Your beliefs, inferences,
preferences, and decisions are only as good as your information, the values you
assign, your ability to organize your premises into good arguments, and your
ability make decisions consistent with your values. Your upbringing and your
education will give you much of your background knowledge and values.
However, current information is almost always a part of good decision making.
You might be surprised to know that:
According to a 2001 Gallup Organization poll:
| ...results suggest a significant increase in belief in a number of these experiences over the past decade, including in particular such Halloween-related issues as haunted houses, ghosts and witches. Only one of the experiences tested has seen a drop in belief since 1990: devil possession. Overall, half or more of Americans believe in two of the issues: psychic or spiritual healing, and extrasensory perception (ESP), and a third or more believe in such things as haunted houses, possession by the devil, ghosts, telepathy, extraterrestrial beings having visited earth, and clairvoyance. |
Similarly, about a 2004 Gallup poll showed that
| Forty-five percent of Americans also believe that God created human beings pretty much in their present form about 10,000 years ago. |
Despite what many people consider definitive refutation from the 911 commission
bipartisan report, many people continue to believe as they did in Aug. 2003 in a
Washington Post study:
| The Post poll, conducted Aug.
7-11, found that 62 percent of Democrats, 80 percent of Republicans and
67 percent of independents suspected a link between Hussein and 9/11. In
addition, eight in 10 Americans said it was likely that Hussein had
provided assistance to al Qaeda, and a similar proportion suspected he
had developed weapons of mass destruction. http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&contentId=A32862-2003Sep5¬Found=true |
In a 2010 poll conducted by for The Daily Kos by the nonpartisan polling firm
Research2000 discovered that
| 36 percent of self-identified Republicans believe that President Obama was not born in the United States, 22 percent are not sure, 42 percent think he is a natural citizen. |
For those who doubt Obama's citizenship, I recommend either the urban legends page on this myth or the Factcheck.org cite
Bad information and argumentation can be found in
many places. For example, according to an MSNBC report, "Nearly 40 percent
of lung disease patients believe that surgery can spread cancer by exposing the
tumors to the air — a false idea that could cost them their lives,...."
Likewise, many people believe that saliva can transmit the HIV virus. In fact,
there are only four fluids that can transmit HIV: blood, semen, breast milk, and
vaginal fluids. Nor can mosquitoes can carry the virus; mosquitoes suck blood
from the body and do not inject it.
If you find yourself interested in widespread but false beliefs, an excellent
book on the topic is discussed here

Avoiding false beliefs, cultivating true beliefs, getting the most out of your
life, and being responsible in your dealings with other people [even other
animals ;-)] all require that you take an active role in gathering, organizing,
and evaluating information. This exercise is designed to help you achieve
these goals. Below you will find a large list of five different types of
news sources from diverse viewpoints with links to their web sites. Most
of the standard news outlets are not linked below. I assume that you are
aware of CNN, etc.. More importantly, gathering information from a variety
of sources and challenging your own perspective by exploring alternative
viewpoints will give you a much greater depth of perspective. Go to AT
LEAST 7 SITES, one site from each category on the large list (below)--including at least one magazine, one science
or skepticism site, one national newspaper, one international newspaper, one
non-political/non-partisan information source, one left-leaving information
source, and right-leaning information source. Read the article titles and a few article
summaries (when given) on each site. Finally, read ONE full article from
ONE site on the large list. Next, go to one of the three most common news
outlets listed below the large list. Read an article on the same topic
from one of the three sources there (listed immediately below the list of 7 news
sources). Once you've done your reading, answer the questions on the quiz
in beachboard (The questions are also given here.).
1.) What seven sources sources did you visit?
Your magazine [1], your science or skepticism site [2], your national newspaper
[3], your international newspaper [4], your non-political/non-partisan news
source [5], your left-leaning news source [6], your right-leaning news source [7].
Make sure you copy the title exactly without the parenthetic comments.
2.) Were you aware of these sources of information before now? Write yes, no, or some in the blank [1].
3.) Were you aware of the websites for these sources of information before now? Write yes, no, or some in the blank [1].
4.) What news source, long-list news source, did you choose? Write the exact name in the blank for the category in which your source appears. Write no in the blanks for every other category. Magazine [1] Science or Skepticism [2] National Newspaper [3] International Newspaper [4] Non-political/Non-partisan News Source [5] Left-leaning news source [6] Right-leaning news source [7]. Make sure you copy the title exactly without the parenthetic comments.
5.) Which of the three major news sources did you choose [1]? Make sure you copy the title exactly without the parenthetic comments.
6.) Look at the cover page of each news source. How many articles are "headline" articles (featured prominently, e.x. pictures) in the long-list news source? Long-list news source [1] Major news source [2]
7.) Are headline articles on each main page the same articles? Write yes, no, or partially in the blank [1].
8.) What article did you read from the sources on the long list?
9.) Did the articles in the major and long-list sources report the same facts in the same fashion?
10.) Did the articles in the major and long-list sources report the same facts in the same fashion?
11.) Did one provide more information than the other?
12.) Did one provide more analysis than the other?
13.) Did the first major news source have an article on that topic, or did you have to look around?
14.) Where did each news source get their article?
15.) Which article did you find the most useful? Why?
16.) On a scale of 1-5 how useful was this exercise?
|
5 Kinds of News Sources |
||
|
Magazines Politics and General
Utne
Reader
Science and Skepticism |
Newspapers/TV/Radio United States
International English Language Papers/TV Canadian Broadcasting Corporation News (Canada) The Globe and Mail (Canada) The Toronto Star (Canada) The China Daily (China) Al Ahram (Egypt) British Broadcasting Corporation News (England) British Expat.com (England) The London Times (England) The Guardian (England) Agence France-Presse (AFP) (French) Le Monde Diplomatique (French) Deutsche-Aussenpolitik (Germany) Deutsche Welle (Germany TV) The Tehran Times (Iran) Bitterlemons.org (Israel) The Japan Times (Japan) All Africa.com (Kenya and Africa) The Moscow Times (Russia) Gazeta.ru (Russia)
|
Religion, Rights, And The Environment American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) U.S. Department of Justice Crime Stats
Non-Partisan Government Watchdogs Open Secrets.org (Campagn Contributions)
Left-Leaning Information Sources
Right-Leaning Information Sources
|
|
3 of the Most Popular News Sources |
||
| Fox News | USA Today | Yahoo News |