Institute for Inquiry
Context Questions Research People, Places Creative Works

NETWORK INVITATIONS

Privacy/Surveillance

Language Extinction

Wildlife Collaring

Childhood/Adolescence

Self-Authoring

Military/Weaponry

Open Category

CONTRIBUTOR GUIDELINES

NETWORK CONTRIBUTORS


Some of the most important questions in a wireless age expose commonly held assumptions that just don't hold up. Most of us believe, for example, that the world around us would not have "gone wireless" over the past several decades if EMF science did not understand how EMFs affect people, plants, animals, and ecologies. Tacitly, we assume that such real world concerns would be the primary focus of EMF science—and that public agencies governing our interests in EMF health would have required that focus. Yet, as we discover, we are mistaken.
Likewise, most of us tend to believe that the greater number of interactions available to us via wireless technologies is tied to greater freedom of choice. Tacitly, we assume that by expanding our individual reach into the world (and the world's reach back to us), we are more conscious of people, places, and our selves. Yet, as we discover, we are also mistaken.
Nonetheless, by asking and exploring such questions, we can learn more about the world than would have been possible had wireless technologies never been developed.
It is highly unlikely that most of us would seriously pursue an understanding—even in basic terms—of the fields of energies we live within. We would have little reason, and few techniques, for exploring the bio-electrical conditions in which life thrives or fails to thrive.
Similarly, we would not have been as likely to perceive the value of our lived experiences in body and place. Our choice to respond to a living world, as opposed to an online world, would not have occurred to us. For the first time, our experiences in nature, with one another, and within our inner, private selves can focus into a depth of complexity, beauty, and feeling that we may have only previously taken for granted.
The kind of reasoning we discover through such questioning is far more likely to inspire us into being more alive within our own lives—and, to inform the connections we do make through wireless technologies. The conditions in which life flourishes become far more apparent than if we'd merely examined wireless technologies through risk or cost-benefit scenarios. Indeed, pursuits of such questioning are incalculable in their power to open the world to us and to who we are in it.


RESEARCH >






LEAD CONTRIBUTORS

LOUIS SLESIN, PhD
RESEARCH & POLITICS

DAVID CARPENTER, MD
PUBLIC HEALTH

ANDREW
MARINO, PhD, JD
EMF SCIENCE

EDWARD CASEY, PhD
ECO-PHENOMENOLOGY

MICHAEL
WARBURTON, JD
PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE