Thursday, July 28, 2016

Dialogue in action

How does the power of dialogue to snap us out of our set ways of thinking or interpretation manifest itself?
Our set ways of thinking are progressed by typical patterns. The dialogue concept suspends assumptions to enable exploration of underlying thinking, provides a "container" in which interactions take place, and uses proprioceptive attention to enable a transformation in underlying patterns of thought.
To suspend assumptions means to recognize the source of thought and reflect on the underlying automatic process that gave rise to a particular conclusion. To correct or flx a problem (that could be a paradox) is to take a stance that is separate from it, that objectifies it, and that seeks to apply an analytic approach towards understanding it. While this approach is the essence of science, it is also limiting, especially if this is the only move one is able to make. A "dialogic stance" is one that moves in the direction of suspending both the immediate effort to correct a problem, and the very processes by which it becomes defined in a particular way. Its value lies in the possibility of dissolving problems before they appear by reframing experience.
To provide the container implies easing interactions and surfacing options to solve system problems, reducing the risk of participating, and legitimating inquiry into underlying images, norms and perceptions.  The purpose of the container is to enable participants to see, in effect, the water in which they have been swimming, so that they may influence it consciously.
To use proprioceptive attention is to apply a kind of mindful self-reflection that slows down thinking and opens the possibility for insight. It goes beyond reflection based in memory—in processing images and information that occurred in the far or recent past. They are accepted as literal and real. If we had the ability to connect them with the nature of our thoughts we would be able to see self-destructive thoughts, for example, and have some ability to control them. Typically we simply see our thoughts as emerging "from nowhere" and do not detect our own fingerprints on them.

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