Wednesday, May 28, 2014

what's your big question?

Our minds are naturally inclined toward associative and interdisciplinary thinking.  We connect the dots in all sorts of ways, often when we don't fully comprehend the experience (and sometimes when there aren't even any dots).  

We have questions about the nature of the world: our experience of it, our place in it, our relationship to it, what lies beyond it, and everything else.  When we're young we ask questions all the time.  We are insatiably curious.  It's like somehow we intuitively understand that the more we learn the better we get at everything--including learning.  We don't worry about curricular units or standards.  We have no test anxiety.  We test ourselves all the time.  We love risk and we don't care if we fail.  It's always somebody else who's saying, "Hey, come down from there, you're going to get hurt!"* [*Often, they're right.  In any case they're probably more experienced in estimating the odds of that was fun didn't hurt vs. itchy leg cast for a month outcomes.  But sometimes you just KNOW you can do it and it's frustrating to be told you can't.  Pushing the edge is what learning is all about.** {**As a teacher/responsible adult I must explicitly remind you to do this (i.e., learn/push the edge/create new neural pathways in your brain that actually change your mind) in ways that will not break laws or harm any sentient beings-- most especially you-- or offend, irritate, annoy, upset, or anger your parents.***} <***If you think this is a lot of footnotes, or whatever we're calling the blogger's equivalent, you should read David Foster Wallace (especially Infinite Jest).  In fact, this is the perfect time for you to consider his commencement speech (which doesn't contain footnotes, but does contain the sort of wisdom that more people should hear while there's still time to do something about it.).  At any rate, if you're still following this sentence you'll do fine in this course.>}]  Not only do we love climbing learning limbs when we're young, we know it's what we're best at.  Most of us learn whole languages best between the ages of 5-12.  Our amazing brains manage the torrential inflow by creating schema

We have every incentive to accelerate and amplify our learning as we age.  Our future is increasingly complex and uncertain.  Our culture and economy favor those in the know.  Learning is increasingly your responsibility as individuals.  You're becoming more independent; in about a year you'll be heading off to college, where your professors may not know you exist and definitely won't care how you organize your binder.  As if all that isn't motivation enough for you to get your learning on, it turns out that not learning may actually be bad for you.  We form new neurons and connections in our brains when we learn.  Scientists are investigating whether the lack of new neuron formation is a cause for depression or an interfering factor in recovery.

When it comes to thinking for yourself in the traditional high school setting, though, there are constraints.  Inquiry that doesn't "fit" in the classroom is too often seen as insubordinate.   By definition, individualism and divergent thinking don't regress to the mean or conform to a one-size-fits-all syllabus.  We will have to find ways to gracefully lose arguments and compromise.  In addition, a culture of fear of punishment or embarrassment can lead the smartest and most successful learners to surrender and play the game.  When this happens, motivated learning in the presence of no opportunity dies the same death as a fire in the presence of no oxygen.  The authors of "The Creativity Crisis" say we ask about 100 questions a day as preschoolers-- and we quit asking altogether by middle school. 

In his book Orbiting the Giant Hairball, Gordon MacKenzie describes visiting schools to show students how artists sculpt steel into animals:

“I always began with the same introduction: ‘Hi My name is Gordon MacKenzie and, among other things, I am an artist... How many of you are artists?’
The pattern of responses never failed.
First grade: En mass the children leapt from their chairs, arms waving wildly, eager hands trying to reach the ceiling.  Every child was an artist.
Second grade: About half the kids raised their hands, shoulder high, no higher.  The raised hands were still.
Third grade: At best, 10 kids out of 30 would raise a hand.  Tentatively.  Self-consciously. 
And so on up through the grades.  The higher the grade, the fewer children raised their hands.  By the time I reached sixth grade, no more than one or two did so and then only ever-so-slightly—guardedly—their eyes dancing from side to side uneasily, betraying a fear of being identified by the group as a ‘closet artist.’”  

Richard Saul Werman (the man who created the TED conference) said, "In school we’re rewarded for having the answer, not for asking a good question.”  School and the way it works was designed back when things were very different and oriented around mass production; that's not the way the world works any more.  You can't just prepare for a job that may not be around by the time you graduate.  And in the age of the search engine, there is no real point in learning facts for their own sake, especially since so many of them eventually turn out not to be facts after all.  You have to develop the critical thinking, problem-solving, oppurtunity-seeking, and collaborative skills that will enable you to CREATE a role for yourself in the new economy.  (And don't worry, if you're not an entrepreneur by nature, these abilities will help you do whatever else you want to do more effectively.)

So, our first mission is to reclaim the power of the question.  Everything you ask has an interdisciplinary answer.  Show me a cup of tea and I'll show you botany, ceramics, and the history of colonialism (for starters).  Wondering why your girlfriend doesn't love you any more?  Psychology, poetry, probability... you get the idea.  And no matter what the question or the answers, you're going to have to sort the signal from the noise and determine how best to share the sense you make.

What's your Big Question?  

What have you always wanted to know?  What are you thinking about now that you've been asked?  What answers would make a difference in your life, or in the community, or in the world?  What do you wish you could invent?  What problem do you want to solve?  This is not a trick and there are no limits.  Please comment to this post with your question and post it to your course blog (title: MY BIG QUESTION).  You can always change your question or ask another.  If you need some inspiration, check out this year's Eng 3 Big Questions here.

71 comments:

  1. Will humans ever expand beyond Earth?
    How will we cope with rising sea levels?
    Will psychedelics ever be made legal for use in psychiatry again?
    Will racism ever be truly gone?
    What will we do about climate change?

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  2. Is this class going to be even more open the last one?

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  3. What is the point of expanding our knowledge and learning? To pass it down for further research or to be turned into a legend as technology grows and replaces the thinking portions of our daily lives?
    What happens when advanced technology is abused and only 2 ranks in society exist; the intelligent and the ignorant as scholars create more advanced technology and naive people become more dependent on "smart" phones to do all the thinking?
    What would happen if we lacked such technology?

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  4. I know I am a little behind on the bandwagon but here are my questions:
    -If you think about evolution the first humans evolved from something less than what we are today. Do we, in today's society, have anymore evolution left in us? Are we done growing, is this it for us?
    -Why do we have an innate nature to want more? Why do we find entertainment in the misfortune of others? Is it neurological or just wired in us?
    -Why do Americans have a different accent than people in Europe? If we originated from colonized European civilizations why do we differ in our speech?

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    1. I have also been thinking on the question of why we look at peoples' flaws and mistakes (like when someone has something on their face, you look at it instead of their eyes, but its different when you try not to look at someone in a wheelchair)? Are others shortcomings/flaws really different from mine or yours or are they all they same magnitude?

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  5. My big question is how will humans become extinct and what will happen after? Many anthropologists and other scientists say that there will an airborne pathogen that will kill most of the human population, a meteorite will hit Earth like 65 million years ago when dinosaurs went extinct, or simply the Universe will expand until it no longer can. When the human population ends before the Earth does, will new organisms rise and evolve?

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  6. My questions have more to do with an intimate and universal concept for everyone on this earth, with so many people sometimes I wonder, Does every person have their own fate in life?Does true love really exist for everyone?

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  7. -Will there be a period in future will all discrimination will be abolished? No more racism? The end of homophobia? The end of religious intolerance? Will the final generation of discrimination die off and thus commence a new era in history of human equality? For the United States, North America, the world?

    -How far can space really go? Where does it end? No scientific facts, just as human curiosity- how will man if ever get to the end of space?

    -Is the human fear of judgment so grandiose in our society on a global level that it causes so much panic and fear for one to speak publicly, in front of a crowd? Are self-esteems so low that one can’t present themselves to a crowd? Most people tread at the thought of public speaking- they’re even courses taught on how to do it! It is so easy for a lot of people to go up to a stranger and have small talk waiting in a line or so, even picking up an argument with a stranger- however when people are speaking (just talking!) in front a lot people, we already have known for a long time, most are terrified and have a panic attack. I don’t have this fear, at all (trust me, you’ll find out!) however, why do people tread this so much?

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  8. My Big Question that I have always wondered about since I was brought upon the theories was did we, humans, truly evolve from pre-existing mammals such as monkeys as scientists predict or were we created by God? If we were created by God, does he really have an overall view on how our whole life will occur or do we live our life day to day hoping we would live another day and he just provides us with fate?

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  9. More and more individuals seem to want to put aside all emotion when dealing with complex issues, stating that they will simply get in the way. However are we neglecting what we as humans are driven by? When is it best to listen to the voice of your heart rather than listening to the logic from your brain?

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  10. Big questions: Will I and others be able to achieve all the goals (from love to jobs) that we want for ourselves before we die or is that to far fetch? Will we be able to even answer this question right now? Or will I have to wait till my memorial when I am dead to know if I lived my life fully? I might be answering this question myself because it can not be answered unless we have created a time machine. Maybe my ultimate question is that do we all think of this? What do you personally do to not think about "planning" our lives? Are our lives planned out already by a higher power?

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  11. My questions: When will people truly live in an open and loving environment?
    Has society lost itself in the commotion?
    Why does society lead us to climb a ladder for success and wealth, if those things do not guarantee happiness?

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  12. Mhh my big question would be if global warming would ever get so bad to cause earth to really loose it's basis to provide necessities for humans?

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  13. My big question is why does it seem so important and necessary to be apart of the "popular" kids in school? So many people focus on being known and accepted by others and what they can do to be considered popular, but in reality is that what's going to get you into college? I feel that society has become so focused on being popular for our age group or famous for adults, but forget the idea of happiness. Are you happy when all you can do is watch what you say or do in order to fit in with the "cool' kids? Do you feel that you are being true to yourself and are you comfortable with who you have become? Considering what many people do just to be called a popular kid at school, why has stereotypes and status become such an important outlook to teenagers in specific?

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  14. On of my biggest questions is when will the destruction of our own planet stop?
    We live on a planet with limited resources and our generation is wasting them like there is no tomorrow, but the sad part is one of these day THERE WILL BE NO TOMORROW. That will be the day we have expended all of our non-reusable resources and as a planet, not just a species because we are expending the clean water, air, and earth. It will be almost impossible to inhabit this planet, like the beginning of the movie Wall-E. I don't know about you but I want to protect this planet as much as I can.

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  15. My big question is how was life formed? How did we come about? How did the human existence start to exist? Even though there are many theories proposed by many scientists and some scientific aspects can be looked at to try and answer these questions but it still isn't satisfying for me. I had a chat with another student today in biology class about how strange life is and that it's an irreversible reaction. If you break human body down to its core, you'll find carbon, oxygen and other elements in its pure form but if you combine those elements outside, you will not get a human body.. How strange!! I would love to be someone who understands the evolution of humans on Earth.

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  16. -What makes us generous? Does the desire to be generous mean we are born innately good or evil?
    -Should infants get a choice in their own abortion like mothers get a choice of their own body?
    -Is it harder to believe in a God than the belief that humans evolved from a chemical reaction? If humans evolved so rapidly in the past, why are we not evolving as rapidly today?
    -What hurts more... physical pain or emotional pain?
    -What would you do for a Klondike bar?
    -How many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop?
    -Who framed Roger Rabbit?

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  17. My big questions: How is it that we all began as one then ended up to what we are today, with many languages, many religions, and just many diverse aspects of life? Who am I, and I don't mean as in a label, but the person behind that? Will there ever be world peace, where we can come to an understanding?

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    1. What is the next big thing? When will we find it? How will it be important?

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  19. The human neurological experience has always been of interest to me, particularly because I spend a lot of time sifting through my own thoughts and picking the brains of others via lively debate or discussion. I decided to delve into a big question that would allow me to focus on this very thing. Here is an assortment of questions that are interrelated:

    What is thought?

    When does thought become vision, and vision turn into reality?

    Is our thought preconstructed, preprogrammed or predicted?

    Are we, as citizens in control of our thoughts or ideas?

    How are our thoughts influenced?

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  20. My big questions are:

    What point is the line drawn between religion/belief and science?

    Is there a such a chemical connection between two people or people and animals?

    What lurks beneath the unexplored areas of the sea? The forests? Space?

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  21. I had a question and as I read all of the other amazing questions ones in comments I had forgotten mine. Shit. I thought it was good, I don't really have anything super fantastic, but let me try to think of something intellectual...
    -Why can't we revisit the exact thoughts in our head that we have at one moment that tend to come and go?
    I always have so much on my mind am never able to remember everything that I wanted to. I also have conversations with myself that will never be finished. Why can't they be saved or bookmarked or something because I know that I've thought of some great stuff over the years
    -What characteristics of music unite and bring people together?
    -What happens to dreams and memories inside of our minds before and after they're forgotten?
    -Why do I stress myself out so much?!
    -Why do we fear the unknown, rejection, being insufficient, less than someone else, or different even though these are the things that we're told to explore and be in order to be ourselves?
    -How does confidence, or lack of, affect our lives every day and in the long run?

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  22. MY BIG QUESTION…
    “Even though, you know, we can fly, and cars and technology has gotten better I feel the the human race is not progressed as much as we should be”

    How come the human race isn’t progressing as fast as technology is? why do people act upon life as if it were a competition? the most money, bigger house, look better than the next person..will we ever live together in peace?

    “Yeah, we gonna be staying on the moon, But there’s still gonna be racists, So, in the end, are we really winning — these nuclear bombs, nuclear war.. What’s going on?”

    ~ inspired by/the quotes are lyrics by rapper Lil B, featured in this video: http://youtu.be/corY-FZAZog
    Lil B - The Age Of Information MUSIC VIDEO DIRECTED BY LIL B

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  24. When is life ever simple? We make simple go complex, making it difficult for some audiences to understand what is going on or what the idea is about. Yet, people do the research to see how it goes. We can't make what is already made simple and culturally accurate to say that your and you're are different by definition and by context. It has to make sense, therefore introducing complexity, which is something we strive to learn about. Simple is why we go to school because it's only based on one generic idea and we need to know more so that we can expand on the understanding of living life. So when is life ever simple? What point in our lives do we choose to make the simplest decision?

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  25. Where does it cross the line between "free speech" and "hate speech"?

    Is it ethically right to keep the elderly heavily medicated instead of letting them die a natural death?

    Should we continue to prolong life when overpopulation is already a tremendous environmental problem?


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  26. I have always wanted to know if we are alone in the universe. Many people say alien life can't exist, but how can you be sure of something that hasn't been proven? No one has searched every corner of the universe and confirmed humans are the only life forms. Now that I have pondered over this question again, I think of all the possible alien existence out in the mysterious universe. I wonder if we will be able to find life on other planets within my lifetime. Imagine the breakthrough this new finding could bring to us. Our knowledge on the universe can grow like never before. Also, if you ever do find other life forms, will they be more intelligent than us? If so how would we cope with this? For now, I look forward for bright scientists and researchers to continue expanding our knowledge of the universe. Answers about the definite end to world poverty would make a difference to the world. I wish I could invent a cure to every type of disease currently present. The most prevalent problems I would like to solve are poverty, racism, and abuse in many third world countries.

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  27. I had a hard time thinking of a big question, but I landed on a quite simple one. What is truly important in life? While it seems simple, it is interesting that the answer changes over time. Not only that but also it changes based on your personal beliefs and ideals. Well I thought it was interesting.

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  28. Why do we always push each other away? We all live on this world together, but we always seem to judge based on race, gender, religion, or sexual orientation. But what does it all matter anyways? What if one day a world wide disaster hits out of nowhere and we decide it's every man for himself. What good would that do? The wedges we create would be shoved down deeper. But if everyone on this planet worked together, maybe that disaster could be overcome. Now think of the looming threat of pollution and all the damage it has caused and will continue to cause. If the whole world worked together to decrease emissions maybe we could stop its destruction.

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  29. My big questions encompasses communication and my desire to learn ASL. Why aren't we taught to communicate our needs, better yet why is our freedom to express those needs revoked in a place of learning. Why isn't sign language something required in school? Not knowing creates a huge barrier between people that have trouble hearing or are deaf and people that can't talk, with people that have the privilege of being able to speak/hear.
    Another question I have is about books, as in why so many kids, teens, even adults nowadays seem to dislike and even hate the thought of reading and more, actually doing the action. For some people, reading becomes an escape, a form of entering a new world, so how can literature and books have equally distinct effects.

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  30. What is the purpose of human life on earth? We all eventually die so then what is the reason for this continuous cycle? How did we become this diverse unit of life: racially and morally?
    What defines a person? Actions? Appearance? Personality?
    Is is fair that we humans can manipulate different species for scientific research or for experimental fun?
    What is the definition of true happiness?
    When young children are curious, most are not afraid to ask and answer their curiosity? Why do teenagers not participate in class when asked for an opinion or an answer by a teacher?

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  31. Sometimes I think about things like this but it kind of makes my head hurt, so maybe someone can answer these for me instead.

    What or how can the life we have been given be justified?
    Who or what decides which soul goes into a body?
    How does it feel to be one of the 107,000,000,000 people who have graced the Earth (including cave men, I hope)?
    We are 2/107,000,000,000.
    0.000000000019% of the human race.
    How do you think it so happened we were born into this time period, and not the era of horse and buggies, nor the era of dinosaurs (as a dinosaur)?

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  32. Can someone see the entire world in a lifetime? Is it possible for someone to embark on a journey around the world, to meet everyone and see/experience everything during their life? How would one go about doing this unrestrained by the monetary aspects?

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  33. My big question is movies, books, and television shows are boring and stupid. They are so easily predictable they become a hated pastime for me. They all follow a certain pattern and once you figure it out the fun and excitement of the movie immediately is drained away. My big question is could there be a way to make a movie or television show or book unpredictable, new, and exciting?

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  34. Thinking of one question that could define how I perceive this year seems pretty difficult. That said, this is subject to change i'm sure.

    What shapes creativity? How do creative people take the inspiration from their lives and create art from it? There are so many different ways to create art, what defines art?

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  35. Why is this path where everyone is determined to over achieve in school and then proceed to get into a college just to get a decent job and then finally start a family widely accepted by most people? Is there something more then this? or is this all were left with to achieve a moderate form of happiness for the duration of our lives?

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  36. What can we learn from being in nature?

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  37. Why do people invest so much time in social media? Is social media making the younger generations less social? Should social media users limit ourselves to how much time we put into social media.

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  38. Why do people worry so much on how others think of themselves?
    Why are we the country that mostly uses that phrase of identifying each other by a different ethnicity and the word "American"?
    This may sound a bit confusing but an example is like addressing yourself as "Mexican-American" or "Chinese-American" and not other countries do the same like being "Mexican-Canadian" or "Chinese-Australian". It kind of sounds off to me but if other countries use it, I probably just don't hear or see it that much compared to the diversity we have here in America.

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  39. new big question-how do artists develop their own unique style? why is it so difficult to mimic other artists styles or use new materials?

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  40. Why is it bad to judge people? We all are taught to shy away from being prejudice, but really we are just labeling people as they present themselves. It's their fault if they dress in baggy clothes and gangster-like, right? So what's so wrong with labeling someone to protect yourself later on?

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  41. Why is mental illness still so stigmatized? What makes it so hard for us to accept mentally ill people into our society? Do we just fear those who are "different"?

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  42. Are we really alone in this universe? We are such a small portion of it, do others know if we exist but we still are unaware of them? Or have we just not been told of anything that was found outside of our current known existence?

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  43. My big question goes out to my senior peers. How does four years of high school have such a strong impact on us? Did we mature? What has these four years taught us? Did we change our wardrobe? How would we handle certain situations now compared to when we were a freshman? Do we look at school differently and understand the significance learning actually has on us? Do we look at life differently? I have these questions that intrigue me because now I'm putting myself in this experiment. I sit back in astonishment and reflect on all 3 years I've completed, asking myself these questions with curiosity... Am I the only one?

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  44. Why has journalism become such a tough business? Is it because newspapers have become obsolete? Or is it because we have evolved into a new technological world? What method of communication is most efficient in today's world? How has the world of news broadcast changed over the years? And how has the way we send, receive, and analyze new information progressed over the years? Are these changes good or bad? How will these changes affect us heading into the future?

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  45. Why are we the way we are? Why do certain people obtain disorders later in life? Is this problem in society getting worse over time? Or are we just more aware about what is going on within the human body?

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  46. Why does everything have to be a competition?

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  47. Will Racism and Sexism in America ever truly end?

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  48. Where do dreams come from? What do they mean?

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  49. Can absolute certainty exist? In the fields of science there is always a small degree of uncertainty. Philosophers like Aristotle and Ayn Rand used a system of metaphysics for basic proofs on the world around us. However insane and ridiculous notions are omnipresent about the nature of reality from time to general existence. Opinions and hypothesis always point in different directions. But is there an objective way to be certain about anything? If so can it be used to further falsify other unanswered mysteries in our world.

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  50. Will people ever find a way to reach immortality? Probably not, but it would be super cool.

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  51. My big question is why do 842 million people not have enough food to eat, worldwide, every year?

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  52. My big question is, what is the purpose of life? While this is a very common and general question, it is a question that regularly crosses my mind. Why do we spend so much time worrying about what others think of us, stressing about school and our futures, and working on our self image? One day, we will all be gone and none of it will matter. So, what's the point of it all?

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  53. What happens when and after we die? Theories like reincarnations, spirits, and heaven have always been around but what if there was more to it? What sort of scientific explanations can there be for this?

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  54. Why do people do the things that they do?

    What is the motivation behind it?

    Are our actions quantifiable or hopelessly random?

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  55. What should I do after high school?

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  56. What is considered a successful life? Does wealth and fame measure success? Or is it the matter of one's happiness where one stand?

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  57. Lately I have playing my guitar a lot and listening to music all the time. I've found that I really and truly love listening and making my own music. This got me thinking. Is it really hard to make a successful career in music? I don't necessarily have to be a singer or play the guitar, I think it would just be fun to be a music producer. I already have some experience in music from working the sound board for my churches band every Sunday and at practices. What other positions are there in the music industry that I may be successful in? It may not even be a career that comes from music. Even if it was just a side job that made my day a little better, I think it would definitely be worth it.

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  58. How do the people we consider mentors and guiders affect our lives? In what ways do they affect they way we live our lives and the morals that guide us? Is our ability to have successful interpersonal communications as adults dependent of receiving attention and interaction with others as infants/adolescents?

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  59. Is it possible to prove the existence of a God that cannot be consistently seen nor heard? Why do scientists tend to believe Evolution and historians tend toward Creationism? Why is our society today so secular and scared of religion?

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  60. What's the real story? Everyone has the side of them that everyone else sees, but there are also things about them that even their best friends will likely never know. Why do we hide parts of us from the ones we're closest to? Why are we more likely to tell our life story to a complete stranger rather than our family or friends? How do I get people to show me who they really are and tell me their real story, the one they keep to themselves?

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  61. Does work have to be excruciatingly boring and painful , or can you make it what you want and enjoy yourself in life?

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  62. Are there any limits to how far bio-mechanical engineering can be used to better lives?

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  63. Why is it that we look up to people we don't even know. People in movies, models, actors, we say we wish we were them, but truth is. We don't even really know who they are

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  64. Hhy do i have synesthesia?
    Has it shaped any aspects of my personality and if so what?
    How can this knowledge benefit reasearchers?

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  65. Basketball brings so many people together. Its not just the fact that it connects people but that it connects people of two different lifestyles; sometimes people that wouldn't connect any other way. What made me think of this was that i watched the USA national basketball team visit the Westpoint Academy and it got me thinking. Also, in different countries a lot of times when people out of country visit they can connect easily with the people through a sport like basketball.
    This brings me to my question of what is the thing that allows basketball, or any sport for that matter, so connectable? Why and how does basketball have the power to bring so many people together?


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