Is it okay to give in to peer-group pressure if your peer-group is nicer than you are?
    20+
    Asked by:
    @reallykazcooke
    Share
    What is the role of the Grandparent when it comes to raising Grandchildren?
    1+

    So many of today’s Grandparents fulfil the role of the Carer for their Grandchildren. On occasion, the Grandparent’s own methods of responding to / dealing with the behaviours of children may differ from that of the child’s parents. What is the expectation in the event this occurs?

    Asked by:
    Mary
    Share
    How do we get adults to really listen to our children on matters of civic responsibility? (transport/town planning/cultural infrastructure)
    7+

    We largely ignore the thoughts and ideas of children, when they are active participants in their cities and towns. Children have their own culture, and histories. They have more time to observe, make lateral connections, and have a heightened sensory perception. They have such valuable input and are shamefully undervalued in conversations, which have a direct impact on their environment. I fear that the absence of their voices in the planning and analysis of our social infrastructure is to our detriment as a society.

    Asked by:
    Hannah Liddeaux
    Share
    How do we limit our misuse of new technologies?
    5+
    Asked by:
    @kenbaumann
    Share
    What lies in the future of Australia if we do not want to rely on mining, overseas students and toursim?
    26+

    It is about the future of ours and generations after.

    Asked by:
    @frecklecat
    Share
    Could we be entering a new era of stability in Australian politics, or does that afford Malcolm Turnbull way too much credit?
    1+
    Asked by:
    Tom Nicholls
    Share
    Is the relentless pursuit of economic growth sustainable as our planet shudders under the impact of the effects of global warming?
    5+

    As the irrefutable evidence of the effects of human causation of global warming through increasing production of greenhouse gasses gains traction,it seems that a new economic paradigm (other than growth) must be urgently considered. After all, it’s about the survival of the next generation(s).

    Asked by:
    David Jewell
    Share
    Why do humans tend to get more politically conservative as they get older? (Specifically, my dad).
    17+
    Asked by:
    @annette_v
    Share
    What are the differences between the mind, brain and consciousness … and how are they the same/connected/related?
    8+

    Because I wonder where ‘thought’ originates from and where our consciousness goes when we die. It matters because the greater awareness we have of ourselves the greater ability we have to improve ourselves.

    Asked by:
    danielle ryan
    Share
    Why do we find it so difficult to keep opposing ideas alive in the same mind?
    0

    To quote the late great Christopher Hitchens in introducing his autobiography, Hitch-22, “The most intense wars are civil wars, just as the most vivid and rending personal conflicts are internal ones, and what I hope to do now is give some idea of what it is like to fight on two fronts at once, to try and keep opposing ideas alive in the same mind, even occasionally to show two faces at the same time.” From the personal to the political, and the intersection of the two, why do we find it so difficult to keep opposing ideas alive in the same mind?

    Asked by:
    Andrew Legg
    Share
    If light actually slows down, even a tiny bit over millions of years, does that mean the universe isn’t expanding, it just looks like it is?
    10+

    It’s a question I came up with that I’d love an expert to explain. I like to question the assumptions that other assumptions are based on but over time are seen as fact.

    Asked by:
    tim
    Share
    Abdul Abdullah: do you think the Australian government has worked out why young Muslims are pissed off?
    5+

    It is a critically important question.

    Asked by:
    Phil
    Share
    Why has society constructed this idea of a ‘path’ to follow in order to be happy and successful? And are we all just waiting to die?
    6+

    This is the current internal debate I am struggling with as a student about to graduate and go out into the competitive and soul-crushing work force world. There is often this moral vs. wealth and success debate when thinking about the person I want to be and whether I can truly make an impact in this world. How can we break free from the ideals in place by our society and comfortably be ourselves without giving up certain parts of who we are and how we think?

    Asked by:
    Shannon H
    Share