Funny Questions About the Human Condition

Here is a great list of philosophical questions to get you thinking about life, the universe, and everything. Some questions are quite complicated, and some questions are deceptively simple but with broad or far reaching implications.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • Philosophical questions about human nature and the human condition
  • Philosophical questions about the universe and reality
  • Philosophical questions about the human mind, consciousness, and intelligence
  • Ethics and morality philosophical questions
  • Philosophical questions about society and government
  • Philosophical questions about science and technology
  • PDF and Image of Philosophical Questions

It's a great list of questions to get an intellectually stimulating discussion going and touches on a lot of different areas of philosophy. And while some of the questions might be intriguing to academically trained philosophers, this list of philosophical questions is aimed at a more general audience and is meant to be accessible to everyone. I've also put up a printable PDF and an image of all the questions at the bottom of the page.

So, have a look, I'm sure you'll find at least a few philosophical questions that will pique your interest. And remember, when having a discussion on philosophy, "why?" and "why do you think that?" are always great companion questions.

Philosophical questions about human nature and the human condition

  • What harsh truths do you prefer to ignore?
  • Is free will real or just an illusion?
  • Is there a meaning to life? If so, what is it?
  • Where is the line between art and not art?
  • What should be the goal of humanity?
  • Does fate exist? If so, do we have free will?
  • What does it mean to live a good life?
  • Why do we dream?
  • Where does your self-worth come from?
  • How will humans as a species go extinct?
  • Is it possible to live a normal life and not ever tell a lie?
  • Does a person's name influence the person they become?
  • Is the meaning of life the same for animals and humans?
  • Is humanity headed in the right or wrong direction?
  • Does the study of philosophy ever lead to answers or simply more questions?
  • What is the best way for a person to attain happiness?
  • What is the most important goal every person should have?
  • Is it better to be a big fish in a small pond or a small fish in a big pond?
  • What are you capable of achieving?
  • By what standards do you judge yourself?
  • Can human nature be changed? Should it be changed?
  • How replaceable are you?
  • If you had to guess, what do you think would be the most likely way you'll die?
  • Is it better for a person to have a broad knowledge base or a deep knowledge base?
  • If someone you loved was killed in front of you, but someone created a copy of them that was perfect right down to the atomic level, would they be the same person and would you love them just as much?
  • If you could become immortal on the condition you would NEVER be able to die or kill yourself, would you choose immortality?
  • What actions in your life will have the longest reaching consequences? How long will those effects be felt?
  • How long will you be remembered after you die?
  • If a child somehow survived and grew up in the wilderness without any human contact, how "human" would they be without the influence of society and culture?
  • How would humanity change if all humans' life expectancy was significantly increased (let's say to around 500 years)?
  • Where do you find meaning in your life?
  • What do you think would be humanity's reaction to the discovery of extraterrestrial life?
  • Will religion ever become obsolete?
  • If you could teach everyone in the world one concept, what concept would have the biggest positive impact on humanity?
  • Is suffering a necessary part of the human condition? What would people who never suffered be like?
  • Does hardship make a person stronger? If so, under what conditions and at what point is it too much hardship? If not, what makes a person stronger?
  • Would things get better or worse if humans focused on what was going well rather than what's going wrong?
  • What benefits does art provide society? Does art hurt society in any way?
  • How likely do you think it will be that humans will last another 1,000 years without killing ourselves off?
  • What do you attribute the biggest successes in your life to? How about your largest failures?
  • If freedom is simply being able to do what you want, are animals freer than humans?
  • Would you want to know you are going to die before hand or die suddenly without warning?
  • What is the best way to train people to see the gradients in the world around them instead of just a simplistic "this is good, that is wrong" view of the world?
  • Is intelligence or wisdom more useful?
  • Which of your beliefs are justified and which ones aren't?
  • What do you contribute back to society?
  • What are you going to do with the one life you have?
  • Is it more important to help yourself, help your family, help your society, or help the world?
  • What life-altering things should every human ideally get to experience at least once in their lives?
  • Why don't we as a species take more advantage of the fact that we have almost infinite knowledge available to us?
  • What two questions would you ask to get the most information about who a person truly is?
  • Some people believe that if life has no purpose, then there is no reason for living. While others think that if life has no purpose, that frees a person to find/create and follow their own personal purpose. Which is a more valid point of view or are they both equally valid?
  • Does absolute power corrupt absolutely?
  • Why do we judge ourselves by our intentions but judge others by their actions?
  • What activities cause you to feel like you are living life to the fullest?
  • Does knowledge have intrinsic value or does it need to have a practical use to have value?
  • What would you genetically change about humans to make them a better species?
  • How important is play in living a healthy and fulfilling life?
  • Where do you think is the most worthwhile place to find meaning in life? Work, family, hobby, religion, philosophy, helping others, all the small miracles, or something else entirely?
  • What is the biggest waste of human potential?
  • Is a life that focuses on avoiding pain and seeking out pleasure a good and worthwhile life? Why or why not?
  • Does jealously have value in driving humans to improve themselves or is it a purely negative emotion?
  • What percentage of your life do you feel truly alive? When do you feel that way? How can you feel that way more often?
  • What do you think your future self will remember about you now?
  • "Know thyself" is an ancient concept going back much further than Socrates and is at the root of much of philosophy. With that in mind, what are the most important things to learn about one's self or is all self-knowledge equal?

We have a few more questions about human nature on our deep conversation topics page.


Philosophical questions about the universe and reality

Philosophical questions about the universe and reality

  • What do you think existed before the universe was created?
  • What in life is truly objective and not subjective?
  • Is it possible for a human to fathom the true depths of reality and existence?
  • If the universe is finite, what would beyond the edge of the universe be like?
  • Is there inherent order in nature or is it all chaos and chance?
  • What is the best path to find truth; science, math, art, philosophy, or something else?
  • Is math something that humans created or something we discovered? Is looking at reality mathematically an accurate representation of how things work?
  • There has always been something. Before there was something, there was only nothing. Which do you think is more likely?
  • As more and more is being discovered about quantum physics, we become less and less able to comprehend the nature of reality. Is this something temporary and our minds will adapt and begin to understand this new reality or is it possible that the human mind will soon reach its limits of comprehension? If it's only temporary, is there is a limit to what the human mind can comprehend? If we are reaching our limits, how do we continue to study our reality?

Philosophical questions about the human mind, consciousness, and intelligence

Philosophical questions about the human mind, consciousness, and intelligence

  • Is happiness just chemicals flowing through your brain or something more?
  • Why are humans so susceptible to magical thinking?
  • If every neuron in a human was accurately simulated in a computer, would it result in human consciousness?
  • Is it possible that some animals are self-aware and think about their ability to think?
  • How do you define consciousness?
  • Is it possible to prove that other people besides yourself have consciousness?
  • How conscious do you think animals are?
  • How would you define genius?
  • How much does language affect our thinking?
  • Why are humans so confident in beliefs that can't be proven?
  • Are there limits to human creativity?
  • If all your memories were erased, what kind of person would you be?
  • Why do humans have such a strong urge to distract ourselves from the real world?
  • Can rational thought exist without language?
  • What is the benefit of consciousness from an evolutionary stand point?
  • Would you be able to tell if time had been altered in some way?
  • Would it be more frightening to discover that humans are the most advanced species in the universe or that we are far from being the most advanced species in the universe?
  • There is zero chance that ALL your firmly and dearly held beliefs are true. So, which of your beliefs are most likely to be wrong and which are most liable to be true?
  • Assuming evolution is correct, do you think that if humans went extinct another species as intelligent as humans would evolve? If life exists long enough on a planet, is intelligence and consciousness inevitable?
  • Is the concept of "you" continuous or does past "you" continually fade into present and future "you"? In other words, what part of "you" sticks around over time considering that the atoms that make up your body are constantly being replaced and your memories are always changing?
  • Is it possible that someone's genes might affect their political leanings? If no, why not? If so, what would be the ramifications?
  • Would selectively breeding an animal such as a dog based on intelligence, increase its intelligence over time? If so, how intelligent could dogs become? If not, how does intelligence emerge in a species?
  • Why do we resist doing things that we know are good for our well-being while craving things that are detrimental to our well-being?
  • Is it be possible for humans to create something completely novel and new that is based on nothing that previously existed? Or is human creativity just rearranging and building on previous ideas?
  • If there existed a perfect clone of you, would it also be you? Would it act in exactly the same manner as you (like a mirror) or would it act differently? If it acted differently then would it still be you? At what point would it not be you?
  • Your perception of the world is just what your brain constructs for you from the signals sent by your senses. Plus, there is a slight delay, so you aren't even experiencing the simulation in real time. What would it be like if humans could perceive what the world is actually like and do it in real time? Also, what are the ramifications of every single person's reality being a little different and unique to them?
  • If language influences how we perceive color, what other things could languages be changing our perception of?
  • Is a sense of humor a byproduct of consciousness or something else entirely?
  • Are intelligence and happiness tied together in any way? If you are highly intelligent, is it more likely that you'll be more, or less happy?
  • Human memory has been shown to be incredibly unreliable. With that in mind, how do you know which of your memories are genuine and which have been altered or made up?
  • Different people and different organisms perceive reality in vastly different ways. With that in mind, what is real and what is just our perception of reality? Or does every organism live in its own personal reality?

Philosophical questions about ethics and morality

Ethics and morality philosophical questions

  • When, if ever, is taking a human life justified?
  • Can animals have morals?
  • Without religion would people become more, less, or be equally morally corrupt?
  • What rights does every human have? Do those rights change based on age?
  • Is justice a human construct or is it independent of humans?
  • Why do people expect a universe full of randomness to be fair?
  • With no laws or rules to influence your behavior, how do you think you would behave?
  • What would be the most ethical way to give away five million dollars?
  • Is privacy a right?
  • Are people ethically obligated to improve themselves?
  • Should there be limitations on the right to free speech?
  • Should euthanasia be legal? Why or why not?
  • What's the difference between justice and revenge?
  • Do business owners have the right to refuse service to customers?
  • If doing something good for others makes us feel good, can there ever be such a thing as pure altruism?
  • What is your definition of evil?
  • Do all people have equal value regardless of their actions or is a person's value based on their actions?
  • Why are humans so fascinated by mass murderers if their actions are universally considered evil and vile?
  • If babies are considered innocent, when do people cease to be innocent?
  • How much effort should an individual put into not offending others?
  • Why do humans often associate beauty with morality?
  • If you could press a button and receive a million dollars, but one stranger would die, would you press the button? And if so, how many times?
  • If humanity was put on trial by an advanced race of aliens, how would you defend humanity and argue for its continued existence?
  • Do animals have rights and do those rights extend to all animals or do the rights change based on the complexity of the animal?
  • At what point is overthrowing a government ethical, considering all the violence a revolution usually entails?
  • Can morality ever be objective or is it always subjective? If it can be objective, in what instances? If it's always subjective, how do we decide whose concept of morality is correct?
  • Are intentions or outcomes more important when judging whether actions are moral?
  • If it was discovered that most animals were conscious of their existence and eventual death, what would be the ramifications of that discovery?
  • If it was discovered that personality traits were partly genetic and could be removed with gene therapy, would it be ethical to edit out negative character traits that harm others like extreme aggression, compulsive lying, or cruelty?
  • If scientists could accurately predict who was more likely to commit crimes, what should society do with that information?
  • If you can save another's life and don't because doing so would break the law, are you ethically justified in your decision?
  • Are all individuals morally obligated to save another person's life if they are able? What if that person lives in another country?
  • Is it just and right to deny entry to a country when doing so probably means death for the immigrant and their family?
  • Should we terraform planets if it means that we may be destroying undiscovered microscopic alien life?
  • Does anonymity encourage people to misbehave or does it reveal how people would choose to act all the time if they could?
  • What is the most fertile soil for hatred? Fear, ignorance, jealousy, or something else entirely? Is it possible that some people are genetically predisposed to hatred?
  • As people, we feel our moral obligation weaken with physical as well as emotional distance from individuals in need. For example, you're more likely to help someone dying of hunger at your feet than someone dying of hunger in another country. How does this human trait of morality dependent on distance shape our world?
  • If I steal a loaf of bread from you and eat it, when does the bread itself cease to be yours and becomes mine?

Philosophical questions about society and government

Philosophical questions about society and government

  • If you could start a country from scratch, what would it be like?
  • Would the world be a better or worse place if everyone looked the same?
  • What causes the most harm in the world, but is completely avoidable?
  • How far should governments go to prevent its citizens from causing harm to themselves?
  • Do people in wealthier countries have a moral obligation to help those in poorer countries?
  • What should the role of a government be, what boundaries and limitations should it have?
  • Is poverty in society inevitable?
  • How should we measure the productivity of a society?
  • What would a utopia be like, how would it function and continue to exist?
  • What is the biggest threat to the social contract in our country?
  • If everyone said what they were actually thinking, what would happen to society?
  • What are the benefits and drawbacks of diversity in society?
  • Could societies exist without a way to transfer value (i.e. without money or a barter system)?
  • What would happen if a maximum income of was implemented?
  • What will the economy of wealthy countries look like in 50 to 100 years?
  • What is the most important right our government allows for?
  • Has social media been a net positive or a net negative for our society? Why?
  • What do you think the long-term effects of so many people being glued to their screens will be?
  • Should tax payers have the option to explicitly say what they don't want their tax dollars spent on?
  • Can a society exist without laws?
  • Will humanity ever be able to escape tribalism and the creation of in and out groups? Should it?
  • How much privacy are you willing to sacrifice for safety?
  • How would the world change if there was an accurate measure of aptitude?
  • Is hierarchy necessary for all successful human communities?
  • Is some degree of censorship necessary?
  • What are the biggest moral dilemmas your country is facing now?
  • If all humans want the same basic things, why is there so much violence and strife between people?
  • Is the cultural trend of individualism and the rejection of collectivism a beneficial or detrimental trend?
  • Is the human tendency to create groups an overall positive or a negative trait in terms of general human flourishing?
  • What would happen to a society in which no one had to work, and everyone was provided enough food/water/shelter/healthcare for free?
  • Do you think there will ever be a global government? If a world government did come to power, assuming it wasn't particularly cruel or evil, would it be a good or bad thing?
  • Would a government run with algorithms, A.I., and statistics be better or worse than the government we have now?
  • Is it more or less difficult to be successful in the modern world than it was in the past (10, 50, 100, or 1,000 years ago)?
  • Considering that the technology exists to enable a real democracy, would a true democracy (every single person can vote on every single legislation) be advantageous or detrimental?
  • Under our government are there any rights that you have but shouldn't? How about rights you don't have but should?
  • How would society change if men were able to get pregnant and men and women both had an equal chance of getting pregnant?
  • Why have many societies begun to place such a high value on emotions and being emotional?
  • Is it right or wrong that everyone seems to be accustomed to the fact that all of humanity and most of the life on Earth could be wiped out at the whim of a handful of people?
  • In an ideal government, what should a good citizen provide to their government and what should that government provide that good citizen?
  • Was the agricultural revolution and the explosion of civilizations that came from it an overall good thing for humans or a negative? In other words, would it have been better or worse for people to stay in small tribes?
  • What will be/are some of the by-products to society of everyone having the ability to take pictures or a video at any time?
  • Does marriage as an institution need to be updated or is it fine how it is?
  • If you were given the ability to reform how your country's leaders were chosen and how they serve, what would you change?

We also have a few more questions about society, culture, and the world on another page.


Philosophical questions about science and technology

Philosophical questions about science and technology

  • At what point is a technologically enhanced human not a human anymore?
  • Does the modern age make global conspiracies more or less feasible?
  • Is technological advancement a net positive or a net negative?
  • Is technological progress inevitable as long as humans exist or can it be stopped?
  • Is true artificial intelligence possible with our current technology and methods of programming?
  • What scientific breakthrough would have the biggest effect on humanity?
  • Why did technology progress more slowly in the past than it does now?
  • Should full access to the internet be a fundamental human right?
  • Has the invention of the atomic bomb made the world a more peaceful place?
  • Do you think the singularity will occur? If so, what time frame do you think it will happen in?
  • Is there a limit to what humans can create through technology and science?
  • Will we keep leaping to even greater technological and scientific breakthroughs that radically change society, or will the rate of progress slow and humanity's progress be limited to incremental improvements?
  • If a robust and cheap genetic engineering industry existed, would you have your genes edited? If so, what genetic changes would you choose to make? If not, why not?
  • Assume that in the future there will be huge leaps in human augmentation. Given a scale from completely human to completely machine, how far would you choose to augment yourself with robotics? What parts would you augment and why?
  • If the transporters in Star Trek existed and you used it, your particles would be disassembled and then reassembled, do you die every single time? Are you ever alive at two places at once? Are you ever completely dead?
  • If emotions are the product of biochemical reactions, then in the future we will be theoretically able to control them. If we could control emotions through technology, should we?

For some more questions about the future of the human race check out our deep conversation topics page.


PDF and Image of Philosophical Questions

Here is a PDF of all our philosophical questions.

And here is a link to an image of all our philosophical questions.


More deep questions

  • Deep conversation topics
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Source: https://conversationstartersworld.com/philosophical-questions/

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