Moving beyond universal damage narratives to assess how technology affects different children in different contexts.
Laozi's relativism—the understanding that all qualities exist in relation, that good and bad emerge from perspective and context—offers escape from technological determinism. Debate tends toward absolutes: technology destroys children's brains or empowers them; screens are poisons or tools. Reality is contextual. A shy child might flourish through online community; a socially anxious child might retreat further. Technology that stimulates one child's mathematical thinking numbs another's. Rural children gain access through devices; urban children lose solitude. Age, temperament, family culture, economic circumstance, developmental stage—all mediate technology's effects. Wisdom means moving beyond the false simplicity of universal harm or universal benefit toward discerning assessment: What is this particular child's constitution? What does this specific context demand? How does this technology interact with this child's nature?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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