Question explored
How can a small inquiry community publish what it is learning while protecting the people who make candid conversation possible?
Our starting rule
An experiment log records the question, format, useful takeaways, and open directions. It is not a transcript. Participant names, personal disclosures, private links, and identifiable questions stay out unless explicit permission has been given for a clear reason.
What a good log includes
- The question the gathering was designed to explore.
- A short account of the format that was tried.
- Insights that can stand on their own without attributing private speech.
- Tensions or disagreements described at the level of ideas.
- Resources that were intentionally shared for public use.
- A possible next experiment.
For sensitive sessions
Some topics invite vulnerability. Those logs should remain high-level, and may be better left unpublished when summarizing them would reduce trust in the room.
Next experiment
After the first public events, we will revisit this template and keep only the parts that make the archive genuinely useful.