(September 30, 2017 at 2:04 pm)AtlasS33 Wrote:(September 26, 2017 at 9:07 am)pocaracas Wrote: Curiosity killed the cat, so say the ancient folk.
Curiosity is not a human trait.
And the curiosity towards space should stem from the observation that it moves relative to us, but moves periodically.
Cats are natural hunters; that's why they are curious. They are derived by interest (like hunger or finding hiding spots), but my question still remains: what drives humans on the other hand, to explore the heavens? what do we have there to care about?
If you choose the attractiveness and beauty of the scene; it asks: why is it so attractive; then?
If you choose evolution, then why did humans didn't grow the same feeling to other scenes? especially these days when we discovered the devastating hostility it has for human visitors.
All of nature is not bound to our laws and doesn't move relative to us.
Quote: And the curiosity towards space should stem from the observation that it moves relative to us, but moves periodically.
Elaborate
Elaborate? It will still end up with "Allah did it."
An space doesn't move periodically, it moves constantly. Relativity of space/time is a point of view thing sure, but everything is constantly moving.
And for the billionth time, and not just to Muslims, but also to Christians and Jews and Buddhists and Hindus. There is not one religion, that when it cant get away with simply quoting their holy words, they try to debunk science. Then when they cant flat out debunk science, they try to claim science matches their club.