You Can't "Act As If" God Exists

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Clip taken from Modern Wisdom with Chris Williamson: • The Ugly Decline Of Mo...
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Пікірлер: 2 600

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic24 күн бұрын

    For early access, ad-free videos, support me on Patreon: www.patreon.com/alexoc Watch the full podcast with Chris Williamson: kzread.info/dash/bejne/lId-ysONh73egdY.htmlsi=eQ3SKOWQ0XFbnATX

  • @GrahamAlanRandallMusic

    @GrahamAlanRandallMusic

    24 күн бұрын

    These were true statements. You can just believe in helping people.

  • @nigelbrown3658

    @nigelbrown3658

    24 күн бұрын

    Re 4:49 about us not having to make genuine moral sacrifices in modern society, I’d say we have gone to great lengths to hide those options from ourselves by allocating them to others especially by thinking the democratic process is a set and forget process instead of an ongoing dialogue.

  • @aspire90medo1

    @aspire90medo1

    24 күн бұрын

    obviously, you'd know if your videos aren't monetized, but I just wanted to say I didn't see an Ad in this one.

  • @aiya5777

    @aiya5777

    24 күн бұрын

    Alex, you can do anything

  • @tesmith47

    @tesmith47

    24 күн бұрын

    You WHITE folks talking to each other, if you want some different answers , how about talking with Black folks

  • @Implicit_Truth
    @Implicit_Truth24 күн бұрын

    This video came out 55 seconds ago and yet there are comments criticizing the arguments in it.

  • @jamesclerk815

    @jamesclerk815

    24 күн бұрын

    If you are one with the philosophy then you already know the argument.

  • @jeremycurle6880

    @jeremycurle6880

    24 күн бұрын

    time is relative 🤔

  • @Taylormademan900

    @Taylormademan900

    24 күн бұрын

    Bible thumper Christ insanes have a low attention span and can't handle anything in depth or put together well. Their answer to everything is "Jesus" "Pray about it." Or the dumbest one, "Get right with the Lord." WTF 😂

  • @user-soon300

    @user-soon300

    24 күн бұрын

    This is because people they do not. Change their mind about it.

  • @user-soon300

    @user-soon300

    24 күн бұрын

    By the way not all people from the same spot.for example I'm from Iraq it's different timing i think.

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn983024 күн бұрын

    The whole idea that someone can "decide" what to believe is completely insane to me. If im not convinced of something there's not much i can do about it. Do people expect me to start pretending to believe something? Cause im not going to do that. I can't see how it even works.

  • @natigrinkrug

    @natigrinkrug

    24 күн бұрын

    I spoke to a group of “spiritual” folks on my college campus today. They consistently acted as though I could simply start believing in spirituality, and a soul, etc. as if belief in this mystical supernatural thing actually makes it exist. I couldn’t get through to them that I could not possibly believe in such a thing if I am not presented with sufficient evidence for it to be true.

  • @Andres64B

    @Andres64B

    24 күн бұрын

    I know. I can no more choose to believe in their God than I can choose to believe in Santa Claus, Gremlins, or the Easter Bunny. Ask them to just start believing in Santa Claus.

  • @Archeidos-Arcana

    @Archeidos-Arcana

    24 күн бұрын

    The reason why you can't decide what to believe is because you haven't examined the fundamental nature of reality deeply enough (metaphysics and ontology). Not to say that most theists have either, but there's a lot more to Being than what we can wrap our heads around. When one sees our Beingness through MANY ontologies, metaphysics, and epistemologies, and begins to understand how some of them succeed where others fail -- and that none of them are inherently 'better' than any other -- one may then become a genuine mystic/skeptic. EDIT: Some folks seem to misunderstand what I mean by this. I'm saying you can indirectly re-wire your beliefs by simply choosing to be critical of your existing beliefs. Which is to say, when you genuinely understand that the 'map' you hold is not the 'territory' -- the things which don't sound convincing to you, will very likely change. Cognitively, you are re-wiring/re-enforcing patterns all the time, you just aren't aware of it. Which is why most people think they can't "control what they believe" and seem to think that people who CAN are acting irrationally. It's just not true; and highlights a lack of self-understanding and little self-mastery (and thus, a lack of 'wisdom', or 'meta-cognitive' capacity). Belief is genuinely extraordinarily powerful, folks -- because consciousness itself is powerful. If you don't believe X is possible -- then X will never be possible for you (full-stop). If you believe X is possible, and then engage your creativity in figuring out how you could make X happen; then X suddenly IS possible because you did it. For a long time, a man wanted to fly -- one day a man figured out how to fly (by creating a machine). It's not a matter of becoming "irrational" -- it's a matter of developing alternative forms of cognition (adopting new logics or 'patterns of cogitation'). Doxastic, paraconsistent, and constructive logics are just as valid as 'traditional logics' -- they are simply better at different things. "When you change the way you look at things, the things themselves begin to change." -- Max Planck

  • @someguyusa

    @someguyusa

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Archeidos-Arcana You're missing the point. We do not have any conscious control over what data or information will be able to convince us of something. You cannot believe something if you are not convinced of it, and you cannot choose to be convinced of something. You may choose to behave as if you believe something, but that's not the same thing.

  • @MultiAwesomered

    @MultiAwesomered

    24 күн бұрын

    Do you have any interaction with or experience of depression? Being stuck in bad positive feedback loops forces you to believe things that aren't true.

  • @SamoaVsEverybody814
    @SamoaVsEverybody81424 күн бұрын

    When people say "act as if God exists" always perplexes me. Like I've always been in a situation where my biases actually DESIRED for God to exist, but I'd mindfully act skeptically in an effort not to be fooled. Ignorance cannot be bliss if one knows they're being being ignorant

  • @nunchukGun

    @nunchukGun

    24 күн бұрын

    This. I honestly think it *is* more natural to believe in god. That doesn't make it better or right though.

  • @PopularDemand1000

    @PopularDemand1000

    24 күн бұрын

    I think you’re on dangerous ground whenever you go against what is natural, especially by your own definition.

  • @poogie_bear

    @poogie_bear

    24 күн бұрын

    I ignore the mainstream news knowing I'm being ignorant, It brings me bliss.

  • @craeted

    @craeted

    24 күн бұрын

    I think a good interpretation to consider for when people say “act as if God exists”, is how it could incentivize people to act ‘good’. If you drove like a cop was always around, you’d probably drive better. - Note: I also don’t think the statement *necessarily* implies that God exists or doesn’t

  • @jeffk1722

    @jeffk1722

    24 күн бұрын

    @@craetedyes. But the God in many “holy,” books, especially the Bible, doesn’t stand for “acting as if” to be enough. It’s supposed to be a real relationship you’d die on a cross upside-down for, right? Or get mauled for, or stabbed by a spear in India for? I consider myself BARELY even acting as-if btw

  • @cheesium238
    @cheesium23822 күн бұрын

    We're figuring out the Dr. Manhattan argument slowly. "I'm just a puppet who can see the strings"

  • @lolersauresrex8837

    @lolersauresrex8837

    17 күн бұрын

    If you can see the strings that means they’re actually there and there is something to pull on them because they aren’t loose strings, that’s for sure.

  • @nihlify

    @nihlify

    16 күн бұрын

    This is just a pointless semantical argument. Why does the strings have to be controlled by God? You could be living in the matrix, you could be living in an alien laboratory/zoo. It could just be the nature of the universe for reasons we don't know. Yet theists claim to know with absolute certainty 😂​@@lolersauresrex8837

  • @swolejeezy2603
    @swolejeezy260324 күн бұрын

    Alex is such a thoughtful dude. I know people have been saying this your entire time on KZread but we will be watching your career with great interest

  • @lucacuradossi1040

    @lucacuradossi1040

    24 күн бұрын

    Palpatine

  • @buckfozos5554

    @buckfozos5554

    24 күн бұрын

    @@lucacuradossi1040 lol, yeah you can't sneak that one in. I heard his voice too as I read it.

  • @Dialogos1989

    @Dialogos1989

    24 күн бұрын

    Phantom Menace!

  • @garrgravarr

    @garrgravarr

    24 күн бұрын

    Ew

  • @audiodead7302

    @audiodead7302

    23 күн бұрын

    He has such a young face though. His beard seems out of place.

  • @VikVaughnMISC
    @VikVaughnMISC24 күн бұрын

    I had brought this up to a Christian awhile ago. I said to them that I understand why I should believe in God if heaven and hell are a thing, but I don't know how to believe in a god. All of them could explain why I should, but none of them had advice for getting over the 'how' hurdle. Glad to see someone intelligent has the same question as I do. Makes me feel less dumb.

  • @omp199

    @omp199

    24 күн бұрын

    You: "... but I don't know how to believe in a god..." Blaise Pascal: "That is true. But understand at least that your ability to believe is the result of your passions; for, although reason inclines you to believe, you cannot do so. Try therefore to convince yourself, not by piling up proofs of God, but by subduing your passions. You desire to attain faith, but do not know the way. You would like to cure yourself of unbelief, and you ask for remedies. Learn of those who were bound and gagged like you, and who now stake all they possess. They are men who know the road you desire to follow, and who have been cured of a sickness of which you desire to be cured. Follow the way by which they set out, acting as if they already believed, taking holy water, having masses said, etc. Even this will naturally cause you to believe and bunt your cleverness."

  • @VikVaughnMISC

    @VikVaughnMISC

    24 күн бұрын

    @@omp199 Been there, done that Pascal and yet I felt nothing so L + Ratio

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    i did drugs, bro lol others claim it had the opposite effect, but you can't replace experience with hypothetical knowledge

  • @Shawn-nq7du

    @Shawn-nq7du

    24 күн бұрын

    Pray, like I did. A great book I recommend is CS Lewis' "Mere Christianity." But do pray and visit a Catholic Church and talk to a priest afterwards.

  • @chillinchum

    @chillinchum

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@omp199What if a person does not desire to believe? Why should they desire it in the first place?

  • @davec-1378
    @davec-137824 күн бұрын

    This was hands down, the best exchange I’ve seen in months, perhaps longer. Very interesting views given with useful analogies that gave clarity.

  • @easyaccessjeans
    @easyaccessjeans24 күн бұрын

    This was a very thought-provoking clip. I'm adding this to my repeat playlist so that I can think about it more often. Thank you.

  • @louisuchihatm2556

    @louisuchihatm2556

    20 күн бұрын

    Yeah right! I opened it just for it play in the background & I ended up sitting down to watch & listen.

  • @aliraza9494
    @aliraza949424 күн бұрын

    So much to learn in a mere ten minute video from you than entire playlists from so many other channels.

  • @rodgolson
    @rodgolson24 күн бұрын

    Amen, and AMEN! Thank you for this succinct and clear video. As someone who left Mormonism and Christianity in 2018 to become an atheist, I appreciate your ability to articulate these thoughts so well. The ugly political climate in the USA, especially on the right with publicly professed Christians, proves your point that many don't actually believe what they profess. Their actions - lying, cheating, and dismantling democracy for ideology - contradict scriptural teachings about gaining heaven. American Christian nationalism opposes Jesus' teachings and threatens humanity's greatest system of government. Your discussion lends credible evidence exposing the hypocrisy of those claiming religious beliefs they don't uphold. I aspire to communicate these ideas as concisely as you have.

  • @tsubadaikhan6332

    @tsubadaikhan6332

    23 күн бұрын

    Watching the current debate in America, I would imagine it's difficult to find someone to have an even tempered discussion like this with. It's probably just the internet highlighting extremes and bringing out our worst qualities when we are anonymous, but it feels like most people have staked out a position now, and will defend it, even when parts of it become ridiculous.

  • @davidcattin7006

    @davidcattin7006

    23 күн бұрын

    Yes. Social proof is strong as well, and is why, especially in small conservative towns, people all go to church. I would be willing to bet that half of them don't really believe. They go because it's the thing to do. To not go would make you different, and different is unacceptable.

  • @john-doe842

    @john-doe842

    22 күн бұрын

    May I ask why you left Christianity my friend? Were you raised in a Christian family? When you were a ”Christian” did you actually have a personal relationship with Jesus?

  • @wet-read

    @wet-read

    22 күн бұрын

    Indeed. Project 2025 cannot be allowed to be implemented.

  • @Shawn-nq7du

    @Shawn-nq7du

    22 күн бұрын

    Try the real deal - Catholicism. Mormonism is a new 19th century religion.

  • @MaxWithTheSax
    @MaxWithTheSax24 күн бұрын

    Props on the production quality and editing. Looks great.

  • @loodlebop
    @loodlebop24 күн бұрын

    Isnt it nice when Alex is invited as a guest and allowed to speak

  • @JeffBedrick
    @JeffBedrick24 күн бұрын

    When you finally get around to removing all the clutter from your attic, your first thought should not be: "now how can I fill it up again with more clutter?"

  • @sababaratashvili8629

    @sababaratashvili8629

    24 күн бұрын

    *Looks at modern era Suuuuure.

  • @InigoMontoya-

    @InigoMontoya-

    24 күн бұрын

    You haven't met my wife.

  • @MrWeebable

    @MrWeebable

    24 күн бұрын

    Empty room just stays empty? No furniture implies it has no function.

  • @Hemlocker

    @Hemlocker

    24 күн бұрын

    I think this is a terrible analogy.

  • @kawasakiwhiptwo5821

    @kawasakiwhiptwo5821

    24 күн бұрын

    There is something (if you can realize it) other than clutter. You can fill it with that.

  • @JasonPSchafer
    @JasonPSchafer23 күн бұрын

    As a Christian, I appreciate this discussion. This is the problem I feel is an issue. Many Christians don't have to experience martyrdom, and we also refuse to work past our experience intellectually and spiritually. Many of us need a reason to get up in the morning, and so religion is important, but at the same time we wouldn't do the right thing even with those beliefs. It's awful. We need to be honest with ourselves with our comfort in modern society and not just keep parroting the same 20 arguments on the internet. We have a responsibility to offer something more than just absurdism and nihilism for people who do not have the minds built to handle such an existentially painful self dependent hopelessness.

  • @joeroganjosh9333

    @joeroganjosh9333

    21 күн бұрын

    A reason to get out of bed in the morning….the vast majority of people anywhere get out of bed to go and earn money. Otherwise they’re on the street and starving. The gods aren’t giving anyone their daily bread.

  • @JasonPSchafer

    @JasonPSchafer

    21 күн бұрын

    @@joeroganjosh9333 Being religious isn't about turning a blind eye to the suffering of an imperfect world. But I think you already know that. So I'm not sure what you think your comment is supposed to add to the discussion, it's really the kind of comment I've seen play out 300 times in these debates over Facebook and KZread and it's not productive. Of course people have a near term instinctive drive to survive from immediate threats, but that doesn't address the issue of their mental health in society at all. If your life is totally driven towards what Kierkegaard would call the Aesthetic life or Moral life, you eventually run into a problem of apathy or existentialism. Either the people stop caring because they realize nothing matters. Or they panic because they want things to matter but everyone around them are saying they are a fool for even daring to possibly try to make the "leap of faith". Yeah, I agree, the world is ugly as hell, I'm as cynical and Nihilistic as they come naturally, but if I don't have a present hope for the future and today. I might as well not get up in the morning and do anything, so it's better that I keep believing my "tomfoolery" as others would call it, as silly of an argument as it sounds. I couldn't be bothered to eat, sleep, or earn money if life doesn't have a reason to exist, is my entire point. Someone's always going to have it worse than me, I am painfully aware of that. You're not the first, nor the last person to point out this problem. Everything including money and the food I eat can be deconstructed. We all just choose to deconstruct things to various levels in our lives due to the usefulness of it for our own contexts.

  • @stealthh4zz4rd74

    @stealthh4zz4rd74

    21 күн бұрын

    "Many of us need a reason to get up in the morning, and so religion is important" WTF, that sounds like it doesn't matter, if you chose between hinduism, buddhism, islam or anything else!? I'm NOT a christian because it helps me "be a better person", I believe in Jesus because he is the WAY, the TRUTH and the LIFE.

  • @JasonPSchafer

    @JasonPSchafer

    21 күн бұрын

    @@stealthh4zz4rd74 you're putting a conclusion in my mouth. I'm having a discussion with other people who will not necessarily agree with us, so screaming things over and over like the paramount truths we believe don't really get us anywhere in a conversation. Of course the reason I believe in Jesus is because I actually believe he Resurrected, and that he is our only source of salvation. That he Reigns in heaven at the right hand of the Father as our source of hope in the present age. That is my point of why Christianity gives me hope. It's the only truth I know. But I don't go screaming this to people, because that isn't a productive way to converse the Good News in a world oversaturated with information. I tell it to people thoughtfully and discuss it and then surrender to God and let him do the mending of hearts. We are just the news tellers. I'm not a Universalist, but for me to just up and ignore other people have chosen different truths for various reasons and not ask "why did they do so?" Is intellectually dishonest.

  • @bobsurface908

    @bobsurface908

    21 күн бұрын

    @@stealthh4zz4rd74 I see what you did there. The problem is All the other books say literally the same things, for the same reason: "Allah/Vishnu/right living/Quezelcoatl is the Way, the Truth, and the Life - if you offend/refuse to follow (x), you'll suffer (y)." Or in other words: What if you're following the wrong sub-set of Christianity, and you should be living communally with no goods, or should be believing the Body and Blood of Christ is rather than just a celebration - or vice versa, or that Confession is the only way to be forgiven - or that it's a papist charlatanry, and you should be praying for forgiveness alone like Jesus said? What if it turns out "deeds" are actually the route to salvation instead of "faith", and if you believe but do not act, you're not treating your brothers like you want to be treated...or the other way around, and that your "faith" will drive you to carry out "deeds"...but if your deeds are seen and you're praised for them, they become valueless because God sees what is in your heart and public recognition negates it? And on and on and on. Just

  • @Berliozboy
    @Berliozboy24 күн бұрын

    That's one of my issues with the "Act as if you do" type of advice. It reminds me of critics that tear down problematic art with the sentiment "It has dangerous ideas! Well, I can read them and I'm not susceptible to them, but the masses, and think of the children! They are susceptible!" Maybe built into the critical impetus is being way to willing to sell people short.

  • @hellomate639

    @hellomate639

    24 күн бұрын

    I believe in God and I sort of take issue with Peterson framing it this way as well. It's a very noncommittal thing, perhaps. There's a related problem with the question "does God exist?" however. If God is the originator of everything, then God is the originator of origination, time, logic, paradoxes, etc. Likewise, that also makes God the originator of the concept of nothingness and the concept of reality. I've lately taken to referring to God as a sort of hyper-reality in that sense. It might seem wild, but that's ontology for you. It also means that by definition, God as a concept falls out of simple propositional logic or empirical analysis. The empiricist who lives in a perfect matrix will never know that they live in a perfect matrix.

  • @heinrich.hitzinger

    @heinrich.hitzinger

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@hellomate639Would you choose the blue or the red pill? 💊🤔

  • @hellomate639

    @hellomate639

    24 күн бұрын

    @@heinrich.hitzinger In this thought experiment, there is no red pill to free you. There is no evidence that you're in the matrix, whatsoever. The empiricist simply continues on in the matrix, declaring the idea that they're in the matrix to be ridiculous due to a lack of evidence.

  • @danw5760

    @danw5760

    24 күн бұрын

    I'm conflicted on it. Im close to a free speech absolutist, but I can't deny the truth that art and culture does influence the masses in a significant way, it's difficult to reconcile that truth with my ideal

  • @Berliozboy

    @Berliozboy

    24 күн бұрын

    @danw5760 i think it absolutely effects people. I take issue with the "it effects them, not me." The typical "censorship for thee and not for me" attitude.

  • @jamesbennett3521
    @jamesbennett352124 күн бұрын

    self deception is never the best alternative

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    the layers of self-deception must be so deep if you think that's even a possibility

  • @jaughnekow

    @jaughnekow

    24 күн бұрын

    It's a mode of defense

  • @TheYahmez

    @TheYahmez

    24 күн бұрын

    Vedic Maya; Subjectivity is ~"Illusory"~ For many (if not all) 'The Self' is contingent upon Self Deception. Our ordinary modes of being are interdependent with pretense. God, the sanctity of human life & rights to things such as property ownership & self determination are about as real as money.

  • @UnstoppableFloridaMan

    @UnstoppableFloridaMan

    24 күн бұрын

    Yet if you take your truth what do you get. Utter meaningless and nihilism. If you truly believe that to be the way things are do not want to delude yourself with life why live it at all? You see how dangerous and depressing this way of thinking is?

  • @jaughnekow

    @jaughnekow

    24 күн бұрын

    @@UnstoppableFloridaMan you lose either way?

  • @tychostation2423
    @tychostation242323 күн бұрын

    Oh wow. I come from a creationist household. At least while growing up. Alex is a wonderful human being. Glad to see him and Chris having a chat!!

  • @MadMathMike
    @MadMathMike24 күн бұрын

    5:15 I believe them too, Alex, but another reason to consider might be growing *discomfort*, particularly due to a lack of economic security. It is certainly easier to be generous (or not selfish) when your needs are well met. Of course, we don't have a previous poll by Mr. Beast asking this question, so I suppose we can't really say if things have changed at all. 🤔

  • @bennettfloyd2715
    @bennettfloyd271522 күн бұрын

    We cannot choose what we do or do not believe. What we CAN choose is the degree to which we’re willing to scrutinize or investigate our beliefs. But we cannot choose our beliefs in and of themselves.

  • @farrider3339

    @farrider3339

    22 күн бұрын

    Straight to the point. I agree. Most people fail to realise

  • @IanM-id8or

    @IanM-id8or

    22 күн бұрын

    @@farrider3339 Most THEISTs fail to realise that. The vast majority of atheists get it

  • @David-dv2lb

    @David-dv2lb

    22 күн бұрын

    what's this based on? completely untrue.

  • @mandatory055

    @mandatory055

    22 күн бұрын

    If we cannot choose what we believe, how can we choose our attitudes towards how far we investigate our beliefs?

  • @princeicykeybord

    @princeicykeybord

    21 күн бұрын

    @@mandatory055the way you relieve yourself of bias is by seeking understanding of the other side. You can’t choose your biases but you can choose how you go about them. This doesn’t always change biases or beliefs, rather allows the possibility of understanding.

  • @360.Tapestry
    @360.Tapestry24 күн бұрын

    the other day i mentioned something along the lines of: wow, these comments seem to present this opinion. five guys in a row jumped on and tried to put me down for taking youtube comments seriously - and yet none of them, not even one, had anything substantial to say.... it didn't make me feel bad for me, it made me feel bad for them🤷‍♂

  • @ghoulish6125

    @ghoulish6125

    24 күн бұрын

    There are very few places on the internet, let alone a comment section, where intellectual and honest conversation take place. You’re essentially exposed to the wasteland of human populations where Critical thinking skills, reading comprehension or desire to learn might be an absolute 0 at times

  • @MultiMustafa7

    @MultiMustafa7

    24 күн бұрын

    Since I have nothing of substance to say, I might as well look for something to compliment. Let's see here.... Nice profile picture!. Is that a Chinese Dragon?

  • @troyzieman7177

    @troyzieman7177

    24 күн бұрын

    Of all the challenges we face as a species. I can see a potential pathway to overcome them , except one . The internet . Theoretically, having broad access to unlimited information and access to other people, literally anywhere on the planet . Should of lead to more social cohesion. We forgot that critical thinking is something we have to work at . It is not one of our naturally evolved skill sets.

  • @ghoulish6125

    @ghoulish6125

    24 күн бұрын

    @@troyzieman7177 well broadly speaking, as we have age restrictions for a lot of activities and other possible, tangible freedoms (think drinking, smoking, etc) certain websites simply have to be gatekept from minorities. At large, the internet is simply one of those age defining tools that launches our species forward, children need it, we need it. What children don’t need are the absurd videos aimed at them, social medias that cripple teens, so forth and onwards (there are several examples to list, I’m sure you can fill in the gaps). This will never happen because it will hurt some rich monopolies and their bottom lines, as we are a society of profit over people, almost anywhere you look. It would be beneficial for mankind to tailor the internet in certain ways that are more tooled towards societal benefit, but I fear would deem that as some sort of freedom killing, commie talk.

  • @troyzieman7177

    @troyzieman7177

    24 күн бұрын

    @ghoulish6125 the problem with regulating the internet is their will never be a human being qualified to do it . Similar to censoring anything like speech for example . The internet can be a tremendously beneficial tool and for me what it requires is a complete retooling of the educational system . From kindergarten to university there should be required training in critical thinking , and skepticism. We need to teach people how to think not what too think . If people could for the most part, rationally sift through volumes of information and control their individual biases . Then the internet could be a mostly upside tool . The problem is people gravitate too their bias. The internet allows you to confirm every opinion and whim you have . Then you are open to believing anything

  • @RorinoTheGreat
    @RorinoTheGreat24 күн бұрын

    I act like a Christian to appease my parents but it is perpetually low stakes. They have only pressed me on it twice, and I only convinced them by the slimmest of margins, and I would consider that medium stakes at best. If I were in a high stakes situation, or otherwise was forced to act like I was a Christian at all times, I sincerely doubt I would be capable

  • @jamesdean5095

    @jamesdean5095

    24 күн бұрын

    You wouldn't be capable, for sure. My parents and I avoid the issue out of mutual respect - the last thing I would want is to hurt them, and having grown up Christian I understand the nature of that hurt. It's no challenge to me to keep my beliefs low key in order to not hurt my parents. That being said, I absolutely would not lie if asked. That's where the 'mutual respect' element comes in. They know I don't believe, it's self-evident. But we don't need to talk about it. It's worth considering how YOU want to live though. You shouldn't have to present a lie; to not be who you really are. As mentioned, if pressed I could not lie. I believe this is bad for the soul. Embrace your beliefs and don't be ashamed of them. Your parents are adults - they can handle it. They can handle you.

  • @edivaldobarbosa3709

    @edivaldobarbosa3709

    22 күн бұрын

    ​@@jamesdean5095 honestly i would lie just to avoid discussion, when taking inconsequential lies into account my peace of mind is prioritized over overall honesty

  • @dannyhernandez265

    @dannyhernandez265

    19 күн бұрын

    There’s only so much you can lie about. After a while, I think you have to tell them. It’s like someone feeding you a food you don’t like all the time, but you keep eating it anyways.

  • @jeronimo196

    @jeronimo196

    11 күн бұрын

    No worries, most christians also act like christians at low stakes situations and only some of the time. Shouldn't be that hard to fake, really. Low stakes, high stakes - most people usually do what they want to do and find justifications/ask forgiveness later.

  • @monkeydonk3925
    @monkeydonk392524 күн бұрын

    Petitioning for Alex to have a conversation with Forrest valkai. I think that would be a phenomenal discussion

  • @Bigstank7420

    @Bigstank7420

    24 күн бұрын

    Forrest is political hack everything he says is exactly what the woke liberal party want him to say.. he doesn’t have a signal opinion that differs wich is not interesting to me at all

  • @DionysusBrew

    @DionysusBrew

    24 күн бұрын

    Two of the best!

  • @MattCrawley_Music

    @MattCrawley_Music

    24 күн бұрын

    I'm not sure, I can't imagine there being much chemistry.

  • @jamesbennett3521

    @jamesbennett3521

    24 күн бұрын

    what would they disagree on? qualia, maybe? the realness of one's own experience of, say, the color red? regardless, I would watch it. two very investigate, skeptical minds would be a good time!

  • @Bigstank7420

    @Bigstank7420

    24 күн бұрын

    Forrest is a woke political hack with no original opinions he would offer nothing to the conversation

  • @witsemxx7837
    @witsemxx78376 күн бұрын

    One moment in my life (like 4 years ago) I was so aware of free will not existing, that I had out of body experiences. So I would be talking to some one and constantly be thinking that what I came up with to say and do was completely out of my control, this made my conscious part to be observing my acting self. When I stopped "over" thinking it went away, now I live in the moment and accept my feelings and other peoples feelings as the basis to live on, its nice!

  • @scottymeffz5025
    @scottymeffz502524 күн бұрын

    That was brilliant. Thank you.

  • @clarklawlor419
    @clarklawlor41919 күн бұрын

    People often conclude that "no free will" means that nothing they do matters, therefore they shouldn't put any effort into directing their own life. But the conclusion should be that we should be more empathetic about others' decisions and situations, and we should program society (and our own lives) in order to influence our internal algorithms to make better decisions, rather than relying on the old tools of retribution for crimes and sheer "will power" for motivation. Perhaps we need to frame the "no free will" argument differently in order to influence a better reaction to it.

  • @thelordz33

    @thelordz33

    4 күн бұрын

    The fact that there is no discernable difference between a world in which free will exists and one where it doesn't should be all that is needed to be said. What difference does it make if free will exists or not?

  • @clarklawlor419

    @clarklawlor419

    4 күн бұрын

    @@thelordz33 I mean, true, whether it exists or not shouldn't make any difference. But if the way we *talk or think* about it effects how we act in a negative way (i.e. causes us to disengage from life or feel a loss of control) then maybe there are better ways to discuss or think about it. Most discussions I hear about it tend to devolve into semantics, and leave people wondering "what now?" The truth is that our minds do process information and make decisions. We are biological machines that process inputs and react according to our biological algorithms. The fact that we are aware of this process as it happens gives us a sense of control. We could argue that this sense of control is part of the programming of our minds, and we shouldn't reject that "sense of control," because doing so would disrupt the algorithm. The fact that we have no "control" over this programming at a deeper level shouldn't impact whether we engage the program.

  • @joannware6228
    @joannware622815 күн бұрын

    Daily Verse "But I say to you, love your enemies, and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your heavenly Father, for he makes his sun rise on the bad and the good, and causes rain to fall on the just and the unjust." - Matthew 5:44-45

  • @gr42eg
    @gr42eg23 күн бұрын

    Wonderful dialogue. The exchange on the literally true and figuratively false (and its inverse) can be a useful heuristic for investigating for interrogating the growing number of ethical choice that modern science is bringing forward.

  • @rodtaubman7772
    @rodtaubman777224 күн бұрын

    Gold. Love this clip.

  • @zachr755
    @zachr75524 күн бұрын

    Incredible, Alex! One of the most intellectual clips on KZread, and the whole podcast episode is phenomenal as well!

  • @wonderpeter5231
    @wonderpeter523124 күн бұрын

    Alex, first off: you're one of my favourite KZreadrs. One of the things I've really heard you ponder about in the last couple of years is the apparant impossibility of 'deciding to believe' something without proof. Perhaps you already knew this, but I wanted to share my perspective with you. I believe in God. Am I rationally convinced that he's out there? No. I am very honest a out that. But I say I believe however, because in this case, believing (for me) means really wanting, hoping and trusting that he's there. I've been in bad places, mentally throughout my life. For me at some point, my skeptical side has lost the battle against my emotional side. Just on the religious front, I seem to say to myself: "Sure. I'll allow myself to believe in this without evidence", because rationally I seem to understand that I need it. Again; perhaps you've already heard perspectives like this, but perhaps it opens up a new idea of how a person can in some way 'decide to believe' something without proof.

  • @nathanmaxey2966

    @nathanmaxey2966

    2 күн бұрын

    Ah yes, belief in belief.

  • @futureboy7653
    @futureboy765324 күн бұрын

    A great example of how our greatest difficulty remains properly taking criticism. The whole "critic" vs "proposer" paradigm, while interesting for abstract discussion an about civilization's trends and periods of greater criticism vs proposing, doesn't really match reality. Everyone is able to do both, to varying degrees at various times. We are all examples of Alain de Botton's "Wild Hope-filled Optimist", critiquing what we see as sub-optimal in our hopes of reaching the more optimal, and proposing new ideas when we have them and think they're good. There will always be things we can improve, and therefore always a need for successfully processing valid criticism.

  • @LarryJ2022
    @LarryJ202211 күн бұрын

    The human experience isn't entirely logical. We can see, hear, and feel things that aren't there. We can indulge in delusions, fail to understand logic and science, make unhealthy choices purely for pleasure. If trying to please a god that logically cannot exist brings you happiness, do it. If that bothers you, do something else, but nobody can find your purpose in life for you. You are responsible for your own happiness.

  • @christopherchilton-smith6482
    @christopherchilton-smith648224 күн бұрын

    So well put. The only part of my experience that has changed by knowing there is no such thing as free will is how harshly I hold people to account for their actions *in reflection* The stories my brain generates when reflecting have been fundamentally altered by this knowledge and I think that's about it.

  • @mindlander

    @mindlander

    24 күн бұрын

    Think there is a difference between us and a rock? Will wise..

  • @loomismeister
    @loomismeister24 күн бұрын

    @5:00 Why are we assuming that people 1000 years ago wouldn't push the same button for the equivalent of $1M? I'm pretty sure peasants would be slamming that button for castles all day long, regardless of how devout the populations are.

  • @MichaelDeHaven

    @MichaelDeHaven

    24 күн бұрын

    We're better at remembering negative things than positive things. We then often improperly generalize based on that. It's a useful survival strategy. But it definitely has its downside in a modern, especially social media, world.

  • @scrapanimation3813

    @scrapanimation3813

    24 күн бұрын

    I think they were specifically refering to people already pretty rich, wanting to press the button. Iam not that sure though

  • @willmosse3684

    @willmosse3684

    23 күн бұрын

    Yeah. Medieval Europe at least was a rough place, with violent death rates significantly higher than they are now. I see no reason at all to think that medieval people would press that button any less than modern people.

  • @martifingers

    @martifingers

    15 күн бұрын

    I see what you mean of course but perhaps this is more about what sort of morality is being practised ie maybe the same would be true 1000 years ago but maybe the peasants would not claim to be acting morally or perhaps might change their choice when reminded of the eternal punishment that might result. Is that true today?

  • @johnjacquard863
    @johnjacquard86315 күн бұрын

    i appreciate your channel fine sir blessings!

  • @brianmoren3780
    @brianmoren378024 күн бұрын

    Funny how most pretend we don't ''act as if'' all the time. We do. All the time.

  • @KoopstaKlicca

    @KoopstaKlicca

    24 күн бұрын

    Perhaps too anecdotal but a good example of this is dealing with depression with my therapist. I had a pretty unshakeable idea that things can't get better and that I'm doomed to depression but my doctor simply asked that I would "act as if depression is changeable" and I'm doing a lot better now with time and effort. When it comes to application of ideas and theories to life, sometimes it's every needed or helpful to act as if the principle is true to get everything that hinges on that principle moving, and only then do we have access to the validity of the principle

  • @NoFeckingNamesLeft

    @NoFeckingNamesLeft

    24 күн бұрын

    @@KoopstaKlicca you’re right and I think anyone who’s overcome serious mental turbulence knows and is grateful for how malleable and “programmable” beliefs actually are. We’re just not rational creatures at all and our brains are highly exploitable even to itself. I don’t know Alex at all so I could easily be very wrong, but he strikes me as someone who hasn’t gone through this particular flavor of introspection yet.

  • @KoopstaKlicca

    @KoopstaKlicca

    24 күн бұрын

    @@NoFeckingNamesLeft I do think there is a place for rationality, but yeah despite Alex not being a theist, I think he is still submitting to this idea of an "external rationality" that humans just happen to have the ability to access, rather than just another part of the brain that can be swayed like any other.

  • @jamesdean5095

    @jamesdean5095

    24 күн бұрын

    @@KoopstaKlicca In my view rationality is like logic; it's a rigid system of rules that is self-evident in its robustness. Usually what's actually disagreed upon is axioms - what do we agree on as the base of where we build that logic from. The problem with that is there's nothing to debate about - we just fundamentally disagree. I'm currently watching another long debate Alex has had with Sam Harris, and my constant thought the whole way has been: you disagree on axioms. They cannot be debated because they are fundamental beliefs. You just disagree, and that's it.

  • @bike4aday

    @bike4aday

    23 күн бұрын

    @@jamesdean5095 That's a good point. And without recognizing that the disagreement is fundamental, it leads to endless circles of trying to prove the axioms with the model to convince the other which simply cannot happen because as soon as the model questions it's own axioms it invalidates itself.

  • @mertonhirsch4734
    @mertonhirsch473424 күн бұрын

    I think we should let the theists in our lives remind us to regard other people in our lives as having a value that can not be materialistically and pragmatically mathematized, and we should let the atheists remind us that we don't need fear of eternal punishment or hope of reward to treat people that way.

  • @heckingbamboozled8097

    @heckingbamboozled8097

    24 күн бұрын

    That's cool and all if you don't care about finding out what's actually fundamentally true

  • @ZhangK71

    @ZhangK71

    24 күн бұрын

    Human beings are always going to be irrational to some extent-even atheists. They are going to be just as likely to like and value and feel compassion (or hate and feel bloodlust) towards some people without a ready-made “mathematical” reason internally or even one that can be later mathematized in a “computational-psychology” PhD’s office. Alternatively, you could also argue that treating people well-at least according to the Abrahamic model-is an implicitly mathematical assessment. The reward for doing so is positive infinity while the punishment for not doing so is negative infinity. And then the claim is that each individual act of grace and sin is added up, which means each of them is positive or negative infinity divided by whatever number of total such acts in life… and we know infinity divided by whatever number is still infinity.

  • @dylanboczar999

    @dylanboczar999

    24 күн бұрын

    I agree, but also, I was not raised religious in any way shape or form, am a pretty rigorous empiricist, etc, and yet still have a deep-seated core feeling that other people have a sort of sacred value. I really don't think you *need* religion to feel that.

  • @ShmoeBoe

    @ShmoeBoe

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@dylanboczar999 Why do you think people have sacred value? It just sounds you're religious with a thick facade of empiricism.

  • @Alkeeros

    @Alkeeros

    24 күн бұрын

    @@ShmoeBoe it's called "empathy." I seem to be an accident of the universe (I see no compelling evidence of a mind behind creation), but I still feel pain and pleasure, and can think. Other people are also capable of thought, pain, pleasure. So I should not act in a way that causes pain, if I can help it. And I have to trust others generally feel the same way. Nothing supernatural required. Imagine if people claimed you needed to be religious to enjoy tasting food. So when someone says "I can't articulate why I like the taste of cherries rather than blueberries, but I do!" someone said "but why do you prefer one taste? Surely you're just religious and afraid to admit it."

  • @sunflare8798
    @sunflare879824 күн бұрын

    You are so much younger than Peterson, and so much better... Way more articolate, precise and knowledgeable, truly impressive. Keep getting better Alex, we need young people like you

  • @BruceWayne-ri4wr

    @BruceWayne-ri4wr

    24 күн бұрын

    I will go and tell you right now that within 5 years the cosmic skeptic here will be a bible-believing Christian he'll be a Catholic like me but I just about guarantee you you can tell he's heading in that direction he doesn't really believe atheism I don't know how anybody can be an atheist if you really start to sit and think about it there's no way that atheism is true it's clear that God exists you can argue about how he interacts in our life from now to the cows come home but he clearly exists I don't know how anybody could see otherwise

  • @michaelhart1072

    @michaelhart1072

    24 күн бұрын

    Articolate 😂 ironic. Alex isn’t better than Peterson. They’re just very different and fulfil different needs

  • @hellomate639

    @hellomate639

    24 күн бұрын

    Peterson is the tip of the iceberg for what's coming. He's merely a harbinger.

  • @stefus97

    @stefus97

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@michaelhart1072nah, he s pretty much better than Peterson, which in itself isnt saying much..

  • @adammills9063

    @adammills9063

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@michaelhart1072 very true, Peterson speaks for those who think talking blabbering crap makes for a good argument.

  • @natanbridge
    @natanbridge22 күн бұрын

    I wish I could have a direct dialogue with Alex about some related issues. There is quite a bit of cognitive and epistemic space between confident belief and confident disbelief. And, in that space, more than one attitude is possible. I have found, in the context of my own meditation practice, that it is possible to have an openness without positively believing. And that openness doesn't necessarily remain static. In meditation, that openness can lead to certain results. Those results are not necessarily epistemic conclusions - where one comes to believe something with a high degree of certitude. But the results can, nevertheless, feel significant, efficacious, and pertinent to my values, outlook, attitudes. Regarding free will, there is such a thing as "compatibilism," right? One doesn't have to embrace Chisholm's "unmoved-mover" libertarian free-will agency in order to believe in a certain sort of capacity to choose and to control - a capacity that may be compatible with determinism. Regarding the relationship between religious belief and values, I want to ask the following question: what about putting something above your own individual self-interest and the self-interest of those who are closest to you? Alex gave the thought-experiment example of the people who could make a selection that made them rich but involved the extermination of some random innocent person. What about the following example: you could make a choice that would guarantee the flourishing of yourself and those you love: but it would entail the complete annihilation of the human race in a century. How do people commit themselves to a value-system and ethical-system that requires them to put some greater interest above their own ultimate personal interests and above the ultimate interests of those who are closest to them? I am not asserting that some sort of religion is necessary for this; but it certainly seems as if something like religion might be helpful in this regard.

  • @AnnaMcKinnon-nw3lx
    @AnnaMcKinnon-nw3lx24 күн бұрын

    I have been thinking recently about how we are to act in accord with the truth if it is true that free will doesn't exist. Alex, you say that you 'just don't know what that looks like' - I tend to agree, but the issue could definitely be explored (unfreewillingly!). But let us assume, as I'm inclined to, it's impossible to conceive of a life lived in accord with the truth that free will doesn't exist. Doesn't it follow that your principle that we should live in accord with the truth is not a possibility and that we do need to make utilitarian judgements (ie in this case to live as if we have free will). If that then is true, shouldn't we be more open to living with other propositions that are not true but net positive from a utilitarian perspective. And more broadly, if there is no free will, isn't what you have to say (or any of us have to say) largely academic in terms of outcomes for humanity etc? What will be, will be so what is the point of one's engagement? You get the point I'm sure. Would love your thoughts or further exploration of this topic at some point.

  • @InigoMontoya-
    @InigoMontoya-24 күн бұрын

    When I had my brain tumor removed, I didn't look to have it replaced with something else.

  • @nicholasjohnson4402

    @nicholasjohnson4402

    24 күн бұрын

    Clever. But it's not apples to apples.

  • @jackcleary1879

    @jackcleary1879

    24 күн бұрын

    You might seek serotonin elsewhere if the brain tumour removal caused you to go into a severe depression

  • @yonaoisme

    @yonaoisme

    24 күн бұрын

    people will have a religion-shaped hole in their mind after leaving religion, rather than realizing that the hole was never there

  • @jaijaiwanted

    @jaijaiwanted

    24 күн бұрын

    @@nicholasjohnson4402we’ll see. The analogy could be very accurate.

  • @XRamenmaX

    @XRamenmaX

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@yonaoismewhen I left my religion, I did not have a religion shaped hole afterwards, I had a community-shaped hole, and in most parts of the world Churches have built a good strong community. Causation does not equal correlation.

  • @zhizn_snake
    @zhizn_snake24 күн бұрын

    When I dropped my religion, I felt it right to naturally trust in science instead. 🤷‍♂ Been working fine for me. And no I don't see science as the same as religion nor follow it like a religion. But all science isn't cold facts and numbers, there's also the science of the mind - studying psychology for instance. Just because we don't believe in a "soul/spirit" doesn't mean we don't believe in things like "feelings" anymore or the concept of the "self", we just know it's something of the mind and not in literally "the soul" or " the heart". We can have stories and ideas about good/bad, right/wrong without believing in mythology or dogma. We can even create and take part in social rituals or traditions without having to believe in myths (look at birthdays, Halloween, New Years Day, eclipses even). Why the need to believe that a god is watching you to judge your actions? Why isn't your own conscience and principles, even a sense of duty to your loved ones and society, enough to live up to that you need a god to fear instead? Many religions also argue that "god" is all around is and in everything, just take that literally... the idea that we should literally treat each other and nature as if "god" is present in them actually seems beyond the actions I've seen from most religious people. Hell, just replace "god" with "stardust" and you're actually being factually correct. Stardust may have, in part, created everything, but it's not omnipotent and omniscient, it's even better because rather than it being something beyond our realm of understanding, it's actually easier to understand and relate to as we are all made of the same thing, so rather than "fear" it like a "god" we should respect it and see it as part of ourselves.

  • @jordandthornburg

    @jordandthornburg

    24 күн бұрын

    Why would a sense of duty be something real and not also a delusion if atheism is true? It seems like it is. It is consistent with theism to think you have moral duties to your fellow man that you "ought" to fulfill and if you dont, you are wrong. I dont think that is consistent with atheism.

  • @newme1589

    @newme1589

    5 күн бұрын

    Your first phrase shows you behave to science, like a religion, do not do that ! "Dont trust science", question everything, read the studies, see how they are done, focus on your personal experience, dont take it as truth because "science says so"

  • @nelly5954
    @nelly595424 күн бұрын

    You should consider interviewing Rhett McLaughlin or Link Neal, from Good Mythical Morning. Both are former evangelical Christians with an amazing story of leaving their faith- Rhett especially is very engaged in the philosophical/theological literature surrounding it. It's a bit out of left field, but it would be really interesting.

  • @jmerton8362
    @jmerton836224 күн бұрын

    There are those that curse the darkness and those that turn on lights.

  • @williammcfarlane6153
    @williammcfarlane615324 күн бұрын

    It's not that they've gotten too comfortable but more of a philosophy of "out of sight, out of mind"... Very few people will say that they wholeheartedly support child labor, but many are not willing to give up benefits that they receive from child labor... 😬

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    have you ever read "the ones who walk away from omelas"? it's a short read

  • @chaotickreg7024

    @chaotickreg7024

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@360.TapestryHave you been watching Big Joel. He's a big Joel.

  • @momchi98
    @momchi9824 күн бұрын

    9:20 is my favorite part. I've seen how the more I try to be objective the less I like life. It's bleak, it's dull, it's uncaring. This is not reality's problem, but my human brain's problem. The brain on average just does not like objective reality, only as long as it's useful and/or makes us feel good or makes our lives better. The moment a grim reality comes around my brain wants to have children less and less. So far that eventually I became an antinatalist, I truly don't want and never will (hopefully I don't succumb to stupid emotions), because I know how painful life can be and how many people, including me like to escape it to actually get to enjoy it. This doesn't mean all of reality sucks obviously, just like nature is cruel and unforgiving it can be beautiful and calming. Just going for a walk in a forest, walking through old wooden bridges through small rivers makes life more majestic. All I am saying is on the whole the more I think about existence the less I value it. I can't know what I will do in reality, but if the news told me in a week a giant meter will wipe out all or almost all of humanity I won't truly grieve or be sad. I am not invested in life anymore as I once was. I will talk to my family, tell them how much they mean to me and try to calm them down because I know they will take it much worse.

  • @strider_hiryu850

    @strider_hiryu850

    24 күн бұрын

    yes the confronting of the nature of reality can very quickly embitter the heart. this is the dilemma. blue pill, or red pill. do you continue to live in happy lies, ignoring the depressing reality. or do you take it head on. either crumbling under its weight, or rising above. >"just like nature is cruel and unforgiving it can be beautiful and calming" it's simultaneously a horror flick, and a romance drama. the duality of man is a mere reflection of the duality of nature. >" I am not invested in life anymore as I once was. I will talk to my family, tell them how much they mean to me and try to calm them down because I know they will take it much worse." oh no. don't tell me you're legitimately considering committing, what the Japanese call Harakiri. please seek help, call a help line, listen to your family when they tell you not to. please

  • @ewfvds8036

    @ewfvds8036

    24 күн бұрын

    What do you mean when you say it's bleak and dull? I mean, compared to what? If you know what something is to be dull then you certainly know what it is when things are not, or else you have nothing to differentiate it with. I hate when people say such things. Like, "Things are meaningless." Oh, you mean when they don't currently hit the mark whereby you would experience something to be meaningful? Things can't be inherently meaningless when you're body is already programmed to know what it is for things to be meaningful. Everywhere people are always whining about not caring about anything anymore. It's almost gotten to the point where it borders on evil: meaning people no longer care about the world ending. With SO MUCH history, knowledge, developments in art, in music, in morals; people who've put their lives in wars - for their countries or to protect their values. DULL!? l Try new experiences, go outside, learn a new language, read Shakespeare, learn an instrument, defy anxieties, stop using social media, stop using porn; or better yet, go and find a rock about half your weight, carry it for as long as you can, and when you can no longer, place it somewhere higher than where you picked it up: All this bullshit about not being to enjoy the one and only thing you've ever participated in, I mean It's the most single dullest thing I hear about.

  • @brianmoren3780

    @brianmoren3780

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@ewfvds8036The way you dismiss these very real depressive feelings is also dull.

  • @billpetersen298

    @billpetersen298

    24 күн бұрын

    Yes, there was a clip of a child in absolute terror. Saying, this is the end, over are over again. From during the eclipse. A reminder, of how primal we can be, and were. There has to be a god. Because it’s just too much for us.

  • @j8000

    @j8000

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@billpetersen298i mean, so what? Being afraid during an eclipse isn't the sum total of life. It's certainly not proof of the divine. That child will also play and run and laugh so much it hurts. Sure, bad things happen, but and this is crucial, good things happen too.

  • @Specialeffecks
    @Specialeffecks22 күн бұрын

    In addition to irrigating deserts how about the cleaning out of/not ignoring the garbage, rather than the cutting down of forests? Also, there are degrees of pushing a button, so a random person ends for $1 million: from someone in irreversible pain who wants to avoid the agony of his imminent demise and begging for it, to a heathy someone in front of their loving family. Details, please.

  • @camtheman3x6
    @camtheman3x622 күн бұрын

    Provocative title, good discussion :)

  • @cannibalgrape9863
    @cannibalgrape986324 күн бұрын

    There is an argument that a society needs three types of peoples; creators, preservers, and destroyers. The critic is the destroyer and are a necessary thing in a society, for they clear room for the creator to create.

  • @jackkrell4238

    @jackkrell4238

    24 күн бұрын

    Well said, buddy. Also, Alex seemed to insinuate that a critic and a creator are fundamentally distinct, but if A and B are the only options and A is destroyed, than B must be the only option left( Obviously things aren't quite as binary as this example.)

  • @DarkMatter2525

    @DarkMatter2525

    24 күн бұрын

    Does that come from the Hindu gods Brahma (creator), Vishnu (preserver), and Shiva (destroyer)?

  • @cannibalgrape9863

    @cannibalgrape9863

    24 күн бұрын

    @@DarkMatter2525 That's just one culture that embraced the idea and included it in their religion. European pagan renewal cycle myths were also similar.

  • @ttte123

    @ttte123

    24 күн бұрын

    This is interesting because the Gods of Hinduism represent these traits. Brahma is the creator, Vishnu the Sustainer and Shiva the destroyer.

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    even by refusing to play by the rules of the matrix, we're all just serving the matrix

  • @Bella_Malk
    @Bella_Malk24 күн бұрын

    Hhhm... today I will \

  • @davidsalts
    @davidsalts24 күн бұрын

    The thing about free will is that it's actually a category mistake to put it up against determinism. The alternatives when thinking about how the universe works are deterministic or random (non-deterministic). "Free will" is the name we have given to an observed phenomenon. You can think of it like this, a system that is too complicated to predict must be treated as if it is chance, whether it is or not. When it comes to the human brain, we call this "free will".

  • @willmosse3684

    @willmosse3684

    23 күн бұрын

    I’m not sure that works. I agree that “a system that is too complicated to predict mush be treated as if it is chance”. But chance means random. When people say they have free will, they don’t mean that their behaviour is random. They mean that there is some way in which they rationally choose a course of action, not that it is a dice role beyond their control.

  • @user-lz3io7dx1b
    @user-lz3io7dx1b20 күн бұрын

    Atheism is often misunderstood. It's not so much a belief in the absence of something as it is a lack of belief in gods or deities. One can lean towards agnosticism, hovering around the belief that there's likely nothing beyond our understanding. Humanity's cultural and religious backgrounds shape our perceptions profoundly. Religious teachings instill either fear or love; for instance, the teachings of Jesus emphasize forgiveness and compassion. However, the ultimate nature of life and existence remains elusive, and I'll likely be long gone before we ever uncover definitive answers. Striving to embody the virtues of compassion and forgiveness, as exemplified by figures like Jesus, would undoubtedly benefit society. Yet, human flaws such as judgment, lust, and greed persist despite religious teachings. Many turn to religion seeking guidance and structure, a fact supported by psychological research. Reflecting on my own beliefs, I remain agnostic, acknowledging the uncertainty inherent in our understanding of existence. Science, too, provides no definitive answers regarding the mysteries of life. Nonetheless, I choose to embrace moral principles, shaped by my experiences of suffering and observing others' struggles.

  • @BigHeretic
    @BigHeretic24 күн бұрын

    The solution proposed is to make decisions based in reality... come on!

  • @stephendevore

    @stephendevore

    23 күн бұрын

    That wouldn't be heresy.

  • @BigHeretic
    @BigHeretic24 күн бұрын

    How seriously can we take the answers to the hypothetical A Million $ and someone is killed, given that the question is impossible? Isn't any answer as hypothetical as the question? One can pretend to jump a dangerous gap, but does that mean that someone would do it in reality?

  • @kashperanto

    @kashperanto

    23 күн бұрын

    How is the question impossible? A super wealthy Bond villain bad guy could easily arrange for someone random to die and for you to get a million dollars. I think fewer people would actually go through with it for real, but given that people already kill each other for far less I have no doubt that many would push that button.

  • @KiltedGreen

    @KiltedGreen

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kashperantoIndeed. The president/PM whatever is supposedly prepared to push that button and incinerate a lot more than 1 person. And they don’t even get $1m for doing so.

  • @BigHeretic

    @BigHeretic

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kashperanto You're missing the point; it's a hypothetical question which makes the answer hypothetical. If you don't like this example, choose one with time travel or something which *is* impossible... how useful is any given answer?

  • @kashperanto

    @kashperanto

    22 күн бұрын

    @@BigHeretic You made it quite clear in your original comment that the fact that it was impossible was somehow relevant. But I also reject the idea that all hypothetical questions/answers are useless. They may not reflect what you'd do if the hypothetical became reality, but what you believe you'd do in that situation is still useful. For example, if anyone that I know seriously answered that they'd take the money then I would likely cut ties with them. It is certainly possible that I'd struggle to follow through on this if it became reality, but even that thought is a useful outcome of pondering the original hypothetical. But if you restrict "useful" to mean "accurately predict reality" then maybe hypotheticals are useless. But even then that would have to ignore mundane hypotheticals like "what will you do if it rains tomorrow".

  • @BigHeretic

    @BigHeretic

    22 күн бұрын

    Thank you for your thoughts. You'll notice that my OP is questioning the utility of an impossible hypothetical, idk myself; it just occurred to me that answers may only be as true as the question, which in some cases is not true at all 😊​@@kashperanto

  • @JohnVandivier
    @JohnVandivier21 күн бұрын

    Keep growing Alex. Watch this clip yourself a few more times and see the sand you stand on. “I don’t knows” and “maybes” and false contrasts abound.

  • @elizathegamer413
    @elizathegamer41323 күн бұрын

    i dont know if it's intentional, but the cutoff here is perfect. "act as if you do not have free will looks like this:" then the video stops. I think its a good point. the only way to act like we have no free will is to do nothing and make no decisions

  • @someguyusa
    @someguyusa24 күн бұрын

    Alex should consider the Higgs boson or "god particle" as it was called. Scientists thought it should have one value or another within a certain LCH experiment, which would more or less prove or disprove the likelihood of a god entity. However, the results were a number almost exactly in between the two anticipated candidate values. So, if a more precise, tangible, demonstrable science in physics can be so close and yet so far away from the "true" answer to something, then it's perfectly reasonable that humans in our philosophies, religions, and spiritual beliefs can be so close and yet so far away. It wouldn't surprise me if so-called "free will" is similarly complex. And the gun being loaded is such a stupid analogy to make an argument over. It's literally a gun safety rule, not a case for how to live. It's essentially saying to not take an unnecessary risk and to avoid building bad habits in case you are mistaken or accidentally do have a loaded gun one day because it can kill someone, but Alex is basically just strawmanning that whole thing to build his case. It's rather disappointing to me because I like his ideas for the most part. He basically doesn't have an answer, but he is kind of shuffling the cups around to seem like he does. Basically acting just like the neoatheists he criticized.

  • @DundG

    @DundG

    24 күн бұрын

    You should read why the higgs boson was called god particle. It has nothing todo about the existence of god. Just google it.

  • @omp199

    @omp199

    24 күн бұрын

    I agree that Alex seemed to miss the point about gun safety. I'm not sure I get what you mean about the Higgs boson, though. Experiments aimed at finding evidence for the Higgs boson would tell you nothing about the existence or otherwise of "a god entity". The fact that silly journalists like referring to the Higgs boson as "the god particle" should not mislead you into thinking that it has anything to do with a deity. As for "free will", I have yet to be convinced that anyone discussing it has any coherent concept in mind to which to attach the term. What does it mean for will to be free? Free from what? Free from the laws of physics? The laws of physics are descriptive, not prescriptive. Scientists want to know what happens in the universe. In the hypothetical event that a person does something that seems to defy the laws of physics, all that would mean is that one or more of their supposed laws of physics was not actually a law in the first place.

  • @jjkthebest

    @jjkthebest

    24 күн бұрын

    I think I'm missing the point too then, because the gun analogy seemed to hold up in my eyes. You act as if the gun is always loaded when the bad outcome can only occur when it is loaded, but the moment the good outcome requires the gun to be loaded, you're gonna make sure to act in accordance with reality. If you relate the question in the title, you can act as if god exists when it is the safe thing to do, but when acting as if god exists requires you to make serious sacrifices, the person who doesn't believe in god isn't gonna do that.

  • @someguyusa

    @someguyusa

    15 күн бұрын

    @omp199 I'm not saying the boson has to do with God. My point is that the value scientists discovered was almost exactly between their predictions. So if they can get it wrong and be baffled, so can philosophy thinkers. It doesn't mean he's right or that others are dumb. It means the topic is difficult and complex.

  • @someguyusa

    @someguyusa

    15 күн бұрын

    @@jjkthebest I already explained myself. You can't apply a physical safety rule to a philosophical point like that. It's apples to oranges and is stupid to do so.

  • @Rathe6
    @Rathe624 күн бұрын

    Whether or not one has free will has to be anyone’s most fundamental belief. If we don’t, nothing said or done by anyone matters. It simply has no significance. If we do have free will, then all the conversations that follow can happen.

  • @avatarmufasa3628

    @avatarmufasa3628

    24 күн бұрын

    Even in a world with no free will, we are part of that chain and if it just so happens that we act in accodance to what makes us live fulfilled lives, then surely it wont matter that we werent "free", we got the result we wanted?

  • @MrCmon113

    @MrCmon113

    24 күн бұрын

    Free will is complete nonsense. What you say or do matters, because it has consequences. Just like your actions have effects, they are themselves caused by prior circumstances.

  • @Rathe6

    @Rathe6

    24 күн бұрын

    @@avatarmufasa3628 If you don’t have free will, you don’t really exist. The idea of “you” or “I” is just an illusion. Without free will we’re just biological computers fulfilling our programming.

  • @Rathe6

    @Rathe6

    24 күн бұрын

    @@MrCmon113 and yet at some point today or tomorrow, you’ll feel someone ought to have done differently than they did. Even that they were wrong for not doing otherwise.

  • @avatarmufasa3628

    @avatarmufasa3628

    24 күн бұрын

    @@Rathe6 And he can do that. Just as they didnt have any choice in their responce, he can just argue he doesnt have any choice with his and consequently takes action to make sure the future leads to events in line with his goals, i guess making that future occur

  • @Sylar-451
    @Sylar-45123 күн бұрын

    Well Sam Harris has offered a pretty darn good 'what now' in his Waking Up app. By far the most helpful advice and ideas I've come across for a better life! Also it's easy for me to live without a sense of Free Will thanks to this as well. RIP Daniel Dennett

  • @willmosse3684

    @willmosse3684

    23 күн бұрын

    Yes. Secular meditation and dharma is the best non-theistic non-supernatural based option for something that can fill the hole left by religion that I am aware of.

  • @user-fo8ey1ix6f

    @user-fo8ey1ix6f

    23 күн бұрын

    People shouldn't be held accountable for their actions then.

  • @willmosse3684

    @willmosse3684

    23 күн бұрын

    @@user-fo8ey1ix6f Retributive justice should probably be reigned in, yes. But deterrence, restitution, and removal from society for the safety of others would all still be good reasons for the justice system to take action relating to removing people’s freedom or property.

  • @Sylar-451

    @Sylar-451

    23 күн бұрын

    @@user-fo8ey1ix6f Shouldn't be punished, but we still obviously need to prevent harm to others if they're dangerous. Robert Saplolski goes over this a lot

  • @bornkinggamer3347
    @bornkinggamer334724 күн бұрын

    About that poll it looks like 44.5% said they'd take the money, but it was only $10,000.

  • @cypress_piper
    @cypress_piper24 күн бұрын

    "At dawn, when you have trouble getting out of bed, tell yourself: “I have to go to work - as a human being. What do I have to complain of, if I’m going to do what I was born for - the things I was brought into the world to do? Or is this what I was created for? To huddle under the blankets and stay warm?” "So you were born to feel “nice”? Instead of doing things and experiencing them? Don’t you see the plants, the birds, the ants and spiders and bees going about their individual tasks, putting the world in order, as best they can? And you’re not willing to do your job as a human being? Why aren’t you running to do what your nature demands?" "You don’t love yourself enough. Or you’d love your nature too, and what it demands of you."

  • @NoFeckingNamesLeft

    @NoFeckingNamesLeft

    24 күн бұрын

    oh hi Marc

  • @tgrogan6049
    @tgrogan604924 күн бұрын

    I got out of bed for 40 years and went to work and I never thought about "god"!

  • @stetonwalters574

    @stetonwalters574

    24 күн бұрын

    I've gotten out of Bed And went to work for the last 33 years.And never thought about the fact that my body is made up of 7*10 Billion Adam's. But yet here I am.

  • @LURSMAND

    @LURSMAND

    24 күн бұрын

    kinda sad tbh

  • @fireside9503

    @fireside9503

    24 күн бұрын

    Ignorance is bliss

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    is that supposed to sound impressive?

  • @genericusername8337

    @genericusername8337

    24 күн бұрын

    @@LURSMAND Why?

  • @boomguitarjared
    @boomguitarjared24 күн бұрын

    The notion of free will feels quite simple to understand to me, maybe I'm missing something. Regardless if everything is pre-determined or not, you have the ability to make decisions. If you decide to do something, you can be doing that thing, whether that thing was pre-ordained or not doesn't matter at that point, because if you didn't choose to do the thing, you would not be doing it. Thus, choose what you want to do and do it.

  • @jjkthebest

    @jjkthebest

    24 күн бұрын

    I think most people mean something different when they say free will though. They mean something that specifically isn't predetermined. Now, I think that is an incoherent concept, so I'm not the best person to explain it. But I think, the idea is that if it can be predicted it isn't what they mean by free will.

  • @j.d.s.8132

    @j.d.s.8132

    24 күн бұрын

    Your choice is also predetermined, that is whats important. All your life leads up to this choice, and thus it isn't truely free and can't be viewed in isolation from the moral system you were raised with, your past experiences, possible trauma and mental health concerns. All these factors will lastly determine your choice.

  • @ryleeejay3829
    @ryleeejay382919 күн бұрын

    I often don’t understand all the language in the videos, but they’re fun and interesting to listen to

  • @seanmcmahon9217
    @seanmcmahon921724 күн бұрын

    “Living without God is not that easy. And I feel the appeal of religion in that sense.” Steven Weinberg

  • @matthewphilip1977

    @matthewphilip1977

    23 күн бұрын

    Honestly living with God (the Yahweh character from the Bible) is not that easy. And I feel the appeal of atheism in that sense.

  • @seanmcmahon9217

    @seanmcmahon9217

    23 күн бұрын

    @@matthewphilip1977 I would agree with both statements. Religion offers hope of eternal life, forgiveness, and cosmic meaning. Atheism offers no supernatural supervision, freedom, and no cosmic demands. Each has their positives and negatives.

  • @njhoepner

    @njhoepner

    23 күн бұрын

    Hmm...I find it quite easy.

  • @matthewphilip1977

    @matthewphilip1977

    23 күн бұрын

    @@seanmcmahon9217 “Each has their positives and negatives.” Yeah. But the demands on both to live HONESTLY with them are great. To really face up to either can be a challenge, to say the least.

  • @DMG380

    @DMG380

    22 күн бұрын

    I am now breaking the fourth commandment and committing a mortal sin that is apparently worse than murder. I am working on Saturday. If God existed, I would be fucked.

  • @adaptivelearner6162
    @adaptivelearner616224 күн бұрын

    Alex O'connor hasn't provided any compelling evidence that absolute Determinism is true.

  • @thomasseichter5670

    @thomasseichter5670

    24 күн бұрын

    That is true. And on top he hasn't even claimed it.

  • @TheTrueRandomGamer

    @TheTrueRandomGamer

    24 күн бұрын

    He also hasn't reconciled his treatment of others with this worldview, even if true. Morality is functionally useless under it because the child that gets an A on their test and the person who cures cancer are no more culpable for their actions than the child who cheats or the person who enacts/endorses genocide. They could never be anyone other than the people who would do those things. Empathy, consideration, and introspection now exist as vestigial organs for the human experience.

  • @camilobulla

    @camilobulla

    24 күн бұрын

    It does not need absolute determinism for free will not to exist. Even if there is a random aspect, it still does not exist. kzread.info/dash/bejne/hn1pqK-jZaefqrg.htmlsi=-RKFz6Etf4JV_Mgc and kzread.info/dash/bejne/onqbk9usepTVhdY.htmlsi=OeYaOQg04b_fanRt

  • @360.Tapestry

    @360.Tapestry

    24 күн бұрын

    you didn't have a choice whether you were going to make that comment or not

  • @tobycokes1

    @tobycokes1

    24 күн бұрын

    It's just rational for to not believe it.

  • @ManuelCampagna
    @ManuelCampagna24 күн бұрын

    So the Shap is still rampant!

  • @sicfxmusic
    @sicfxmusic24 күн бұрын

    If every wish from someone is an email, how many notifications does god receive per second and does he/she/it read and reply all of them?

  • @lrvogt1257
    @lrvogt125724 күн бұрын

    If I say X doesn't exist... why on Earth should I provide a substitute for the things others built on that false idea? If people want a substitute for a religious community then organize a non-religious community of like-minded individuals based on other common interests. Education, healthcare, social justice. Why would that be my duty?

  • @thomaspickin9376

    @thomaspickin9376

    24 күн бұрын

    It's not your reponsibility, just because you made that statement, but the point is if we're creating a culture where everyone is just 'a critic' and there's no solutions from anyone then we're not really moving forward. We'll either end up going backwards or just stay where we are. Yes it's easier to point out flaws, but coming up with solutions is what is needed and we need to encourage that from more people rather than just negativity.

  • @lrvogt1257

    @lrvogt1257

    24 күн бұрын

    @@thomaspickin9376 : I agree with that principle but I'm questioning how that works in practice. There is "being a critic" and simply pointing out that something is objectively false. I don;t think they are equal. Must I provide an alternative to there being no trolls?

  • @kappascopezz5122

    @kappascopezz5122

    24 күн бұрын

    Even if X doesn't exist, the idea of it still could have been useful for something, so if you remove it, there might be some previously fulfilled need that now has nothing left to grant it. An example would be how germ theory replaced miasma theory (the idea that sickness is caused by bad air), and then people stopped worrying about airborne diseases, causing infections to spread where there originally would have been fewer. A relatively simple solution would have been to critically assess the "metaphorical truth" of the previous theory, and see which parts were actually useful and which ones really were just useless baggage. But making that distinction is something you should do when proposing to throw stuff out.

  • @thomaspickin9376

    @thomaspickin9376

    24 күн бұрын

    ​@@lrvogt1257 I'd maybe say "being a critic" is if all you do is point out problems but never offer any solutions. No of course you don't have to offer a solution 'every' time you point out a problem with something, it's about balance. But if we encourage that culture of just picking flaws rather offering solutions, we probably won't get as many solutions as we like. Maybe in practice we should encourage people to take a step back a bit more, think "Am I adding anything new to this?", "Am I saying this in a kind or compassionate way?" or "Am I just trying to be right/win?". I'd also say in regards to stuff being "objectively false", people always need convincing, no matter what it is or how obvious it is to you. It's good to keep that in mind and the other person's perspective.

  • @lrvogt1257

    @lrvogt1257

    24 күн бұрын

    @@kappascopezz5122 I wish them well but I am not invested in some stranger’s delusions.

  • @terrencelockett4072
    @terrencelockett407224 күн бұрын

    That's also a problem that faces some of us, the need to fill a void that once was the supernatural beliefs of religion. Critiquing religions and theists' beliefs don't necessarily need a one size fits all replacement just like dating. That's the problem I see some people have with giving solutions to things they criticize or things rightfully criticized. It also seems like the problem with the lack of solutions to some problems is, we're jumping into new territory that you don't have any real parameters to gauge the possibilities of a solution. Like once you stop believing god controls and creates all morality, actually gauging what's good and bad about minute aspects of life especially when nuances are added.

  • @nicholasworsley4246
    @nicholasworsley424624 күн бұрын

    I’d be super interested in hearing you talk to Sean Carrol (physicist) about free will. You guys think about the idea of free will so differently

  • @Theactivepsychos
    @Theactivepsychos24 күн бұрын

    It’s not for atheists to give people answers it for people to find them. It’s all their in music, art, literature and now in film and TV.

  • @modernorpheus
    @modernorpheus23 күн бұрын

    "Act as if God exists." Okay. *Slaughters entire cities*

  • @HungryWarden

    @HungryWarden

    22 күн бұрын

    Technically speaking that is a moral action as God only commits moral actions and he did do that.

  • @pauls7803

    @pauls7803

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@HungryWardenor an immoral action as God only commits immoral actions?

  • @HungryWarden

    @HungryWarden

    21 күн бұрын

    @@pauls7803 I guess it could go either way. But I know one thing and that is that even if the Christian God does exist I don’t think anyone should worship that monster.

  • @pauls7803

    @pauls7803

    21 күн бұрын

    Very true

  • @Barri-rj9vt
    @Barri-rj9vt23 күн бұрын

    To say "determinism may be true" does not equate to living in accordance to the truth THAT determinism is true. At the end of the day you are not certain that determinism is true and you're placing faith in a theory. In a sense, this is no different than theists placing their faith in a deity.

  • @shadowcolossus8045
    @shadowcolossus804513 күн бұрын

    This does remind of conversations Ive almost had with myself growing up realizing that I dont believe in a God, but I believe in the values of Christianity and can identify that its good for most people to have something to believe in where i dont feel the need to correct them from my perspective

  • @MaxHarden
    @MaxHarden24 күн бұрын

    I acted as if god existed in desperation to break free of alcoholism. But really what I did was “give my problems to my higher power”, aka “accept reality”. Stopped fighting and let the universe sort things out.

  • @jaybee9269

    @jaybee9269

    24 күн бұрын

    My higher power was “weather.”

  • @user-soon300

    @user-soon300

    24 күн бұрын

    @@jaybee9269 what causes the weather

  • @martijnnvermeulen7515

    @martijnnvermeulen7515

    24 күн бұрын

    speaking of this as a higher power would, I think prove the point that religious folks are making about people not really being able to live as consistent atheists. If we are meaningless blobs of matter, there is no hierarchy. Why would ''reality'' (whatever that means) or ''the universe'' be higher than me?

  • @universecreator988

    @universecreator988

    24 күн бұрын

    @@martijnnvermeulen7515 No one ever thought that

  • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana

    @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana

    24 күн бұрын

    @@user-soon300 Why do you assume weather has a cause other than weather itself?

  • @Y0UT0PIA
    @Y0UT0PIA24 күн бұрын

    Hhhm... today I will "act as if" I'm watching this video and commenting on it... delightfully devilish

  • @joshjosh1780
    @joshjosh178024 күн бұрын

    I have known that there is not a god since I was a young child, I have also known since I was a adolescent that I don't get to choose what I want to want, but only one of those two things are manageable by my brain, or in other words, I have to eat or I die, I have to drink water or I die, and I don't get to choose if I do those things or not without having chosen to not exist anymore and I still want to exist. So please, someone inform me on how I can live without freewill, without succumbing to this life's experience of the great illusion of choice, it's honestly mind bending, but I constantly think about how it might be possible to breakout, but only total chaotic random actions would result from a person who breaks free of their determined path in life.

  • @aiya5777

    @aiya5777

    24 күн бұрын

    you don't have to do anything🤷 just enjoy the movie where you're as the main character

  • @andrewcropper2318
    @andrewcropper231821 күн бұрын

    I'm struggling to get my head around the idea that 'maybe we need to start acting in accordance with what's true' in the context of the ideas about free will and morality put forward in this clip. Granting for the sake of argument that free will doesn't exist and that morality is a social adaptation, what would it mean to act in accordance with these truths? And what practical benefit would we get from doing so?

  • @spud8137
    @spud813724 күн бұрын

    It is obviously ridiculous to state there definitely is a god, and yet equally ridiculous to state there definitely is no god. Both positions are clearly untenable.

  • @kappascopezz5122

    @kappascopezz5122

    24 күн бұрын

    The difference is that I've never actually heard the latter voiced out, without referring to which god it is that definitely doesn't exist. Because various god concepts range from tautological to logically/physically impossible, though the latter applies the most frequently when someone talks about a specific god concept

  • @tobycokes1

    @tobycokes1

    24 күн бұрын

    No one states the latter

  • @davenchop

    @davenchop

    24 күн бұрын

    master of the obvious

  • @MultiMustafa7

    @MultiMustafa7

    24 күн бұрын

    Well to be fair if there is a 'Big G' he likely would not be the Tri-Omni God.

  • @peterw3160

    @peterw3160

    24 күн бұрын

    Incorrect. There is not 50/50 probability in all things. Is it possible that an ancient Chinese teapot is orbiting Pluto? It’s possible, but it’s not likely. With no stakes you can say “well it’s possible.” But if you were asked to make a bet for a million dollars, you’d put your money on the probability that there is no ancient teapot out there. What is the probability that Zeus exists? What about Poseidon? What about Thor? What about Molech? What about Ishtar? Would you bet a million dollars on their existence? No, you wouldn’t.

  • @nelson6702
    @nelson670224 күн бұрын

    If you can have free will with God there's no logical barrier to having free will without.

  • @channelname5938

    @channelname5938

    24 күн бұрын

    A problem I see with a lot of theist arguments is that they take basic philosophical “this can’t exist without this being true” arguments, but they take the “this being true” portion and give it personhood. “For there to be laws there has to be a lawmaker.” Okay… you’re essentially stating the laws have to come from… a place??? Okay. Why does it have to come from a conscious being?

  • @heckingbamboozled8097

    @heckingbamboozled8097

    24 күн бұрын

    @@channelname5938 "because it requires a personal creator!" But... WHY?

  • @theoldpaths6897
    @theoldpaths689723 күн бұрын

    To be metaphysically correct for something to be good it must also be true. Thus, to affirm the goodness of religion necessarily (if you hold to traditional metaphysics) means it participates in the truth.

  • @tim57243
    @tim572436 күн бұрын

    It isn't clear how I would behave differently if God exists, so I can't act as if God exists. The Bible is self contradictory, so I can't act as if the Bible is true. I could act as if some self consistent subset of the Bible is true. This could come from a pastor, or the Catholic catechism (perhaps, I haven't read all of it), or analogous Mormon or Evangelical documents. Can someone point me to a Mormon catechism?

  • @njhoepner
    @njhoepner23 күн бұрын

    I would say a few things: 1) Realizing that religion is a myth does not entail a responsibility to replace it. When I take out the trash I don't immediately take someone else's trash to replace it. 2) The need to "replace it" is merely falling for the evidence-free claim that we need religion, in particular that "you can't have morality without religion." Pure nonsense. Morality predates religion...and religion does not provide anything that could rationally be considered morality. We can do better, and in fact we repeatedly have. 3) The decline of religion may have something to do with the fact that we're better off and our lives are more stable - I fail to see how that is a bad thing. I'd like to see that spread to the entire world. I think the bottom line is that Bertrand Russell was right - if something is true we should believe it, and if it is not we shouldn't believe it. Pretending to believe something because it's supposedly socially useful a la Jordan Peterson (in reality, by "socially useful" he means "it reinforces the bigotries I want imposed on the world") is just living a lie. I can't see any sense in that.

  • @ronaldbaginski

    @ronaldbaginski

    22 күн бұрын

    Better off with the decline in religion, you must be joking. Secular society around the world aborts/kills 70 million babies a year. We are allowing children to mutilate their bodies permanently in the name of transgenderism. A person can change their gender on a daily basis. Look at sam Smith, he changes his gender pronouns on a regular basis. To believe that we are better off without God and moral absolutes is nothing short of myopic.

  • @petersielski4591

    @petersielski4591

    20 күн бұрын

    wow you are so very right and correct....i am with you in all you say

  • @JamesR1986

    @JamesR1986

    11 күн бұрын

    This isn't a conversation about morality (and I would agree with you that we do not need religion to form morality) it's about meaning, and comfort and community. It's about answering the most important question of all "how do you spend your limited time on this world." I am reminded of the end of the Matrix trilogy (where the Matrix itself is a direct metaphor for religion) where the normies are not all unplugged from the Matrix, rather they are given the choice to unplug themselves from the Matrix. Thank God for that. The world outside the Matrix is harsh, brutal, hostile, and miserable. It may be "the true world," or perhaps truer, but in all other ways life inside the Matrix is superior. And maybe in the long run the people outside the Matrix will build something even better then life inside the Matrix, but that project will take many lifespans and I won't fault anyone who would prefer spending their limited time in the Matrix, rather then working on a project who's ending they will never see, and who's goals are neither defined or agreed upon.

  • @njhoepner

    @njhoepner

    10 күн бұрын

    @@JamesR1986 I won't deny that myths can be comforting, especially myths with a community of followers. If it were possible for all people, or a majority, to live in a myth without harming the rest, all well and good. I haven't seen any of the Matrix movies, but I gather that might be the case there. For us, though, the people embedded in their myths often do harm others specifically because of their myths. That being the case, I think the harsh truth would be better.

  • @samjall9216
    @samjall921624 күн бұрын

    We don’t know if there is a God

  • @jzargo1709

    @jzargo1709

    24 күн бұрын

    Profound

  • @ballisticfish1212

    @ballisticfish1212

    24 күн бұрын

    No one has ever made that point in any of Alex’s videos or comment sections.

  • @user-soon300

    @user-soon300

    24 күн бұрын

    Yes that's true but always remind yourself we are nothing towards this great universe

  • @MrGwandrin

    @MrGwandrin

    24 күн бұрын

    nor do we know if there is an Easterbunny

  • @t-rizzle0509

    @t-rizzle0509

    24 күн бұрын

    Speak for yourself.

  • @uninspired3583
    @uninspired358323 күн бұрын

    I'd push the button. But I also would have when I believed in God too. Belief doesn't have a causal role in sociopathy.

  • @1overpar
    @1overpar24 күн бұрын

    Religion purports to offer a personal relationship with all the things we don't understand... But in fact, religion offers a story that allows people to compartmentalize all the things they don't understand, and gives them a script to follow in place of developing a perspective on their place in the universe. Atheism doesn't supply a replacement for the story or the script... When faced with the realization that the story and the script are just that, it's up to the individual to figure out what that means to them. Religion offers "utility" in protecting people from the existential crisis of consciousness, and also in encouraging its adherents to follow a uniform code of belief and behavior. It's not surprising that some people prefer the story to the uncertainty... But the uncertainty is the reality of the human perspective, and no one can answer the subsequent questions for another person. If we want to be honest with one another, each of us has to look into that abyss and figure out how to come to terms with it in a way that makes their life meaningful. I absolutely support someone who chooses to follow a religion because that's what they find to be rewarding... And if that marked the boundary of religion's impact on our society, I doubt that many people would take issue with it. But we know that isn't the boundary...

  • @domepuncher
    @domepuncher24 күн бұрын

    If I am ever asked if I think God exists, I tell them "I've actually never thought about that before". Bewilderment on their faces is priceless.

  • @luckyboy9339

    @luckyboy9339

    24 күн бұрын

    And you know that is a lie.

  • @zimpoooooo

    @zimpoooooo

    24 күн бұрын

    Which God, is also a good answer.

  • @in_paradiso_58

    @in_paradiso_58

    24 күн бұрын

    @@zimpoooooo why, does that help muddy the waters, lol...

  • @domepuncher

    @domepuncher

    23 күн бұрын

    @@zimpoooooo Nah, I'm not trying to be a reddit atheist type lmao. The whole point of mine is that it's funny - never having thought about the supernatural is a much more ridiculous thing to claim.

  • @zimpoooooo

    @zimpoooooo

    22 күн бұрын

    ​@@domepuncher It's just a sensible question. Anyone asking that question will always be thinking of their own very specific god.

  • @rickwyant
    @rickwyant24 күн бұрын

    I'm sorry but the fact of existence is simply mind boggling. That's all the religion I need. The existence of the universe and my being aware of it, astonishing.

  • @mindlander

    @mindlander

    24 күн бұрын

    That's not religion. Fyi

  • @danw5760

    @danw5760

    24 күн бұрын

    You could just be a simulation so don't get too excited

  • @EphemeralOnlooker

    @EphemeralOnlooker

    24 күн бұрын

    There's been 4 thousand religions buddy. Don't act like yours is special.

  • @mindlander

    @mindlander

    24 күн бұрын

    @@danw5760 Im not. You could be..even God couldn't know if they're the ultimate being.

  • @willyphallicus9958

    @willyphallicus9958

    24 күн бұрын

    Best part is its a two way street.

  • @wingedexperience4238
    @wingedexperience423823 күн бұрын

    Whats the Marx book he referes too at 3:00?

  • @rickybaker42
    @rickybaker4223 күн бұрын

    Something I think which is relevant here is what psychologically happens to you when you play devils advocate too long. It starts to pull you away from convictions, even if you hold them very strongly. I’ve felt it happen to me: it was definitely weird and I felt a little lost for a time. But I snapped out of it when I needed to defend my original position against an absurd critique. All of a sudden I knew I believed it again. This might be hard to explain, but I think it’s kinda what happens when you defend a “theoretical” position too long. Like you don’t really believe it but you try out a thought experiment, following the logic, and look for ways to prove it wrong. But you’ve already suspended your instincts and intuitions to follow the logic, and you find yourself in limbo never being able to be convinced either way. Because at the end of the day, our instincts ultimately recognize the truth of something and we know it when we see it. This is obviously not claiming that rational inquiry is useless, only that rational inquiry should be validated/trusted when you feel that “click” inside. Not a lightbulb moment, because those can be wrong, but something deeper, something more in the heart maybe. It’s incredibly honest, doesn’t care about personal pain or sacrifice, and reinforces the deepest thing in you: that you want to be a good person. Edit: to tie this into the context of the video, the advice to “act as if it’s true” is not the same as “thinking as if it’s true”. Acting in certain ways builds habits which can become instinctual over time and start to significantly influence the way you think and believe. So to push for acting as a Christian or as if God were true might seem odious at first but will more than likely start to convince the one acting of that truth. Such that when push comes to shove, he will actually be a Christian and be prepared to face the consequences of such

  • @oguzemrekara8743
    @oguzemrekara874324 күн бұрын

    nah the critics are crazy imagine listening to him and just going "Of course you can"

  • @CatDaddyGuitar
    @CatDaddyGuitar24 күн бұрын

    "Act as if God were there"? Why stop there? Why not act as if Spider-Man actually swings around New York?

  • @FoxyGrandpa75

    @FoxyGrandpa75

    20 күн бұрын

    Well maybe because there’s a difference?

  • @CatDaddyGuitar

    @CatDaddyGuitar

    20 күн бұрын

    @@FoxyGrandpa75 what difference? Maybe more evidence that Spiderman exists?

  • @markmiller6111

    @markmiller6111

    20 күн бұрын

    Title is wrong because I’m not religious but I definitely act as though God exists. If I completely discounted the existence of God, I would have to discount the value of human life. In the same way I discount the value of animal life (not vegan), humans after all are just animals from a scientific worldview. So Alex can intellectualise this all he likes but you cant get away from the fact that we need something external to create meaning. I’ve seen all his arguments against this including Sam Harris laughable “wellbeing” argument but they all appear shallow. It’s like privileged people being blind to their own privilege. A man grows up under a society that was built with Judeo-Christian ethics, influenced by people that was influenced by people with Judeo-Christian ethics and thinks he exists in a vacuum and did it all by himself, blind the privilege that this apparent “wellbeing” nature of the people around him was shaped by something, in the west…judeo-Christian ethics

  • @CatDaddyGuitar

    @CatDaddyGuitar

    20 күн бұрын

    @@markmiller6111 why do you need something external in place for meaning? Why do you have to have something external to value human life. I don't operate that way. I don't find that I need the trappings of mythology or tradition in order to find meaning in my life. I was a Christian for many years, why would I act as if God exists when I find no evidence to validate that belief? In the search for truth why would I lie to myself?

  • @FoxyGrandpa75

    @FoxyGrandpa75

    20 күн бұрын

    @@CatDaddyGuitar there’s abundant evidence that Jesus was the son of God. Zero evidence that spider man exists. That would be the most glaring difference

  • @brendanpmaclean
    @brendanpmaclean23 күн бұрын

    I have long been of the belief that morality predates religion. Human communities developed morality as a means of survival. That morality and the comfort it provided formed a platform from which religious perspectives could grow. In summary, god is a by product of human morality. Our problem now is that religion, and therefore, by default, not just the good bits, but the corrupted, political, agenda/profit driven bits too, tries to define and even monopolise morality and it simply doesn’t work. The meaning gets twisted in the confusion.

  • @Chalkstix
    @Chalkstix18 күн бұрын

    In regards to the "Press this button, receive a million dollars, but some random person dies" thought experiment, I believe people would do it because of this extreme individualism we've developed. It's an extreme case of "I don't care about the rest of the flock as long as I'm doing good", and while there might be a higher tendency for people to feel this way now than in the 60s of 70s where the communal and cooperative spirit blossomed, it's definitely not something new. As far as we can trace back, humans have been taking advantage of another for personal gains - even if it meant the death of someone else. While there's certainly a survival aspect to having financial security, it also seems like a lot of people have convinced themselves that "getting wealthy" or "being succesful" are the true purposes of life. While nobody can decide what the purpose of someone's life is, this does provide a somewhat shallow purpose. I sometimes come across Christians who believe, that if you don't have Christianity in your life, your life has no purpose. But just because I, as an atheist, don't believe there's a universal purpose to life, it doesn't mean I can't find and create purpose. Family and friends, and social interaction in general, has given my life purpose. And if I'm being entirely honest, I think what gives many religious people purpose, is the sense of community that the religion offers - not necessarily the religious text or tenets themselves.

  • @chrisfedde4032
    @chrisfedde403224 күн бұрын

    I am the most random person.

  • @YukonV

    @YukonV

    24 күн бұрын

    you really are

  • @sum8601

    @sum8601

    24 күн бұрын

    bro chill with that randomness, its too much.

  • @zimpoooooo

    @zimpoooooo

    24 күн бұрын

    Have a random like.

  • @achyuthcn2555
    @achyuthcn255524 күн бұрын

    Your blatant denial of giving eastern philosophy a serious try the same way you studied western philosophy is appalling Alex. Do a podcast with Swami Sarvapriyananda after listening to some of his lectures.

  • @overpope3510

    @overpope3510

    20 күн бұрын

    I have to say that's a good point. Instead of neandering against the whole point of "no god exists"(to which I agree), have a look at other philosophical systems and look for commonalities and differences. It's way better content anyway.

  • @achyuthcn2555

    @achyuthcn2555

    20 күн бұрын

    Eastern philosophy is far more sophisticated than western philosoophy. Vedanta even proves the ultimate truth.

  • @buglepong
    @buglepong22 күн бұрын

    i tihnk its more indicative of how powerful civilisation and civilised society is. people must be willing to do things _they do not personally believe but isnt necessarily proven_ in order to maintain it, because its _just that good_ . in a sense all ideologies and religions are luxury beliefs, created by civilisation in order to perpetuate it.

  • @amunt3r
    @amunt3r20 күн бұрын

    I've spent many years in churches, and very few people are making significant personal sacrifices on moral grounds. They are living comfortable lives without much intellectual or spiritual depth. There's not much in modern religion other than self soothing.