In other threads, it is frequently asserted that science can't answer the why questions but only the how questions.
Some examples of why questions:
- What is our purpose?
- What (or who) created the Universe?
- Do we have a soul?
Some examples of how questions
- Why is the sky dark?
- Why have there been so many species of life on Earth?
- Why is the Sun so hot?
Clearly the term "why question" is poorly chosen, but leaving that aside, what makes a "why" question? Is there some quality they have or don't have that makes them "why" questions or is it simply that religions are happy to make up answers to difficult questions when science is not?
Actually, at one level, I think science can provide answers to some of the why questions. For example, the answer to the first one above, according to science, is "none" or perhaps "we make our own purpose".
It would be helpful, I think, if the religionists here could give some of the why questions they think science can't answer and the answers that their religion gives and how they know the answer is correct.
A couple more for you
Where is justice?
what is beauty?
My own view is that the 'how' questions provide information about the external world. They show us the context of our lives.
The 'why' questions are all about making sense of our
internal lives i.e. what its like to live inside our own heads. Messy and illogical certainly, which is probably the reason why these sorts of questions are illogical and messy too.
Another way to think about it is the 'why' questions being about seeking, and perhaps inventing, purpose and meaning. The former is implied, as someone already pointed out, by the very use of the work 'why', and difficult to proove as valid. 'Meaning' however is more elusive and personal. We all need to feel our lives have some sort of meaning, even if it is simply through our personal relationships with friends and family.
In the end there is little chance of making it through life in a sensible way without taking account of
both sorts of questions, and using them to understand ourselves, the world around us and our place in it.