John Fairbairn wrote:In such circumstances, if a Japanese expert says, "I think you have to do this" and you ask in English "why", he is apt to be confused or even flustered. Do you mean 'for what reason is that best?' or 'how did you come to that conclusion?' or 'what's that got to do with the price of fish?' or 'I don't care what your answer is, I'm just showing you off by putting you on the spot". Not getting the answer you want may not be his fault. And look at how many young native English speakers muck up 'Wherefore art thou Romeo?' Even when the teacher explains 'wherefore' means 'why', Shakespeare's sentence usually has to be explained even further (i.e. it's not that he's a Romeo but that he's a Montague - and you probably have to explain even that to half the class).
In short, building a case on 'why' won't take you very far.
There is always a more precise way of asking 'Why'. However, there is also a more precise way of saying almost anything, so the decision of which level of precision is the correct balance between openness and precision is arbitrary and socio-cultural.
There is nothing wrong with going for the fastest and most open:
- 'why'
instead of the more precise, but quite slower to express:
- 'Probably due to my rank, although I can't be sure of the reasons by precisely the same lack of strength, I am not able to read more than two or three moves in a game of the complexity of the one we are dealing with; taking into account that in this case I use "complexity" to express my perceived difficulty of evaluating the separation of enclosed territories and dame areas, if such thing exist, of which I can't be sure. This lack of reading ability makes me wonder: "is the reason of your suggested move - that must most probably be correct, if we assume that your rank is based, among other skills, on your reading strength - a conclusion in a number of moves beyond my skill range? Or is it a collateral effect that, although present in a shorter number of moves, still I am not able to observe due to other deficiencies in my go skillset."
There is an additional advantage of 'why' that's especially useful when children use it. Any other way of forming the question will add criteria to the answer that the person answering might not want there and is forced to remove.
e.g:
Q-'why P7?' A-'Because it gives the best thickness to white in sente.'
compared to:
Q-'wouldn't P8 also kill?" A-'Killing is not the objective. P7 gives the best thickness to white in sente.'
'Why' is better than a more precise question that implies, in the process of becoming precise, assumptions that result false. Thus, 'why' is the humblest question. It says 'I don't understand your last assertion and I don't presume to know the origin of my ignorance.'