tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5202199125904138125.post7259118780343903740..comments2015-12-15T16:29:39.247+01:00Comments on Nirgal's Logs: From Cognitive Dissonance Detector to Mapping the Global BrainNirgalhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00380559356916470781noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5202199125904138125.post-5809704233093310232013-05-15T14:05:02.358+02:002013-05-15T14:05:02.358+02:00hanks Helene, i love the way you formulate this an...hanks Helene, i love the way you formulate this and the stuff you shared !<br />Looking forward to read more. ;)Nirgalhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00380559356916470781noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5202199125904138125.post-90599727345054131602013-05-15T11:01:57.876+02:002013-05-15T11:01:57.876+02:00Very nice post Nicolas! And how exciting the persp...Very nice post Nicolas! And how exciting the perspective of being able to understand ourselves and each other from wherever we come from, and develop semantic tools to do so. Lots of things come to mind. <br /><br />First, even before talking of dissonance and biases, we could acknowledge that there are differences. Differences in what is known and not known, differences in cognitive processing, and differences in world views. These differences indeed cause people to experience fear and threat and stress or anger facing the 'other', and as a result denial or conflictual attitudes in front of unusual situations, ideas or people. This phenomenon is also reinforced by the fact that we can't always assess these differences, assess what we know and don't know and how much we understand. <br /><br />There's a very interesting graph of phases and features of transition cycles in transition psychology that shows the stages people go through when faced with situations that threaten 'business as usual', here applied to personal events, it can be applied to many areas… http://www.eoslifework.co.uk/transprac.htm#T1<br /><br />When it comes to the known or unknown, or how much we may know about something, the Jahori window comes to mind. http://higheredgeblog.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/johari-window2.gif<br /><br />This approach puts a lot of focus on asking and telling for people to discover their own blind spots or walk each other through what they know and their cognitive preferences. Something that is found also in 'appreciative inquiry', 'action research' or 'action science' or in Dave Snowden's 'Cynefin model' to put the ladder of inference that you refer to in your post to work with a minimum of cognitive bias. <br /><br />Then there's all the discovery of how people function in Myers Briggs types of cognitive preferences and various spiral dynamics or action logics that may be controversial when used to put people in boxes, but are quite useful as a means to understand preferences and differences.<br /><br />Combining self discovery with self exposure in shared discovery 'conversation' is what the tools we are working to develop would need to facilitate. <br /><br />I will try and elaborate a bit more on all this in a post :)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com