We say “Here’s what I think” with confidence that sounds authentic but often isn’t. When pressed to explain why we hold these views, our honest answer frequently boils down to: “Because Bob said it.”
This is the intellectual equivalent of a child saying they did something “because Tommy did it.” We recognize this pattern in children. But as adults, our intellectual lives often follow the same pattern. We’re just more sophisticated about how we phrase it.
Confidence isn’t the same as clarity. The volume of your voice doesn’t prove ownership.
The real question isn’t whether we agree with Bob. The real question is: how do we agree with Bob?
The architecture of agreement
Genuine agreement requires more work than most people realize. It’s not enough to like Bob’s conclusion or find his position convenient. Real agreement works on at least three levels:
Bob’s reasons – What evidence is he using? What concerns drive his position?
Bob’s reasoning – How does he connect his reasons to his conclusions? What logical steps does he take?
Bob’s assumptions – Where is Bob coming from? What foundational beliefs shape how he sees the world?
Think of it this way: Bob’s reasons are the ingredients he uses. His reasoning is the recipe, how he combines and cooks them. His assumptions are his taste preferences, shaped by experience, culture, or mood. You can’t really cook the same dish until you understand all three.
But here’s what strikes me as crucial: you can only meaningfully agree with Bob’s reasons when you hold reasons of your own. Without your own foundation of thinking, all you can do is understand Bob’s position. You can’t genuinely agree or disagree with it.
If you don’t have your own reasons, then you’re not thinking. That’s intellectual vending.
The precision of disagreement
Most disagreement is lazy. We call people “idiots” or “morons.” Words that translate across cultures as universal ways to voice disagreement without doing any intellectual work.
But what becomes possible when disagreement gets precise? You might disagree with someone’s reasons, their reasoning, or their assumptions. Knowing where you disagree allows you to articulate what you disagree with specifically.
I find I can’t meaningfully disagree with Bob until I understand his position well enough to present it as well as Bob himself presented it. Or even stronger.
When I can make Bob’s argument better than Bob made it, something shifts. I’ve demonstrated sufficient understanding to meaningfully disagree. Not because I’ve earned some rhetorical right, but because I’ve done the work to know what I’m actually disagreeing with.
In other words, I need to find all the reasons to agree with Bob before I can explain which reasons, reasoning, or assumptions I don’t share.
The dance
When both parties commit to this standard, understanding each other well enough to strengthen each other’s positions, something remarkable happens. Disagreement transforms from adversarial battle into a dance.
You take turns making each other’s arguments stronger, then explaining precisely where and why you part ways. This creates space for genuine intellectual engagement rather than the exchange of borrowed talking points.
What I find beautifully ironic is that this approach relieves anxiety rather than creating it. When you know that Bob is committed to understanding your position well enough to present it fairly before he disagrees with it, you can relax. You don’t have to be defensive or perfect. If there’s a flaw in your reasoning, Bob will find it. But only after he’s done the work to understand and strengthen your position first.
An echo is what happens when you’re alone, yelling into emptiness. Even in a room full of people, if you’re just repeating borrowed thoughts, you’re essentially alone. Nothing meaningful comes back to you because you’re not engaging with anyone’s actual thinking.
But having a voice (your own reasons, reasoning, and assumptions developed through genuine exploration) enables you to engage in the dance of authentic disagreement. Voice enables connection with other thinking people.
The paradox is this: even though developing your own voice feels like solitary work, you can never complete it alone. The dance requires a partner. You need other voices to help you challenge your reasoning and strengthen your arguments.
If you’ve done the work, you’ll know the difference between shouting into an empty canyon and moving in step with another thoughtful person.
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Related writings: I’ve explored the distinction between genuine and borrowed thinking: what intellectual presence requires, the cost of translating thoughts for comfort, and how understanding emerges through dialogue.
[photo by Andrew Seaman]