Jerry, it is not a silly question, and deserves an effort at explanation.
With a set trigger set up, the triggers have to be low enough to clear the sear bar as it is cycled through the tumbler's half and full cock notches. If the triggers contact the sear bar during cycling, the triggers cannot engage each other properly, and you get in the least, an unsafe situation, and at worse, non function altogether. Set triggers work under the tension of a strong mainspring to the rear (in this case) on the trigger bar, pressing down hard on the back step of the back trigger. The back trigger is caught by a fine notch in the front trigger when the rear one is pulled toward the rear, loading the spring. The rear trigger will be considerably clear of the sear bar. A light touch on the front trigger will disengage the rear trigger whose forward end snaps upward under the tension of the heavy spring, striking the sear bar and thus driving it out of the full cock notch of the tumbler. On a double acting set trigger, the lock can be fired without setting the triggers, because there is a bar on the front trigger that can contact the sear bar. All Hawken triggers are made this way, as far as I know. The single acting type of set trigger must be set to fire the lock since there is no bar on the front trigger - just a notch to catch the rear trigger when it is set. On some single acting set triggers the heavy spring presses down the rearward step on the back trigger which forces the trigger's forward bar hard up against the sear when the triggers are unset. On locks that do not have a fly or detent in the tumbler, this helps to keep the nose of the sear from stopping in the half cock notch as it passes the sear's nose during firing. With such rifles, the trigger must be set before the lock can be cycled. I won't go into the advantages and disadvantages of the two types of set triggers...for another thread.
I hope that helps clear the mud a little.