When persistent conflict uses the same words, audit the definitions — the disagreement may be semantic
When two people or two parts of your own thinking use the same term with persistent conflict, pause the debate and conduct a definition audit: have each party write their operational definition independently, then compare—if definitions diverge, the conflict is definitional not factual and should be resolved at the definition level.
Why This Is a Rule
A significant percentage of persistent disagreements are definitional, not factual. Two people argue about whether a feature is "ready" — one means "it passes all tests" and the other means "it handles all edge cases gracefully." They agree on the state of the code but disagree on whether the word "ready" applies. The argument feels like a factual dispute about the code's quality but is actually a semantic dispute about the word's meaning.
These definitional conflicts can persist for hours, meetings, or weeks because the participants assume they're using words the same way. Each side presents evidence that "proves" their position, but the evidence is evaluated against different definitions. The debate generates heat but no resolution because the resolution requires aligning definitions, not presenting more evidence.
The same pattern occurs internally: two parts of your thinking conflict because they're using the same word to mean different things. "I should be more productive" — the part of you that means "produce more output" conflicts with the part that means "produce higher-quality output," and the internal debate feels like confusion about priorities when it's actually confusion about a word.
When This Fires
- A debate keeps circling back to the same points without resolution
- Two people agree on facts but disagree on conclusions
- You feel internally conflicted about a term like "success," "quality," or "fair"
- Someone says "we already agreed on this" but the other person disagrees
Common Failure Mode
Conducting the definition audit together rather than independently. When people write definitions in the same room, social pressure aligns their language before the divergence becomes visible. Each person adjusts their definition to sound compatible with what they hear the other saying. Independent writing preserves the genuine definitions, which is where the diagnostic value lives.
The Protocol
When conflict persists despite shared facts: (1) Stop arguing. (2) Identify the key terms under dispute (usually 1-3 words). (3) Each party writes their operational definition independently — not in the same room, not after discussing. (4) Compare the definitions side by side. (5) If definitions diverge → the conflict is definitional. Align definitions first, then re-evaluate whether the factual disagreement even exists. Often it doesn't — people who agree on definitions frequently agree on conclusions.