I haven't thought about this too much but I've ordered them in the order in which they must've evolved. — TheMadFool
Mathematics is now the language of science. Without numbers people don't take you seriously. Yet English still asks quantitative questions with ''how many?'' Of course it's not that inconvenient to ask ''how many?'' but the concept of quantity not having its own question is very odd given what I said. Some languages like Hindi (India) have a specific question on quantity viz. ''Kitna?'' which translated means ''how many?'' So, shouldn't English develop its own dedicated question for quantity? — TheMadFool
Where light? OR Where food? comes before "What" since we pretty much know what food is. When primitive tube animals sought out food, they ingested stuff before they knew what it was. Which is pretty much tied up with what is and is not food. — charleton
where food? where safety? where predator? - are all far more pressing than the overly intellectualized 'what?' question. — StreetlightX
There really is only one question, so it must be the first. All other questions are subsidiary:
What do I do now?
To me, that's different than "what?" — T Clark
Isn't "how many?" very similar to "how much?", which is what we commonly ask for the cost or price of something. The fact that we say it as two words in English, while other languages say it as one word, seems irrelevant — Metaphysician Undercover
Deleuze's suggestion of course is that we overturn entirely the priority of the 'what?' question, which has more or less debilitated philosophy for 2000 years. I think he's basically right about this. — StreetlightX
But ''where?'' can be reduced to ''what is the location?'' It doesn't work the other way does it? — TheMadFool
In other words, you lose something in the translation: the 'reduction' reduces the question to a shell of what it was. You lose specificity for the sake of generality: but this latter is abstract and lifeless. — StreetlightX
But ''where?'' can be reduced to ''what is the location?'' It doesn't work the other way does it? — TheMadFool
Thus you invalidate your putative evolution of query! — charleton
I image the 8th question is a conglomeration of all others. — charleton
Surely animals don't ask ''why?'' or ''who?'' My views are based on such clues as that. — TheMadFool
I don't know why s/he said — TheMadFool
Oh yeah that reminds me: it's utterly irrelevant that 'how many?' is two words and the other questions listed are one word. The number of words is utterly arbitrary and reflects nothing other than local anthropological quirks. 'How many?' is it's own question and there's no use being silly about the number of words involved. — StreetlightX
However, you can't deny that questions like ''who?'' and ''why?'' require some level of understanding of self, identity or rationality. — TheMadFool
You need to read up on the intelligence of animals. — StreetlightX
Phrased as vaguely as that, one could deny or affirm a great deal without it having any iota of significance. — StreetlightX
I've never seen an animal ask ''why?'' — TheMadFool
Help me phrase it better. — TheMadFool
Then you haven't looked hard enough. — StreetlightX
It's your question. — StreetlightX
That is why your attempt to divide basic inquiry into these distinct categories, and place one as prior to the other, is ill-founded. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fundamental curiosity, or inquisitiveness, allows for the possibility of all these different questions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Give me one example of an animal asking the question ''why?'' — TheMadFool
I'm looking for constructive criticism. Something that'll throw some light into matter. — TheMadFool
What kind of answer is being sought after, in your opinion? — StreetlightX
It's not clear what 'matter' you're trying to throw light upon. — StreetlightX
A reason in the logical sense — TheMadFool
It cannot be. As you can see question-types diversified with, roughly speaking, knowledge. The point is how unique and special must an experience or knowledge be before it gets its own question? — TheMadFool
1. What?
2. Where?
3. How?
4. Which?
5. When?
6. Who?
7. Why? — TheMadFool
How else can we make sense of questions and the things each type of query implies?
Yes. I agree but do you really think my inquiry is a dead end? — TheMadFool
And to reason is to make inferences. It the height of silliness to think animals cannot make inferences or pose inferential questions. — StreetlightX
And your 'seven questions' are an arbitrary garb-bag drawn from two seconds of thought. — StreetlightX
They are in no way comparable to the dimensional issue, which is, by contrast a well posed question. — StreetlightX
1. Thingness
2. Space, and place.
3. Praxis
4. Category
5. Time.
6. Identity
7 Teleology — charleton
What makes you think that we don't always already form new questions just by experiencing moment to moment? — Joshs
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