Ah. I suggest doing it differently next time. It is much clearer (and less deceptive) if you do not ask questions when you are trying to make a point. Instead, ask questions when you are curious about something and think someone has the answer, and use declarative statements (like those in the parent comment) to make a point. It should greatly aid in your communication.
I am trying to make a point AND I am curious about people’s answers to my questions. These are not mutually exclusive. It is my style to ask many questions.
If I don’t ask questions, I will have to make more assumptions about what you actually think. I don’t want to make declarative statements as if I already know exactly what you think about a topic. That is how people end up talking past each other. They don’t fully understand what the other one is trying to say.
Ah. I suggest doing it differently next time. It is much clearer (and less deceptive) if you do not ask questions when you are trying to make a point. Instead, ask questions when you are curious about something and think someone has the answer, and use declarative statements (like those in the parent comment) to make a point. It should greatly aid in your communication.
I am trying to make a point AND I am curious about people’s answers to my questions. These are not mutually exclusive. It is my style to ask many questions.
If I don’t ask questions, I will have to make more assumptions about what you actually think. I don’t want to make declarative statements as if I already know exactly what you think about a topic. That is how people end up talking past each other. They don’t fully understand what the other one is trying to say.
You’re not a big fan of rhetorical questions, are you?
No