After deliberation, people typically end up holding a more extreme version of what they thought before the discussion began (group polarization), and this is close to an iron law of social interactions, demonstrated in controlled experiments such as the Colorado study where Boulder liberals became more pro-affirmative-action and Colorado Springs conservatives more anti.

causalpending

Speaker

Cass Sunstein

Evidence Quote

this is as close as there is to an iron law of social interactions where people in deliberating groups ndepth more extreme in the same direction that they were heading before they started to talk

Source

Sunstein on Infotopia, Information and Decision-MakingEconTalk
Created: 6/15/2026, 9:20:35 AM

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