Peace congresses often start by dealing with some of the less important questions in excessive detail, so at the end there is no time to discuss the most important problems.
Hypothetical questions get hypothetical answers.
Who questions much, shall learn much, and retain much.
You don't want a million answers as much as you want a few forever questions. The questions are diamonds you hold in the light. Study a lifetime and you see different colors from the same jewel.
The simplest questions are the most profound. Where were you born? Where is your home? Where are you going? What are you doing? Think about these once in a while and watch your answers change.
By the time the people asking the questions are ready for the answers, the people doing the work have lost track of the questions.
History is, strictly speaking, the study of questions; the study of answers belongs to anthropology and sociology.
The answers you get from literature depend on the questions you pose.
Once you start asking questions, innocence is gone.
I think Poe had a mission to tell us what it's all about. To answer some of the great questions of life.
If journalists ask you again and again about the same bands, you'll end up saying you hate them just because you're so fed up with being asked all those stupid questions.
The people were just so lovely and accommodating and had really interesting questions and it was just interesting to see how the show is actually received in so many different countries.
They ask questions like 'do you believe in aliens' and those types of things. They were really interested in aliens, and that was really something that the Japanese have an interest in, and they are also very big fans of romances.
I'm not sure what theory is, unless it's the pursuit of fundamental questions.
The question is the morning after. What sort of Iraq do we wake up to after the bombing? What happens in the region? What impact could it have? These are questions leaders I have spoken to have posed.