Do you know what I hate?
Unexplained rhetorical questions.
Now, I know what you're saying already, "but rhetorical questions don't really have answers, and are meant to be unexplained!" Hear me out. Do you really think I'd be writing this if I didn't have a point?
Most rhetorical questions are harmless. "Wouldn't it be nice if it wasn't raining 80% of the year?" "Are you ready to party?" "What has he ever done for me?" Answering yes, yes, and no is obvious, but the questioner is not really want a reply. The reason lies deeper. It gets you to think. But of course, are rhetorical questions always this simple?
In the past few hours, days, weeks, and months, I have encountered a new an insidious breed of rhetorical conventions. Normally, when a question is asked in a textbook, there is some sort of analysis, or, at the very least, guidance. Even when there is no help, the writer is usually courteous enough to place such it in a "questions" or "problems" section. Evil conspires against this practice.
To start, these evil constructs are placed innocently enough alongside other explanatory notes. They often begin with a complicated set of facts, either made up, or plucked from an obscure case liked by the writer. He then asks the reader a seemingly simple question. "Is there a duty?" "Are the pigs a nuisance?" "Was the smelly and dirty man insane?" (I'd say no, probably, and obviously) While the answer might be clear to the reader, the reasoning is fuzzy. The point is for the reader to think. Trouble arises when the writer casts the reader adrift.
With no direction on how a court might decide, what reasoning might be applied, or how a motion might survive, the reader is left with doubts: doubts about his understanding of the section, the chapter, or the class, his intellect, his reasons for coming to law school, and his ability to find some measure of worth in the world. When the reader is cast adrift, his very faith is called into question. This is the work of a heretic.
Heretics are ones who attack the faith of others. They challenge beliefs and question established principles. These writers mercilessly do just that. The reader's beliefs and principles are called into question when he is cast adrift and left without guidance. That is the evil of these rhetorical questions.
I hate unexplained rhetorical questions because they are the heretical works of heretics. Do you see my point now?