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Wonder Ponder, Visual Philosophy for Children, is an imprint specialising in products for fun and engaging thinking. This website provides accompanying material to our Wonder Ponder boxes, including guides for children, parents and mediators, ideas for wonderpondering and fun games and activities. It is also a platform for sharing your very own Wonder Ponder content and ideas.

Wonder Ponder Blog

The Wonder Ponder blog includes posts on the creative processes behind our Visual Philosophy for Children material, as well as workshop experiences, guest posts on a variety of topics and generally interesting, eye-catching or mind-bloggling stuff we feel like sharing with you. 

Filtering by Tag: Ellen Duthie

Taking a plunge into the world with Ellen Duthie

Ellen Duthie

Interview with Ellen Duthie
originally published in Italian in

 
 

Why do you practice philosophy with children? Is it something that they need or is it an adult projection?

I practice philosophy with children because it is a joy to do. It is a joy for me -of that I am sure-, and I have reasonable evidence that children also find it a delightful pursuit and an engaging way of being in the world.

I started practicing philosophy with children in a somewhat organic (some might say messy?) manner. When I was at the University of Edinburgh studying philosophy, I also taught children English as a foreign language and Scottish children as preparation for sitting their exams. And it happened without giving it much thought, at least initially – I started sharing my philosophical interests and questions with my students, finding that it was a relatively foolproof way of sparking irresistible conversation. 

Since then, I have developed a more thoughtful and methodical approach to my practice, with more of an awareness of what I am doing or trying to do, what I try out, what works and what doesn’t work so well. But that initial joy remains and sparks with every session and, I hope, in every book.

I think children and adults have a need to partake in the distinctly human sense of wonder about the world and to share time and space to think about our world, and ourselves and others in the world together. I am particularly interested in cross-generational philosophical practice too.  

In one of the games you created, which later turned into a book, you dealt with the theme of cruelty: why this choice, apparently far from the themes usually proposed at this age?

Yes, Cruelty Bites was the first title (in Spain, Germany and Mexico it is published, as you say, more like a game, in a box with the pages loose inside; in Italy, Argentina and Korea it is published as a book) in the Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy series.

The origins of the project and of this particular book were not particularly thought out from the beginning. In fact, it all started in a classroom, within the framework of a project at a Spanish state school, where I did philosophy with the same group of kids for about three years, from age three to five. I normally used picture books and other interesting provocations in the classroom, often several in the same session, in order to allow for explorations of a given idea or concept through very different starting points and approaches. I was always very interested in finding new and interesting ways of providing opportunities for comparison for young children. I find opportunities for comparison a very interesting way of generating interesting questions and thought processes. I had been thinking of broaching the subject of cruelty (or being “bad”) for some time, but I could not find any provocation or prompt I was happy with, so I thought of making my own prompts, in the form of scenes from a possible story (a bit like a snapshot, with the characters caught mid action). I jotted them down and, because I was lucky enough to have quite a few illustrator friends, asked Daniela Martagón to lend me a hand. I knew she would think it was an exciting challenge! To draw scenes for young children to think about cruelty without scaring them away but without making them “cute” either is certainly a challenge you don’t normally expect to get as a children’s book illustrator. And when she showed me what she had prepared, and especially when I took them to the classroom and showed the kids, I understood that we had come up with an idea worth exploring further. And eight years later, here we still are!

So to start with the theme of cruelty wasn’t initially a publishing decision but rather a classroom decision. Children aged four are young, yes, but they already have some experience of cruelty –as victims, aggressors and witnesses, and they often rather obsessed with “goodies” and “baddies”. They are also learning how to navigate the limits of acceptable behaviour (what can I do to others, what can others do to me?). So it is the perfect age to accompany a normative approach with an approach that allows room for questions and nuance in specific situations where kids are unsure as to whether a particular rule might apply or not and why, or where they are confused by the apparent collision of two seemingly contradictory rules, or where they start detecting contradictory behaviour in adults who often say one thing while doing another.

On a last note, thinking about cruelty tends to be a more powerful question and thought generator (at least initially) than thinking about kindness (even though, of course, thinking about cruelty inevitable leads to thinking about kindness).  

On the homepage of your website, we read: open, look and think: why this strong reference to the body dimension? Could it be useful if this approach to philosophy were also extended to the world of adults?

One of the reasons we initially published these books in boxes, with the pages loose, and why, even in the book format, the questions are set out on the page in such a manner that you need to turn them again and again to read them, was indeed a belief that mental engagement is favoured or intensified through physical engagement. I believe this is true for children and for adults, and it is not in the least a new idea. The Peripatetics and many others since them have posited a curious link between movement of mind and feet. I think movement of hands also helps. There seems to be an interesting effect in terms of concentration when we link physical and mental action.

With those three simple instructions, we also mean to invite readers to take them to the real world. Look around you! If you do it for long enough, you’ll soon find yourself irresistibly stopping and thinking.

Check out and try out this simple but incredibly rich Wonder Ponder workshop.

And check out these other free Wonder Ponder downloadable resources in English

 

ELLEN DUTHIE

Ellen Duthie is the founder of the Wonder Ponder project of philosophy and literature for children, established in Spain in 2014. She is the author of the series of Visual Philosophy for all ages (Cruelty Bites, I, Person, Whatever You Want and Pinch Me!) with illustrations by Daniela Martagón, the Wonder Ponder mini series of stop-and-look books for babies and toddlers (Niño huevo perro hueso - Boy Egg Dog Bone-  and Niña Gato Agua Pato -Girl Cat Splash! Duck-) also with illustrations by Martagín, and Hay alguien ahí? Preguntario interplanetario para terrícolas inteligentes? -Is There Anybody Out There? Interplanetary Questionary for Intelligent Earthlings- (with illustrations by Studio Patten). Her latest book, Un par de ojos nuevos -A New Pair of Eyes, is a theatre play of sorts, illustrated by Javier Sáez Castán and Manuel Marsol. Her books have been published in Spain, Mexico, Argentina, Brasil, Italy, Germany and South Korea.

Ellen was born in the very south of Spain, in Cádiz, in 1974, to British parents. She went to school in Spain and then to university in Scotland. She now lives in Madrid, with her partner and son, doing lots of different things including writing, translating, teaching and training teachers, as well as organising and directing the annual International Philosophy, Literature, Art and Childhood Course (FLAI) in the stunningly beautiful mediaeval village of Albarracín (Teruel, Spain).


THE FUTURE IS WOW! A free, downloadable Wonder Ponder booklet for thinking about the future

Ellen Duthie

An 18-page booklet created by Ellen Duthie and Daniela Martagón.

CONTENT: This booklet offers a chance to predict the future; imagine what a 100% virtual life would be like; take a walk through a gallery of inventions of the future and design your very own inventions; look at, imagine and draw possible future evolutions of the human body; prepare your intergalactic luggage for a life on another planet: what would you take?; attend a debate among Best Future candidates: which one would you chose?; have a good think about the democracy of the future; interview a dweller of 2984; send postcards to the past and postcards to the future; curate an exhibition for a future museum of the 21st century; imagine the future in full detail, look out through a window onto the worst possible future; look out through a window onto the best possible future; and drum up the courage to take part in our “A Day in 2984” short story competition (full terms and conditions in the booklet or here).

The free downloadable resources we offer at Wonder Ponder take a very long time to create and are fairly costly to produce.

It is our choice to make them available free of charge and we think it's great for them to be downloaded for free.

If, however, you would like to support our work and acknowledge the use and enjoyment you get out of our resources, you can make a voluntary contribution, that will help us to continue to create free resources and undertaking other projects such as our I, WONDER, SELF-INTERVIEWS UNDER LOCKDOWN project, where more than 100 people aged 5 to 18 took part and which has been read by hundreds of people.

Your contribution might reflect the price you think is fair for this particular booklet, or an amount for the booklets you have downloaded and enjoyed in the past and you suspect you will download and enjoy in the future.

You can make your contribution via paypal, here (please enter “I would like to make a contribution” in the note section so that we can track donations).

Another way of supporting our work is sharing it! So please, share! share! share! And enjoy!

It's here! Wonder Ponder's free downloadable 7-page Christmas wonderpondering booklet

Ellen Duthie

It’s here! Our first (we are far from superstitious but have all our fingers and toes crossed in the hope that it is also our last) pandemic Christmas.

And following the now established tradition, we are sharing our Christmas Wonderpondering downloadable booklet for wondering, pondering, questioning and drawing about Christmas.

What should a good present be like? And what should it NOT be like? Could anything be a present? Do we all deserve presents? Could a broom be a good gift? A new cooking pot? A rifle? Does getting presents make us happy? What are enough presents and what are too many presents? Is a football pitch full of presents too many presents? Is a pair of socks enough of a present? ¿Would you give half your presents to a kid that didn’t have any?

If your answer is yes, would you open them beforehand, to see what they were and make a selection (this one’s for me, this one’s for him or her) or would you share them out, half and half, before opening them? Is one of the two options fairer than the other? If you would open them before in order to make a selection, what would you take into account when deciding, for each present, whether to keep it or give it to the other person?

TIME FOR PRESENTS is only one of the 7 pages from our special Christmas Wonderpondering downloadable booklet for thinking about Christmas. A gift in the form of a free, downloadable, printable and shareable PDF.

This year we have included a hidden pandemic question. Can you find it? There is a wee clue on the cover page.

The free downloadable resources we offer at Wonder Ponder take a very long time and to create and are fairly costly to produce.

It is our choice to make them available free of charge and we think it's great for them to be downloaded for free.

If, however, you would like to support our work and acknowledge the use and enjoyment you get out of our resources, you can make a voluntary contribution, that will help us to continue to create free resources and undertaking other projects such as our I, WONDER, SELF-INTERVIEWS UNDER LOCKDOWN project, where more than 100 people aged 5 to 18 took part and which has been read by hundreds of people.

Your contribution might reflect the price you think is fair for this particular booklet, or an amount for the booklets you have downloaded and enjoyed in the past and you suspect you will download and enjoy in the future.

You can make your contribution by clicking on the button below or via paypal, here (please enter “I would like to make a contribution” in the note section so that we can track donations).

Another important way of supporting our work is downloading it for free and then sharing it on social networks. Thank you, whatever you decide!

I would like to make a contribution

Ideas for thinking about school with Wonder Ponder: pandemic edition

Ellen Duthie

It’s that time of year again in Spain (back to school this week) and many other countries, and what a year it is! Whether or not in the midst of a pandemic, it is always interesting to think about school, learning, what it means to be a good teacher and what it means to be a good student, about friends and other school life creatures, about the school of our dreams and the school of our nightmares….

We are pleased to share our by now traditional downloadable free booklet brimming with ideas for thinking, talking, writing and drawing about school. This time, we’ve added a few pandemic morsels to the booklet to reflext the times we are living in, without drowning out the main issues that are always worth thinking about, with or without a pandemic.

Time to download and enjoy!

También en castellano També en català

Uncertainty in the classroom: a webinar by Wonder Ponder author Ellen Duthie

Ellen Duthie

We are very excited to announce this online webinar ‘In conversation with Ellen Duthie’ organised and hosted by the Cumbria Development Education Centre and open to all interested here.

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Wondering and Pondering Uncertainty in the Classroom

Uncertainty certainly seems to be the word of the year, and there is no doubt it is scary. But what if we were to embrace it in the classroom? Celebrate it, even?

In this webinar, Ellen Duthie will offer inspiration and ideas for celebrating and leveraging uncertainty in the classroom based on experiences with the Wonder Ponder project of Visual Philosophy for Children at schools, from early years to secondary, both pre and post-Covid-19.

About Ellen Duthie

A specialist in children’s literature and philosophical practice with children, Ellen Duthie has spent the last 15 years developing material to stimulate philosophical dialogue with and among children, using children’s literature and visual stimuli as prompts for discussion.

Ellen is the founder and manager of the Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy for Children project, involving:

-       a global programme of philosophy and art workshops with people of all ages at schools and other institutions such as public libraries and museums

-       a teacher training programme and online academy

-       and a solid publishing programme based in Spain but with presence in Germany, South Korea, Mexico, Argentina and Brazil (also available in English).

She is the author of all the titles included in the Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy for Children series: Cruelty Bites (an invitation to wonder and ponder about cruelty), I, Person (an invitation to wonder and ponder about identity), Whatever You Want (an invitation to wonder and ponder about freedom) and Pinch Me! (an invitation to wonder and ponder about reality, imagination and dreaming).  At the crossroads between philosophy, art and literature, these books use thought-provoking visuals to encourage readers to explore philosophical issues, aiming to foster independent, deep and playful thinking.

Ellen plays an active role in the international Philosophy for Children community and recently co-edited the book Family Resemblances: Current trends in philosophy for children (Anaya, 2018)

She is also the Head of the Wonder Ponder Academy, offering online teacher training courses and education research courses, and co-directs the International Course on Philosophy, Literature, Art and Childhood held yearly in Albarracín (Spain).

Cruelty declared apt for children

Ellen Duthie

Yesterday this fantastic review by Kim Kindermann of the German edition of Cruelty Bites published this month by Moritz Verlag (Grausame Welt?) was aired on German public radio Deutschlandfunk Kultur.

Here is a translation of the review. Long live Grausame Welt?!

Far from your typical read-aloud book for children: Cruelty Bites, by Ellen Duthie and Daniela Martagón, approaches the subject in a playful way. (Moritz Verlag / imago / Westend61)

Far from your typical read-aloud book for children: Cruelty Bites, by Ellen Duthie and Daniela Martagón, approaches the subject in a playful way. (Moritz Verlag / imago / Westend61)

Deutschlandfunk Kultur

 LESART. 26.02.2019

Kim Kindermann

 Cruel situations and scenes, described and illustrated by two authors: Cruelty Bites invites children to think about good and evil. A very successful book about a very difficult subject, in our reviewer’s opinion.

"Let’s try pinching very hard. Any reaction?” says the card, showing a boy tied down to a table. The scientists experimenting on the child are rats. On another card, a man has been locked up in a cellar by a group of children. "Now you stay down here and think very carefully about what you’ve just done!" they say. And on another card, a girl is biting her own arm.

Three scenes, three cards. Three of a total of 20. All of them are square. On one side, we see a cruel situation: a girl kills an ant, some lions eat a goat, a mother and father serve a stew made with cat meat, some children pull a girl’s hair, a father holds down his son firmly to give him a shower. On the back of each card, lots of questions on the theme.

 Off with the rose-tinted glasses!

Philosopher Ellen Duthie doesn’t actually offer any answers as to what cruelty is. She asks where cruelty starts, what about the victims, what about the perpretrators, and whether an act might be less serious if it doesn’t last too long.

 Step by step we are invited to analyse the situation. The focus is always on the questions. What do you find cruel about it? Have you ever experienced a similar situation?

It is demanding. Ellen Duthie does not only ask children to deal with this difficult problem; she also tells them cruelty exists. So off with the rose-tinted glasses"! The world isn’t all pretty.

But should we ask children questions? Yes, we should! Because children live in this world, with all its shadows too; children see and also experience situations that are not easy. The sooner they learn to classify situations, to give them a name and understand their own feelings, the sooner they might try to avoid being cruel. Here, that happens because they are allowed to experience different situations playfully.

 Dialogue and reasoning about violence

But also because these cards invite readers to comment. Unlike your typical read-aloud book for children, here exchange and reasoning occurs. That is good. The format also contributes to this.

The cards allow several children at the same time to engage in dialogue about different aspects of cruelty and to reason with each other. Duthie manages to make you want to speak about a subject that many would rather avoid altogether.

Daniela Martagón’s illustrations are also a great success in this regard. On the one hand, they are simple, in black and white on a colour background, and reminiscent of cartoons. On the other hand, they play with the absurd as a mechanism of distance. Like the rats, that keep the children in cages as test subjects. Or the girl who bites herself, and whose enormous sharp teeth seem to belong more in the mouth of the cat that is standing opposite her, with its hair standing on end.

 Illustrations that don’t miss a beat

There’s nothing pretty or cute about the illustrations, which clearly hone in on the cruelty of the content. This is stressed further by the bright background colours: pink, orange, blue, green and yellow. They act like a flag: Attention! This is important!

And yes, this book of cards is important. Let’s state it clearly: children ought to be taken seriously. We can and should speak about subjects such as cruelty with them, philosophise with them.  

What is more, we can start early on, with no rush: Cruelty Bites is perfect for preschoolers and primary age children. What is ok and what is not? Where are the limits and to what extent can they shift? It is never to early to start talking about all of this.

Ellen Duthie, Daniela Martagón: Cruelty Bites / Mundo cruel
German edition translated from the Spanish by Paula Peretti 
Moritz Verlag, Frankfurt / Main 2019 

 

Original German review here.

"PINCH ME!" is here! Take a peek! The fourth title in the Visual Philosophy for Children series invites readers to explore reality, imagination and dreaming

Ellen Duthie

PinchMe_Magia_escena.png

Pinch Me! [together with its versions in Spanish (¡Pellízcame!) and Catalan Pessiga’m!], the latest title in the Wonder Ponder series of Visual Philosophy for Children (and adults) has just arrived from the printers.  

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In this fourth title in the series, authors Ellen Duthie (writer) and Daniela Martagón (illustrator) invite people of all ages, small, medium and big,  to wonder and ponder about reality, imagination and dreaming in a way that is both playfully serious and seriously playful. What is real and what is not quite so real?  

Pinch Me am I dreaming.png

Containing fourteen illustrated scenes designed to prompt wondering and pondering, Pinch Me! invites younger and older readers to explore a range of intriguing aspects about reality, imagination and dreaming, including the differences between real and pretend, real and alive, our senses and what they can (and can't) tell us about the world, and to wonder whether we could be dreaming or not. It also contains scenes that are likely to spark wondering and pondering about magic, virtual reality, fiction and reality, fake news and representation in selfies, in a way that is both relatable and destabilising, as well as riveting for a very broad age range, from age 6 to adults. 

As all Wonder Ponder fans out there know, every box contains a poster. This is normally a chance for illustrator Daniela Martagón to explore the theme of the box freely and sometimes wildly. This time both authors, writer and illustrator, have joined forces and gone wild, to create what is effectively a book within the book: Little Remo in Pinchmeland. A tribute to Sendak's' In the Night Kitchen ,which was in turn a homage to Winsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland comic strips, this read-aloud comic on a poster takes Little Remo through dreamlike scenarios made up of elements from the 14 scenes in Pinch Me! and other literary scenes, making readers wonder whether or not he's dreaming and, perhaps, whether they are themselves dreaming. 

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After Cruelty Bites (2014), I, Person (2015) and Whatever You Want (2016), and the success of the Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy for Children's project not only in Spain, where the books are published originally, but also , thanks to the sale of foreign rights, in South Korea, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil and Germany, we took some time to digest everything that had happened since the launch of the Wonder Ponder imprint in November 2014. We took the time to step back and make sure that we knew where we were and where we wanted to go.  The pace of our project does not need to follow and would not benefit from following the pace of the publishing market. The research requires time, the creative process requires time, the testing with different age groups and ensuing reconsideration takes time. Slow publishing? That's us!

We are working to create a lasting collection, one that reaches other countries and languages and one which several generations of children and adults might hopefully enjoy. 

At a time where most of the voices we hear boom out answers and statements about the ways things are and the way they should be, it is more urgent than ever to develop the habit of owning, sharing and exploring our uncertainties. 

That is part of what we aim to do, with both a literary and a philosophical interest at heart, in the Wonder Ponder series of Visual Philosophy for Children. That is what we have done, with equal measures of rigour and playfulness in Pinch Me!

We hope you enjoy it! 

Readers outside Spain can purchase a copy online

More about 

PINCH ME!

What if life is a dream? 
An illusion?
Or a good old story?
When you pinch yourself, does it hurt?
And does the pain prove you are not dreaming?

 Can we trust our senses?
If our eyes sometimes trick us, might they always trick us?
How do we know that the world is as we perceive it and not as a fly or a dog sees it?

If you could connect to a machine that made you live and feel only good things, would you want to connect to it forever?

What is real? And what is not so real?
What do you think?

Half-way between a book and a game, Pinch Me! comes in a box and invites readers aged eight and over (adults too!) to think about reality, imagination and dream in a way that is both serious and seriously fun.

Part of the critically acclaimed Wonder Ponder, Visual Philosophy for Children series, Pinch Me! is designed for children to look at, read and think playfully about by themselves, accompanied by an adult or in a group, in educational, play or family contexts.

Themes:  reality ·  imagination ·  dream ·   memory ·   the five senses ·   perception ·   fiction/reality ·  real/pretend  ·   reliable information ·  real/virtual ·   philosophy for children.

Content
·   14 illustrated scenes.
·   More than 100 carefully worded questions designed to spark a rich and well-oriented reflection without leading it to pre-established conclusions.
·   3 blank cards for readers to design their own philosophical scenes and pose their own questions.
·   Brief guide for children and adults.
·   Ideas for wonderpondering. Suggestions for use.
·   A-3 thematic poster: Little Remo in Pinchmeland

About The Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy for Children series
Wonder Ponder introduces readers to philosophy’s big questions in a way that is playful and appealing. Engaging scenes and intriguing questions prompt reflection and discussion, encouraging children to develop their own thoughts and arguments and to build a visual and conceptual map of the issue addressed in each box.

Interested in learning more about the Visual Philosophy for Children series by Wonder Ponder? Check out our website and our online shop

Wonder Ponder at the 18th International Conference of the International Council for Philosophycal Inquiry with Children (ICPIC)

Ellen Duthie

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Wonder Ponder's Visual Philosophy for Children author Ellen Duthie will be taking part in the 18th International Conference of the Internacional Council for Philosophical Inquiry with Children (ICPIC) to be held this week in Madrid (opening on Wednesday 28th and ending on Saturday 1st of July).

Under the theme 'Philosophical Inquiry with Children Coming of Age: Family resemblances' the conference aims to offer "an open discussion covering all the different approaches to the implementation of the community of philosophical inquiry in formal, non-formal and informal education. [...] After nearly 50 years of engaging children, adolescents and adults in a community of philosophical inquiry in different (formal, non-formal and informal) educational settings, a wide variety of methods and styles have been used that share some common features and a family resemblance.". 

Ellen has shared with us what she will be doing at the conference: 

 

On Thursday morning, I will be presenting my paper "The Wonder Ponder Visual Philosophy for Children’s Independently Narrative but Thematically Connected Visuals as Stimuli for Philosophical Inquiry”, where I will explore the specific qualities of Wonder Ponder visual philosophy scenes in terms of how they operate to stimulate dialogue compared to other types of stimuli commonly used in philosophical practice with children, such as Lipman's philosophical novels or quality picture books chosen for their potential for philosophical inquiry.  
At the crossroads between philosophy, art and literature, Wonder Ponder boxes use thought-provoking visuals to encourage readers to explore philosophical issues (cruelty, identity and freedom in the three boxes published to date), aiming to foster independent, deep and playful thinking. Each box contains 14 striking, independently narrative but thematically connected scenes for thinking about and engaging in philosophical dialogue on a given issue. It also includes a further 3 blank scenes for readers to contribute to the book as authors and artists and, innovatively, as thought-provokers.
I will suggest that, by virtue of being both deliberately philosophical and deliberately literary, the Wonder Ponder material interestingly incorporates advantages of other existing stimuli.
Like Lipman’s philosophical novels, Wonder Ponder scenes and sets of scenes are designed with philosophical intention, even though the result is far closer to the picture book form than the novel form. The advantage of being able to design material with philosophical intention is that it allows you to purposefully pack the material with philosophically stimulating potential. I will explore the differences and similarities between engaging with text-based philosophical stimulus and image-based philosophical stimulus in these two cases.
On the other hand, like picture books, Wonder Ponder scenes are designed and developed with literary intention. The advantage of creating material with literary intention is that it allows authors to bring out the deep connections between philosophy and literature in ways that are interestingly effective for stimulating philosophical inquiry with children. I will explore the differences and similarities between engaging with a picture book and one Wonder Ponder scene, and between a picture book and a full set of Wonder Ponder scenes, as a philosophical stimulus. 
In addition, the visual philosophy scenes in the Wonder Ponder boxes add one important advantage of their own in terms of thought and dialogue stimulation: the possibilities arising from comparing and contrasting.
Although individually narrative scenes, the scenes included in a given Wonder Ponder box are designed to prompt questions and thinking by themselves, but also to prompt thinking through comparison and in conjunction with the other scenes in their box. Thus, each box tells 14 stories with connections, both literary and philosophical, incorporating an interesting and relatively unexplored territory within the range of stimuli for philosophical inquiry: the possibility of comparing and contrasting complex, yet easily and immediately grasped scenarios from an early age and making connections between different fields and issues.
Besides presenting, I am also part of the Organizing Committee of the conference, which aims to be a fully bilingual conference (with sessions combining English and Spanish presentations and workshops), so our work's cut out for us! 
I'm very much looking forward to seeing some friends again and to meeting many others. I'm hoping -I'm sure- that this will be a stimulating opportunity to share and learn from each other. 
The conferences and some of the presentations and symposia will be broadcast live at https://www.youtube.com/c/RafaelRoblesLoro

Our Wonder Ponder titles (Cruelty Bites, I, Person and Whatever You Want will be available at the conference bookshop stall). 

See you in Madrid!