This afternoon, I went to a lecture that my professor,
Cristen Millet, was giving in Borland building. She talked about her work as a
professional artist, telling us conceptual and historical backgrounds that are
the underlying basis for her current work. Much of her art is about medical
history, specifically as it relates to the female body and reproductive system.
This was interesting from an artistic, historical and social perspective. Much
of the scientific speculation of early medical studies was entirely wrong; for
example, one medieval diagram depicts a seven-chambered uterus, each chamber
designated male, female or hermaphroditic. The men who were proposing this
theory of female anatomy had never actually seen a uterus; this was in a
pre-dissection era, and the diagrams were based entirely upon speculation. It
seems strange to me that this theory would be developed with so little basis.
What is far more alarming, however, is the fact that this was considered
factual with absolutely no evidence to back it up. While we surely do not have
anything so absurd in modern textbooks and historical medical practices seem
barbaric to our modern sensibilities, I believe that it is important to keep occurrences
such as these present in our minds. People tent to regard anything that is
placed under the umbrella of “science” as indisputable fact, and this is simply
not true. For all of the vast knowledge that humans have acquired about the
world, there is so much more that is beyond out understanding. In the future,
people will certainly look back at our contemporary beliefs and some of them
will be seen as misguided or wrong. I am not saying that scientific advancement
is unimportant. What I do strongly believe, though, is that it is important for
people to have a questioning mind. Just because knowledge is “institutional”
does not mean that it is undoubtedly correct. In formal education settings like
universities, “critical thinking” is encouraged, but sometimes critical
thinking is presented as the ability to solve complicated or creative problems.
I propose that critical thinking means to be critical of what you hear–to
question and doubt and be skeptical. In that way, I think that critical
thinking is vital.
Mary Cate, I totally agree with what you are saying about critical thinking. We as a society need to be able to critically analyze what we are hearing and be able to decide whether or not it is accurate. Especially in the current society of social media and false advertising, there is a lot of false information out there, making it even more important that people know how to correctly analyze information and it's sources. Great post!
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