Morality Can't Be Objective, Even If God Exists (Morality p.1)

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-------------------------------------VIDEO NOTES-------------------------------------
It's good to be back. Check out my previous livestream to catch up on where I've been. In the meantime, I've decided to lay out my moral philosophy. In this video, I discuss why I think morality can't be objective even if God exists. My next video will discuss why atheistic morality must be subjective too.
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William Lane Craig Clip: • Atheism and Nihilism
My discussion with Rationality Rules about morality: • My Problem With Sam Ha...
My latest livestream: • 🔴 LIVE: I’m back! Q an...
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Пікірлер: 9 700

  • @tamircohen1512
    @tamircohen15125 жыл бұрын

    Thank the lord! God has provided us with a new CosmicSkeptic video

  • @sceneable8437

    @sceneable8437

    5 жыл бұрын

    The irony.

  • @brendanmccabe8373

    @brendanmccabe8373

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sceneable wow you got the joke

  • @alicegarcia9487

    @alicegarcia9487

    5 жыл бұрын

    I love this comment.

  • @2ndairborneguy790

    @2ndairborneguy790

    5 жыл бұрын

    Oxymorons. Oxymorons everywhere.

  • @grannykiminalaska

    @grannykiminalaska

    5 жыл бұрын

    LOL😉

  • @shannonfernandes8483
    @shannonfernandes84834 жыл бұрын

    Quite fascinating. This reminded me of the Socratic version of this. "Do the gods call certain behavior good and that makes it good? or do the gods recognize that which is good and say so?" (This is a simplified paraphrased version)

  • @appledough3843

    @appledough3843

    2 жыл бұрын

    @i love jesus Well, as far as we know, that only applies to physical matter and energy. It doesn’t seem to apply to abstract objects and metaphysics like numbers. 2+2=4 it cannot be 4 and not 4 it’s just 4. But I believe that God IS goodness itself. The issue with saying: (“are things good because God commands it to be good or are things already good and that’s why God commands them?”) ^ the issue with saying that is because it’s an absurd statement, I believe. Replace “God” with “good”. Are things good because good commands it to be good? Or does good recognize good to be good and that’s why good commands it so? It’s an absurd statement.

  • @Nickesponja

    @Nickesponja

    2 жыл бұрын

    @i love jesus A cat can't be both alive and dead. The cat may be in a state which is a superposition of dead and alive, but that's not the same as being, at the same time, in two different states (dead and alive)

  • @TheLastOutlaw289

    @TheLastOutlaw289

    2 жыл бұрын

    @i love jesus how about you shut up as this is not what Schroedinger meant when he used that Analogy this quote was meant to be a joke showing how ridiculous quantum theory is….no there is no wave particle duality as this is an inherent contradiction….a fraction of a photon has never been observed…particles cannot be measured in Hz….

  • @klivebretznev2624

    @klivebretznev2624

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TheLastOutlaw289 well-said .

  • @TheLastOutlaw289

    @TheLastOutlaw289

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@klivebretznev2624 What Einstein did was he replace the light wave function of the ether with a particle…and changed the etheric medium into mediums of Math…then he allowed this mathematical medium to be acted upon ie “bent space time” another absurd idea is that you can bend space which is a “gap” and is not a thing at all to be bent.

  • @elenafari_
    @elenafari_ Жыл бұрын

    you've put into words what i've been thinking for a long time!! btw, i love the way in which you express yourself

  • @Silvercrypto-xk4zy
    @Silvercrypto-xk4zy Жыл бұрын

    I discovered your channel a couple days ago while watching one of Lukas videos on his channel Deflate, in which you were discussing the problem of hiddenness. even as a christian I like and respect the way you do your content, its not vitriolic and/or hateful like some atheists (and unfortunately some professed christians) can be. I enjoy dialoging w3ith people such as yourself where we can disagree without being disagreeable

  • @arri2493
    @arri24933 жыл бұрын

    Alex: says one sentence My dumbass : *goes onto google dictionary for the 10th time*

  • @swiftpig1229

    @swiftpig1229

    3 жыл бұрын

    lack of vocabulary ≠ lack of intelligence don’t worry!

  • @Daniel-wr9ql

    @Daniel-wr9ql

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@swiftpig1229 that has no correlation, shut your mouth, please.

  • @Daniel-wr9ql

    @Daniel-wr9ql

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Zachary Ham oh, that's right, I'm blind af, my most sincere apologies

  • @SarahStarmer

    @SarahStarmer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Me too, Starting with "Objective".

  • @donlemon1958

    @donlemon1958

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s almost always a failure of the communicator, not the listener.

  • @emmaclayton2007
    @emmaclayton20075 жыл бұрын

    I love watching your videos- I’ll admit that I’m not very smart, but I love learning about these kinds of things (even though 50% of the time I have no clue what’s going on).

  • @hrsh3329

    @hrsh3329

    4 жыл бұрын

    Same here 😁

  • @haydenharris3059

    @haydenharris3059

    4 жыл бұрын

    Emma darling neither do the believers in a God

  • @Apostateoftheunion

    @Apostateoftheunion

    4 жыл бұрын

    You're smart enough to watch CosmicSkeptic soooo... give yourself a little more credit.

  • @marktaylor8023

    @marktaylor8023

    4 жыл бұрын

    The fact that you believe you don't know what is going on 50% of the time means that you're 50% closer to understanding than you thought. The Dunning-Kruger (spelling?) effect cuts both ways.

  • @BitchChill

    @BitchChill

    4 жыл бұрын

    Stupid

  • @anubhavphukan5720
    @anubhavphukan5720 Жыл бұрын

    The moment you got onto your actual points I was completely shocked and it was like an enlightenment.

  • @df4250
    @df42502 жыл бұрын

    I think you've provided an excellent analysis on a topic which I've grappled with for some time. One question I would like to ask is: Is it possible to establish objectivity in the absence of "standards"? Words like "ought" and "good" and so many other such words are, I believe, inherently subjective and their inclusion in the logical argument would be like including a variable in a mathematical equation that can only be estimated and expecting to obtain an accurate answer to the equation that contains it. Alternatively, can you present a logically consistent case where objectivity has been achieved from subjective premises?

  • @aleksinenadic4166

    @aleksinenadic4166

    4 ай бұрын

    I fw this comment heavy. This is exactly what I was thinking but you put it into words. Thanks

  • @rohanking12able

    @rohanking12able

    4 ай бұрын

    gotta say this is it.

  • @Ian_sothejokeworks
    @Ian_sothejokeworks5 жыл бұрын

    ‘Ought’ is a funny word. Kind of a suffix or root: sought, thought, bought. Very active. Good word. Shit, there’s a gas leak in my house.

  • @putinsgaytwin4272

    @putinsgaytwin4272

    5 жыл бұрын

    Ian did you die?

  • @Boyd2342

    @Boyd2342

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@putinsgaytwin4272 he was a great man 😭

  • @JohnnyCrack

    @JohnnyCrack

    4 жыл бұрын

    Rest in Peace - Ian

  • @isaaclai3523

    @isaaclai3523

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Boyd2342 In fact, the best man I have ever known.

  • @weirdrelationz3444

    @weirdrelationz3444

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@isaaclai3523 Gone but never forgotten ;(

  • @opanpro9772
    @opanpro97723 жыл бұрын

    Theists: Morality is Objective Atheists: Morality is Subjective Nihilists: There is nothing such as Morality!

  • @Yameen200

    @Yameen200

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol well summed up let me add Agnostic - Morality can be objective but with subjective circumstances

  • @diamonddinttd6303

    @diamonddinttd6303

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nihilism.. Not going to lie, sounds good.

  • @legalfictionnaturalfact3969

    @legalfictionnaturalfact3969

    3 жыл бұрын

    nope, i'm atheist and i know that morality is objective. also, not sure what your point is with this 1-dimensional comment. make a statement or shoo.

  • @Yameen200

    @Yameen200

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@legalfictionnaturalfact3969 How is morality objective on your view. What is its foundation

  • @legalfictionnaturalfact3969

    @legalfictionnaturalfact3969

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Yameen200 the golden rule.

  • @BaldTom
    @BaldTom2 жыл бұрын

    Love your work mate.

  • @KURO_ame
    @KURO_ame Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant video, am a new viewer. Let me say this, I ought to watch part 2 of this. 😉

  • @jungleismasiv4426
    @jungleismasiv44264 жыл бұрын

    Alex defines morality as "the *intuition* that we ought to do that which is good and ought not to do that which is bad," and then, by further building arguments using this definition, concludes that morality is subjective. But the word "intuition" assumes the subjective nature of morality. So he has assumed his conclusion. If we replace the word "intuition" with "notion," then we can avoid assuming our conclusion. Although then we run into another problem: let's say we design a robot, which can recognise good and bad, and is programmed to only do good. Would that robot be "moral?" According to this definition, yes. Although, if we define morality as "the *notion* that we ought go do that which is good and ought not to do that which is bad, where there may be circumstances in which we might be able to do that which is bad," then this problem is solved. We need to assume that the *choice* to do both good as well as bad is a prerequisite for morality, which is not the case with the aforementioned robot. Morality cannot be defined for a being that has no potential to do that which is bad.

  • @Mr-vz3rv

    @Mr-vz3rv

    4 жыл бұрын

    So is morality subjective or not?

  • @anitahyche1

    @anitahyche1

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Mr-vz3rv it's subjective.

  • @Mr-vz3rv

    @Mr-vz3rv

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@anitahyche1 I agree

  • @stevedriscoll2539

    @stevedriscoll2539

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ok, clever, you replacing “intuition” with “notion”, but haven’t you ignored how the point of whether morality is objective or not, regardless of all other “notions” or “intuitions”?

  • @alexanderbenevento4356

    @alexanderbenevento4356

    3 жыл бұрын

    At any given time in history, however, philosophers, theologians, and politicians will claim to have discovered the best way to evaluate human actions and establish the most righteous code of conduct. But it's never that easy. "Life is far too messy and complicated for there to be anything like a universal morality or an absolutist ethics" At best, we can only say that morality is normative, while acknowledging that our sense of right and wrong will change over time

  • @strategossable1366
    @strategossable13665 жыл бұрын

    0:00 "good morning everybody" It's evening, you fool. CHECKMATE ATHEISTS

  • @reda29100

    @reda29100

    4 жыл бұрын

    But what does a 'good' morning constitues of? How can we know if the 'good' morning he refers to is what we subjectively call a 's***y' day? What if the morning he refers to is the apocalypse we all fear dawning upon us? *Vsauce theme rolling*

  • @astorvialaw4980

    @astorvialaw4980

    4 жыл бұрын

    Gandalf has entered the chat

  • @MegaSage007

    @MegaSage007

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@astorvialaw4980 You live in a make believe world?

  • @calebsherman886

    @calebsherman886

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@reda29100 Now I really need someone to edit Cosmic Skeptic's videos with Vsauce music.

  • @the_polish_prince8966

    @the_polish_prince8966

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@reda29100 Gandalf?

  • @theboombody
    @theboombody8 ай бұрын

    To quote Mike Tyson, everyone thinks morality is relative until they get punched in the face.

  • @TheRudolfp

    @TheRudolfp

    10 күн бұрын

    It would actually indicate that it is relative because the one getting punched would feel the act is wrong more vigorously than others

  • @theboombody

    @theboombody

    7 күн бұрын

    @@TheRudolfp Why should they feel the act is wrong AT ALL?

  • @irrelevantcheese8623

    @irrelevantcheese8623

    2 күн бұрын

    @@theboombody because they got punched in the face and didn’t like it

  • @theboombody

    @theboombody

    Күн бұрын

    @@irrelevantcheese8623 Bingo.

  • @LebaneseLizard
    @LebaneseLizard Жыл бұрын

    As a Catholic, I can say wholeheartedly this was very enlightening to hear. It’s very interesting how we can question everything and switch up our beliefs so quickly. I love how you’ve explained your points and I appreciate the new perspective on morality

  • @johnairhart769

    @johnairhart769

    Жыл бұрын

    Morality is still objective. But I liked the video

  • @stmp4160

    @stmp4160

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnairhart769 eh, sorta, there's certain morals that if you use the commonly agreed logic are "objective" but at the same time, if we had a different perspective than this it wouldn't be. Killing for example is considered "objectively" bad and in my opinion, just like most people it is very bad. But some think otherwise and they do have logic for it. Some even have very compelling arguments. Case and point. There is no "objective" morality, only commonly agreed morality. Back in the day abusing women was considered "objectively" just fine morally because they were "inferior". And no, the women that disagreed with that norm doesn't make it not commonly agreed, like I said, a smaller percentage of people disagreeing doesn't make it not commonly agreed to be moral. Do we disagree with that with today's logic and morality? Yes. But back in the day things were different. In the future many things will change in terms of what is moral and what is not. Implying that there's an "objective" moral system would be oversimplifing everything. There's no actual black and white. We aren't living in a fictional world with heroes and villains.

  • @clayjo791

    @clayjo791

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stmp4160 You are begging the question here; assuming the conclusion in your premise. You have not actually shown that there is no objective morality-- you have shown your belief that morality is a mere human construct, which would mean that true good and evil don't actually exist, nor does justice (which would follow); but you haven't proven it. This would mean that doing the right thing towards others is always ultimately for selfish reasons, because that's the only value one receives in doing them... the same value you would get in killing someone who is blackmailing you, or in cheating on your wife, if you are absolutely sure you can get away with it. However, if these acts bother you, it's because you have a conscience-- a moral sensor that gives us a sense of guilt and shame when we do wrong. You also have a sense of justice, which, I would argue, both come from God. There truly is good and evil, and God is the standard; our built-in moral sensor which is the conscience bearing witness.

  • @stmp4160

    @stmp4160

    Жыл бұрын

    @@clayjo791 1. God isn't even close to the standard humans use as a moral compass, he commits multiple genocides regularly, encourages slavery in certain passages, killed 40 something children for making fun of a bald guy which was one of his prophets, I could go on. If God was judged by human morals he's evil as hell. 2. Yes you feel guilt, sympathy and compassion but that's just a normal reaction we have cause humans are social creatures. As social creatures we feel bad whenever someone experiences an experience that is painful or hurtful or we assume is painful or hurtful. 3. So how would I prove it in any other way than using logic to show it's a human construct? Please pray tell. There is no other way to disprove or prove a construct which does not exist in the physical world based around a certain logic without using logic itself. That's the only reason the idea of God can't be disproven cause he's the equivalent of the dream theory in theories, whatever logic or law of physics you throw at the theory of God it'll just bounce off with the ex-machina way he's presented. 4. Also yes there is no "good" or "evil", it's how one processes things that makes them out as such. For example, abortion, some find it evil and others don't. Is there a subjective answer? No, at one end you're stopping someone from having a future but at the other what if it's needed? Morality Is subjective. That doesn't take away from the fact that someone can have one Also no, the fact that it's a construct does not make it selfish necessarily, on a spectrum everything is selfish, even if it is by a very little bit. Doing something that you feel is right to benefit someone else isn't selfish, a tiny bit yes because you feel good for doing "good" but even if it wasn't a social construct it'd still be the same so I don't see your point.

  • @clayjo791

    @clayjo791

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stmp4160 I don't have to vouch for God's righteousness or His existence-- my response is for your benefit that you may see your error and repent, that you may be saved from His justice. You are without excuse in God's sight because He's the one who created you. His mercy is great if you turn to Jesus for salvation, but if eternal separation from Him is what you want because you think that you can judge your maker, you will get what you have earned. No need to respond... I'm just the messenger.

  • @SawtoothWaves
    @SawtoothWaves5 жыл бұрын

    Sam Harris: "Good's not dead"

  • @Eric-zl1kn

    @Eric-zl1kn

    5 жыл бұрын

    The Brony Notion good was never alive

  • @SawtoothWaves

    @SawtoothWaves

    5 жыл бұрын

    Good dammit now the Newsboys song is stuck in my head

  • @slrandomperson

    @slrandomperson

    5 жыл бұрын

    The Brony Notion Oh my god you're alive

  • @slrandomperson

    @slrandomperson

    5 жыл бұрын

    I haven't checked your channel since like 9 months ago holy crap

  • @steakismeat177

    @steakismeat177

    5 жыл бұрын

    “It’s surely alive”

  • @slrandomperson
    @slrandomperson5 жыл бұрын

    I've grown up Christian my whole life, but I've always had questions that no one had answers to and doubts that were brushed off. I scoured the internet for hours and possibly days in total, compiling a list of arguments that Christianity makes versus what atheists have to say on the topic. Your videos were a common source within this list, and I can honestly say that part of what converted me to atheism, at least what helped me realize that I have been an atheist for much longer than I'd let myself believe, was definitely your channel. You opened my eyes to so many new views and topics that the Church is too afraid to touch on because they don't have answers yet. My parents don't know that I do not believe in god, so I still have to go to church every Sunday, but the more I go the more I realize how ludicrous it all is. Thank you for helping me figure out who I am.

  • @brendanmccabe8373

    @brendanmccabe8373

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sophia Leo Benjamin Franklin invented the pros and cons method of showing information by taking the pros and cons and showing them next to each other

  • @slrandomperson

    @slrandomperson

    5 жыл бұрын

    zempath Thank you! While I am very glad that I've figured it out early enough that it hasn't destroyed my world view entirely, I'm a little irked that I have a few years to go until I can finally stop going to church and such.

  • @slrandomperson

    @slrandomperson

    5 жыл бұрын

    Donald McCarthy Thanks! I've never been compared to a lioness before but I'm glad someone thinks so

  • @henryambrose8607

    @henryambrose8607

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sophia Leo I believe it's a play on your name.

  • @slrandomperson

    @slrandomperson

    5 жыл бұрын

    Henry Ambrose I know, people constantly bring up Leo The Lion but nobody's ever said I have the "wisdom" of one. I may be a teenager but I understand things too 😂

  • @ramalouf1
    @ramalouf1 Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant Alex. Completely agree with your conclusions and the arguments supporting same.

  • @peterf90
    @peterf9011 ай бұрын

    I agree one hundred percent but it almost seems like I really always did think that though I don’t think I ever could of articulated the thought as well as you do. Great vid, keep on telling your truths.

  • @tarikwalters854

    @tarikwalters854

    11 ай бұрын

    Why is the ought necessary for morality though?

  • @deztroit
    @deztroit4 жыл бұрын

    I feel like a lonely christian in this comment section.Anyways I was just gonna thank you for broadening my views and thanks for explaining it clearly. Anyways I hope you all have a good day. Edit: I havent even read everything. But I want to delete this message now lol

  • @david77james

    @david77james

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bible classes by well studied teachers is a good source of knowledge that keeps one from feeling lonely. The more time one invests in learning about God & His truth, the more that one grows spiritually, & comes to "see" so much that non believers are blind to.

  • @bernardocarneiro1982

    @bernardocarneiro1982

    4 жыл бұрын

    david77james yeah,not really. If want to stretch alot,I guess you could learn mythology,and some costumes of some ancient societies,by studing the bible. And even a "non believer" can do that. One does not need god at all in his life to enjoy it,or even to broaden horizons. Art,work,relationships, depeer thinking,all are actually much more pivotal to have than god. Take me for example. I do not believe in god,yet Im a very upbeat,cheerful and happy person. I can live without a god pretty easily actually

  • @deztroit

    @deztroit

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bernardocarneiro1982 I agree with you that you can be happy. I am glad that you are a living a great life.(I don't want to start a fight) I personally believe in God and belive that it is what I want to do and I am happy this way. Just wanted to say don't be fooled by all the bad "Christians" out there. Anywasy I wish you the best and if you want to learn about Christianity I recommend maybe going to a church. Anyways I have ranted I hope you keep being happy.

  • @david77james

    @david77james

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@bernardocarneiro1982 - Hey Bernie babes. The majority chooses to stay away from knowing God intimately, so you're common. 15% of the world's most brilliant geniuses (past & present) took time to diligently seek absolutes of God, and they found many, same as about a third or less of humankind. As such, you don't have to show your ignorance on the subject, by acting as though your rejection of truth, based on your never having sought it diligently, qualifies you as the final word on the subject, because rejection is what the majority choose. I need not engage scoffers in conversation on the subjects they know nothing about, based on their choice to remain ignorant, so, I'll just advise you of this: You're wrong, and you're lying to yourself about God, but that's what you WANT, based on your perversions & personal agenda. You think that you will have an easy go of it on your day of judgment, but you won't. God says that "they are without excuse" (speaking of those that "claim" they are non-believers), since every human of normal intellect KNOWS God IS, even liars that claim there is no god. .

  • @bernardocarneiro6029

    @bernardocarneiro6029

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@deztroit Right on brother 👍👍👍 for a cool,respectable Christian like you,I will always have respect

  • @stangrabmeabeer4449
    @stangrabmeabeer44494 жыл бұрын

    I struggled to find anyone that could remotely verbalize similar things I’ve felt and thought. I couldn’t agree more with everything you’ve said on this channel, thank you.

  • @all-caps3927

    @all-caps3927

    7 ай бұрын

    There is a huge problem with this argument, the fact that the existence of God is granted to the believers of object morality in religion means that the question 'why do we ought to do that which is good' a pointless one to ask. The whole point of the existence of God being granted, is to also grant the fact that God still has his Christian-defined qualities of being omniscient and omnipotent: hence meaning we can argue that God knows what is good, and that God has the power to create a heaven to reward us for our good. That means therefore, we ought to do which is good, not only as a sign of obedience and worship to the existing God in this case, but also to feel an unfathomable feeling of euphoria in heaven as a reward for doing so. We ought to do what is good, for out own benefit, and for the fact that the almost universally accepted morality of religion has worked for centuries leading up to this point in humanity and this is exhibited in the fact that the majority of laws are re-phrased verses from abrahamic religious teachings effectively. It is irrelevant to ask why we ought to do what is good when you've granted the existence of God in the equation because the existence of God inherently grants the existence of heaven and the omniscient nature of God who knows all about what is good and what isn't, and therefore to practice objective religious morality for this reason. I have provided a reason as to why an individual human ought to do what is good as a believer and why humanity as a whole ought to do good.

  • @Ash-ee1hx

    @Ash-ee1hx

    7 ай бұрын

    What if, because of their omniscience, God knows that there is no objective morality?

  • @macvadda2318

    @macvadda2318

    4 ай бұрын

    @@all-caps3927this is such a weird argument, its just “god real so me right”

  • @leishmania4116
    @leishmania41162 жыл бұрын

    To me it's simple. If every sentient being disappears, will morality still exist? If the answer is no, then morality is subjective

  • @Samuel-qc7kg

    @Samuel-qc7kg

    Жыл бұрын

    But God and the angels can be considered sentient beings who exist that follow moral laws. Even if in the natural world every sentient being were to disappear it doesn't mean there would be no beings who can practice moral laws. And I whouglt about a second thing that may be not as good or strong as the first but nevertheless I can express it: based on your premise, if sentient being never existed then morality never would've existed. And if sentient beings never existed then things like cars or power plants wouldn't exist either, but that doesn't mean cars and power plants can't exist in the universe, they just need the intervention of a sentient being. What I am trying to tell with this is that sentient beings are just the ones who practice morality and create cars, and if they were to disappear it wouldn't mean that morality or cars would fail to be a logical concept to exist in our universe. It would just mean that the means by which cars are made and morality is practiced is absent. If radios were to disappear, electromagnetic waves with potential meaningful messages would still be there.

  • @Chriliman

    @Chriliman

    Жыл бұрын

    No, because what makes it objective is the fact that we exist and that we can actually be right about things. What you’re saying is like saying a bubble must not objectively exist because it eventually pops.

  • @leishmania4116

    @leishmania4116

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Chriliman What does it mean that something is wrong/immoral? It's purely subjective

  • @Chriliman

    @Chriliman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leishmania4116 it means you actually make someone feel a certain way by your moral actions. They either feel negative or positive and that feeling exists in objective reality.

  • @nemaiemoskalia

    @nemaiemoskalia

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​@@leishmania4116gree, one person may steal food and believe it's immoral while the other may do it and think it's completely justified as he/she does it to survive so the action is not immoral. Everything in this regard depends on the broader context and on the subjective "moral compass" of a person judging

  • @soyevquirsefron990
    @soyevquirsefron99025 күн бұрын

    Most theists don’t know or care what “objective” morality means. They are simply trying to express “my morality is more important than your morality”

  • @magnabosco210
    @magnabosco2105 жыл бұрын

    I think including the words “good” and “bad” in your definition of morality is a mistake. I’ve learned to go with “benefit” and “harm” when having discussions about morality because the other two words tend to smuggle in far too much theistic baggage. That being said, I also think morality is subjective. Keep up the great work, CS.

  • @JM-us3fr

    @JM-us3fr

    5 жыл бұрын

    I tend to use the words "good" and "bad" when speaking to the layperson with no philosophic background. I instead dive into "ought-statements" otherwise. "Benefit" and "harm" would seem to indicate a utilitarian perspective, which may be your stance, but I tend to take a deontological perspective.

  • @wirelessbaguette8997

    @wirelessbaguette8997

    5 жыл бұрын

    But again, why ought we avoid benefit and why ought we commit harm?

  • @SteveMcRae

    @SteveMcRae

    5 жыл бұрын

    +Anthony Magnabosco I said the same thing about not caring for the definition being used in terms of "good" and "bad"...as Moore notes in his open argument question there is really no proper way to define "good" in moral conversations. But when you go with "benefit"/"harm" like Sam Harris does you are seemingly tacitly admitting an objective moral framework.

  • @GeraltofRivia22

    @GeraltofRivia22

    5 жыл бұрын

    Anthony Magnabosco what if I view harm as good? What if I enjoy harming myself or others and find doing so to be moral? For me, harming others and myself is good. And you haven't made it clear whether "benefit" and "harm" apply to me or others as well. If I steal something, I benefit but it harms someone else. Is that moral? That's why he uses good and bad. Because you can't define good or bad. Otherwise it would just be a subjective definition of morality and I could disagree like I've just stated.

  • @David-ni5hj

    @David-ni5hj

    5 жыл бұрын

    There is no objective morality? So Nazis did nothing wrong? So the rapist's claim is as valid as the victim's? So we have no reason to avoid war? There is a lot of consequences that we would have to assume if we defend this claim.

  • @randomkoolzip2768
    @randomkoolzip27684 жыл бұрын

    A lot to sort through here: fallacies of equivocation, question begging, strawman arguments, etc. I can just hit the highlights: (1) you claim to follow Moore in rejecting the naturalistic fallacy, but you conclude that, because "good" cannot be defined, we therefore must conclude that objective morality is impossible. Moore certainly didn't believe that, so you need to at least acknowledge that, on this point, you and Moore diverge. (2) Your definition of morality as "an intuition of what is good and bad" already begs the question. If morality is only a personal sense, based upon intuition, then it naturally follows that it's subjective. You've assumed that which you set out to prove. (3) You say that the only reason people would "choose" one religious morality as more ethically viable than another is because they feel it provides a better framework for moral truth, and that because this "choice" is subjective, religious morality must be subjective. But the impulses that compel a person to choose one religion over another are morally irrelevant. A person's choice has no bearing on whether the moral system is right or wrong. Defining morality as a collection of subjective individual choices is just another example of question-begging. Also, I'll just add that your notion that people "choose" their religion is contrary to your belief in the impossibility of free will. (4) In claiming that we still need to demonstrate objectively that we "ought to do that which is good," you're attempting to create an "open question" fallacy. But "ought" is implicit in the notion of "good." So you're asking, in effect, if "we ought to do what we ought." That's not a particularly enlightening question. You claim that religious people go around in circles on this point, but really it's you whose argument is circular.

  • @twelvedozen5075

    @twelvedozen5075

    4 жыл бұрын

    Random Koolzip excellent points

  • @yonatanbeer3475

    @yonatanbeer3475

    4 жыл бұрын

    Great response. Small thing though, even non-free actors can be said to make choices. "Electricity flowing through a circuit always chooses the path of least resistance" is a valid sentence, even though electrons obviously can't choose which wire they go through.

  • @somesoccerguy4817

    @somesoccerguy4817

    4 жыл бұрын

    Wow, no response from Alex? Strange...

  • @davudgunduz6681

    @davudgunduz6681

    4 жыл бұрын

    Answer this comment alex pls

  • @xxxxxxcx156

    @xxxxxxcx156

    4 жыл бұрын

    How is he going to read 4k comments? Also do you think the bible is morally good for our times? Incest, rape, pedophilia? If you think it was morally right in old times then morality is subjective, if you think it is still right then morality is subjective because no other people think its right. Of you think it is right because god did it and nobody else can do it then morality is subjective

  • @michaelhenry8091
    @michaelhenry8091 Жыл бұрын

    you are 100 percent correct, this channel is helping me stay sane, even though sanity is subjective as well if you ask me,

  • @tarikwalters854

    @tarikwalters854

    11 ай бұрын

    Why is an ought necessary for the definition of morality?

  • @davsamp7301

    @davsamp7301

    3 ай бұрын

    It is only necessary for those, who are Not inclined in following what is necessary. Necessary in light of the reasons for Action, with which morality is concerned. I myself am often confused where the difference is between 'should' and 'ought'. I Take both to refer to reasons for Action, meaning, that If Something would be good to do, one should do it. In fact, If one knows Something to be good, nothing is needed, Not even own thought, to direct ones Action towards it by oneself. The answer to Alex's is therefore very simply, that 'good' and 'ought to do' are connected necessarily. Does this Show you to your satisfaction, why it is necessary?

  • @hannasolecka202
    @hannasolecka2022 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant! Thank you so much for sharing your point of view!

  • @lovespeaks777

    @lovespeaks777

    6 ай бұрын

    Do you believe there is no morality?

  • @WoWisMagic
    @WoWisMagic5 жыл бұрын

    Missed you Alex! Hope your schooling is going well :)

  • @helsiclife
    @helsiclife5 жыл бұрын

    I truly enjoy your videos and I wish KZread existed when I was 14 and was questioning my faith.

  • @shitposteriori5247

    @shitposteriori5247

    4 жыл бұрын

    Rawlings Ad hominem much. Calling him an imbecile doesn’t change the fact that you never answered his question.

  • @shitposteriori5247

    @shitposteriori5247

    4 жыл бұрын

    Rawlings Nevertheless, I’ll ask a different question. Why doesn’t the bible ban slavery like it bans murder or theft?

  • @shitposteriori5247

    @shitposteriori5247

    4 жыл бұрын

    HellRehab yes, I’m familiar with Exodus 21:20, why do you think I asked the question? A question that you once again haven’t responded to, and have taken the patronisation route. You’ve cited the scripture, congrats, but didn’t answer “why doesn’t the bible ban slavery like it bans murder or theft?”

  • @shitposteriori5247

    @shitposteriori5247

    4 жыл бұрын

    HellRehab Shit sorry rehab, I thought you were the other guy.

  • @shitposteriori5247

    @shitposteriori5247

    4 жыл бұрын

    Rawlings Did you just delete your comment? Well if it’s not ad hominem as you say... I’ll take the liberty of calling you a coward.

  • @EvanMaddox22
    @EvanMaddox222 жыл бұрын

    As a Christian, I would like to give a response to the proposed question at 17:00. If the hypothetical scenario is that the God of the bible is objectively proven to exist (say through the resurrection of Jesus Christ), then the reason we “ought” to do what is good is simply because we should then listen to the commands of God. My response may appear to be simple and I am aware that you addressed this in the video. However, you did not address why we “ought” to obey Gods command. The reason we should is because God tells us that abiding in his word and obeying his commands leads to life. And failing to do what is good, or falling short of the glory of God, is sin and leads to death. So if the God of the Bible is proven true, we should take his word seriously, and whether my decision to obey a God who is true and defines what is true is subjective or not, I would be wiser to fear him and obey his commands which leads to life.

  • @airwolfcentral169
    @airwolfcentral169 Жыл бұрын

    As a religious moral objectivist this video was highly interesting 🧐 thank you!

  • @minetime6881

    @minetime6881

    Жыл бұрын

    Same, its a really interesting conversation, I didn’t find his points convincing that objective truth isn’t real, but I did have to rethink my understanding of it.

  • @isaac1572

    @isaac1572

    Жыл бұрын

    If life and the continued evolution of life is an objective fact, or objective truth, then some morals are the product of objective truth (some morality is objective). Nurture of offspring is an instinctive necessity in mammals and some other animals, that are non moral (pre-morality), and yet this same objective behaviour in humans is both subjective and objective. Our subjective moral compass tells us that caring for our children is the right thing to do and at the same time our objective moral instincts tell us that caring for our children is the right thing to do. Some of our morality is both objective and subjective.

  • @primetimeclips3322

    @primetimeclips3322

    Жыл бұрын

    @@minetime6881 what didn’t you find convincing? ( not trying to start arguments )

  • @ignipotent7276

    @ignipotent7276

    Жыл бұрын

    @@isaac1572 Evolution struggles to justify why i ought not to do it in the near future.

  • @ignipotent7276

    @ignipotent7276

    Жыл бұрын

    @@isaac1572 but i get your point

  • @JohnJones-wo1bc
    @JohnJones-wo1bc5 жыл бұрын

    I remain undecided about this issue. Good on you for putting forward your argument in a highly intelligent way. You are a very smart man, and I really enjoy your videos. Welcome back

  • @fullup91
    @fullup915 жыл бұрын

    Your last Live Stream was awesome :)

  • @gnatscrafts
    @gnatscrafts2 жыл бұрын

    this is everything i feel about morality, all wrapped up in one great video

  • @lovespeaks777

    @lovespeaks777

    6 ай бұрын

    Let’s liken subjective morality to a football game. If I’m watching a football game that has no rules (subjective morality) and I say one team has 2 touchdowns, they actually don’t. I can say they do but that would be delusional. Reality is there is no score, no progress-it’s just a free for all. So even if I make judgments about it, they aren’t in accord with reality, so why should I believe them and impose them on others? Or want to punish others for my delusion? And where did I get the idea of scoring or not scoring if there isn’t scoring?

  • @williamethegod5013

    @williamethegod5013

    6 ай бұрын

    morality can be objective with god because if you are a god you can do anythng so a god could make morality objective if the god wanted to

  • @lovespeaks777

    @lovespeaks777

    6 ай бұрын

    @@williamethegod5013That’s not true. For it to be objective it would have to be unchanging. If it could change, we’d be stuck with subjective morality. Becaise morality is objective, the source of this morality is unchanging. This source is God

  • @williamethegod5013

    @williamethegod5013

    6 ай бұрын

    your not understanding what i'm saying my definition of god is a being who can do what ever he wants and if that being wants morality to be objective it will be objective yeah morality could be unchanging you didn't establish anywhere in your argument that morality has to change so why are you assuming it has to change

  • @redish2098

    @redish2098

    4 ай бұрын

    @@williamethegod5013 I find you funny, assume we could objectively prove god didn't exist you would say the exact same "god can do anything so therefore he exists". very sad ngl, allows you to not have to even understand any of the points made

  • @gabrielchattaway1663
    @gabrielchattaway166311 ай бұрын

    As always, love your reasonably skeptical content. Many thanks for keeping me open-minded and warding off the evil Assumption spirits (which definitely exist btw). I tried to come up with about 4 or 5 different objections throughout the course of the video, but ultimately you've left me stumped by your comprehensive argument. I'd describe my initial stance as drifting in between... It seemed more likely that morality was subjective but I was open to the possibility that there is an objective morality. Not knowing whether or not that morality was discoverable, I assumed it an unfalsifiable claim. However, you've officially changed my mind. Unless we subjectively create an axiom that says that the objective good (granted it exists) is something we ought to do, we're left with Hume's guillotine; you can't derive an ought from an is. Even if murder is wrong, why oughtn't we do it?

  • @tarikwalters854

    @tarikwalters854

    11 ай бұрын

    Why is the ought necessary for the definition anyway? Intellectually honest people want to go to heaven so all we really need is the is.

  • @macvadda2318

    @macvadda2318

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tarikwalters854because if presented with a choice id rather go to heaven, because its what i want, i dont believe in god, but if there was a afterlife heaven sounds splendid

  • @tarikwalters854

    @tarikwalters854

    4 ай бұрын

    @@macvadda2318 Do you believe in right or wrong?

  • @macvadda2318

    @macvadda2318

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tarikwalters854 to me yes, i have my own right and wrong, but i can also acknowledge that some have different versions

  • @tarikwalters854

    @tarikwalters854

    4 ай бұрын

    @@macvadda2318 Then what does right and wrong mean “to you”?

  • @aysoodaagh3167
    @aysoodaagh31673 жыл бұрын

    Wow! Alex I truly appreciate the way you express such complex and mind blowing ideas! You're one of the most intelligent people I've ever seen.

  • @thomasfplm
    @thomasfplm5 жыл бұрын

    I agree with everything you said. I'm not good at organizing the ideas, but I believe I thought most of what you said.

  • @tyler-qr5jn
    @tyler-qr5jn2 жыл бұрын

    Gosh, the internet is both a curse and blessing. I'm glad we have a platform for great thinkers around the world to collectively speak to everyone. Unlike those in the past... everything move exponentially.

  • @alittax

    @alittax

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's also how I feel. Thanks to the internet, we've got an opportunity to interact with strangers and learn so much more than if we were restricted to the circle of people we have business with on a daily basis.

  • @perrypelican9476

    @perrypelican9476

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@alittax the problem is that most people are easy to influence. I have discussions with people I know. I often ask them where they get the info they use against my arguments and they say "Google, of course". The amount of our personal knowledge is much more than ever before. The problem is that most of it is not true or unproven or confused. Does that mean it's better? Is it better to have a bunch of good info in our heads or way more Info, most of which is useless? I hope you get my point. The crap that people tell me is incredible. When I explain why they are wrong, they feel humiliated and can't figure out why they are so off track. Ok, so I straighten out many people who I talk to. But many of them just don't want to be enlightened. They are ok believing what they believe despite it being wrong. They don't want to accept that the source of their wisdom is not always wise.

  • @Elisha_the_bald_headed_prophet

    @Elisha_the_bald_headed_prophet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@perrypelican9476 bafflingly, people are much more willing to guzzle up what some stranger on the internet is peddling than to be persuaded by the actual people around them, who care about them

  • @Pepperoni290

    @Pepperoni290

    Жыл бұрын

    @@perrypelican9476 google is fine most of the time, it gives you a bunch of different sources to compare

  • @piglin469

    @piglin469

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Elisha_the_bald_headed_prophet well if these people belive a random sussy source thats false they would fall for your averege snake oil salesmen

  • @nothingisreal2671
    @nothingisreal26712 жыл бұрын

    I think empathy is the road to good morals.

  • @atholgraham9214

    @atholgraham9214

    11 ай бұрын

    That's your subjective view :)

  • @nothingisreal2671

    @nothingisreal2671

    11 ай бұрын

    @Athol Graham yeah yeah but the question is, do you agree with it? If not, then why not?

  • @ROFLVH

    @ROFLVH

    9 ай бұрын

    ⁠​⁠@@nothingisreal2671because all empathy is just “understanding” someone’s personal worldview/feelings. That doesn’t equate to objective “good” or “bad”. The first response on this post was correct. It is your subjective view.

  • @all-caps3927

    @all-caps3927

    7 ай бұрын

    There is a huge problem with this argument, the fact that the existence of God is granted to the believers of object morality in religion means that the question 'why do we ought to do that which is good' a pointless one to ask. The whole point of the existence of God being granted, is to also grant the fact that God still has his Christian-defined qualities of being omniscient and omnipotent: hence meaning we can argue that God knows what is good, and that God has the power to create a heaven to reward us for our good. That means therefore, we ought to do which is good, not only as a sign of obedience and worship to the existing God in this case, but also to feel an unfathomable feeling of euphoria in heaven as a reward for doing so. We ought to do what is good, for out own benefit, and for the fact that the almost universally accepted morality of religion has worked for centuries leading up to this point in humanity and this is exhibited in the fact that the majority of laws are re-phrased verses from abrahamic religious teachings effectively. It is irrelevant to ask why we ought to do what is good when you've granted the existence of God in the equation because the existence of God inherently grants the existence of heaven and the omniscient nature of God who knows all about what is good and what isn't, and therefore to practice objective religious morality for this reason. I have provided a reason as to why an individual human ought to do what is good as a believer and why humanity as a whole ought to do good.

  • @macvadda2318

    @macvadda2318

    4 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@all-caps3927gods laws being the most basic shit ever doesnt really mean hes real, this entire thread was nothing but bibberbang, yes the laws are MOSTLY accepted, but that doesnt automatically mean his are objective, while some laws are objective imo, makinh it technically subjective, gods laws arent all agreed upon, making it subjective once again, convinience doesnt = correct, its called conformation bias

  • @abarquerojr
    @abarquerojr5 жыл бұрын

    Hey there! Great videos, very thought-provoking. Continuing on the example of yellow. Yellow light does have an objective definition: electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength of about 590-560 nm. Yellow appears to be only subjectively describable because we can't perceive its objective attributes directly. What if there also is an objective definition of good and bad, it's just that we cannot perceive it either?

  • @ioanbeuka6479

    @ioanbeuka6479

    5 жыл бұрын

    Great? If you like the absurd things... If isn't objective, he mean that killing people for his skin is good for some people?

  • @dg7455

    @dg7455

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is no possible way to have an objective definition of good and bad. "Good" and "bad" are ways for humans to categorise things as moral or immoral. That is the inherent issue: perception of morality is subjective. Morality has traits that make it inherently subjective. To follow you up on the yellow issue, what if someone decided that yellow is actually 660-710 nm? You couldn't disprove them, because the definition of yellow is just what humans think yellow **looks** like, so even if they picked the wavelength of green, then they would still be subjectively correct.

  • @ioanbeuka6479

    @ioanbeuka6479

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dg7455 the whole text is false. Good and bad are objective, in the Bible said that human thinks that are gods. It can't be good killing babies, and all humankind

  • @ioanbeuka6479

    @ioanbeuka6479

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@dg7455 and is not the same colors and the values of good and bad. Is not the same kill and music.

  • @CharlieNoodles

    @CharlieNoodles

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not to be mean, but you’re English is terrible and it’s difficult to understand exactly what you’re trying to say so you should probably just say out of the debate. Morality is subjective, our definition of what is good and what is bad is based entirely on our individual perception. Even if god exists there still can be no objective moral standard if you are going to claim that that moral standard is subject to gods will.דניס ביוקה

  • @critikill1
    @critikill15 жыл бұрын

    Ok I'm intrigued, but I'll wait for part 2. If it's still interesting, I say we just set up a debate between you and Steve to see if it holds up.

  • @MrJakers101
    @MrJakers1012 жыл бұрын

    I agree with your thinking and have this to add.. Isn’t everything(under a certain level of scrutiny) subjective? Facts are an agreement based on perceived truth in regards to our ability to interpret experience. That means our human constructed ideas of a particular objectivity can always change.

  • @garretnarjes782

    @garretnarjes782

    Жыл бұрын

    In a fundamental and technical perspective, this is true. At the same time, it seems pretty reasonable to consider facts that are consistent and independent of our existence which we can observe might be objectively true. For example, the speed of causality (light) within a specific gravitational area so far seems constant. Our subjectivity is entirely present in our definition of terms of how we measure and represent that speed, but the speed itself does not change based on our perspective. Someone can present a different speed finding, but the odds are much higher that they are either incorrect or lying than they truly found a different speed. A second (time unit) is defined as the time it takes for cesium-133 to go through 9.192631770 x 10^9 cycles of radiation. A meter is the distance light travels in 1/299,792,458 of a second. The choice to use cesium to define a second, and to use that denominator to define a meter... that's all subjective choices, but the facts used are objective. And while our subjectivity is arbitrary, once we define those arbitrary terms sufficiently in observable facts, our conclusions are relatively objective, as defined by our arbitrary terms in order to make communication and analysis of those facts useful. It's true, that underlying ALL of our reasoning is our subjectivity, but it is very possible to eliminate an extremely large amount of that subjectiveness and arrive at something that has a high degree of objectivity. Interestingly (IMO), I think this is also why you find most good (subjective) scientists couching their conclusions with terms of uncertainty. They are aware of the limitations of our ability to make objective conclusions, and so we can only arrive at a high degree of certainty, but not an absolute certainty.

  • @sirnick12

    @sirnick12

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah that is the basis of ideas like perspectivism. "There are no facts only interpretations" or a basically all of Nietzsches work. But once you get deep enough into that hole you simply change the word objective with intersubjective. As in something that in its core may be subjective but basically nearly everyone agrees on

  • @andrewdong3875
    @andrewdong3875 Жыл бұрын

    Alongside this video, I can think of 'The Sources of Normativity' (1996) by Christine Korsgaard as another great book on the foundation of morality. Basically, Korsgaard takes on the same fundamental questions -- namely: where does 'oughtness' come from, and (if it really exist,) how can it be proven & justified? Yet its conclusion (and a Kantian one indeed) is quite different. By the way, great job Alex.

  • @jcg7672
    @jcg76724 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoy your videos. I have always been a moral subjectivist but never put much thought into it, because like you I assumed that just went along with atheism. You really helped me work through this, thanks!

  • @LittleMAC78

    @LittleMAC78

    Жыл бұрын

    From a Biblical viewpoint, I'm not sure it's possible to have objective morality and free will. We all have our own reasons for our actions, even those who do things we see as 'wrong'. Morality must be subjective if we truly have free will.

  • @-TroyStory-
    @-TroyStory-3 жыл бұрын

    Morality is a social agreement brought about by reasoned discussion, laws, and sometimes having a bigger stick.

  • @egonwiesinger1195

    @egonwiesinger1195

    Жыл бұрын

    this one is priceless

  • @manjunathravindra1270

    @manjunathravindra1270

    10 ай бұрын

    @@egonwiesinger1195 right ??

  • @Daily_Dose_Of_Wisdom
    @Daily_Dose_Of_Wisdom24 күн бұрын

    I’ve been earnestly seeking to understand Atheistic explanations of Morality and I have to say I am shocked by how many misconceptions and circularities are present within a single video. I’ll keep digging to see if there is anything from Alex, or others, than is less facile.

  • @trumpbellend6717

    @trumpbellend6717

    Күн бұрын

    Lol I've been earnestly seeking to understand the Theistic explanation for morality. So please feel free to define "morality" and "good" for us all...... does it relate to human wellbeing or suffering and how we treat each other ? Is it relative or absolute ? Objective or subjective, if objective then *NAME THE SPECIFIC STANDARD* ? What purpose does it serve ie what the goal of a moral system ? 🤔 If these basic questions are beyond you then please don't waste either my time or your own in further discussion

  • @ChaoThing
    @ChaoThing2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video, this has helped me enormously. Hi from 2022 by the way.

  • @abbycaister2270
    @abbycaister22705 жыл бұрын

    my GOD I've waited so long

  • @sinenomine8101

    @sinenomine8101

    5 жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @ShannonQ
    @ShannonQ5 жыл бұрын

    This is interesting. The assumption that God's command is innately moral is something I'm frequently met with in dialogue. You should come on Non Sequitor some time it's a great place to exercise and test your arguments.

  • @PongoXBongo

    @PongoXBongo

    5 жыл бұрын

    Which strikes me as odd. Are God's commands not subject to His whims? It's just pushing the question back a step.

  • @wilemstout5016

    @wilemstout5016

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yes Alex, go on the non sequitur show, I’m sure you’d be amazing on there.

  • @PongoXBongo

    @PongoXBongo

    5 жыл бұрын

    So, either God doesn't have a choice then (He's not all-powerful) or they exist separate from Him (He's incidental)?

  • @M2daBwitdaQinbetween

    @M2daBwitdaQinbetween

    5 жыл бұрын

    PongoXBongo Plato's euthyphro dilema essentially

  • @PongoXBongo

    @PongoXBongo

    5 жыл бұрын

    I was responding purely to your statement. I am not so invested in this topic so as to start reading related writings (just passing the time on YT). ;)

  • @andrejkubik4313
    @andrejkubik43133 ай бұрын

    You are exceptionally intelligent, and I think intellectually honest. Based on your other videos I think your intentions were not atheistic, you genuinelly wanted to find God and goog in the world. You are searching for the truth. You are one of the greatest thinkers of our time (of youtube at least) and you are still pretty young.

  • @chrisplaysdrums09
    @chrisplaysdrums099 ай бұрын

    “If one lays absolute claim to, and boasts of virtue, surely this a sign that virtue is absent” “The self righteous are the thieves of virtue” I could list off many more quotes like this.

  • @kevinjacob2652

    @kevinjacob2652

    4 ай бұрын

    I may be seeing your argument improperly (do tell me how to see it better if so) but cosmic Skeptic is not boasting of virtue or making a claim that they are virtuous (or that they aren't) however asking "why should one follow god's moral code?" or "why should one submit to god's standards of morality" not a implication of that we shouldn't or we should but if we should or shouldn't, why so? (why if we should and why if we shouldn't) Also on what basis do you claim that self-righteous people are "thieves" of "virtue"? (if such claim of moral virtuousness can exist even if one doesn't believe in an objective set code of morality) of course i understand there is a issue with claiming having a "better grasp at morality/reality" by claiming that morality is subjective, still i want to understand why you make those statements

  • @sophieclements908
    @sophieclements9085 жыл бұрын

    Whoa, I'm so early. First time i've seen no views before! So hyped for your vids!

  • @kevanathra8741
    @kevanathra87415 жыл бұрын

    Our favourite altar boy is back!

  • @davidhatcher7016

    @davidhatcher7016

    5 жыл бұрын

    Kev Anathra altar?

  • @kevanathra8741

    @kevanathra8741

    5 жыл бұрын

    altar indeed

  • @TreespeakerOfTheLand

    @TreespeakerOfTheLand

    5 жыл бұрын

    This explains it all :) kzread.info/dash/bejne/inuIu8ttdtOpj9I.html

  • @ems7623

    @ems7623

    2 жыл бұрын

    oh my. It hadn't occured to me but he does rather look like the quintessential stereotype of "altarboy."

  • @gt8391b
    @gt8391b Жыл бұрын

    Great video Alex. Ultimately isn’t this just a restatement of Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem?

  • @jinn_1891
    @jinn_18919 ай бұрын

    Welcome back 🎉🎉🎉

  • @flash_gif
    @flash_gif4 жыл бұрын

    Ok, this resonates with what I had in my head, but thanks for making it clear.

  • @canaansykes5192
    @canaansykes51925 жыл бұрын

    You continue to impress me with your clever and profound arguments. Your work is stupendously appreciated. I am a proponent of the overall growth of knowledge, but especially the natural sciences, and it is after seeing thoughtful gentlemen like yourself that I want to raise up our children and encourge them to think and do it well. Thank you very much for sharing your thoughts and best of wishes and continued sucess with the channel. ~ C.M.

  • @alguno1010101
    @alguno10101013 жыл бұрын

    I don't know why people think that morality being subjective means that suddenly the Holocaust could be right. Art is subjective and that doesn't mean that I can make a ball with recently used toilet paper and say that it has artistic value. Well, maybe I can but no one would agree with me, probably not even myself.

  • @Isaac-hm6ih
    @Isaac-hm6ih Жыл бұрын

    ... and, subscribed. This seems very well considered to me. I almost entirely concur, my one disagreement being that I'd define good as being "what you ought to do". I don't think there's any truly objective way to determine what is good, regardless of the presence or absence of gods, but my intuition is for "ought" to be part of the definition of "good".

  • @magdstudios3965
    @magdstudios39655 жыл бұрын

    Alex, you should create a Discord server. Either that or one of us could make one and transfer ownership if he joins.

  • @knightmarecx2069

    @knightmarecx2069

    4 жыл бұрын

    Magd Studios I’m pretty sure he does have one

  • @DarthRane113
    @DarthRane1135 жыл бұрын

    Now this may be confirmation bias but I feel this is as accurate as it gets, at the very least it's a much more thought out explanation of my thoughts

  • @reda29100

    @reda29100

    4 жыл бұрын

    Murder is bad because it hurts societies. Had it given us 5% better economy for killing each not-that-much contributing individuals to societies, it would've been a TOTALLY different story. Trust me; I don't wanna be an apologist for theives, rapists and delusional corporations which consider societies as consumers rather than people with rights and dignity; but we keep forgetting the underline we base our judgements on: that every individual of us has practically infinite potential. Had it been not; if those individuals we seek their right bear a heavy load on our societies that it isn't worth it to bear them. Imagine a world where a single soul kept alive costs the whole group 30% less share of resources, how about barely living with that soul being alive. Would you/we like that situation to occur? Or prefer to let go of what is not worth it? Lying on others is bad; but what if that would make our economy way superior to them than before? Clearer even: the lying badness is not even inherently bad; had telling lies saved someone's live and telling the truth led to his killing: would you like to tell the executioner where his Innocent wanted people are? Rape is bad; but have we considered the possibility that (hypothetically, I'm not invoking any historical memeory) people were segregated by religion/race/political opinions that they have no right to marriage, so much so that they go extinct. Would we consider rape is this narrow aspect (I obviously despise rape; but we humans are so arrogant to claim knowing the truth when in fact all we care about is our interests) a terrible act? Or merely a mean towards restoring demographical balance/equality? I do feel bad for writing this stuff; but my opinion in myself is we as a species are filthy piece of shit that don't really know self-worth but are too arrogant and delusional to justify our acts in the name of 'humanity'!! We allegedly claim to care for conscious beings but at the same time we, me firstly, don't even think about, let alone give a FUCK about the thousand species that either intentionally or consequently go extinct. And no I'm not talking about global warming, I mean pouching. I mean did we ask ourselves the question: do we care about the universe after we go extinct? Assume another human-like form emerges after we go extinct. Do we feel any passion towards them now? Do we care about the resources we leave behind for, not our decendants, but another life-form, alien to us? We like to feel good about ourselves by developing morality whilst avoiding the horrible truth: we are just a species that is simple idiot selfish piece of shit; and it's a fact! Why else did we allocate the human life over other animals' lives even when we, disgusting people, have attacked that very individual animal's tree/habitat? As if we are superior by intelligence to them; well, let the aliens invade our planet to treat us the same way we did those poor animals. Why else do you center our interest around the human life rather than conscious live that feel the same pain that we do?!

  • @shanestrickland5006

    @shanestrickland5006

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@reda29100 Yea you raise a strong point and I have thought this to.

  • @em3sis

    @em3sis

    4 жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, I disagree with almost all of his points that follow from his false definition of morality itself. He conflagrates the desire to complete moral acts or immoral acts with morality itself. If your definition contains a subjective premise of what an individual OUGHT to do, everything from there will also be subjective. Another comment put it nicely, his definition is essentially "we ought to do what we ought to do". His subjective desire to commit an evil or good act has no bearing on the morality of the act.

  • @TheNinthGenerarion

    @TheNinthGenerarion

    4 жыл бұрын

    Curious Entity murder can be justified when the one you’re killing is someone who is actively harming multiple other people, thus his murder would be morally better than countless murders caused by that individual

  • @alexanderbenevento4356

    @alexanderbenevento4356

    3 жыл бұрын

    At any given time in history, however, philosophers, theologians, and politicians will claim to have discovered the best way to evaluate human actions and establish the most righteous code of conduct. But it's never that easy. "Life is far too messy and complicated for there to be anything like a universal morality or an absolutist ethics" At best, we can only say that morality is normative, while acknowledging that our sense of right and wrong will change over time

  • @anthonybaker6419
    @anthonybaker6419 Жыл бұрын

    Completely agree very well put, came to this realisation after a very intense mushroom trip, truth is all that matters and is the one true path, delusion is seclusion from oneself

  • @dann285

    @dann285

    Жыл бұрын

    Word salad from mushroom salad.

  • @TheAlphazoneYT
    @TheAlphazoneYTАй бұрын

    Counter: Morality is objective, but you don’t need religion or belief in a god to conclude this. Simply, take the harm principle. If it harms someone in any conceivable way it is morally wrong. Now, at first this may seem like a gross oversimplification of morality that won’t account for a great deal of nuances that occur in the real world. But I implore you to think it all the way through. Inject any scenario into this premise & examine it to the last most specific detail, & you’ll find that the harm principle solves it all. On top of this, I am of the position that in real life sometimes things that are morally wrong have to happen. Necessary evils if you will, like going to war for example, or situations where people are forced by circumstance. But whether something occurs out of necessity or not is irrelevant to how wrong it is.

  • @azyy1248

    @azyy1248

    Ай бұрын

    The "harm principle" is just a social contract, evolved over time by animals to increase their chances of survival and the passing down of their genetics. This exact thinking can be used to justify things like murder and rape, so it's not to be taken seriously. What most people are missing is that every animal is driven to do one thing: pass down their genetics. Literally every action every alive being has is related to this. Every single one. I believe morality is objective, but this line of thinking doesn't make sense.

  • @litensnubbe9516
    @litensnubbe95165 жыл бұрын

    "A person can't possibly live a happy life assuming morality is subjective..." i mean, happiness seems pretty subjective. whatever gives you dopamine am i right?

  • @haydencase7886

    @haydencase7886

    5 жыл бұрын

    Free Halla Well something tells me your comment is also subjective.

  • @nuclear_crow3876

    @nuclear_crow3876

    4 жыл бұрын

    When dopamine is released you feel joy I think. Happiness is a bit broader and can be a result of other mental states or emotions such as contentment.

  • @WatchBalloonshop

    @WatchBalloonshop

    4 жыл бұрын

    What Dr. Craig actually says there is that it's impossible to live *consistently* and happily within a morally relativistic worldview. If an atheist were to live _consistently_ within the tenets of moral relativism and follow them to the extent of their logical conclusions, he would find that it really does lead to existential nihilism. Life becomes absurd and meaningless at that point, so for the atheist to avoid this radically uncomfortable conclusion, he must construct a purpose for his life and choices that will allow him to escape this dreadfully bleak outlook. In this video, Alex attempts to ground his conclusion that "morality is subjective" within the (non-existent) objectivity of his own subjective experience. That's what I call *logical **_inconsistency._* So, my advice would be: don't search for dopamine in life, my friend. Search for meaning. It lasts longer. Also, you don't have to take my word for it. If you're interested, check out Dr. William Lane Craig's actual youtube channel, Reasonable Faith, where you can hear him out fully for yourself.

  • @lollerskatez1

    @lollerskatez1

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@WatchBalloonshop give up dude. Don't go missionaring on a cosmic sceptic video.

  • @WatchBalloonshop

    @WatchBalloonshop

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@lollerskatez1 The only time you need a flashlight is when you are in darkness. That's all I'm trying to do here brother. What would be the point of using one where light is already shining?

  • @scottmc2626
    @scottmc26264 жыл бұрын

    The proposition that we "ought to do that which is good" is a tautology, since, with respect to actions, "good"is defined as that which we ought to do.

  • @MrDzoni955

    @MrDzoni955

    4 жыл бұрын

    This! When you say "this is good" you are literally saying "this is as it should be" or "this is as it ought to be".

  • @waynekenney9311

    @waynekenney9311

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@MrDzoni955 Yes! So a robot with some objective function that it moves to maximize is doing 'good' and if it is trying to minimize something it is avoiding 'bad'.

  • @wachyfanning

    @wachyfanning

    3 жыл бұрын

    I tend to define good as a nebulous positive concept which often promotes wellbeing. But yes, if I were to ask somebody why we ought to do what is good, I expect the argument is going to be circular. We can easily explain why we have the desire to do good, but it's circular to explain why we must fulfill these desires to do so.

  • @waynekenney9311

    @waynekenney9311

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wachyfanning I agree, the tautology is unavoidable. Good is just what we define it to be. Humans have an intuitive idea if good and bad, but isn't this just the product of evolution. Evolution doesn't have a will to maximize a objective function. It's accidental.

  • @ultrainstinctgoku2509

    @ultrainstinctgoku2509

    3 жыл бұрын

    Watch this. m.kzread.info/dash/bejne/lGmVla-xedTAf9Y.html

  • @Krehfish534
    @Krehfish534 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Alex! I really liked this video actually, I thought it did an excellent job of explaining a critique of morality as we discuss it. I did have one critique that you may address in a future video I just haven't watched yet. It in no way addresses morality in a way that can be superimposed to other people, a fundamental psychological reason why people insist on objective morality. Christianity and other moral objectivist systems offer that this is based on the divine impulse in every being, further necessitated by the image-of-God-ness in every being. This also answers the should in a different way than common surface level critiques, because it asserts that the moral impulse is a central component of humanity, without which one cannot properly function. In this, to ignore or counter the moral impulse is to commit a self-destructive action that has immediate and eventual consequences, both to one's self and one's surroundings. Thus the answer to "should" is "because you are designed to 'should,'" which is indicative of a need for a supremely moral being. I think you did a very fair job addressing the answers religious people actually assert, but I'd offer this as a more robust definition of what they assume in their assertions. I'd argue that this is a more robust definition than evolutionary programming or any non-theistic standard because it successfully links morality to both Divine ordinance and human flourishing, two central components of classical moral theology. I hope I hear something about this in a future video that I haven't watched yet, but if not, I hope you read this and consider offering critiques to my assertion!

  • @d.brianburnsii1011
    @d.brianburnsii10112 ай бұрын

    I am an atheist, but I do have to criticize one part of the argument around doing good. I do appreciate your outline of the circular reasoning for why we should do good because God commands it. The theist would say here, that God is the embodiment of good, and doing good is an experience of being like God. The argument of why you should do good under a theistic principal, is that you should do good to be one with God. And if there is such a thing as an eternal afterlife, then it would be desirable to be one with the eternal and cosmic force of good, than to be severed from that force. The reason of why one should do good for the theist is for the eternal reward, and to bring joy and glory to the entity of pure cosmic goodness. I ultimately agree with your thesis statement, however, I do think that this is your weakest response in your grouping. The statement of "we do good things because God is good and commands it," is to undermine that good things are also met with reward, and bad things are met with punishment. If there is a hell and heaven, then it would be objectively foolish to do anything that wasn't good, if doing acts that aren't good send you to hell. And as a result, this becomes the easiest point for a theist to break, and then use as a springboard to attack the entire arguments integrity. I would love to see how you address a subjective requirement to do good that also takes into account the claim for the afterlife.

  • @rizdekd3912

    @rizdekd3912

    Ай бұрын

    "If there is a hell and heaven, then it would be objectively foolish to do anything that wasn't good, if doing acts that aren't good send you to hell." It might objectively foolish to risk eternal torment, but does that make it objectively right to do something or not do something to avoid eternal torment?

  • @jeremyleyland1047
    @jeremyleyland10475 жыл бұрын

    Why would you say the robot doesn't have a "should"? You yourself argued against the idea of freewill. If humans have no freewill, how can you differentiate us from a programed robot? If I see "unfairness" but lack the free will, is this actually a "should"?

  • @CosmicSkeptic

    @CosmicSkeptic

    5 жыл бұрын

    If we somehow programmed the robot to experience the feeling of moral 'ought' that we do, whether or not that's free, I think we could call it a moral agent, at least in the same sense that we would call a human a moral agent. (Though ultimately, of course, with no free will the concept of ought makes little sense.)

  • @henryambrose8607

    @henryambrose8607

    5 жыл бұрын

    I don't think a robot _can_ have any idea of "should," nor any ideas whatsoever. The robot carries out tasks; it does not have a consciousness.

  • @henryambrose8607

    @henryambrose8607

    5 жыл бұрын

    Oliver Moore Perhaps, but I think that it is included in the premise of a robot that it is not conscious.

  • @quentinwach

    @quentinwach

    5 жыл бұрын

    Didn't you just state you are wrong?

  • @midnight8341

    @midnight8341

    5 жыл бұрын

    Henry Ambrose but what if you made a perfect scan of the human brain and reassemble it to AI. If the AI believes itself to be still, well... Itself before the transfer, then why would you deny it consciousness? And if you can have a selfconscious construct in silico, then you can assemble it from scratch in silico.

  • @deBugReporter
    @deBugReporter5 жыл бұрын

    Waiting for that promised part 3.

  • @enrique7919
    @enrique79193 жыл бұрын

    I think you're most recent preachings should come and give this a listen

  • @enrique7919

    @enrique7919

    3 жыл бұрын

    All my comments are based on your most recent contradiction

  • @hackerj23
    @hackerj23 Жыл бұрын

    Logical mistake: CS states that religious morality is subjective because we can’t determine which religion is correct, therefore it isn’t objective. Objectivity and demonstrability/empiricism are not the same.

  • @dopphinheuwe8177

    @dopphinheuwe8177

    Жыл бұрын

    objectivity and empiricism are the same. if you’re going to state something to be objective, you’d better be able to demonstrate it empirically. otherwise your statement can’t hold any truth value. that’d just be speculation. the statement that religious morality is subjective because we can’t determine which religion is correct, is a completely valid one to make. it is corroborated by the demonstrable fact that not all humans share the same morality even if they share the same religion. this reasonably follows because morals are not objectivity derived from religion, they’re subjectively derived from cultures.

  • @BestPaulever
    @BestPaulever5 жыл бұрын

    In my humble opinion, your last point is actually you as a subject being variable. It is not about the object(objective morality) we discusse here objective or subjective. Have a good one!

  • @DoctorGlitch
    @DoctorGlitch3 жыл бұрын

    I have a doubt here. What if someone says god commands us that we ought to do what is good because if we don’t we would go to hell and if we do we’d go to heaven and that according to most religions is the ultimate objective of life. So doesn’t that make religious morality objective. (P:s I’m an atheist i just had this question. )

  • @AH-vm8yo

    @AH-vm8yo

    3 жыл бұрын

    In my opinion I don't think Christians have an objective morality they're mostly subjective for example if you ask a Christian is stoning your disobedient children wrong I'd hope they would say yes but the bible tells you to do that same with stoning homosexuals they don't do everything in the bible because they used their own subjective morality when looking at it deciding it's either a pointless rule or an immoral one. In my opinion the only religious people who could ever claim to have an objective morality are the one's who follow their holy book too the letter. I may have just sounded like an idiot and may be wrong if I am I apologise for talking a lot of crap. I'm sure Alex would be able to put forward a better argument.

  • @mayowaojutalayo5298

    @mayowaojutalayo5298

    3 жыл бұрын

    A H true I’m a Christian but we don’t pick and choose what to follow I recently found out that bacon is wrong any God said we shouldn’t eat pigs but people still do it

  • @AH-vm8yo

    @AH-vm8yo

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mayowaojutalayo5298 wait so your saying I'm correct but you don't pick and choose so I'm wrong but you still eat bacon when told not to so I'm right lol sorry what you said may have been simple to understand but I don't get what you mean at all. Sorry for not understanding what you meant.

  • @DoctorGlitch

    @DoctorGlitch

    3 жыл бұрын

    A H I don’t think you get my point. Forget about what people follow. The point i’m trying to make is that religious morality should still be considered objective as it is what god commands people to do. So if people refuse to follow a certain thing against the will of god it’s still people’s subjective life choices not that religious morality is subjective because religion prescribes what humans ought to do. You get me?

  • @mayowaojutalayo5298

    @mayowaojutalayo5298

    3 жыл бұрын

    A H no I’ve stopped but what I’m saying is the stoning thing your talking about isn’t true and if it was it was an Old Testament thing cause Jesus in the New Testament I as more forgiving. There was a prostitute that was getting stoned and Jesus said they should stop cause the propel stoning her were also sinners so we do have an objective morality o would argue from a theist point of view but from a neutral view I would say there isn’t

  • @joehinojosa8030
    @joehinojosa80302 жыл бұрын

    Good to see you mate! Missed the Old blasphemy.

  • @daman7387
    @daman73872 жыл бұрын

    13:38 The difference Dr. Craig would see between a Muslim and an atheist isn't that the Muslim BELIEVES their view to be objective, while the atheist doesn't. Instead, IF the Muslim is correct, their right and wrong is determined by a standard higher than human. This isn't true if the atheist is correct. This, I think, would be closer to what Dr. Craig would agree with. This doesn't necessarily refute Alex's main point, but I do believe he's incorrect on this smaller point

  • @demiurge8480
    @demiurge84805 жыл бұрын

    you remind me of first generational gamers finding glitches and seams in the game and the excitement with which they shared it with us XD

  • @quentinwach
    @quentinwach5 жыл бұрын

    Ok. It will take me a long time to think through all your points. But I am skeptical. Above all, I don't see how an agent has to be conscious in order to be moral. If we take it to be true that we have no free will then the ability to experience "moral choices" doesn't seem to have any importance at all. *thinking in progress*

  • @waderobins07

    @waderobins07

    5 жыл бұрын

    ...thinking in progress... I imagine a 'loading' wheel in your eyes with a blank stare. Are you a robot? Ha ha

  • @quentinwach

    @quentinwach

    5 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely agree with you

  • @sirmeowthelibrarycat

    @sirmeowthelibrarycat

    5 жыл бұрын

    Lil Phag 😳 ‘Human behaviour is determined by the laws of physics’ ? If so, how do you explain why in a situation X one person behaves negatively but a second person behaves to the contrary. For example, A and B approach C. A then attacks C but B intervenes to protect C. Why? Are your ‘laws of physics’ capable of discriminating between individuals? How? What about D who phones police but E who does nothing? Be very careful when you abandon free will, as you then open the door to extreme individualism with each person deciding, arbitrarily, how to behave. That negates any agreement to the concept of justice and punishment. All that A needs to offer in his defence is ‘physics made me do it, Officer!’ Is that what you believe?

  • @quentinwach

    @quentinwach

    5 жыл бұрын

    You miss the point. There is a difference between free will as something external untouched by reality and free will in a deterministic world governed by natural laws, the laws of physics. Of course we all think we have a choice. But if we could reset time and let you make this choice again you would always make the exact same one. Simply because our choice is already made doesn't mean it does not exist. And of course different people with different agendas make different choices.

  • @susangarry2249

    @susangarry2249

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sir Meow The Library Cat Well, people are different. Our programming is different. But our programming is also subject to the laws of physics. The reason why persons A, B, and C might act differently in identical situations is the fact that persons A, B, and C are not identical, but their actions are still governed by physics because physics governs both their external and internal environments. If persons A, B, and C were identical, then barring any randomness, we would expect them to act identically in identical situations. And we can't control randomness, so the existence of random events does nothing to help the notion of free will in the sense that you can freely choose from multiple options how you will act in any given situation.

  • @tomerbauer
    @tomerbauer2 жыл бұрын

    Hi CosmicSkeptic! Your analysis of morality is fascinating, both in the videos with Stephen and on your solo videos. What is your position regarding Buddhist view of morality, considering that buddhist morality claims objectivity which relies neither on scientific materialism nor on theism? There is a series of five very short videos from a western Buddhist monk positing that there is absolute morality. Would you consider giving a response to this monk? His account is "Yuttadhammo Bhikkhu", and the videos are grouped under the playlist "reality" in his account. Thank you!

  • @JonasGrader
    @JonasGrader4 ай бұрын

    Hi, Truth seeking Christian here. Great video, thank you for extending my mind. You said ‘God defines good, and God commands us to do good’ as the religious argument for objective morality. You then objected to this by asking ‘why I ought to do as God commands… because he is good?… obviously entering a circle. But would this be the answer? Having established that God exists, and that He defines good and commands it, I would say the answer to ‘why should we do as He commands’ would be more something like ‘because He created you in His image and bought you with the blood of His Son to be a slave to righteousness and not sin’. This removes the circle from the argument I think. The question would then be how do you know that this answer is objective, and the answer would be because the bible says these things. Then the argument would then move towards biblical matters of inspiration and innerancy. You could then say that the bibles interpretation is subjective, but are commandments open to interpretation? It is this moral code which the bible tells us is written on our hearts by our creator. If the moral code is written on our hearts then morality is objective. Secondly, a command is not true or false if from a dependent and fallable being. But if from The perfect God then it is true. So I don’t think your comparison to the twitter follow command is appropriate here. Would be interested to know thoughts and objections to these.

  • @EclecticOmnivore

    @EclecticOmnivore

    3 ай бұрын

    @JonasGrader Some comments. You wrote; > Having established that God exists, and that He defines good and commands it, I would say the answer to ‘why should we do as He commands’ would be more something like ‘because He created you in His image and bought you with the blood of His Son to be a slave to righteousness and not sin’. For the sake of this discussion, I will grant that the following is true; * A god exists. * That god has access to or is the source of an objective moral code. * That god is best described by some group of Christians. There's a problem, though. Just as all Christians are sinners (as they are not their god God, and only that god God can be sinless), all Christians (and all non-Christians) do not have unambiguous access to that god's objective moral code. After all, they are not the god God. NOTE: Sin in this context is anything that is not the god God. It is not (principle of identity) 1:1 with morals or goodness. The god God may be objectively moral and wholly good, but we don't have access to that insight outside of a set of otherwise unsupported ideological claims ... that differ between sects of Christianity. On that note... This is one of the reasons why there are so many sects of Christianity. In practice, let alone in ideology, even Christians can't agree with each other about what that objective moral code is. The practice of living an actual moral life requires effort, and admission of failures. As the Bible is full of justifications of immoral deeds -- ex: slavery -- it can't be the true word of any god that is the source of objective morality, or the unfaltering follower of an objective moral code. (ie. Sin isn't about morals as much as it is anything that is not the god God.)

  • @JonasGrader

    @JonasGrader

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi, Thanks for the reply, interesting stuff. I would agree that we don’t have direct access the unambiguous moral law because we are not God and do not know all Truth. So where do we find moral Truth? The Christian answer would be the revealed innerent word of God (The bible). But I think your argument is that if there are immoral things (slavery) in scripture and disagreements about intepretation, how then how can we trust and use this as the measure of moral truth? I would then ask you on what grounds do you judge the immorality of the bible upon? I would say the slavery objection is fair, but also has nuances to it, but for this discussion about objective moral Truth I ask you: Is the agreement on the existence of God (in this discussion) encourage us to go and find moral laws (much like physicists went looking for the laws of physics upon the agreed existence of a law maker to begin scientific discovery) more than we would do if we did not think that God existed? In other words, is the agreement of the existence of God a better social landscape for the persuit of objective moral laws which will benefit society? If so, where do we then look for evidence of this? I would suggest scriptures and developing a scientific method for morality, yet to be codified 😄

  • @budd2nd
    @budd2nd3 жыл бұрын

    I come from a very different background to cosmic a sceptic although I am an atheist as well. I am very interested in and have researched quite a lot of early hominin (earliest ancestors of us - Homo sapiens) evolution. From my understanding of our evolution, I suggest that morality could have evolved something like this. All animals quickly learn that whatever causes pain or discomfort, is best avoided. So the beginnings of the concept of good v bad begin. As early hominids (our earliest ancestors) we lacked sharp claws, fangs, venom or the ability to run very, very fast, so we banded together for protection out on the African plains. Continued acceptance within the group required a level of empathy and the ability to work collectively together. Any wrong doing that caused pain, injury or death to other members of the group, would surely be frowned upon to some degree, even by the simplest of intellects. So to avoid being shunned by the group, a code of do’s and don’ts develops. With each progressive generation, those that can’t or won’t, stick to the dos and don’ts (the code if you want) get removed from the group. They are far less likely to survive and reproduce, naked and alone, as they would be. So with each generation there are more people that care for each other, protect each other and less people who don’t follow the “code”. Slowly this “code” gets hardwired in to us, as the percentage within the population gets higher and higher. So a sort of proto morality slowly increases, generation after generation. This would cause a type of proto morality to evolve. It is, I think intrinsically part of the intellectual growth of a social species. To stay within the moral code becomes, over time instinctual. Please let me know what you think of this hypothesis.

  • @budd2nd

    @budd2nd

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Richdragon Yes my wording is probably not correct there. I meant that it is an emergent property of living within societies, however simple those societies are. Does that sound better?

  • @AnnaPrzebudzona

    @AnnaPrzebudzona

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@budd2nd I read your comment and then your reply to Richdragon and out of nowhere the question popped in my mind: why does it matter? I'm not being provocative. I'm genuinely curious. What you wrote is an elaborate speculation that science will never be able to determine. What is the purpose of creating this hypothesis? What does it help you to achieve?

  • @budd2nd

    @budd2nd

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@AnnaPrzebudzona Thanks for the question Anna. I personally think it’s extremely interesting to contemplate our earliest ancestry.

  • @mingledingle1556

    @mingledingle1556

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AnnaPrzebudzona why do we do anything? What did you hope to achieve by writing this KZread comment? Why did you watch this KZread video? We do things all the time that seem pointless. For example, Philosophy as a whole is pointless. We can’t prove any of these things, but we enjoy talking about them anyways. Speculation and debate are fun things to do and they’re things that interest people’s brains. Let’s not judge people for hypotheses like this on a channel that is all about pondering

  • @nclon11

    @nclon11

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mingledingle1556 here if groups are successful through morality, we achieve our evolutionary goals - survival and reproduction

  • @sophiapark8859
    @sophiapark88593 жыл бұрын

    After watching the whole video I think you have definitely shifted my thinking on some of these issues. I think you are absolutely correct. There is no proof that we “ought” to do something one way or another. Even if you could objectively prove God exists, the still lies the subjective opinion of whether or not you personally want to come under his authority. I think that if any God were proven to exist that would PERSONALLY be persuasive to me that I would want to live under his authority. However, it’s not an objective reason for everyone to do so. I think this is the basis of the idea of free will.

  • @ThomasintheMind

    @ThomasintheMind

    Жыл бұрын

    What if that god was Kim Jong-un?

  • @breasonable4343

    @breasonable4343

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThomasintheMind what if you had a point?

  • @pythondrink

    @pythondrink

    Жыл бұрын

    @@breasonable4343 you're cruel 😂

  • @breasonable4343

    @breasonable4343

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pythondrink 😆

  • @WillowLemmons
    @WillowLemmons2 жыл бұрын

    my interpretation of objective good is anything that feels good whilst causing no harm to others (and by harm I mean damage that doesn't lead to a beneficial things,so getting a shot from a doctor to save your life isn't evil because the purpose of it was not to negatively affect your life it was to do the opposite, and assuming it does work,then it was good,whereas being stabbed is not to your benefit but to your detriment). but then again as far as we know everything is a social construct and objectivity if that's the case is then ironically subjective

  • @mattreigada3745
    @mattreigada3745 Жыл бұрын

    It’s been a few years since I’ve seen this, it was worth the rewatch and it is a point I have made to theists and apologists even prior to seeing this. One novel point that wasn’t originally addressed that is perhaps worth consideration is that the very notion of objective morality is in contradiction with the notion of free will when one considers them more deeply. I’m not sold on the existence of free will myself, but it is a cornerstone of the Abrahamic faiths that generally also assert objective morality.

  • @kninenights
    @kninenights4 жыл бұрын

    Before I started watching your videos I held a belief that morality was mostly subjective with some ultimate objective rules that are objective no matter what. However, after thinking through things and considering the points presented in your videos, my belief has progressively shifted to the belief that all morality is subjective no matter what.

  • @o0Avalon0o
    @o0Avalon0o5 жыл бұрын

    I find your videos facinating.

  • @TheIdealistProject
    @TheIdealistProject Жыл бұрын

    Great video! But I guess the problem here is that people are often associating the "objectivity" of moral actions to empathy, which makes it subjective. I think people have forgotten how Immanuel Kant has treated morality; that it is an a priori truth; similar to the laws of logic that IF everyone followed it, then the conclusion will be a better society. Regardless if religion existed or not, it remains a logical fact - people killing each other cancels out the possibility of existence. Morality should be grounded in REASON, not in EMPATHY, no matter how empathy might be much more intuitive to rely on than reason for many. Only then people will see the "objectivity" of moral values when people start to see it like a logical derivative rather than a subjective preference or a primitive response of our paleomammalian brain. While I would agree that there are subjective moral values (those fall with different laws in different countries we have), there ARE objective moral values as well, independent of human experience. Subjective and objective moral values co-exist. Imagine if everyone killing each other - it will cancel out life and progress (objective), likewise, marijuana is okay to some countries but in our country, not yet (subjective). Morality is a rational enterprise - with or without the existence of religious notions, and Darwinian naturalism. It remains like a logical law that will bring positive results if and only IF ALL people were able to follow it. Sources to explore: Kant's CPR (and other Kant's moral philosophy), Against Empathy by Paul Bloom

  • @Livo-ph9fj

    @Livo-ph9fj

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you may be onto something. You said that positive results will be seen given that EVERYONE comply. In the world we live in, there is quite clearly a difference in opinion regarding many things morality included and that would then explain why we have so many huge global problems.

  • @darkengine5931

    @darkengine5931

    Жыл бұрын

    I can see a practical need for rules in any organization, and especially simple rules in the largest ones given that some people might have difficulty comprehending and remembering any exceptions. Any standard is better than no standard, but the lack of nuance in Kant's CI hardly seems capable of navigating the nuanced complexities of life, even in a society where no one lied, no one stealed, no one killed, and so forth.

  • @robertdinire6133

    @robertdinire6133

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Livo-ph9fj Just because not EVERYONE is following it, doesn't mean it's not objective. Kant proposed that morality is a logical enterprise. People can believe 1+1=3 but the answer remains it's 2. Same thing with morality. Now if you think morality is not objective, then tell that to rape victims, or people who are in the concentration camps.

  • @robertdinire6133

    @robertdinire6133

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darkengine5931 Of course, that's why utilitarian morality was born, as opposed to Kantianism. But what the OP is saying is not about the nuances that CI can't propose, but rather it's about how morality is objective regardless if people obey it or not. That's what makes us as humans - having free will to disobey objective moral values. But Kant has shown us that there are objective moral values, even if we disobey it, it remains objectively sound and logical.

  • @darkengine5931

    @darkengine5931

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@robertdinire6133 ​I still see what appears to be an embedded/implied hypothetical in even CI itself which depends on subjective interests. "Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law [if you wish to be a good person, or wish to contribute to making up a more harmonious society]." I also question the utopian nature of it. Suppose we were all perfectly rational, benevolent beings, treating each other solely as an ends and never a means, and only acting in accordance with that which we wish to be universal law while working hard and never being lazy. I could certainly see better societies emerging than our present one if only because everyone is now benevolent, but there still exists finite resources and scarcities which will often force us to prioritize the needs of one person over another's. That's also a problem I find with utilitarian frameworks in spite of their hypothetical objectivity (should we arrive at a perfect and consistent way to measure utility).

  • @capablancahz
    @capablancahz2 жыл бұрын

    This is just a semantic problem. Most people agrees that objective morality means that all the goods and the bads are fixed, unchanged and determined. It doesnt matter if someone ought to do good or not, but the good & bad is still unchanged similar to a universal constant. if you think that objective morality means that why we ought to do good, then the answer is of course subjective. It is you the one that needs to decide to good or bad. both have their consequences. and of course that is subjective to everyone. but that doesnt change the fact that it is good or bad.

  • @DepressionAlgorithm
    @DepressionAlgorithm5 жыл бұрын

    You have some interesting ideas here, but there are some flaws. The one that particularly caught my attention is around 17:00 you make the pre-supposition that God is real for the sake of argument and that his morality is 'objectively true', due to his existing. But you go on to say that even then, morality can't be objective because we can't explain why we *ought* to do good instead of bad. My beef with this is that the concept that we ought to do good things is very possibly baked into the concept or morality itself. Morally good choices are by definition things we ought to do. If we're assuming morality is objective, then you're also assuming, that we ought to do it, because that's moral, and morality is objective. If someone has no ought to do good, then they aren't being moral. Now if it sounds like I'm misrepresenting the definition of morality, it's only because by your own admission you've made your definition in this thesis very nebulous and poorly defined. I don't think the definition I've used is any more or less meaningful than the one you've provided. Furthermore, you've failed to define key terms like 'intuition' and 'ought'. You said you don't think you need to do this... well.. I definitely disagree. You do. This is especially important for the usage of the word 'intuition'. This is a bit of a loaded word when discussing things of an objective nature. Intuitions are by definition subjective. Definition of intuition: "A thing that one knows or considers likely from *instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning* ." By using the word intuition and then failing to better define it, you've essentially concluded in your definitions and premises that morality is a feeling and not a part of reasoning or absolute truth. That's a problem. If morality is proven to be objective, than it would be untrue to state that objective morality is an intuition that we ought to do good.. it would be more accurate at that point to say that morality *is* doing that which *is* good, as codified by the objective moral standard of God.

  • @YEYGAHH

    @YEYGAHH

    4 жыл бұрын

    xI2ei I think you misunderstood the scenario he presented. He suggested if God were true. That’s it. He didn’t include His morality being objectively true in the scenario. Also I think his definition of Morality was fair. There’s no need for intuition. The definition has the basics of what the topic is (Good, Bad, Ought, Ought Not) Can’t simplify it more then that. Mind you I disagree with his conclusion. I just think we should be fair in representing him in our comments and critiques. Cool?

  • @ricardodelvallemunoz

    @ricardodelvallemunoz

    4 жыл бұрын

    I think you're pushing the question. If by definition we ought to make morally good choices, how do we define them? By what standart is a choice morally good?

  • @namethis658

    @namethis658

    4 жыл бұрын

    He's basically pointing to Hume's "is - ought" problem. It is impossible to prove "ought" from "is".

  • @someother7568

    @someother7568

    4 жыл бұрын

    @kabal And there you have entered into free will. A good law and a good judge are objective - A is good, B is bad. You an I have freedom to submit ourselves to the law or rebel against it. Our choice doesn't change nor impact the law only our measurement and consequence against it. It is very reasonable for the law to be objective but our choices subjective.

  • @someother7568

    @someother7568

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Kabal Save, that people didn't design morality (in the root start of morality, many have designed their own morality). You do have the subjective choice to pic your own moral code and abide by it. You stray a bit to far when making all inclusive statements like their is no object meaning to good. While their may be subjective interpretations of good, the objective definition is "to my benefit". However, if one chooses a world view where this is no "law giver", then any and all choices in any and all situations is valid and "good". As I have no direct authority over any other, we each can make any choice and impose on anyone to any degree - a.k.a the survival of the fittest. Only when there is an independent superior which establishes objective law do we inherent a responsibility to abide by such law and thereby definition of good/evil.

  • @Kaneinja
    @Kaneinja4 жыл бұрын

    My view on morality has come along in a similar in the sense my atheism is a ground point for it. I fallow the path of I do not believe in a god, therefore a god does not exist to give morality, therefore morality is man-made. That being said, numerous moral philosophies appear, creating subjectivity. To me, it seems morality must be subjective if every man can create a moral code by which he believes. However, there is a form of objectivity in morality when it comes a mass following. If an entire nation believes in one moral code, it may be originally subjective, but is a universal one that does not shift from person to person creating a sense of objectivity. This could be the case for every nation on the planet; a number of subjective moral codes finding themselves in disagreement. This disagreement is still justified even if we agree that subjectivity occurs. I think so many people that find morality subjective think they have to accept another person’s view of morality, but I believe it to be the opposite. Just because we can accept that morals are different, we do bot have to say that they should be considered moral on a grand scale. This is a societal dilemma, not one of who has the true god.

  • @iamdanyboy1

    @iamdanyboy1

    3 жыл бұрын

    But aren't there certain objective moral truths. Like murder is bad. Rape is bad. Slavery is bad. Like these seem to be demonstrably moral truths if morality is defined as an innate desire to stop ourselves from doing things to others that we would not tolerate upon ourselves. This can result in subjective moralities on the whole, but these subjective sets will have overlapping objective truths like I mentioned above. Of course the caveat here is a moral person should also be a mental fit person n.

  • @AbandonedVoid

    @AbandonedVoid

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@iamdanyboy1 Not really. Those only seem like moral truths based on the culture you grew up in. Slavery was normalized for millennia, and even seen as a good thing by many ancient cultures like the Sumerians. The concept of rape, as you conceive it here, didn't really exist until fairly recently, especially the rape of women since they have been regarded as property throughout most of humanity. "Murder" also just means "any immoral killing," so it's incredibly subjective; some people think abortion and meat-eating are murder, whereas others do not. Absolutist pacifists think even killing in self-defense is murder. While you can find overlap between pretty much any two moral philosophies, if you take all moral systems into account then there is no middle ground that they all agree on. Even if there were, what you have is an Argumentum ad Populum or at best an argument from definition, which are fallacies. I can find you a moral system that justifies or even demands any universal evil that you can come up with, I guarantee it. If morality was objective, then we would not have war.

  • @iamdanyboy1

    @iamdanyboy1

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AbandonedVoid lol. Sure. But these are moral systems that had to be invented or created to accommodate these acts. My contention is if you are a primitive civilisation, with no higher concept of morality , you will still know that when someone kills someone else , it's bad. When someone forces a lady , if you are another lady at least you will know it's bad. You will know it's bad when you see someone being violently forced to do labour in return for no renumeration and treated as less than human despite being the same as you. Yes we justify every bad thing that happens to our enemies as moral or necessary actions. But keeping everything else constant, ever since out birth humans are hardwired to find certain acts detestable. It's really not morality but a sense of disgust , so as to say.

  • @AbandonedVoid

    @AbandonedVoid

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@iamdanyboy1 All moral systems were invented or created to accommodate the acts contained within them, that's kind of the point of morality. As to murder and rape being known as bad "intuitively," I'm going to disagree with you there. In cultures where rape is normalized, even "another lady" will defend it, as strange as that might sound to you. The same is true of killing. The human conscience is based mostly on conformity, and guilt and empathy are not consistently felt in the same ways for the same reasons among even the mentally healthy. Again, however, even if it was, you would have nothing more than an argumentum ad populum or maybe an argument from nature, both of which are still logical fallacies.

  • @alexanderbenevento4356

    @alexanderbenevento4356

    3 жыл бұрын

    At any given time in history, however, philosophers, theologians, and politicians will claim to have discovered the best way to evaluate human actions and establish the most righteous code of conduct. But it's never that easy. "Life is far too messy and complicated for there to be anything like a universal morality or an absolutist ethics" At best, we can only say that morality is normative, while acknowledging that our sense of right and wrong will change over time

  • @cosmicprison9819
    @cosmicprison98192 жыл бұрын

    Yes, nihilism is unlivable. So is objective morality. Human beings are masters at being morally inconsistent, i.e. hypocrites, whenever it suits them. I've been thinking about how to describe our "innate" moral system accurately: Solipsistic or myopic utilitarianism would be my current suggestion. However, if that is our innate behavioural framework, it's an "is", and therefore still doesn't allow us to turn this into an objective "ought".

  • @jessehaufler8405
    @jessehaufler84052 жыл бұрын

    Hope this is a good post and hope you guys have a good day, anyway here goes… When he says we can’t prove we ought to recognize God’s authority because God commands it and we can’t say we ought to obey God’s commands because they are good commands, I think it depends on what ought to means, which I don’t remember him defining ought to. If he did sorry about that… the way I would think of ought to is a watch ought to work as the inventor of the watch designs it to work. If “ought to” means that a watch ought to work as the inventor of the watch intended it to work, then that is why we ought to follow God’s commands. God created us to obey his commands, therefore it is what we were designed to do or ought to do, which should prove that we ought to obey his authority separate of the commands being good and separate of God commanding it. Not to make this post too long, but God created all the natural laws and literally everything else, and all of them obey what he told them to do. If there is the argument for why we ought to obey, why ought existence itself obey God?

  • @joseph-thewatcher
    @joseph-thewatcher4 жыл бұрын

    Religious Morality: God engages in and commands Israel to commit genocide - Good Man engages in genocide on his own - Bad God promotes and commands Israel to institute slavery - Good Man institutes slavery on his own - Bad God commands the ritual of blood sacrifices - Good Man engages in blood sacrifices on his own - Bad The list goes on and on. I find it insulting and hypocritical when religious people choose to ignore the immoral acts contained within their own holy texts to criticize others. It's as if by deflection they can take the focus off the shortcomings of their own holy books.

  • @toyosioyejobi309

    @toyosioyejobi309

    4 жыл бұрын

    You atheist will not just shut up about these part. Like God is all about war. Or that's all God is about. If you are genuine and if it's not your hate for God speaking you will read all scriptures and understand who God is and not just cut and paste where only God commands his people to war against a nation that has oppressed people

  • @joseph-thewatcher

    @joseph-thewatcher

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@toyosioyejobi309 If you're talking about god in general then you're right there are gods that aren't trying to wipe out humanity. However, the Abrahamic god is a war god whether you like it or not. He is depicted as a tribalistic, genocidal, homicidal war lord both in the old and new testaments. Even those who are in a covenant with him aren't safe from his wrath. He is like an abusive husband. People can talk about the love of the Abrahamic god all they want but that doesn't change the fact that it's religious influence is humanities greatest enemy. Just to be clear, I think most of the stories in the Bible are fiction and folklore. I think much of it is hype. However, I do think the devotees of Elohim, YWHW, Jehovah, Jesus or Allah are quit capable of being destructive and violent in the name of their god.

  • @toyosioyejobi309

    @toyosioyejobi309

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@joseph-thewatcher That's your bias speaking. I'm very sane and literate and I don't see it that way. Apart from the biases in your statement. I have felt the presence of God and I have seen and being a conduit of miracles. Jesus is the full and perfected Revalation of God. He is the culmination of everything God was trying to teach the Jews who eventually failed to realize this all the way and eventually rejected and caused his death. Which was his destiny anyways. These are spiritual things. The atheist is closed minded and he is restricted to what he can see or touch. I mean you compare God with warlords like gengis khan etc. It shows you don't know him. I'll implore you to have an open mind and read the scriptures. God will reveal himself to you.

  • @joseph-thewatcher

    @joseph-thewatcher

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@toyosioyejobi309 You accuse atheists of being "closed minded" and "restricted to what he can see or touch". Yet you claim "I have felt the presence of god and I have seen and being a conduit of miracles." It seems to me that your standard for believing in god is based on seeing and feeling. How hypocritical of you. Your god experience is no different than claims of devotees of other religions. Why do people like you think that you know the opposition better than they know themselves. I was a commited Christian for more than 20 years and have read the Bible a lot and continue to read it. As a result of having an unfettered, unbiased, open mind I have come to my own conclusions. Conclusions that people like you take personal offense at. You can believe in Jesus all you want, it's you right to do so, but stop pushing your religion upon others. I find your religion nonsense and it is rude of christians to suggest or insist that I or anyone else accept it on faith alone without making an honest inquiry into it's claims and doctrines.

  • @toyosioyejobi309

    @toyosioyejobi309

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@joseph-thewatcher I have made inquiries too and all evidence seem to point at a resurrection but my faith in christ is eventually beyond that because I understand the person of the holy spirit. Who is the spirit of God that dwells in all who accept Jesus christ. So I have 2 ways.to affirm. Logical evidence and the experience of God and his spirit. If I had only logical evidence what's not to say just like you I say I have to see the physijesus first or somehow I have to be taken to the past to see the resurrection before I belief. Nobody is shoving anything unto you. I didn't and neither has anyone I have seen here. I responded because you pasted a quite fallacious and misleading representation of The God of Israel which I felt compelled to correct. The fact that you say that shows there's something in you still struggling with the idea of God. I can "see" clearly that there has been a bit of hate towards God which led you to do some research get open to atheist ideas and eventually lose your faith if you had one. We can only share our faith it's up to you to chose or reject so quite frankly I'm shocked you decided to resort to that attack like every atheist does just attack and attack. At least you are a bit respectful I'll give you that. In any case I can only hope and pray you find the real christ again that his spirit fills you up and convict you of faith that you will belief without any doubt. It is well with you

  • @MadJDMTurboBoost
    @MadJDMTurboBoost5 жыл бұрын

    I was always under the impression that “good” is defined as “what ought to be/be done”.

  • @fikirifex1178
    @fikirifex1178 Жыл бұрын

    Great content I have come across, but my question is does Alex lock his doors at night, or should he be subjective whether or not someone might steal his laptop or borrow it forever.

  • @muhammad2219
    @muhammad22199 ай бұрын

    18:04 Why do we do Good? 1- God told u how to behave. 2- why do u do what God commands? 3 points - He created your eyes your body etc. That u wouldn't sell for a thousand or etc. He gave u them for free What he asks for u to in exchange is to just obey him. - Why would we obey him? Because of the End result Would u want hell? If u do sure go on. If u want heaven Then obey simple. - When we (Muslims) say God commanded u... God is ofc far more superior than u and I U are his servant and u should Obey Your God in everyway And for the point 1 and 2 given.

  • @rizdekd3912

    @rizdekd3912

    9 ай бұрын

    "- Why would we obey him? Because of the End result " What is the end result and why ought we to desire it? "Would u want hell? If u do sure go on." Of course no one wants to go to what most Christians/Muslims think of as hell. And while that's a good reason to do something that isn't morality...it's obedience. There's nothing wrong with that line of reasoning. If I thought I knew there was a god and knew what this god expected of me, I'd happily do it regardless if the reason is subjective as long as it didn't go against my internal sense of what is right/wrong. But the 'ought' you feel is due to your subjective fear of punishment...Fear is a subjective feeling and a subjective basis for feeling you want (not necessarily ought) to do something. And if 'fear of reprisal' is a sufficient reason, then so it my subjective feeling that I ought to behave myself because of human authority, social pressure and a feeling I have that that I want to help people when I can and I don't want to hurt people unnecessarily.

  • @muhammad2219

    @muhammad2219

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rizdekd3912 it's ok to have Subjective feelings but u can't based your feeling upon Morality.... And I don't think anyone with the right mind would want to go to hell or the fire.... God says Obey me That's Objectively Has to be done You could Subjectively say I don't want to then u chose the punishment U could subjectively say I would do it then u chose Heaven That's free will you're free of choosing between them but as a command it's Objective to obey God not obeying God would mean Objectively wrong and u would be punished or dealt with justice. And for your last point no u can't base your morals upon your Subjective understanding using subjectivity there is no good or bad do whatever u want a society could exist that Ra*e is ok and as a subjective moral is ok? Come on

  • @rizdekd3912

    @rizdekd3912

    9 ай бұрын

    @@muhammad2219 What you describe seems to be obedience, not morality. As I said, that's perfectly reasonable to obey a god and if I knew about a god and knew what it wanted me to do, I'd likely do my best to do it. But that doesn't mean I think I ought to do those thing in the sense that they are 'right' things to do, but rather out of fear of punishment or hope for reward. Do you see the difference? Do you do things because you personally feel you ought to do them and refrain from other things because you truly believe them wrong...or just to appease an angry god? Would you help your fellow man...just because you wanted to help him or because God ordered you to help your fellow man? Do you think if left to your own desires, you'd ignore him? And, since different cultures around the world all pose different details of what god wants us to do, I have no hope of ever figuring out what the right god is and what it wants me to do. A Muslim would have his set of things I ought to believe and do but those things would put me at odds of the Christian god. The Christian would have me do and believe different things the Jew would say is wrong. Judaism... something else entirely and that's just the religions that fall under the Abrahamic religions. And even within those major religions, Islam, Christianity and Judaism, there are sects and denominations each with their choice rules and following one sect would put me at odds with another sect. An atheist has no real way of knowing which god-belief is right. And if the idea is to just follow the basics that all religions agree on...I already do that.

  • @tiedeman39

    @tiedeman39

    8 ай бұрын

    Why would we obey him? Because of the end result. So, making threats, saying "do what I say or I'll torture you?" That's moral to you? That is a "might makes right" moral system that is inherently subjective. It's like if a mob boss forces you to pay protection money, unless you want the end result.

  • @muhammad2219

    @muhammad2219

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tiedeman39 1. you are literally nothing and we're nothing before he created u, he owns u.... you're his slave so you have to obey him. 2. When your mum makes u some food at least u have to thank her.... or help her around the house .. she held u for 9 months.... and her love for u is alot... Allah's love is way more than your mother's for u. 3. The end result is what YOU choose, disobedience= eternal hell and obedient= eternal paradise, u choose it... and being obedient your life would be better... like it isn't like Allah forbid good for u, he forbid bad for u. 4. "Moral"? It's about simple Logic atp, Allah created u, he is your master, so u obey. There is nothing flawed in that.

  • @SchubMa
    @SchubMa4 жыл бұрын

    I came here wondering if this was a real philosophy channel. Then he said "First I have to define morality" and I was like "yeah, alright, this is definetely the type of stuff I remember from high school"

  • @TMMx
    @TMMx5 жыл бұрын

    Craig seems to define "good" as "that which is in accordance with a god's nature." While people often accept that "we ought to do what is good," if we unpack that statement and reveal it to mean "we ought to do that which is in accordance with a god's nature," that seems far less obvious. That's a statement that is not clearly true. There's also a debate between Matt Slick and Scott Clifton in which Slick absurdly claims that a command can, in fact, have a truth value.

  • @artcoffeejeff

    @artcoffeejeff

    5 жыл бұрын

    TMM I like your comment here very much, so I'm just asking a question. (perhaps one with an obvious answer) "That's a statement that is not clearly true." Are you saying this because it's not clear what the nature of god is? If so, I agree. I'm only assuming that god exists, for the purpose of this discussion. But if god exist, it's not clear what his/her nature is, otherwise there would only be one religion.

  • @davidhatcher7016

    @davidhatcher7016

    5 жыл бұрын

    Jeff Stewart Satan?

  • @alltheworldsastage4785

    @alltheworldsastage4785

    5 жыл бұрын

    What's wrong with saying that a command can have a truth value? I don't quite get your objection.

  • @TMMx

    @TMMx

    5 жыл бұрын

    "Are you saying this because it's not clear what the nature of god is?" No, I'm saying that even if a god's nature is clear, it is not clear that we ought to act in accordance with it.

  • @TMMx

    @TMMx

    5 жыл бұрын

    "What's wrong with saying that a command can have a truth value?" A command doesn't make a claim. Only claims can be true or false.

  • @arkyudetoo9555
    @arkyudetoo9555 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this Alex, I never bought Sam Harris's objective morality ever since I've heard him talk about it. I really am strongly for subjective morality since the beginning, and with my upcoming, this really helps me learn a lot. So, thank you.

  • @tomgreene1843

    @tomgreene1843

    Жыл бұрын

    So is child abuse good?

  • @jamesjr2574

    @jamesjr2574

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomgreene1843 😂😂 they don't like to answer those questions

  • @tomgreene1843

    @tomgreene1843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamesjr2574 So it seems.

  • @stmp4160

    @stmp4160

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomgreene1843 the commonly agreed moral code says so but some people disagree. Again, it's all subjective, just because one way of logic is taken by most doesn't make it the objective truth. If most people started to believe that the earth is flat it wouldn't make the earth flat

  • @tomgreene1843

    @tomgreene1843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stmp4160 Would it be ok for some to engage in abuse ?

  • @brittanyblack9503
    @brittanyblack95032 жыл бұрын

    If granted God exists, then the answer to your question @ 17:14 minutes is simple: “Why ought we do good?” Because the “good” we do glorifies God and leads people to him to exist in eternity with him forever. The more objectively “good” done, the more people are led to believe in the Creator of good and spend eternity with him. In Christianity this is called “the great commission”. In Christianity we believe Jesus teaches people to do good to allow others to glorify God who is in heaven and seek first God’s kingdom and all else will be added to them. The reverse is also true (we ought not do “bad” because it leads away from God and eternity with him and leads others toward the same consequences). So there is indeed an objective goal to get to with objective good if God exists. So it indeed can be stated that a theist has an objective foundation for morality if theism is true.