Menu Top
Latest Psychology NCERT Notes, Solutions and Extra Q & A (Class 11th & 12th)
11th 12th

Class 11th Chapters
1. What Is Psychology? 2. Methods Of Enquiry In Psychology 3. Human Development
4. Sensory, Attentional And Perceptual Processes 5. Learning 6. Human Memory
7. Thinking 8. Motivation And Emotion



Chapter 7 Thinking



Introduction

Thinking is a core cognitive activity, unique to humans, involving the manipulation and analysis of information. It goes beyond simple sensory input to interpret meaning and relate information to existing knowledge, creating new understanding. Thinking is essential for various cognitive processes, including problem-solving, reasoning, judging, decision-making, and creativity.

This chapter explores the nature of thinking, its components (mental images and concepts), different thinking processes, the nature and development of creative thinking, and the intricate relationship between language and thought.

We will also discuss how language develops and is used, and its connection to our thinking processes. This includes understanding different viewpoints on whether language determines thought, thought determines language, or if they have separate origins.



Nature Of Thinking

Thinking is considered the foundation of all cognitive activities. It is a higher mental process that involves manipulating and analysing information acquired from the environment or already stored in our memory. This manipulation occurs through processes like abstracting, reasoning, imagining, problem-solving, judging, and decision-making.

Thinking is typically organised and goal-directed. Most daily activities, from simple tasks to complex challenges, have a specific goal that one aims to achieve through planning, recalling previous steps, or inferring new strategies.

Thinking is an internal mental process. It cannot be directly observed but must be inferred from overt behaviour. For example, a chess player's deep thinking before a move is internal, but their subsequent move allows us to infer the strategies or evaluations they were considering.


Building Blocks Of Thought

Thinking relies on existing knowledge, which is represented mentally in the form of either mental images or words (concepts).

Forming concepts is essential for organising knowledge, making our thought processes quicker and more efficient. Categorising objects and events allows for faster retrieval and processing of information, similar to how physical items or library books are organised for easy access.

Girl forming a mental image

(An image showing a girl with thought bubbles containing visual representations, illustrating the concept of forming mental images.)

Map showing places

(A sample map with various places labelled, likely used in an activity to demonstrate the formation of mental images.)

Blank map upside down

(A blank map presented in an unusual orientation, used after viewing the first map to test recall based on the formation of mental images.)


Culture And Thinking

Cultural background significantly influences thinking styles. Research comparing American and Asian students' descriptions of pictures suggests differences: Americans focus on prominent individual objects ("analytical thinking"), while Asians focus on relationships between objects and backgrounds ("holistic thinking"). This indicates that cultural factors shape how we perceive and organise information mentally.

Illustration related to culture and thinking, possibly showing analytical vs. holistic focus

(An image potentially depicting a scene used in a cross-cultural study, like an underwater scene, to illustrate differences in what people from different cultures focus on or how they describe the scene.)



The Processes Of Thinking

Thinking encompasses various complex processes directed towards specific goals.


Problem Solving

Problem solving is thinking that is goal-directed. It involves navigating from an initial state (the problem) to an end state (the solution or goal) through a series of mental operations or steps. Problems can range from simple daily tasks to complex challenges (e.g., repairing a cycle, planning a trip, solving a math problem). The process typically involves identifying and representing the problem, planning a solution (setting sub-goals), evaluating potential solutions, executing the selected solution, and evaluating the outcome, potentially rethinking and redefining the problem and solution.

Obstacles to Solving Problems: Two major hindrances are:

Mouse making a conclusion about being a cat

(A cartoon showing a mouse saying "All cats have four legs, I have four legs, therefore I am a cat," illustrating incorrect deductive reasoning where the initial premise or inference drawn from it is flawed.)

Mental Operation Nature of Problem (Example: Organising a School Play)
1. Identify the problem A week left for Teacher's Day, need to organise a play.
2. Represent the problem Organising involves choosing theme, casting, arranging funds, etc.
3. Plan the solution: Set sub-goals Research themes, find actors, estimate costs, seek expert advice.
4. Evaluate all solutions (plays) Consider themes based on cost, duration, suitability; hold auditions/rehearsals.
5. Select one solution and execute it Choose the best play option and stage it.
6. Evaluate the outcome Assess audience/teacher feedback; reflect on successful steps.
7. Rethink and redefine problems and solutions Think about how to improve future plays.

Reasoning

Reasoning is the process of gathering and analysing information to arrive at conclusions or make inferences. It is a form of problem solving where the goal is to determine what conclusion can be drawn from given information. There are different types of reasoning:

Analogy: A form of reasoning involving a comparison where the relationship between two things is the same as the relationship between two others (A is to B as C is to D). Analogies can aid problem-solving by highlighting salient attributes that might otherwise be missed.


Decision-Making

Decision-making is the process of choosing among several available alternatives by evaluating the potential costs and benefits of each option. Judgment is an interrelated process where conclusions are drawn, opinions are formed, and events are evaluated based on knowledge and evidence.

Some judgments are automatic (habitual), others require conscious effort. Judgments are influenced by personal beliefs and attitudes and can change with new information. Decision-making is choosing among options, often involving evaluating criteria like interest, future prospects, costs, and benefits associated with each choice (e.g., choosing a subject in school, deciding between playing sports and studying). Decision-making differs from other problem-solving in that the potential solutions (choices) are usually already known, and the task is to select the best one based on evaluation.



Nature And Process Of Creative Thinking

Creative thinking involves producing novel and original ideas or solutions. It's not limited to outstanding achievements by famous figures; everyone has the potential for creativity in various aspects of daily life ('Everyday Creativity' vs. 'Special Talent Creativity').


Nature Of Creative Thinking

Creative thinking is characterised by:

J.P. Guilford distinguished two types of thinking relevant to creativity:

Both convergent and divergent thinking are important for creativity: divergent thinking generates ideas, and convergent thinking selects the best one.

Figure related to divergent thinking

(An illustration potentially showing a central idea branching out into multiple different ideas, representing the nature of divergent thinking.)


Lateral Thinking (Box 7.2)

Edward de Bono uses the term 'lateral thinking', similar to Guilford's divergent thinking, contrasting it with 'vertical thinking' (logical, linear processing within existing frameworks). Lateral thinking involves looking for alternative ways to define and interpret problems, making mental leaps to new perspectives. It's about "digging a hole in another place" rather than deeper in the same spot.

De Bono developed techniques like the 'Six Thinking Hats' to stimulate different thinking modes: White (facts), Red (feelings), Black (caution/logic), Yellow (positives), Green (creativity/alternatives), Blue (process control). Wearing different 'hats' helps view issues from varied perspectives.


Process Of Creative Thinking

Creative thinking is more than sudden insight; it's a process with stages:

  1. Preparation: Understanding and analysing the task/problem, gathering background information. Involves curiosity and exploring different viewpoints (divergent thinking).
  2. Incubation: A period where conscious effort on the problem may pause. Creative ideas may emerge during this time while the mind is relaxed or engaged in other activities.
  3. Illumination: The "Aha!" moment when a creative idea suddenly emerges into consciousness, often accompanied by excitement.
  4. Verification: Testing and evaluating the idea's worth or appropriateness (convergent thinking).
Diagram showing the stages of the creative process

(A diagram depicting the stages of the creative process: Preparation, Incubation, Illumination, and Verification.)


Strategies For Creative Thinking

Creative thinking can be enhanced through specific strategies:



Thought And Language

A fundamental question is the relationship between thought and language. Is language essential for thinking, or does thinking exist independently?

There are three main viewpoints on their relationship:


Development Of Language And Language Use

Language is a system of symbols organised by rules, used for communication. It has three basic characteristics:

Language acquisition is a complex process, regular across children globally despite individual differences in rate. It progresses through stages:

How language is acquired is debated:

Both perspectives contribute: learning explains vocabulary and regional variations; innate readiness explains rapid grammar acquisition and universal stages.


Bilingualism And Multilingualism (Box 7.3)

Bilingualism is proficiency in two languages; Multilingualism is proficiency in more than two. Mother tongue is typically the first language learned or the one with which one identifies emotionally. Individuals can have multiple mother tongues.

India has widespread multilingualism at individual and societal levels. Most Indians use multiple languages in daily life. Studies show that bilingualism/multilingualism benefits children's cognitive, linguistic, and academic skills.


Language Use

Effective language use involves knowing socially appropriate ways to communicate. Beyond grammar and vocabulary, it requires pragmatics – understanding social contexts and using language to achieve specific goals (requesting, thanking, demanding) appropriately. Children often struggle with politeness and turn-taking in conversations, which are learned through social interaction.



Key Terms

Bilingualism, Brainstorming, Concepts, Convergent thinking, Creativity, Decision-making, Deductive reasoning, Divergent thinking, Functional fixedness, Illumination, Images, Incubation, Inductive reasoning, Judgment, Language, Mental representation, Mental set, Multilingualism, Problem solving, Reasoning, Remote association, Syntax, Thinking



Summary

Thinking is a complex mental process manipulating information, inferred from behaviour. It uses mental images and concepts as representations.

Key thought processes: Problem solving (goal-directed), Reasoning (inference, deductive/inductive), Judgment (conclusions/evaluations), Decision-making (choosing among alternatives). Judgment and decision-making are related.

Problem-solving hindrances: mental set, functional fixedness, lack of motivation/persistence.

Creative thinking: production of novel/original ideas, reality-oriented, appropriate, constructive, socially desirable. Involves convergent (single solution) and divergent (multiple solutions) thinking. Divergent abilities: fluency, flexibility, originality, elaboration. Lateral thinking is similar to divergent.

Creative process stages: Preparation, Incubation, Illumination ('Aha!'), Verification.

Creative thinking can be enhanced via awareness, generating varied ideas, brainstorming, using checklists/questions.

Language: uniquely human system of symbols (words) organised by rules (syntax) for communication (verbal/non-verbal).

Language development: stages from crying/babbling to one-word (holophrases), two-word (telegraphic speech), and grammatical rules. Acquisition theories: Behaviourist (learning via association, imitation, reinforcement), Nativist (innate LAD, universal grammar, critical period).

Thought and language relationship: Language determines thought (linguistic relativity), thought determines language (Piaget), or they have different origins merging later (Vygotsky).

Language use: involves pragmatics (socially appropriate communication) beyond vocabulary/syntax.



Review Questions



Project Ideas