Why do we love science? OR What fascinates us about science?
J. Thomas Bridges, Ph.D.
Humans, in their thinking, are drawn to patterns or more precisely the discovery of patterns. Imagine the mathematical pattern of the Pythagorean Theorem that governs right triangles or of the number π, which seems to display no pattern at all as we numerically extend it.
There is something transparent to the human mind regarding mathematical intelligibility. It allows the intellect to see at depth, more so than mere qualitative reasoning. This is the fascination with science: humans are able to obtain all the intellectual gratification that mathematics affords, but not in solely in the realm of causally inert numbers; science tells us about the world of existing things. The more mathematically precise the science, the greater is our satisfaction with it. And when we can have a mathematically precise description of a pattern in the world of nature, this we call a law of nature and esteem it highly.