New Horizons Support Network, Inc. presents…
Coffee House Conversations On Race Relations(This item courtesy of Everyday Democracy)
Contrasting Dialogue and Debate
1. Dialogue is collaborative: two or more sides work together toward a common understanding.
Debate is
oppositional: two sides oppose each other and attempt to prove each other
wrong.
2. In dialogue,
finding common ground is the goal.
In debate,
winning is the goal.
3. In dialogue, one
listens to the other side(s) in order to understand, find meaning, and find
agreement.
In debate, one
listens to the other side, in order to find flaws and to counter its arguments.
4. Dialogue
enlarges and possibly changes a participant’s point of view.
Debate affirms
a participant’s own point of view.
5. Dialogue reveals
assumptions for reevaluation.
Debate defends
critique of the other position.
6. Dialogue causes introspection on one’s own position.
Debate causes
critique of the other position.
7. Dialogue opens the possibility of reaching a better solution than any
of the original solutions.
Debate defends
one’s own positions as the best solution and excludes other solutions.
8. Dialogue creates an open-minded attitude: an openness to being wrong
and an openness to change.
Debate creates
a closed-minded attitude, a determination to be right.
9. In dialogue, one submits one’s best thinking, knowing that other
people’s reflections will help improve it rather than destroy it.
In debate, one
submits one’s best thinking and defends it against the challenge to show that
it is right.
10. Dialogue calls for temporarily suspending one’s beliefs.
Debate calls
for investing wholeheartedly in one’s beliefs.
11. In dialogue, one searches for basic agreements.
In debate, one
searches for glaring differences.
12. In dialogue, one searches for strengths in the other positions.
In debate, one
searches for flaws and weaknesses in the other positions.
13. Dialogue involves a real concern for the other person and seek not
alienate or offend.
Debate
involves a countering of the other position without focusing on feelings or
relationship and often belittles the other person.
14. Dialogue assumes that many people have pieces of the answer and that
together they can put them into a workable solution.
Debate assumes
that there is a right answer and that someone has it.
15. Dialogue remains open-ended.
Debate has a foregone conclusion.
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