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Neil Postman is concerned that the questions we ask shape the kind of answers we receive. He argues that the structure of our questions can limit the range of possible answers and lead to oversimplified or misleading conclusions. Postman emphasizes the importance of asking thoughtful and nuanced questions to encourage critical thinking and deeper understanding.
This site is really for answers not provision of questions. However to help you look at the related questions I will link to below.
You ask questions that help with schoolwork and reports that hopefully have truthful answers. OR You answer questions truthfully. Some of these questions are from people who desprately need help. I hope I answered yours.
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Respondents tend to provide socially respectable answers, known as the halo effect, thus creating an underestimation of depth of anger, prejudice and hatred.
Airway and Lungs
cause and effect
Rhetorical questions make the audience think about an answer to the question but no response is needed. This makes the reader think of all the possible answers, which then becomes memorable to them.
Cause and Effect.
As television's popularity ballooned, some people began to questions its effects. Of special concern was TV's possible impact on children. On several occasions in the 1950s, Congress looked into the effect of violent content on young viewers. To adress this concern, the TV industry adopted its own voluntary standards.
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The chief legitimate concern is the effect of smoking on the lungs