A Quote by Vanessa Redgrave

Ask the right questions if you're to find the right answers. — © Vanessa Redgrave
Ask the right questions if you're to find the right answers.
Ask the right questions if you're going to find the right answers.
If you don't ask the right questions, I can't give you the answers, and if you don't know the right question to ask, you're not ready for the answers
If you don't ask the right questions, you don't get the right answers. A question asked in the right way often points to its own answer. Asking questions is the ABC of diagnosis. Only the inquiring mind solves problems.
We do not ask the right questions when we are young, so we miss the important answers. Now it is too late to ask, too late for the illuminating answers, and the unanswered questions haunt us for a lifetime.
When people ask me what philosophy is, I say philosophy is what you do when you don't know what the right questions are yet. Once you get the questions right, then you go answer them, and that's typically not philosophy, that's one science or another. Anywhere in life where you find that people aren't quite sure what the right questions to ask are, what they're doing, then, is philosophy.
It is the function of a liberal university not to give right answers, but to ask right questions.
The scientific mind does not so much provide the right answers as ask the right questions.
It is not that we don't know the right answers, it is just that we don't ask the right questions.
Find the right questions. You don't invent the answers, you reveal the answers.
An expert knows all the answers - if you ask the right questions.
To gain knowledge, we must learn to ask the right questions; and to get answers, we must act, not wait for answers to occur to us.
The answers are all out there, we just need to ask the right questions.
Ask the right questions, and the answers will always reveal themselves.
Language was invented to ask questions. Answers may be given by grunts and gestures, but questions must be spoken. Humanness came of age when man asked the first question. Social stagnation results not from a lack of answers but from the absence of the impulse to ask questions.
As a leader, it is often better to ask the right questions and listen than to have all the answers.
Questions are like gifts - it's the thought behind them that the receiver really feels. We have to know the receiver to give the right gift and to ask the right question. Generic gifts and questions are all right, but personal gifts and questions feel better.
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