Key Idea: Paper 1 Section A hands you an unseen text or image and asks you to explore a philosophical issue about being human. The whole skill is turning that stimulus into a sharp philosophical question you can argue. Master this and the unseen stops being scary: whatever they show you, your method is the same.
🧠 The sub-skills, one card each
Topic 11.4 at a glance
- What Section A asks — A 25-mark essay exploring ONE philosophical issue about being human, sparked by an unseen stimulus. You choose the issue; the stimulus is the launch pad, not the subject.
- Reading a text — Find the tension inside the words — a claim, a paradox, a 'and yet'. That tension is your issue in disguise. Quote the phrase that carries it.
- Reading an image — Describe what is literally there, ask what it symbolises, find the claim it quietly makes about being human, then name the issue.
- A toolkit of issues — Have ready issues to reach for: personal identity, freedom vs determinism, the self and others, mind and body. Match the stimulus to one you can argue well.
- Plan the essay — Intro (name the issue + link the stimulus) → View A argued → View B as objection → deepen → reasoned conclusion. Link back to the stimulus throughout.
Turn the stimulus into a philosophical QUESTION, then argue it. The stimulus is a spark, not the essay. Do not summarise or describe it — extract the tension inside it, phrase it as a question about being human, and spend the rest of the essay arguing an answer.
✍️ See it work
Stimulus (original) — A young man deletes every old post, photo and message from his phone. "None of that is me anymore," he says. His sister laughs: "You can wipe the phone, but you can't wipe you." With explicit reference to the stimulus and your own knowledge, explore a philosophical issue related to what it is to be human.
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: Describing the stimulus instead of arguing from it. Retelling what the text or image shows earns almost nothing. The stimulus is a launch pad: name the issue it raises in one line, then spend the essay arguing views and reaching a conclusion — quoting the stimulus only to anchor your points, never to fill space.
✅ Check yourself
Six quick technique checks. If you can do these, no unseen stimulus will throw you.
What does Section A actually ask? A 25-mark essay exploring ONE philosophical issue about being human, sparked by an unseen stimulus you choose the issue from.
How do you read a text stimulus? Find the tension in the words — a claim, paradox or 'and yet'. That tension is your issue; quote the phrase that carries it.
How do you read an image? Describe it plainly, ask what it symbolises, find the claim about being human it makes, then name the issue.
Name issues in your toolkit. Personal identity, freedom vs determinism, the self and others, mind and body. Match the stimulus to one you can argue.
What's the essay shape? Intro (name issue + link stimulus) → View A argued → View B objection → deepen → reasoned conclusion.
How often should you cite the stimulus? Throughout — anchor each main point to it, especially the intro and conclusion. But argue; never just describe it.
Exam Tips
- Spend your first minute finding the tension in the stimulus and writing your issue as a one-line question — the whole essay flows from it.
- Quote a short phrase from the stimulus in your intro and conclusion; explicit linkage is directly rewarded.
- Choose an issue you can actually argue with real views — don't pick the deepest tension if you can't develop it.
- Argue, don't describe: name the issue in one line, then get straight into views, objections and a reasoned conclusion.