The Chapters
1. The Chapters
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Each chapter presents a distinct philosophical argument for a controversial conclusion, requiring readers to identify flaws in opposing views rather than simply choosing their preferred position.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Structure: Ten chapters, each written "in character" from a specific perspective (not necessarily the author's own), covering topics from God's existence to the ethics of eating meat.
- Not a unified system: The chapters do not fit together into a coherent whole; readers must question each claim and decide whether the arguments are convincing.
- Active engagement required: The book emphasizes that philosophical positions require work—you must identify flaws in arguments for the opposite conclusion, not just pick what you like.
- Common confusion: This is not a "pick your favorite opinion" book; it challenges students to engage critically with arguments rather than passively accept conclusions.
- Appendices on method: Logic (validity) and philosophical writing are covered separately to support the argumentative work.
🙏 Theology chapters
🙏 Chapter 1: Can God Allow Suffering?
- Core argument: An all-powerful, morally perfect God would not allow the suffering we observe in the world, so such a God must not exist.
- Objections addressed:
- Suffering is necessary for appreciating good things
- Suffering builds valuable character traits
- Suffering is required for free will
- God has hidden reasons we cannot understand
- Example: The chapter examines whether the existence of widespread suffering is compatible with divine perfection.
🎲 Chapter 2: Why You Should Bet on God
- Core argument: You should believe in God because it is in your best interest—you gain a chance at eternal heaven without risking anything of comparable value.
- Objections addressed:
- God's existence is incredibly unlikely
- Merely believing isn't enough for heaven
- You cannot change beliefs at will
- Don't confuse: This is a pragmatic argument (about what's in your interest), not an argument about whether God actually exists.
🧠 Identity and death chapters
🧠 Chapter 3: What Makes You You
Personal identity: the conditions under which a person at one time and a person at another time are one and the same person.
- Rejected views:
- Same body criterion: Criticized using conjoined twins and body-swapping thought experiments
- Psychological factors: Rejected based on "fission" cases where one person's mental life transfers into two separate bodies
- The chapter criticizes attempts to answer the personal identity question rather than proposing a positive solution.
💀 Chapter 4: Don't Fear the Reaper
- Core argument: Death cannot be bad for you because you don't experience painful sensations while dead; since death is not bad, fearing it is irrational.
- Supporting claims:
- Physical organisms cease to be conscious when they die
- You are a physical organism
- Objection addressed: The deprivation view (death is bad because it deprives you of pleasant experiences you would otherwise have had)
- Example: If you experience nothing while dead, there is no subject to be harmed.
🔗 Free will and knowledge chapters
🔗 Chapter 5: No Freedom
- Two arguments against free will:
- Desire-based: All actions are determined by the strength of our desires, which lies outside our control
- Determinism-based: All actions are consequences of exceptionless deterministic laws of nature
- Additional claim: Even if laws are not deterministic, undetermined/random actions wouldn't be free either.
- Objection addressed: Attempts to show free will is compatible with determinism (compatibilism)
- Don't confuse: The chapter argues both determinism and indeterminism are incompatible with freedom.
🤷 Chapter 6: You Know Nothing
- Two skeptical conclusions:
- Future skepticism: We cannot know anything about the future because all reasoning about it relies on the unwarranted assumption that the future will resemble the past
- External world skepticism: We cannot know anything about the present world around us because we cannot rule out that we are currently having an incredibly vivid dream
- Example: If you can't distinguish waking from dreaming, you can't claim to know you're awake right now.
⚖️ Ethics and politics chapters
⚖️ Chapter 7: Against Prisons and Taxes
- Core argument: It is wrong for governments to tax or imprison citizens because these practices are not relevantly different from a vigilante locking vandals in her basement and robbing neighbors to pay for it.
- Main objection addressed: The social contract theory—the claim that we have tacitly consented to following the law and paying taxes.
- The chapter examines putative differences between government action and vigilante action.
🤰 Chapter 8: The Ethics of Abortion
- Rejected arguments (both sides):
- Against abortion based on: lack of self-sufficiency, consciousness, rationality
- For abortion based on: human DNA, potential personhood, life beginning at conception
- Main argument examined: Abortion is immoral because the embryo has a right to life.
- Flaw identified: Having a right to life doesn't entail having a right to use the mother's womb
- Alternative argument presented: Abortion is wrong because it deprives the victim of a valuable future.
- Final claim: Although immoral, abortion should not be illegal.
🐄 Chapter 9: Eating Animals
- Core argument: Eating meat from factory farms is immoral.
- Rejected justifications:
- People have always eaten meat
- Eating meat is necessary
- Eating meat is natural
- Main argument: It would be immoral to raise and slaughter puppies in similar ways and for similar reasons, so factory-farmed meat is also immoral.
- Example: If you wouldn't accept puppy farming, consistency requires rejecting factory farming.
😊 Chapter 10: What Makes Things Right
Utilitarianism: the rightness or wrongness of an action is always entirely a matter of the extent to which it increases or decreases overall levels of happiness in the world.
- Defense against objection: The theory wrongly permits killing one person to save five.
- Additional topics:
- How morality is and isn't subjective
- Cultural variability in moral beliefs
- The notorious "trolley cases"
📚 Appendices on method
📚 Appendix A: Logic
Validity: a feature that makes an argument a good argument.
- Explains what it means for an argument to be valid
- Provides illustrations of different types of valid arguments
✍️ Appendix B: Writing
- Three-section model for philosophy papers:
- Introduce the view or argument you plan to criticize
- Advance your objections
- Address likely responses to your objections
- Writing advice:
- Importance of clear, unpretentious writing
- Charitable treatment of opposing viewpoints
- Editing rough drafts
- Evaluation criteria: Common standards philosophy instructors use when grading papers
- Additional topic: The difference between consulting sources (excerpt cuts off here)