cognitive biases (1)

Stefan

The Real Reason Arguments Never End!

Why Smart People Can't Find Common Ground (Spoiler: It's Philosophy)

Ever walked out of a meeting feeling like you were arguing but couldn't pinpoint exactly why? Smart people, good intentions, same circular arguments week after week? That's because you're having philosophical debates without knowing it. The product manager pushing for "maximum user engagement" is being utilitarian. The engineer saying "we promised this feature" sounds like Kant. These aren't strategy problems - they're philosophy problems hiding in plain sight.

What You'll Discover:
🎯 The three ethical frameworks running every strategic decision (consequentialism, deontology, virtue ethics)
⚠️ The Business Trolley Problem - why some decisions feel fundamentally different even with identical outcomes
📊 Why "evidence over authority" fails - data doesn't speak for itself (philosophers knew this for centuries)
🔍 Three ways evidence goes wrong - streetlight effect, survivorship bias, McNamara fallacy

Business Examples:

  • Sam Bankman-Fried/FTX: Pure consequentialism without guardrails ($8B "for the greater good")
  • Johnson & Johnson Tylenol crisis: Deontological principle over profit ($100M recall that rebuilt trust)
  • Nokia's data tragedy: Had all the evidence, still lost 50% market share in 5 years (theory-ladenness blinded them)
  • Deutsche Bahn's metric gaming: Cancelled trains don't count as "late" (the 'Scheuer-Wende' problem)
  • Microsoft transformation: Ballmer's stack ranking vs Nadella's growth mindset (stock tripled in 5 years)

The Hidden Pattern:
Your worst meetings aren't communication failures - they're unrecognized philosophical conflicts. Sales sees consequentialist outcomes, engineering sees deontological duties, leadership sees virtue ethics character. Same data, different frameworks, endless arguing.

Practical Framework:
Identify which ethical framework people are using Separate direct vs indirect consequences ("pull lever" vs "push person") Consider time horizons (quarterly vs decade) Think meta-level (what organization are you becoming?)

The Competitive Advantage:
Organizations that recognize these philosophical dynamics make better decisions faster. Research shows bias-awareness training improves decision accuracy by 30%, critical thinking frameworks boost problem-solving efficiency by 40%. This capability can't be copied like features or talent.

Your Immediate Actions:

  • Framework Translator: Help people see they're using different ethical lenses
  • Assumption Audit: 15 minutes listing what you're assuming (saves millions in bad decisions)
  • Peer Review Revolution: Have departments review each other's metrics (borrowed from science)
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