In Freakonomics, the “unusual question” doesn’t come from a formal method or theory.
It comes from a habit of looking at the ordinary world as if something is off.
Let me put it precisely.
🧭 1. It starts with curiosity about anomalies
For Steven Levitt especially, the trigger is:
👉 noticing something that doesn’t quite make sense
Not:
- big theories
- grand problems
But:
- small inconsistencies
- odd patterns
- things people take for granted
Examples:
- Why do some teachers’ test scores jump suspiciously?
- Why do sumo wrestlers behave differently at certain ranks?
👉 The unusual question begins as:
“Wait… that’s strange.”
🕵️ 2. It comes from ignoring what you’re “supposed” to study
Levitt explicitly rejects:
- traditional economic topics (inflation, GDP, etc.)
- disciplinary boundaries
Instead:
👉 Anything is fair game if it reveals behavior
So the unusual question often comes from:
- looking where others don’t look
- asking what others consider trivial or inappropriate
🔍 3. It is driven by the search for hidden incentives
Once something feels “off,” the next move is:
👉 “What incentive could explain this?”
So the unusual question is not random—it is structured like:
“What hidden incentive might be operating here?”
🧨 4. It often comes from distrust of surface explanations
Levitt & Dubner assume:
People’s stated reasons are often misleading
So they ask questions that bypass:
- moral narratives
- official explanations
👉 The unusual question is often:
“What if the opposite were true?”
“What if this is not what it seems?”
🧭 5. It is playful, even mischievous
There’s also a tone:
- irreverent
- slightly subversive
- willing to offend common sense
👉 The question is “unusual” because:
it violates what we are not supposed to ask
🌊 6. In one sentence
The unusual question comes from noticing anomalies, ignoring conventions, and asking what hidden incentives might explain them.
🌌 (In your language)
You might feel a resonance here:
- Levitt:
👉 anomaly → unusual question
- You:
👉 symptom → problematique
Both begin with:
something that doesn’t fit
But then they diverge:
- Levitt → finds incentive
- You → stay with the event
🧭 Final formulation
If we sharpen it:
The unusual question is born
at the moment when common sense fails—
and curiosity refuses to look away.
If you like, we can take a very interesting step:
👉 map
unusual question (Levitt) × symptom (Lacan) × event (your work)
That would show three different ways of responding to
“something is off.”