Should librarians & archivists be at the front line fighting for intellectual freedom?
    16+

    As mass surveillance by companies and government increases, digital privacy becomes more and more important. Information professionals have many skills that can contribute to educating and informing citizens about the importance of intellectual freedom.

    Asked by:
    @jayechats
    Share
    why is there still no cure for cancer?
    7+

    All you ever hear is that something is being tested… it seems that there is more money to be made in ‘support’ medicines

    Asked by:
    S M
    Share
    What’s the allure in everyone’s secret pastime – the social media photo stalk – and why are we compelled to do something so destructive?
    9+

    Do we do it to make ourselves feel better or to make ourselves feel worse? Either way, PLEASE MAKE ME STOP LOOKING AT THE INSTAGRAM.

    Asked by:
    @shesaidso
    Share
    Why do those with the power to make a decision so rarely involve those who will be affected by the decision in the decision making process?
    2+

    How much is the mental health epidemic due to lack of meaning in contemporary society?
    Why are there so many bored people resorting to (legal/illegal) drugs nowadays?
    How can we expect people to think and make good decisions in times of crisis (eg.bushfire) when they have little experience of thinking and making decisions in every day life?
    Individuals grow and develop when having the opportunity to work out problems with others.

    Asked by:
    Martin Butcher
    Share
    As a community, how can we support a person with a mental health issue, without creating stigma?
    10+

    I have a mental illness in a regional city. I had an episode of anger which I understand is due to acute anxiety, at my daughter’s school. Three years on, people still cower, there is gossip about me, that is of the effect that I am going to coffee shops to ‘meet’ and ‘pickup’ men, and that I am most interested in meeting married men. I am told I have to just move around and amongst the society, (by my psychologist) but I find it safer and apparently I am becoming more reclusive, to remain at home. I don’t condone aggressive behaviour. The school and my workplace, were trying to ‘support’ me, by having psychologists at the school, monitor my behaviour and have people behave ‘accordingly’. I began to feel I was living ‘The Truman Show’, and realise none of my interactions were authentic. Initially those people were being ‘kind’ but misguided, in supporting me, and I guess, my daughter. I have 3 years until she leaves school. I will go ‘somewhere else’. Michael Kirby has spoken of the chaplaincy program being a ‘front’ to filter through students of need/risk. I plod on. This stigma came into my new workplace. I plod on. Btw: this is not my paranoia. Underneath, I find it deeply alienating and distressing.

    Asked by:
    Stigma_or_Getoverit
    Share
    Does science fiction give us an unrealistic expectation that we can effectively inhabit Mars?
    11+

    The recent discovery of water on Mars has brought into perspective that a manned mission may contaminate the results of any discovery of life. Perchlorates and cosmic radiation are still barriers to a lengthy mission. Is it more important to have realistic expectations of Mars or a vision of solving problems to which we do not yet have answers?

    Asked by:
    Ggorgg
    Share
    Why is becoming an economy more important than a society?
    22+

    We are constantly outsourcing social tasks, child care, aged care, any care actually. Our level of tolerance and sense of community is constantly diminishing, causing more depression and social problems. Why aren’t we encouraging mothers to spend time with their kids instead of putting them in care? Why aren’t we supporting adult children in looking after their aging parents. Why don’t we help each other more? Is it all about money? Appearances? Lack of tolerance?

    Asked by:
    Renee
    Share
    Why are we so city-centric in Australia?
    9+

    I grew up in cities, but have lived in the provinces for over 20 years, and find it to be a refreshingly connected place to live. I rail against the snobbery of city folk towards ‘country folk’. We have just as many great ideas and cultural practises as cities do.

    Asked by:
    @bespokeshespoke
    Share
    Why do schools still teach content instead of skilling students to succeed in the Information Age?
    7+

    I find it strange that all educational philosophy and research gets ignored by modern high school education.

    Asked by:
    Chris lougheed
    Share
    How can we resolve the conflict between the subjective centrality of our lives & awareness of its objective insignificance?
    8+
    Asked by:
    @weekly_service
    Share
    Why is blasphemy so satisfying even though I’m an atheist?
    48+

    Goddamit.

    Asked by:
    @Tim_Sinclair
    Share
    Why do we seek answers rather than better questions?
    5+

    Questions drive inquiry, which is the way to critically engage with contested ideas.

    Asked by:
    @MsNicoleGibson
    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