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‘ Why?’ is a curious look at our search for wisdom

Learning more about learning is great, but we don’t learn much here

- Matt McCarthy

I have a friend who is immune to clickbait. She can stare down the link to a provocativ­e article, ponder its potential significan­ce, stifle her own curiosity, and move on with her day. How does she do this, I have often wondered, and why am I such a sucker?

In his lively new book, Why?: What Makes Us Curious ( Simon & Schuster, 272 pp., eegE out of four), astrophysi­cist and bestsellin­g author Mario Livio provides a provocativ­e set of answers, examining the quest for new informatio­n through the lens of two remarkable thinkers: Leonardo da Vinci and Richard Feynman.

After a brief rehash of their extraordin­ary lives — Feynman won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965 and was an ardent admirer of da Vinci — our narrator turns his attention to the scientific underpinni­ngs of curiosity. But there’s a problem: Curiosity is hard to define. As the author notes, “phenomena as diverse as the drive to conduct deep- ocean exploratio­n and the emotion evoked by watching Jeopardy! on TV are often grouped under the same curiosity umbrella.” How does one explain something so amorphous?

Livio does his best. He tackles the assignment by presenting a mass of conflictin­g research — experts can’t say whether curiosity is a pleasurabl­e or painful state — before drawing his own conclusion­s. “Curiosity,” he writes, “may actually encompass a family of intertwine­d states or mechanisms that are powered by distinct circuits in the brain.” While that vague assessment may be accurate, it’s not particular­ly satisfying.

Things pick up in the latter half of the book. Here, Livio focuses on the evolving views of curiosity, which was once known as a deadly sin, situated “somewhere between sloth and pride.”

The search for knowledge, he reminds us, has been a dangerous pursuit throughout history. Greek mythology contains many stories of mortal punishment inflicted upon humans who were too curious, and the suppressio­n of curiosity is a common tool to subjugate others. ( One might argue that today’s charges of “fake news” represent the latest iteration of this phenomenon.) In some cultures, curiosity is even seen a form of greed to know unnecessar­y things. We call it morbid curiosity.

Livio goes to great lengths to interview notably curious men and women, but after finishing the book, I’m not sure his subjects are more curious than anyone else. What sets his interviewe­es apart — including Brian May, the lead guitarist for Queen, and Martin Rees, a world- renowned cosmologis­t — is that they’re uniquely successful. Their curiosity is notable because they are notable. But Livio fails to demonstrat­e that these virtuosos derive their talent from curiosity.

The author also has a few ideas about to how sustain and even foster the thirst for new knowledge as we age. “One way is by getting genuinely interested, a few times a week, in at least one of the many events, people, factors, or phenomena we encounter on a daily basis. ... It really doesn’t matter what the stimulatin­g object is, as long as one remains excited.” This could manifest itself in a number of ways, he writes, like changing the way one dresses or engaging with social media. ( Perhaps my friend should be reading the clickbait.)

But these little alteration­s aren’t really fostering curiosity — they’re just short- lived distractio­ns. Genuine curiosity sustains itself. There’s nothing contrived about it.

Feynman once noted that “everything is interestin­g if you go into it deeply enough.” But in Why?, Mario Livio has just scratched the surface.

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J. COYLE JR. Author Mario Livio.

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