Is your child an overthinker? Give them the ultimate weapon to prove the world wrong—and the empathy to understand it.
We live in a world full of "messy bags" and "naked ghosts." Grown-ups love to use big, complicated words, but often, there is nothing inside them. If your child struggles to untangle their deep thoughts, this book is their ultimate mental survival kit.
How to Prove GROWN-UPS Wrong is not a typical chapter book. It is a brilliant, interactive Socratic dialogue disguised as a heartwarming story of friendship.
Through a series of bite-sized, everyday mysteries—like a rained-out dodgeball game or a boy panicking over forgotten homework—two best friends use the sharpest tools of logic and philosophy to solve the conflicts of the playground.
What makes this book a premium brain-builder for your child?
- Socratic "Story-Drawers" (No Pencils Needed): Forget mindless fill-in-the-blank workbooks. At the end of every chapter, children engage in real-time mental dialogue. They act as "Seekers," uncovering the hidden psychological truths behind everyday conversations.
- 100% Pure Text (Zero Distractions): Pictures are ambiguous; words are precise. In an era of screen-addicted, dopamine-driven reading, this book contains NO interior illustrations. It forces the brain to slow down, build its own imagery, and master the deep structure of "Sturdy English" (written entirely without contractions to build focus).
- ❤️ Logic as the Ultimate Empathy: Discover why a boy who almost told a lie is actually the most honest child in class. Your child will learn Donald Davidson's "Principle of Charity"—the warm heart that uses cold logic not to win arguments, but to truly understand others.
️The "Friendly Giants" Hidden Curriculum
While your child is reading about candy and homework, they are secretly mastering the concepts of history's greatest logical minds:
- Gottlob Frege: Understanding how words only have meaning when stacked into "safe boxes" (sentences).
- W.V.O. Quine: Learning to separate real-world objects from their "name tags" to prevent mental confusion.
- Chrysippus & George Boole: Systematizing the magic building blocks of thought like "And," "Or," and "If."
Adults are not always right. Often, they are just clumsy people who have forgotten how to think.
Do not let your child's brilliant thoughts remain as invisible ghosts. Equip them with a sturdy coat. Equip them with the Rules of the Game.
Approximate Length: 18,000 Words
Start the game today. (Because Book 2 of the RAWRTHOUGHTS Logic Series is already waiting!)