Making the implicit explicit
A group of friends may disagree on the value or costs of different choices. Using the Meta-Problem Method to choose the best problem to solve, we can talk directly about our competing priorities.
Suppose you are trying to decide where to live with a friend, and both of you care most about the length of the commute. Maybe one person is willing to drive a little further in exchange for fewer household responsibilities. Or maybe one person expects to quit their job soon and so the commute doesn’t matter in the analysis.
Helping your friends solve their own problems better is difficult because you often only see a small sliver of what they are trying to accomplish. When you decide if you should take a new job, move to a new town, or which car to buy, you will make that decision in the context of your other goals in life. With friends you are often missing a lot of that context unless they choose to share it.