Why?

Everyday I ask that question and I never come up with an answer. I'm sure it's a question that has been asked for as long as the word existed (?) but still, there must be a reason to it all. Everything needs a reason, right? Or does it? Are some things just the way they are and that's that? Are things supposed to appear misleading so that we're forced to ask a question? Action seems to be an answer in and of itself. An answer to what? I don't know, but it seems to be an answer. Most often, questions are asked when action is not present. So take action, and there is no room for question.

But wait a second. How can we take the correct course of action without raising the proper questions? Will we question our actions before we make them only to later realize that the correct course of action was to do nothing at all? Had that option even occurred to us at the time of questioning? Or were we too busy figuring out what action to take?

If all that exists is the question, the action, and the result, then we would no doubt fail to make the correct choices 50% of the time. So what prevents that? Our ability to learn from the results of our questions and actions prevents it. But how does learning from the results really help us if we don't even know the true effects of the results until much later? If we have no idea how many different possibilities can arise from the question and action combinations, then how can we make an educated interpretation of their results?

It makes more sense to agree that we really don't know anything and to accept that there is no way to figure everything out, if everything we believe exists really even exists at all... which leads us back to the beginning:

Why?