What is required for people to reach consensus in public?
To be specific, I'm talking about written statements in public that individuals will attest to.
It seems necessary that participants are sufficiently:
- grounded in shared reality; a common foundation
- motivated; inclined to participate
- comfortable; they feel safe to participate
- communicative; skilled at interactions
- intelligent; able to comprehend the ideas being discussed
- disinterested; without conflicts of interest
- self-confident; making a mistake or being wrong is ok
- authentic; willing and able to share their ideas
- truth-seeking; striving to advance our understanding
It seems likely that correct consensus can only be reached unless people are trained and practiced in:
- logic
- critical thinking
- rationality
- calibration: until people have a track record of making predictions, it is usually premature to give their predictions any particular degree of credibility.
To many eyes, the following three concepts have a very high overlap: (a) logic; (b) critical thinking; (c) rationality -- but to me, after reading The Sequences*, they have very different meanings in terms of people's particular skills.
For example, one doesn't learn about Aumann's Agreement Theorem in (a) or (b), at least not in my experience.
When I think of "logic", I typically think of deductive logic or sometimes other variations, but I rarely think about how Bayes Theorem generalizes over logic and makes it quantitative even under uncertainty. Claude 3.5 Sonnet wrote this about E.T. Jaynes who wrote "Probability Theory: The Logic of Science", and I agree with it completely:
* There are other places too, not least of which is LessWrong.