You will think your way all through this book. The author by stating: “It’s not what you know that is wrong, but what you believe. This is because you can only know what is true, you can never know what is false—but you can believe anything.” He believes the true fracture in society is between the debased and based. Here are just a few topics the author takes head on:
“Science cannot answer every question put to it; not now, and not eventually, either. It is not always right to correct a wrong. Women cannot do whatever they like with their own bodies. Men neither. There is no right or wrong side of history. Science is no more self-correcting than any other human endeavor. There is no wisdom in crowds. The source of a proposition has no bearing on the truth of that proposition, even if the proposition is spoken by a “Nazi.” There are differences between the races, and indeed all human groups. A consensus among elite academics does not prove the belief of the elite academics is true. That you are offended is irrelevant to whether a proposition is true or false. Hypocrites are sometimes the best judges. If animals have rights, they have responsibilities, too. Equality is false and undesirable. Diversity is our weakness. Equity is destructive.”
If you are on the political left, you won’t like this book. If you’re on the right, you will like it more. Either way, you’ll have to think, which is the main benefit of this book. It’s far too long though, which so many fallacies portrayed I lost count. It’s also full of typographical and grammar errors, and I have a high tolerance for typos, just not this many. I wish it would have been about 70% shorter. It probably deserved 2.5 stars, but I can’t really recommend it except for those who love logic and confronting all of our very human fallacies.