What is the future of politics?
    6+

    The current political system is under pressure around the world. High levels of community distrust, eroding of 2 party systems & decreasing membership, rise of extreme groups, loss of national sovereignty, impact of global corporations.

    Asked by:
    @geeforce77
    Share
    How far are we from a borderless, visa-less world?
    8+

    I’m a traveller, and as an Indian, I find travelling beyond India quite challenging due to Visa restrictions. This is a symptom of a larger problem. Till the time there are boundaries, there are going to be conflicts. The direction of history has been towards unification, we have far less independent political sovereignities today in the world than ever in history, but world unification still seems elusive. Is it going to happen anytime soon?

    Asked by:
    @itaintsodeep
    Share
    Is it okay to give in to peer-group pressure if your peer-group is nicer than you are?
    20+
    Asked by:
    @reallykazcooke
    Share
    Is it ethical to replace human care workers with robotic care workers?
    9+

    As the boomers get older, aged care will become a key economic issue. Automated systems will also become more sophisticated. We will have to make ethical decisions regarding what industries should be open to the disruption of automation.

    Asked by:
    @scarschwartz
    Share
    When further growth becomes impossible on our planet, what will replace growth as the great economic driver?
    6+

    The huge increase in standard of living for two centuries has been driven, and is measured by, economic growth. To continue to progress without destroying the planet we need a replacement or significant morphing of growth.

    Asked by:
    @geeforce77
    Share
    What are the problems that money solves? Are there other solutions?
    7+

    Climate change and the arts are two prime examples of areas where seems difficult to apply this metric-based approach. I am curious about alternatives. What if everyone had a smartphone? Could we something radically different emerge?

    Asked by:
    Emmanuel
    Share
    How do we take our communities back from the control of corporate shills and sociopaths without violence?
    10+

    Behind every story in the media that makes me want to cry I can trace the instigating issue to greed and lust for power/control by entities (corps and gov) and individuals who seem classically sociopathic. The way we have decided to perceive success seems to lead inevitably to the ones most lacking in morals, ethics or care for others to be hailed as leaders. I am tired of the cruelty. I would like to see what we could achieve if kindness and social wellbeing were the goal instead of greed.

    Asked by:
    @The_True_Katt
    Share
    Why do we increasingly accept and expect less of our political leaders?
    10+

    The public seems to be content with castigating honest and reasonable mistakes while overlooking genuine issues in favour of “weapons of mass distraction”.

    Asked by:
    Rogan
    Share
    Is it more important to focus on the present (enjoying the moment), future (achieving goals) or past (learning from mistakes)?
    10+

    What makes for a more fulfilling life?

    Asked by:
    @littlecrossing
    Share
    Are we becoming Generation Device?
    4+

    Modern society has taken to mobile technology at an astonishing rate. Most of us are plugged in, connected, friended or have followers; but is our immersion in the online world and our obsession with the next gadget adversely affecting our engagement with, and enjoyment of, the real one?

    Asked by:
    @glenworking
    Share
    In our organisations, do we assume that all people think alike?
    1+

    I saw graffiti on a wall showing two characters arguing with each other. One said, ‘Question Everything!’ The other said, ‘Why?’
    I was introduced to a body of work on cognitive style that highlights 40 years of research on the predictable differences in the way people think. People do not think alike yet can anyone suggest any management strategies in any organisation or in society that recognizes these differences and allows for different styles of thinkers to thrive? I have asked this question for ten years and found just one organisation that shaped approaches for different style of thinkers. The cost to organisations and societies for not recognizing these predicable differences is tremendous. You see it in our cliches. For some, seeing the glass as half full is positive. For others it is negative as you fail to see that the glass as twice the potential. As such, seeing the glass as half empty is positive as you twice the potential. Yet society thinks seeing the glass as half full is seen as positive; it can also be seen as accepting the mediocrity of the status quo.

    Asked by:
    @edbernacki
    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 has the world still not taken action on climate change?
    8+

    Despite knowing about the risks of climate change since the 1960s and after 25 years of UN climate negotiations, emissions have continued to rise. With the impacts now clearly visible around the world, why are governments still failing to act?

    Asked by:
    James Clark
    Share