Can principles from law and a legal education help us in our day to day disagreements with colleagues, neighbors, family and friends? Our guest today, legal professor John Inazu, thinks so, and he speaks with Rick about his newly released book, Learning To Disagree: The Surprising Path to Navigating Differences with Empathy and Respect. They discuss the value of legal education for learning to get good at disagreement, and they also venture into the cultivation of empathy and fairness, how to think about occupying “middle ground,” and the need to be careful with our language when labeling people with whom we disagree.
Show notes and a full transcript are available.
Communication Spirals & The Temptation To Escalate
Thinking About Attending A Gay Wedding?
Assessing Disagreements Among Friends
On Being Democrat and Pro-Life
A Friendship Forged Through Differences
Biola Students Share Their Experience With Unify America
Reports From The Front: Unify America
Why Are People Leaving Church?
On The Road To UC Berkeley
Be An Ambassador for Christ: Statecraft and Shrewdness
The Four Horsemen of the (Relational) Apocalypse
Getting Help From Gottman
Let's Work On Indirect Communication
The Great Dechurching
It's Not Pointless, Good Things Still Happen
Tim Keller's Remarkable Civility
Why Talk To Someone If They Won't Change Their Mind?
When Christians Disagree
A Rabbi, An LDS Bishop, And An Imam Walk Into A Church
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