To treat all viewpoints alike without allowing your personal feelings or vested interests to bias your examination of other viewpoints.
A.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness
B.
Intellectual Empathy
C.
Intellectual Perseverance
D.
Intellectual Confidence in Reason
2.
To hold yourself to the same rigorous standards of evidence and proof to which you hold others who don’t think like you.
A.
Intellectual Integrity
B.
Intellectual Perseverance
C.
Intellectual Autonomy
D.
Intellectual Confidence in Reason
3.
To not be deceived by your own ego into believing you know more than you do.
A.
Intellectual Integrity
B.
Intellectual Humility
C.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness
D.
Intellectual Confidence in Reason
4.
To have the ability to willingly examine your own deep-seated beliefs when you are presented with new information.
A.
Intellectual Confidence in Reason
B.
Intellectual Courage
C.
Intellectual Perseverance
D.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness
5.
To accurately reconstruct the viewpoints of others and reason from premises, assumptions, and ideas other than our own.
A.
Intellectual Humility
B.
Intellectual Courage
C.
Intellectual Empathy
D.
Intellectual Autonomy
6.
To struggle with confusion and unsettled questions over an extended period of time to achieve deeper understanding or insight.
A.
Intellectual Integrity
B.
Intellectual Empathy
C.
Intellectual Perseverance
D.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness
7.
To realize that thinking for yourself can sometimes be unpopular, especially when you are part of a social group that expects you to think like them.
A.
Intellectual Empathy
B.
Intellectual Fair-Mindedness
C.
Intellectual Perseverance
D.
Intellectual Autonomy
8.
To understand that by encouraging other people to develop their own thinking skills, they will learn to persuade each other by reason and become reasonable persons, despite their deep-seated beliefs.