Questions vs answers
Recently, I had a discussion with a friend about the key difference between science and engineering.
As a computer engineer, my friend found that the more advanced his coursework got and the more he learned about electronics, circuits, and microprocessors, the better he understood the subjects as a whole.
Which shouldn't be too surprising. That's the point of a college engineering degree: learn how stuff works and how to make stuff work.
But me, I find that as I learn more about brains and minds, filled with complex interactions between neurons, glial cells, neurotransmitters, and hormones, the picture gets steadily more complicated. The universe is one big dynamic system, full of chaotic pieces, and I keep finding more questions. The more I learn, the less I know.
That's the scientist's perspective on the world: more knowledge means more questions. More astonishment, more confusion.
(This is not a novel pronouncement, merely a recent observation supporting previously suggested differences between the two disciplines.)