Why isn’t there more research into making lab grown hamburgers and mince cheaper, surely it’s a matter of scale to make them cheaper?
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    Asked by:
    James Geddes
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    What isn’t a thought?
    4+

    Thoughts consume most of our lives and they don’t even exist.

    Asked by:
    @stevenadams52
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    Why have I never stopped at East Richmond?
    8+

    22 years of riding trains, not once have I stopped there. It only saves 5 minutes to skip it. Why does nearly every train skip it?

    Asked by:
    @TimToGetAWatch
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    Should we bring back conscription?
    3+

    Some countries use a year of compulsory military service as a rite of passage for young adults. Looking at our 18 year olds today, some might say we need to bring in this kind of enforced ‘gap year’ for the good of the individual and of our whole society. And of course, it would strengthen the country militarily to have a national service corps. But at what cost? Would this be worth it?

    Asked by:
    Deb
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    Who is the expert – the observer, or the person who has lived the experience?
    2+

    Think about the various ways seeing and how expertise is allotted in our society and which point of view is given privilege of expression, employment, publicity and notoriety…

    Asked by:
    @initiallyno
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    How do you maintain the discipline that allows you to be wild?
    3+

    For Cheryl Strayed. Getting started might be an impulse. From there to the finish requires something else.

    Asked by:
    @Peterhgh
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    How many does light bulbs does it take to change a politician?
    14+

    People have great ideas all the time- how to help those in need, starting with providing water where there is none, sanitary and hygiene products where they are lacking, food and shelter to those without… but do politicians ever change? We keep electing and fostering a system where the greediest are given the role of decision makers… why is that?

    Asked by:
    @OzHorrorcon
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    Why should I be denied the freedom to sell my organs?
    3+

    Throughout our lives we sacrifice many things for money- relationships, comfort, time- if I can rationally decide, with no duress, that dispensing with an organ is my preferred mode of raising money why should I be prevented from doing so? Particularly given that it may save the life of someone in urgent need.

    Asked by:
    Adam Myatt
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    Does free will really exist?
    2+

    I’m asking because it is a question, after standstill discussions with peers — some for; some against — I cannot clarify to myself what I believe. To have this question answered would not only put my mind at ease, but influence how I see the world and go about my life.

    Asked by:
    Ryan Powell
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    Is there actually such a thing as unconditional love – and if there were, what would it actually mean?
    8+
    Asked by:
    Tiny Iota
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    Can you really combat terrorism when terrorism is whatever the state wants it to be?
    15+

    Thinking about the past Communist vs Fascist dualism, and now the “good” vs “evil” i.e. the “West” vs “terrorism” dualism, and past and present governments using these terms as pawns for their own agenda, perhaps rendering them meaningless. Also thinking about the list of organisations deemed ‘terrorist’ orgs by Australia, e.g. the PKK Kurdish Workers Party who are fighting ISIS (therefore, terrorism) in Kobane

    Asked by:
    @spoonfulofthyme
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    In reality, is world peace a possible achievement?
    11+

    I’m asking this question because it is, without doubt, something that most of us want to have happen, and I would like it to be both possible and to be brought about. However, I’m wondering if thinkers who have had more experience of life and of thinking, than I have, believe that it is actually possible. It matters to me because I see peace as enabling any person to experience a positively richer experience of life, and for this reason, I view it as being something that should matter to all of us.

    Asked by:
    @Indigo9
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    The tragic picture of the drowned Syrian toddler, or Kevin Carter’s picture of the starving Sudanese child with a vulture waiting to pounce, lead to compassionate letters about how we deal with the aftermath of the world’s tragedies. But where are the ideas for how we stop these tragedies at their source?
    20+

    Can you tell us how we, the people, convince the United nations to act as a genuine force for good in the world by bringing together the might of the world’s most powerful nations to rectify, at its source, the trauma these individuals are enduring? Or can you suggest other ways we can act? I’m asking this question out of sheer frustration that we can do nothing more than be compassionate to the world’s victims AFTER the event. People power has achieved results before, so perhaps those caring people can do more now – but how?

    Asked by:
    Robyn Maggs
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