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Deliberation

Revision as of 18:00, 4 November 2012 by WinSysop (talk | contribs) (On using Experts in Deliberation)

aspects of deliberation

Contents

Systematic Approach To Deliberation

Justification of Deliberation

Deliberation systems have three main functions, according to the the writers of Deliberative systems[1]. The three are Epistemic, Ethic and Democratic. On the epistemic consideration, It should produce well informed decisions. In the ethic side, deliberation creates more bonding between citizens. In the democratic perspective deliberation should take into account inputs from wider prompt opinions of the population, when making decisions.

On using Experts in Deliberation

Although experts are sometimes crucial for deliberation, because they hold more corroborated SON, there are some concern that should be addresses when expert are taking part in a deliberation. Expert may harm deliberation in those aspects:

  • Epistemically, delegation of deliberation to expert can promote citizen ignorance.
  • Expert themselves can be biased (as was suggested by Loerenz et al.[2])
  • The world view of the experts can be very narrow, and may have low representation of variety of important SON to the decision making. The may have lack of emotional perspective of the shareholders population, or may ignore ethical or democratic principles. Expert can be influenced by some major school of thoughts that prevail in the academy.
  • Expert may be part of well educated elite which are not good representative of the whole public, and may promote decision in the lite of their elite world-view.
  • Experts may also lack the will or the understanding of reaching the ability of a group to act, or to reach high degree of consensus. Groups needs some inner adjustment to happen, so the can act. Some more able people need should be addressed, so they will want to move the group towards it's goals. Or a group should reach high degree of consensus to avoid grudge between groups. Experts decisions may not take these factors into account.

Epistemic Considerations

Settings of Deliberation

Distortions in Reason

For unloigical and intutive reasoning, see Intuitive Decision Making in "Decision Making"

Psychological considerations

methods of deliberation

Criticism on deliberation

See Also

References

  1. Parkinson, J., & Mansbridge, J. (Eds.). (2012). Deliberative Systems: Deliberative Democracy at the Large Scale (p. 204). Cambridge University Press. p.10-12
  2. Lorenz et al., How social infulence can underminr the wisdom of the crowds effect, 2011, PNAS