Often it feels like the only thing we can agree on is that we can't agree on anything. World debate champion Julia Dhar offers three techniques to reshape the way we talk to each other so we can take our disagreements somewhere fruitful — over family dinners, during work meetings, and in our national conversations. Plus host Modupe Akinola explains why better arguments might start not with arguments at all, but with better questions. We hope you enjoy this episode from the TED Business archive, and find it helpful in any difficult conversations you have to navigate over the holiday season.
What Wikipedia teaches us about balancing truth and beliefs | Katherine Maher
How labor unions shape society | Margaret Levi
Is the war for talent real? | After Hours
Mark Cuban doesn’t believe in following your passions | ReThinking with Adam Grant
A creator-led internet, built on blockchain | Adam Mosseri | TED Tech
The power of being yourself at work | Deepa Purushothaman Part 2
The workplace, redefined by women of color | Deepa Purushothaman Part 1
Why people and AI make good business partners | Shervin Khodabandeh
Juliet Schor wants a four-day work week
The funding gap in start-up investing | Temie Giwa-Tubosun
The power of purpose in business | Ashley M. Grice
What if you could help decide how the government spends public funds? | Shari Davis
How to make yourself more human in an automated world | Kevin Roose
The link between menopause and gender inequity at work | Andrea Berchowitz
The rigged test of leadership | Sophie Williams
Why are drug prices so high? Investigating the outdated US patent system | Priti Krishtel
3 steps to getting what you want in a negotiation | Ruchi Sinha
"A seat at the table" isn't the solution for gender equity | Lilly Singh
How to escape the cynicism trap | Jamil Zaki
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