MrDude wrote:
1: I am interested in how, why nature works (not way as intrigued as a scientist (i.e. physicist) though)
2: I consider myself, my self-awareness as a part of the universe. (Which means that I think of the self-awareness as a dynamical process "governed" by laws of nature)
1+2 put together and I end up with a universe that tries to explain itself. Right?
So am "I" (my perception (senses), my thoughts (which I consider as a "meta"sense in some way)) a part of an big attempt to discover/explain the universe itself?
And if so: is there a way to tackle the question why the universe wants to know how it works and why it exists?
Or why do people want to understand nature (=themselves and their surrounding)? (Ok, people do so because they are rewarded with a good feeling (pleasure when something has been discovered,etc.) But that does not explain why they experience good feelings when doing so.
I am just a little bit confused right now

Once there is life as we know it on Earth, the laws of nature lead to evolution by natural selection. Among our ancestors, millions of years ago, some must have had more of an innate urge to understand things than others. In the long run, and on average, the former fared better than the latter as far as reproducing and perpetuating their genes is concerned, so any genes favoring such a tendency thrived and became widespread, while others died out. This is probably because the former attitude leads to the development of technology, while the latter does not.
To me, the tricky question is what consciousness itself
is and how it works.
_________________
The red lake has been forgotten. A dust devil stuns you long enough to shroud forever those last shards of wisdom. The breeze rocking this forlorn wasteland whispers in your ears, “Não resta mais que uma sombra”.