What makes us human, I think, is an ability to ask questions, a consequence of our sophisticated spoken language.
My greatest strength as a consultant is to be ignorant and ask a few questions.
I look at art as a container. You can't get inside it, so you have to ask all of these questions.
What I'm saying is it is our responsibility to exercise due diligence, to ask the tough questions, to get the evidence before we make those very costly decisions about how and when and where our military is used.
Polling is an art as well as a science, and the art of crafting good questions is still vital.
The uncreative mind can spot wrong answers, but it takes a very creative mind to spot wrong questions.
I don't give a whole lot of thought or credence to questions about what comes on next, what goes on next.
Should surveillance be usable for petty crimes like jaywalking or minor drug possession? Or is there a higher threshold for certain information? Those aren't easy questions.
Efforts to develop critical thinking falter in practice because too many professors still lecture to passive audiences instead of challenging students to apply what they have learned to new questions.
The issues that cross a president's desk are never easy. The easy questions don't even get to the president.
I deal with cultural issues whether they be in the Middle East, Far East, the Orient or the West. You broach questions in the context of their culture and then present Christian answers.
I'm a curious person. I like to ask questions.
The great thing about this town hall format is that it allows us to hear what's on the minds of Americans. Tonight, it was clear - voters have quite a few questions about the direction in which the current administration is headed.
Science does not limit itself merely to what is currently verifiable. But it is interested in questions that are potentially verifiable (or, rather, falsifiable).
Drama asks some uncomfortable questions at times... It goes to pretty dark places.
I find dates, in general, horrific. We have to sit there and ask these questions and pretend to eat a meal, and it just feels so stiff.
The thing is, often press people ask questions that are so personal that even your nearest and dearest wouldn't ask them.
I put forward formless and unresolved notions, as do those who publish doubtful questions to debate in the schools, not to establish the truth but to seek it.
Majorities and minorities cannot rightfully be taken at all into account in deciding questions of justice.
'Apocalypse Now' poses questions without any attempt to provide definitive answers, and the film's profound ambiguities are integral to its enduring magic.