Saturday, May 29, 2010

We tend to substitute opinions for thinking

Is Thinking Back in Fashion, Lane Wallace, The Atlantic June 2009. See our earlier Pigeon Post article on Imagination in children's stories as well as Science Experiments in the Kitchen.
"We're capable, but not practiced, in the art of thinking," says Phil Terry, CEO of Creative Good, a business consulting company, and the founder of a web-based reading and lecture organization called Reading Odyssey. "We're all endowed with curiosity, but a lot of us, for very good reasons, stop using it after a certain point. After a certain age, we tend to substitute opinions for thinking."
[snip]
Which brings us to Aristotle. Wisdom, according to Aristotle, isn't an object anyone acquires. It's a habit; something that emerges from a particular way of processing information and engaging with others and the world. And a habit that's essential for us to develop to make better decisions in business and life.

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