Skepticism 101 how to think like a scientist
(2013)

Nonfiction

Audiobook CD

Call Numbers:
CD/149.73/SHERMER,M

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Audiobooks CD/149.73/SHERMER,M Available

Details

PUBLISHED
Chantilly, VA : The Teaching Company, [2013]
©2013
DESCRIPTION

9 audio discs (approximately 540 minutes) : digital, CD audio ; 12 cm + 1 course guidebook (iv, 181 pages : illustrations ; 19 cm.)

ISBN/ISSN
9781598039528 IC9388A-01, 1598039520 IC9388A-02, PB9388A
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Compact discs

"Nobel prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman said, "The first principle is that you must not fool yourself- and you are the easiest person to fool." These words are no less insightful today than they were when he wrote them in 1985. Despite our best efforts, we are all vulnerable to believing things without using logic or having proper evidence- and it doesn't matter how educated or well read we are. Our brains seem to be hardwired to have our beliefs come first and explanations for our beliefs second. And although we are skilled at recognizing the cognitive biases in other people's thinking, we often have blinders on when it comes to our own. Professor Michael Shermer of Claremont Graduate University and Chapman University calls the hallmarks of skepticism the "best tools ever devised in human history for thinking about anything," including life's biggest questions. In Skepticism 101: How to Think like a Scientist, he reveals how to use these concepts and techniques to better comprehend the world around you. Over the course of 18 thought-provoking lectures that will surprise, challenge, and entertain you, you will learn how to think, not just what to think- and you'll come to understand why extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."--Course description from distributor's web page

Course no. 9388

Volume 1 of program contains twelve lectures and Volume 2 of program contains six lectures; the length of each lecture is: ca. 30 min. The entire program consists of eighteen lectures

Lecture notes and program information contained in course guidebook

Unabridged

Lecturer: Professor Michael Shermer, Claremont Graduate University and Chapman University

Additional Credits

Additional Titles