Hahahahahaha. This is utterly true of all significant intellectual debates. Both sides have too many strong arguments where both parties will be satisfied no matter what.
I knew who I agreed with before I watched--and I didn't change--but seeing how these two gentlemen were civil and respectful with each other was the amazing refreshing drink of water I got from this.
@Armenias Thunk Why am I a putz? Are you just a bored young person who just found the word putz? And take your respect, fold it eleven times, and stick it where the moon don't shine. Shmuck.
Wish it was twice as long! Big credit to Christian Radio for hosting these, showing they are open and civil to opposing viewpoints on the greatest matters.
This was one of my favourite conversations I've seen on here. Fair, civilised, and interesting. This is how I wish most conversations between people were like.
What a great debate. Both debaters deserve high praise and the moderator was excellent as well. It was nice to see people debate in such a civilized non-confrontational manner.
I am so impressed with Spencer's breadth of historical knowledge. He seems to have a developed and nuanced understanding of so many historical periods and developments. And the complexity and "messiness" of history really comes across in his analysis, so that he avoids overstating his case or diminishing countering perspectives that do shed some light on the truth of the matter. This is how historical analysis is done well. Bravo!
@@isaacambi1914 I would never part with money for something that might be nonsense. Can you please summarise the most powerful bit of evidence Blinksky offered? 7;30 4 Sep'24-G.M.T.
What a beautiful and sadly rare, thing it is to watch these people genuinely engage, especially the way they directly respond to each other's points. In so many of this sort of debate/discussion the speakers simply talk across each other, rather than actually engaging. Full credit to the host in establishing an environment where this can happen. Many thanks.
I tend to favor Steven Pinkers worldview-I'd love to have him as a professor-but Nick Spencer certainly lent his knowledge towards creating an interesting discussion
5:17 “Overall do you think that less religion, more progress is what we looking at, essentially?” “I wouldn’t put it that way. I’d say more humanism, more progress” This is why Pinker’s style is so effective and why he’ll get far by not stepping on toes unnecessarily. He avoids the negative phrasing in favour of the positive.
tobo86 I’ll say combining both pinker and the other is more precise watching it till it finished I saw how pinker is fine but idealistic in humanism. Humanism is a good one but it would be so unrealistic if it would be just on atheism. The other guy stressing the importance of religion in the present otherwise it will cause catastrophic global shift if you would to implement just humanism in today’s society while pinker already wants the ideal future the other guy knows that this won’t happen anytime soon so we should slow it down a little until it is okay to do so.
tobo86 I think his wording was more than merely avoiding stepping on toes. I think it was a critical difference. I’m an atheist. For a while I considered myself an anti-theist, but I certainly wasn’t against all religious people or even all religions so I had to figure out why. It didn’t take long to realise I was anti other things like dogmatism, superstition etc and I was only anti-religion if the religion did these things. So there’s a real distinction there; caring about the well-being of other humans is what drives progress forward, and it’s something both atheists and theists can do (and they can both fail to do). So religion is actually nothing to do with it.
Good chat. Really enjoyed this one! Big Pinker fan but all the people touting his victory here are just spewing predetermined bias lol Great points on both sides
Fantastic Conversation. I tend to agree with Pinker but I would love listening to more of Spencer he seems to have a vast knowledge of history which I enjoy learning from as well. I wish more Christians were like him. I simply have to think that if morality is not grounded in reason that it by definition is grounded in unreason. I have a preference.
I would say that the morality of religion *is* grounded in reason. Religious morality didn't come out of a vacuum, of course, it was carefully articulated over centuries.
Morality isn't based in reason. I say that as an atheist. If you want a great atheistic non-rationalistic explanation of the origin of morality look up Jonathan Haidt's critique of hyper-rationalists. His argument is that morality is largely based in our temperament and intution, so caused by evolution, but not arrived at through reason. We then go and rationalize whatever we instinctively believe to be "good" or "bad" anyway. For example, what about homosexual incest? Or heterosexual incest between infertile siblings? We all feel instinctive disgust and claim those to be immoral. The reason is some innate disgust of incest that evolution probably outfited us with, as incestuous groups produced defect offspring. Our disgust sensitivity doesn't distinguish between those and cases where reproduction isn't an issue, though. Now, you could say: "Why not rationally deem it moral in the above cases?" Because that goes completely counter to human nature, and is thus rather anti-humanistic. From a Pinkerian humanism perspective, one would really *have* to support gay twins' ability to have sex and marry, and their dignity, the same way one defends unfamiliar gay relationships. But is any humanist out there campaigning for that? Does anyone *really* feel the same level of outrage over anti-gay-incest sentiments? I really doubt it. But it's completely hypocritical. We'll just have to deal with the fact that, at the end of the day, all our first principles *can't* be based in reason. You can't create a complete ethical system without priors you take for granted, any more than you can do the same with mathematics. It's necessarily incomplete. We know since Mill that *what is* can't tell us *what ought to be,* objectively. No observation can, and no introspection can.
I actually respect Jonathan Haidt a great deal. But moral philosophy is a different subject than how people in general approach morality. For example many theistic moral arguments such as a divine command theory are non-intuitive. So how humans generally approach morality doesn't essentially undermine the process of justifying a process of morality. I know that Jonathan Haidt would not in any way want us to not use reason to justify moral precepts; on the contrary he would hope we could do better than our biases.
Reason is simply a catalyst, a layer, that connects the primal and allows society building activities, culture - language etc. Thus reason is sort of a translator of the innate, primal, evolutionary. No translator IS the original author. Thus things get lost and reshaped.
@@napoleonbonaparteempereurd4676 The ottoman empire which is the longest empire to ever exist in human history also before hand you do know that Joseph Stalin was a Atheist right
This is a way important subject matter needs to be discussed , we all have learned so much today . Was really impressed with Nick Spencer's wide historical knowledge. The way he has placed some of his argument was quite interesting. Steven and Nick both have given us much to think about . Great program and amazing discussion . I think both are winners .
Pinker rightfully conceded that some of the original purveyors of enlightenment concepts were Christians, but his meta-argument is far more important here. He did his best to imply that it’s somewhat unimportant to focus on the religious affiliations of the actors involved given that the concepts themselves are capable of standing alone.
[...some of the original purveyors of enlightenment concepts were Christians] I wonder which ones. Christian concepts come from the ancient Middle Eat via Judaism, from Greek, from Zoroastrianism, from Celtic and pagan culture and religion, and others. Christianity helped consolidate these ideas in one place so to speak, and developed them, but the enlightenment was at its core was a philosophical movement away from Christianity. That the movement would adopt tried and true ancient ideas that existed before Christianity, such as those from the Greeks, is not surprising
@hatter00 I was thinking how they were consolidated under the early Catholic church, but thinking about, although the Catholic church was dominant, there were still dissenters right through the reformation, but they were relatively insignificant. Still, it was the Catholic church that was the only formal educator for centuries Judaism at least, acted as the secular humanity and knowledge for a Hebrews. The faith gave them a purpose and direction. It has been positive for them at least. I suppose despite their shortcomings, Abrahamic religions brought a peace to particular groups of people. the problem comes because Judaism, and Christianity more so, is divisive and inherently contradictory. Islam has also inherited these values
@hatter00 [I don't see Judaism as being secular...] Some are today anyway. [ i don't see the Torah (especially Leviticus) as containing any secular teachings] Leviticus 19:18, “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” is a form of the "golden rule". The rule has varying strengths depending on how it is stated. Leviticus 19:11"You shall not steal; you shall not deal falsely; you shall not lie to one another. OK, overgeneralized, and certainly one can make arguments for when one should steal, deal falsely and lie, but still, secular laws, just take out the word "god". [they still fellowship due to cultural inheritability rather than anything.] Fellowship is inherently part of the social human condition. Gangs are formed because of it. Clubs are formed because of it. [I don't see the Abrahamic religions as merely having shortcomings, they have taken the world backward regardless of whether it did good for certain individuals, whose only positive assertion comes from feeling solace & comfort..there simply is no truth in their teachings.] Overall, I would generally agree with you, but when looking at religion from a historical perspective, the ideology has contributed to progress as well as to regress. Today it seems it is more into promoting regress
@hatter00 [ If Judaism, Christianity & Islam are so secular...] They aren't. I was aware of secular or cultural Jews, but it appears there are secular Christians and Muslims as well. The Bible contains the Torah (it is the Pentateuch or books of Moses). The Quran does not plagiarize any more than any writing of the day did, but does borrow some thoughts and beliefs, just as the Hebrew Bible borrows from Middle Eastern myths (the flood being a good example). Muslim beliefs are so different it may as well be another god. [Freedom of speech is the bedrock of any free society...] One of the pillars perhaps, but I can get behind that. [It just amazes me how 21st century people base their values & assert cosmic truths derived from our primitive & barbaric ancestors who didn't know the earth was spherical, didn't know about evolution & didn't know germ theory of disease.] And what would it take to understand why they do? Interesting to note that the Jewish people have been long noted for their money wisdom, and as lawyers, doctors, etc and whether they were portrayed as shylocks or benefactors with strings, throughout centuries of persecution, central to keeping their identity and fortitude against aggressive attacks, the one thing that remains constant is their faith in what their Bible says. And for many other religions their scripture empowers them to carry on though travesty and trial. [It's convenient for you (like many other religious apologists)...] Just to clarify, I am a skeptic first, especially against anything supernatural, pseudoscience and woo, and an atheist specifically for religious matters. [The ideology didn't contribute to progress, give me one example of such! ] I am not sure what you are asking for. I can give examples that much of modern geology was founded by Muslim scholars such as Abu al-Rayhan al-Biruni and Al-Biruni, which Wikipedia says "His religion contributed to his research of astronomy, as in Islam, worship and prayer require knowing the precise directions of sacred locations, which can only be accurately found using astronomical data." The Earth was also initially explored by creationists or Christians looking to understand god's wonderful world such as William Smith, James Hutton, Nicolas Steno among others. And of course there is Georges Lemaître, who already had the notion of a beginning of the universe in his religion. The concept of zero: considered as arising out of the Indian religious beliefs. [There's no such thing as a "Christian scientist" as much as a scientists who's Christian.] There are scientists that do profess to be Christian. You must know of Kenneth Miller and Mary Schweitzer as examples. The two have stated they keep their beliefs separate from their work. [Name one ethical statement made, or one ethical deed performed, by a believer that could not have been uttered or done by a nonbeliever.] The Hitch challenge. "Apostasy." -- Rizuken on reddit
@hatter00 [oh come on now..so if he was born in the same circumstances BUT the only difference is that his parents were Hindu & he was, would we credit Hinduism to it? It's just silly!] The book that dealt with the mathematics, astronomy, and astrology by Al Biruni was written about 1097 ACE, in other words, before the open sea navigation that would allow European countries to colonize large parts of the world. In Islam you are required to face Mecca to pray. With vast Muslim Empires and the need for increased sea trading, it was necessary to find which direction to face when far away or while at sea (thus they improved sea navigation as a consequence). This is not a requirement in Hinduism. Most other ancient religions require you to go to a sacred place, the religion in a sense was tied to that place. The Hebrews being nomadic, and constantly having their sacred places destroyed, developed the idea of a more portable religion. So in Abrahamic religions, you could either build representatives of that sacred place where you found yourself, or in the case of Islam, face in that direction. [Earth being explored by creationists or christians is still being explored by humans...] The motivation for the early creationists was to study god's work. The freedom to study the work in this way and not seem sacrilegious may be due to the Reformation, and the idea that it was possible due to the Enlightenment, but it did release them to think they could understand their own religion better by studying Nature. The difference in comparrison to modern creationists (the "new" creationists if you like) is that they actually did the exploring and experiments, and gave an honest assessment of their findings and results. This laid the basis for showing and providing evidence for a Earth older than 6000 years, which would later come into place when C. Darwin formed his ideas on natural selection as a way to explaining animal variations
I have found that thinking about the supernatural in the natural world can be quite maddening Like the damn Warner Bros frog who only sings when nobody is around... the elusiveness of the supernatural is not just a cosmic joke on the living, it has to be there.
How hasn't this got 100000 views already? This was much more constructive and informative than the previous Jordan Peterson debate on the same channel.
Pinker sure goes into bullet time dodging a few questions just over half way through... Great debate as always. Shame Nick didn't pull up claims Pinker made as 'truth' as it would have been great to the overall debate. Keep up the great work. Respect to all parties. You could do this question again with different people in future!
Really enjoyed this. I wish people would stop saying this person won or that person won. I learned something from both men. I am a Christian but never do I dismiss or think less of someone because their world view is different than mine. Education is a lifelong process. Learn something from everyone. Work to be a better person so that the world is a better place for everyone.
Very informative from both sides. At a point I feel I was having a history lesson rather than a debate. Pinker's last quote was very powerful, Christians still have to address why the most benevolent and educated places in the world are secular and house a large number of atheists.
Bible says that anyone can live or try to live a moral life (Matthew 7:7-14) , it has nothing to do with being a Christian or not. Pinker has very little knowledge about theology and for an atheist writer that is like suicide as much as theologians who don't address the secular morality that is inside anybody's hearts and not taught by the Bible (Romans 2:15). At the beginning, Pinker says "nothing comes out of the blue" but at the same time he believes in evolution which is contradictory with that statement. Thus, theologians should always address Bible verses not only books concerning to morality but I fell he didn't want to sound like a preacher but because of that he gave more foundations to Pinkers' arguments which are just his opinions once he doesn't believe in objective morality.
Who is it that is running the world's refugee camps, orphanages, homeless shelters, shut in programs, and bread pantries? I'll give you a hint, it's not largely the atheists, Muslims, Hindus or Buddhists. John 3:16-18 "Most assuredly, I say to you, he who believes in Me has everlasting life."-Jesus
I think Aristotle is the link most people miss when discussing the Enlightenment and Renaissance. I think the mixing of Judeo/Christian and Aristotle's philosophies were key to the explosion of understanding reality. Islam took in Aristotle's writing around 800 but did little with it, in the 1200s the Mongolians sacked Bagdad forcing a westward push, especially by those wise enough to see this coming. China didn't get into his works untill the 1600s even though they were quite inventive. So it seems to me that while Judeo/Christian and Aristotelian ideas are not a necessity for progress, they seem to be good for progress.
Good point, but one minor correction. Islam did take in Aristotle's writings around 800, and then persecuted the thinkers who took those writings in. I am totally blanking on this one, but there is a specific sect of Islamic philosophy centered in Baghdad that drank deeply from Aristotle and got ruthlessly persecuted for it
Christianity was more interested in Platonic ideals than Aristotelian methods. It took the decline of faith and the rise of literacy and education in abstract thought back to the Greek philosophical approach for rationalism to re-emerge and spark the scientific revolution.
Finally! People that can, know-how, and actually want to talk to the other side. I only watched 2 episodes of this show, and whoever is picking the people to represent specific sides, is doing a great job. Debate moderator or interviewer is asking the spot-on question, not aggressive but he pokes just enough to enable speakers to have a meaningful conversation.
"Only the Sith deal in absolutes" - Obi Wan Kenobi.... George Lucas and Gene Roddenberry are far from solid figures of moral truth and behavior. Lucas will sue you for a nickel and Roddenberry wrote about a fictional future where crime exists everywhere but home.
One of the saner, epistemological and civil debates between a theologian and a scientist. How nice would it be if all such debates follow such a high standard decorum.!!
If you're interested might I recomend some reading material? Plato: The Last Days of Socrates Volataire: Letters from England Nietzche: Thus spoke Zarathustra
@@Jhonnycomelate yes, i am stll a Muslim and my faith only increases with the wonderful insights i gain from studing different philosophies and meaningful debates
superb debate--great to see Stephen come up against a worthy opponent my two cents. Among other things, religions are value systems; they say faith is good, charity is good, alcohol is bad, sloth is bad, etc. Humanism is also a value system; suffering is bad, happiness is good, murder is bad, incremental progress is better than no progress at all. There are two important differences though. (1) humanism arrived at its values by analysis, evaluation, and debate. People thought & talked and came up with a system of values that reliably produces progress & which is flexible enough so when it turns out something doesn't work, using it's core values of enquiry and free debate, it can (granted, with some effort) correct its mistake, and (2) it doesn't require belief of any kind and isn't dogmatic. Belief & dogma require upkeep, to be passed on, and if somehow all texts and memory of Christ were erased today, it would be gone forever; whereas if we similarly lost & forgot all about humanist values, we could arrive at the same core principles over time.
I don’t understand, when we right things in this book of secular humanism does that immediately update our CPU? Haven’t we been telling people not to do terrible shit through out the ages ? What will make this book any different?
KayJay2017 If your open minded and intelectually honest yes That this one approached the conclusion trough analisis, reason and evidence, is open to change and be debated, plus requieres the least dogmatism possible
Pothead from the Future So you think by sheer virtue of reading this manifesto, somehow this will solve the problem of evil? Or is this strictly to base legal legislation off of, kinda like a kelly blue book but for morality? If so that’s terrifying, I don’t want people forcing onto me what I must accept as right or wrong I am my own person and can discern for myself would you agree?
Yeah I disagree on both counts. 1) Religion has been in constant debate, flux, and change for millennia all through debate, analysis, and _progress._ Just because they weren't doing it based on atoms, neurons, and statistics doesn't invalidate that. 2) Humanism as Pinker promotes it does require belief, it axiomatically assumes the truth of intrinsic human value, dignity, etc. These values cannot be rationally proven, full stop. The current humanist manifesto recognizes this as well in its opening, saying explicitly "[The humanist manifesto] evolved through the ages and continues to develop through the efforts of thoughtful people who recognize that values and ideals, *however carefully wrought*, are subject to change as our knowledge and understandings advance." However carefully wrought. And yet, Pinker and any humanist will stand completely resolute on these notions of the universality of human value. I guarantee that there is exactly no argument you could ever pose to Pinker to change his mind on that from now until death. Yet, "however carefully wrought"... Do you see the same problem I do? If you don't describe that as dogmatism, then I don't know what you'd call it but it functions the same way. It's just that the authority being appealed to is switched from a book from a god to some disembodied idea of reason, which when practically applied means _his_ reason. Rationalists idolize their own reason. His dogma is that there are certain values he holds that his reason has deemed correct, and they are incontrovertible. And this is where dogmatism creeps back into humanism in my opinion, and it shows how Pinker plays a funny game with his definition of Enlightenment values, that is to say "everything I disagree with is counter-enlightenment." He just throws social Darwinism, Communism ("scientific socialism" as Marx called it on occasion), and the French revolution that birthed the literal Cult of Reason, out of the pantheon of enlightenment products, let alone allowing them to be labeled humanist. Now his specific arguments for doing this I don't know, I can't find him ever taking about it maybe you know some, but I assume he does as all other humanists do. Claiming they either weren't philosophically/rationally valid (again basing the truth on their personal reason) or saying they don't follow the _true_ tenets of humanism (which is a dogmatic, non-provable assumption similar to what I mentioned earlier). The reason I believe those types of movements are excluded is because they show that rationalism like Pinker promotes can easily fall into dogmatic catastrophes, despite the opposite being the expressed goal. I also don't think this kind of emergent dogmatism is really avoidable, it's impossible for everyone to be perfectly rational, people have to live and make decisions with some axiomatic assumptions (you can't live day to day constantly reevaluating the foundation of your morality), and people also can't group well with people who have different axiomatic assumptions, so they group with people who agree with them, then form political movements for the changes they all want. Then bang, you have a social movement working toward an ideal goal based on unprovable, dogmatic assumptions about the world, complete with their own right/wrong value structure, i.e. an emergent religion, for all intents and purposes. I'm sorry this was so long winded but I don't know how else to make my point. Essentially what I want to say is that dogma is something intrinsic to human behavior, doesn't matter the framework you use.
Dīvīna Simulācra Indeed a cero dogma point is impossible, the fact that certain axioms are taken in consideration simply because of 'self evident' and no because of reasonally fundamented is present on every idea, the thing is that secular humanism admits this and is open to permanently challenge this kinda axioms and question them
Another pleasant and constructive conversation. I’d say that was a 50/50 draw between Pinker and Spencer. Pretty much everything both of them said was true. Positive-sum games between theists and secularists are possible yet! Our rational values are the same at bottom; it’s only our explicit explanations for these values that differ.
Darryl White: Thanks for the response. My notion of truth is essentially Hegelian; i.e. I understand the truth to be “the whole of objective reality” which includes the negatively self-opposed subject(s) as the inward side of its own substantiality. IOW, you can’t have the universal sport of football without the particularly opposed clubs to play it.
I am so glad Nick Spencer didn't let Pinker's statement regarding slavery in Christendom go unchecked. It is critical to acknowledge that slavery was basically nonexistent in the latter half of Europe's Medieval Period, but it is too often ignored.
@@TesterBoy LOL no, slavery in the Christian world is not a coincidence. And the religious themselves wish for a master and slave relationship with their god, if they disobey they are perfectly fine with being tormented forever as even Jesus was when he visited heaven for 3 days. Thinking is not for sheep, it's downright discouraged in their own scripture. Period.
Pinker’s method and demeanor-is probably the best version of the humanist argument I’ve ever seen. Even as a believer myself, I find myself generally agreeing with him.
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this but I think that an important takeaway from this conversation is that the underpinning of human morality should not come from Darwinism.
It never ceases to amuse me no matter who the Christian is Layman, scholar, apologist or lunatic one still has to explain atheism is not a world view. Good conversation.
20:42 David Hume would have had an absolute whale of a time with dissecting Pinker on his reasoning for inherent goods. This is one of the most obvious cases of the 'is' 'ought' fallacy that Pinker cleverly attempts to mask. For example, 'being alive' is a FACT but the assumption that 'being alive' is 'good' and therefore we 'ought' to value life is an OPINION that does not logically flow from this stated fact. An interesting presupposition that Pinker seems to hold is that being alive is BETTER than being dead. Notice the moral wording that he uses. Who is to say that being dead isn't better than being alive? Can you quantify what is better? And if it is BETTER does that automatically mean that it is objectively something we should value? I believe Spencer allows Pinker to get off in this part of the debate too easily. Hume would be fuming at the inconsistencies.
This is absolutely true - If life rather than death is always better, and if that's one of Pinkers' moral cornerstones then what are we to say about those who suffer excruciating pain daily, what about issues such as abortion & euthanasia? I don't think that being alive rather than dead is inherently better or at least obvious. Pinkers moral reasoning would rule out pro-choice arguments which I believe he is in favour for.
Precisely. The trouble with constructing a moral framework that does not include a moral lawgiver or some form of externally prescribed objective morality, is that it is based on illogical assumptions. Secondly, if these illogical assumptions contend that all human life is sacred then you simply move towards Judeo-Christian ethics, as these rationally stem from this core metaphysical belief. The irony is that a 'moral atheist' is simply a person who follows Judeo-Christian ethics but bases their beliefs on illogical assumptions because they can't move past the 'is' 'ought' gap.
DJPeachOfficial - God enough with this silliness. Of course it would be nice if objective morality existed, but *that doesn't change the fact that it doesn't exist.* Therefore, we have to make collective judgments about how to make a moral framework, not pretend that there's a sky daddy. This is so blindingly obvious.
@Emailjwr - If objective morale values do not exist then you writing a comment to this post is just as morally arbitrary as torture, mass genocide or concentration camps. If you have no grounding for your morale framework you have no right to say what anyone does is right or wrong, you can only say its relative - like an opinion or fashion. Where as I say we do seem to experience an objective morality in our day to day life. >Therefore, we have to make collective judgments about how to make a moral framework, not pretend that there's a sky daddy. This is so blindingly obvious. If the Nazis won the war and purified Europe, you would have no basis to say what they did was wrong, because it's just a collective judgement made as a result of a particular sociological evolution.
Ahhh I see the utilitarian perspective has always served us so well hasn't it. Let's make collective judgments about morality and see where that takes us. The problem with this is that the collective judgments can very easily change with time, I would hope that this is clearly evident to you. Unfortunately, with no ultimate standard to measure against there is always the issue that these collective judgments do change and perhaps change for the worse. Who is to say that the mass genocide of people with mental or physical illnesses is not an overall benefit to society? What if the collective judgment was to deem this as morally fitting and acceptable? Does that make it right? I would hope you would agree with me that this clearly can't be the case and that a genocide is abhorrent. You see there is very slippery slope with collective judgments dictating morality. Secondly, consider this, when we talk about progress it needs to be measurable against something right? The question being asked is, are we getting closer to our intended goals and aspirations? But if the standards we use are constantly changing (as with collective judgments) then we are constantly shifting the goalposts and therefore how can we really say if we have made progress?
You only think that because you agree with Pinker. Spencer used a rich historical context to support his arguments that humanism and scientific progress sprung from the basis of Christianity---interestingly, Jordan Peterson makes the same case in his discussions. Spencer made a lot of good points, and I say this as an atheist.
M. Woofington What about sanctioning slavery, commanding infanticide and genocide or the subjegation of women is in accordance with humanism? What about magical incantations and witches is scientific? Neither science nor humanism have anything to do christianity. The fact that humanism and science arose in christian countries doesn't mean they're christian concepts. Thinking otherwise is committing the genetic fallacy.
I feel that fantasy novels and other fiction are replacing the psychological fulfillment that people get from religion. Maybe they serve the same emotional need.
Around the 3:40 mark differentiates between "beliefs and institution". As an Atheist I just can't agree with him on this. I'm not saying Christianity does not have some beliefs I deem bad, I just think Christianity has some good beliefs as well. The Mustard Seed, prayer, how about the Old Testament being the basis for Capitalist thought and the New Testament being the basis for Socialist thought. Christian or not, we are all living within its constructs.
Randy Lee Thanks. Could you please elaborate a little bit more on this conception of the OT being a Capitalist oriented document and the NT being a socialist one. I can understand with the Parable of Mustard Seed that there is a socialist element but can't tease apart the OT example.
Old T is more about law and order while Jesus hung with thieves, prostitutes, and tax collectors. Jesus was the man who could provide for the sick and the needy without asking for a fee, Job knew the cost of life no matter the power a mere mortal could obtain. Old T is a bit more anticulturalist while the New is much more multicultural. This is why you see so many Berniebot Atheists quoting Jesus verses at Republicans. The Berniebots are following the constructs of the Bible, even if they do not wish to follow the Bible. I wish I could go on further, but I’m in need of sleep. I hope this was enough to paint a picture. I believe the Mustard Seed analogy may also be a metaphor for mental growth, seeds meaning schools of thought.
Bullsfan, Salman may find more answers about the beliefs structure of socialism especially toward the bottom. I never said that Socialism was word for word from the New T, only that it was inspired by its verses. Much like Jesus inspired Individualism, he inspired Socialism as well. The idea of a loving all powerful god inspired Socialism, where do you think they got the idea of utopia? They think to themselves that a perfect god would heal the sick for free, where did this idea originate? What construct in the Western World might have given them that idea? I’m pretty sure they were not influenced by that Greek or Roman guy who gets his eyes pecked out, then they grow back, then they get pecked out again, and so on and so forth. This is a very specific principle. Let us not forget that the Catholics did this as a State on tax payer dollars for well over a thousand years before the Protestants reinforced the idea of Individual giving as well as Individualism. And you have to admit that Socialism has a very strange streak of Individualism, it’s just not the kind you and I care to share in. You won’t catch me in no pink hair unless it’s Halloween. Their individuality is that they’ll join a collective that you and I will not subscribe to. Their faith in this is so strong that they even doubt the Swedish government website stating that Sweden has a 22% corporate tax rate. They tell me with the upmost faith that they “tax the rich over in Sweden.” Like the Swedish government is releasing Fake News on itself. ☹ The level of faith needed to be like this is astronomical. One failure you may be making in understanding modern socialist atheists, they view Jesus and God as the State. They are oppressors. They could have made a “better” world. One with less wars and more healthcare, video games, sweet rides, etc. They think God taught us violence and justified rape yadayadayadayada… Most “atheists” truly do believe in God in many ways, they are just mad at him for not being a genie granting unlimited wishes. Trust me on this, I was once one and still know many of them. Atheists like myself may not believe in god, but we love him. Like any good book the Bible describes the world and inspires the mind. I wish I could say more, but I’m compiling a lot of original ideas for my own channel which I hope to launch soon so I don’t really want someone getting a jump on my tech stupid ass. I wish this place would host me!!! Lol I love their atmosphere.
Salman, I hope I was able to illuminate this enough. I'm unplugging from the internet today. I'm gonna spend some time learning to make furniture out of wood and hopefully figure out how to edit video to launch my own Chanel one day.
I've watched a couple of these and the host is excellent. He's informed, impartial and asks extremely pertinent questions at every twist and turn of the conversation.
Our moral progress is more darwinistic than either of these two gentlemen would suggest. We're moral because that's the type of people that survive. Immoral people cause pain and suffering to others and do not reciprocate favors, so they naturally get culled by the moral people who work together. To work together, you have to be moral. Cooperation is an enormous survival advantage. The larger your cooperative group, the better you survive. Hence, why inclusive circles have been growing larger and larger with time. It's not cause we're smart and figured it out. It's cause it works without us having to figure it out.
Nick's argument was religion existed while this happens, so religion deserves the credit, that's like saying the moon deserves all the credit because it was around the whole time as well. Silly, and no not an atheist, just that I don't need my religion to justify everything. Steven did a great job, arguing against someone who really liked the book, 2 funny.
That's actually a misrepresentation of what Nick said. In the video, he specifically disambiguated between historians determining whether or not progress just happened to be made in a Christian culture, and progress actually occuring *due* to this culture. He then proceeded to show that it was the latter that was happening.
No Nick quite clearly said many times that it's tricky. This is because Pinker makes a great point. Nick gives it away when he states that Christianity created the problem for which it also created the cure. This is a sad attempt to have it both ways. Christianity was perfectly happy challenging science when it disturbed it's theological ideas.
Hey, Steven Pinker is utterly deluded! He talks about moral progress and lists many liberal and humanistic values, eulogising how 'good' and civilised 'we' are and he also says we are not at risk of someone stabbing us or blowing us up. What world is he living in? Is he completely unaware about how western liberal democracies treat the rest of the world? The West's current good fortune exists on the shoulders of huge past and present oppression, suppression and destruction of other unfortunate peoples. Ghandi said when asked what he thought of western civilisation replied "I think it would be a good thing". Western liberal humanistic democracies are not moral, good or progressive - they are violent, discriminatory and oppressive, and Pinker turns a horrible blind eye to that truth. Listening to his self-satisfied, nicey-nicey nonsense made me feel sick. Your mileage may differ.
Steven dodges so much when it comes to giving religion any credit (and this isn't just based of this convo, i saw it in his talk with Jordan Peterson too) What about the abolition movement?- "I don't know the history of abolition" "the first COMPREHENSIVE argument for abolition was secular "-what about Gregory of Nyssa? "we can't lay out that experiment with other civilisations/cultures" -but looking at history, we kind of can... "they lived in Christian society, so all their arguments were made using a Christian basis" -so there were no secular bases to make any of these arguments? no aristotelian ethics? no stoics? why is it that when arguments from a secular basis finally came about (again, by people living in societies that were still Christian) they had often been preceded by arguments made on Christian grounds by centuries?
Confirmation bias is always a problem when listening to these debates, but there is enough food for thought to keep you thinking. As an agnostic, I think I will lean more to the idea that we yearn for the transcendent,but certitude should be avoided
I really don't get why it is said that "Reason in and of itself" cannot get us the foundations for a better human being, a better "morality"...??? That seems to me a HUGE assumption. Is it NOT reasonable to treat each other well or as well as can be for the GOOD of the community and more extensively the world?? I think the ideas were there in essence or WORDS and religion did help to disseminate the ideas, though as we see didn't apply them to ALL human beings, a distinction of rank that always has existed implicitly in societies based on meritocratic hierarchies; AND religions, like evolution are created or evolve and HAVE TO work with what's already THERE, so religions started (rites or myths and advice, etc) with the social or worldly conditions that were the case or existed at THE TIME, thus the admonitions FOR slavery and its continuation justified by the distinctions of Rank among peoples, as different peoples and even the genders had different VALUE.... but it was reason itself with the help of reason in science that created the conditions to be able to NOT need slavery for example to feed all humans?? So machines are invented and suddenly keeping and feeding so many hands and mouths becomes economically undesirable and THEN the ideas of "we the people are all created equal" become viable to IMPLEMENT and thus make more tax payers?? If the economic progress made possible by inventions and scientific progress in ALL areas had not been there WE STILL WOULD HAVE SLAVERY as can be seen in places where those things have not been adopted or implemented. Comments... ?? Please, i love to be disproved, that again is the way of progress. I will not stubbornly hold on to the ideas I exposed here if someone makes better ones. Good luck.
David Hume argued that you cannot derive an "ought" from an "is." This means that reason alone, which deals with facts and what "is," cannot determine moral values or what "ought" to be. Moral judgments require a value-based component that reason alone cannot supply.
And it was actually the Charter of The Forests signed a year later that gave "the common people" the rights and freedoms they enjoyed until Enclosure and Industrial Revolution and always wrong attributed to Magna Carta.
Awesome conversation. Spencer had the upper hand almost the entire time -- I enjoyed how when Pinker questioned that Christianity was the primary cause of the scientific revolution since it's been there for a thousand years despite the evidence, Spencer pointed out the particular circumstances in the 17th century that lead to Christianity, at that moment, executing it. I also enjoyed Spencer's refutation of Pinker on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. What I don't like is the presuppositional secularists in the comment claiming Pinker was "twice as effective" or that he should have "given" Spencer a chance. Did they even watch the video? There wasn't one time where Pinker was able to refute a point Spencer made. I think Spencer clearly took the upper hand here, it's nice to see new intellectuals on these videos dismantling the classic secular thinkers (Jordan Peterson beating Susan Blackmore, and now Nick Spencer really showing Pinker on his understanding of history).
You took the words right out of my mouth. It's as if those commenting in the ways you've mentioned missed that this conversation is two-way, and that what Pinker said wasn't always an actual refutation of Spencer's words because of its clarity and briefness. Spencer unfailingly broadened the words of Pinker to bring clarity, and not obfuscation. This should, at least, bring the secularists into a wider understanding, and not into a cursory reaction of hollow words, like "Pinker was twice as effective with fewer words".
"17th century that lead to Christianity, at that moment, executing it." You really couldn't be anything else at the time could you? Even today coming out as atheist can be a social suicide in places like USA. Because that's how the religious operate. It's essentially the ideas of the enlightenment that opened the doors to get rid of religion as the sole source, if we still used Christianity as a source we would still make efforts in useless things such as faith healing or praying. We can still see how religion poisons just about everything in Africa and the middle-east, where dogma is more important than actual knowledge. And in the west it is is the Christians who try to smuggle in fake science of creationism into school. The religious are still very much left behind.
Hirnlego999 I totally agree. Being a Christian in Western Europe and also having good ideas that are not specific to Christianity is not a point scored for Christianity!
It's not the fact that scientists that happened to be Christian that made the scientific revolution Christian in character. It's the fact that their motivations to study science were due to Christian values rather than secular values.
What Christian values would that be? Eat from the tree of knowledge and everyone shall be punished. Try to build a tower of Babel too see how magic man has it up in the clouds? Punished. The bible states that no evidence shall be provided so take it on faith. Christianity is not exactly for enlightenment values. Heck, one man was even burned alive for translating the damn book into English in England, this is how much the priests wanted to keep the mystical mumbo jumbo to themselves and with it power.
@Miguel Cisneros You are clearly very ignorant of the meaning of 'nothing'. Nothing means 'not something'. If God never came into existence, it means he didn't come from something. In other words: God came out of nothing.
@Miguel Cisneros You are hilarious ... You simply don't know what 'nothing' means! Let me help you: nothing = not something. That's what that word means. You can't picture 'nothing'. Nothing is not something. It doesn't mean empty space. It's just a word and it literally means: no thing. Get it? Example: "Miguel did not do anything yesterday" = "Miguel did nothing yesterday". Example: "Miguel does not know a thing about logic" = "Miguel knows nothing about logic". Example: "Miguel did not say one thing that makes sense" = "Miguel said nothing that makes sense". Example: "God did not come out of something" = "God came out of nothing".
@Miguel Cisneros Really, that's your response? You should consider responding to what I actually said. I'm not trying to insult you (you are the one who uses words like 'dummy' anyway). I'm merely pointing out that if you say God came from no thing, that's the same as saying God came from nothing. If that's insulting to you, I feel bad for you. For the record: I took a philosophy class in college. I suggest you take a class in semantics. Or just take a dictionary and look up the word 'nothing'.
@Miguel CisnerosYou're still not listening to what I'm saying. We are talking semantics. I understand you believe God is not created and didn't have a beginning. That's not the point here. The point is: you are saying God didn't come from anything but also saying God didn't come from nothing. That's a contradiction. Clearly you believe God didn't come from anything, but you keep refusing to say God came from nothing because you wrongly interpret that as if it means God began to exist. It doesn't, because nothing is just a words meaning ... not (some)thing.
@@tonybanks1035 Well Steve's main book thesis is correct. You would, I know, prefer to live in modern Secular USA, then Midevil Protestand/Catholic UK.
@@denverbritto5606 Really? "Be kind to evryone, for evryone you meet his fighting a hard battle" - Socrates understands humanism "Wonder is the beginning of wisdom" - Socrates understood how learning starts off
@@napoleonbonaparteempereurd4676 philosophy Yea, they learned plenty of that from the Greeks. But the Greeks didnt hold charity and compassion for the weak, the downtrodden as virtues. Greeks and Romans were big on citizens rights, but the concept of human rights would have been entirely alien. It was a Christian nation thar held the first public conversation on what rights a conquered people had in Valladolid, 1550. The Roman and Greeks couldn't have cared less about what rights conquered Gauls, Spaniards and Britons had.
Denver Britto Muslim conquests in India, Middle East and Africa carried with them discussions on the topics of conquered people’s rights many hundred of years before. Look at the Mughal Empire (and compare with how the British behaved) and the Ottoman Empire for examples of this and compare to European conquests in the Americas and Africa. What did the European Christians learn from their talks if they didn’t apply it? The Greek settlements in Africa was much more accepting of other cultures because in their view those cultures didn’t compete with them on religion. They were by definition open to many gods and didn’t chop people’s heads off if they didn’t succumb to their faith. All those areas became distinct in the way that they kept their distinct culture but adopted a Hellenistic administration. Compassion for the less fortunate is not exclusive to Christians since it’s at the very core of Buddhism.
Secular Humanism > Religious Humanism With all proper and due respect and gratitude to Jordan Peterson's many good arguments - Steven Pinker Check mates his entire premise with that one.
Where was the checkmate in the video, exactly? Nick Spencer clearly showed, without any successful rebuttal from Pinker, that humanism is better grounded on Christianity than atheistic thought. This entire video was checkmate on Pinker.
Well you use the word grounded. So this can have two meanings. One is of origin, that humanism's origin is in Christianity. It is fairly easy to see that that is A) a very non exclusive claim, perhaps Christianity being one of the many factors in the process of the cultural evolution of humanism, but it has no exclusivity on it as a theology. and B) that even if it was its exclusive fore bearer that does not mean anything in regards of what is better just as primitive medicine could have stumbled onto antibiotics it is in no way better than modern medicine even though you could claim modern medicine is "grounded" in primitive medicine. The second meaning is that religious humanism has a better coherency or philosophical foundation than secular humanism. Pinker plainly explains away the claim that secular humanism is merely an aesthetic preference but more a mindset that is comprised of game theoretic and secular rationalism trying to figure out what would be "good" for man. Yes it is true that secularism embrace of humanism is in no way guaranteed in foresight. It can also give rise to other ethics. Yet neither is Christianity as one can plainly see in its history. to claim that secular humanism ethical development came from a christian background is to claim the first meaning of the word "grounded" and back you go. The point is that because of humanism's better truth claims it is superior in its ability to deliver the moral "good"s in an ongoing, adaptive way.
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHA. Atheist tears are delicious. I'll just copy and past what I said, since you couldn't respond to it. Did the entire discussion on human liberty, God-given rights, and Darwinism/eugenics escape you? The moment the word 'magic' is brought up, it's clear the atheist baby has had to shrivel up, call for his mommy, and scream at the fact that Christianity provides a better basis for everything they consider good, including their very own humanism, then the irrelevant atheistic philosophy they ascribe to.
Every time someone tries to give credit to religion for some progress that has occurred, they usually do so by confusing “culture” with religion. If you cannot trace the progress back to one of the tenets of the belief system, then there’s nothing to your argument. But, from the very beginning (literally…in the beginning) the Bible not only starts itself off by condemning the pursuit of knowledge, it actively promotes inaccurate information about reality. Progress has been made DESPITE the world’s various religious belief systems.
Some good points on both sides. I'm glad to see these civilised conversations happening. There's a great examination of the beginnings of science and the direction it took in Geeco-Roman history in the book "The Scientist in the Early Roman Empire".
Pinky is confused. there is no REASON, no WHY I should do X in the first place. humanism has no foundation for its principles, and if one should admit there is a tendency to do good, that tendency is more probable than not grounded in a teleological substrate. if Pinky thinks it can be grounded on atheism, then that's a religious position. sorry Pinky.
Hi @hatter00, the Supreme Court has ruled that atheists are entitled to the same protection under the First Amendment as are Baptists, Catholics or anyone else, so in that sense, atheism is a religious stance. As for behavior, why should a man not spread his seed far and wide as that will help the species survive, especially if he is wealthy and can support all those children.
@@GustAdlph incorrect I've seen Constitutional Experts discuss this. See, Athiests enjoy the same protection and right under the law as religios people, But Athiesm itself was not defined as a religion.
It’s really pathetic to see theists defend their favorite toy or idea. Feels like overgrown children defending Santa. I know it’s a bit more complex but really, it’s pathetic. Religions have grown with almost every society and they all contradict each other. Soooo silly. If you’re religious and can’t see the “if they’re all right makes them all wrong” makes perfect sense you’re open to nonsensical beliefs. Pretty simple
You've just agreed at the end of your statement that many truths cannot exist which is the first principle of Christianity, I recommend you watch Frank Turek's apologetics videos.
@@jesselevyvieira3588 seriously? Frank turek? I guess he’s a little better than Ken ham 😂😂. I suggest you study science and how things really happen and how facts work. Good luck finding reality
Nick Spencer really impressed me. He was able to engage and counter arguments with named references on the spot time and time again. I think I will see what he has published. Pinker, usually an interesting speaker, was not so impressive when his argument for why humanism excluding Christian influence came up with a reason to see slavery as wrong was to repeatedly state that its not hard to see that we all (black and white) have a brain and they justifies that one should not enslave the other! But very thought provoking. Another great unbelievable!
I'M A CHRISTIAN AND EVEN I ADMIT THAT PINKER SLAYED OUR SIDE!!! ZOMG I HAVE NEVER BEEN MORE EMBARRASSED TO BE A CHRISTIAN. 2 in the pink, 1 in the stink. Amen.
I really like Steven but his performance here is a perfect example of main stream atheistic thought today. Every argument he leveled against Christianity was a straw man argument. That’s all they got. Plus to make the claims he did shows he is way out of date on the literature
All true. Hopefully next generation of atheists will produce more complex and sophisticated thinkers. Listening to refutations of "The bearded man in the sky" gets tiring after a while ;)
In every non-believer's defense: we have been waiting for 2000 or so years for the religious to provide proof for their metaphysical claims. Maybe if believers would bring forth anything tangible, we could answer with something else then: where is your proof? Also, it is very hard not to straw-man believers, when there are so many variations within each religion.
There are many watertight arguments based on experiencing, reason, logic and modern science. The problem is that I have yet to encounter an atheist who understand the arguments. Like this argument: Argument 1A: Only Consciousness exist P1. Only one ontologically real substance can exist --- Due to the interaction problem P2. Consciousness exist --- Gross perceptual appearances (aka matter) and subtle perceptual appearances (aka mind ) exist in Consciousness and hence can not be ontologically different substances C. Only Consciousness exist Argument 1B: Consciousness is another name for God God --- Definition 1. That-which-does-not-appear-or-disappear (non-space) 2. That-which-does-not-change (non-time) 3. That-which-is-known-by-itself (Being and conscious of Being) C. God is non-dimensionless conscious Being (aka Omnipresent, Omniscient and Omnipotent) P1. Consciousness does not appear or disappear P2. Consciousness does not change P3. Consciousness is known by itself C1: Consciousness has the same properties as God C2: Consciousness is another name for God
47Ronin This is highly subjective since even if one provides "proof" one can reject it. Christians have provided many arguments throughout 2000 years such as simple arguments for the resurrection to more complicated philosophical arguments from Aquinas, Augustine, Leibniz, etc such as arguments from reason, consciousness, morality, ontology, etc and scientific arguments for God from physics such as Big Bang cosmology, fine-tuning and quantum mechanics to show that philosophical materialism is false as a worldview. Just because you reject these for whatever reason doesn't mean that proof wasn't provided.
But the theory of evolution (Darwin) and the discovery of DNA (Watson & Crick) don't explain and don't even claim to explain the origin of life. What is Pinker on about?
I wonder how Christians reconcile their god with the idea that he is the necessary entity that pushed the "evolution" button, creating a 4 billion year long cascade of meaningless replication and automatic self-annihilation ad infinitum.
I'm not a theist, but I guess they would say something like that you shouldn't try to ascribe any kind of motive comprehensible by humans. They will also probably have a problem with seeing God as an 'entity'. Why do you think this is a problem to be reconciled; the idea doesn't strike me as mutually exclusive with the idea of God or even a problem for theists?
I always figured abiogenesis was best explained by some kind of proto-evolution. Which is basically complex molecular chemistry. By that I mean, complex amino acids and other molecular chains form "randomly" in that their building blocks float in the water in a "random" manner. They will again break up and re-form, unless they prove to be the most stable connection possible, over the long term. In other words, (proto-)DNA was just the most "fit" molecular structure to "survive." And among those, some that managed to procreate themselves (or create building blocks for more of it) gradually became more prevalent.