I'm learning Clojure and trying to understand reader, quoting, eval and homoiconicity by drawing parallels to Python's similar features.
In Python, one way to avoid (or postpone) evaluation is to wrap the expression between quotes, eg. '3 + 4'. You can evaluate this later using eval, eg. eval('3 + 4') yielding 7. (If you need to quote only Python values, you can use repr function instead of adding quotes manually.)
In Lisp you use quote or ' for quoting and eval for evaluating, eg. (eval '(+ 3 4)) yielding 7.
So in Python the "quoted" stuff is represented by a string, whereas in Lisp it's represented by a list which has quoteas first item.
My question, finally: why does Clojure allow (eval 3) although 3 is not quoted? Is it just the matter of Lisp style (trying to give an answer instead of error wherever possible) or are there some other reasons behind it? Is this behavior essential to Lisp or not?