Showing posts with label debate reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debate reform. Show all posts

How the Idea Stock Exchange Turns Political Opinions Into Scoreable, Falsifiable Claims

 Most political debate fails for a simple reason: claims are never made falsifiable. When someone says "we need to strengthen our borders," there's no agreed-upon measure of success, no baseline, no conditions under which they'd admit they were wrong.


The Idea Stock Exchange (ISE) fixes this by requiring every belief to pass through a structured template before it earns a score. Here's what that looks like in practice.


The Three-Part Score

Every argument submitted to the ISE receives three scores:

  • Truth Score (0-100): Is the underlying claim supported by peer-reviewed or otherwise credible evidence?
  • Linkage Score (0-100): Does this argument actually connect logically to the belief it supports or opposes?
  • Importance Score (0-100): How much weight should this argument carry in the overall debate?
These three scores combine into a ReasonRank — a weighted composite that propagates recursively up through the argument tree. Strong sub-arguments raise the score of parent arguments. Weak ones drag them down.

What a Belief Page Looks Like

Take the belief "Colorado should adopt ranked choice voting." On the ISE, that page includes: a neutral definition of ranked choice voting, a table of the top pro arguments with scores, a table of the top con arguments with scores, the best supporting and opposing evidence (classified by type: T1=peer-reviewed, T2=expert, T3=journalism, T4=opinion), falsifiability conditions (what evidence would change my mind), a cost-benefit analysis with short and long-term projections, and a conflict resolution framework identifying shared interests between supporters and opponents.


No other political platform does all of that for every belief, systematically.


The Daily Review Protocol

The ISE uses a daily systematic review process documented on GitHub. Each day, up to three belief pages are evaluated against the full template. Improvements are logged in progress_log.txt. Scores are recalibrated when evidence changes. Each belief must satisfy six standards before it is marked complete: structural compliance, clarity, neutrality, scoring integrity, evidence quality, and logical rigor — including falsifiability conditions.


This is what it looks like when a political candidate actually shows their work.


Help Build the ISE — It's Open Source

The platform is built on Next.js, TypeScript, PostgreSQL, Prisma, and TailwindCSS. Whether you're a developer, researcher, or writer — there's a role for you.

  • Developers: pick a good first issue on GitHub and contribute to the scoring engine or frontend
  • Researchers: score arguments using the Belief Template (Truth, Linkage, Importance)
  • Writers: draft neutral pro/con arguments for contested beliefs
  • Everyone: star the repo to increase visibility and help this reach more contributors
Browse the beliefs at myclob.pbworks.com and contribute at github.com/myklob/ideastockexchange

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How the Idea Stock Exchange Turns Political Opinions Into Scoreable, Falsifiable Claims

 Most political debate fails for a simple reason: claims are never made falsifiable. When someone says "we need to strengthen our borde...

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