Philosophers can always ask questions like: "What determines the Nature of the box?" "Is the box of any use to me?" "Why should I be bothered about the box?" "Is our life determined or even created by the box" "Who created the box?" "Must I take the answers for granted even if it says yes?" "Shall we live a live in accordance with the answers?" "Is the box a gift of the Gods or of Nature maybe?" "Can we ask questions that the box can't answer even if it says no?" "Should I always believe the box?" "Why can we only ask one question" "Can we find an anwer ourselves that is better than the answer given by the box?" "Will our life be less meaningfull if we answer questions ourselves?" "Can the box listen to our answers too?" "Does the box change if our thoughts about it change?" "Shall we see the box as an oracle in contact with gods who have the most complete list of answers and questions?" "Will the box ever give an answer that we don't understand yet but that can be understood in the future after more questions have been asked?" "Is the box a kind of black box containing all information about all possible universes?" "Will asking one question influence the next question?" "Are all answers existing before the question to the answer is asked?" "If so then how can the box know all the answers?" "How can all answers exist in such a small box?" "Can we predict the behavior of the box, that is can we know the answers ourselves?" "Is asking a question to the box determined by other questions and from where comes our first question?" "Can we exist without the box?" "How looks the box inside and can it answer that question itself?" "Can we look inside the box?" "Can we know how the box looks like an Sich?" "Does the box understand every language?" "Is the box real?" Etcetera. Can the box answer all these questions and if so would all answers be understood?