'Thought' or 'thinking' is a
mental process which allows beings to
model the world, and so to deal with it effectively according to their goals, plans, ends and
desires.
Words referring to similar concepts and processes include
cognition,
sentience,
consciousness,
idea, and
imagination.
''Thinking'' involves the cerebral manipulation of
information, as when we form
concepts, engage in
problem solving,
reason and make
decisions.
Thinking is a higher
cognitive function and the analysis of thinking processes is part of
cognitive psychology.
Basic process
The basic mechanics of the human
brain reflect a process of
pattern matching or rather
recognition. In a "moment of
reflection", new situations and new
experiences are judged against
recalled ones and
judgements are made. In order to make these judgements, the
intellect maintains present
experience and sorts relevant past experience. It does this while keeping present and past experience distinct and separate. The intellect can mix, match, merge, sift, and sort
concepts, perceptions, and experience. This process is called
reasoning.
Logic is the science of
reasoning. The awareness of this process of reasoning is access consciousness (see philosopher
Ned Block).
Conceptualization
Thinking can be modeled by a field (like a mathematical representation of an electro-magnetic field, but with each point in the field representing a point of
consciousness).
Patterns are
formed and judgements are made within the field. Some philosophers (
panpsychists/panexperientialists - see ) believe the entire field is conscious in and of itself, a consciousness field. They say consciousness creates thinking, thinking and other brain processes do not create consciousness. Other scientists (for example
Bernard Baars) think of it as a workspace. Some philosophers (for example
Thomas Nagel) have said they do not have a clue as to how we are
aware of our thinking.
A thought can be said to be whatever arises in the dualistic mind. A dualistic mind is one in which the one from which the thought arises considers himself to be separate from other forms. A thought may be an idea, an image, a sound, a smell, a touch or even an emotional feeling that arises from the brain.
Aids to thinking
#Use of
models,
symbols,
diagrams and
pictures.
#Use of
abstraction to simplify the effort of thinking.
#Use of
metasyntactic variables to simplify the effort of naming.
#Use of
iteration and
recursion to converge on a
concept.
#Limitation of
attention to aid
concentration and focus on a concept. Use of peace and quiet to aid concentration.
#Goal setting and goal revision. Simply letting the concept percolate in the subconscious, and waiting for the concept to re-surface.
#Talking with like-minded people. Resorting to
communication with others, if this is allowed.
#
Working backward from the goal.
#Desire for
learning.
Pitfalls
#
Fads.
#Self-
delusions: inability to confront relevant issues (
roadblocks).
See also
★
List of basic thinking-related topics
★
Lists of thinking-related topics
References
★
Eric Baum (2004). ''What is Thought'', Chapter Two: The Mind is a Computer Program. MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-02548-5
External Links
★
The Uniqueness of Human Recursive Thinking
★
The Psychology of Emotions, Feelings and Thoughts, Free Online Book
★
Nature of Human Thought