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New!

Thinking Critically, 13th Edition

John Chaffee, Cheri Carr, Shannon Proctor

  • {{checkPublicationMessage('Published', '2025-08-22T00:00:00+0000')}}
Starting At $77.95 See pricing and ISBN options
Thinking Critically 13th Edition by John Chaffee/Cheri Carr/Shannon Proctor

Overview

Empower students to become sophisticated thinkers with Chaffee/Carr/Proctor’s “Thinking Critically” 13th Edition, which teaches the fundamental cognitive process allowing students to develop higher-order thinking needed for academic and career success. Students learn to think critically and creatively about subjects drawn from academic disciplines, current issues and life experiences. The authors begin with basic skills related to personal experience, then progress to more sophisticated reasoning skills required for abstract contexts. Chapters provide an overview of a significant aspect of critical thinking such as problem-solving, perception and the nature of beliefs. Activities and writing assignments invite active participation, where students critically examine others' thinking, as well as their own. Readings engage students to think about complex issues from various perspectives.

John Chaffee

John Chaffee, Ph.D., is professor emeritus of philosophy at The City University of New York, where he has developed a Philosophy and Critical Thinking program that annually involves 25 faculty and 3,000 students. He is a nationally recognized figure in the area of critical thinking, having authored leading textbooks and many professional articles. He has also conducted numerous conference presentations and workshops throughout the country. In developing programs to teach people to think more effectively in all academic subjects and areas of life, Dr. Chaffee has received grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Ford Foundation, the Annenberg Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. He was selected as New York Educator of the Year and received the Distinguished Faculty Award for Diversity in Teaching in Higher Education.

Cheri Carr

Cheri Carr, Ph.D., is a professor of philosophy at CUNY’s LaGuardia Community College, where she is the director of LaGuardia’s Philosophy for Children Internship, a program designed to educate college students in philosophical and creative thinking through engaging young children in the life of the mind. She is known for her research integrating feminist ethics with Deleuzo-Guattarian frameworks of thought, and has presented her work at conferences and workshops worldwide. She is the author of "Deleuze’s Kantian Ethos: Critique as a Way of Life" (2014) and the co-author of "Deleuze and the Schizoanalysis of Feminism" (2019).

Shannon Proctor

Shannon Proctor, Ph.D., is an associate professor of philosophy in the Humanities Department as well as the Liberal Arts Coordinator at LaGuardia Community College. Her research explores the interconnections among habituality, substance use and freedom with a particular focus on the ways in which substance misuse disorders temporal experience. She is the author of “The Temporal Structure of Habits and the Possibility of Transformation” (2016). Her pedagogical work focuses on the importance of argumentation and interdisciplinary research skills for improving student outcomes. Between 2019–20 she was a co-PI on an National Endowment for the Humanities grant on Mass Incarceration and the Humanities, which culminated in a community-wide showcase that highlighted students’ research and creative projects.
  • New readings speak to contemporary debates about gender, families, race, climate and more. Instructors can engage students in challenging conversations about these issues, eschewing the binary thinking represented by other textbooks, while helping them develop their critical reasoning skills at the same time.
  • A fully updated chapter on key concepts in critical reasoning and argumentation comes earlier in the text and allows students to develop these key skills so that they can be used throughout the rest of the semester.
  • A new approach to critical thinking about moral dilemmas introduces students to moral reasoning -- without depending upon a deeper philosophical knowledge of moral theory -- and emphasizes the development of one’s moral compass.
  • A new chapter on creative reasoning connects the power of reasoning to the lived experience of creativity.
  • There is an expanded discussion of the interconnections between critical thinking and freedom (both at the conceptual and lived dimensions of experience).
  • Each chapter includes the feature, Thinking Critically About Visuals, that engages students in comparing and evaluating images drawn from current events and popular culture.
  • Chapters 1 and 11 link critical thinking and creative thinking. Chapter 1 analyzes the creative process and develops creative thinking abilities, creating a template for approaching issues and problems, both critically and creatively. Chapter 11 reinforces these connections and encourages students to create a life philosophy.
  • Chapter 3, "Reasoning Critically," includes a section on "Constructing Extended Arguments" that presents a clear model for researching and writing argumentative essays.
1. Thinking.
2. Thinking Critically.
3. Reasoning Critically.
4. Solving Problems.
5. Perceiving and Believing.
6. Constructing Knowledge.
7. Language and Thought.
8. Forming and Applying Concepts.
9. Relating and Organizing.
10. Thinking Critically About Your Moral Compass.
11. Reasoning Creatively.
12. Thinking Critically, Living Freely.

Textbook Only Options

Traditional eBook and Print Options

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  • ISBN-10: 8214144787
  • ISBN-13: 9798214144788
  • RETAIL $77.95

  • ISBN-10: 8214144701
  • ISBN-13: 9798214144702
  • RETAIL $139.95