With any question, why is it always so helpful to know why the answer is the one that is? In another words, which principle of thinking and learning is most closely tied to question “why”? Or is it purely social act of expressing deeper interest? Is questioning for reasons mandatory?
I feel I know the answer to this question intuitively, but find it hard to express it into words without it sounding stereotypical and lazy.
This seems bizarre, because it’s children who are most “famous” for asking “why” all the time, but: How would you, say explain to a child, why do we need to know reasons behind things?
Because it allows for proper prioritization of needs, allows for the better exploitation of our surroundings (as tool using animals), and is INCREDIBLY useful for helping us try to “model” other human’s behaviors and act as social animals as opposed to just being the regular kind.
Probably the most impact “Why” question probably started occurring before we were even human and it was “Why did they do that?”
Being able to understand the motivations of other beings is absolutely fucking incredibly overpowered both in terms of cooperative action with your fellows AND destructive action against foes/food sources.
It’s kind of important. Boss says “every 10 minutes you need to flip this switch the opposite direction”. It’s just a switch on a wall. Sure you can just do it blindly and never know why, you’re still getting paid after all. Or you can ask. Maybe it changes a signal to prevent collisions between trains. Maybe it tells all the sliding doors to open at a shopping mall in New Jersey. Maybe it drops treats into a pet enclosure. Or maybe it is really truly wasting your time.
If you can’t directly see the results from doing/avoiding a thing, having the purpose explained helps.
Two reasons I can think of:
- Information is more trustworthy if you can arrive at the same conclusion or at least understand how the other person arrived at it given the same information. If someone tells you that person X should be avoided, you could either blindly follow that advice or ask for a reason to decide whether you’d agree with the assessment.
- Knowing the reasons behind something is also useful for extrapolating to new knowledge. A child who asks why they need to bathe will not just learn to wash themselves regularly but also about hygene in general, societal expectations about body odor and/or a possible disease vector.
That is an interesting question.
I think wanting to know the “why” of things could be a matter of humans being curious in nature. Why that is the case, could be because of evolutionary benefits to the survival of the species.
I think wanting to know the “why” is related to wanting to understand how thinks work - because if we understand how things work, we understand the cause and effect relations in a situation, and with that we can try to control things.
If I can understand why something is the way that it is, that makes it predictable in the future. And if I can predict how things will behave in the future, I can try to control them or use them to my advantage. This goes for small things, like food staying good for longer in the fridge, but also for large things, like the social and cultural systems at work in society.
Yep, it all goes back to fear. If I know why I can control it hopefully and I’m less scared.



