Dialogic Skills: Debate vs Dialogue

Most of the time when we enter into a conversation about a difficult topic we end up in a Debate. We stake out a position and defend it. We end up talking at each other instead of talking together. Statements bounce of each of the participants. There’s a saying, “People don’t listen, they reload.” How many times are you thinking of a rebuttal while the other person is speaking instead of really listening to them?

Debate is a zero-sum game and guarantees that, in things like politics, at least half of the people’s voices will be ignored. It is impossible for a society to thrive when this is the case.

A more productive way to communicate is through Dialogue. What makes dialogue effective is that it creates an environment where people can say what they need to say while being assured that others are able and willing to listen. Dialogue is not a zero-sum game like debate. It is generative with the result that new solutions can be created that neither party would have thought of on their own. Unlike in debate where both parties end up unchanged, in dialogue each party is changed by the other.

Dialogue is a dialectic between what is going on inside us and what we think is going on inside others. During dialogue we must not only make space for ourselves, but we need to make space for others with curiosity, generosity, and compassion.

Dialogic Practices: Inquiry vs Advocacy

Dialogue has a different cadence and tone than debate. Missing in true dialogue are the verbal volleys, like siege engines, traded back and forth with the goal of knocking down the defenses of the opposing side and advocating one’s own position. In dialogue, there are no sides. No participant has a privileged position over the others. It is a safe, generative space where entirely new viewpoints are created by participants thinking together rather than in opposition. A dialogic space is one of inquiry rather than advocacy. To accomplish this, participants must master certain skills that make dialogue possible. We break dialogic skills into two areas. Making Space for the Self and Making Space or Others.

Make Space for the Self

We exist within tightly defined boundaries which comfort us like a cocoon. Our view of reality serves less to describe objective reality and more to serve our own psychological needs. In order to learn and grow we must make room within ourselves to explore alternate views and the unknown.

Make Space for Others

We tend to stick with people who think like we do and ignore or denigrate those who do not. But other people are sources of new ways to think about things. They represent that which we do not understand so to broaden our own viewpoints, we need to make space for those of others. But first to do that, we need to better understand ourselves.

Even with dialogic skills straightforward dialogue may be too difficult because:

  • We either do not engage initially or have too much difficulty opening up because we are too triggered from the start.

  • There is a lack of clarity about the sources of our own and other’s viewpoints.

  • We often have no common language to express our viewpoints.

  • There is little to no empathy for the other side.

  • We assume the differences between sides are too great to bridge so do not bother engage in the first place.

  • We have too steep a climb to get to a generative space.

The Solution: Brain-based Holistic Dialogue

Our brain-based approach to dialogue:

  • Brings clarity about the source of our viewpoints and behaviors.

  • Develops a common language in which to speak our truth

  • Develops empathy by establishing commonalities at the most basic human level.

  • Identifies unexpected commonalities before dialogue takes place.