Critical Thinking becomes more “critical’ in today’s “VUCA” digital new normal.
Critical Thinking is the rational analysis (often with creativity embedded in it) and evaluation of the issues in order to make a fair judgment. There is only a very small fraction of true Critical Thinkers who can always dig through the root causes of problems. How to debunk the myth of Critical Thinking, and how to apply Critical Thinking to ask good questions for either problems-solving or making sound judgment and effective decisions timely?

Critical Thinkers often starts with asking “WHY,” rather than jump into “HOW”: Critical Thinking needs to combine different thinking processes, to gather a mass of information, break it apart and reconstructed with a level of accuracy, projecting futuristic events, numbers, etc., and it’s complex thought process involving thinking differently, or thinking out of the box. It is about breaking the rules that have been created through experience. So experience is inside the box. Critical Thinkers live out of the box, ask open questions to collect relevant information. Problem solvers who can leverage Critical Thinking are always chasing root cause by asking the big 'WHY' questions without too rushing up into HOW.
Critical Thinkers do not just ask one or two random questions, they ask in a structural way continually: Critical Thinking as an iterative process leads to a series of refinements based on learning and experience. Critical Thinking implies some systematic methodology, employing and applying the criteria deemed appropriate by the thinkers involved, to arrive at the tangible and reproducible truth - the commonly accepted objective, testable or measurable, time-bound reality. So Critical Thinkers continue to learn and make inquiries. Rather than "good" or "bad,” Critical Thinking is ever-improving. In the business world, at least, you can't always wait for the "best" decision to emerge. You have to make the best decision you can, based on a structural way to make inquiries, and a sound process to make a better choice, and have the gut to admit when a mid-course correction is in order.

Critical Thinking becomes more “critical’ in today’s “VUCA” digital new normal. Even the best Critical Thinkers have blind spots. Because we all have a cognitive bias, whether individually or collectively, such truths derived by imperfect people using imperfect processes will necessarily leave a measure of uncertainty. Thus, any question, whether perfect or imperfect, will by definition be imperfectly answered or unanswered. Still, Critical Thinking helps to frame the right problems via ask better questions and solve them more effectively.
0 comments:
Post a Comment