Critical thinking is not a linear, simple or purely cyclical process. It is complex and cyclical in nature, but can involve iterative, back-and-forth thinking that does not neatly fit into a pure cycle model. Here is a more detailed discussion of how critical thinking works:
Critical thinking involves actively and skillfully conceptualizing, applying, analyzing, synthesizing, and/or evaluating information as a guide to belief and action. It is not a step-by-step, linear process but rather an intricate, evolving cycle. At the core is a constant interaction between our mind and evidence or experiences from the world.
A basic cyclical model of critical thinking would involve the following phases: 1) Identifying and defining a problem or issue, 2) Researching relevant information from credible sources, 3) Analyzing and evaluating gathered information through reasoned judgment, 4) Drawing well-supported conclusions, 5) Testing conclusions against standards, personal beliefs or new evidence, then 6) Repeating the cycle as needed by returning to phase 1 or 2 with new insights.
The reality is far more complex than this simple cycle implies. True critical thinkers do not always move through phases in neat order, nor do they necessarily return full circle before reassessing initial conclusions or identifying new related problems to explore. Their thinking often involves an iterative process with numerous feedback loops between different stages.
For instance, after analyzing information in phase 3, a critical thinker may realize their problem definition from phase 1 was incomplete or inaccurate, requiring revisiting earlier work. Newly drawn conclusions in phase 4 could lead right back to phase 2 if more research is needed before verification. Standards and beliefs assessed in phase 5 may change due to insights generated along the way. And so critical thinking is perhaps best described not as one cycle but as a continuously evolving network of interconnected cognitive processes.
Several other key aspects make critical thinking distinctly non-linear and non-simple:
- It tackles ill-defined, complex problems without clear answers, requiring flexible, multi-facated exploration across disciplines.
- It considers diverse, sometimes conflicting perspectives rather than moving towards a single conclusion.
- It allows for reasonable doubts and uncertainties, wherein thinker’s own assumptions are open for scrutiny.
- It requires high-level cognitive skills of analysis, evaluation, inference, explanation, interpretation that are not stepwise but interact in sophisticated ways.
- It depends greatly on thinker’s evolving background knowledge, developing expertise and ability to metacognate on their own thinking process.
While models depict critical thinking as cyclical, it is better characterized as a dynamic, iterative process with complex interconnections between different phases of reasoning and evaluation. True critical thinkers do not simply move from point A to B to C but engage in continual refinement of understanding through recursive inquiry and open-minded skepticism. Their thought process resists oversimplification and reflects an effort to engage with ill-structured problems from multiple perspectives simultaneously over time.