Protecting children's natural curiosity and organic development matters more than preventing all digital risk.
The Uncarved Block—pu in Chinese—represents the child's original, unconditioned nature, essential wisdom before socialization carves away authenticity. Laozi warns against over-shaping; excessive technology restriction can mirror excessive tech immersion—both conditions impose external designs on the child's emerging self. True wisdom preserves the child's capacity to question, explore, and discover their own relationship with technology. This concept challenges the protective impulse to decide *for* children what technology means, advocating instead for space where they develop their own critical thinking about digital tools. In the technology debate, this asks: are we protecting children's authentic development, or imposing our fears? Children need guided space to experience, reflect, and form their own understanding—carving away the block too aggressively damages the essential uncarved nature we're trying to protect.
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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