Critical Thinking, Standpoint & Ethics

From The Embassy of Good Science

Critical Thinking, Standpoint & Ethics

Instructions for:TraineeTrainer
Goal

The aim of this module is to encourage learners to reflect critically upon their own beliefs and assumptions and to recognise the importance of positionality in the construction of knowledge and approach to ethical analysis.

At the end of this module, learners will be able to:

  1. Reflect upon their own positionality, where it comes from, how it influences their thinking and personal biases.
  2. Critically examine the basis of knowledge.
  3. Appraise the significance of alternative epistemological positions.
  4. Take a critical approach to ethical analysis.
Duration (hours)
1
For whom is this important?
Part of
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iRECS
1
Module Introduction

Video Transcript

According to Burbules and Berk (1999): Where our beliefs remain unexamined, we are not free; we act without thinking about why we act, and thus do not exercise control over our own destinies (p46).

An understanding of where our knowledge, beliefs and assumptions come from, and how we are positioned in relation to our research is vital for an ethical approach to research and analysis. Cultivating a habit of critical reflection is an important step towards gaining this understanding.

In this module you will be asked to think about how knowledge is created, to reflect upon your own beliefs, assumptions and biases, and how these might impact upon research and ethics.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step1 video 1

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Thinking About Knowing

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We begin with some questions to start you thinking about where your knowledge comes from. Do you know the answers to these questions?

(Complete the quiz before reading on)

Easy? Maybe, but how did you know the answers?

These questions represent two different kinds of knowledge: a priori and a posteriori. To answer questions A. and C., one can employ reasoning, whereas the answers to questions B. and D. stem from observation and experience.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 2 quiz 1

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Thinking about Knowing continued

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Philosopher Immanuel Kant maintained that a priori knowledge is independent of experience. He contrasted this with a posteriori knowledge, which has its sources in experience and observation. In life, most knowledge is of the a posteriori form; it is rooted in experience and observation.

Watch this video to find out why philosophers think there might be a problem with this.


The Problem Of Induction

Understanding how we construct knowledge helps us to take a critical standpoint and to exercise caution when making assumptions about proof. As well as the above evidence-proof issue, it is also important to acknowledge the impact of the researcher on the creation of knowledge.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 3 Audio Transcript 1

4
I Saw It With My Own Two Eyes

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For most people, the ultimate proof that something is true is to see it for themselves. But how reliable are your observations? In the following pages, we will consider three potential influencing factors:


5
The Sense Perception Of The Observer

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We receive information through one or more of the senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch, and taste, but do we perceive things as they really are? Take a close look at the images below:

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How we interpret the information from our senses to have meaning is termed ‘perception’. Two people might be exposed to the same sensory experience, but the way in which they interpret the information can differ. Perception of the same senses can vary from one person to another because each person interprets stimuli differently based on their learning, memory, emotions, and expectations. For instance, if we ask five people to describe a painting, it is likely that the five descriptions will be different, even though the people are all looking at the same painting.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 5 Audio Transcript 1

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Impacts Of The Observer

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Researchers in many fields have long known that the act of looking at something can change it. This holds true for people, for animals, and for particles. Below you will see four well known examples of how an observer can have an impact on what they are observing. For this drag and drop exercise, match the impact type to the meaning.


Exercise Feedback

These phenomena are well known in research. For instance, being observed makes psychiatric patients a third less likely to require sedation (Damsa et al, 2006), or the famous double slit experiment in modern physics. But many people believe that what we see is never what ‘really is’, even in the most highly controlled experimental settings. What do you think?

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 5 Audio Transcript 1

7
The Viewpoint Of The Observer

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Sometimes its not just the presence but the viewpoint which changes the interaction with the observed.

The third influencing factor upon what is observed stems from the viewpoint of the observer. Researchers are not neutral processors of information. As human beings, they bring with them a host of assumptions and preconceptions.


Observation is dependent upon and coloured by our individual senses and our background beliefs and assumptions. In research, many of our background beliefs and assumptions are associated with the paradigm in which we operate, as we consider next.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 7 Audio Transcript 1

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Scientific Paradigms

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Video Transcript

The concept of scientific paradigms was introduced by Thomas Kuhn in 1962 in the book: The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. By ‘scientific revolution’ Kuhn has in mind a major turning point in the development of science, such as is associated with Copernicus, Newton, or Einstein. Each of these figures initiated a spectacular change of course in the development of science, which is often characterised as a revolutionary change.

According to Kuhn, a scientific revolution is not so much a leap forward as a change of direction. When a scientific revolution occurs, science does not progress more rapidly along a pre-determined path, but rather sets out along a different path altogether.

Researchers who share a paradigm will also share certain basic beliefs; they share a particular understanding of what science is all about, and how it can be pursued. In essence, they share a way of seeing the world. Once there is convergence on a paradigm, there is a framework in which problems can be solved, researchers in the field have a clear idea of where the problems lie, and of what might count as a solution to them. The researchers speak a common language.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 8 Video Transcript

9
What Is A Paradigm?

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Since Kuhn, use of the word ‘paradigm’ has been broadened and nowadays people apply it in many different settings, but these are the key lessons.

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 9 Audio Transcript 1

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A View From Somewhere

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Kuhn suggested that all scientific knowledge is ‘situated’ knowledge and cannot represent a ‘view from nowhere’. We all view the world from within a particular set of social and epistemic practices. According to Kuhn, scientists working within different paradigms are effectively working in different worlds. But how do we know which paradigm we are working in?

irecs Critical thinking, standpoint & ethics step 10 Audio Transcript 1

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Identifying Personal Assumptions And Biases
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Critical Reflection
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Activity Feedback
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Taking A Self-Aware And Critical Approach To The Analysis Of Ethics Issues
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End Of Module Quiz
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Module Evaluation
Steps

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