33 min

Thinking Well in High Stakes Situations Dare to Think | Mere Liberty Podcast

    • Philosophy

Thinking Well in High Stakes Situations| Show Notes TIP JAR: https://donate.stripe.com/aEUdUE5YodhZgkUeUV 
Summary It's easy to believe high stakes situations - like a pandemic - create an imperative to act first. But this is false! We cannot take purposeful action, or well-reasoned action without thinking first. This is counterintuitive to most us. When we're under pressure to make a life-altering decisions, it's easy to believe a "shoot first, ask questions later" approach might work well. But especially when dealing with complex problems that affect us in various way, high stakes situations create an imperative to think first - before acting! To compound the issue, getting others to make particular decisions in similar situations means we are left with the power of persuasion. This is what makes life difficult. It's not only that we experience problems, but those problems are dynamic, and we cannot use force against others to make decisions we want them to.
In this episode of Dare to Think, I've republished a discussion I had with Doug Stuart at the Libertarian Christian Institute. We're discussing the courses I teach online at mereliberty.com about how to build and develop the skills of thinking well. Join me, Kerry Baldwin as we Dare to Think about the importance of thinking well in high stakes situations.

If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review on iTunes, Spotify, Amazon, YouTube, Rumble, or Odysee.
Main Points of Discussion 01:49 Intro; Human Action - Do groups act?
05:53 Can people do things without thinking?
09:36 What do we mean by high stakes?
15:32 High stakes decisions and imperatives to make a decision
 20:25 How should we treat experts and are they making decisions for us?
27:57 Why we can't take action without thinking first?
30:20 Final thoughts
Resource Links The Liberty Seminar opens for registration three times a year with each semester. mereliberty.com/libertyseminar
Use DISCOUNT CODE DTT2022 at checkout to receive 30% off the SUMMER 2022 session.
Offer expires April 17th. If you find this after the deadline, sign up for the waitlist at mereliberty.com/waitlist
Waitlistees will be notified first of upcoming registration and also receive an exclusive discount just for joining the waitlist. 
Join my monthly newsletter! mereliberty.com/signup
Become a monthly MEMBER and receive premium rewards mereliberty.com/membership

Thinking Well in High Stakes Situations| Show Notes TIP JAR: https://donate.stripe.com/aEUdUE5YodhZgkUeUV 
Summary It's easy to believe high stakes situations - like a pandemic - create an imperative to act first. But this is false! We cannot take purposeful action, or well-reasoned action without thinking first. This is counterintuitive to most us. When we're under pressure to make a life-altering decisions, it's easy to believe a "shoot first, ask questions later" approach might work well. But especially when dealing with complex problems that affect us in various way, high stakes situations create an imperative to think first - before acting! To compound the issue, getting others to make particular decisions in similar situations means we are left with the power of persuasion. This is what makes life difficult. It's not only that we experience problems, but those problems are dynamic, and we cannot use force against others to make decisions we want them to.
In this episode of Dare to Think, I've republished a discussion I had with Doug Stuart at the Libertarian Christian Institute. We're discussing the courses I teach online at mereliberty.com about how to build and develop the skills of thinking well. Join me, Kerry Baldwin as we Dare to Think about the importance of thinking well in high stakes situations.

If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review on iTunes, Spotify, Amazon, YouTube, Rumble, or Odysee.
Main Points of Discussion 01:49 Intro; Human Action - Do groups act?
05:53 Can people do things without thinking?
09:36 What do we mean by high stakes?
15:32 High stakes decisions and imperatives to make a decision
 20:25 How should we treat experts and are they making decisions for us?
27:57 Why we can't take action without thinking first?
30:20 Final thoughts
Resource Links The Liberty Seminar opens for registration three times a year with each semester. mereliberty.com/libertyseminar
Use DISCOUNT CODE DTT2022 at checkout to receive 30% off the SUMMER 2022 session.
Offer expires April 17th. If you find this after the deadline, sign up for the waitlist at mereliberty.com/waitlist
Waitlistees will be notified first of upcoming registration and also receive an exclusive discount just for joining the waitlist. 
Join my monthly newsletter! mereliberty.com/signup
Become a monthly MEMBER and receive premium rewards mereliberty.com/membership

33 min