Questioning

Questioning

Silhouettes of people walk toward a large stack of books on a barren, monochrome landscape with a pale background.
The great books aren’t just classics — they’re cultural Schelling points that give our minds a place to meet up in the world of ideas.
A man in a suit walks on grass beside a long-haired dog, with faded images of a magic wand, a hat, and white doves in the blue-toned background.
A childhood spent under the spell of sleight-of-hand taught me skepticism, curiosity, and the habit of looking beneath appearances.
A stone bust of a bearded figure with an orange band across its forehead displaying several question marks.
“It’s much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers that might be wrong.”
A hand holding a camera lens against a yellow background with shadow patterns, symbolizing problem-solving success.
What the breakthrough methods of laboratory research can teach the business world about brainstorming.
a group of kids wearing glasses in a lab.
The curiosity of children is a national resource. Adults destroy it.
a painting of a group of people in a room.
Humiliating powerful people was not a key to success.
The right questions are those sparked from the joy of discovery.
Questioning isn't just a way to get the right answer — it's also a means for sustaining relationships and creative thinking.
just asking questions
Media provocateurs and conspiracy theorists insist that they're "just asking questions." No, they aren’t.