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Deliberation

Deliberation is a process of thoughtfully weighing options, for example prior to voting. Deliberation emphasizes the use of logic and reason as opposed to power-struggle, creativity, or dialogue. Group decisions are generally made after deliberation through a vote or consensus of those involved.

In legal settings a jury famously uses deliberation because it is given specific options, like guilty or not guilty, along with information and arguments to evaluate. In "deliberative democracy", the aim is for both elected officials and the general public to use deliberation rather than power-struggle as the basis for their vote.


Individual deliberation is also a description of day-to-day rational decision-making, and as such is an epistemic virtue.

 – Italian philosopher

Giorgio Agamben

 – Historian and philosopher (1906–1975)

Hannah Arendt

 – American academic and author (1957–2021)

Lauren Berlant

 – American political theorist (born 1959)

Bonnie Honig

 – French philosopher, anthropologist and sociologist (1947–2022)

Bruno Latour

 – Visual representation of the structure of an argument

Argument map

 – American legal doctrine and metaphor

Blank pad rule

 – Argumentation scheme

Dialogue mapping

 – Psychological tendency of people to think and solve problems in simple ways

Low-information rationality

 – type of deliberation

Online deliberation

The dictionary definition of deliberate at Wiktionary