Curiosity and mankind go hand in hand. Humans are always wondering. Use a tenth-grade english class for example, on the first day the kids want to know what will happen in the next school year. In the books they will read they will have many questions not all of them will get answers. In the book To Kill a Mockingbird, they will have many questions about Boo Radley, Mrs.Dubose, and Tom. In Julius Caesar, the main question will be why do I have to read this? If the tenth-grade english class does not strike your fancy then how about a child? Children are professional question askers. They want to know how this works, why that happens, who is that, …show more content…
Society knows what is right and what is wrong. This is vividly demonstrated in the book Night. Which is about a teenage jew during the holocaust. In the book, they describe the women and children being burned they knew that was wrong. One quote that the main character said is “I told him that I could not believe that human beings were being burned alive in our times; the world would never tolerate such crimes.” This quote is 100 percent true. The world did not tolerate the holocaust or the nazis. They started a world war to put an end to it. Society knows what is right and what is wrong, however, society does not always choose the right