Why bother doing the right thing?
    1+

    We often have a choice between doing what we know is right, and doing what will gratify or benefit ourselves (even at the expense of others). So, why be good?

    Asked by:
    Chris Gill
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    Why can we see into outer space but not the bottom of the ocean?
    13+

    There’s some spooky looking fish down there, and yet we seem to waste time looking out into the big black sky (moot point if NASA announces aliens later today…)

    Asked by:
    @LibraryMill
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    Would you take a drug that induced happiness with one side effect; the following day, you remember being happy but not what had happened?
    3+

    Knowing ourselves seems to be the foundation for everything. It is important to question, and be critical of the thoughts, actions and beliefs that resonate with us. Such contemplation is crucial to continual self-development and sanity. Thus, madness can be partly seen as obliviousness, or in history it was highlighted as forgetting. If we forgot what had made us happy, are we mad?

    Asked by:
    Samantha Tran
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    If science is the search for truth, why is innovation suppressed in peer review?
    7+

    It is important to me because the search for truth has been limited by this process that says we must rely upon outdated theories of others. This process limits creative thought and tells us how to view the world. It is nothing less than boundaries upon subjective experience of the world. People should question this because it limits the perception of truth.

    Asked by:
    Nika
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    Can we truly love unconditionally?
    6+
    Asked by:
    @doctorshan12
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    What’s the point of the relentless self-obsession that social media fosters?
    11+

    Because I don’t understand people’s obsession with sharing their usually boring lives and opinions.

    Asked by:
    Marie Alafaci
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    How would our lives change if we talked about death as much as we talk about birth?
    13+

    Because I believe that talking about death can be life-changing and life-affirming.

    Asked by:
    Karin
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    If a duck took a selfie would they call it “human face”?
    12+
    Asked by:
    @Kristen_Boschma
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    How can we deal better with refuges who want to come to Australia, ie in a humane and compassionate way
    1+
    Asked by:
    Jocelyn
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    Will we ever evolve to a place where we make decisions, not just on the financial and economic benefit but for “The Greater Good” of the majority not just the powerful and financially wealthy ?
    7+

    Because, having watched as, at least those in the West, have turned away from the principles offered by the Ten Commandments and instead adopted the principles of The Seven Deadly Sins (with great enthusiasm I might add) we seem to be losing our humanity. Social justice is fading away and social depression and hopelessness is its replacement. Why does it matter to me? I guess because I actually care about people and it makes me angry and sad to see us destroying, not just the planet, but ourselves. I guess it’s the “no man is an Island…” and “Do unto others” Once we forget those, what do we become – non humans? Who says “history never repeats” they were nuts !

    Asked by:
    Elaine
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    What can western cultures learn from other cultures about the grieving process?
    17+

    I currently have a family member who is dying from cancer… and I recently had a friend who died prematurely. Our rituals are so brief. Other cultures morn for days, weeks and sometimes months in ritualistic ways. Is it the threat to economic functioning or is it truly better to just get on with it?

    Asked by:
    Sophie
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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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    For a nation of immigrants why have we become a less welcoming country in the last 10 or so years?
    40+

    I’m annoyed by the illogical and racist emails that I receive from friends whose parents or grandparents came here as so called economic migrants or refugees. Ever since people like Pauline Hanson have come on the scene I’ve seen a change in our culture. I’m sure most Australians don’t want to live in a racist country.

    Asked by:
    Stephen Schmideg
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