Tuesday, November 26, 2019
102 Critical Thinking and Gay Marriage Professor Ramos Blog
102 Critical Thinking and Gay Marriage    Quick Write  Quick Write  How have your beliefs and ideas been shaped from birth?  Critical Thinking  Critical comes from the Greek wordà  krinein, meaning ââ¬Å"to separate, to chooseâ⬠; above all, it impliesà  consciousà  inquiry (4).  Conscious also means to be awake or aware. This suggests that by examining our reasoning, we can understand the basis of our judgments and decisions ââ¬â ultimately, so that we can make better ones.    Critical thinking requires us to support our position and also see the other side. The heart of critical thinking is a willingness to face objections to ones own beliefs, to adopt a skeptical attitude not only toward views opposed to our own but also toward our own common sense  that is, toward views that seem to us as obviously right (Barnet et al. 12)  Kim Davis at the county clerkââ¬â¢s office in Morehead, Ky., in 2015.  Issue: Gay Marriage Licenses  In a 2015 case from Kentucky, Kim Davis refused to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.  Who has a say in the matter? What is affected by this issue?  Letââ¬â¢s work on the three questions on page 10.  Why are we talking about this issue? How does this affect people who are not gay?  News Article  Gay man denied marriage license by Kim Davis challenging her for county clerk: I want to bring ââ¬Ëpeople back togetherââ¬â¢  Obstacles to Critical Thinking    The topic is too controversial.  The topic hits ââ¬Å"too close to home.â⬠ Personal experience with topic.  The topic disgusts you.    Generating Ideas: Writing as a Way of Thinking  Writing helps writers to think. Prewriting, Brainstorming, clustering, lists,  Confronting Unfamiliar Issues  Since college can not prepare you for every possible issue you will face, it seeks to equip you with tools, methods, and habits of mind that enable you to confront arguments about any potential issue.  Identifying and Examining Assumptions  Assumptions may be explicit or implicit, stated or unstated.  Implicit Assumption: one that is not stated and often taken for granted.  Explicit Assumption: a clearly stated assumption.  What assumptions do you see in the issue?  David Ermold speaks with Clerk Kim Davis as he files to run for Rowan County Clerk Wednesday, Dec. 6, 2017, in Morehead, Ky.  1st Amendment  The Bill of Rights is the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution  The 1st Amendment      
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