Surlethe wrote:
- The second vexing question concerns the "why" of these theories. Why does Nature behave according to Einstein's relativity, rather than according to Galileo's?
Because Einstein's relativity is a more accurate description, than Galileo's presumably was.
Surlethe wrote:Why do particles sometimes behave as waves, and waves sometimes as particles?
Because particles do their thing, whatever that may be, and seeing wave/particle duality is a condition of being a human observer.
Surlethe wrote:Why do atoms join to form compounds?
Because their structure dictates their behavior, and this is the behavior dictated by their structure.
Surlethe wrote:Why do higher forms of life evolve from lower forms?
Because an accumulation of survival-assisting traits gives you what we tend to term a 'higher' life form, and long periods of time combined with random mutations and survival pressures don't leave much alternative.
Answering these particular questions seems pretty trifling, to me, without anything that an actual scientist would recognize as much of a 'science education.'
I'm looking forward to seeing the explanation, as to why I'm wrong.