3298: Finding Quality Information in a Sea of Rubbish by Michael Mehlberg on Developing Critical Thinking Skills episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 25, 2024 · 9 MIN

3298: Finding Quality Information in a Sea of Rubbish by Michael Mehlberg on Developing Critical Thinking Skills

from Optimal Living Daily - Personal Development and Self-Improvement · host Justin Malik

Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 3298: Michael Mehlberg explores the challenge of sifting through overwhelming amounts of low-quality information to find truly valuable insights. He offers practical strategies for discerning reliable sources and emphasizes the importance of developing critical thinking skills to navigate the digital landscape effectively. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://michaelmehlberg.com/blog/2015/9/14/finding-quality-information-in-a-sea-of-rubbish Quotes to ponder: "Sorting through rubbish is a skill - one that can save time, energy, and lead to better decisions." "The internet is filled with distraction, misinformation, and irrelevant content. Finding the gems requires a discerning eye and a strategic approach." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 3298: Michael Mehlberg explores the challenge of sifting through overwhelming amounts of low-quality information to find truly valuable insights. He offers practical strategies for discerning reliable sources and emphasizes the importance of developing critical thinking skills to navigate the digital landscape effectively. Read along with the original article(s) here: https://michaelmehlberg.com/blog/2015/9/14/finding-quality-information-in-a-sea-of-rubbish Quotes to ponder: "Sorting through rubbish is a skill - one that can save time, energy, and lead to better decisions." "The internet is filled with distraction, misinformation, and irrelevant content. Finding the gems requires a discerning eye and a strategic approach." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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3298: Finding Quality Information in a Sea of Rubbish by Michael Mehlberg on Developing Critical Thinking Skills

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Welcome aboard Villarreal, please sit and enjoy. Please sit and stretch, steep, flip, or that, and enjoy. Villarreal, love the way. This is Optimal Leaving Daily, finding quality information in a sea of rubbish by MichaelMelberg of MichaelMelberg.com and re-narrator justimolic reading you blogs every single day of the year.

Without further ado, let's get right to it as we optimize our life. Finding quality information in a sea of rubbish by MichaelMelberg of MichaelMelberg.com Truth be told, I have an agenda that has everything to do with you. My writing on modern da Vinci aims to help you and other readers become better, more knowledgeable, more productive, more confident, and more creative humans. If you're hearing this right now, my agenda is working.

If you share this post or subscribe, I'll consider it a great success. Eventually, you'll find another blog to peruse or a news article to read. They too will have an agenda. It may be to sign more subscribers, push up political view, or drive sales of a new product.

Whatever it is, they wrote every word with their agenda in mind. When you return to Facebook after a long day of serving the internet for news, every wall post, every forward, and every video link you find has an agenda behind it. Your friends, family, and neighbors post and share for their own reasons, often without thinking, without consideration for their readers, and without wondering whether what they're posting is true. In other words, much of what we consume on the internet is rubbish, utter, unforgiving, relentless rubbish.

We're not supposed to read or believe or like or tweet or forward such nonsense, but we do anyways. Why? Because it sounds good and it gets a reaction. Because on the internet, nobody stops you.

Nobody will think about what you've written, they will just like your post. They'll get a warm, fuzzy feeling while spreading the nonsense further before they move on with their lives. None of this should be surprising, and on some level, none of this matters. But looking at the bigger picture, we know that the posts and tweets flying around have an effect on both small and big events in life.

After all, the way we interact with others is fed by our misconceptions and system of beliefs. World leaders are elected by a populace, educated or not. Walls are torn down when freedoms are restricted. The things we read and choose to believe affect how we treat those around us, how we cast those votes, and how fast we tear those walls down.

Of course, we can't fight every snippet of misinformation or uninformed opinion, there's not enough willpower or time to go around. What we can do is cultivate a challenging, questioning attitude while we peruse the internet. By challenging our worldview, we will learn more. By questioning what we read, we will start to get a sense for quality information versus the nonsense.

This is easier said than done, staying alert 100% of the time while under a barrage of hype and misinformation can be a challenge in itself. Here are a few things to keep in mind while reading to maintain that questioning attitude. Number one, anyone can post anything at any time on the internet. Long gone are the days when the primary information sources came from newspapers and television shows, sources who albeit biased like any source, took the time to research their facts and kept their opinions to a separate section.

Number two, others often represent their opinions as facts, but they are still opinions. Number three, the internet moves fast, bloggers post new articles quickly, companies release new products daily, and journalists publish news as it happens, not the day after. The result, information may be unintentionally inaccurate. So what do we do?

How do we find quality information in this sea of rubbish? Doing so may feel impossible, but it only requires that you challenge and question what you read. Ask yourself, what am I reading? A Friends Twitter post, a news article, an opinion blog, keeping in mind the type of article you are reading will prevent you from mistaking opinion for fact.

What is the author's agenda? As we discussed earlier, everything you read is backed by an agenda. Not every agenda is malicious, but you must understand it. Once you know the author's motivations and funding sources, you can better assess the quality of the information at hand.

If what you are reading is portrayed as fact, does the author cite sources? Is there evidence? Is it supported? Missing sources doesn't mean the author didn't have any, but an article with sources is far easier to verify.

Is the site or article trying to sell you something? This goes back to the motivations of the author. If the author is selling, it's almost impossible to trust them as a source of valuable information, and be far better to seek an external opinion. Is the article grammatically correct and free of spelling errors?

While grammar and spelling have nothing to do with whether the statements made are fact or fiction, a clean, well written article shows the author has taken the time to proofread his or her work. They show at least a basic level of care for the content they are publishing. Review poorly formatted, improperly constructed material with caution. Recognize that the author may not have taken the time to verify facts if they didn't take the time to proofread.

There is no perfect way for finding pure, unmotivated, quality information. These are a few ways to combat the relentless flow of rubbish and develop a more informed, sensible approach to the information you read. Most importantly, by spending the necessary time to keep the points you heard in mind, you will develop your own conclusions about what you're reading, and creating your own conclusions will, at the very least, arm your knowledge with reason. Additional tools.

1. Read scientific papers. They are peer-reviewed, controlled, determined cause and effect, and many times use randomization to reduce errors. Google Scholar is an excellent tool for finding such papers.

2. Find a trusted source and continue to use it. For example, I love using Engagit to read technology reviews. I trust them.

I find the reviews to be full of relevant detail. They help me understand new technology far better than a Facebook friend who has an opinion but doesn't understand why they like or dislike the technology. 3. Spotcheck information you find.

Factcheck.org and Snopes.com are two websites built specifically for this. You just listen to the post titled Finding Quality Information in a Sea of Rubbish by Michael Melberg of MichaelMelberg.com, and I'll be right back with my commentary. Need a vehicle that isn't afraid to make a splash? That's the Volkswagen's house.

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Thank you, Michael. You mentioned his writing on modern da Vinci. That was the name of his site previously. Now, it's just MichaelMelberg.com.

I think this is truer now than ever, and likely will become even more true with time. With AI now, anyone can write long-form content very easily, very quickly, where in many cases, probably most cases, the human touch will be gone. And articles will flood the web. What he describes is pretty much exactly why this podcast was created.

There were so many articles, even back when this podcast was created in 2015. What my business partner and I tried to do was really find the best ones, and get permission from them to read them to you. Our criteria was pretty strict. It still is, because my goal is to have each day be impactful in some way, maybe motivational or inspirational, or just makes you think a little more, maybe question how we're choosing to live.

I figure if we listen to even just one of these every day and sometimes ten minutes or less, it'll be a step in the right direction and hopefully offset a lot of the stuff that knocks us down. Rubbish, as Michael calls it. If you ever find a blogger that seems to really bring you up, let me know. We're always open to more.

But with that, have a great rest of your day, and I'll see you tomorrow, as usual, where you're optimal life. Oh, wait.

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This episode is 9 minutes long.

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This episode was published on August 25, 2024.

What is this episode about?

Discover all of the podcasts in our network, search for specific episodes, get the Optimal Living Daily workbook, and learn more at: OLDPodcast.com. Episode 3298: Michael Mehlberg explores the challenge of sifting through overwhelming amounts of...

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