Even though science technology has enhanced immensely over the past few centuries, there are still parts of this world that predecessors of science were not able to explain. Basically, because there are so many parts that science could not cover, we could yet find wonders over the boundaries of science. For instance, we still do not know why cancer occurs, but just the process of it and the hypothetical cause. Learning more and more about these would certainly give us wonder and since there are more than enough for us to research and find out about this world, we could half assume and half believe that science is indifferent with wonders.
There’s more. Does the fact that a punch is a mere momentum with a cluster of cells lessen the pain when it lands on your face? No! Instead of talking about momentum or animated beings called cells, you say “AW” and spit out a teeth and some blood, assuaging your marred jaw. Knowing why things happen does not reduce the wonder of itself. Snow could exemplify this case very well. We know why snow falls but when we watch snow, we do not say that particles of H2O are falling in a solid state. Instead, we say “Wow it’s beautiful.” Finding out more about things does not make them any less authentic or pedestrian.
Science and wonder, these two concepts aren’t quite different. Science isn’t just a tedious job Wonderful things are as closely related to science as pizza and cheese. We could not separate them from one another and get rid of the biased view: science and wonder are the opposite.
Good. I'd actually rather have you missing the total SAT word count rather than cram them in there absurdly. Interesting video. Pizza and cheese would be good right about now.
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