Rather long, but worth reading. I've extracted some useful bits below.
http://www.resilience.org/stories/2013- ... ke-compostAs our world views begin to shift, there will be a lot of discussion about critical thinking. Shifting world views expose flaws in people’s thinking, from the ways we protect our ideas, to inaccurate assumptions, and to the inferences that result. This is in part because fundamental assumptions of our society are beginning to show cracks. There are many descriptions of critical thinking, but most of them do not go far enough in describing the synthesis necessary in describing our global problems. Ecological, macroscopic, and systems-based critical thinking is necessary to ask the proper questions about our global problems. [...] Our education also focus on knowledge and its application, without challenging students to do the creative work of synthesis.
[We need to:]
•Gather complete information – more than one source
•
Understand and define terms (make others define terms, too)
•Question the methods by which results were derived
•Question the conclusion: do the facts support it? Is there evidence of bias? Remember correlation does not equal causation
•Uncover assumptions and biases
•Question the source of information
•Don’t expect all the answers
•Examine the big picture
•Look for multiple cause and effect
•Watch for thought stopping sensationalism
•Understand your own biases and values (Chiras, 2002)
[...] Dr. Rosling suggests that we can cut the emissions of the wealthy, and then move the poor people to the wealthy class through a leap of faith, or magic, or something. First of all, the idea that we can reduce emissions of the wealthy is arguable on many fronts. But that is not the main piece of faulty logic. The most interesting piece of magic here is that we can focus on emissions, and ignore the energy basis that creates the emissions. Yet the fossil fuel emissions are caused by way of the transformed, high-tech society that wealthy countries have built by using the majority of the world’s fossil fuels. The idea that we can focus on carbon and ignore energy basis is what is missing from the analysis. Our single-minded focus on the tailpipe and while completely ignoring the gas gauge is the most obtuse and deadly blind spot in the history of man. Just where is the energy for a high-tech society for 10 billion people going to come from?
[...] Scientists need holistic views to counteract the tendency to focus narrowly. We need generalists in addition to our specialists. And we need people who can look at our problems at a larger scale; Einstein said that we cannot solve problems from the same consciousness that created the problems. We must learn to see the world anew, from a larger scale to see a complete picture of the processes involved. Our tendency is to become anxious about problems, and to immediately fasten on potential solutions. This process creates an immediate narrowing of vision, through reductionism. The first step in learning to think macroscopically is to take a step back and look at the larger scale first, to understand the drivers of the smaller scale. The biggest driver is always energy.
Energy can unify and simplify the understanding of complex systems. Energy systems diagrams represent the passage of energy through systems at various scales. Energy is a part of all storages, and flows of energy are a part of all processes.
[...] Here are some assumptions that surround our current societal worldview. As we hit multiple limits, we have no choice but to begin to look at some of these perspectives that frame our world views. Ways of knowing and being that have worked for 200 years are beginning to fail as the system begins to descend. Which of these assumptions do you hold and why?
•Growth is good
•Energy is no object, but money is
•Money is an accurate representation of the value of resources and goods in society
•Renewables can replace fossil fuels because all energy is of equal quality
•Man exists separate from nature, and the economy can exist without the environment
•The stock market = societal health
•Markets are free, and they work, such that our free markets need to be left alone
•Advancements in technology are always something to strive for
•Technology is a replacement for fossil fuels
•Our empire can expand infinitely
•An all-of-the-above energy policy is best
•Our global systemic problem is carbon emissions
•Maintaining the trajectory we’re on is better than any alternative
In this era, developing a critical, skeptical mind is essential to understanding what is happening with the global changes that are occurring. Thinking about how you think can help give a framework for understanding the changes that are occurring.