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Concept
1 min read

Consensus as Relational Ripening

Decision-making through ubuntu consensus as a gradual relational ripening process, not a rushed vote.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao moves gently, imperceptibly; Laozi warns against forcing. Ubuntu decision-making similarly cannot be rushed. Consensus emerges not from voting quickly but from relational ripening: ideas circulate, objections surface slowly, concerns get addressed, understanding deepens. This process takes time—not clock-time but relational time. A good decision emerges when the community is ready, when dissent transforms into understanding or acknowledged difference. This concept reframes 'slow decision-making' not as inefficiency but as sophisticated relational technology. When you force a vote before ripening, you create resentment that poisons implementation. The Tao Te Ching teaches that the sage accomplishes much by doing little; ubuntu decisions become self-implementing when they've ripened through genuine consensus. Rushing produces compliance without commitment. This practice requires trust: the decision will come when it's ready. Meetings may feel circular—returning to themes—but this is relational deepening. Technology for ubuntu must support this: asynchronous dialogue, space for reflection, visibility of how thinking is evolving. Consensus-time cannot be compressed without losing its relational integrity.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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