Mercury,
March/April 1997 Table of Contents
Caroline
Poon
Shanghai American School
Science
springs from our urge to connect with others.
Sometimes
it is hard to imagine why anybody could find satisfaction from science.
There are so many unanswered questions, and, for every one question
that is answered, an uncountable number of new questions arise.
There is no end to what we do not know.
Are
we so bored as to have to make more work for ourselves? That seems
to be an unworthy reason for us to strive for higher levels of scientific
knowledge. If our only purpose were to find ways to stop boredom,
we would be...well...bored!
Perhaps
we tell ourselves that we are curious, but did we not create an
expression, "Curiosity killed the cat"? We seem to have worked ourselves
into a paradox, which, though we do it often, can't be considered
a reason to find value in science. No, curiosity is not an adequate
reason. One cannot say simply, "The only reason I like science is
that I'm curious." It is part of the reason, but not all of it.
Besides
curiosity, there is far more.
Science
is part of our quest to find others like ourselves. Humans are social
creatures, and we are constantly on the lookout for others who can
understand us, whom we can identify with. This is why we developed
language, and cities, and religion so that we can always
be with those who are like us. Whenever we dial a number on a telephone,
pick up a pen to write a letter, turn on the computer to use email,
it is because we want to communicate and assure ourselves that there
are others who understand us.
All
three of these things are science: pens and paper, from farther
back, when cities were far apart no matter how close; the telephone,
when Alexander Graham Bell found that he wished to further his ability
to tell someone far away that he existed; and email, recently, mostly
invented as a way to save on telephone bills, send letters quickly,
and resurrect the telegraph system in a modern way.
Now,
as we discover that we've met everyone in the whole world, that
we've shaken every hand, we want to find more. Now that we have
explored all the Earth and found every culture in every corner of
the globe, we are itching to find more. Where frontiersmen moved
west in a developing America to open up new country and find a place
with fewer people, we are exploring science to find more. Where
pilgrims went to the New World to escape religious persecution,
we search the sciences for a land where all is rational, logical,
and, therefore, of the same opinion.
Living
packed and close on our little planet, we are lonely.
How
can there not be more like us? we ask.
There
is no one there to answer. Either they cannot hear us, or we cannot
hear them. We refuse to believe that there is no one else. We cannot
be all there is. Religion, too, is a way to find others like us,
or another like us, or the possibility of there being others like
us.
In
both science and religion, we know that we cannot know that another
is the same as Ourself without knowing Ourself first. Science is
our way of finding out about Ourself. Using biology, we find out
about ourselves physically. We find out about the way our bodies
work; about what is good for us and what is bad; about how to improve
our physical condition, for we must survive to continue our ceaseless
search for more. Chemistry, physics, and Earth science: All are
ways to find out about the world around us. They are methods by
which we find out about our surroundings, our habitat. They are
our eyes and ears and noses and tongues and touch our five
senses. Astronomy is our direct way to find others like us. Now
that we have explored all the peoples of the Earth, we are looking
for other people, elsewhere. We hope that those people will be like
us, that they'll understand our art, believe in our sacred religions,
and, most of all, help us in our learning of Ourself, and our search
for others like us.
Where
will we go next to find friends? What will they be like? Will they
embrace us as we would like to embrace them? Will they be stronger
than us; will their science be more developed? Or will we be the
ones to help them to improve their knowledge? Are there moral implications?
Will we understand each other when we finally meet? Can they answer
our questions? Will we have learnt enough about Ourself to realize
that we are one and the same?
There
are more questions springing up from the one question I have tried
to answer. That is what science is all about. It is not about creating
something to look at, it is not about alleviating boredom, and it
is not about finding answers. It is about the next question, and
the next, and the next. It is about the next question and the next
person to ask a question, and about finding the questions that can
answer the next question.
That
is what we strive for.
CAROLINE
POON
is an eighth-grader at Shanghai American School, China. "It's a
broad topic," she says, "but to me, it's one of the most important
things to think about when considering science." Her email address
is stpoon@gate.uninet.co.cn.
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