Contrast to Debate
Deliberative Dialogue Is Not A Debate
In a debate, you search for glaring differences. | Deliberation involves concern for others. |
In debate, you search for weakness in another’s position. | In deliberation, you search for strength in another’s position. |
Debate involves countering the other’s position at the expense of the relationship. | Deliberation assumes that many people have pieces of an answer to a workable solution. |
Debate calls for investing wholeheartedly in your beliefs. | In deliberation, you temporarily suspend your beliefs. |
Debate is oppositional and seeks to prove the other wrong. | Deliberation is collaborative and seeks common understanding. |
The goal of debate is winning – often only for a short-term advantage. | The goal of deliberation is common ground for action which is the basis for consistent policy. |
In debate, you listen to find flaws and counterarguments. | In deliberation, you listen to understand and find meaning in agreement. |
Debate defends assumptions as truth. | Deliberation reveals assumptions for re-evaluation. |
Debate defends original solutions. | Deliberation opens the possibility of better solutions. |
In debate, you submit your best thinking and defend its rightness. | In deliberation, you submit your best thinking in order to improve it. |
From materials provided by the National Issues Forum at Montgomery College, Gaithersburg Business Training Center, June 10-11, 2004