The first questions we ask in our lives are often the most important. We overlook them in adulthood, and many come to accept this as are, and not think too deeply.
Putting oneself in the mindset of the innocent and naive is revelatory and enlightening.
To many it actually isn't even important, are they really the enlightened? Perpetual openmindedness, or settling in/finding a niche or thought process...maintaining the awe and wonderment of youth, or simply getting on with life and forgetting about that which isn't immediately evident and tangible/relevant.
As intelligent beings, we are unique in our capacity to think, to contemplate the beyond.
Is there relevance in asking the unanswerable? After all, this is the nature of having or finding a belief system.
Is a question more important than an answer?
Most of the questions are 'why's and 'what's ....
- Why?
- Why do we live?
- Why do we die?
- Why am I me and not someone else?
- Why exist?
- Why is it commonly believed for a form of deity to exist, without evidence?
- What is nonexistence?
- What is nothing?
- What is?
- What isn't?
- What if? (alternatives to what 'is', as pondered in m1469's topic)
- What is space?
- What is time?
- What is reality?
These are some of the most pertinent questions for me, and I find all to be unanswered, some may find answerable and answered questions to be the most practically relevant to their life.
The best questions are the briefest too, if it isn't, it often has a question within the question, and perhaps should be divided.

Relevance is the big thing here, and I think that is personal.
Alot is answered without question, is it of any relevance to question those answers?
