Well, it isn't explicitly about children's philosophy, but I think this article does drive home the idea that great thought doesn't have to happen in an academic setting. All of us, including children, spend a great deal of time doing menial things, like commuting, or cutting the grass, or washing the dishes. It's often through routine tasks like these that we get five or ten precious minutes of quiet to actually think about nothing in particular, and these moments present a rare opportunity to ponder the mysteries of the universe. Just as I firmly believe that Sartre, Aristotle and Rand belong in conversations with little people, I believe that there's room for them in our own daily tasks as well.
We'll never get the opportunity to chat with Gandhi on a crowded city bus, but...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/8117567.stm
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