This is, as others have pointed out, an artifact of the question wizard. We're still in the first iteration. There were options and words that quite a few of us wanted to tweak a bit more prior to shipping, but at some point you just have to get it out there and let it make a bit of a mess so you can see what's going to happen in actual cases, optimize it from there, and test some more.
We really appreciate everyone's patience with this and hope you don't mind editing where it makes sense to help folks. We knew some questions might look a little disjointed (as if you were reading one part of a conversation), but we didn't anticipate that looking like an attack from our robot overlords.
A wizard that successfully guides people through navigating Stack OverflowsOverflow's many possible quirks and customs is our goal, and it's insanely hard to do in a manner that is welcoming and not onerous to someone that is brand new to the site and just learning how to program. This is something we can learn from (and perhaps infer new subtle archetypes when we put the final question together). A box that lets someone say "I don't have any code, my question is about a programming tool" could let us switch to a template that is better suited for someone asking a question about, say, Git.
But I really, really, really want to look at the numbers from the test group and any static analysis we do from the questions produced through it before we go changing stuff. We've introduced structure where there wasn't any, so we have to get a baseline of what structure vs no structure looks like, and then we can start looking at what changes to that structure do, and we're at least a few more iterations away from that.
So, we appreciate y'all putting up with it while we whittle this down. We're not obtuse (other answers on related posts kindakind of imply we don't realize what we're doing or optimizing for) -- we do, and we also know it's going to take a lot longer to get to the version that many people think we should have shipped initially while actually testing it responsibly (that's why we hired all those fancy UX experts and researchers and such).