Are you more fond of asking questions or of answering them? Where does literary art fit in to the question above?
Answering, because it is a total ego trip for me to know shit that other people do not. Pretty much any time I'm asking a question, it's to gather more knowledge, so when somebody asks a question, I can whip out my throbbing brain cock, and answer that question. Maybe, 80, possible 90 percent of the reason I'm on /lit/ is so I can answer questions people ask me so people know me as that guy that knows a lot of stuff.
>>9971682
Asking. Answering feels like work. Answering also takes more words
>>9971682
Why do you ask?
>>9971682
the chances that i will ask questions irl and get actual good answers are what? close to zero. on the internet, on imageboards, in proper subboards - very high, but i couldn't give a fuck, i wouldnt say IM FOND, it's a tool.
but answering questions - when asnwering what are the chances person will have all the prerequisites to understand what i will be telling him? again, close to zero, and i will think - why bother, why explain, why answer, when i can just ignore or give some shit snarky le epic ironic answer and move on.
>>9971682
[We] know what OP prefers, do [we] not?
Statements designed as questions, or rhetorical questions, are too often viewed as 'passive\aggressive' these days. This is because we live in boring, motherfucking times....
But I like it all, OP. And literature concerns itself with all.