The wonderful thing about thinking is that nobody knows anything about it (although you would never ascertain that gem from reading many of the contributions on this forum). And (of course) nobody really knows anything about anything, but I would like to add my specimen to the pile by suggesting that contrary to the accepted order of things intellectual, the answer must be known before the question posited. After all, how could you possible know what to ask without this knowledge? — synthesis
I’m a little confused by the question (if there is one) posed. Maybe there isn’t one and that’s cool. Is your post about whether or not conceiving of something means that you “know” about it?If so, know what about it? Anything? — Anthony Minickiello
Like I could speculate over the existence of unicorns and have a preconceived image of what unicorns look like in my head, but it doesn’t follow from those facts alone that I know all there is to know about unicorns, right? Moreover, I could conceive of what a moral life is like, but does the mere fact that I posed the question prove that I know what a moral life is? So I could use some clarification. — Anthony Minickiello
Or if the question has to do with “knowing the answer before the question is asked”, I’m not sure that is necessarily true for all questions. Maybe I could ask my teacher for clarification on a math problem without having a clue of their response, right? — Anthony Minickiello
I would argue that only a possible answer must be consolidated - not necessarily known - before the question posited — Possibility
It's certainly true that asking the right question is often 90% of the quest to find the right answer. — fishfry
...contrary to the accepted order of things intellectual, the answer must be known before the question posited. After all, how could you possible know what to ask without this knowledge? — synthesis
The wonderful thing about thinking is that nobody knows anything about it.... — synthesis
And maybe in asking the question why, we are looking for an answer that has always been there. — Antony Nickles
Asking a question presupposes the question has an answer, else the asking is a nonsense question. But certainly the asking is not the answer itself. — tim wood
Asking the question might be the final conscious effort to find specific information. — synthesis
I guess that's a possibility but it becomes complicated because answers vary with constantly changing conditions that give rise to questions. — synthesis
For instance, location and time are crucial to living an organized life which itself is indispensable to living a meaningful life... — TheMadFool
It appears to me that, in terms of temporal sequence, a certain aspect of nature has to acquire some kind of significance in and of itself and this significance can be in the cultural, social, physical, technological, epistemological, etc. spheres/domains before a question pertaining to it can make sense and questions have to make sense for them to be answered, right? — TheMadFool
My preliminary investigation suggests that time (when?) and space (where?) were conceived of by the human mind before when? and where? became meaningful. When? and where? would be meaningless without a frame of reference in which space and time didn't/doesn't exist. Likewise, it's my suspicion that without an established sense of personhood, free will, and responsibility, among other things, the question who? would be devoid of meaning. — TheMadFool
the answer must be known before the question posited. — synthesis
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