Ray Bradbury, in "All flesh is one: what matter scores?" in When Elephants Last In The Dooryard Bloomed: Celebrations For Almost Any Day In The Year (1975).
There are these four ways of answering questions. Which four? There are questions that should be answered categorically [straightforwardly yes, no, this, that]. There are questions that should be answered with an analytical (qualified) answer [defining or redefining the terms]. There are questions that should be answered with a counter-question. There are questions that should be put aside. These are the four ways of answering questions.
Gautama Buddha, in Sutta Pitaka, as quoted in: Ṭhānissaro (Bhikkhu.) (2004) Handful of leaves. Vol. 3, p. 80
If I had a group under me, they would try and figure out what I wanted the answer to be, and they would tell me what I wanted to hear ... I've watched that approach at 20 public companies ... The main thing is: Are you reasonably sure that you know what you're doing?
Cognition is autonomous; it refuses to have any answers foisted on it from the outside.
Franz Rosenzweig, in Franz Rosenzweig: His Life and Thought (1961/1998), p. 97
There is a man in each scholar, a man who inquires and stands in need of answers. I am anxious to answer the scholar qua man but not the representative of a certain discipline, that insatiable, ever inquisitive phantom which like a vampire drains whom it possesses of his humanity.
Franz Rosenzweig, in Franz Rosenzweig: His Life and Thought (1961/1998), p. 97
Teachers who offer you the ultimate answers do not possess the ultimate answers, for if they did, they would know that the ultimate answers cannot be given, they can only be received.