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Welcome to Debategraph. Log in or register to edit, evaluate or comment on debate maps.
Our goal is to make the best arguments on all sides of any debate freely available to all and continuously open to challenge and improvement by all.

In pursuit of this goal, Debategraph is:

(1) A wiki debate visualization tool that lets you:
  • present the strongest case on any debate that matters to you;
  • openly engage the opposing arguments;
  • create and reshape debates, make new points, rate and filter the arguments;
  • monitor the evolution of debates via RSS feeds; and,
  • share and reuse the debates on and offline;
(2) A web-based, creative commons project to increase the transparency and rigor of public debate everywhere—by making the collective insight and intelligence of the global community freely available to all.
  • Every debate map is provisional and open to iterative improvement by anyone who participates.
  • Over time, the debate maps will mature into the definitive articulations of each debate.
  • Every change you make—whether correcting a text, adding a new argument, or starting a new debate—contributes towards the fulfilment of this social promise.
  • So be bold as a first time visitor—and safe in the knowledge that a full editing history provides a safety net. And if you are interested in playing a more systematic editorial role in the community, we would love to hear from you.
(3) A global map of all the debates that enables us to visualise and deepen our understanding of the ways in which different debates are semantically interrelated, and ways in which these interrelated debates shape, and are shaped by, each other.

Who for?
  • Anyone is free sign in and start creating, editing, rating and commenting on debates straightaway (once a valid e-mail address is confirmed).
  • NGOs, companies, and all branches of government are free to create and contribute to public debate maps—and to use them to support other forms of consultation and deliberation.
  • Universities and schools are free to use debate maps for research and classroom projects—and to teach and encourage critical thinking skills.

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Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License. Copyright © 2008 Thoughtgraph Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Registration No: 05843166.

Featured maps

Climate Change
A collaborative international project to map the causes, consequences and potential responses to climate change, with researchers from the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, the Open University's Knowledge Media Institute, and Rutgers, Oslo and Naples Universities.
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Iranian Nuclear Programme
How should the rest of the world respond to Iran's pursuit of full nuclear fuel cycle technology, including the ability to enrich uranium?
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Obama's Vice President
A debate map exploring Barack Obama's choice of a Vice-Presidential running mate. 
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Should Drugs be Legalised?
A map investigating global drugs policy issues; starting with the debate around the legalisation of drugs. Would the legalisation of drugs benefit or harm society?
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The Future of Iraq
Examining the policy options open to the US executive government with respect to Iraq in the Spring of 2008. Subsequently broader issues and international perspectives will be added, including the lessons emerging from Iraq.
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Intelligent Design
A map starting to explore the arguments around Intelligent Design.
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Drugs Policy in the UK
A debate map exploring and building on the detailed findings of the RSA Commission on Illegal Drugs, Communities and Public Policy's review of UK policy on the use and abuse of illegal drugs.
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Can Computers Think?
A long term project with AI theorists and philosophers to bring Robert Horn's brilliant and pioneering debate map of 50 years of philosophical argument about the Turing Test and the possibility of computer thought up to date.
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Sport and Genetic Enhancement
Harvard philosopher Michael Sandel's concerns about the application of genetic technology to sport, as expressed in his recent Open University Ethics Bites philosophy podcast.
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To be or not to be...
A light-hearted map of Hamlet's existential dilemma (Act III, Scene I), to commemorate the 444th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth on 23 April 1564.
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Abortion
Mapping the arguments on all sides of the abortion debate. Under what circumstances, if any, should abortion be permitted?
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ID System Debate
Mapping the debate around the proposed introduction of a biometric identity system in the UK. What is the government's rationale for the system? And does this rationale stand up to detailed scrutiny?
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Road Congestion
Analysing the issues around, and potential responses to, the projected increases in road congestion in the UK.
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Politics and the media
The debate arising from Tony Blair's final Our Nation's Future lecture as Prime Minister on the systemic problems between politics and the media in the 21st Century.
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