When Does a Question Open—or Close—a Conversation?
When Does a Question Open—or Close—a Conversation? The grammar may be curious. The posture may not be. Framing the Question Questions that open conversation do more than produce answers: they make it possible for another person to add context, challenge a premise, or reveal what the asker could not already see. Yet a sentence ending in a question mark can also behave like a locked door: “Why would you do that?” “Don’t you think this is irresponsible?” The useful distinction is not open-ended versus closed-ended. It is whether the person answering has genuine room to change the conversation. A Question Opens When It Allows Revision A question opens a conversation when the asker is willing to be altered by the answer. It closes a conversation when the answer is being used as a confession, a compliance check, or decoration around a decision already made. That is why “What happened?” can be either generous or threatening. Asked by a colleague who wants to understand a missed handoff, it cr...