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A vacant question is: How do youngsters that grow in time after your experiences started perceive the world? How do they think about things which you're aware of they've taken hold in your lifetime? How do they live with things which had already been there at the time of their birth?
What do they think about things which they get introduced to which are no deal anymore during the time they are already alive?
What crosses their minds if they're clueless about the development of things which another elder person beside them knows about?
What is the position like if you don't know about any of this? If you just happen to drop in in between somewhere at the timeline and the progress is unknown to you?
What does this ignorance look like from the inside and how much do actually they care?
Can they really imagine the world functioning without certain things they got to know, if they know about it they didn't exist in former times?
And - is it actually a bother to them to think this through?

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Date: 27 September 2015 04:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mandarinsun.livejournal.com
Also, the documentary Connections shows how scientist were looking for one thing and really after years of experiment found something else which would be useful for the younger generation to see. A problem I'd see with showing it to students is that it is very fast paced and they'd love it for that reason, but maybe wouldn't take away from it as much as if they read the same material, but then again they'd never read that. You can watch Connections on You Tube.

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