For Whom the Bell Tolls

Question

What questions remain unanswered?

Synthesized answer

Based solely on the provided passages, the question "What questions remain unanswered?" is not directly addressed. The passages contain many rhetorical questions posed by the author to God, but they do not discuss which of these questions remain unanswered.

For example, the author asks why God changed his ways and carries people through misery [4], and why God will not begin the joys of heaven on earth [4]. He also questions why David concluded that a man running alone brought good news [1]. However, the text does not state whether these questions received an answer or remain unanswered.

Therefore, the passages do not contain information about which specific questions remain unanswered. They only list the questions themselves, without any resolution or commentary on their status.

Synthesized from the book passages below. Chat with the book on Feynman for follow-up.

From the book

uld be julap enough, the refuse of our servants bezoar enough, and the offscouring of our kitchen tables cordial enough. O my soul, when thou art not emough awake to bless thy God enough for his plentiful mercy, in affording thee many helpers, remember how many lack them, and help them to them, or to those other things which they lack as much as them. ​ VII. EXPOSTULATION. M Y God, my God, thy blessed servant Augustine begged of thee, that Moses might come and tell him hat he meant by some places of Genesis: may I have leave to ask of that Spirit that writ that book, why, when David expected…
Passage [90]
inds, war, famine, and pestilence; Satan left out these, and brought in fires from heaven and winds from the wilderness. If there were no ruin but sickness, we see the masters of that art can scarce number, not name all sicknesses; every thing that disorders a faculty, and the function of that, is a sickness: the names will not serve them which are given from the place affected, the pleurisy is so; nor from the effect which it works, the falling sickness is so: they cannot have names enough, from what it does, ​ nor where it is; but they must extort names from what it is like, what it…
Passage [113]
hat the proceedings may be apert, and ingenuous, and candid, and avowable, for that gives satisfaction and acquiescence. They who have received my anatomy of myself consult, and end their consultation in prescribing, and in prescribing physic; proper and convenient remedy: for if they should come in again, and chide me for some disorder, that had occasioned and induced, or that had hastened and exalted this sickness, or if they should begin to write now rules for my dict and exercise when I were well, this werc to antedate or to postdate their consultation, not to give physic. It were rather…
Passage [117]
these galleries thou broughtest them into thy bedchamber, by these glories and joys, to the joys and glories of heaven. Why hast thou changed thine old way, and carried us by the ways of discipline and mortification, by the ways of mourning and lamentation, by the ways of miserable ends and miserable anticipations of those miseries, in appropriating the exemplar miseries of others to ourselves, and usurping upon their miseries as our own, to our own prejudice? Is the glory of heaven no perfecter in itself, but that it needs a foil of depression and ingloriousness in this world, to set it off?…
Passage [22]
Conqueror, was left, as soon as his soul left him, not only without persons to assist at his grave, but without a grave. 'Who will keep us then, we kuow not; as long as we can, let us admit as much help as we can; another and another physician, is not another and another indication, and symptom of death, but another and another assistant, and protector of life: nor do they so much feed the imagination with apprehension of danger, as the understanding with comfort. Let not one bring learning, another diligence, another religion, but every one bring all; and as many ingredients enter into a…
Passage [88]

More questions about this book