not improve academic performance among children
and may improve
academic skills among older students. It also creates
stress for students and their parents and reduces the amount of time that
students could
spend outdoors, exercising, playing sports,
doing chores,
educating themselves, sleeping, or
doing
other activities that
could be beneficial.
Home Schooling
-
Studying -
Testing -
Less Homework More Play
Homework should be about
homework, it should
not be
school work done at home. Schools should not force kids to take
work home with them. If you can't teach students effectively enough at the school, then something is wrong with the school.
A student should only take home valuable knowledge and information, not
more work, especially if it's
disposable assignments. Everyone needs
balance.
It's
not good to take your
work home with you, especially when your home needs work too.
All work and no play
is just abusive.
After-School Activity or
After-School Program
is an organized activity that is focused on helping students with school
work and helping students get evolved in other activities that can be
beneficial to them in other ways. An after-school activity is any
organized program that youth or adult learner voluntary can
participate in outside of the
traditional school day. After-school activities are a cornerstone of
concerted cultivation, which is a style of parenting that emphasizes
children gaining
leadership
experience and
social skills through
participating in organized activities. Such children are believed by
proponents to be more successful in later life, while others consider too
many activities to indicate
over-parenting. While some research has shown that structured
after-school programs can lead to better test scores, improved homework
completion, and higher grades, further research has questioned the
effectiveness of after-school programs at improving youth outcomes such as
externalizing behavior and school attendance. Additionally, certain
activities or programs have made strides in
closing the achievement gap, or the
gap in academic performance between white students and students of color
as measured by standardized tests. Though the existence of after-school
activities is relatively universal, different countries implement
after-school activities differently, causing after-school activities to
vary on a global scale.
Elective Courses.
After-School All-Stars is a national non-profit organization that
partners with schools across the United States to expand the learning day
for low-income children. It provides after-school programs. Currently,
ASAS serves nearly 92,000 students on over 400 school sites in 14 regions
across 10 states.
Structure (what schools should be like) -
Memory
Assignment is a task or piece of work
that is given to you as
part of a job or as part of a course of study. An
undertaking that you have been assigned to by an instructor. A duty that
you are assigned to perform. Assigning is to allocate a task to a person.
Select something or someone for a specific purpose. Attribute or give.
Decide as to where something belongs in a scheme. The act of putting a
person into a non-elective position. The act of distributing something to
designated places or persons.
Assignment in
computing is an operation that assigns a value to a variable.
Assignment in
law is the process whereby a person, the assignor, transfers rights or
benefits to another, the assignee. An assignment may not transfer a duty,
burden or detriment without the express agreement of the assignee. The
right or benefit being assigned may be a gift (such as a waiver) or it may
be paid for with a contractual consideration such as money. The instrument
by which a claim, right, interest or property is transferred from one
person to another. A transfer of property by deed of conveyance. Transfer
one's right to. The attribution of someone or something as belonging.
Allocate is to distribute according to
a plan or set apart for a special purpose. Not the same as
transference.
Delegate is to
transfer power to someone. Give an assignment
to. A person appointed or elected to represent others.
Delegate is someone
who attends or communicates the ideas of or acts on behalf of an
organization at a meeting or conference between organizations, which may
be at the same level or involved in a common field of work or interest.
Mediate.
Summer School
doesn't mean that you're a slow learner, it may just be an indication that your
school sucks.
All young people experience learning losses during the
Summer Vacation
because schools are
inadequate and ineffective. In order to be
good at something, you need to practice, when you stop practicing,
your skill level decreases. When you are not actively using
knowledge that you have learned, it's
easy to forget what you
have learned.
If you don't use it you lose it.
Students need to learn how to maintain their skill
level and knowledge level, but they must be given the
right
knowledge and the right skills, if not, you're wasting time,
energy resources and people.
Schools need to teach students how to use their skills and
knowledge in the real world, instead of just on paper.
"It's amazing how we still made progress even after all the
mistakes that we made. We spent years experimenting with many
different ideas, most of which did not benefit us. We have made
a lot of mistakes ,and we have wasted a lot of time, but
we have learned many things. It's time to put our knowledge into
actions. We know what to do, and we know what not to do. But we
must do. Just knowing will not solve our problems."
"Learning should be like Life, a
Chain Reaction that is
Self
Perpetuating and
Self Sustaining."
"The more you learn the more you will see, whether that is
good or bad depends on you."
"Everyone should be an avid searcher
of knowledge"
I guess this was just
a natural progression of my curiosity. I went
looking for adventure and I eventually found
knowledge, and some of that knowledge actually pertained to me.
But I wouldn't say that I found myself, I would just say that I
understand myself a lot more then I did before, and I also
understand the world more then I did before. Seeking knowledge
is truly the greatest adventure of all time."
"I'm sometimes 20 or 30 questions
ahead of the current question, only because the current question
needs certain questions answered first before you can even start
to figure out just exactly what the actual question is, and
sometimes people are just asking the wrong question, which makes
it almost impossible to answer correctly."
"When you're 5 to 10
questions ahead of the
conversation, you are at a
level of thinking that solves problems a lot faster."
"Some people just ask
questions but
never really look for the answers, I like to search for answers
because searching for answers is much more
rewarding instead of just wondering what the answers might be."
"If you don't try to be great at
something then you will never be great at anything. But
you can be good at doing many things, which could count as doing
something great, but being really good at something will have
its own rewards."
"I sometimes feel like a black hole, and my curiosity is the gravitational force that
gradually pulls in knowledge and information from the universe.
The more knowledge and information I consume, the farther I see.
Everyday is another step forward on a never ending quest to
understand more. Breaking down knowledge into smaller more
defined elements. With each element symbolizing a doorway in the
hallways of knowledge. And each door acting like an electrical
circuit, open or closed,
on or off. Eerily
similar to my
computer counterpart. But instead of words being defined as
zeros and ones, the words in my mind are defined by on or
off. On or Off? Natural intelligence and Artificial intelligence
working together in harmony as if they were one. Ones and zeros,
on or off...Huston, we have lift off...Engage."
"Learn as
if you will live forever...because there is a chance that
you may live forever"
"
If you
don't learn the things that matter, then learning doesn't
matter."
Memory
-
Learning Games.
Questioning - Learn to Ask Questions - Ask
Questioning is the need for more
information in order to
understand
something more accurately. Questioning is
to
verify the
accuracy of the information
presented.
Questioning is a
linguistic expression used to make a
request for
information, or the request made using such an expression. The
information requested should be provided in the form of an
answer.
Question is to
challenge the accuracy, probity, or
propriety of information. A
sentence of inquiry that asks for a reply
to a.
Uncertainty about the
truth or
factuality or existence of something. Place in doubt or express
doubtful
speculation.
Inquiry is a search for
knowledge. A
systematic
investigation of a matter of
public
interest.
Inquisitive is showing
curiosity. Inquiring
or a desire to
know something
by
researching. Conduct an
investigation.
Follow-Up Questions are used to expand on
and complete the
information obtained from the initial questions.
Clarifying Questions are tools used by
active listeners to
ensure understanding and obtain
essential information. These types of questions are simple inquiries of
fact. They require brief or concise answers that don't typically provide
new information, simply a more concrete understanding of the matter at
hand.
Ask is to
request information about
something. To seek an
answer. To address a question
to someone and expect an answer from someone.
Pick Someone's Brain is to obtain
information by questioning someone who is
better informed
about a subject than oneself.
Why is a question word that is used to get an
answer or to receive a
reason or
cause for something that can
help
justify
or
explain that something so that a
person can
understand that
something
effectively.
Five W's.
Movie clip where the kid keeps asking the
question '
Why
?' over and over again. This is a clip from the HBO pilot show called
Lucky Louie. You should always answer with better answers of course.
Never Discourage a Child's need for Answers. "A stupid
question is a lot easier to answer than a stupid mistake".
"I never
gave up on asking why. My interest in the world has always been with me
ever since I was a child."
Right to Know.
The Million-Dollar Question is a question
that is very important and difficult to answer.
Questionnaire
is a research instrument consisting of a
series of questions and other
prompts for the purpose of gathering information from respondents.
Opinion Pole -
Q & A -
Trick Questions -
Questioning the Law
Questionnaire Construction is a series of questions
asked to individuals to obtain statistically useful information about a
given topic – when properly constructed and responsibly administered,
become a vital instrument by which statements can be made about specific
groups, or people, or entire populations.
Etiology is the study of
causation, or
origination.
Learning Methods -
Scientific Inquiry"I would
rather have questions that can't be answered than answers that can't be
questioned.” -
Richard Feynman"He who has a strong enough why can bear almost any
how." -
Friedrich NietzscheIt's good that more people are questioning
things. But it's bad when people assume things and pretend that they're
not being gullible. Questioning things is not about
pretending to know the answers
to the things that your're questioning. If you stop asking questions, then
you are
gullible.
Sometimes when people ask a question, the original question is
not the actual question
that they are asking. They are in fact asking other questions, most
likely because they're making false
assumptions or they have no idea which
questions they should be asking. So you might have
to verify what the actual questions are that someone is asking, without
you yourself making any assumptions. This also applies to certain answers that people may give.
The answer someone gives might not be the whole story, so you may have to
investigate and ask a few more
questions in order to get the truth. This type of awareness and skill is the power of Human Intelligence, an ability that
Artificial Intelligence will never be able to
accurately reproduce or imitate. And when things can't be accurate,
then they
can't be trusted, whether it's a machine or a human.
Listen, and then
Analyze.
There may be a story within a story.
Example Scenario: I know this person, so when they ask a particular
question at a particular time, I know what they are really asking me. And
when they answer a particular question at a particular time, sometimes the
answer is saying that they don't want to talk about this particular
subject at this particular time. They may also be saying that they are
unclear how to answer that question accurately. Example Questions
and Answers: So how do you feel? I'm OK. Where have you been? Around. Do
you want to talk about something? Not right now.
In order for me
to answer your question accurately, I would first have to know the reasons
why you are asking me this question? This is because the reasons why a
question is asked will have an effect on the type of answers that are
given to that question. And if an answer can be
interpreted in the wrong way or used
out on context, then several answers will need to be given, with each
answer only applying to that particular question. If this agreement can
not be guaranteed, then no answer can be given at this time under these
circumstances, especially if the reasons you give for asking the question
are misleading in any way.
Socratic Method is a form of
cooperative argumentative
dialogue between individuals, based on asking and answering questions to
stimulate
critical thinking and
to draw out ideas and underlying presumptions.
Debate.
Socratic Questioning is disciplined questioning that can be
used to pursue thought in many directions and for many purposes,
including: to explore complex ideas, to get to the truth of things, to
open up issues and problems, to uncover assumptions, to analyze concepts,
to distinguish what we know from what we don't know, to follow out logical
implications of thought or to control the discussion.
Dialectic is a
discourse between two or more people holding
different points of view about a subject but wishing to establish the
truth through reasoned arguments.
Problem Solving -
Creative Thinking -
Philosophy -
InvestigationFrequently Asked Questions
-
FAQ
-
Communication
Internet Searches
-
Seek more Information
Twenty Questions is a game where one player is chosen to be
the answerer. That person chooses a subject (object) but does not reveal
this to the others. All other players are questioners. They each take
turns asking a question which can be answered with a simple "Yes" or "No."
In variants of the game, multiple state answers may be included such as
the answer "Maybe." The answerer answers each question in turn. Sample
questions could be: "Is it bigger than a breadbox?" or "Can I put it in my
mouth?" Lying is not allowed in the game. If a questioner guesses the
correct answer, that questioner wins and becomes the answerer for the next
round. If 20 questions are asked without a correct guess, then the
answerer has stumped the questioners and gets to be the answerer for
another round. Careful selection of questions can greatly improve the
odds
of the questioner winning the game. For example, a question such as "Does
it involve technology for communications, entertainment or work?" can
allow the questioner to cover a broad range of areas using a single
question that can be answered with a simple "yes" or "no". If the answerer
responds with "yes," the questioner can use the next question to narrow
down the answer; if the answerer responds with "no," the questioner has
successfully eliminated a number of possibilities for the answer. The game
encourages
deductive reasoning
and
creativity.
Twenty Questions (PDF).
Can you Solve the Three
Gods Riddle? - Alex Gendler (youtube)
Pathological Science is an area of research where "people
are tricked into
false results.
Inquest is
a
judicial inquiry in common law jurisdictions, particularly one held to
determine the cause of a person's death.
Yes-No Question is formally known as a polar question or a general
question, is a question whose expected answer is either "yes" or "no".
Formally, they present an exclusive disjunction, a pair of alternatives of
which only one is acceptable. In English, such questions can be formed in
both positive and negative forms (e.g. "Will you be here tomorrow?" and
"Won't you be here tomorrow?"). Yes–no questions are in contrast with
non-polar
wh-questions, with the
five Ws, which do not
necessarily present a range of alternative answers, or necessarily
restrict that range to two alternatives. (Questions beginning with
"which", for example, often presuppose a set of several alternatives, from
which one is to be drawn.)
It's
all Relative.
Closed-Ended Question is a question format that limits
respondents with a list of answer choices from which they must choose to
answer the question.
Generalizing.
Interrogative is a term used in
grammar to refer to
features that form
questions. Thus, an interrogative sentence is a sentence whose grammatical
form shows that it is a question. Such
sentences are sometimes said to exhibit an interrogative
mood—thus treating interrogative as one of the grammatical mood. This
applies particularly to languages that use different inflected verb forms
to make questions. Interrogative sentences can serve as yes–no questions
or as wh-questions, the latter being formed using an interrogative word
such as
who, which, where or how to specify the
information required. Different languages have different ways of forming
questions, including the use of different word order and the insertion of
interrogative particles. Questions are also frequently marked by
intonation, in particular a rising intonation pattern – in some languages
this may be the sole method of distinguishing a yes–no question from a
declarative statement. Interrogative mood or other interrogative forms may
be denoted by the glossing abbreviation INT.
Question Mark is
a
punctuation mark that indicates
an interrogative clause or phrase in many languages. The question mark is
not used for indirect questions.
Trick Questions (misleading) -
False Memories
Cross-Examination is the
interrogation of a witness called
by one's opponent. It is preceded by
direct examination, which is the process of adducing
evidence from
witnesses in a court of law.
Interrogation is
formal systematic questioning or inquiry that asks for a reply or to get a
confession, sometimes by
force or
manipulation.
False Dilemma.
Doubt - Skepticism - Scrutiny
Skepticism
is doubting the
truth or
accuracy of something.
Questioning certain
knowledge or beliefs.
Skeptic -
Skeptic.
Doubt is being
unsure of something. Uncertainty about the truth or
factuality or existence of something.
Cartesian Doubt
is a systematic process of being skeptical about the truth of one's
beliefs or doubting what is believed
to be true.
Philosophy.
Refute is to
prove and
argue something to be
false or incorrect using
evidence.
Debunk is to prove something to be false or
to expose an
exaggerated claim about a myth, idea, or belief.
Ponzi's.
Scrutiny
is to examine carefully for accuracy with the intent of
verification. The act of
examining something closely for
mistakes or errors. To look at
critically or searchingly, or
in minute detail. A
prolonged intense look.
Intermediate Scrutiny
is the second level of deciding issues using judicial review. The other
levels are typically referred to as
rational basis review
or least rigorous
and
strict scrutiny or most rigorous. In order to overcome the intermediate
scrutiny test, it must be shown that the law or policy being challenged
furthers an important government interest by means that are substantially
related to that interest. That should be contrasted with strict scrutiny,
the higher standard of review that requires
narrowly tailored and least
restrictive means to further a compelling governmental interest.
Fallacies -
Pseudoscience -
Science Fraud
Incredulous is when you are not disposed or
willing to believe something. Unbelieving.
Misrepresentation
refers to a
false statement of fact made by one party to another party,
which has the effect of inducing that party into the contract.
Misinformation -
Beliefs -
Money.
Cynic is someone who is
critical of the
motives of others.
Second Guess is to judge or
criticize
someone with
hindsight. To anticipate or
predict someone's actions or
thoughts by
guesswork.
Hocus Pocus?
Testing Miracles | DW Documentary (youtube) - Debunking people who
believe they have special powers.
The Society for the Scientific Investigation of Parasciences in Würzburg
Germany offers 10,000 euros in prize money to anyone whose supernatural
claims can withstand rigorous scientific testing. The society is a
gathering of physicists, biologists, and psychologists who don’t want to
discount those who delve in the paranormal as crazy, but analyze their
claims in laboratory conditions. But so far, all candidates have failed
the test, and the 10,000 euros are still in the pot.
James
Randi extensively challenged paranormal and
pseudoscientific claims. He was the
co-founder of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), and founder of
the
James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF). Randi began his career as a
magician under
the stage name The Amazing Randi and later chose to devote most of his
time to investigating
paranormal, occult, and supernatural claims, which he collectively
called "woo-woo". Randi retired from practicing magic at age 60, and from
his foundation at 87. Although often referred to as a "debunker", Randi
said he disliked the term's connotations and preferred to describe himself
as an "
investigator". He wrote
about paranormal phenomena,
skepticism, and the history of magic. He was a frequent guest on The
Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, famously exposing fraudulent faith
healer Peter Popoff, and was occasionally featured on the television
program Penn & Teller: Bullshit! Before Randi's retirement, JREF sponsored
the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge, which offered a prize of one
million US dollars to eligible applicants who could demonstrate evidence
of any paranormal, supernatural, or occult power or event under test
conditions agreed to by both parties. In 2015, the James Randi Educational
Foundation said they will no longer accept applications directly from
people claiming to have a paranormal power, but will offer the challenge
to anyone who has passed a preliminary test that meets with their
approval.
Activism.
Answer - Reply - Respond
Answer is a reply to a
question.
An answer is the speech act of replying to a question. An answer is a statement
made in response to a
question without being
vague. An
answer can be a solution to a problem or a response to a
problem. An answer is a
statement that
solves a problem or
explains how to solve the problem.
An answer may help you to
understand the
meaning
of something and be sufficient or adequate in either in quality or quantity.
An answer may be
satisfactory and meet the requirements of some question and serve as a purpose
for a particular action. An answer is to
react
verbally or in writing that shows a
response or a
reaction to something or as
the
result of
soemthing.
Q&A.
The answer my friend may not be blowing in the wind, the answers may
be floating around in your head, and maybe you have not yet made the right
connections to the information and knowledge that you already have that
would make you realize the answers that you already have. But if you don't
have certain information and knowledge, then you will never find the answers.
This is why
learning is so extremely important.
Closure is seeking answers to questions that can explain an event so
that understanding can be obtained in order to learn from the experience
and avoid
confusion or
ambiguity and the vulnerability of
experiencing a similar mistake again in the future. Also to avoid reliving
a
traumatic moment people should
always attempt to acquire new knowledge to satisfy questions regarding
particular issues. Seek a
resolution or a
conclusion
but always leave room for new information that might formulate a more
accurate understanding.
Validity -
Bias Errors
How many questions do you think you need
to ask in order to fully understand something?
Depends on the answers. Why? Why does this matter?
What? What is the most important matter at this moment? What are
the priorities?
Where? Is the location relevant?
Where is this information
leading to?
Who? What person or people is this in reference to? Does it
matter who it is?
When? When will this information affect me? When will I need to
end this transmission?
How? How did this happen? How did this
transmission first initiate?
Do I have the time? Do I care what time is?
Am I learning something? Am I teaching something?
Are there any other questions that I should be asking?
After the transmission is completed, please show appreciation
without discrimination.
So what's next?
Who Knows
is an answer that someone gives when they don't know the answer, and they
assume that no one knows the answer either.
Who Knew is an answer that someone gives
when they don't know the answer, and that maybe no one knew the answer
either.
You need to know the
difference between
opinion and
fact, and you also need to know why some people
Criticize.
Some people have
personal motives when giving opinions, so they
are corrupted, narrow minded and very dangerous.
So called
Experts need to be questioned too, as well as the
research.
Don't Blindly Believe -
ConformityBeing able to explain and
ask a question correctly is half the job of getting the correct
answer that you are seeking.
One of the main goals of Questioning
is to help you avoid
Jumping to Conclusions, but you have to be asking the right
questions.
"Sometimes people don't know what questions to
ask, and other times,
people believe they know the answers, so they don't
bother asking questions."
"Asking a
stupid question usually gets a stupid answer, but
asking no question, gets no answer."
"I question
everything, even myself."
"I would rather have questions that can't
be answered than answers that can't be questioned.” -
Richard FeynmanPeople who decline
information or
avoid certain information are just misinformed and really
don't understand the benefits of information and how knowing
things actually helps their decision making. This is just
another side effect of our
failing education system that is combined with our
ignorant media
outlets. If people were better informed on how to use
information, and better educated to correctly understand
information, then people would never decline or avoid
information, in fact people would seek information instead of
waiting for it to appear. People opting to remain ignorant is
just a
learning disability that they can easily fix.
Media Literacy -
Propaganda
-
Information Literacy -
Denial -
Morals -
Memory -
Self-Directed Learning
Educational
Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 33, Nos. 3 & 4, 2001 - Questioning as an Epistemic Process of Critical Thinking.
POLYCARP IKUENOBE.
Department of Philosophy, Kent State University.
Introduction:
The idea of questioning one’s idea is regarded by many as an
affront. This attitude towards questioning suggests that it is
rude, especially when it is persistent. Questioning is
considered a way of casting aspersions on one’s ability or the
reasonableness of one’s view. Questioning is often taken to mean
that one is not making a good point or one is not articulating
one’s ideas properly. As a result, questioning tends to engender
a defensive response. This attitude has a long tradition. It was
responsible for how
Socrates was received by Athenians, and why
he was eventually killed.
By questioning persistently for
justifications and
clarifications, Socrates got on people’s nerves and sometimes
humiliated them; he made people realize they did not quite know
what they thought they knew. This angered them. Socrates argued
that the attitude of wanting one’s ideas to be always
‘validated’ and not questioned is intellectually stagnating and
is a mark of ‘ignorance’. He pointed this out in his idea of
‘wisdom’. A wise person is one who is always willing to ‘learn’.
Such a person assumes tentatively that she does not know. She is willing to
methodologically suspend her belief and question it for the
purpose of exploring it, to expand her knowledge. The process of
questioning—for the purpose of eliciting information and
adequate justifications—represents an epistemic attitude which
is necessary for critical thinking. Such attitude is often what
teachers want to engender in students as critical thinkers.
In this paper I explore, in general, the sense in which
questioning may be regarded as an
epistemic process of
critical
thinking and I offer a theoretical foundation and argument for
encouraging such process. More specifically, I do this by
analyzing the notion of questioning, to show its logic as an
open-ended process of inquiry and its function, as a process of
critical thinking. Critical thinking involves a disposition to a
rigorous process of inquiring, learning and acquiring knowledge,
in terms of rationally evaluating and
justifying beliefs. I
argue that the open-ended logic of questioning reveals its
epistemic feature and heuristic value as a process of critical
thinking. And that the epistemic value of this process is given
credence and motivated by human
fallibilism. The realization of
such fallibility and the effort to avoid or correct errors is a
motivation for critical thinking, construed in terms of
fallibilistic epistemology. The epistemic value of questioning
is usually not adequately appreciated, hence its negative connotation. An appreciation of
the plausible epistemic basis and value of questioning may
obviate the negative connotation it engenders. This apparent
problem unduly hangs clouds over questioning as an epistemic
process and a
pedagogical tool. Any theoretical effort to
motivate questioning as a process of learning and teaching will
be adequate only if it is sensitive to this problem. We should
bear in mind the theoretical connection between the process or
method of learning or acquiring knowledge (epistemology) and the
tools or methods for teaching (pedagogy). The process or method
of imparting knowledge, teaching and helping people
learn and the process or
method of acquiring knowledge are
theoretically coextensive. As such, questioning may be a
valuable tool for teaching and learning critical thinking
skills. I do not provide a detailed description of how this
strategy could be used in class the way Hyman (1979), Dillon
(1983) and Blosser (1973) do. I only provide a theoretical
foundation and justification for its use in relation to
teaching and acquiring critical thinking skills and abilities.
Thus my concern is whether there is a way to motivate
questioning or highlight its value both as a process of
acquiring knowledge and of teaching, to make it appealing. I
suggest that exploring the logic, epistemology and functions of
questioning as an epistemic process of critical thinking may be
able to do this. In order to appreciate how questioning may be
construed as an epistemic process of critical thinking, we need
to understand the nature of critical thinking and its
plausible
motivation. We may start by addressing the following questions:
(1) What is critical thinking? (2) What are its epistemological
features and motivation? (3) What are the logical and
epistemological nature and functions of questioning? (4) How
does the nature and function of questioning make it a process of
critical thinking? Fallibilism and an Epistemic View of Critical Thinking Critical
thinking involves the rigorous process or method of ascribing
reasonableness to a belief. In Goldman’s view (1986), an
epistemic theory of justified belief is necessary to account for
a justifiable ascription of reasonableness to a belief. A
plausible epistemic conception of the process of critical
thinking may be couched in terms of a normative fallibilistic
epistemology. This view is grounded in the fact of human
fallibilism, the limitations in human cognitive abilities, our
awareness of such a fact and the conscious effort and
willingness to avoid or mitigate such fallibilism. Such effort
or willingness involves adopting a rigorous and critical
attitude for evaluating a belief, which requires that we be
tentative about the reasonableness of our beliefs and that we be
always open to other plausible evidence or counter
evidence. Fallibilism in this sense implies that we accept a
belief tentatively in the context of the currently available
evidence. We may need to distinguish between substantive
skepticism and fallibilism (which is a kind of methodological
skepticism). Substantive skepticism says we do not or cannot
have knowledge. This view is considered incoherent because to
say that we do or cannot have knowledge is to imply that we do
in fact have some knowledge, which is that we cannot have
knowledge. Fallibilism says we could be mistaken but grants that
we do in fact know some things. The implication of
fallibilism
for critical thinking is that we should adopt stringent methods,
whereas the implication of substantive skepticism is that there
is no need to try. An epistemic view of critical thinking
specifies how we ought to acquire and justify beliefs. This
process must involve rigorous inquiry and the critical analysis
and evaluation of evidence. The normative view regarding how we
ought to acquire beliefs implies that we have an epistemic
obligation to use the appropriate method
or process that will lead to reasonable beliefs. If we do not,
there is a reasonable basis to make an epistemic judgment that
we do not have a reasonable belief. However an epistemic theory
must be sensitive to human fallible cognitive processes, which
are the causal and justificatory basis for acquiring belief.
These causal processes and beliefs are circumscribed by and
contingent on the facts about one’s context and condition. So
the normative view of fallibilism is parasitic on some factual
properties and conditions about human fallibilism. The normative
view presupposes, in part,
that we are cognitively capable of using the normatively
prescribed process or method. One needs to appreciate the
distinction between the factual and epistemic claims about
fallibilism in order to understand the plausible connection
between them, as a way to illuminate the epistemic notion of
critical thinking. The epistemic claim of fallibilism involves a
prescription to adopt critical thinking process and attitude
regarding what ought to be considered knowledge. It specifies
the rigorous standards by which we determine whether one’s belief is
justified or
reasonable. To the extent that we are aware of our
fallibility, we should make reasonable efforts to guard against,
avoid and correct our errors. This involves being tentative and
methodologically skeptical (McPeck, 1981). It involves
questioning and ‘methodologically casting aspersions’ on beliefs
and evidence, being open to new
evidence and being willing to change one’s beliefs with new
evidence. This process is methodologically adversarial and
confrontational. According to Siegel (1988),
Fallibilism is ‘the thesis that all our knowledge-claims are
open to revision and are possibly mistaken’ (p. 145n). This
statement regarding the nature and motivation for critical
thinking is ambiguous in a sense. It could be understood as a
factual thesis about the nature of human knowledge-claims. It
could also be understood as a normative statement regarding how
we ought to determine the nature of a knowledge-claim. This is
the view that is directly relevant to the nature of critical
thinking as an epistemic process of inquiry. We need to know how
such factual statements may motivate an epistemic view of
critical thinking as a process by which we ought to reason,
acquire beliefs or engage in inquiry. Fallibilistic
epistemology, as a normative thesis, says that S knows that q,
if and only if there is a justification r for S’s belief that q,
such that r being a confirmed and ‘undefeated’
evidence for q only makes it highly probable that q is true.
This theory allows a person to know ‘something’ on the condition
that a plausible justification exists in support for what one
claims to know, such that the supporting evidence being well
confirmed and ‘undefeated’ only makes it reasonable to believe
that what one claims to know is highly likely to be true.
Fallibilistic epistemology implies that if a belief is well
confirmed and we have no negative evidence or ‘defeater’ to
vitiate our justification, we hold it as conditional knowledge
or justified
belief in the given context of relevant
alternatives and available evidence, we are able to get new
information to improve our state of knowledge, such that when
the hitherto warranted evidence no longer supports our beliefs,
we are bound to modify our beliefs. There is a plausible
universal and intuitive appeal for fallibilistic epistemology.
Part of this appeal derives from the obvious truth that human
beings are by their nature susceptible to error. Human beings realize as part of
their rationality that they are fallible, and this is reacted in
their cognitive processes which play an important role in their
process of acquiring, justifying and modifying beliefs.
Our
perception and reasoning are susceptible to error, and since
knowledge is a product of either the process of reasoning or
perception or both, it is invariably susceptible to error—as a
function of the ‘faulty’ process. However people have strong
intuitions that we do know many things. Fallibilistic
epistemology is the attempt to articulate a theory of knowledge,
which will square with our common-sense view that we do know
many things, and that we are also susceptible to error. It is an
attempt to avoid substantive skepticism in spite of our fallible
cognitive processes. Fallibilism provides a foundation for
Nicholas Burbules’ (1991) conception of critical thinking as
reasonableness, which he argues, involves ‘being willing to
admit that one is wrong’ (p. 250). Such reasonableness suggests
that we are willing to evaluate evidence and that we make
concerted efforts to provide adequate justifications. Since we
can be in error, we should not immediately accept a belief without proper
examination. Critical thinking specifies a set of attitudes,
processes, methods and contexts which will facilitate our
ability to do inquiry, to avoid and correct errors so as to
arrive at a reasonable belief. Such attitudes include, according
to D’Angelo (1971), open-mindedness, intellectual curiosity,
flexibility, intellectual honesty, methodological skepticism,
persistence, objectivity and respect for views (pp. 7–9). The
plausible connection between the factual and epistemic claims of
fallibilism—in terms of the factual claim motivating the
epistemic claim—may be illuminated by the ‘
ought implies can’
principle. What we ought to do implies what we can indeed do. If
we cannot do something, then it is unreasonable to expect that
we ought to do it or make a judgment about us on the basis of a
standard which we cannot achieve. This suggests that we may not
hold one ‘epistemically responsible’ persona
or epistemically evaluate one’s belief on the basis of what it
is impossible for one to do or avoid doing. So considerations
about how we ought to acquire knowledge or what ought to be
considered knowledge (epistemic claim) has to be sensitive to,
or parasitic on, considerations regarding how we can possibly
acquire knowledge and what we can possibly know (factual claim).
If we ought (or are expected) to acquire knowledge or justified
belief by the process of questioning and
critical examination,
then (1) we must, given our cognitive abilities, be capable of
engaging is such process, and (2) the conditions and context which support such
processes of questioning and examination must exist. Such
context includes what Bridges characterizes as
moral
preconditions, namely: reasonableness, receptivity, peaceableness, orderliness, truthfulness, freedom, equality and
respect (Bridges, 1979, pp. 21–24). These conditions imply that
we do not see questioning as critical thinking ability in a
negative light; we should be receptive to it instead. They imply
that we provide a motivation for the requisite abilities and
investigate the ‘contexts that support or encourage them; and
into the barriers that impede them’ (Burbules, 1991, p. 250).
The epistemic importance of the plausible connection between the
factual and normative theses of fallibilism with respect to
critical thinking has to do with the idea that the factual
thesis and our realization of such fact engender that we set a
high and rigorous standard for acquiring knowledge, with a view
to avoiding or correcting errors: this is the motivation for
critical thinking. The fact that our knowledge is only highly
probable (given human fallibilism) implies that there is a
window of opportunity for one to be in error. Insofar as such a
window exists, no matter how small, we should be committed to
questioning and critically exploring it. This is because the
most reasonable belief is one which approximates the truth and
is held by one based on critical thinking. Truth in some
metaphysical or logical sense is an ideal (Popper, 1985;
Russell, 1965) that we are trying to epistemically get at by a
process of inquiry. This requires that we engage in the process
of critical thinking which is more likely to get us closer to
such an ideal. It is assumed that given our fallibilism, we may
not know what the truth is or arrive at the ideal, in terms of
the true metaphysical nature of reality. Truth in this
metaphysical sense is the actual state of affairs or reality
itself in terms of what Kant calls the noumena, to which
statements approximately correspond. It is in this regard that
Popper sees truth epistemically as a verisimilitude.
Human knowledge can be conceived only in terms of a
verisimilitude because it is based on induction, the
‘defeasibility’ of available evidence, and susceptibility to
error; this necessitates critical thinking. The more rigorous
our critical thinking and the more the belief is confirmed via
such processes, the nearer to the truth our knowledge will be
and the more reasonable. Bertrand Russell (1959) argues that
most of our beliefs are based on induction, and we accept them
because they have a probability of being true. The higher the
probability the nearer we are to truth, but we may never reach
the truth because there is always the possibility of error. He
concludes that the highest probability is all we ought to seek
via a critical process; it is all that we can achieve. To accept
a belief as the truth (as opposed to an approximation of the
truth or the most reasonable belief) is, in some sense, to say
that the belief is no longer open to question or further
consideration of new
evidence. The inquiry is closed! This attitude is considered in
many relevant contexts as dogmatic. This is inconsistent with
the idea of critical thinking and fallibilism. So the attitude
or principle of rigorous inquiry which a critical thinker must
have entails an understanding of the criteria for assessing
reasons offered for the justification of one’s beliefs and being
able to apply these criteria. This idea is couched in the
normative notion of ‘reason’ and its cognates, such as
rationality, evaluation, justification, reasonableness,
assessment and judgment, which feature pervasively in the
different conceptions of critical thinking. To think critically
involves being able to question and evaluate beliefs in order to
optimize the reasonableness of a belief. This is a process of
placing evidential strictures on one’s doxastic attitude and the
process of justification, to approximate the truth. After
critically evaluating and questioning a number of evidence, then
one is ‘moved’ to
make the judgment that there is adequate evidence to consider it
reasonable. 330 P. Ikuenobe
It is in this sense that Siegel (1988) argues that critical
thinking involves being ‘appropriately moved by reasons’ (pp.
32–42) to accept a belief after a rigorous process of
questioning. This involves using the
reasoning skills, critical
dispositions, attitudes and habits that are required to assess
statements, beliefs and issues as a basis for accepting them as
reasonable. He accepts that the criteria by which we assess the
appropriateness of the reasons which ‘move’ us to accept beliefs
as
reasonable are fallible, open to revision and are possibly
mistaken (p. 145). Thus critical thinking ‘may include the use
(or rejection) of methods, strategies and techniques as
exemplars’
(McPeck, 1981, p. 13), which requires questioning our
fundamental methods. This suggests why we may not accept a
belief as the truth such that we regard further inquiry closed.
Critical thinking process suggests some strictures which may
help us to minimise our fallible tendencies.
Siegel (1988)
makes this point rather ambiguously with respect to the
connection between critical thinking and fallibilism, when he
argues that ‘Fallibilism… requires that we keep open the
possibility of criticizing the very criteria of legitimate
criticism we utilize’ (p. 144n). It is not clear whether it is
the fact of human fallibilism and our awareness of it that
requires this or the epistemic standard regarding how we ought
to know, or both, in the sense that the epistemic is dependent
or parasitic on the factual.
So a robust sense of critical thinking may be seen as a
fallibilistic epistemic process of questioning and evaluating
statements, beliefs, arguments, knowledge and experience. Being
able to question as a rigorous process of inquiry, to evaluate
evidence and determine the reasonableness of a belief, is
regarded as the hallmark of a critical thinker, who is also
regarded as the paradigm of a liberally educated person. This
process implies that all available evidence, assumptions and
general network of beliefs in a given context be questioned and
critically examined and evaluated. This, according to Paul
(1982), involves a broad view or a ‘strong’ sense of critical
thinking. This involves, (1) the avoidance of atomistic view of
logical errors in individual reasoning, (2) a concern about
self-deception with respect to reasoning, and (3) the
disposition of a person in a given context to have a reasonable
doxastic attitude. It also requires some sensitivity to the
psychological, sociocentric, cognitive and egocentric components
of one’s world-views, which shape one’s beliefs and reasoning.
The ‘strong’ sense of critical thinking requires the exploration
of the network of arguments, issues and views as the context for
justification, in the attempt to ‘depersonalise’ one’s
world-view. This strong view demands that people be willing and
encouraged to actively question, challenge and criticize their
most fundamental beliefs. A core feature of some conceptions of
critical thinking involves having a disposition, attitude, and
willingness, (1) to actually use one’s abilities to effectively
analyze issues, solve problems, reason, organize and express
ideas, and make reasoned judgments, and (2) to contextualize the
use of these abilities to different relevant subject matters.
According to Morgan & Wayne (1995), one of the points ‘of
agreement among the definitions concerns the effective component
of critical thinking. Critical thinking is dependent upon a
person’s disposition to use it’ (p. 338). Critical thinking
involves a disposition which depends on a context that allows
for its development and use. Hence the process of questioning
needs to be taught in the context of a subject matter. We also
need to teach how it is best used to achieve the requisite
result. This idea is illuminated by Aristotle’s view of virtue.
Critical thinking involves, in some sense, the practical
disposition to be epistemically virtuous. Such virtue would
emerge only if someone learns to do virtuous acts all the time
and thus forms the habit of doing virtuous acts; this requires a
context which engenders such disposition and actions. Hence many
theorists (McPeck, Siegel and
Burbules, among others) see critical thinking as a set of
intellectual behaviors and abilities which have to be used,
nurtured and demonstrated—but only when such a context exists.
The Logic and Epistemology of Questioning Hintikka argues that a
striking feature of questioning as a philosophical method, and
in my view as an epistemic process, is its inherent open-ended
process, in that there is the possibility of one question to
lead to another. The process of questioning implies that it has
the logic of open-ended question-and-answer sequences.
Questioning implies a process of continuously opening up issues about the
reasonableness of a belief; it requires providing better
evidence or counter-evidence. This idea is coextensive with the
idea that, with better evidence or counter-evidence, what we
thought we knew could in fact be false—which is the idea that we
are indeed fallible. The epistemic standard of fallibilism which
is parasitic on this idea or fact about human fallibilism
provides a theoretical motivation for critical thinking, which
involves the need for us to acquire and adopt a fallible
disposition and critical attitude. Such an attitude or
disposition involves using the process of questioning to
critically engage in inquiry. Such an attitude can be learned if
one can be taught to appreciate the logic, functions and
significance of questioning with respect to knowledge
acquisition. However it is pertinent to address more precisely
the logic of
questioning as an open-ended process. In this regard,
Jaakko
Hintikka’s analysis of questioning as a philosophical method may
illuminate its nature as an epistemic process of critical
thinking. In his analysis, he argues that questioning ‘offers a
useful model for many different types of knowledge-seeking’
(1984, p. 25). These types of knowledge-seeking include, in my
view, learning, inquiring, eliciting information, reasoning,
evaluating evidence and determining the reasonableness of a
belief. Hintikka construes questioning as having a logical structure,
which involves a question-and-answer sequence. A question has a
logical correlative in terms of an answer, which provides the
information being sought by questioning. It is by virtue that
this logic may be seen as an epistemic process of critical
thinking, to the extent that critical thinking involves the
process and attitude of being always open to new evidence and
questioning one’s evidence and the reasonableness of beliefs.
This logic implies that we should never dogmatically accept a
belief or regard any issue as settled. However we may accept
that an issue is tentatively settled and a belief is
unquestionable given the evidence we have. To regard an issue as
unquestionable implies an attitude of dogmatism which is opposed
to the fact that we may be mistaken. This is also akin to the
idea of critical thinking insofar as critical thinking is
opposed to dogmatism. To the extent that questioning has the
logic of opening up a new set of question-and-answer sequences
and the opportunity to be open to new evidence it is not
dogmatic. The logic of questioning implies that we have the
attitude that we may be mistaken. This logic indicates its value
as an epistemic process of critical thinking. This logic is
manifested in our ordinary use of language. When we say that the
point is ‘unquestionably’ correct, this implies that
the issue is resolved, it is understood and no further questions
may be asked to explore it further. But if it is questionable,
then it has to be explored or clarified further. By this
open-ended logic of questioning, ‘we can discuss and evaluate,
not just someone’s state of knowledge at a given time (vis-a-vis
the evidence one has at the time) but also entire strategies of
knowledge-seeking’ (Hintikka, 1984, p. 30). Anytime a person asks a question, she is seeking information in
the form of an answer. This information seeks to eliminate some
plausible alternative answers to the question. For instance, the
question ‘What caused the American civil war?’ suggests that
there is a logical correlative in terms of an answer, ‘x caused
the American Civil War.’ The question seeks information
regarding x, which ‘is a conclusive answer if and only if it
provides the questioner with the information that was requested’
(Hintikka, 1984, p. 27). For this information to be knowledge,
(1) it must be true or at least likely to be true, (2) the
person who provides it is honest, serious and sincerely believes
in it, and (3) it is backed up by sufficient and ‘undefeated’
evidence. When the information is presented to the questioner
and she accepts it, it becomes reasonable for her to say truly
‘I know that so-and-so caused the American Civil War’. The
information presents a factor in a possible range of factors
that may have caused the American Civil War. The information may
not imply that one and only one factor caused the American Civil
War. The person who provides the information must not absolutely
believe that one and only one factor caused the American Civil
War. Her belief or answer can be further questioned or explored
to determine its adequacy and reasonableness. There may be other
information, evidence, factors and insights that have not been
explored which may justify one’s belief. This idea is given
credence by the iterative nature of justification which might be
understood against the background of human fallibilism. If I use
x to justify my belief y, then I need to justify x with z, and z
with w, and so on. Hence a belief is reasonable only in the
context of evidential or inferential relations among all
available beliefs and evidence. Thus the value of any answer is
determined in terms of the information it provides for the
questioner in the context of the inferential and evidential
relations among all available evidence and accepted beliefs and
the opportunity and possibility for it to lead to further
indeterminate question-and answer sequences. However an answer
to a question may not satisfy a questioner. In this regard, the
notion of questioning has a psychological correlative, which is
the expectation that an answer should provide some information
and satisfaction. This derives from the idea that an answer must
satisfy our curiosity and make sense, in that we believe it is
likely to be true based on its evidential relations to our
background beliefs, meta-beliefs and conceptual scheme. We are
then emotionally satisfied by an answer if it makes sense to us;
it is consistent with our coherent set of beliefs; hence it is
considered justified. If the information is inconsistent with our system of beliefs
and our expectation of what the ‘correct’ answer should be, then
we are not likely to be satisfied with the answer provided. Such
inconsistency provides an uncomfortable feeling of
dissatisfaction with the answer provided. The process of
questioning helps us to critically think and react on our
background beliefs and the inferential relation between answers
and our beliefs, to make sense of it in order to satisfy us.
Thus questioning is a powerful epistemic tool, with tremendous
value in that it allows us to regard any
issue as open—it is not unquestionable. This open-ended logic of
questioning, Hintikka (1984) argues, derives in part from the
fact that questions are usually not asked in vacuum, but within
the context of some assumptions, background beliefs,
meta-beliefs and the available information. There are explicit
or implicit evidentiary and inferential links between
assumptions, evidence or justification, and answers or beliefs,
which questions, and the process of questioning, seek to bring
out, to get a satisfactory answer. In this regard, questions and answers are
context- or
theoryladen in the same way in which the
reasonableness of a belief is contextual in relation to the
available evidence. This gives credence to the idea that
critical thinking as a process of questioning and determining
the reasonableness of a belief is also contextual (Burbules,
1991). The assumptions and context that underlying questions
raise are in themselves antecedent questions, which have to be
answered in order to provide adequate information which may illuminate the
target question. Just as a question presupposes other questions
and answers, an answer is also provided within the context of
assumptions about other questions and answers. These assumptions
may raise questions which have to be answered, to see how the
individual who provides an answer ‘makes’ the logical
question-and-answer connection or the inferential connection
between belief and evidence. This includes observational or
perceptual beliefs and evidence. What we claim to know, as the
basis for answers, may derive from observations and beliefs.
They are a kind of inference which is made on the basis of our
conceptual scheme, background beliefs and meta-beliefs. Critical
thinking in this regard involves the process of questioning,
examining and evaluating beliefs to determine whether our
experience and beliefs are warranted. We may say that the
process of observation involves critical thinking:
that of making a reasoned connection between our conceptual
scheme or background beliefs as evidence and our perception. For
instance my ability to adequately observe, justifiably believe,
identify or know that a certain object is a chair suggests that
I do have some concept of a chair. This means that the object
that I perceive falls into the conceptual category of things
that I think of as ‘chairlike’. So if my concept of chair is
correct, and my ‘perception’ of the features of the object
is correct, my identification of the object as a chair cannot be
false; it follows necessarily from my premisses. We can ‘see’
and evaluate a conceptual scheme and the reasoning process of
making observations by asking some appropriate questions. If
someone asks me why I identify x as a chair, I would answer by
providing the necessary and sufficient conditions for what I
think must hold for an object to be designated as a chair. I
would catalogue the relevant features of a chair that the thing
x has and I would say that it is as a result of these features
that I have categorized x as a chair. You will then have an idea
of my beliefs about the nature of a chair, the object x, and my
reasoning in terms of how I make the connection between my idea
of the nature of a chair and the features of x as observations
or beliefs. The fact that a question-and-answer sequence has the
possibility of generating other series of question-and-answer
sequences suggests that there is always the possibility of
exploring the context and assumptions which underpin the
questions and answers. This helps one to come to grips with one’s fallibilism and
assumptions which were not obvious. If a set of assumptions is
seen as plausible, then one is able to know this in relation to
one’s belief and answers. If they are not plausible, then they
have to be jettisoned, modified or changed. This idea of seeing
a network of assumptions and beliefs and questioning or
examining them is what is captured by Paul’s (1982) view of
‘strong’ critical thinking. When certain assumptions are
questionable and therefore questioned, then one realizes that the basis for one’s
answer is suspect. One can reasonably see how such assumptions
may contaminate one’s answer for one to be mistaken. One may see
how differences or similarities in assumptions, evidence and
reasoning may illuminate a view and make it understandable. This
realization may engender the process of critical thinking and a
positive attitude towards questioning. The Functions of
Questioning: epistemic and pedagogical implications From the
analysis of logic questioning, we can, in some sense, see some
of the functions it performs and their epistemological and
pedagogical implications. Questioning performs the functions of
increasing our overall knowledge, which may result in our
ability to avoid or correct errors because we are fallible. It
helps us to get a deeper understanding of issues. In this
regard, we may identify two fundamental functions of
questioning. The primary function is that it is
information-seeking. An answer to a question provides
information which adds something to the epistemic
state of the questioner. The secondary function is that it
engenders critical analysis. Questioning can help us to explore
issues about the initial information provided, to determine its
adequacy. This secondary function of questioning includes, among
others, challenging and criticizing in a positive and
constructive way, to help people explore their ideas. The
questioning that proceeds after an initial question has been
answered may be for the purpose of exploring and providing new
perspectives. This could be in the form of playing the ‘devil’s
advocate’, in order to provide an opportunity for both the questioner and the questionee to react
on a belief and the underlying reasoning or evidence. The
function of questioning is illuminated by its logic, which is
similar to the logic of dialectics. Such a dialectical process
involves seeing the answer to a question as a thesis, which can
be further questioned to arrive at an antithesis. The antithesis
can in turn be questioned to arrive at a synthesis, and this may
be seen as a different thesis which can be questioned ad indium.
This open-ended nature of questioning involves a method of
moving knowledge and inquiry forward.
With respect to the primary and secondary functions of
questioning, we may distinguish between fact-finding questions
and analytical questions.
Fact-finding questions are questions
which require one to supply informational facts which are
verifiable. For instance, I may ask, ‘On what date did America
become an independent country?’ or ‘Who is the author of
Macbeth?’ These questions are fact-finding, in that they are
seeking specific answers in the form of facts which can be
verified. The notion of ‘
information-seeking’ is broader than the notion
of ‘fact-finding’. One may seek information in terms of opinions
or ideas which may not constitute facts. If, for instance, I ask
in an Ethics class, ‘What is your stance on abortion?’ or ‘What
is the argument for your stance?’, I am seeking information
about a plausible opinion and reasons which are not facts as
such. These are not fact-finding questions but are
information-seeking; thus, all fact-finding questions are
information-seeking, but the converse is not true. An analytical
question is one which requires one to explore,
explicate, examine, clarify, dissect, react on and relate issues
or ideas. Analytical questions unlike fact-finding questions
might help to elicit the reasoning behind an idea in order to
fully unpack it and make it accessible and understandable, such
that the reasonableness of the idea may be evaluated and
determined. The following may constitute a systematic sequence
of analytical questions in social and moral discourse: What do you mean when you say all
humans are equal? What does equality mean? Can we distinguish
between factual and prescriptive equality? In what sense are all
human beings equal? Are you saying that as an adult, I am equal
to a one-year-old baby? Do you want to suggest that a medical
doctor should receive the equal wage to a cashier in a McDonalds
restaurant? These questions do not seek facts as such, but they
seek to explicate and analyze issues and concepts. These
analytical questions are information-seeking in the primary
sense; they open up the opportunity to ask further exploratory
questions, to improve one’s epistemic state. So analytical
questions may be information-seeking as well. Hintikka draws an
analogy between the analytical-information-seeking variant of
questioning in interrogation and deductive reasoning (1984, p.
35). He provides an example of this in Plato’s dialogue, Meno,
which shows how by questioning, Socrates helped a slave-boy to
analytically elicit complicated knowledge of geometry. This
represents a classic case of how appropriate questioning may
help someone to unearth tacit knowledge or unpack complex and implicit meaning of concepts. In
this sense, analytical questions involve a process of critical
thinking, in that they seek to explore implicit meanings,
inferences, underlying assumptions and justifications. They
involve exploring implications of ideas and the evidential or
causal relations among evidence, ideas, contexts, patterns and
trends. From the distinction and characterization of
fact-finding and analytical questions, we can see that
statements regarding the evidentiary or inferential connection
between answer and question may be either a posteriori and
synthetic or a priori and analytic. For instance, a question may
be a way of requesting that one makes some analytic connections
between two sets of ideas in order to clarify meaning. For
instance, one might ask, ‘What do you mean when you say Jane is
a spinster?’. The answer would be, ‘I mean that Jane is an
unmarried female’. The question requires that one articulates
the idea of ‘spinster’ which is not fully grasped by the
questioner in terms of ‘unmarried female’. A question could also
be a request for one to be aware of and to react on one’s tacit
reasoning process or belief. In making the connection between
inference or reasoning (which has relevance to the notion of
critical thinking) and questioning, Hintikka (1981, 1983) argues
very forcefully that what people call ‘inference’ or ‘deduction’ in a
nonphilosophical parlance is actually a sequence of implicit
question and answer. We sometimes see this in a court of law
where a lawyer may use questions to elicit a set of answers from
witnesses, from which she makes inferences and connections as a
basis for making her cases, and by which a judge or jury decides
a case regarding guilt or innocence. The questions in this case
elicit tacit or implicit information. The principle of
fallibilism, which requires us to be methodologically tentative
about our beliefs, is a motivation for questioning, as a process
of seeking information,
activating tacit knowledge, evaluating
evidence and examining beliefs. This principle governs the quest
for the best deductive procedures (Hintikka, 1981,
1983). It has to do with a process of infusing rigor into
inquiry, making sure that there is consistency or coherence
among beliefs and that there is appropriate justifiatory
connection between belief and evidence. The truth of a
proposition in a deduction is evidentially transmitted to other
propositions that it entails to form a consistent and
justifiable set of propositions. This principle explains how we
rationally form, justify, modify or change our beliefs. However
it is pertinent to distinguish between the proper epistemic
sense of questioning, that which performs the above functions
and has the requisite logic and heuristic value, and the
attenuated senses of questioning, which may legitimately
engender negative attitudes. Some of these attenuated senses of
questioning are used in a confrontational manner for badgering
and as a rhetorical device. These senses my analysis of
questioning as an epistemic process of critical thinking wants
to delegitimise, to obviate the negative attitude. Questioning
is supposed to help build a bridge between a questioner and
questionee in terms of the each sides cognitive state; such possibility is
vitiated by the negative attitude associated with it. If I ask a
question with the expectation that you will understand my
question and provide me with a plausible answer, then my
assumption is that we do at least have similar or coextensive
background beliefs or cognitive abilities. We have ideas about
the nature of rational processes or background and meta-beliefs
that a person should have in order to engage in a meaningful
question-and-answer sequence for the sake of examining issues
and improving knowledge. Critical Examination of Questioning as a Process of Critical
Thinking In the Humanities, analytical questioning is used to
explore the components of an issue, the reasoning behind views
and beliefs, and their implications, such that one can come to a
better understanding, and perhaps, different ways of looking at
an issue. This point is usually not well appreciated by many
students. They think that learning involves knowing the correct
answer to a question, which is synonymous with knowing the
truth. Thus they are more interested in finding the true answer
to a question. Once we have arrived at an answer which
represents the ‘truth’, inquiry ends. Their view is that the
notion of truth is absolute. We should not question the answer
any further to explore its implications, assumptions, merits and
flaws. Although some students appreciate the importance of an
intellectual inquiry in its attempt to arrive at truth, they do not seem to
appreciate the importance of the rigorous, analytical and
critical process for arriving at truth: that the rigor of the
process determines in part the reasonableness of what is
accepted as true. Such reasonableness depends on the adequacy of
the evidence and the method bringing evidence to bear on our
beliefs. As far as many students are concerned, if questioning
has any merit at all, it is vitiated by what is considered its
adversarial and confrontational approach, which engenders a negative attitude.
This attitude towards questioning is similar to Moulton’s (1983) attitude towards the
method of analytic philosophy. She argues that this method
involves constantly looking for better reasons and
counter-examples to refute or rebut another person’s argument.
She argues that this method is fundamentally adversarial and it
is not conducive for learning philosophy. Although Moulton’s
argument is instructive regarding the attitude associated with
the adversarial method, she does not address the adequacy of the
rigour of such a method. One gets the impression that she is
suggesting that the adequacy of the rigor of the method is
irrelevant insofar as it engenders a negative attitude. However
if questioning is seen as reacting this adversarial approach,
then one can appreciate why, according to Moulton’s arguments
regarding the negative attitude, it may not be seen as a tool
that is conducive for teaching and helping students learn. It is
also pertinent to mention that if one appreciates the heuristic
value of questioning, the negative attitude it generates may be
for the most part deemed unwarranted. One heuristic value of an
argument for questioning in relation to fallibilistic
epistemology is that it represents the falsification method of
inquiry in science. Science is generally accepted as involving a
paradigm case of rigorous inquiry. Questioning represents the
rigorous process of testing a belief as a hypothesis. In an
attempt to falsify it, we question the reasons and evidence that
are brought to bear on it. This process, which many have
characterized as critical thinking, may be uncomfortable.
Because people usually emotionally invest in their
beliefs, when
the beliefs are deemed to be awed or unjustifiably held, it
appears as if they have lost their investment. This is the idea
reacted in the old saying ‘if ignorance is bliss it is folly to
be wise’. The corollary of this idea is that if
wisdom
is unpleasant, then it is appropriate to be ignorant: if the
process of learning and acquiring ‘wisdom’ is not pleasurable,
then it is apparently more comfortable
to be ignorant. A
learning process is a humbling process, thus it is unpleasant.
But the actual feeling involved in one’s realization and state
of knowing (as opposed to the process of knowing) is pleasant,
hence it is unpleasant if it turns out we do not actually know
what we thought we knew. It is in the sense of such a
possibility that learning, which derives from critical thinking,
is an on-going, never-ending process. We always entertain doubt
and question in order to expand our knowledge. Thus the rigorous
process of acquiring knowledge is open-ended; this suggests why,
given fallibilism, the open-ended logic of questioning is
coextensive with the open-ended process of acquiring knowledge.
338 P. Ikuenobe However the open-ended implication of questioning and the
indeterminacy of question-and-answer sequences could be seen as
implying an unsatisfactory epistemological position. This is the
position of perpetual or absolute skepticism, which is that,
since we cannot be certain about our knowledge because we could
be in
error, therefore, we cannot have knowledge. If we cannot
be certain about any belief because it is always open to
question (not ‘unquestionable’), then it is not worth the name
knowledge. So if we can always doubt our knowledge, it seems to
follow that we do not know, since what we know should not be susceptible to
doubt or error. This conclusion is a non-sequitur because the
fact that we are sometimes in error (fallibilism) does not imply
that we are always in error (skepticism). By a nonvacuous
contrast, if we know when we are in error, then we should know
when we are not likely to be in error. We do have strong
intuitions that we know many things. The implication of
open-endedness, Hintikka (1984) argues, should not count against
the value of questioning as a philosophical and epistemic tool;
hence, in my view, it can be used as a tool for teaching and
learning. He argues instead that this view of questioning
highlights its heuristic value as a methodology of learning and
imparting knowledge. That it implies this interesting epistemic
situation is a strong reason to favor it; it involves the
process of exploring and examining beliefs to avoid dogmatism.
However the fact that questioning can help us avoid dogmatism
and move knowledge forward, in terms of the possibility of
highlighting a lack of appropriate justification, it may lead to
the frustration that we cannot arrive at the truth, especially
in the Humanities, where many of the issues are abstract and
conceptual. This is an indication of human nature with fallible
cognitive processes; we should neither be frustrated about it
nor lament it. Since questioning as an epistemic process helps
to foster growth in knowledge, to avoid questioning is to
foreclose growth in knowledge that may be brought about by new
and rigorous perspectives, and to tend towards dogmatism. The
connection between questioning and critical thinking can be
understood, in part, by seeing that they are both conceptually
grounded in the theory of fallibilistic epistemology—which is
motivated by the facts about human fallibilism. In this sense,
at least, they are conceptually coextensive. However we may also
see questioning as theoretically motivated by fallibilism, where
the process of questioning involves the process of critical
thinking. Fallibilism helps us to make sense of the open-ended
nature of the logic of questioning as a process of acquiring
knowledge. Questioning and critical thinking both involve a
process by which we are sensitive to human fallibilism and are
able to bring about approximation to truth and progress in
knowledge. We are able to bring about progress because, by the
rigorous process of questioning involved in critical thinking,
we unearth and explore what we did not know before or initially
see as reasonable. We question and justify our beliefs so that
those that are justifiable will be sustained and those that
cannot be justified will be further questioned, examined,
modified or changed. But the converse, that progress implies
questioning with respect to rigorous critical analysis is not
necessarily true, because progress could arise from guesses,
fortuitous revelations and accidental discoveries without any
concerted and rigorous efforts to question, inquire and examine.
Given the plausibility of these statements, by
modus tollens, to
deny growth implies the denial of rigor inherent in questioning
regarding critical thinking. An important character and value of
rigorous and critical inquiry is its ability to bring about
progress in knowledge. This is engendered by the process and
method of questioning. This argument may be illuminated by
Thomas Kuhn’s (1970) conceptual distinction between ‘normal’ and
‘revolutionary’ sciences. Kuhn argues that ‘revolutionary’
science has rigor, because it involves questioning and critical
examination; this involves seeking new evidence, trying to
falsify old theories, thus facilitating progress and growth in
human knowledge. The concept of critical thinking and the
associated principles and process involves being able eschew
dogmatism and avoidable errors. This epistemic process of
eschewing dogmatism requires that we be appropriately moved by
reason, which involves, according to Siegel (1988), ‘a proper
understanding of the relevance of reasons and the rules of
inference and evidence’ (p. 43). This idea is captured by the
notion of ‘constructive’ questioning or criticism, which is a
rigorous process by which one may systematically bring evidence
to bear on belief, to bring about growth and progress in
knowledge. Lack of such process can lead to intellectual
stagnation and decay. In this sense, questioning may be seen as
an aspect of critical thinking which involves the process and
general context of learning, the acquisition of knowledge and
education. My analysis of questioning shows how its logic and
functions provide a context which may encourage the epistemic
virtue of the process of examining evidence as a basis for
optimizing the reasonableness of beliefs and how lack of such
context may impede the process. Paradoxically the advantage and
heuristic value of fallibilism as a grounding for the process of
questioning with respect to critical thinking may be part of the
problem and the negative attitude usually associated with
questioning. The relationship between questions and answers also creates an
epistemic problem similar to
Meno’s paradox. If I ask a question
seeking information, I should already ‘know’ (implicitly) or
presuppose an answer. If I do not already ‘know’ (implicitly) an
answer, I would not know if the answer that is provided is the
correct one in order to accept it as satisfying my inquiry. I
would not even ask the question if I did not already ‘know’
(implicitly) the correct answer I should accept. The
notion of question thus seems to suggest that one somehow
presupposes the answer or a plausible range or spectrum of
alternatives, hence one questions to get something that falls
into the spectrum, to validate what one knows. At the same time,
if one does not already know what the information or spectrum
is, one will not know what one is looking for because even if
one lands it one will not recognize it as representing what one
is looking for, since one does not ‘know’ it. However the
logic of questioning in its open-ended process helps us to avoid
this epistemic problem in Meno’s paradox. The logic of
questioning implies that nothing is absolutely known;
assumptions are open to questioning and further exploration. By
questioning the assumptions underlying questions and answers in
an open-ended sense, we are able to clarify our ideas. When we
ask a question, we do so within the contexts of our background
beliefs, available evidence or knowledge,
meta-beliefs
and conceptual scheme. When we accept an answer, we do so
tentatively within 340 P. Ikuenobe
these contexts as inference to the best explanation which could
be questioned further given better evidence.
Conclusion:
I have analyzed questioning to show its connection with
fallibilistic epistemology as a basis to motivate
critical
thinking as a process of inquiry. By questioning texts, views,
assumptions and beliefs, students may be able to learn the
process of inquiry and acquire the ability and disposition of
critical thinking. My analysis seems to lend credence to some
commonplace views regarding how teaching and using the process
of questioning could help students acquire critical thinking
abilities. This requires that,
(1) instructors motivate questioning by explaining to students its logic, functions
and basis as an epistemic process—this may help to vitiate the
negative attitudes and implications;
(2) students have to see
the connections among questioning, critical thinking, inquiry
and learning, and fallibilism;
(3) instructors have to develop a
constructive and non-threatening way to ask questions and teach
students a process of asking questions so that one does not
alienate and intimidate;
(4) the instructor must create, in
general, a classroom environment that will allow
students to express themselves, and they must be given the
opportunity to actively participate in their own learning
process, which involves acquiring the skills of questioning for
the purpose of bringing about understanding, growth and progress
in knowledge.
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BECKER (Eds) Konsepte der Dialektik (Frankfurt, Vittorio
Klostermann).
HINTIKKA, J. (1983) Rules, Utilities, and Strategies in
Dialogical Games, in: J. HINTIKKA & L.
VAINA (Eds) Cognitive Constraints on Communication (Dordrect,
Holland, D Reidel).
HINTIKKA, J. (1984) Questioning as a Philosophical Method, in:
J.H. FETZER (Ed.) Principles of
Philosophical Reasoning (Totowa, NJ, Rowman & Allanheld).
HYMAN, R.T. (1979) Strategic Questioning (Englewood Cliffs,
Prentice Hall).
KUHN, T. (1970) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
(Chicago, University of Chicago Press).
MCPECK, J. (1981) Critical Thinking and Education (New York, St
Martins Press).
MORGAN, J. & WAYNE, R. (1995) Critical Thinking—What Does that
Mean?, Journal of College
Science Teaching, March/April, pp. 336–340.
MOULTON, J. (1983) A Paradigm of Philosophy: the adversary
method, in: S. HARDING &M.B.
HINTIKKA (Eds) Discovering Reality (Boston, MA, D. Reidel &
Co.).
PAUL, R.W. (1982) Teaching Critical Thinking in the ‘Strong’
Sense: A Focus on Self-Deception,
World Views and a Dialectical Mode of Analysis, Informal Logic
Newsletter, 4(2), pp. 2–7.
Questioning as an Epistemic Process 341
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MILLER (Ed.) Popper Selections
(Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press).
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ISSN 0013-1857 print; ISSN 1469-5812 online/01/03&40325-17
Ó 2001 Philosophy of Education Society of Australasia
DOI: 10.1080/00131850120064063326 P. Ikuenobe
The Moody
Blues- Question (youtube) -
Question (wiki)
Lyrics
Why do we never get an answer
When we're knocking at the door
With a thousand million questions
About hate and death and war
It's where we stop and look around us
There is nothing that we need
In a world of persecution
That is burning in it's greed
Why do we never get an answer
When we're knocking at the door
Because the truth is hard to swallow
That's what the wall of love is for
It's not the way that you say it
When you do those things to me
It's more the way that you mean it
When you tell me what will be
And when you stop and think about it
You won't believe it's true
That all the love you've been giving
Has all been meant for you
I'm looking for someone to change my life
I'm looking for a miracle in my life
And if you could see what it's done to me
To lose the the love I knew
Could safely lead me through
Between the silence of the mountains
And the crashing of the sea
There lies a land I once lived in
And she's waiting there for me
But in the gray of the morning
My mind becomes confused
Between the dead and the sleeping
And the road that I must choose
I'm looking for someone to change my life
I'm looking for a miracle in my life
And if you could see what it's done to me
To lose the the love I knew
Could safely lead me to
The land that I once knew
To learn as we grow old
The secrets of our souls
It's not the way that you say it
When you do those things to me
It's more the way you really mean it
When you tell me what will be
Why do we never get an answer
When we're knocking at the door
With a thousand million questions
About hate and death and war
It's where we stop and look around us
There is nothing that we need
In a world of persecution
That is burning in it's greed
Why do we never get an answer
When we're knocking at the door...
I Know - I Think I Know
Sometimes there are
questions that you need to
answer that go
way beyond the
five w's, like the
philosophical questions and the
logical questions, questions that if answered correctly, will
help paint a clearer picture.
Full Spectrum Knowledge.
Who?
When?
Where?
Why?
What?
How?
What happened? Where did it take place?
When did it take place? Who was involved? Why did that happen?
(causes).
How did it happen?
(reasons).
Sometimes there are no simple
answers.
Some statements create more questions then they answer. When
people
generalize or make
assumptions, it forces other people
ta ask questions because the person did not
specify any
meaning about their statement. And some
questions create more questions. Not to say that the
newly created questions are relevant or important, or does it
mean that we should be discouraged from asking questions just because
it may lead to
more work or
more questions. It only means that we must
realize that just because we answered one question, that does not necessarily
mean that we have answered all the questions completely. Some
investigations need further inquiring in order for us to better
understand something, this way we have a better chance
of making
the right
decision.
Knowing is a
lot better then not knowing, but believing that you
know enough is the most
damaging thing in the world.
No Such thing as a stupid question is a popular
phrase that has had a long history.
It suggests that the quest for knowledge includes
failure, and that just
because one person may know less than others they should not be afraid to
ask rather than
pretend they
already know. In many cases multiple people may not know but are too
afraid to ask the "stupid question"; the one who asks the question may in
fact be doing a service to those around them.
Why?
Inward Wits: Good Instincts, Good Imagination, Good Memory, Good at
Estimating and Good Common Sense.
Outward
Wits: Sight, Hearing, Smelling, Taste and Touching or Feeling.
Intelligence Types.
Ben
Dunlap: The life-long learner (youtube)
"It's better not knowing what you don't
know, then
not even knowing that you don't know. Even if the
pursuit of knowledge creates more questions, at least you know
that there are more questions to answer, because if you didn't
know that there was more questions to ask, then you will never
become more knowledgeable.
Learning is a good thing.
Ignorance is a bad thing."
Asking too many questions
can sometimes have the opposite effect by making things more
complicated then they need to be. Stick with the known facts and
hold the
philosophy for a later time
when
more is known about the problem.
When giving answers you want to avoid being
superfluous. So how
do you know how much information a person requires? By giving
that person an answer and then saying that there is more
information if needed. So depending on that person's knowledge,
and their ability to know when more information is needed, will
ultimately determine how much information is needed.
Information Overload -
FallaciesA funny thing happens when learning,
the more you know the more you will
realize what you don't know, which
is not bad because now you know what you don't know, so you're
still learning. But now you're a little more aware, and you now
have more choices and more options, with several choices being,
Do you need to seek out missing knowledge on your own? Or find
someone who has the missing knowledge that you need? Or, if
unable to access needed information, what actions can you make,
without looking
ignorant?
Learning how much you don't know is just the beginning.
Pretend to
Know Enough -
Knowing it All is Impossible -
Knowing Something is PossiblePi is kind of
like learning, it's endless. The more you learn, the more you know. And
the more you know, the larger your circle of awareness and understanding
gets. And as you keep learning more, the more you learn about what you
still don't know. But it's not just learning about all the different things that you
still don't know, it's learning about all the things that you can
know, and all the choices and possibilities that knowledge gives you. So
you can say that learning is its own reward, but it's much bigger than
that, much much bigger.
Our desire to know things and to
learn things is either a gift from God or just a natural process that life
created in order for life to prosper and survive. If we did not have this
gift to learn we would not be here. So if you take this gift for granted,
or ignore its potential, your life will be meaningless and very
unproductive.
Memory -
Self Directed LearningKnowing more and more about less and
less until you know everything about nothing, is just another
idiom for
idiots.
"One side effect of learning is that the
more you learn about the world, the more you will realize how
many problems there are in the world, which is a good thing.
Because you can't solve a problem if you don't realize a problem
exists. Don't be discourage by knowing how f*cked up the world
is, be thankful that you know it. And be thankful that this is
not all that you know, because you also know how wonderful life
is. You have to
balance
yourself between fixing the problems and enjoying life."
"What ever you do,
do not discourage yourself from learning, or frustrate
yourself because of difficulties. Obstacles and obstructions are
a part of life. They are not barriers, they are only
problems that require a little more thinking in order to solve
them."
Rating System - Reputation - Rank
Rating is an appraisal of the
value of something. An expert
estimation of
the
quality, quantity, and other characteristics of someone or something.
Rating
is the evaluation or
assessment of something, in terms of
quality, like when
a
critic rates a novel, or in terms of quantity, as with an athlete being rated by his
or her
statistics, or some combination of both.
Rating
System for Movies.
Credit
Rating (background checks) -
Profiling -
Slander -
Comment
Sections -
Trust -
Branding -
PR.
Rating Scale is a set of categories designed to elicit information
about a quantitative or a qualitative attribute.
Rating
Site is a website designed for users to vote on or rate people,
content, or other things. Rating sites are typically organized around
attributes such as physical appearance, body parts, voice, personality,
etc. They may also be devoted to the subjects' occupational ability,
for example teachers, professors, lawyers, doctors, etc.
Quality is something of superior grade. An essential and distinguishing attribute. A
characteristic property that defines the apparent individual
nature of something. Excellence or worth measured by long
lasting, durable, repairable, recyclable.
Quality
Control.
Characteristic is any
measurable property of a device
measured under closely
specified conditions.
Experiment.
In order to speed up the
process of
choosing and
deciding what
is the best or the most
valuable product or process, you need a
rating system that can quickly calculate the most important
aspects and features, and at the same time explain why these
aspects are the most important. A person might have particular
needs, so then and only then, does a product or process need to
be changed or modified. A Rating System can never be about
opinions, it can only be based on
scientific research,
facts,
statistics, user feedback and
predictions. A Rating System can never be accurately
measured using money because money does not have any useful
information attached to it.
Money only indicates the price of something, money does not
calculate the true cost, the amount time, the amount of people,
the amount of resources, its durability, its recyclability, its
ease of repair, its ease of
upgrading, or the impacts and the
side effects that a particular product or process has on the
environment or people.
Ratings and Reviews from others helps us to choose, but not without risk.
There's more to
choosing then meets the
eye.
Ranking is a
relationship
between a set of items such that, for any two items, the first is either
'ranked higher than', 'ranked lower than' or 'ranked equal to' the second.
In mathematics, this is known as a weak order or total preorder of
objects. It is not necessarily a total order of objects because
two different objects can have the same
ranking. The rankings themselves are totally ordered. For example,
materials are totally preordered by hardness, while degrees of hardness
are totally ordered.
Rank refers to the relative position,
value,
worth, complexity, power,
importance, authority, level, etc. of a
person or object within a ranking.
Rating Warnings:
Rating systems can be manipulated like with the
2008 Financial Scam that cost
Americans almost 1 Trillion Dollars.
And
these criminals are still stealing money.
Deep
Neural Networks for YouTube Recommendations (PDF)
Reputation is an
opinion about that entity,
typically a result of
social evaluation
on a set of criteria.
Even
Popularity can be Flawed.
Distinguished
Reputation is when a person is standing above others in
character or
attainment. A
reliable source.
Reputation System are programs that allow users to rate each other in
online communities in order
to build
Trust through reputation. Some common uses of these systems can
be found on E-commerce websites such as eBay, Amazon.com, and Etsy as well
as
online advice
communities such as Stack Exchange. These reputation systems represent
a significant trend in "decision support for Internet mediated service
provisions". With the popularity of online communities for shopping,
advice, and exchange of other important information, reputation systems
are becoming vitally important to the online experience. The idea of
reputations systems is that even if the consumer can't physically try a
product or service, or see the person providing information, that they can
be confident in the outcome of the exchange through trust built by
recommender systems. Collaborative
filtering, used most commonly in recommender systems, are related to
reputation systems in that they both collect ratings from members of a
community. The core difference between reputation systems and
collaborative filtering is the ways in which they use user feedback. In
collaborative filtering, the goal is to find similarities between users in
order to recommend products to customers. The role of reputation systems,
in contrast, is to gather a collective opinion in order to build trust
between users of an online community.
Collaborations.
Reputation Capital is the quantitative measure of some entity's
reputational value in some context – a community or marketplace.
Reputation Management refers to the influencing and controlling of an
individual's or group's reputation. Reputation management is the practice
of attempting to
shape public perception
of a person or organization by influencing information about that entity,
primarily online.
Review
Site is a website on which reviews can be posted about people,
businesses, products, or services.
Review is to appraise critically.
Critical
evaluation. Examination.
Critic -
Observer Effect.
Recommender System is a subclass of information
Filtering System that
seeks to predict the "rating" or "preference" a user would give to an item.
Inter-Rater Reliability is the degree of agreement among
raters. It gives a score of how much homogeneity, or
consensus, there is in the ratings
given by judges. It is useful in refining the tools given to human judges,
for example by determining if a particular scale is appropriate for
measuring a particular variable. If various raters do not agree, either
the scale is defective or the raters need to be re-trained. There are a
number of statistics which can be used to determine inter-rater
reliability. Different statistics are appropriate for different types of
measurement. Some options are:
joint-probability of agreement, Cohen's kappa and the related Fleiss'
kappa, inter-rater correlation,
concordance correlation coefficient and
intra-class correlation.
Cohen's Kappa is
a statistic which measures inter-rater agreement for qualitative
(categorical) items. It is generally thought to be a more robust measure
than simple percent agreement calculation, since κ takes into account the
agreement occurring by chance.
Fleiss' Kappa is
a statistical measure for assessing the reliability of agreement between a
fixed number of raters when assigning categorical ratings to a number of
items or classifying items.
Focus Group is a form of qualitative research in which a
group of people are asked about their perceptions, opinions, beliefs, and
attitudes towards a product, service, concept, advertisement, idea, or
packaging. Questions are asked in an interactive group setting where
participants are free to talk with other group members. During this
process, the researcher either takes notes or records the vital points he
or she is getting from the group. Care should be noted to select members
of the group carefully for effective and authoritative responses.
Rating
Systems -
Consumer Search
Surveys -
Public Feedback
Evaluation is
a systematic determination of a
subject's merit, worth and significance, using criteria governed by a
set of standards. It can assist an organization, program, project or any
other intervention or initiative to assess any aim, realisable
concept/proposal, or any alternative, to help in
decision-making; or to
ascertain the degree of achievement or value in regard to the aim and
objectives and results of any such action that has been completed. The
primary purpose of evaluation, in addition to gaining insight into prior
or existing initiatives, is to enable reflection and assist in the
identification of future change.
Testing Errors -
Research -
Statistics
Expert Opinion, or an uneducated opinion, both can have value, and
both can have very little
Value.
Questions and Answers System
(Q&A)
How to Spot a Fake Review on Amazon
Fake Spot has 236,337,760 Total Reviews Analyzed.
Consumer Review Fairness Act of 2016- H.R.5111 restricts people from
writing fake reviews or having other people write fake reviews on their
behalf. But how will this stop the
propaganda?
A Rating System
must standardized, incorruptible and easily deciphered. (5 Star)
The Rating System must be able to be updated when user feedback
reveals new insights or new information.
Calculations - Techniques - Processes
- Facts - Figures - Weights - Measures and Size - Dimensions -
Technical Descriptions - Manufacturer Sustainability -
Recyclable - Ingredients - Chemicals used - Parts - Components -
Comparisons to other Techniques.
Unbiased Product Reviews or
User Feedback that analyzes and evaluates a product accurately.
Empirical Evidence.
Bidding does not determine
value or the
actual
cost of a product or
service, it only determines the price that someone is willing to pay.