
The Harvard EdCast How to Disagree Better: Strategies for Constructive Conversations
Feb 18, 2026
Julia Minson, Harvard Kennedy School professor who studies how people engage with opposing views and author of How to Disagree Better. She explains why we avoid conflict, how persuasion-focused talk fails, and introduces conversational receptiveness and the HEAR toolkit. Practical tips include practicing on low-stakes disagreements and using language to signal curiosity and keep conversations constructive.
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Avoidance Is Based On False Assumptions
- People avoid disagreements because they expect worst-case outcomes like unpleasantness or wasted time.
- Julia Minson found opposing views are usually more sensible and moderate than expected.
Persuasion Creates A Win-Lose Frame
- Pursuing persuasion frames arguments as battles with winners and losers.
- Minson argues that commitment to learning prevents conversations from becoming contests.
Actively Expose And Evaluate Opposing Views
- Seek out opposing perspectives and think about them deliberately before dismissing them.
- Evaluate opposing views with the same scrutiny you give your own side.

