I'd rather have questions that can't be answered, than answers that can't be questioned.
@kibcol1049 That's very spiritual. Do you follow the dao or another path? Seem's almost like close buddhahood.
@lankohr Not especially, I wondered where I'd heard that. πŸ€”
@kibcol1049 It's often attributed to Feynman, but also in some religious texts. And even then there was almost guarantied a drunken Greek guy thinking/saying it a few thousand years ago.
@lankohr Most clever things are repeated like good jokes. It's often impossible to know who made them famous, let alone who actually said them first. If there's a general acceptance of a credit I will give it.

@lankohr @kibcol1049

I just thought that it might depend on the language one speaks, it might not translate well into other languages.

In German it works but it it needs a bit tweaking::

Ich habe lieber Fragen ohne Antwort anstatt Antworten, die man nicht in Frage stellen kann.

(Translating back: ".. answers one cannot call into question".)

I don't speak Old Greek, so over to you ;-)

Diogenes?
@sam Most probably. That guy was beyond everything. Maybe the universe is in reality Diogenes lying in his barrel and just making this stuff up.