Currently browsing

August 2012

Generations and Justice

Among the most important qualities of a just society is that we are able to meet our needs without undermining the ability of others to meet their needs. Among the many needs we humans have is our need to be seen, heard and taken seriously. The on…

Citizen deliberators generate well-considered recommendations

The process and mandate of panelists in citizen deliberative councils tend to make randomly selected people act much more responsibly as citizens while on the council. A recent article in the New York Times Magazine notes that randomly selected pa…

Letter to a peace activist

This is an excerpt from my recent response to an activist who felt that stopping an attack on Iran was the most important issue we faced, given the horrendous likely consequences of such an attack on Middle East populations and on the global econo…

Conflict and the varied gifts of powerful conversation

The power of conversation is real but not total. People sometimes take an oversimplified perspective of the power of dialogue, deliberation, and choice-creating to deal with tensions between people. EIther they think “just talk” can’t do much to r…

Last call for a few angels

The Co-Intelligence Institute’s summer fundraiser is over. The results: Funds raised: $8048.11 // Target: $20,000 // Percentage raised: 40% We send our deepest thanks to the 57 of our 1891 subscribers who responded. If you or anyone you know can b…

Public opinion, public judgment, and public wisdom

Pollsters, politicians and pundits quote public opinion polls to tell us what the public thinks. Deliberative democracy advocates promote public judgment to deepen public opinion. Few people talk about public wisdom – what it could be and what it …

Diversity is as big as the universe

Recently, thanks to a subscriber, I reread my article from several years ago – “Diversity is as big as the universe”. It covers a lot of ground well and I think you’ll enjoy it.