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Because even the scholar is much aware that life is temporary. So while it is enjoyed, the scholar must yet ponder what lies beyond it. Is it better than the current, or not? That will all remain to be seen.

2006-06-13 13:04:35 · answer #1 · answered by Guardian 2 · 2 0

After this known earthly life I think that we enter into another life unknown to all of us. The human mind is afraid of change and so afraid of the unknown. It's great to enjoy life to the fullest but we place guidelines on ourselves that dictate us the farthest we can stretch before we start on a self-judge confession. The line between good and evil is built in our conscience. The scholar ponders such because after searching his soul he has no regrets, he had lived life within its limits.

2006-06-13 20:35:02 · answer #2 · answered by alpha & omega 6 · 0 0

Because scholars will ponder the outcome of all situations presented to them. He is curious to answer what has not yet been answered. Isn't that what scholars and philosophers do?

2006-06-13 20:13:50 · answer #3 · answered by Sue S 3 · 0 0

Because he may be worried about what happens next. Why not try reading and studying the Bible?

2006-06-20 11:17:55 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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