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Why a Question is Not Always a Question. Ask NO questions and we get no information. . Ask NO questions and we get no information. . Ask an improper question and we get MEANINGLESS information .
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Ask NO questions and we get no information.
Ask NO questions and we get no information.
Ask an improper question and we get MEANINGLESS information.
Lawyer: Doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse? Witness: No. Lawyer: Did you check for blood pressure? Witness: No. Lawyer: Did you check for breathing? Witness: No. Lawyer: So, then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy? Witness: No. Lawyer: How can you be so sure, Doctor?
Witness: Because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar. Lawyer: But could the patient have still been alive nevertheless? Witness: It is possible that he could have been alive and practicing law somewhere
Ask a questions that is a bad question and we get answers that look correct, but which are meaningless information. This is a very dangerous situation.
Five Bad Questions (from the Internet) There are five things that women should never, ever ask a guy, according to an article in an issue of Sassymagazine.
The five questions are: 1 - "What are you thinking?"
The five questions are: 1 - "What are you thinking?"2 - "Do you love me?"
The five questions are: 1 - "What are you thinking?"2 - "Do you love me?"3 - "Do I look fat?"
The five questions are: 1 - "What are you thinking?"2 - "Do you love me?"3 - "Do I look fat?"4 - "Do you think she is prettier than me?“
The five questions are: 1 - "What are you thinking?"2 - "Do you love me?"3 - "Do I look fat?"4 - "Do you think she is prettier than me?"5 - "What would you do if I died?"
Leading Questions: A “leading” question is one that leads to a certain answer….
http://efg-bnusfoodreserves.blogspot.com/2012/09/listen-to-reporters-conspire-on.htmlhttp://efg-bnusfoodreserves.blogspot.com/2012/09/listen-to-reporters-conspire-on.html
Leading Questions: • Presupposition “What is your opinion of the disastrous national debt?” Or: “What is your opinion of the national debt?”
Leading Questions: • Presupposition “Do you believe this popular product is better than the competition?”
Leading Questions: • Presupposition • One-sided “Should more government money be spent on schools?” Compared to what?
Leading Questions: • Presupposition • One-sided • Social desirable “Right think” “Right think in… right think out!”
Leading Questions: • Presupposition • One-sided • Social desirable • Ambiguous
Leading Questions: • Presupposition • One-sided • Social desirable • Ambiguous • Double bind “Have you stopped beating you wife yet?” Yes or No.
Leading Questions: What to avoid:
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity Be precise and use precise words: Avoid words such as: “like” “you” “all” “good” “bad” “where”
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implied assumptions
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implicit assumptions • Implicit alternatives a. Alternatives not expressed:
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implicit assumptions • Implicit alternatives a. Alternatives not expressed: b. Better: Alternative suggested by IF or THEN “Would you buy a fuel cell so you could be independent of a utility company?”
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implicit assumptions • Implicit alternatives a. Alternatives not expressed: b. Better: Alternative suggested by IF or Then “Would you buy a fuel cell so you could be independent of a utility companyif it cost 10% more than you current payments?”
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implicit assumptions • Implicit alternatives • Generalizations and estimates If a question becomes too generalized it may lose its meaning… and/or people will just guess.
Leading Questions: What to avoid: • Ambiguity • Leading questions • Implicit assumptions • Implicit alternatives • Generalizations and estimates • Double-Barreled questions Questions connected with “and,” and “or”… Which question is being answered??
Leading Questions: What to avoid: Double-Barreled questions Questions connected with “and,” and “or” Which question is being answered?? “Should our store give out more prizes, and have more contests?”
Mary Michaud http://www.uwex.edu/ces/tobaccoeval/pdf/good-bad.pdf