From Critical Thinking to Criticality
A Higher Education for a Troubled World
Routledge (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 25. November 2026
302 pages
E-Book
978-1-040-56460-8 (ISBN)
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Description
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From Critical Thinking to Criticality sets out a bold case for critical thinking across the university. It inquires into the need for, and the nature of, critical thinking; and it expounds new theories and arguments that are applicable not only across disciplines but, even more, across the university as the complex institution that it is.
Against the horizon of the contemporary world, this book notes how critical thinking is in jeopardy and considers the inadequacy of the technical debates in the academic literature. It picks up and radically develops the idea of criticality into a new idea of the university in a troubled world. Hidden potential lies within the university - independently of its study programmes - to advance students' criticality.
With arguments situated in the contexts of ecological crises, the rise of artificial intelligence, the tense relationship of states and their universities, political populism and the emergence of a post-truth age, this book urges that criticality be re-instated and anew in the university. It is essential reading for students, academics, and senior leaders in universities, as well as anyone concerned to re-examine the significance of critical thinking for the world.
Against the horizon of the contemporary world, this book notes how critical thinking is in jeopardy and considers the inadequacy of the technical debates in the academic literature. It picks up and radically develops the idea of criticality into a new idea of the university in a troubled world. Hidden potential lies within the university - independently of its study programmes - to advance students' criticality.
With arguments situated in the contexts of ecological crises, the rise of artificial intelligence, the tense relationship of states and their universities, political populism and the emergence of a post-truth age, this book urges that criticality be re-instated and anew in the university. It is essential reading for students, academics, and senior leaders in universities, as well as anyone concerned to re-examine the significance of critical thinking for the world.
Reviews / Votes
EndorsementsCritical thinking is more needed as a public virtue than ever before. In this important book, Ronald Barnett and Martin Davies expand our ways of thinking about what critical thinking is and how to promote it. They develop the concept of "criticality" as a way of broadening our focus about what it means to be a critical thinker: beyond someone skilled at assessing knowledge claims to a way of being, thought, and action that characterize a kind of personhood. If we want to promote critical thinking, we need to understand what it means to promote critical thinkers.
Nicholas C. Burbules
Edward William and Jane Marr Gutgsell Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Although the 'ideal knower' in higher education is often identified as someone who is a critical independent thinker, very few people are able to define what 'critical thinking' is. This book provides novel insights into the concept of criticality and, even more importantly, illustrates how critical thinking can be developed by drawing on an understanding of the nature of the university itself.
Emeritus Professor Chrissie Boughey, Rhodes University, South Africa.
I have been waiting for a book such as this for years-a text that dismantles critical thinking across disciplinary fields and offers way to make sense of it-critically. The text points to the worrying concern of the loss of critical thinking in higher education and provides a model of criticality that transcends modes and theories of critical thinking. It culminates in seven planes of criticality which illustrate the central argument of the book that 'criticality envelopes critical thinking'. This book is enlightened and enlightening, it offers a captivating stance on troublesome issues in a postdigital world.
Professor Maggi Savin-Baden, Oxford, UK.
Universities are in crisis. One of the main reasons for this is because the rationale of the universities is no longer clear. At the heart of universities nowadays sit financiers, who make decisions on behalf of the universities, and this promotes money making above everything else. Hence, critical thinking is diminished, if not marginalised to the periphery of the university mission and activity. Ronald Barnett and Martin Davies' new book acts as a counterpoint to this slide into financial non-thought. This book is a well-needed counterinsurgency aimed at re-establishing critical thinking as the central goal and practice of universities for the present moment and beyond.
Associate Professor David R. Cole, Western Sydney University.
Barnett and Davies' incisive and engaging book calls on universities, qua institutions, to exercise their considerable powers to become a critical conscience for the world. While recognising the value of extant critical thinking, epistemologically and pedagogically, it challenges higher education institutions to become agents of criticality, enabling students not only to think and reason critically, but to become critical beings exercising concern through action in the world. By providing a new way of thinking about university education; From Critical Thinking to Criticality brings hope into troubled worlds.
Emeritus Professor Kathleen Lynch, University College Dublin
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
3 Tables, black and white; 11 Line drawings, black and white; 11 Illustrations, black and white
ISBN-13
978-1-040-56460-8 (9781040564608)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Ronald Barnett | Martin Davies
From Critical Thinking to Criticality
A Higher Education for a Troubled World
Book
approx. 11/2026
1st Edition
Routledge
€191.50
Not yet published
Ronald Barnett | Martin Davies
From Critical Thinking to Criticality
A Higher Education for a Troubled World
Book
approx. 11/2026
1st Edition
Routledge
€52.50
Not yet published
Persons
Ronald Barnett is Emeritus Professor of Higher Education, University College London, UK and Emeritus President of the Philosophy and Theory of Higher Education Society.
Martin Davies is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Martin Davies is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Content
1 Introduction: A troubling setting
Part one: The evaporation of critical thought
2 Heresies of critical thought
3 An algorithmic world
4 Myths of the framework
5 A critical dialectic
6 Thinking critically about critical thinking
7 Recapitulation and development: The myopia of 'critical thinking'
Part two: Criticality and its modes
8 The standard view of critical thinking
9 A model of criticality
10 Seven modes of criticality
Part three: Advancing criticality
11 Curriculum matters: For a critical experientiality
12 Pedagogical matters: Emergent learning and two forms of criticality
Part four: The university-for a culture of criticality
13 Disagreeing well: the university as space of criticality
14 The university: the world's critical conscience
Endnote: Pessimists and Optimists Unite! (At least in some ways)
References
Endorsements
Index
Part one: The evaporation of critical thought
2 Heresies of critical thought
3 An algorithmic world
4 Myths of the framework
5 A critical dialectic
6 Thinking critically about critical thinking
7 Recapitulation and development: The myopia of 'critical thinking'
Part two: Criticality and its modes
8 The standard view of critical thinking
9 A model of criticality
10 Seven modes of criticality
Part three: Advancing criticality
11 Curriculum matters: For a critical experientiality
12 Pedagogical matters: Emergent learning and two forms of criticality
Part four: The university-for a culture of criticality
13 Disagreeing well: the university as space of criticality
14 The university: the world's critical conscience
Endnote: Pessimists and Optimists Unite! (At least in some ways)
References
Endorsements
Index
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