Mohamad&Issa said:
If I didn't use WHY so what I should use.By the way, Newton used WHY when "the apple fell down" and then his famous theory about gravity was formed.
I don't think that there is science without WHY.
The objection is not about the
word but about a style of question.
"Why" is a kind of question and leads to answers in terms of some sort of reason ("why did you hit your sister?") or something like "God did it". Seldom helpful.
i.e. the speed of light is constant to all observers because none of us deserve to see anything else. See?
You will hear "why" being used as a shorthand where another kind of question is actually intended ... usually it works out fine, like if you ask "why is the night sky dark" you are expecting a certain sort of reply ... in terms of mechanisms and what it tells us about the structure that gives us the night sky we observe.
That is actually a "how" question... the listener understands this.
If you ask: "how is the speed of light the same for all observers?" you get an answer in terms of the mathematical transformation that make this work.
I suspect that this is not the sort of reply you are after.
"why is the speed of light the same for all observers?"
... well, that's a property of the Universe.
Science cannot tell us why something is a property of the Universe because of "empiricism" - look it up.
It can tell us what is, and how it got to be that way (at least, in principle) but not why it is.
After a lot of data was collected to the effect that the speed of light looks pretty much the same to everyone so far, Einstein postulated that this was a law of nature: the speed of light is the same for absolutely
everyone. It seems to have worked out so far but we cannot prove that there is not an inertial observer someplace who sees some different speed for light in a vacuum. This is an example of an issue called the "problem of induction". You can read about that too, and the solutions offered by Popper and co.
You got the comment about why questions because it was starting to look like you wanted an answer in terms of some ultimate "reason for everything".
It looks like there isn't one. We don't even have an overall model/theory of everything and even if we did it would only show that the invariance of the speed of light is consistent with that model ... you can still ask "why is that?" Why doesn't the Universe have different physics? Well... because it doesn't.