Anyone new to philosophy soon encounters new ideas that challenge their hidden biases and cherished beliefs, or are at odds with common sense and tradition. Yet, these philosophical ideas are backed by strong arguments, arguments so strong that it’s difficult to identify what is wrong with them. Too Weird to Believe, Too Plausible to Deny: Mind-Blowing Philosophical Ideas explores these strange yet cogent ideas in 29 short, clear chapters written by some of the best philosophers alive today.
Some of these ideas include:
- Nobody should reproduce.
- You are not responsible for your actions.
- Consciousness is in everything, everywhere.
- Your property doesn’t really belong to you.
- Absolutely anything can be art.
- Biases are morally good and help us understand reality.
- We can’t know what scientific facts are correct.
- Having a disability can be good for you.
- You should never ever lie, even to save a life.
- You have no moral duty to obey the law.
- You don’t exist because there is no self.
Each chapter starts with a seemingly counterintuitive philosophical conclusion and a simple, accurate description of the underlying argument supporting the conclusion, including historical and cultural context. This is followed by an outline of objections for the purposes of conversation and debate, and a discussion of the implications of the idea, or how it may relate to the reader’s interests and attitudes. Each chapter closes with suggested readings and a list of references for readers who want to learn more about the idea.
Anyone new to philosophy soon encounters new ideas that challenge their hidden biases and cherished beliefs, or are at odds with common sense and tradition. Yet, these philosophical ideas are backed by strong arguments, arguments so strong that it’s difficult to identify what is wrong with them.
Introduction: Too Weird to Believe, Too Plausible to Deny Part 1: What
Should We Do?
1. Having a Disability Can Be Good for You
2. Lying Is Always
Wrong
3. Not Being An Evil Bastard Is Hard
4. Polyamory Is Not Cheating
5.
Theres No Duty to Obey the Law
6. More Lives Better Than Good Lives
7. We
Should Not Reproduce
8. Taxes Arent Just Theft, Theyre Much Worse
9. Your
Property Isnt Really Yours
10. Ignorance Is the Foundation of Justice
11.
Freedom Without Alternatives
12. Were Not Responsible
13. It's Your Fault
Youre Not Happy
14. More Than One True Morality
15. Moral Facts Are Magic
Tricks Part 2: What Is True?
16. Bias Is Good
17. Against Doing Your Own
Research
18. Anything Can Be Art
19. Sex Is Socially Constructed
20.
Conscious Intelligent Robots Are Virtually Inevitable
21. Consciousness Is
Everywhere
22. Consciousness Is Not What It Seems
23. Theres No Self
24. The
Past and Future Are as Real as Now
25. We Can't Know If Scientific Theories
Are Correct
26. The World Is Almost Certainly Not the Way It Seems
27.
Reality Doesnt Matter
28. Should You Believe Nothing?
29. Nothingness: The
Contradiction at the Ground of Reality
Cliff Sosis is a Principal Lecturer at Coastal Carolina University, USA. He is interested in philosophy of science, metaphilosophy, and metaethics. He created and runs the website What Is It Like to Be a Philosopher?, which features in-depth autobiographical interviews with philosophers from a wide range of backgrounds.