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TAGS: Bias; Consultation
Abstract:
Exploring Bahá’í consultation as a framework for mitigating cognitive biases, emphasizing group deliberation, justification, and repeated exposure to diverse perspectives for effective debiasing.
Notes:
Mirrored with permission from journal.bahaistudies.ca. See also the complete issue [PDF].

"Justly and Without Bias":

Consultation as a Technique for Mitigating Cognitive Biases

Andres Elvira Espinosa

published in Journal of Bahá'í Studies

33:4, pp. 9-37

Ottawa: Association for Bahá'í Studies North America, 2024-09

Abstract: This paper investigates the possibility that one purpose of consultation is the mitigation of cognitive biases in individual participants and in the group as a whole. After exploring the nature of cognitive biases through the lens of evolutionary psychology, the paper surveys existing research on effective methods of “debiasing” individuals. This research suggests that the most effective environment for mitigating bias is a deliberative group, in which individual participants may be asked to justify their reasoning in a social environment of diverse perspectives. Bias mitigation diminishes over time, requiring repeated exposure to the debiasing environment. This model for debiasing strongly resonates with Bahá’í consultation, a conclusion that can enrich Assemblies’ and other consulting groups' perspectives on, and expectations of, consultation.
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