EDIT: I have combined my answers on the recommendations of some people here.
Summary
Based on some reading and thinking, I have come to some (tentative) statements of what I believe:
The statement "Using callbacks for domain logic is a bad design practice" is false, as written. It overstates the point. Callbacks can be good place for domain logic, used appropriately. The question should not be if domain model logic should go in callbacks, it is what kind of domain logic makes sense to go in.
The statement "Using callbacks for domain logic ... can lead to unexpected errors that are hard to debug when callbacks in the chain halt execution" is true.
Yes, callbacks can cause chain reactions that affect other objects. To the degree that this is not testable, this is a problem.
Yes, you should be able to test your business logic without having to save an object to the database.
If one object's callbacks get too bloated for your sensibilities, there are alternative designs to consider, including (a) observers or (b) helper classes. These can cleanly handle multi object operations.
The advice "to only use [callbacks] for cross-cutting concerns, like queueing up background jobs" is intriguing but overstated. (I reviewed cross-cutting concerns to see if I was perhaps overlooking something.)
I also want to share some of my reactions to blog posts I've read that talk about this issue:
Reactions to "ActiveRecord's Callbacks Ruined My Life"
Mathias Meyer's 2010 post, ActiveRecord's Callbacks Ruined My Life, offers one perspective. He writes:
Whenever I started adding validations and callbacks to a model in a Rails application [...] It just felt wrong. It felt like I'm adding code that shouldn't be there, that makes everything a lot more complicated, and turns explicit into implicit code.
I find this last claim "turns explicit into implicit code" to be, well, an unfair expectation. We're talking about Rails here, right?! So much of the value add is about Rails doing things "magically" e.g. without the developer having to do it explicitly. Doesn't it seem strange to enjoy the fruits of Rails and yet critique implicit code?
Code that is only being run depending on the persistence state of an object.
I agree that this sounds unsavory.
Code that is being hard to test, because you need to save an object to test parts of your business logic.
Yes, this makes testing slow and difficult.
So, in summary, I think Mathias adds some interesting fuel to the fire, though I don't find all of it compelling.
Reactions to "Crazy, Heretical, and Awesome: The Way I Write Rails Apps"
In James Golick's 2010 post, Crazy, Heretical, and Awesome: The Way I Write Rails Apps, he writes:
Also, coupling all of your business logic to your persistence objects can have weird side-effects. In our application, when something is created, an after_create callback generates an entry in the logs, which are used to produce the activity feed. What if I want to create an object without logging — say, in the console? I can't. Saving and logging are married forever and for all eternity.
Later, he gets to the root of it:
The solution is actually pretty simple. A simplified explanation of the problem is that we violated the Single Responsibility Principle. So, we're going to use standard object oriented techniques to separate the concerns of our model logic.
I really appreciate that he moderates his advice by telling you when it applies and when it does not:
The truth is that in a simple application, obese persistence objects might never hurt. It's when things get a little more complicated than CRUD operations that these things start to pile up and become pain points.