Our panel of 91 professional philosophers has responded to

287
 questions about 
Language
221
 questions about 
Value
43
 questions about 
Color
68
 questions about 
Happiness
32
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Sport
392
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Religion
2
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Action
51
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War
244
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Justice
284
 questions about 
Mind
96
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Time
58
 questions about 
Abortion
374
 questions about 
Logic
574
 questions about 
Philosophy
1280
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Ethics
124
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Profession
154
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Sex
70
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Truth
58
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Punishment
170
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Freedom
89
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Law
75
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Perception
27
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Gender
69
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Business
67
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Feminism
117
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Children
134
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Love
218
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Education
34
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Music
80
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Death
81
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Identity
151
 questions about 
Existence
4
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Economics
75
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Beauty
54
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Medicine
2
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Culture
77
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Emotion
31
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Space
39
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Race
110
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Animals
105
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Art
24
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Suicide
5
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Euthanasia
36
 questions about 
Literature
282
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Knowledge
110
 questions about 
Biology
208
 questions about 
Science
23
 questions about 
History
88
 questions about 
Physics

Question of the Day

I’m guessing that what you think is that every question has a satisfying answer — an answer that explains what we wanted explained or tells us what we wanted to know. And so my question is: why do you think that?

For the record, I don’t think it’s true, or at least I don’t see any good reason to suppose that it must be true.

Here’s an example. We can send electrons, one at a time, through a certain sort of magnetic field (one oriented “inhomogenously” in a particular direction.) The electron will respond in one of two ways: maximum upward deflection or maximum downward deflection; nothing in between. So suppose a particular electron passes through the field and is deflected upward. You ask why up rather than down.

The most widely-held view among physicists is that there is no answer. The most widely-held view is not that we just don’t know, but that which way the electron went is a matter of pure chance; nothing explains it.

Now this may be wrong, but there are serious reasons for thinking it may be right. It’s not just a matter of “We’ve tried to figure it out and we can’t.” It’s a matter of the deep way that probability is built into quantum mechanics at the very bottom. And whether it’s right or not, it’s a perfectly coherent view. So my answer to the first of your questions is that there’s plenty of room to think some questions just don’t have answers at all.

As for the cow… There may be a good answer, though I’m a philosopher and not a cowologist. But any answer will depend on details of evolutionary history, and it’s entirely possible that some of those details involve pure, random chance & mdash; a stray cosmic ray inducing an unpredictable mutation, for example. So my answer to your first question could have a bearing on your second question: if we push the “why” question back far enough, we may reach a point where answers just run out.

If by "a logical answer" you mean an answer that is logically consistent, then I agree that every well-posed question has a logical answer. Nevertheless, the logically consistent answer to some question will often rely on information from beyond the subject matter of logic. The answer to why a particular cow has four legs will rely on information about the cow's parentage, genetics, embryology, anatomy, or some such. Logic all by itself cannot answer that question.