You can't define "question" without knowing what a question is but you can't know what a question is without defining "question". — Agent Smith
What is a question? is an impossible question - to ask it, one must know what a question is but it also indicates the questioner doesn't know what a question is. This is the paradox. — Agent Smith
I, questioner = X, and I, questioner ≠ X — ucarr
This "question" makes no sense. — 180 Proof
I guess the paradox I mentioned in my previous posts can be "resolved" by changing the question (what is a question?) into a command (define "question"). It's kinda a cheat code to avoid/escape what is a mind-boggling loop. — Agent Smith
Generically, a question is an expression that consists of a variable. — 180 Proof
A question is the difference between two or more simultaneously occurring mental states! — karl stone
What is the metaphysical status of a question?
— ucarr
Which question is that? — Ciceronianus
Casual answer - any question
— ucarr
Rhetorical questions? — Ciceronianus
↪Ciceronianus
Yes. — ucarr
If that's the case, then questions which aren't questions are questions. — Ciceronianus
...I question whether all questions are alike, and think they vary in purpose and according to context. — Ciceronianus
What is a question?
Generically, a question is an expression that consists of a variable. — 180 Proof
Placing a filter over the grammar of question, such that we read it as a formal question that, in actuality, intends to make a statement, i.e. a rhetorical question, is a contextual maneuver that converts query into statement by social agreement. If this socially constructed reading of question as statement supports paradoxical word play, the grammarian of question can read it as would-be paradoxical piffle. — ucarr
then a categorical examination of the grammar of question is possible — ucarr
Without question. :smirk:I question whether all questions are alike, and think they vary in purpose and according to context. — Ciceronianus
A question is an expression that consists ofGenerically, a question is an expression that consists of a variable.
— 180 Proof
Can you reconfigure this statement as a paradox? — ucarr
I'm not sure whether you're saying...that rhetorical questions are, or are not, questions for your purposes... — Ciceronianus
...unless you maintain that purpose has nothing to do with whether or not there is a question--because there is only one true question or form of question... — Ciceronianus
Nor am I sure whether you're addressing grammar, or metaphysics, or if they're one and the same. — Ciceronianus
then a categorical examination of the grammar of question is possible
— ucarr
So, it's grammar we're concerned with? — Ciceronianus
Generically, a question is an expression that consists of a variable. — 180 Proof
A question is an expression that consists of
a variable? :eyes: — 180 Proof
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