People compare knowledge to the ocean. The ocean is boundless, so knowledge is infinite. No matter how much a person knows, there are some things he doesn't know. Asking questions is a way to explore knowledge. Based on this, Hugo, a great French writer, said: "There is no doubt that the key to all science is a question mark, and the wisdom of life probably lies in asking why everything happens."
This is indeed the case: if Darwin had not questioned the "creationism" in the Bible on the issue of human origin, there would not have been the birth of the "anthropoid ancestor theory"; If Copernicus did not doubt the geocentric theory, there would be no Heliocentrism. ...
However, many of our young people are not good at questioning, let alone discovering. They think that the contents of the book are right, everything in the book is right, and what the predecessors said is right. They rely too much on books, worship their predecessors and dare not cross the line. In fact, these people can't innovate. If there are more such people, human civilization will stagnate.
Even if our questioning is wrong, it is not a bad thing. If you dare to question, you will fully show your own shortcomings and correct them. Those who dare to doubt and dare not speak will only keep their doubts in their hearts forever. If we want to increase our knowledge in this competitive society, we must ask questions. Only in this way can our study progress and open the door to science.
Tisch
Everyone has his sincere dreams, even animals are no exception: birds dream of singing, ponies dream