I’d go with yes, as rising intonation conveys questioning (at least in the languages I somewhat know). We even have a ‘?’ symbol.
In and of itself, all that shows to me that, if not answer, making questions is very much part of our nature!
And questions, such as yours, incite discussion and create cultures. Even if not accurate, myths were a way of answering why we’re here and why seasons exist(ed).
If you have ever seen a police interregation, you may notice the detectives ask a question and then, after either no answer or insufficient answer, they will just look at the suspect expectantly. This is done to put phsycological pressure on the suspect to answer the question. Given this info, I would say so, at least in a face to face situation.
Online, I am not so sure. How many posts did you scroll past in the last week on Lemmy that ask a question that you did not answer? How many did you answer? Even if you answered most, you would be in the minority, as if you were not, we would expect far higher engagement rates on posts.
When you’re a dad, you have no choice but answer questions all damn day long.
I think I do.
[Prof. Snape] Clearly ;)
‘obviously’, I tend to correct wrong answers, instead of feeling inclined to answering straight out haha
I think you mean that you follow Cunningham’s Law. /s
(I tried to phrase that as a correction)
Can you like summarize even if its an edit when youre citing a long wikipedia article
Edit: i get tired of playing “Where’s Waldo” with facts/referenced content at the end of a long day
Cunningham is credited with the idea: “The best way to get the right answer on the Internet is not to ask a question; it’s to post the wrong answer.”[17] This refers to the observation that people are quicker to correct a wrong answer than to answer a question.