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What is Deliberative Polling

Handbook of Research on Technoethics
J. Fishkin’s model of deliberative polling measures what people think ahead of an election or important political decision, and also to do some counterfactual polling, in measuring what people would have thought if they had the time to consider the issue more closely.
Published in Chapter:
The Ethics of Global Communication Online
May Thorseth (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 17
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-022-6.ch019
Abstract
The purpose of this chapter is to discuss important ethical aspects of online communication of global scope. We focus particularly on procedural fundamentalism as the most significant threat to free and open communication today. By contrast, it is argued that deliberation models a desirable form of communication, based in both Habermasian discourse ethics, but also rhetoric along with a plurality of communicative styles, as long as they satisfy procedural constraints of deliberation. The importance of judgments that transcend purely private conditions is discussed by reference to reflective judgments aiming at enlarged thinking - to think from the standpoint of everyone else. It is concluded that it is preferable to develop Internet technologies that stimulate imaginative powers in order to make people better informed of knowledge of counterfactual circumstances. Such knowledge may work as an impediment against fundamentalist knowledge.
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Higher Education Pedagogy Revisited: Impacting Political Science College Students' Active Learning, Opinion Development, and Participation
A combination of public opinion research and discussion to create illustrations of what public opinion on an issue might look like if citizens were more informed.
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