{"id":4124,"date":"1951-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1951-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1951-vol-32-no-9-on-straight-thinking\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:51:15","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:51:15","slug":"september-1951-vol-32-no-9-on-straight-thinking","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1951-vol-32-no-9-on-straight-thinking\/","title":{"rendered":"September 1951 &#8211; Vol. 32, No. 9 &#8211; On Straight Thinking"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Life is full of irritations. Some of them                     are little things, like a bad-tasting cigarette or a                     crowd blocking a doorway. Others, like misunderstanding one                     another and not being able to explain ourselves clearly, are                     more serious and take greater toll of our good nature. Our                     tension mounts, our humour subsides, and first thing we know                     we are smothered under a pile of incidents which, perhaps                     unimportant in themselves, have the power to destroy our enjoyment                     of life.<\/p>\n<p> Thinking about our personality and social problems will                     not by itself rid us of our worries and fears, but thinking                     <em>straight <\/em>about problems, hopes and plans will make                     us surer of ourselves, increase our confidence, and thereby                     reduce both worry and fear.<\/p>\n<p>Straight thinking doesn&#8217;t depend entirely upon logic or                     anything like that, but it does demand that we take time to                     think. We don&#8217;t want too much stopping to think, of course.                     That would denude us of ideas, vitality, and individuality.                     We need the golden mean between too much concentration on                     thought and too little thinking about things.<\/p>\n<p>There are fallacies in thinking of which we must beware.                     It is not always the truth of basic ideas that counts toward                     accuracy; we must also take into account the way they are                     put together. If we say &#8220;The moon is made of green cheese&#8221;                     we are dealing with two realities &#8211; the moon and green cheese                     &#8211; but we put them together falsely, and our judgment is wrong.<\/p>\n<p>Logic is the science given over to describing forms of thought                     which we need to use if we are to reason validly. It is not                     a difficult subject, but the words and names it employs are                     likely to frighten people away.<\/p>\n<h3>The Principles of Thinking<\/h3>\n<p>There are two ways of making a decision. We may make observations,                     weigh the possibilities, and decide what to do or say. That                     is the rational way. Or we may decide without conscious thinking,                     as we so often do about the little things in life.<\/p>\n<p>We should be in a continual turmoil if we had to think consciously                     and by rule about every little thing we did during the day.                     It would be harrowing, we should lose a great deal of our                     spontaneity, it would become harder and harder to accomplish                     anything, and we should be continually getting lost in byways.                     The person who is indecisive about little things is like puss                     chasing her tail, the centre of a complex drama but not getting                     anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>Thinking is not easy. Some of us imagine that we are thinking                     when we are only sitting at ease watching a memory movie.                     Reverie can be deceptive. We may sit down to ponder a problem,                     and with a corner of one eye on a corner of the truth we may                     spend an hour wandering without profit amid things that interest                     us but are not important to the question at hand.<\/p>\n<h3>Logic<\/h3>\n<p>Logic is a study that extends over a lifetime. Indeed, what                     we have today of logical reasoning is the outcome of many                     lifetimes devoted to study, but all that we ordinary people                     &#8211; business men, teachers, club workers, members of societies,                     and everyone who is in daily contact with others &#8211; all we                     need is to know and apply a few elementary rules.<\/p>\n<p>Here are four principles for testing our thinking:<\/p>\n<p>(1) The principle of <em>Identity<\/em>. Everything is what                     it is (therefore, you say to yourself or to your argumentative                     friend, it is no good raising a quibble on this score.)<\/p>\n<p>(2) The principle of <em>Contradiction<\/em>. Contradictory                     judgments cannot both be true (so you do not entertain the                     thought or try to put across the idea that something can both                     be and not be.)<\/p>\n<p>(3) The principle of <em>Excluded middle<\/em>. Everything                     must either be or not be: it is impossible to mention anything                     together with a quality or circumstance without allowing that                     the quality or circumstance either belongs to the thing or                     does not. Your answer must be &#8220;Yes&#8221; or &#8220;No&#8221;. (This is a rule                     that will keep us from trying to ride two horses in different                     directions at the same time.)<\/p>\n<p>(4) The principle of <em>Sufficient Reason<\/em>. There is                     sufficient reason for everything. (So you tell yourself when                     something perversely refuses to turn out the way you want                     it to: nothing happens without a reason why it should be so                     rather than otherwise.) Some logicians think this principle                     has no place in logical doctrine, but it is a very useful                     tool to the business man, and, indeed, to all of us who find                     ourselves wishing to think straight.<\/p>\n<p>Using logic will not give us the truth in answer to our                     questions, but it will help us to reach the truth. To learn                     that truth can be reached only by straight thinking, and that                     sometimes the truth we find may challenge our cherished beliefs,                     is the beginning of a philosophy that can make us great.<\/p>\n<h3>About Common Sense<\/h3>\n<p>The processes of thinking may appear cold and intellectual,                     whereas we know that life calls for decisions and actions                     in which emotions and imagination play a part. Well, many                     of these decisions and actions are based, we are accustomed                     to boasting, on &#8220;common sense&#8221;, and logical thinking is merely                     the science of common sense. The man of eminent common sense,                     the woman of good judgment, are persons whose minds think                     clearly and are not influenced by prejudice, narrow views,                     pig-headedness and false values.<\/p>\n<p>This is a virtue we may call &#8220;seeing things whole.&#8221; To think                     straight, a person&#8217;s observation must include the unwelcome                     as well as the welcome facts; he must be able to separate                     the important from the unimportant; he must take note of uninteresting                     facts that have a bearing on the question, and not only of                     the facts which have intrinsic interest for him. The man who                     wishes to think effectively cannot afford to wear blinkers.<\/p>\n<p>Nor can the straight-thinking man fixate on beliefs,                     however well-established they seem, and refuse to consider                     new or different facts that might affect them.<\/p>\n<h3>Some Practical Helps<\/h3>\n<p>It may seem silly to talk about &#8220;system&#8221; in connection with                     thinking. Many of us have been accustomed to thinking about                     thinking as some vagrant faculty that sometimes surprises                     us by being right. The whole point of this Monthly Letter                     is that while a method does not supply thought and inspiration,                     it does guide them, and can make our thinking come out right                     more often.<\/p>\n<p>One elementary rule for successful thinking may be adapted                     from the Boy Scout trick for finding a lost object. You decide                     approximately where the object may be, then start in a wide                     circle and walk in ever-narrowing circles around that                     spot. The object may not be found precisely in the centre                     &#8211; if it were always there it would not be lost &#8211; but the system                     is better in its results than casting far and wide in erratic                     criss-crossing lines.<\/p>\n<p>Almost, as it were, growing out of this is another guide:                     don&#8217;t try to perceive the whole of a complex situation at                     once. Pay careful attention to details. Chase away the moths                     of distraction, which can so quickly and stealthily riddle                     our thinking with holes.<\/p>\n<p>Let your imagination have free play within the bounds you                     have set. This is one of the important requirements of an                     executive: to allow his imagination, centred upon a problem,                     to play with all the knowledge it has accumulated about this                     or closely related problems. It is by combination of the old                     and the new, fused by contemplation, that the creation of                     solutions is brought about.<\/p>\n<p>Often, in these Letters, we have urged the value of writing                     things down, and nowhere else is this device so prolific of                     gratification as in thinking.<\/p>\n<p>Ideas and conceptions which seem utterly chaotic when circling                     and colliding in the mind become clear and separated into                     orbits and systems and galaxies when written or sketched on                     paper. There is in the very act of taking a pencil in hand                     something imperative which the most wandering mind seldom                     resists.<\/p>\n<p>Writing things down brings us face to face with facts, and                     gives us the chance to study them minutely. It shows us new                     relationships between facts. And it gives us the opportunity                     to go back and check the correctness of our thinking. By its                     clarity, it tends to eliminate wishful thinking.<\/p>\n<h3>Reasoning from Facts<\/h3>\n<p>The choice of facts from which to proceed often presents                     a difficult problem. If we keep in mind the purpose of our                     train of thought, and select the facts which have the most                     vital bearing on it, we shall not go far wrong.<\/p>\n<p>Facts are the material of thinking, and there are four principal                     sources: our direct observation; our memories; reports provided                     by other persons, and self-evident truths.<\/p>\n<p>Having gathered and stored facts, and decided what facts                     are useful and true in the case under thought, we need to                     put them together in a form that will give a valid conclusion.                     One of the best ways is by throwing statements containing                     the facts into a syllogism, which is merely an argument consisting                     of three propositions. The first two propositions state known                     facts, the premises, and the third is the conclusion. The                     most common example in teaching logic is this:<\/p>\n<p>All men are mortal<\/p>\n<p>Jones is a man<\/p>\n<p>Jones is mortal.<\/p>\n<p>Here is an argument in which a general statement is made                     (All <em>Men <\/em>are mortal), then a particular statement                     (Jones is a <em>Man<\/em>) which brings Jones within the wide                     statement, and this leads to the conclusion (Jones is mortal).<\/p>\n<p>It must be noted that the syllogism does not make truth,                     but demonstrates it. The premises must be correct. If the                     facts stated in the premises are correct, and if the syllogism                     conforms to the rules, then accuracy of the conclusion is                     assured. (A little Pelican book, <em>Thinking to Some Purpose<\/em>,                     by L. Susan Stebbing, covers the principles and practices                     of logic in an understandable way, and provides us with all                     the usable knowledge of this subject we need for everyday                     affairs.)<\/p>\n<h3>Intuition and Experience<\/h3>\n<p>There are many persons who pooh-pooh logic. They rely                     upon intuition, as did Lucetta in Shakespeare&#8217;s <em>The Two                     Gentlemen of Verona<\/em>: &#8220;I have no other but a woman&#8217;s reason;                     I think him so, because I think him so.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Intuition has its big and important place in life. There                     are certain truths which the human mind perceives without                     effort. Our sciences, our philosophy, and our business are                     built upon truths obtained through intuition. Science calls                     such truths &#8220;axioms,&#8221; philosophy calls them &#8220;innate ideas&#8221;,                     and business men call them &#8220;horse-sense.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Most persons of responsibility are more readily convinced                     by experience than by any other means. Life is a succession                     of lessons enforced by punishment for mistakes and rewarded                     by the good outcome of doing things right. To link these experiences                     in meaningful ways gives us satisfaction, because of these                     things we are <em>certain<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>But we need not confine ourselves to our own experiences.                     It would be a dreadful prospect if every child entering the                     world had to wait and learn by experience the burning quality                     of fire, how to catch and cook his dinner, and that he can&#8217;t                     successfully tackle a lion unarmed.<\/p>\n<p>The man who depends upon his own experiences has relatively                     few materials to work with. That is why technical books and                     trade papers are used to make available to us knowledge of                     the techniques and practices used effectively by others.<\/p>\n<h3>Cause and Effect<\/h3>\n<p>Taking the experiences we ourselves have had, and the experiences                     of others, we may analyse them to determine what made them                     turn out as they did. By that means we find new combinations,                     introduce new factors, and perhaps discover new applications.<\/p>\n<p>In doing this we shall find that not every result is truly                     ascribed to the commonly-thought-of cause. Perhaps                     the most usual fault in our reasoning is the assignment of                     the wrong cause to an observed happening.<\/p>\n<p>A few hints about the pitfalls may be of service. It is                     wise to look for a third factor in every cause-and-effect                     relationship. The apparent cause and the apparent effect may                     be moving together because some other event is bearing on                     both alike. This is a precaution particularly necessary in                     studying business statistics, comparing the results in two                     departments during a year&#8217;s operations, or relating, let us                     say, the rise and fall of the money supply in Canada to that                     in the United States.<\/p>\n<p>We know very little about real causes. Under certain conditions,                     we have observed, certain events are always followed by certain                     others. We need to guard against thinking in a routine way                     that because this came after that, then this is because of                     that. The same result may have several antecedents. For example,                     it may be true that if there are too many cooks the broth                     will be spoiled, but it is also true that spoiled broth may                     result from the inefficiency of one cook.<\/p>\n<p>Much confusion may be avoided by being definite about the                     things we are discussing. &#8220;Define your terms&#8221; is good logical                     doctrine &#8211; and it is fully as useful to the business executive                     as to the philosopher. But definition is difficult, it is                     a severe test of mental skill, and it is often looked upon                     as tiresome.<\/p>\n<p>Definition must bring out a distinguishing attribute of                     the notion we are defining, and it must be clearer than the                     notion we are defining. Mr. Friar gave irritable confirmation                     of the difficulty when he said in Arnold <em>Bennett&#8217;s Dream                     of Destiny<\/em>: &#8220;You&#8217;ve found me out. You&#8217;ve asked me for                     a definition. All you subtle people do that. I can&#8217;t define.                     I never could. I can only state.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>From Definition to Judgment<\/h3>\n<p>After gathering facts, observing happenings, recalling experiences                     of ourselves or of others, and defining both our objective                     and the terms we are using we proceed to reason things out.<\/p>\n<p>Two ways of doing this are by induction and deduction. Induction                     is arguing that what is true of an individual must be true                     of the class to which it belongs; deduction is arguing that                     what is true of a class must be true of an individual in that                     class. Most of our knowledge is obtained by a combination                     of the two.<\/p>\n<p>At the point to which we have reasoned by either induction                     or deduction we frame a hypothesis, which is merely an opinion                     we hold tentatively while we test it. We assume that such-and-such                     follows as a result of so-and-so, and that when                     similar conditions exist in future, the same thing will happen.                     If we find that our hypothesis is correct, so far as observations                     which we consider adequate go, and that such-and-such                     never happens except under the conditions that we have decided                     are necessary, we will conclude that we have reached the truth.                     Even if the hypothesis falls down, the act of framing and                     testing it has cleared the ground, and we have fewer possibilities                     to cover in our next attempt to find the truth.<\/p>\n<p>The danger to be avoided in this kind of thinking is that                     of forming an unbreakable attachment for a pet hypothesis,                     so that divorce from it seems heartbreaking. Methods of thinking                     are not subject to sentimental feeling: they are merely devices                     which we use as a means to acquiring truth and controlling                     facts.<\/p>\n<p>When we frame propositions, which can be the first tests                     of hypotheses as well as stepping stones to truths derived                     from hypotheses, we take a big practical step toward thinking                     clearly. There are four forms of proposition which we use                     in deductive reasoning, and it will be seen that when we have                     fitted our thought into asserting something in one or other                     of these forms we have eliminated a great deal of woolly thinking.                     The propositions are named &#8220;A E I O&#8221;, with the following meanings:<\/p>\n<p>A&#8230;the universal affirmative (All A&#8217;s are X&#8217;s)<\/p>\n<p>E&#8230;the universal negative (No A is an X)<\/p>\n<p>I&#8230;the partial affirmative (Some A&#8217;s are X&#8217;s)<\/p>\n<p>O&#8230;the partial negative (Some A&#8217;s are not X&#8217;s)<\/p>\n<p>The proposition lays before our own minds or the minds of                     others the result of an act of judgment, in which we have                     brought together two ideas. It is always a choice between                     two and only two alternatives at any given time.<\/p>\n<h3>Enemies of Thinking<\/h3>\n<p>The first enemy of constructive thinking is purposeless                     reverie, or day-dreaming. This is a kind of intellectual                     vagrancy indulged in by surface thinkers, who are the only                     unprogressive people in the world.<\/p>\n<p>Next is prejudice, which closes the door to truth and knowledge.                     One mark of an educated man is the degree of his open-mindedness.                     A common sort of prejudiced thinking is to hold an opinion                     more strongly than the evidence warrants. Some prejudices                     are caused by emotional bias, under the influence of which                     we select incidents favourable to them, fail to notice anything                     that tells against them, and then proceed to use our favourable                     cases as &#8220;proof&#8221;.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes we jump to conclusions. We have a likeable idea                     in our minds, and we assume that it is true, then proceed                     to use it as a foundation upon which to base our reasoning                     toward that very conclusion.<\/p>\n<p>Then there are faults due to a mistake in reasoning. One                     common mistake is to argue from an unqualified statement to                     a statement about a special case: &#8220;democratic institutions                     are the best, therefore they must work well in India.&#8221; Or,                     on the contrary, we may argue from a specially qualified case                     to a conclusion that ignores the qualification.<\/p>\n<p>We shall find, as we progress in thinking straight, the                     importance of words. They are the very instrument of thinking;                     without them we should be as ignorant as the beasts of the                     field. Words provide us with nets in which we catch thoughts                     and ideas; they are the material in which we encase our thinking                     to build ideals.<\/p>\n<p>We should try to understand clearly the words we use in                     our own thinking, and to convey to our hearers what precisely                     it is that we are using these words to say.<\/p>\n<h3>A Few Bonus Virtues<\/h3>\n<p>Straight thinking is good for us because of many dividends                     it pays. It helps to release our tensions, to heal our disappointments,                     to cure our indecision and to increase our courage.<\/p>\n<p>Tensions are released when they find an outlet, and what                     better outlet could there be for the pent-up forces within                     us than thinking some problem through to its solution? Even                     to go back, at the day&#8217;s end, to some decision made, and analyse                     it in the light of a few elementary rules of thought, may                     ease our minds by confirming our judgment, or, if calm thought                     dictates otherwise, we may proceed to correct the mistaken                     decision, with consequent peace of mind.<\/p>\n<p>Disappointment, coming upon us like twinges of sudden pain,                     can be tackled by our thought. So long as we can think, there                     is no need to flutter like a wounded bird. Disappointment                     can be wholesome medicine if out of it we learn the possibilities                     for good that we have in our minds.<\/p>\n<h3>Meditative Thinking<\/h3>\n<p>Most of us, while agreeing that we should be better able                     to think if we used some of the knowledge glanced at in this                     Letter, will say that we have not time. Pages could be written                     about the fallacy in this thought: about the extra time it                     takes to fix up mistakes made because of shallow or too-fast                     thinking: about the emotional disturbances brought on by trying                     to think of too many things in the course of a day&#8217;s work;                     about the physical breakdowns caused by over-loaded brains                     forcing a slow-down.<\/p>\n<p>When we learn to think with some degree of order about the                     everyday affairs of our lives, we shall be in the happy position                     of having time to think about things that really gratify and                     relax us.<\/p>\n<p>All through the day there is no solitude; always the door                     opens and someone comes in, but in our own minds there is                     a chance to be alone. We can have the same satisfying feeling                     as if, when on a hike, we walk a hundred steps away from the                     road, into a woods or a glen. By the mere being in an atmosphere                     of serenity our nature grows porous to gracious thoughts,                     and in silent conversation with ourselves we rebuild exhausted                     stores of thought and contemplation.<\/p>\n<p>There are times when we may not wish to be alone with our                     thoughts. We may wish to tell our thoughts, and pick up for                     meditation the thoughts of others, The solitude that is necessary                     to good thinkers is not isolation, but separation from the                     stress and turmoil of the man-made world. It is a good                     and a health-giving thing to have a friend with whom                     to think and talk.<\/p>\n<p>They are lucky persons in whom the sense of wonder and delight                     are kept forever fresh and who have friends with whom to share                     spiritual thoughts. They can never be poor in the things that                     matter most. They are people in whom the art of thinking is                     always making the world to be born again.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[31],"class_list":["post-4124","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-31"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>September 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 9 - On Straight Thinking - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/september-1951-vol-32-no-9-on-straight-thinking\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"September 1951 - Vol. 32, No. 9 - On Straight Thinking - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Life is full of irritations. 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Some of them are little things, like a bad-tasting cigarette or a crowd blocking a doorway. Others, like misunderstanding one another and not being able to explain ourselves clearly, are more serious and take greater toll of our good nature. 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