Religion deals in certainties and philosophy deals more in un-answered questions.
One of the very important characteristics of a student is to question. Let the students ask questions.
The required cheerfulness that characterizes many of our churches produces a suffocating environment of pat, religious answers to the painful, complex questions that riddle the lives of hurting people.
Because of the Chinese culture of obedience, you don't ask questions... You follow and obey.
I think, from the beginning, I was healed and inspired by queer culture, and Christine and the Queens, as an idea from the beginning, is queer because it questions the norm.
I've spent days in cinemas answering questions from the audience, in interviews, travelling abroad, and all they do is thank me nicely.
No Republican questions or disputes civil rights. I have never wavered in my support for civil rights or the civil rights act.
Every clarification breeds new questions.
I'm quite claustrophobic, and I don't like everyone crowding around and shouting the same questions.
Someone who's asking questions of the clergy, that he doesn't have the answers to, I think that's a universal predicament.
I know how men think when they're not responding to questions in a clinical study.
Unfortunately, most college kids these days aren't coming from any place-they seem to ask the same kind of questions over and over again.
All the interests of my reason, speculative as well as practical, combine in the three following questions: 1. What can I know? 2. What ought I to do? 3. What may I hope?
The respect for human rights is nowadays not so much a matter of having international standards, but rather questions of compliance with those standards.
Rarely does an interviewer ask questions you did not expect. I have given a lot of interviews, and I have concluded that the questions always look alike. I could always give the same answers.
How nations and races of men are to be so governed as may be most conducive to the improvement and happiness of all is one of the most interesting questions that can be offered to our consideration.
When we use old confessions and catechisms, we help teach our people that their faith is an old faith, shared by millions over many centuries. We also help them realize that other Christians have asked the same questions.
And indeed, last week, the FBI executed a search warrant on my residence. This happened one day after my attorneys had left a message on the lead FBI investigator's voice mail confirming my continued readiness to answer questions and otherwise cooperate.
How does the subconscious mind work? Is it independent of the conscious mind? Is it programmed by experiences or instructions? Many questions come up, but the one answer is common: if you can access the subconscious, then you can reprogram it, period!
Obviously all of us have thought about Vietnam, particularly in my generation in Australia that were part of conscription and fought there. Our friends came back, forever changed. So there were a lot of questions.