3. Do you have any evidence for that?
4. What are your reasons for saying that?
5. What other information do we need?
6. Could you explain your reasons to us?
7. Are these reasons adequate?
8. Why did you say that?
9. What led you to that belief?
10. How does that apply to this case?
11. What would change your mind?
12. Is there a reason to doubt that evidence?
13. What would you say to someone who said ____?
14. By what reasoning did you come to that conclusion?
15. How could we find out whether that is true?
D. Questions about PERSPECTIVES.
1. You seem to be approaching this from ____ perspective. Why have you
chosen this rather than another perspective?
2. How would other groups/types of people respond? Why? What would
influence them?
3. How could you answer the objection that ____ would make?
4. What might someone who believed ____ think?
5. Can/did anyone see this another way?
6. How many other perspectives can you imagine?
E. Questions that probe CONSEQUENCES of a position.
1. When you say ____, are you implying ____?
2. But if that happened, what else would happen as a result? Why?
3. What effect would that have?
4. Would that necessarily happen or only probably happen?
5. If we disagree, what consequences could result?
6. If this and this is the case, then what else must also be true?
7. Would any implication or result cause you to think differently?