Module 2Run25–35 min

Structured deliberation

Module 1 locked the terms; now the room opens. This module is about what happens inside the window: contributions that carry a position and its reasoning rather than chat, a stance vocabulary precise enough to act on, a one-card template — the Position Card — that gets both out of every member, and facilitation — human or AI — that helps the room see itself without steering it. The line between facilitating and steering is the whole module; everything else hangs off it.

Watch this happen: the demo's deliberation stage shows every device in this module in use — stances, reasons, the facilitator's summaries, and an amendment emerging live. Watch the deliberation stage, then come back for why each piece is shaped the way it is.

2.1 Position + the "because"

Chat and deliberation look similar and do opposite work. Chat produces reactions — "love this", "not sure about this one", "hmm". Deliberation produces examinable claims: a position, plus the reasoning that carries it. The word that does the work is because. "Against" is a fact about you; "against, because our roster can't cover eight more communal plots" is a claim about the world — it can be checked, answered with evidence, or met with an amendment.

The discipline is symmetrical. Support without reasons is as unusable as opposition without reasons: if the proposal later fails in practice, "fourteen people liked it" explains nothing and warns nobody. A group that requires the "because" from both sides is not being pedantic — it is building the record it will need in Module 4, and giving the facilitator something real to summarise.

Key points
  • A reaction ends a conversation; a reason continues one. Only reasons can be answered.
  • Reasons expose which disagreements are factual (checkable), which are about capacity (negotiable), and which are about principle (to be decided, not argued away).
  • "Position + because" is one sentence of effort. Groups that can't get one sentence of reasoning from a member are usually hearing shyness or time-poverty, not emptiness — the structure lowers the bar by making the expected shape small and clear.

2.2 The stance vocabulary

"For" and "against" flatten exactly the information a group needs most. Five stances — each of them a position plus the kind of reason behind it — keep the useful structure without turning contribution into an essay. In print or on screen, each stance is always shown with its label written out; never rely on a colour or an icon alone to tell them apart.

The five stances
  • For — supports the proposal as filed.
  • For, with condition — supports only if a stated safeguard is attached (a sunset, a cap, a review). The condition is the content.
  • For, with amendment — supports a stated change to the text itself. Points at specific words.
  • Against, on principle — opposes the thing itself; no adjustment fixes it. Often carries an alternative.
  • Against, on capacity — opposes doing it now, with these resources. Not a rejection of the idea; a claim about load, money, or time — frequently the most checkable claim in the room.

The two "against" stances matter most. Treating them as one lump is how groups mistake a solvable resourcing problem for a values war — or, worse, "fix" a principled objection with a budget line and wonder why the objector is still unhappy.

Example — VA-2026-014 in stances. Ana: For — adopt the conversion for one winter; the charter says the collective grows for the street, not just the plot-holder. Marcus: For, with condition — a hard sunset: the conversion ends on 30 September automatically, and renewal needs a fresh proposal and a fresh poll. "A season is an experiment; a precedent is forever." Priya: For, with amendment — draw the eight plots by ballot across all twenty-four, not by naming the south edge, so the same eight people don't carry the whole burden. Elena: Against, on principle — a majority should not requisition tenure; her alternative is voluntary food-bank rows on members' own plots, and she pledges two of hers. Ruth: Against, on capacity — winter is when the roster thins; last July the collective couldn't fill the watering round for the two common beds it already has. Five people, five different conversations — and every one of them now visible and answerable.

2.3 The Position Card — one small template that does the work

Everything in 2.1 and 2.2 lands on a single card, one per member, written before anyone speaks. Writing first is the point: it gives the quiet member the same start as the quick one, and it means the opening round of the room is twenty-four considered positions rather than three confident voices and a silence. Five fields:

The Position Card
FieldWhat goes in it
Name and roleWho is speaking — positions are attributed, not anonymous. Owning a stance is part of what makes it examinable.
StanceOne of the five, written out in words — never a colour, a number, or an icon alone.
Position — one sentenceWhat you want to happen, in a sentence a stranger could act on.
Reasoning — the "because"The claim under the position, stated so others can examine it: check it, answer it, or meet it with an amendment.
Condition or amendment, if anyThe exact words. "With a sunset" is a mood; "ends 30 September automatically unless freshly renewed" is an amendment.

Keep a second card for after the amendments: stance now, and which argument or amendment moved it. A position that moves under reasons is deliberation succeeding, and the record should show what did the moving.

Example — Priya's card. Stance: For, with amendment. Position: "Support — but draw the eight plots by ballot, not by map." Reasoning: "I waited two years for a plot, so I feel the cost of giving one up. Naming the south edge in advance puts the whole burden on the same eight people; a ballot across all twenty-four means everyone carries the same risk — the decision stops being 'their plots' and becomes 'ours'." Amendment: the eight plots drawn by ballot across all twenty-four.

2.4 Facilitating without steering

The facilitator's job is to make the room visible to itself — nothing more. Three moves are legitimate, and they are all mirrors:

The three legitimate moves
  • Name where the room agrees — so the room stops re-arguing settled ground and spends its window on the live question.
  • Name where the room divides — the actual point of disagreement, stated in words both sides accept, so the real question gets the airtime instead of its caricatures.
  • Name amendments as they form — so a condition or a change of wording raised at minute twenty doesn't evaporate into the scroll by minute forty.

And three hard limits, each of which converts a mirror into a hand on the wheel:

The hard limits
  • Drafts nothing into the ballot. Ballot text comes from members. A facilitator who "tidies the wording" has authored the question everyone votes on.
  • Weighs nothing. No "the stronger argument seems to be…", no ordering contributions by merit. Ranking reasons is the voters' job — it is, in fact, the vote.
  • Casts no vote in the poll they facilitate. Not because facilitators are untrustworthy, but because every summary they wrote is retroactively suspect the moment they are also a contestant.

The test for any facilitator action: could both sides have written this sentence? A summary the strongest supporter and the firmest objector would each sign as accurate is facilitation. A summary only one of them would sign is advocacy wearing the chair's hat.

Example — the three moves in VA-2026-014. Where the room agrees: all five contributors want the food bank supplied through winter; nobody disputes the shortfall — the disagreement is not about charity. Where it divides: one question — may a majority redirect plots that members hold individually? Amendments forming: Marcus's automatic 30 September sunset and Priya's ballot-drawn plots are on the table. Every sentence is one that Ana and Elena could both sign — which is the whole test.

2.5 The AI facilitator — same limits, plus two caveats in the open

Village Assembly offers an AI facilitator for groups that want the mirror-work done continuously — grouping stances, surfacing points of agreement and division, flagging amendments as they form. It operates under exactly the three limits above: it drafts nothing into the ballot, weighs nothing, and has no vote. It also runs on the group's own machines, so the deliberation never leaves the group's hands to be summarised on someone else's infrastructure, under someone else's terms.

Two caveats belong in the open rather than in fine print. First, a summariser can steer. Every summary chooses what to foreground, and an AI's choices can tilt a room as surely as a chairperson's — more insidiously, because the tone is even and nobody's eyebrows go up. Second, summaries compress, and compression loses someone's nuance — usually the quietest someone. The working protection for both is the same and it is procedural, not technological: every AI summary is shown to the room, attributed as machine-generated, and stands only after members have had the chance to correct it. The room remains the authority on what the room said. An AI summary that members cannot amend is not facilitation; it is unaccountable chairing at machine speed.

You don't need us for this. The facilitation in this module is centuries old: a chairperson who keeps their opinions at home, a flip chart with "agreed / divided / amendments on the table" written up where everyone can see it, and the summary read aloud at the close — with the room invited to correct it before it goes in the minute-book, and the corrected version witnessed. That read-aloud-and-correct step is the same protection we apply to the AI's summaries. Village Assembly makes the mirror continuous and tireless; it is one good way, not the price of admission.

2.6 From reasoning to amendments

Structured deliberation earns its keep when reasons start changing the text. The path runs through the stances: a condition becomes an amendment when its holder writes it as words in the proposal ("the trial ends on a named date automatically, unless freshly renewed"); an amendment stance already is one; a capacity objection sometimes converts into a condition once it is specific ("proceed only if six named volunteers commit first") — and sometimes stands as a warning the group decides to carry, which the record must then keep. A principled objection does not convert — it either persuades, becomes a recorded alternative, or travels with the decision as dissent, which is Module 4's subject and not a consolation prize.

However an amendment lands — accepted by the proposer into the text, or put to the room as an option — it lands in the open, in writing, before the close, and the amended text is what the poll then decides under the rule set in Module 1. An amendment slipped in during the last quiet hour of a window, seen by half the room, poisons the legitimacy of everything after it.

Example. Ana accepted both member-drafted amendments before the close, so the ballot put the amended proposal: convert eight plots — drawn by ballot across all twenty-four — to a shared food-bank bed, June to September, ending 30 September automatically; displaced plot-holders hold first right of return; Elena's voluntary-rows proposal recorded as the stated alternative. Ruth's capacity objection stayed what it was — a warning, preserved verbatim beside the outcome, so that if July proves her right, the record already knows. Every word of the ballot was authored by members; the facilitator's only fingerprints are on the summaries the room checked.
Self-check

1. Which contribution is a position plus reasoning, rather than a bare reaction?

Only the second names a stance and carries a checkable "because" — someone can now answer it with named volunteers, an amendment, or evidence. The others are facts about the speaker's mood; nothing in them can be examined or acted on.

2. Which facilitator action crosses from facilitating into steering?

Naming agreement and naming live amendments are mirror-moves both sides could sign. Ranking the arguments' strength is weighing — that judgement belongs to the voters, because making it is what the vote is.

3. Which of these must the AI facilitator never do?

Grouping stances, flagging a forming amendment, and submitting its summaries for the room's correction are all mirror-work. Authoring ballot text is authoring the question everyone votes on — forbidden for the AI on the same grounds it is forbidden for a human chair.

Completing the module saves your progress on this device.