At HAUS we don't see curiosity as a distraction but as a different way of thinking. We call it wandering, turning things over, ruminating. It goes against productivity as we understand it today, yet we need to create spaces where we can practise it.
Curiositology is a way of asking questions from somewhere else —a place that complements and enriches the answers given from the usual perspectives. It opposes nothing: it seeks to complete the answers from unexplored angles, reframing what we take as evidence and reminding us, cyclically, that it's worth revisiting what it means to do things better.
In this space, science meets intuition, reason meets emotion, and curiosity becomes a compass that guides each step toward a more human way of understanding spaces and the life that inhabits them.
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