Deliberation

Deliberation is thoughtful discussion with comprehensive inclusion of factors and points of view.

Requirements of a ideal deliberation system

  • Valid deliberation is transparently supported.
  • Respectful, just deliberation includes everyone involved.
  • Neutral deliberation gives users control of weights, measures and sources.
  • Respectful deliberation places needs, feelings and concerns up front.
  • Trustworthy deliberation displays public accountability.
  • Sensible deliberation requires sound logic, to be determined by users.
  • Sound deliberation weighs in everything relevant to an issue.
  • Relevant deliberation offers a way to specifiy findings to fit needs.
  • Public deliberation requires a way to collaboratively grade information.
  • Inclusive deliberation allows individuals and groups to derive weights and measures on our own.
  • Deliberation eliminates logial fallacies like false dichotomies, straw man.
  • Deliberation allows tangential relationships to reveal confirmation bias.
  • Ubiquity and translation of deliberation occurs face to face as well as online with as many venues and platforms as possible participating, with way to find each other.
  • Appropriate deliberation systems are flexible to meet various needs and can adapt and change in time.
  • Deliberation in a comfortable atmosphere encourages self-reflection.

There is a level of meta-consciousness when taking part in deliberation, and a structure.

The shapes and connection labels take the place of terms typically used to elicit or describe questioning and explaining. See https://www.brentcoley.com/uploads/1/1/6/9/11695738/lc_questioning_packet.pdf

Elements of Reasoning and Standards for Thoroughness

Derived from Foundation for Critical Thinking Community Online

https://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/the-elements-of-reasoning-and-the-intellectual-standards/480

  • State one’s purpose
    • define terms and position
    • distinguish from related purposes
    • deliberate significance and if realistic
    • check this periodically to stay on track
  • State problem or question to settle
    • restate from different perspectives
    • define meaning and scope
    • deconstruct into component parts
  • Identify viewpoints and assumptions
    • describe one’s own perspective
      • evaluate and weigh justifications
      • opine the effect of assumptions on reasoning
    • repeat from other perspectives
  • Provide related evidence
    • determine clarity, accuracy, relevancy, sufficiency, other qualities
    • provide citations, weights and measures
    • describe means of verifying and vetting
    • include related weighting of information sources
  • Express concepts, inferences and ideas
    • Deliberate cogency, consistency of inferences, interpretations, implications and conclusions
  • Apply the deliberation to specific and general circumstances
    • Evaluate likelihood of consequences given specific conclusions
    • Determine actions and potential of likely effects
    • List people and others involved and effects

https://www.criticalthinking.org/pages/the-elements-of-reasoning-and-the-intellectual-standards/480

Practical Tips

  • one question or point at a time
  • park other issues with a plan for review
  • strict time keeping
  • no ad hominem attacks
  • respond to keep a thread
  • provide materials in advance
  • schedule follow-ups
  • include disparate viewpoints