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(Systematic Approach To Deliberation)
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==Systematic Approach To Deliberation==
 
==Systematic Approach To Deliberation==
[[goals of deliberative systems]]
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Deliberation systems have three main functions, according to the the writers of Deliberative systems. The three are Epistemic, Ethic and Democratic. 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 ions of the population, when making decisions<ref>Parkinson, J., & Mansbridge, J. (Eds.). (2012). Deliberative Systems: Deliberative Democracy at the Large Scale (p. 204). Cambridge University Press. p.10-12</ref>.
  
 
==Epistemic Considerations==
 
==Epistemic Considerations==

Revision as of 13:38, 25 October 2012

aspects of deliberation

Systematic Approach To Deliberation

Deliberation systems have three main functions, according to the the writers of Deliberative systems. The three are Epistemic, Ethic and Democratic. 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 ions of the population, when making decisions[1].

Epistemic Considerations

Epistemology of Deliberation

the problem of coordination


Settings of Deliberation

Limitations on group size

large groups on-line deliberation

Distortions in Reason

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

Psychological considerations

FFFF and deliberation

Settings that promote system 2 discussion

methods of deliberation

deliberative polls

Criticism on deliberation

criticism on deliberation

See Also

Decision Making
  1. Parkinson, J., & Mansbridge, J. (Eds.). (2012). Deliberative Systems: Deliberative Democracy at the Large Scale (p. 204). Cambridge University Press. p.10-12