Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Seasons of Development and Access

Different developmental stages require different technology relationships, like natural seasons requiring different human responses.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi understood seasons—not fixed rules but rhythmic patterns where timing determines appropriateness. Applied to children's technology, this means recognizing that a toddler, elementary child, adolescent, and teen require fundamentally different relationships with devices. A rigid policy treating all children identically ignores developmental reality. The toddler needs embodied exploration and direct sensory experience; screens cannot provide what their developmental task requires. The elementary child beginning abstract thinking can benefit from certain tools while needing protection from social comparison algorithms. The adolescent developing identity and peer relationships faces genuine complexity; total prohibition seems neither realistic nor wise. Each season has its gifts and dangers. Rather than debating whether technology is good or bad, this concept asks: what does this child's current developmental season require? What exposures support their growth; what harms it? Seasons change, and so should technology relationships. A parent might restrict devices for a seven-year-old while supporting meaningful digital creation for a fifteen-year-old. Seasonal thinking brings wisdom to what often becomes ideological rigidity.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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