General Knowledgespeaking topic
The greatest human achievements nobody celebrates are the ones that worked so well we forgot the problem ever existed.
— r/AskReddit
practice with this topic
Set the timer (5-30 min), take 20 seconds of prep if you like, start talking. Jot your thoughts onto the sticky-note board.
similar topics
- Why are Gothic cathedrals seen as symbols of the medieval longing to reach toward heaven? Let's talk about light, height, and faith cast in stone.
- Why is the 'Ode to Joy' in Beethoven's Ninth Symphony considered a universal masterpiece? Let's talk about a composer setting the brotherhood of humanity to music while completely deaf.
- Some communities count 'one, two, many' and have no words to distinguish three from five; yet these people get along perfectly well in daily life. We assume numbers are 'real,' but perhaps they too are an invention. What would a world of thought without numbers be like?
- In the Middle Ages the hour was not yet divided into minutes; people said 'around midday prayer' or 'when the cows are milked.' Minutes and seconds were adopted alongside trains and factories, because workers had to be synchronized. Was slicing time into minutes progress, or did it turn us into cogs in a wheel?
- In ancient Egypt the year began with the rising of the star Sirius, which announced the flooding of the Nile; their calendar was tied not to an abstraction in the sky but to the breathing of a river. For us, New Year's is a box on a calendar; for them it was life beginning again. Should time be anchored to numbers, or to nature?