The 19th-century guide to running an effective meeting - FT中文网
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The 19th-century guide to running an effective meeting

A US officer and engineer devised the process that is still in use today
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{"text":[[{"start":5.65,"text":"The writer is a systems engineer and author of ‘Wicked Problems: How to Engineer a Better World’"}],[{"start":11.65,"text":"One hundred and fifty years ago, when Silicon Valley was still mostly orchards, no one imagined algorithms brokering agreements. Developers claim that AI mediators, like Google DeepMind’s Habermas Machine, can help groups reach a consensus, yet a 19th-century engineer devised a process that still governs many of the meetings that matter most."}],[{"start":33.15,"text":"In 1863, as the civil war raged across America, a church meeting in New Bedford, Massachusetts, opened with prayer and collapsed into chaos. Henry Martyn Robert, a 25-year-old Union army officer, had been nominated to preside. Motions and tempers flew. By nightfall, Robert had lost control of the group. He vowed never to chair another meeting until he had learnt how. "}],[{"start":57.7,"text":"That humiliation seeded one of the most influential documents in American civic life: Robert’s Rules of Order. First published in 1876, 13 years after that disastrous meeting, the manual has been adopted by churches, unions, boards, professional societies and neighbourhood associations who want orderly proceedings. Even in Britain, where parliament follows Thomas Erskine May’s treatise on proceedings, there are groups that rely on Robert’s rules."}],[{"start":86.4,"text":"The son of a Baptist minister who opposed slavery, Robert grew up in a home riven by disagreements. While he joined the Union army, commissioned in the Corps of Engineers, some of his relatives fought for the Confederacy.  "}],[{"start":100.60000000000001,"text":"Robert saw fractures everywhere he went. Without formal rules in place, the loudest voice seemed to prevail during disputes. While railroads and telegraphs stitched the nation together, disagreements pulled it apart. "}],[{"start":113.75000000000001,"text":"Robert approached the idea of improving meeting procedure and brokering agreements with the same rigour that he brought to the construction of harbours and lighthouses. He anchored it to the will of the assembly, then built an order of precedence to facilitate group work and curb amendments, with a two-thirds vote required to limit debate or override the minority. "}],[{"start":137.10000000000002,"text":"Behind the mechanics lay a moral and social contract. When a group met, the majority owed the minority a full hearing — the right to debate, amend and appeal. Once a decision was reached, the minority then owed the majority its acceptance, unless it could later rally support to reconsider. "}],[{"start":156.15000000000003,"text":"These rules might not guarantee wisdom or justice, but they offered stability: a framework that allowed disagreement to unfold without shattering the group. That balance of protected rights and legitimate outcomes sets deliberative procedure apart from majority rule or manufactured consensus."}],[{"start":174.10000000000002,"text":"The rules became so popular that they now function as a default operating system for meetings. "}],[{"start":180.00000000000003,"text":"In smaller settings, of course, such procedures can feel like overkill. That’s the vulnerability of any trusted system: procedure can be captured by those who know it best. The introduction of new technology doesn’t fix this; in some ways, AI mediators risk deepening it by adding an invisible, uncontestable layer that reshapes collective judgment."}],[{"start":204.60000000000002,"text":"Robert’s own instinct was to design for the worst, not hope for the best. The man who once lost control of a church spent his later life building another kind of defence. After a hurricane flattened Galveston, Texas, in 1900, Robert helped raise the city on sand and build a massive seawall. When a comparable storm struck in 1915, the damage was far less. "}],[{"start":227.45000000000002,"text":"The Rules of Order and the Galveston seawall answered the same question: how do you design something that survives the next tempest — whether a storm or a room full of people convinced they are right? "}],[{"start":239.25000000000003,"text":"Robert’s Rules does not eliminate conflict. It calls it to order. It demands we argue in the open, under shared procedures, rather than outsourcing our disagreements to tools that deliver comfort at the expense of clarity. "}],[{"start":258.80000000000007,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780153531_4331.mp3"}

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