Philll
New member
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2026
- Messages
- 29
I'm gonna share a technique my high school English teacher taught me that has carried me through FOUR years of college writing. It's the best essay extender I've ever used and it actually makes your papers BETTER, not just longer. 
It's called the反问 method (that's Chinese for "rhetorical questioning" but I just call it "asking why on loop").
Here's how it works:
After every claim you make, ask yourself "why is that true?" or "why does that matter?" or "how do I know this?" Then answer that question. Then ask it AGAIN about YOUR answer. Keep going until you hit bedrock.
Example from my philosophy paper:
Claim: "Descartes' method of doubt leads to solipsism."
Why?? Because by doubting everything except his own existence, he can't prove the external world exists.
Why does that matter?? It matters because solipsism undermines his whole project of establishing certain knowledge.
Why is undermining his project significant?? Because it reveals a fundamental tension in his philosophy between his method and his goals.
Why does that tension matter for readers today?? Because it shows that radical skepticism, while useful as a tool, can't be the foundation for a complete philosophical system.
See what happened?? One sentence became four sentences of actual analysis. And none of it was fluff. Every layer added real depth to my argument.
I use this constantly now. Every time I'm stuck or running short on words, I pick a claim and start interrogating it. "Why? So what? How do you know? What are the implications? Who would disagree? What does this assume?"
The answers to those questions are ALWAYS worth writing down. They're the difference between a paper that states ideas and a paper that engages with them.
This technique does three things:
It's called the反问 method (that's Chinese for "rhetorical questioning" but I just call it "asking why on loop").
Here's how it works:
After every claim you make, ask yourself "why is that true?" or "why does that matter?" or "how do I know this?" Then answer that question. Then ask it AGAIN about YOUR answer. Keep going until you hit bedrock.
Example from my philosophy paper:
Claim: "Descartes' method of doubt leads to solipsism."
Why?? Because by doubting everything except his own existence, he can't prove the external world exists.
Why does that matter?? It matters because solipsism undermines his whole project of establishing certain knowledge.
Why is undermining his project significant?? Because it reveals a fundamental tension in his philosophy between his method and his goals.
Why does that tension matter for readers today?? Because it shows that radical skepticism, while useful as a tool, can't be the foundation for a complete philosophical system.
See what happened?? One sentence became four sentences of actual analysis. And none of it was fluff. Every layer added real depth to my argument.
I use this constantly now. Every time I'm stuck or running short on words, I pick a claim and start interrogating it. "Why? So what? How do you know? What are the implications? Who would disagree? What does this assume?"
The answers to those questions are ALWAYS worth writing down. They're the difference between a paper that states ideas and a paper that engages with them.
This technique does three things:
- Adds legitimate length (not just filler)
- Deepens your analysis (professors love this)
- Uncovers arguments you didn't know you had (genuinely useful)