Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Child as Sage Observer

Children's innate capacity to observe systems without judgment mirrors the Taoist sage's perspective; technology use reveals what we can learn from them.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi describes the sage as one who observes without grasping, who sees patterns without imposing meaning. Children, before conditioning, embody this quality—they notice things adults miss, engage without predetermined goals, find joy in process over outcome. When given unhurried access to technology, children often use it differently than adults expect: exploring, questioning, experimenting. Adults project anxiety onto this, seeing danger where the child sees discovery. The Taoist turn: what if we reversed the mentorship? What if we watched how children naturally interact with technology and learned from their unselfconscious engagement? This isn't permissiveness but reverence for their unfiltered perception. In the technology debate, this challenges the assumption that children are passive victims needing protection. Instead, they are observers with wisdom about how tools can serve play, curiosity, and creation. The tension between protection and respect becomes generative.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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