You draw boundaries towards questions.
As the links I’ve posted above indicate, no, lists don’t necessarily require questions to begin noticing joints and carving around them.
Questions are helpful however, to convey the guess I might already have and to point at the intension that others might build on/refute. And so...
Your list doesn’t have any questions like that
...I have had some candidate questions in the post since the beginning, and later even added some indication of the goal at the end.
EDIT: You also haven’t acknowledged/objected to my response to your “any attempt to analyse the meaning independent of the goals is confused”, so I’m not sure if that’s still an undercurrent here.
It occurred to me while reading your comment that I could respond entirely with excerpts from Minding our way. Here’s a go (it’s just fun, if you also find it useful, great!):
This is a grave error, in a world where the work is never finished, where the tasks are neverending.
Rest isn’t something you do when everything else is finished. Everything else doesn’t get finished. Rather, there are lots of activities that you do, some which are more fun than others, and rest is an important one to do in appropriate proportions.
Rest isn’t a reward for good behavior! It’s not something you get to do when all the work is finished! That’s finite task thinking. Rather, rest and health are just two of the unending streams that you move through. [...]
This behavior won’t do, for someone living in a dark world. If you’re going to live in a dark world, then it’s very important to learn how to choose the best action available to you without any concern for how good it is in an absolute sense. [...]
I surely don’t lack the capacity to feel frustration with fools, but I also have a quiet sense of aesthetics and fairness which does not approve of this frustration. There is a tension there.
I choose to resolve the tension in favor of the people rather than the feelings. [...]
We aren’t yet gods. We’re still fragile. If you have something urgent to do, then work as hard as you can — but work as hard as you can over a long period of time, not in the moment. [...]
You can look at the bad things in this world, and let cold resolve fill you — and then go on a picnic, and have a very pleasant afternoon. That would be a little weird, but you could do it! [...]
many people seem to think that there is a privileged “don’t do anything” action, that consists of something like curling up into a ball, staying in bed, and refusing to answer emails. It’s much easier to adopt the “buckle down” demeanor when, instead, curling up in a ball and staying in bed feels like just another action. It’s just another way to respond to the situation, which has some merits and some flaws.
(That’s not to say that it’s bad to curl up in a ball on your bed and ignore the world for a while. Sometimes this is exactly what you need to recover. Sometimes it’s what the monkey is going to do regardless of what you decide. [...])
So see the dark world. See everything intolerable. Let the urge to tolerify it build, but don’t relent. Just live there in the intolerable world, refusing to tolerate it. See whether you feel that growing, burning desire to make the world be different. Let parts of yourself harden. Let your resolve grow. It is here, in the face of the intolerable, that you will be able to tap into intrinsic motivation. [...]