@@3magikarpinamansuit281 after a year and two weeks, it's still funny. Let's come back periodically and see when it stops being funny, if ever.
@Pretty_Fly_White_Guy8 ай бұрын
That’s almost believable 😂 then you see cosmic sceptic is there
@ReligioCritic7 ай бұрын
@@Pretty_Fly_White_GuyStrongest evidence against Christianity.
@ethanbotterill27432 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the way the chairs match their shoes. Whoever made that happen, I see you.
@ANONM60D2 жыл бұрын
Hey nice eye!
@tennicksalvarez9079 Жыл бұрын
Best comment ever
@punpai4003 Жыл бұрын
Civilized comment.
@MizzouRah78 Жыл бұрын
Or...it's coincidence.
@ingenuity168 Жыл бұрын
Good observation. 😁
@kevinlee44492 жыл бұрын
I’ve been watching cosmic skeptic for a long time and this conversation has really changed my perspective: I too now see Alex as a tall person.
@zootsoot20062 жыл бұрын
You're not talking intellectually speaking I take it.
@jonathacirilo57452 жыл бұрын
@@zootsoot2006 it was a joke i think, but why not exactly?
@valuerie2 жыл бұрын
Right?? Damn
@elainewagnon66902 жыл бұрын
I thought it was funny.
@tsvetanstoychev6552 жыл бұрын
Is 6.1ft (what the hell is wrong with you people still using this atrocious system) considered tall? It's... it seems kind of average to me. Edit: 6.1ft = 186cm... I am 184 and I'm not considered tall nor am I considered short...
@ryanrogers36102 жыл бұрын
My wife's water broke while listening to this. Just thought you all should know.
@tomyossarian76812 жыл бұрын
You fornicator you..
@mateusztgorak2 жыл бұрын
Congratulations!
@Skurian_krotesk2 жыл бұрын
Damn hopefully you'll be able to fix her water again...
@joostvanrens2 жыл бұрын
I broke while listening to this
@BigPapiLoc2 жыл бұрын
If you drink it you get superpowers
@jaredlowry3547 Жыл бұрын
So refreshing that there needn’t be a moderator in this debate. No strawmanning, dodging questions, rabbit trailing, or ad hominems. Just two serious thinkers really listening to each other and talking through what they believe. I’m a Protestant Christian but I greatly respect both of these guys.
@electrical_cord Жыл бұрын
Even as a Catholic, Alex O'Conner is very respectful. Lots of atheists can learn from him in how to have a discussion. And yes, Trent is great. He's always super nice in debates/dialogues.
@pixboi Жыл бұрын
Yes, this is the climate we need instead of the inflammatory fundamendalist vs. Hitchens age
@thedubwhisperer2157 Жыл бұрын
jaredlowry, what convinced you to select your particular religion out of the many which are available?
@gorb_oron Жыл бұрын
@@thedubwhisperer2157are you a seeker?
@thedubwhisperer2157 Жыл бұрын
@@gorb_oron A what?
@TheOpenCouchPodcast2 жыл бұрын
Alex has become my favorite and respectful atheist. He’s sincere and genuine and respectful. He’s definitely an example of someone who disagrees and yet he’s not mocking or insulting the other! Definitely an example for Christian’s as well to follow.
@gideondavid302 жыл бұрын
He carries himself well. But I can't take him that seriously as a thinker. He is too young for one. Articulate yes, but still young.
@mattheartfollower41232 жыл бұрын
@@gideondavid30 It's not age that makes one wise.
@TickleMeElmo552 жыл бұрын
@@mattheartfollower4123 It often does aided with life experience and self-reflection. How many 18-22 yr olds have you met that are wise? Very small percent.
@TickleMeElmo552 жыл бұрын
@@gideondavid30 This. I think people give him too much credit where there shouldn't be any credit.
@patman1422 жыл бұрын
@@gideondavid30 one of the most silly comments I have seen in a while
@ContriteCatholic Жыл бұрын
00:00 Discussion on philosophy of religion and why Trent Horn is a Christian 05:52 The existence of intrinsic human dignity and morality points towards a divine direction. 16:12 The problem of divine hiddenness and non-resistant non-belief raises questions about the existence of a loving God. 20:43 Religion and politics cannot be simply labeled as good or bad. 35:27 A world that journeys to perfection has more goods in it 44:48 Critiquing the problem of evil in Christianity 49:25 The morality of inflicting suffering for a greater good 58:44 Promoting welfare of mentally handicapped humans over non-human animals 1:03:37 Moral debates involve emotive states and differing moral claims. 1:12:53 The Bible's account of God's revelation is progressive in nature. 1:17:57 People will be judged based on their culpability, not just intellectual inquiry. 1:28:26 The problem of evil and falsifiability of Christianity 1:33:01 The problem of suffering is important and should be taken seriously. 1:42:32 Compensation for suffering may justify allowing evil. 1:47:14 Arguments can increase probability of Christianity being true 1:56:02 The existence of suffering and evil is not a reason to be an atheist.
@Blastoise9000 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for these time stamps!
@jgmrichter Жыл бұрын
Can we get this comment pinned please?
@wolfegaming36 Жыл бұрын
I feel like there needs to be a time stamp to 10:22 but I'm not good at writing a quick little title for it. That's when Alex begins to explain why he is an atheist, starting with the problem of needless suffering.
@lariat_ Жыл бұрын
@ContriteCatholic MVP of the comment section 😎
@lariat_ Жыл бұрын
@@wolfegaming36yes i think you're right, maybe something like "Religion is a response to human suffering"
@Gill19232 жыл бұрын
It’s lovely that we’re starting to see Alex so much in all places. I’ve been here for a while and absolutely delighted by the recognition he has received.
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
The smartest atheists don't remain atheists, but for Alex it's a career.
@Gill19232 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 by that logic Dawkins, Hitchens, Sam Harris and so on arent smart atheists? Lol ok
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
@@Gill1923 You forgot Hawking. He was one of the smartest. The other three are smart but maybe not the smartest like C. S. Lewis and Edith Stein.
@Gill19232 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 What about Hawking? He was an atheist. Also a scientist. And not even close to being as smart on the subject of religion and atheism as the people I had mentioned.
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
@@Gill1923 Okay I'll cross him off. Thanks.
@RobotProctor2 жыл бұрын
Another atheist here. I am also a nonresistant nonbeliever. In fact I used to believe and realized my prior evidences and personal experiences for my beliefs had more natural reasons. I wish you all the best, Internet comrades. Lots of love.
@Calx92 жыл бұрын
Well said! That matches me perfectly man.
@JesseDriftwood2 жыл бұрын
Samesies.
@SeekingVirtueA2 жыл бұрын
Yup. Never thought I’d be in those shoes but here we are. Would have liked to hear Alex’s reply about evil in the Bible. That to me is probably my biggest hurdle to belief that Christianity is true. The follow up question was telling of what possibly could be in the Bible that would convince you a loving God didn’t write it.
@joshs29862 жыл бұрын
Hey mate. Just want to challenge you on nonresistant nonbeliever. I'm not saying your not. In my experience though, lots of people say this and then on reflection realise they were resistant. They had just fooled themselves. Again, not saying you are. Just saying sometimes understanding our own motivations are hard
@alwayslearningtech2 жыл бұрын
@@joshs2986 Hey mate, I'm replying though you didn't comment to me. Leaving Christianity was a struggle that took me around a decade. I was trying to share the good news and prove the truth of Christianity but I kept coming up against evidence against my claims and reasons to doubt. As someone who desperately wished for Christianity to be true, even after no longer believing it, I can tell you that there's many of us out here who truly desired to believe or continue believing, but became convinced otherwise. Sometimes the truth hurts because it's not what you truly desired with all your heart.
@BibleLosophR2 жыл бұрын
This is definitely one the best Christian and Atheist discussions I've ever watched after 30 years of listening/watching/reading hundreds of discussions and debates.
@streetwisepioneers44702 жыл бұрын
Have you seen his debate with William L Craig...if yes what did you make of it?
@BibleLosophR2 жыл бұрын
@@streetwisepioneers4470 You mean where Alex interviewed WLC? It wasn't a debate. It was cordial discussion and interview. Alex even admitted that a number of his criticisms a few years back when he was younger were bad objections. That he now recognizes it being older, wiser and more informed when it comes to philosophy and argumentation.
@basedzealot3680 Жыл бұрын
It’s because Trent is Catholic. Protestants have no idea what they’re talking about
@KZSoze Жыл бұрын
I think the calm and respectful tone is quite nice; but on substance I don’t really see this as being anything other than par for the course, bad arguments for Christianity.
@justin1029200011 ай бұрын
@KZSoze Truth is only "bad arguments" to the Spiritually blind.
@kailerpetersen64042 жыл бұрын
I am an atheist but find this explanation and defense of theology quite well developed and honest (even though I disagree)
@AquinasBased Жыл бұрын
do you think that with this defense and explanation presented to you, it might be a better idea to adopt a theological worldview for the sake of happiness and personal fulfillment?
@kailerpetersen6404 Жыл бұрын
@@AquinasBased no I’m quite happy and it would be a futile effort as you can’t choose to believe. Sure I can act like I believe but that won’t have the same effect and would result in me knowing I’m living in a way that I disagree with which probably wouldn’t make me happy
@Reverendshot7775 ай бұрын
@@AquinasBased A better explanation than others have presented is not automatically convincing. You can recognise something is well presented and argued but still be more convinced by the other side of the argument.
@DubioserAltschauerberger15105 ай бұрын
Religious people are soaking so called fulfillment out of 2000 year old fairy tales for adults. Just that fact alone makes you religious losers hella ridiculous.
@exeterman24 ай бұрын
It's well developed compared to other Christian arguments, but still laughably flawed.
@KeithKazamaFlick2 жыл бұрын
Been watching Alex for years, he always been a smart well spoken lad. big ups
@roeliethegoat2 жыл бұрын
Walked for 2 hours while listening to this, and I was thoroughly engaged the whole time. Thanks for this.
@rosiegirl24852 жыл бұрын
I am cooking and have done the same. ⚘
@zacharyshort3842 жыл бұрын
@@rosiegirl2485 You walk while you cook? :p
@Solbashio2 жыл бұрын
same, but i got hit by car while crossing the street
@tamago80422 жыл бұрын
Doing relatively mundane tasks while listening to a video/podcast is always a nice experience!
@ChuckLorris2 жыл бұрын
@@Solbashio F
@jimothynimajneb6222 жыл бұрын
I’m an atheist but I do enjoy Trent Horn. I think he’s a very intelligent individual, speaks very eloquently, and can bring up points and responses that make you think. I will say, and I may be a weird case as an atheist, but I generally don’t like the problem of evil. As intuitively it may be for me to think that there’s no way a loving god could allow for all this seemingly gratuitous evil, it very well may be the case that if he were to exist then it would be justified in some sense.
@tomyossarian76812 жыл бұрын
I agree entirely, but the example of someone beating a kid on the side road made Trent fidget a bit - if you accept god has his reasons, you cant back away because "you understand parent - child dynamic". Either you can act on your own and counter god's decision to have a child ripped apart, or you have to accept any murder, rape, robbery and whatnot as part of gods plan - after all "if he were to exist then it would be justified in some sense". As with other arguments, Christians want to have it both ways, and that's just 🤮
@jimothynimajneb6222 жыл бұрын
@@tomyossarian7681 I agree for sure.
@davethebrahman98702 жыл бұрын
Merely positing that an explanation may exist is not to provide an argument; it is merely to assert that one thinks such an explanation is possible. Until that fact is established the ‘argument from evil’ stands.
@MrBanksLP2 жыл бұрын
I was also interested in what arguments he would bring forth. Sadly the first argument was the argument citing Anthony flee ... Hm.
@pg14482 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Because I can't help but intuitively feel that these second order goods like compassion, forgiveness or bravery enrich the human experience in a way that even a loving, perhaps especially a loving God, would allow them. The idea that a loving God necessarily needs to provide us some luxurious paradise just doesn't sit right with me
@625098evan2 жыл бұрын
Alex seems to be a sincere truth seeker, and I love that!
@OrangeRaft2 жыл бұрын
He does, but pride will always block the truth even if you are sincere. Truth seekers don’t always find God because there are other things required like repentance and dying to self
@Nissenov2 жыл бұрын
@@OrangeRaft Which God do you believe in?
@OrangeRaft2 жыл бұрын
@@Nissenov well that’s not a good question unless you are involved in these debates comparing Americanized atheism to Americanized Christianity. But I’m not interested in such comparisons because there are other options like a Heiser type view on the ancient world. The question is of allegiances not “belief”
@Nissenov2 жыл бұрын
@@OrangeRaft Fine. Which God do you swear allegiance to?
@Arbitrary_Moniker2 жыл бұрын
@@OrangeRaft Yeah, allegiances. So this little game of yours does devolve into tribalism. How dull, and predictably human. Let's not have an informed view of the world, no, let's pick a team, and build a worldview of excuses that always comes back to that team, even though we live in a world that allows us to be more than that.
@NeutralMjolkHotel2 жыл бұрын
As an atheist, I very much enjoyed this discussion, including Trent’s points. Well-spoken and intelligent, though I do disagree and think his response to the racism and MLK question was a total dodge. Subbed for more chats like this.
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
The atheist both thinks too highly of himself but also too lowly. He thinks too highly because his pride won't let him admit that he has faults and that he is wrong. He thinks too lowly because this causes him to accept a dismal existence.
@sterlinghawkins51822 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 oh dear god…
@pushanka2 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 rofl what a terrible take, this is exactly why most Theists are laughed out of the room. Trent approaches this with empathy and you spew ridiculousness.
@NeutralMjolkHotel2 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 haha hot take there, Jo Ann Ware. Good thing nobody agrees.
@zacharyshort3842 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 You've only pasted this comment a handful of times. MOAR.
@jimisoulman60212 жыл бұрын
Wow! My respect for Cosmic Sceptic has skyrocketed (pardon the pun!). I am really impressed by his integrity and honest enquiry. I wish him well. Thank you CC for hosting and posting this event.
@japexican0072 жыл бұрын
Mine went down, he keeps using the same excuse as to why he rejects God and it’s gotten so played out it’s not even worth responding anymore
@jimisoulman60212 жыл бұрын
@C L I think we may yet still be surprised by his journey! I certainly can related to his way of thinking before coming to Christ.
@LosChongo2 жыл бұрын
@@japexican007 it’s god’s turn to respond.
@jessehollenbeck46072 жыл бұрын
My respect for him has skyrocketed as well.
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
The atheist both thinks too highly of himself but also too lowly. He thinks too highly because his pride won't let him admit that he has faults and that he is wrong. He thinks too lowly because this causes him to accept a dismal existence.
@EvilEyEbRoWzz2 жыл бұрын
Wow... I genuinely didn't think that either guest could bring me anymore "new" arguments to the table that I haven't come across before...boy was I wrong!
@archangelarielle2622 жыл бұрын
you must be new to this.
@Theomatikalli2 жыл бұрын
Hi @Aadam, what new gems did you discover :) ?
@Solbashio2 жыл бұрын
@@archangelarielle262 this comment is gold
@loganwillett28352 жыл бұрын
Such an awesome conversation! Could listen to these two talk all day
@Mountainside1012 жыл бұрын
what a deep and meaningful discussion between two opposing teams.... props to both.
@agitatedaligator53402 жыл бұрын
Cosmic skeptic has been a huge influence in my life. Love him :-)
@marishasveganworld22402 жыл бұрын
He is brilliant ✨
@katrinayakizz Жыл бұрын
Same
@Macluny Жыл бұрын
me too... mf made me go vegan xD
@marishasveganworld2240 Жыл бұрын
@@Macluny Now he is no longer vegan. So sad and disappointing, isn’t it? 😭
@Macluny Жыл бұрын
@@marishasveganworld2240 yes. I'd love to hear the detailed reason.
@frankiemiller53642 жыл бұрын
Alex is so suave, calm and collected, a very impressive showing good sir. Keep up demonstrating what atheists can really be 👍🏽
@Staremperor2 жыл бұрын
"What atheists can really be" - well, anything that theists can be. We are all just people from obnoxious a**holes to champions of humanity. Whether person believes in God, gods or none doesn't affect it.
@williamdowling77182 жыл бұрын
@@Staremperor in my experience, believing you're one of God's chosen people definitely lends itself towards obnoxious assholes. There are indeed a handful of very outspoken atheists... But the other side of the coin is Christian missionaries, of which there are exponentially more. And their main job is to travel the world and tell people they're filthy sinners who deserve hell except that some guy sacrificed himself so that if only you worship him, you can avoid eternal he'll fire.
@gideondavid302 жыл бұрын
@@williamdowling7718 Are you objecting to the message or the messengers? If I had to deliver you disturbing news, and you wouldn't like it, should I just not tell you anything? Maybe a hurricane is about to hit the beach, and I tell you go inland, would that make me an obnoxious person?
@ck58npj722 жыл бұрын
@@gideondavid30 From "The good news bible" then yes!
@DatHombre Жыл бұрын
^Im an atheist, but I certainly think loud obnoxious atheists are far more common (hence the original comment and it's number of likes, since people agree that he's setting a better example than we have seen countless times). Sure, missionaries are spreading that message, but genuine ones are doing it out of the goodness of their hearts (well not exactly, but the point is that they aren't doing it due to ego). Atheists are constantly are just doing an ego battle of who's smarter/who was so dumb that they got brainwashed, and while theists arent immune from the ego battle of "you're so dumb god is right in front of you idiot you think we all came from nothing??? Hahaha idiot", they are still, at least seemingly, far less likely to engage in the battle of egos, assuming they're genuinely trying to live up to what their book has taught them. Since to them, it's very serious, literally about heaven and hell, and to us its just an argument to get into for the sake of arguing.
@Eliza-cn5ii Жыл бұрын
Love this! Nothing better than respectful, reasoned discussions.
@the-outsider84583 ай бұрын
Sure there is. I'd take being intellectually honest and rigorous combined with logically consistent over "respectful" any day. But that might just be me, I suppose.
@valkopuhelin2581 Жыл бұрын
Good points on both sides. Thanks for stirring some thoughts. 🙂
@hannavanderberg16732 жыл бұрын
Alex is a very charming atheist in my eyes. He has real empathy for deep depression and suffering.
@amizan86532 жыл бұрын
Empathy for deep depression and suffering is completely independent of religious belief. There are wonderful atheists and terrible atheists. They're wonderful Christians and terrible Christians. There's wonderful Jews and terrible Jews. Etc. Religious belief has nothing to do with it
@510tuber Жыл бұрын
The difference between atheists and Christians is being an atheist tells you nothing about that person other than they don't believe in a god. They don't have doctrines. Christianity on the other hand has a book full of terrible things that even the "good" ones subscribe to.
@HarrDarr Жыл бұрын
@@amizan8653 if religion doesn't make you a better person what is the utility for it
@amizan8653 Жыл бұрын
@@HarrDarr I think the utility existed in the past. If humans work together as a group, it makes them more powerful altogether compared to individuals. I think religion in the early days was used to get people to form groups where members of the group were even willing to die for the objective of the religious group leader(s). Such a group would have more power and out-compete other groups of humans. Also, humans are extremely afraid of death in terms of what death truly is: the unescapable, permanent end of one's existence, where they return to the state they were in before they were born. Religions all promise some form of afterlife, which is a coping mechanism to not accept with death really is. Anyways, these are simply guesses of mine as to the utility of religion. I can't prove that these are true or not. They're simply what I think.
@pnut3844able Жыл бұрын
As everyone should
@jessep96712 жыл бұрын
I was obsessed with apologetics and taught it to high schoolers in church for years. I now fall into the non-resistent non-believer category. I eventually couldn't help but realize that my determination was to support Christianity, instead of starting with 0 assumptions and aiming for the truth. I've had no spiritual experiences, even despite praying for an hour long drive every day for years. I was one of the "overcommitted" Christians, and now I just look back and cringe.
@tomyossarian76812 жыл бұрын
I'm not going for sucking on each other's members, but I guess you have nothing to cringe about - it is common case that people have neither time nor strength of will to start from 0 and look at the claims impartially, especially when they have been indoctrinated as kids and live in tight communities that are bound by religion, church etc. I wasn't in that position, but I guess I would go through the same process. At some point I would need to know what the hell are facts about Jesus, resurrection, Genesis etc. I don't see how someone with average intellectual ability can swallow all the half baked answers, once they start asking the questions. In any case, good luck!
@tonywallens2172 жыл бұрын
Well that sucks lol
@JosiahG242 жыл бұрын
What evidence made you leave a relationship with Jesus?
@tristanrenteria5152 жыл бұрын
@@JosiahG24 I think it’s more of the lack of evidence of the god in the Bible.
@JosiahG242 жыл бұрын
@@tristanrenteria515 The question of honest seekers looking for proof of Christianity is bogus. God’s raising His Son from the dead is the only proof, and that proof is infinitely capable of settling the mind of anyone who is concerned and who is sincere. So the question is not what proof is there of Christianity, because we are not dealing with Christianity. We are dealing with Christ. We are dealing with a man who became flesh, walked among men, gave His life for man and, to complete it, rose on the third day from the dead. The question is not what you think of Christianity but what you think of Christ and what you are going to do about Him.
@paulfriedman2 жыл бұрын
I expected a good conversation, but this exceeded expecations. There was certainly some repeats from earlier conersations but they injected some new content into this conversation and I was engaged throughout. Keep up the great work.
@paulcrowder2 ай бұрын
I was really surprised to get to the end of this video and find that this is a Christian KZbin channel. Props to you for posting a video that undermines the arguments for your religion, I guess.
@Battousai-hd6is2 жыл бұрын
This is one of my most favorite Christian/Atheist dialogues of all time. Keep up the awesome work Cameron!
@johannaquinones74732 жыл бұрын
I agree! I was so moved by the level of respect, engagement, knowledge that each of these men displayed. Their sincere interest in capturing the other person’s meaning and line of thought, just admirable. As a christian, I have to say I admire Alex’ approach, he is incredibly humble to always leave the door open ((however slim)) to the possibility of him abandoning atheism, I hold on to the hope God will reveal himself to him in a way he finds irrefutable. I say that out of love and respect for the beautiful soul he is.
@chrissonofpear13842 жыл бұрын
@@johannaquinones7473 What would you say was irrefutable? John 14:12, would be one way. 2 Samuel 24 would be another - but boy, it would be messy. Or Numbers 13:13? It all depends what is being revealed, I guess, if God is so mutable, or changes His ways, or at least - changes what faces and traits, are shown. And Satan never got hidden from - even post high treason, his dubious suggestions about Job got given extraordinary weight and audience.
@Joe_mammma2 жыл бұрын
@@chrissonofpear1384 "Because the Bible says so" ought never be enough evidence, reason or argument to convince anyone of the truth of the bible. Of course its going to have "trust me bro this book is true and people who say it isn't are idiots" ("only the fool says in his heart...") sort of verses. All religions and cults have these self preservation/protection devices built in.
@Joe_mammma2 жыл бұрын
@@johannaquinones7473 If you're a Christian, how do you deal with the fact that your God has either favoured you in giving you the sort of brain that accepts the evidence for theism and not the evidence for atheism, or the sort of personal evidence that would convince anyone first hand, thus resigning you to an endless fate of pleasure and happiness. But he has given non-resistant non-belivers the sort of brains that are not convinced by the evidence for theism and are convinced by the evidence for atheism, or he denies them the undeniable first hand evidence that he gives to theists, thus resigning atheists to an endless fate of suffering and torment? How do you deal with that on a "all loving god" world view?
@johannaquinones74732 жыл бұрын
@@Joe_mammma Where is a person’s free will in all of this? I don’t see it like you do. Yes, everybody faces different circumstances, have different mental abilities, etc. and it is true God has very different ways of in which He makes Himself known to people, but I think it is up to each individual to ultimately make the choice for his/herself what to believe. For me it has been a journey, the more I learn about Christianity, the more I am convinced, and if I find myself doubting I put my questions to Him. I trust that He can help me either find answers or dissipate the feeling I need the answer to believe. I am not by any means saying to have faith without reason, but there is a point when you just decide that the evidence you have is good enough.
@JaySeamus2 жыл бұрын
Man, thank you CC Team for hosting cool stuff like these.
@joannware62282 жыл бұрын
The smartest atheists don't remain atheists, but for Alex it's a career.
@JazzyArtKL2 жыл бұрын
@@joannware6228 Very wrong there, Jo Ann. Atheist see the truth. We can do without an imaginary skydaddy.
@luisbarbosa8136Ай бұрын
@@JazzyArtKL you can not even stablish morality values ahaha
@JazzyArtKLАй бұрын
@@luisbarbosa8136 Of course we can. Check out Prof Sapolsky's talk on this where he clearly explains that morality is engrained in human nature.
@TheKorbi Жыл бұрын
This was a very good discussion. They work together to create a shared improved understanding, as opposed to fight against each other.
@justforrfunnn Жыл бұрын
Thanks Trent and Alex. I’m writing this only 45 minutes in, so my apologies if I’m writing prematurely - regarding the objective good God and an existence of evil. Alex wanted a Christian answer. Well Trent could have said we live in a broken world. From his Catholic belief… we did live in a perfect world. That’s was before the original sin.
@sylvilaguscunicularius31555 ай бұрын
You’ll find that when the debate goes tough for the Christians, they often drop the name Jesus or the name Bible from the conversation and solely rely on the broad religious position instead of specifics like the biblical stories. It’s harder to argue against a vague definition of god or several religions/denominations rather than just one.
@tjaysteno2 жыл бұрын
Why's it so bright, was this shot in heaven?! That's one way to win an argument, well played...
@BornOnThursday2 жыл бұрын
00:57:00 | Not sure if Trent was comparing the parent of a child to God and us, but I sure hope not, because Trent has basically said God can do what he wants to his creation...
@colinross37552 жыл бұрын
I reckon that is what Trent was saying and that it was just because god would have good reason to punish us in hell even though we can figure out what that good reason would be - that is just more assertion to justify god sending people to hell - it doesn’t demonstrate god or reasonably justify that his can do whatever he wants. Trent also seemed to suggest that while spanking Alex’s arse wouldn’t be good that is permissible for a parent to do to their child - he’s implying ownership of the child to justify doing what you want within some reason in the way the god is justified in doing anything. It not convincing at all.
@minor002 жыл бұрын
Love the patience of both speakers. That's probably why I was able to watch it until the end. They sounded like friends. Personally, I think a pragmatic justification for being a Christian is the hope for a renewed physical life without suffering and evil. If there is no everlasting and relatable hope after death, then one day everything will die and nothing will matter about my life. It may have mattered to me or others when we were alive, but in the end it will be the same. On the other hand, a new kind of relational and physical life in a world that has continuity from this life, yet suffering, evil, and death are not present....that's a uniquely hopeful possibility. This isn't to say there isn't any need for a epistemic justification of Christianity, but only that there is a pragmatic encroachment on the epistemic, as mentioned in the latest Reasonable Faith podcast. I find this to be a missing component of most explanations of why many of us become Christians. Another component can be found in what is often called reformed epistemology. I've already wrote enough though, but these would be three reasons why I am a Christian.
@Her_Viscera2 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the cost of living as a Christian isnt nothing! So we have to use some reason to determine if it's a good bet :)
@iSkulk2 жыл бұрын
If one day everything will be gone, and nothing matters inherently, then you get to decide for yourself what matters to you. I don't believe I have an afterlife waiting for me, so I have to make sure I live and love to the fullest while I can! I appreciate your well thought out comment, my friend. All the best.
@davethebrahman98702 жыл бұрын
Let him believe this who can! I’d like to believe that every woman is attracted to me, but the evidence is against it.
@minor002 жыл бұрын
@@iSkulk Thanks for reading my long comment(s) and replying! I agree that if atheism is true, everything will one day be gone and nothing matters inherently so you might as well live your life in whatever way seems best to you. I'm glad to hear your way includes loving to the fullest! Sometimes love is hard and even costly, and I'm guessing we'd both agree that the most loving thing a person can do for another would be to unexpectedly voluntarily choose to take the painful death that someone should've had so that they could live. For example, when Yondu unexpectedly dies for Quill. In Christianity, it's Jesus who unexpectedly dies for even the ones who rejected and killed him, in order that they would live. Even if you think it's a fictional story, I hope you get a chance, if you already haven't, to read a couple of the four gospel accounts of Jesus. Or if you don't want to read them, try watching "The Chosen", which is a top notch TV series on the story (with some creative license). Obviously as a Christian, I believe the gospel accounts are more than fiction, but even if we never agree on that, I hope you'll be inspired by the amazing love modeled in Jesus. Also, thanks for calling me friend. I hope for you all the best as well!
@minor002 жыл бұрын
@@Her_Viscera For sure. There is definitely a cost. Epistemic justification is critical as well!
@blackbeauty581710 ай бұрын
57:09, but the thing is, God is not simply smacking bottoms. He's giving 10 year olds leukaemia or doing other heinous things. Even parents with moral responsibility have certain boundaries
@Ninkumpop9 ай бұрын
as an agnostic I would like to play devil's advocate. God isn't necessarily giving kids leukaemia but rather he's allowing it. it's the same as seeing someone get hit by a car and not stopping it rather than pushing them.
@erectilereptile73839 ай бұрын
@@Ninkumpop I am also an agnostic, but I must object - if God set the world into motion (that includes the entire universe) then this child dying of leukemia, this person being hit by the car was certainly part of God’s plan if he did not stop it.
@redmusic267 ай бұрын
@@erectilereptile7383 I'm admittedly not an agnostic lol, but I must respond. The fact that something happened is not evidence that God willed it.
@Gabreyes0932 жыл бұрын
I subscribed to Trent because of the way he argued for his belief. Although I am an agnostic atheist, I like to challenge my existing beliefs. I only recently discovered Alex and his channel. In this discussion Alex was clear with his explanations and Trent did not seem to answer directly. In short, I will be consuming a lot of Alex's content this week. Great stuff!
@gehrig7593 Жыл бұрын
Christians never answer directly, because they can't, there's no argument for them to make. Expecially his orrible answer about slavery really tells you everything you have to know about the intrinsic evilness of religion.
@Stuugie. Жыл бұрын
Yeah I noticed that too. Trent when his ideas are backed into a corner seems to divert from the subject. Alex brought that up several times in this discussion and Trent never adequately engaged with Alex's point. Trent did this in his debate with Destiny on abortion too. He is very civil and his points are very well crafted and informed though, they both did pretty well I think
@SimplyStrength043Ай бұрын
@@Stuugie.did Trent subvert from the subject in the abortion discussion with destiny?
@Unsure_salmon8 ай бұрын
I was an atheist for a while. I also had quite severe depression for a number of years. I remember one day I was lying on my bathroom floor crying about the state of myself and the world. I had really no options left. I swallowed my foolish rationality and pride and I asked something, anything for help, for relief, or a sign that would help me through my suffering. God or Allah or the spirit oh Buddha, I just wanted to understand honestly. I pleaded. And what happened? Nothing happened. And that is a real thing that happened in our universe. And you can’t tell me that it didn’t happen. I’ve made sense of this experience. And I know intuitively that if religious believers accuse nonbelievers of “not trying hard enough to have faith” they will drive their own religion to extinction.
@everykneeshallbowzao8 ай бұрын
An existence of a god and the reality of our suffering doesn’t mean god is just going to come down and stop your suffering for you. He’s not a vending machine. No one on earth escapes suffering. You pleaded and cried out to nothing because allah Buddha and the god of the bible are all different things.
@georgogiannakis61234 ай бұрын
@@everykneeshallbowzaoHe cried out to all of them individually. And sure, a supposed god doesn’t HAVE to help anybody… but an all loving one might have done a little more.
@FahimusAlimus2 жыл бұрын
I’m looking forward to Trent’s journey towards veganism.
@theunrepentantatheist242 жыл бұрын
I think he is more likely to give up Jesus
@FahimusAlimus2 жыл бұрын
@@theunrepentantatheist24 I doubt it.
@amizan86532 жыл бұрын
I wish
@tennicksalvarez9079 Жыл бұрын
Lol
@zavaughnkirkland589210 ай бұрын
@@theunrepentantatheist24 He would have to give up scriptural orthodoxy to be vegan. In Romans we read that "He who is weak in faith eats vegetables only". God instructs Peter to "Raise, kill, and eat". Jesus informes us personally that "all foods are clean for you to eat" so it's obvious to me that moral veganism is just a subjective individual elevating beasts up to the level of humanity. I don't have enough faith to look at farm animals as enslaved.😂
@robertzabick10308 ай бұрын
If there is a God, we are brought into this world by no choice of our own. We face tragedies, sickness, pain, suffering, grief, and ultimately death. If this is not enough, most will end up in an eternal hell. Yet we are to believe that God loves us. In spite of this, I like Alex, struggle, and even desire, to believe in God.
@lesmen42 жыл бұрын
I am highly sympathetic towards Alex O'Connor concern over why there is suffering and pain with us. .
@NoInjusticeLastsForever2 жыл бұрын
The immense pointless suffering of trillions of trillions of trillions of innocent animals on this planet alone should be enough to shake any believer's faith to its core.
@lesmen42 жыл бұрын
@@NoInjusticeLastsForever what i begin to believe is that the pain, suffering and death in any form is part of our life on earth no matter how painful it is.. what matters the most is quality of our soul that matters the afterlife that i believe in. Jesus set a precedent for this process.
@Arbitrary_Moniker2 жыл бұрын
@@lesmen4 In English, please.
@royalrejects2 жыл бұрын
@@lesmen4 do you have any actual reason to hold that belief, or is it just what you’d like to be true?
@japexican0072 жыл бұрын
@@NoInjusticeLastsForever indeed I agree pointless suffering created by man who rejected God and now God has to clean up our mess except atheists still reject God while making him the excuse as to why pain and suffering exists lol trololol
@mac34412 жыл бұрын
This was fantastic. Love Alex’s heart so much.
@davidthornton27882 жыл бұрын
Great conversation. Im an Athiest and I liked Trents approach and deminer.
@johnwick20182 жыл бұрын
Demeaner
@johnwick20182 жыл бұрын
Damn it!!! Its demeanour
@Edgarbopp2 жыл бұрын
Divine hiddenness is one of my main issues as well. I’m going to need some serious evidence to believe in something extraordinary like the existence of god. However, if this god exists they are presumably perfectly situated to provide me with this evidence. Yet they either exist and will not convince me, or more plausibility, lack existence.
@Edgarbopp2 жыл бұрын
@timmy Smith I’m sorry but you don’t get it. The things you mentioned are not evidence, they are circumstances with very plausible natural explanations. You think I should disregard these in favor of supernatural ones? Why would I? I’d need some extraordinary evidence to do so. And we’ve come back to where we started.
@Edgarbopp2 жыл бұрын
@timmy Smith if your god exists it presumably knows the evidence that will convince me, is more than capable of providing it, and does not. In that case your un evidenced opinion is by comparison certainly “not good enough”. I hope you also have a good day.
@samuelunderwood52862 жыл бұрын
Your mere existence, your conscious awareness, ability to choose, and your internal moral sense should serve as plenty of extraordinary evidence to start, and that's before you even start talking about the cosmological arguments. I used to be basically agnostic until I studied Aquinas and Augustine. I know you can be convinced too bro. Ardently seek the truth! God bless
@godfreydebouillon88072 жыл бұрын
Like some samples of God-scat or something? Or flashes across the sky? But wait, any "evidence" we could attribute to some natural explanation. I'd seriously go lookup "the logical rules of inference". Evidence simply is not needed to believe in all sorts of things. I can believe the disjunction "all of space, matter and time exists eternally, or it has a cause" (with an axiom being it cannot come from absolutely nothing) and zero evidence is required for that disjunction to be true.
@Edgarbopp2 жыл бұрын
@@godfreydebouillon8807 it’s easy for me to believe, for example, that my friends and family exist. I see them, I interact with them, I touch them etc. Things like that would be a good place to start. Then I’d like proofs of the existence of the supernatural and such. All this would be exceedingly easy for a god to achieve.
@YuGiOhDuelChannel2 жыл бұрын
Trent has such an amazing way of fully fleshing out what someone is asking or trying to say, that is definitely what makes him special at this debate stuff.
@cheftr12 жыл бұрын
Interesting take. I find him quite different. Often, when he is fleshing something out, he he just changes what is being said. Example when the talk about the Problem of Evil. Trent changes it into "Why God let's bad stuff happen". If that were the problem of Evil, it wouldn't be considered a problem. The switch from discussing "How can Perfectly Good create an absence of itself and it still be Perfectly Good" into "Why does Perfectly Good allow bad things to happen" are fundamentally different questions. Trent's changed question assumes there is no Problem of Evil (creation of evil) and asks why God allows (already created) Evil to continue existing.
@cheftr12 жыл бұрын
@FPT Bot They are fundamentally different in that one asks about actualization and the other asks about sustainment. Trent knows this but does it anyway.
@noahwinslow32522 жыл бұрын
Trent has a great way of confidently not understanding the question
@King-uj1lh2 жыл бұрын
@@cheftr1 both questions are part of the problem of evil, though.
@cheftr12 жыл бұрын
@@King-uj1lh If asked one question and you decide to answer the other, it doesn't really matter that they both are found as chapters in the problem of evil book. They are entirely different arguements dealing with the Problem of Evil, with different premises and different conclusions.
@lyterman2 жыл бұрын
I'm thankful for thoughtful and charitable interlocutors like Alex who can help us understand our beliefs and God better through these types of discussions. Perhaps that's one moral good that could come from some non-resistive unbelief 😉
@davidlovesyeshua2 жыл бұрын
As Alex would say, lucky you to benefit from Alex's non-consensually being withheld sufficient evidence/experience/whatever to believe.
@peterhudson5748 Жыл бұрын
What is Alex’s “threshold” and how is it objectively wrong?
@kenhilker25072 жыл бұрын
Trent at 5:10 "Infinity is just a really bad thing to bring in the world" Trent at 8:25 "God is infinite"
@trygvenyhaug66682 жыл бұрын
Well, his view would be that God is outside of the world So in that sense, those statements are not inconsistent.
@kenhilker25072 жыл бұрын
@@trygvenyhaug6668 ok, but what makes an infinite bad inside the world, yet totally acceptable outside of the world?
@trygvenyhaug66682 жыл бұрын
@@kenhilker2507 It seems like he was talking about an infinite series of events, which wouldn't make a lot of sense, because if there was an infinite number of events in the past, you would never get to today. I don't think he's talking about God in this infinite series of events sense. Also, our understanding of infinities is based on the rules and laws we observe in this world, but if you think of God as outside of our world, he wouldn't be limited by those laws.
@ChrisSena Жыл бұрын
@@trygvenyhaug6668 "If there was an infinite number of events in the past, you would never get to today" That is mathematically false. In the same way that one can prove there are an infinite number of rational (and irrational) numbers between 0 and 1, there are an infinite number of moments in time between a hypothetical origin moment of the universe and now. In fact there are an infinite number of moments in any day (or indeed any period of time).
@trygvenyhaug6668 Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisSena That's a different infinity. The argument is that time had a beginning. If time did not have a beginning(the kind of infinite he is talking about) you would never get to today. It is absurd to say that there is an infinite number of days in the past. You can't count to infinity, but theres still an infinite number of "moments" between two points in time. That would be the case if time had a beginning too.
@anthonyharrell4547 Жыл бұрын
I sincerely enjoyed this conversation
@ChristenDOM0102 жыл бұрын
I'm very excited for this one, probably gonna watch it this weekend. Greetings from the Netherlands! We're a dutch apologetics squad. Groetjes uit Nederland :)
@CJ-sw8lc2 жыл бұрын
I love the Netherlands! (I'll hou Nederland...?)
@ChristenDOM0102 жыл бұрын
@@CJ-sw8lc Amazing! You're getting there, it's: Ik hou van Nederland.
@aidanya13362 жыл бұрын
Groetjes van een nederlandse atheist. Nog nooit een vervelend gesprek gehad met een gelovige hier. (greetings from a dutch atheist. Never had an annoying/bad conversation with a believer here)
@CJ-sw8lc2 жыл бұрын
@@ChristenDOM010 Ahh! I need to practice more 🧐
@ChristenDOM0102 жыл бұрын
@@aidanya1336 Groetjes terug :)Hoelang ben je al overtuigd van het atheïsme?
@philosophicaljay3449 Жыл бұрын
As a polytheist, I find it fascinating to watch these types of discussions between atheists and monotheists, as I can often find myself agreeing with either side or neither side on some issues. I find the intellectually honest, civil discussions happening between atheists and monotheists recently to be a very big step of from the type of discourse we typically found on KZbin a decade ago. I hope that things continue in this more civil direction in the future.
@jkid2467 Жыл бұрын
❤
@glebkamnev7006 Жыл бұрын
Out of curiosity, whats your Religion? And what points do you disagree with on both sides? :)
@philosophicaljay3449 Жыл бұрын
@@glebkamnev7006 Hellenismos, Greek Polytheism. I tend towards reconstructionism, but typically use the term "Revivalist". As for things I agree with on each side, Things I agree with Alex on: 1) I agree with Alex on the Problem of Divine Hiddenness, at least when it comes to religions like Christianity and Islam within which God demands worship. Within many religions, including my own, the Gods do not demand worship, nor do they necessarily desire it. Worship isn't for the sake of the Gods, it doesn't get us a better place in an afterlife, etc. Religions like this have no issue with Divine Hiddenness. I also would take things a step further than Alex and say that Divine Hiddenness is even WORSE for Christians, Muslims, etc. because of the fact that non-resistant non-believers can end up believers of many different religions (take me, for instance, that went from non-resistant non-belief to Polytheism). According to most standard theological ideas on the afterlife within Christianity and Islam, I am hell-bound merely because my non-resistant non-belief led me to the wrong religion, and that is problematic. 2) I do tend to side with Alex on the Problem of Evil in THIS discussion, but that is because they are both coming at it with the conception that a world without evil is a possible world and thus the existence of evil needs an explanation. I think that a world without evil would be a perfect world, but perfection only exists for the Gods and the Forms. Anything beyond that will have imperfections (take a sphere, for example, we can mathematically understand what a perfect sphere is but we also understand, due to our knowledge of physics, that such a thing cannot actually exist in the world). If you start with the idea that the world inevitably will have SOME evils, that is where I think various theodicies, like some used by Trent, work, but as it seems Trent maintains that a world without evil is possible, I tend to agree moreso with Alex's criticisms here. Things I agree with Trent on: 1) While it is moreso an agreement with Pruss and Koons, that infinite causal chains as an explanation cause more problems than they solve. I do think that the Grim Reaper Paradox, and variations of it, helps to suggest that our causal history must be finite. 2) I do agree with him that, in regards to historical miracles, that Jesus resurrection has better evidence going for it than many non-Christian ones. I think that is, however, in large part due to Christian dominance in the world almost dictating what texts got preserved, and I also do not think that that actually means that Christianity is true rather than Polytheism (Jesus' Resurrection is consistent with Polytheism, so non-Christian miracles not having as good of evidence as the Resurrection isn't an issue if the evidence is still substantial enough). I could go on, but that would require rewatching the video to see what they covered here.
@Detson40410 ай бұрын
Polytheism is a much more coherent idea.
@JesseDriftwood Жыл бұрын
I’ve listened to this a few times since it came out, and I genuinely appreciate the conversation. I think Alex does a fantastic job presenting his own positions as well as strong counters to Trent’s. I also appreciate how honest Trent seems when trying to understand Alex properly before offering rebuttals. I think these two are some of the best representatives of healthy conversation in this space. Now that it’s been a year I’d love to know Trent’s thoughts on a few things. (If anyone else knows feel free to weigh in!) 1. Did you ever get off the fence? Did you land on ethical veganism or an advocate of factory farming (I imagine neither, because nuance). 2. Around 1:22:00 when using Michael Shermer as an example he says: I think really smart people can come to unintuitive conclusions. This strikes me as the opposite point he wants to make. The world is full of unintuitive truths. Quantum mechanics isn’t intuitive. A globe earth isn’t intuitive. There are countless logic puzzles that demonstrate just how readily our intuitions can fail us. It seems to me that a smart the smarter a person is, the more willing they should be to accept unintuitive answers when related to life’s most complex questions. 3. I forget the rest. But just want to reiterate, I like Trent a lot. I think he’s be a very fun person to get a beer with and chat philosophy. Much love.
@HereTakeAFlower Жыл бұрын
Number 2 I want to give my two cents about, since it's something I've had my own issues with. Intellect is mostly pattern recognition, the universe is very complex and apparently chaotic. It happens that smart people may notice new hidden patterns and expose them to the world, and (maybe irrationally to a degree) they must fight so that they are not relegated back to the chaotic background at least for as long as it takes to properly assess their worth. A very smart person could theoretically create a defense so good for their theory that others who undertake the duty of trying to prove it false, fail. Eventually someone, or the smart man himself, may prove it wrong, but the time between him finding a theory and someone proving it wrong (we are assuming it's wrong) is a lapse of time in which great intelligence made up and sustained a lie. Sorry English is not my first language and I may have messed up somewhere.
@the-outsider84583 ай бұрын
We apparently have two different understandings for what the word "honest" entails.
@Wishlake2 жыл бұрын
That argument at 56:00 just floored me.
@dreamwolfnektovich1944 Жыл бұрын
56:28 What Trent said here is utterly abhorrent. It is not in fact moral to beat your children, countless studies were done on it you do nothing but cause trauma if you do it. And what is even more disgusting is that he admits that without "moral authority of having caused them" limiting others autonomy would be slavery. So by his logic the act of parenting is slavery but it's a just kind of slavery. Just why? Why do people see their children as objects? Can't you teach children by love? And if you can't why do you think it's OK for you to have them? This pathetic remnant of pre-enlightenment garbage ethics must die. As moral people we all must condemn the religion that promotes child abuse.
@santa_christ Жыл бұрын
nobody: Christians: I wanna hit my kids so badly
@zgramzhnisk303610 ай бұрын
Studies on this topic by their nature tend to look at the larger picture, they cannot be used to condemn each individual case of parents disciplining their children via physical force. Although I agree in most cases where violence is used for parenting it does more harm than good, there are certain circumstances where some sort of a physical responce or at least the threat of the possibility of a physical responce is absolutely needed. You seem to have a naively positive view of how children behave, coupled with a seeming underestimation of the possible consequences of their actions, especially on other children. As someone who has over 20 cousins, many of them younger than me that i had to look after from time to time, some kids just won't stop doing harmful acts like excessive bullying unless you threaten them with force, no matter what you do or tell to get them to stop, believe me i did try all the healthy communication methods that i could think of. This isn't that surprising, considering studies show empathy itself isn't something we are born with, rather it is something we are taught over the years. So some children who havent yet had empathy instilled in them are literally sociopath like in their behaviour, even if they have good and caring "ideal" parents. A kid who practically behaves like a sociopath won't listen to arguments from "empathy" based on "healthy communication" or any other stupid advice typically given by many so called "experts". In cases like that, for the sake of the other children these kids might target you do need to step in with a strong deterrent if they won't stop despite repeated warnings. Obviously not beating them into a pulp but a slap or some other limited method of violence can really be needed and effective to discipline them.
@dylanboczar9996 ай бұрын
@@zgramzhnisk3036 This doesn't really address what dreamwolflettersnumbers is saying, I think. Killing is morally wrong, but sometimes it can (with the same cool utilitarian logic that you use here) be justified in situations where worse wrongs might otherwise be committed. Similarly, using violence against sociopathic children is still wrong, even if it can sometimes be used to avoid even worse outcomes. To summarize: you're saying "violence against children can [sometimes] be effective in reducing harm," dreamwolf is saying "violence against children is morally wrong." Obviously, both can be true. Also worth mentioning that *your* particular talking point can (and has been) easily used to excuse *un-* justified violence towards children (whereas I can think of very few situations in which a bias towards restraint would have a terrible outcome, short of rare "exception that proves the rule" situations where physical harm is already involved, as you say).
@jacks.68722 жыл бұрын
Wow, I oftentimes find myself disagreeing with whichever Christian Alex debates with, but I'm finding that Trent is doing a great job with taking him on.
@badboyb123-n9k4 ай бұрын
Lmao until you find out he worships the largest pedo-ring on the planet labeled as a "church"
@stevegovea1 Жыл бұрын
After I suffered from some traumas in life , I thought about how our ancestors, the hunter-gatherers , who encountered the Neanderthals, might have dealt with suffering loss of loved ones. I truly believe what arose was a belief in an afterlife and god(s)... to help provide hope and reduce the chance of suicidal ideations.
@pnut3844able Жыл бұрын
Bingo
@paulhayes5684 Жыл бұрын
I think it's the opposite and much bigger than we realize
@shamicentertainment1262 Жыл бұрын
@@paulhayes5684care to elaborate ?
@robg5654 Жыл бұрын
both sides made brilliant points i think its these discussions that will eventually lead us to the truth that is if we ever have enough time to develop the concepts before extinction
@shinywarm6906 Жыл бұрын
56:00 Trent's suggestion that he has the moral right to hit his own children, because they are "his" is chiling. Firstly, because it implies it's the act of fathering a child that gives a man "moral authority" over them, rather than its being a corollary of his offering them care and support. Secondly, because he is proposing that the parent-child relationship is essentially one of private, individualised, ownership, rather than guardianship of a human being until they are competent to make their own decisions. His attitudes are precisely those that underpin slavery, and the abuse of animals and other living things through the centuries.
@tjwhite6052 Жыл бұрын
1000% agree with that observation. While watching this I kept thinking, not only does Trent have weak reasons for being a Christian but the morality he derives from it is primitive and gross. The more I honestly engage with Christians the more I'm confident that I made the right choice in leaving Christianity.
@hyuugafan2 Жыл бұрын
So parents don’t have responsibility to discipline their children? Have you not seen how unruly children can be….if your parent say don’t touch the hot stone and you still touch it that’s your fault…
@said8784 Жыл бұрын
@@hyuugafan2 Parents have a responsibility to discipline their children. Parents should not have the right to abuse their children. Corporal punishment is abuse, it leaves lasting scars and only teaches children forcing people to submit to your will through violence is acceptable.
@dan_m77747 ай бұрын
Funny how a needed spanking is defined abuse, but mutilation of genitals is love
@SimplyStrength043Ай бұрын
@@said8784no it will not. spanking has a time and a place
@STAR0SS Жыл бұрын
People praise Trent for his intellectual honesty but he dodged (politely I'll give you that) almost all of Alex hard questions. What's his answer to the deer under a tree problem ? I have no idea.
@lawrence1318 Жыл бұрын
Without suffering faith is void, and without faith it is impossible to please God. So there's your answer.
@@MB-nx9tqAtheist here (or, nonresistant nonbeliever)-I wouldn't call that a non-sequitur. To have faith, you need that faith tested. Suffering is presented by the individual you're replying to as the test for faith, meaning without a reference point (the spectrum of suffering-happiness), you have no touchstone for faith. It's the same way having no power and being peaceful does not make you good, just harmless. One way to visualise a good man is to visualise a powerful man who exercises reason of his own volition to inhibit his use of his power.
@lawrence_of_osaka Жыл бұрын
Complete dodger
@j.harperscott8 ай бұрын
When Alex states that a world without evils that produce goods such as forgiveness and compassion is better, he is basically expressing a desire for heaven. A place where there is no suffering. This is a Christian concept. We have to accept the reality that we live in a fallen world, and one day, there will be a world without all evil. The Christian has that to look forward to.
@bookerdewitt63467 ай бұрын
I'm glad God decided to subject us to all this evil b4 heaven
@C-Farsene_56 ай бұрын
The idea of a utopian world can be found in many ideas, be it islamic, buddhist, even communist
@marcwilliams98245 ай бұрын
Christians need to stop stealing ideas (ie. a world without suffering) and passing them off as if they came up with them.
@the-outsider84583 ай бұрын
Forgiveness and compassion are useful only in our reality. If no one does anything wrong, ie heaven, no one needs forgiveness. If there's no pain of any kind, mental or physical, there's no need for compassion. Going through hardships to produce goods that are useless and irrelevant in heaven, to go to heaven, makes zero sense if you honestly consider the attributes of heaven.
@S.D.323Ай бұрын
But then why create anything besides heaven
@joshuanewsted2560Ай бұрын
@1:20:27, Blessed are those that are not bothered by internal contradictions, lack of evidence, and biblical atrocities. And also blessed are those who are too lazy or unwilling to even learn that these even potentially exist. For these shall inherit the kingdom of heaven. -Gospel of Trent
@samuelwaller4924Ай бұрын
I was blown away at that part lol. Don't worry, he's not anti-intellectual, he just believes thinking is a waste of time and that common sense is probably better anyways (if you don't think about it too hard, of course)
@joshuanewsted2560Ай бұрын
It’s also a bit disturbing that he uses morality as a similar comparison. Meaning if you contemplate and study morality, but end up with a contradictory view to his, you’re wrong. This works for morality because no amount of study and contemplation could justify murder for example, but is quite different for religion because an atheist isn’t harming anyone.
@samuelwaller4924Ай бұрын
@@joshuanewsted2560 counterpoint: plenty of people justify murder (and worse) all of the time. Lol
@joshuanewsted2560Ай бұрын
@@samuelwaller4924 I don’t disagree but that doesn’t make it right. My point is that it’s odd to think of a disbelief in god and murder being anyway equivalent. This is what Trent seems to be doing by muddling morality with belief.
@alleydi8120 Жыл бұрын
So much respect for Alex. Well done Trent, always impressed with your answers.
@nelson67029 ай бұрын
My physical suffering comes and goes. There is no remedy. It shrinks my world. Maybe your compassion does something for you but it does nothing for my suffering.
@viancavarma3455 Жыл бұрын
how articulate alex is never fails to blow my mind
@fleshedexperience Жыл бұрын
It's scary.
@ATOK_ Жыл бұрын
He has watched all of Hitchens videos and read his books
@bryn3652 Жыл бұрын
He's made himself sound smarter by changing the way he speaks
@Spasaymoostard Жыл бұрын
Or he's actually that smart and has only gotten smarter...@@bryn3652
@justin1029200011 ай бұрын
@viancavarma3455 But Alex is still wrong. Charm, sophistication and intelligence don't equate to wisdom and spiritual insight.
@CSB4582 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this diplomatic discourse between these two gentlemen very much.
@CSB4582 ай бұрын
Marking 1:13:31 for my own reference
@AcidGubba6 ай бұрын
Knock Knock.. Who's there? It's Jesus, let me in... Why? I have to save you From what? From what l'm gonna do to you if you dont let me in
@Sarge2265 ай бұрын
He doesn’t DO anything to people that reject him.
@sylvilaguscunicularius31554 ай бұрын
@@Sarge226Jesus said he doesn’t intend or mean to cause division (hah), but if you put anyone before or above him (even thy father and thy mother), then you are not worthy of him… meaning you aren’t saved… because he finds you unworthy. He won’t save you, therefore you will be tortured by his demons and burn in lake fire, which are all his creations. He is in control of this. It’s not Jesus knocking on that door. It’s Jesus and his thugs (demons) behind him ready to break your ankles, if you don’t pay your tax to the church. Oh wait. Lucky we’re in the USA, and it’s 2024, lol. They used to do that before…
@wadeodonoghue18874 ай бұрын
I'm not a main stream Christian, in my view "Christ" is analogous to "Self" in phycology with a tint of magic. The Peace, Fear, Pride within you aren't you you experience them, motivations to dominate(or sibmit) or rizz(be rizzed) are animalistic drives and can be rejected therefore they cannot be the Essence of you either. The Observer that gets to witness this experience of emotions, motivations, etc and learn from "what is", is ultimately the "I am" in "being". This Observer within may be under developed, so much so that you might feel and think you have no option but to dominate or submit, to bend to "human fallibility". So in my view Jesus doesn't want to come in but for you, your higher self to come out of Heaven's closet as it were, an break some bread. Each higher Self has a higher self it may give birth to, in other words the depth of conscious being is without bottom, we naked monkeys have just reached the pond with a fish called Jesus calling us in.
@the-outsider84583 ай бұрын
@@sylvilaguscunicularius3155 Jesus didn't intend to cause division? Where do you get your Jesus info? The Bible?
@sylvilaguscunicularius31553 ай бұрын
@@the-outsider8458 where do I get my Jesus info, lol. Donut. You read the Biblical mythology too literally. Did he bring us a sword? Was he handing out swords? The scriptures tell us “to love thy neighbor as thyself, and to love our enemies…” it says “those who love their brother abides by the light…” “do not judge….” which means all these verses have a deeper meaning, right. When Jesus says he comes to divide? Is this the deeper meaning? No! It’s against his nature and what he’s said and done. He’s about unity, loving, and forgiving one another. Read those verses with that understanding next time. The division is caused not by him but by the people (friends and family) that do not love him as the believer does… which could spark division. Jesus speaks in parables to provoke thought. You should read your Bible more deeply. You’re welcome. Fyi. Read better or he’ll send his thugs and divide you (hah).
@Imheretohelpnhavefun2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic dialog. Super respectful and in depth.
@thekendredspirit5771 Жыл бұрын
Maximal suffering that's unrelenting= Eternal torture. I believe in a creator but I find the concept of eternal torture for finite sins and/or disbelief is the most cruel and unusual ideology I've ever heard in my life and this is not hyperbole.
@santa_christ Жыл бұрын
1:19:12 Trent’s answer is extremely dishonest here. The guy asking the question describes atheists making an honest attempt to discover a god, and Trent instantly misrepresents it as “atheist seeks evidence, rejects god.” I wish they hadn’t let him get away with it, it was blatant.
@jamesiiimcnabb6358 Жыл бұрын
Alex said that you can't decide of yourself what to believe. Wrong. Once you've decided what's true u still need to believe it. It takes the strength of mind of faith to keep the faith.
@tjwhite6052 Жыл бұрын
I don't have to keep faith that 1+1=2. I don't have to keep faith that the sky is blue, I don't have to keep faith that the earth is billions of years old. I don't have to keep faith about any fact of the universe that can be demonstrated as true. Only faith needs to keep faith because it's flimsy and misguided at best
@daviddeida Жыл бұрын
Very well put.Those who believe in Darwin,even though Darwin also doubted his findings needs faith to hold that belief.Those who think reality is confined to 3D only also needs faith to keep that model.Those who think an ape can know reality needs faith.Its hilarious that anyone thinks they have a model thats right.
@SydneyCarton2085 Жыл бұрын
@@tjwhite6052 You either believe your life is a miracle granted by God or that you are an organic robot. You are only as bad as society allows you to be and any morals you may claim to have come from a highly evolved sense of altruism, you must then see them as having personal utility like opposable thumbs. You only feel anything for your family and friends because of their utility, no? You may try and assign value but you will get it from somewhere if not from God. Go and sin, your heart is set on it and you know you are wrong.
@tjwhite6052 Жыл бұрын
@Diego Cervantes yes morality has utility. If I kill someone I open myself up to being killed in revenge. If I help someone out I open myself up to being helped in return. It's not rocket science. And yes even feelings of love are neurochemical "rewards" for behaviors with high survival utility. That doesn't cheapen love or feelings of love. If you want to call me a meat robot or whatever, fine. I can accept it if it's true. I'm always curious though when I hear christians claim I'm a sinner or that without God I'm a moral monster. Makes me wonder if that's not somehow a projection, that what you're really saying is that if you didn't have a God belief you'd be an immoral monster. If thats the case then please continue believing in God!
@AD-nq2nz Жыл бұрын
@@daviddeida Your argument is flawed because it assumes that Darwin 'owns' the theory of evolution and that its validity is a function only of Darwin's opinion i.e., if Darwin was somehow resurrected today and disclaimed the truth of evolution, evolution would therefore be false. This is incorrect because the theory of evolution is not the property of Darwin; he was the theory's progenitor, but it has since been built upon by thousands upon thousands of researchers. Since Darwin's time, we have found extensive fossil records which overwhelmingly support the truth of evolution. Darwin's theoretical resurrection and disclamation of evolution would be no defence to such evidence. To illustrate the flaw in your argument by way of analogy, imagine if Newton was resurrected today and he then disclaimed the truth of his second law of motion, that Force = Mass x Acceleration? Would all modern physicists cease to believe in its truth? Obviously not, because there is now overwhelming empirical evidence that on a non-quantum scale, F = ma is incontrovertibly true.
@micahcollins6412 Жыл бұрын
Christ is Lord! I love when debates like this can happen and people can talk about this. Horn is a good apologist for the Faith.
@talyahr3302 Жыл бұрын
If that were true you wouldn't need an explanation point. Everyone would just know. And you don't think it's telling that it's called being an apologist lol.
@micahcollins6412 Жыл бұрын
@@talyahr3302 Apologist ultimately comes from Late Latin, meaning “a speech in defense of”, in this case Christianity. Also, you saying that Christ isn’t Lord doesn’t make him any less the Lord.
@evad687 Жыл бұрын
@@micahcollins6412You Christ is Lord doesn’t change the fact that it’s actually the eternal Oompa Loompa that is Lord. Prove to me it isn’t.
@Mentesestoicas_ Жыл бұрын
Alex is so precise on his arguments that the dude was like: Yeah thats god's work here.
@war0nheaven4 ай бұрын
😂😂
@AeroCraftAviation Жыл бұрын
36:27 I think the issue here is how closed-off his thinking is. It reminds me of the question "What are aliens like?" Most people with closed-off thinking would ask "How many fingers do they have? How fast can they run? What atmosphere do they breathe? How tall are they?" But the questions we should be asking are "Are they even physical? Could we kill them by observing them because of quantum effects? Do they live in the core of a neutron star? Do they perceive space and time? Do discreet quantities exist to them? Do they have mass?" Saying "God needed to make a world that strives for perfection because striving generates more goods" is frankly quite naïve. It demonstrates he doesn't understand what it means for God to have literally created everything. Like the watchmaker fallacy. It's not "A tribesman comes upon a watch by the seaside" It's "Watch watchswatch watches uwatch a watch watch the watchside" EVERYTHING is watches.
@jerrythecanary962 жыл бұрын
21:53 “I think just the basic idea, that there is a perfect being, who does actually care about you, and will make up for all your suffering. I think this is something that any rational person should desire.” Hard disagree.
@DodInTheSky2 жыл бұрын
Elaborate
@colinrobertson75802 жыл бұрын
Why? I'm an antitheist but this doesn't seem objectionable to me. If I had a mean boss working somewhere that I hated, but I didn't have the ability to get another job, and when I finished working there if I was given 10 times what I made while I was ther. In that circumstance I would be happy that I was given that gift to make up for my pain and suffering even if ideally I was simply just treated well from the beginning. Would you truly be more content to suffer for no reason than to be compensated for it?
@jerrythecanary962 жыл бұрын
@@DodInTheSky I’m not one to think suffering can be compensated. Like people say, “nothing can ever make up for X” be it the murder of a loved one, a traumatic experience, etc… But speaking for myself, i don’t desire a heaven. I’m fine with non-existence after death, I don’t need compensation for random tragedies.
@jerrythecanary962 жыл бұрын
@@colinrobertson7580 I’d liken it more to an author making his characters suffer and then giving them a happy ending. I’m not one to think suffering can be compensated. Like people say, “nothing can ever make up for X” be it the murder of a loved one, a traumatic experience, etc… But speaking for myself, i don’t desire a heaven. I’m fine with non-existence after death.
@colinrobertson75802 жыл бұрын
@@jerrythecanary96 ok, so for example if I hit you with my care would you not want me to pay for your medical bills?
@emdivine2 жыл бұрын
I see a lot of people praising Trent for his honest approach, addressing arguments etc... but I don't see it, all I hear is him weaselling around the question or point again and again, refusing to engage.
@BornOnThursday2 жыл бұрын
I know, right?! I've been time-stamping where he does as I watch.
@Michael-cb5nm2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. It’s almost as if he feels his faith gives him access to a deeper level of knowledge that reason provides, such that he only feels the need to provide polite lip service to the arguments.
@colinross37552 жыл бұрын
Yeah completely agree, sophistry done well eh
@albertwongwong98062 жыл бұрын
Cause you overly focused
@colinross37552 жыл бұрын
@@albertwongwong9806 explain please?
@thedude0000 Жыл бұрын
1:15:50 - That is ALL you need to know about Christianity. Slavery is not intrinsically evil. 🙄 He must use *MENTAL GYMNASTICS* to defend slavery, because he must defend the actions of the Catholic Church throughout history on this topic. Owning another human being as property IS EVIL
@bdnnijs192 Жыл бұрын
I would've given him a paper to start a petition to re-legalise Biblically Correct Slavery. Even offer my platform (if I had one like Alex) to help spread this cause.
@valurimist9861 Жыл бұрын
Wait, so you believe that slavery is objectively evil? What if I disagree, are you implying objective morality?
@bdnnijs192 Жыл бұрын
@@valurimist9861 Don't be ridiculous. Slavery is objectively Good. God orders it in the Bible.
@thedude0000 Жыл бұрын
@@valurimist9861 NOTICED how you slipped your "strawman" into that comment. Where did I write it was objectively evil? I'll be right here waiting.
@valurimist9861 Жыл бұрын
@@thedude0000If its not objectively evil then whats your point? Strawmanning is a bad thing to bring up when youre strawmanning Trent by ignoring what he said right after, and assuming that he assumed all forms of slavery are wrong, I, for the sake of the argument, will accept that he was wrong. But for the sake of the argument, you say that slavery *is* evil. You say that as if it is definitively evil, what if I disagree? Could I not just disregard what you say and say "Well I think its justified".
@DanielCasasamperaGonzález3 ай бұрын
Oju Ramon Llull representant la terra! Quina grata sorpresa xdd
@Carlos-fl6ch2 жыл бұрын
From the get go it seems that TH is actually saying that the universe owes us an explanation and if science at any point cannot help us get the explanations than all bets are of and anything that gives us an explanation is justified. This off course is epistemic bankruptcy. The most scientific position one can take in such cases is I don't know. Period! Else you're walking close to the line of I don't know therefore god.
@williammcenaney13312 жыл бұрын
Trent said he would need to be a vegan or defend factory farming. But that's a false dichotomy because a non-vegan can buy food and other products from local farms and farmers' markets. If I need to buy some products from a supermarket, I can buy only products that factory farms don't produce. When you have to buy groceries from a store selling factory-farmed foods, you have to see whether you cooperate directly or remotely with the factory farmers. Say I'll die if I don't buy a factory farm makes. Should I die because I'm against factory farming?
@introvertedchristian52192 жыл бұрын
That was a great discussion.
@newtonianromance2 жыл бұрын
Only thing that matters is do you treat your fellow human with kindness. I don't care what you believe as long as you at least believe you should be kind to all and gentle to children.
@Miskeen-332 жыл бұрын
Im Christian but Alex kinda won this one though both did a good job
@sisaytekle66216 ай бұрын
You're not a Christian for sure
@ArcherMVMaster8 ай бұрын
28:15 for some odd reason, I knew this one would come up. For christians, because they believe God is good, it seems rational to assume that God's intentions and actions are rooted in goodness, so assuming that God has (good) reasons to allow a certain type of bad is logically consistent. However, that same logic could be turned around this way. By admitting that we don't fully understand god and his reasons, it goes without saying that his intentions and actions could also be rooted in maliciousness. If I can't really understand God and his reasons for doing what he does, then why would I assume that his reasons are necessarily good? It's not consistent to say that we don't know god's reasons or god's minds and also assume that he's only good and has good reasons. That seems like a copout to maintain the belief. What if God is doing what he does intentionally to deceive? After all the Bible shows us instances where God has sent deceiving spirits to people. That would paint a less attractive version of God and not push people toward belief or worship. And in this case of divine hiddenness, God isn't just allowing a little bad thing we can reason our way out of like minor sins. God is against disbelief and worship of false Gods, so why leave those who aren't resisting into a state where they are doomed for the afterlife? Unless, God wants people to be deceived or doesn't care about people being deceived. If that's the case can we really logically maintain the belief that God is good and wants a relationship with us?
@defeatingdefeaters2 жыл бұрын
This is very good. Thanks for sharing 👏🏽
@Elton.G.Joao-filmmaker Жыл бұрын
@CosmicSkeptic thank you for your work in these debates
@kamana64352 жыл бұрын
Wow that was an amazing discussion one of the best I have seen on a Religious channel between an Atheist and a Christian. It made me think to myself why I am not a Christian and have more affinity to Eastern Religions. So thought I would share my perspective. I know the main audience of this channel is likely to be Christians so I wanted to say I am not here to criticize Christians but to critique the ideas of Christianity as I have encountered them. Humans have feelings ideas do not. Having listened to Alex's points helped me clarify the clash I en-counted when studying Christianity. I don't want to write a whole essay so I will summarise my points succinctly. I feel the main reason I never became a Christian is the character of God in the Bible seems to behave in contradictory ways. Trent said in his talk that God defines Morality which then makes Morality arbitrary as God has done things which seem Immoral if done by humans. If a scientist developed a device that flooded the whole earth and killed all Animals and Human life (Plus insects etc..) that would be a immense evil. But God floods the Earth killing all life bar a few and that is totally ok because God is morality by definition. A War-lord commands his men to kill a group of people (including women and children) and we call it a genocide and say its Evil. God commands the Slaughter of the Canaanite's and that is totally fine. Trying to use God as a measure of what is Moral seems to be like using a ruler that randomly changes length every time we try to measure something. It would be useless as we would have no idea how to measure anything reliably. Second point is God is unfair in the way he communicates with his creation. God through his Grace makes his existence known to some as recorded in the bible but not others. Alex as an example has sought God intently as have I in my past. But God has not made his existence 100% clear to me or him. But God in the Bible talks to various characters and makes himself known. To me that is like a teacher who sets a quiz (Salvation) but gives some hints to some pupils and not to others. A teacher who behaved that way would be disciplined or sacked as it is unfair. It was this constant whip lash between the character of God that made me doubt the ideas in Christianity. It seems that God is allowed to abuse his power because he is God. But if Humans behave that way we call them Tyrants and Dictators. Seems like a might is right kind of argument. Trent tried to defend this by saying God is the creator so can behave how he wants and also mentioned his being a Parent gives him authority over his children which is true. But if a parent tried to kill their children no Court is going to let them go free just because they say they brought the child into the world they have a right to take it out. That would not be a good reason. We take into consideration the rights of the child to life. In Eastern religions, Buddhism, Jainism the principle of Ahimsa is the Goal to make one's conduct as Non- Violent as best as you can. This principle seems more applicable to Humans as it is not as arbitrary as the Morality of God in the bible. If Gods Morality is so much beyond what we can understand then its like someone telling you they have the knowledge of ultimate Truth Morality and everything but it is too advanced for your mind. So its totally useless in the real world where humans have to navigate. Finally I wanted to comment on Trent's example in the Q&A about happy to accept 10 million pounds for his house being destroyed but not happy if it involved someone sleeping with his wife. I feel the analogy is flawed as God does not let us choose the suffering we experience in life so we are forced to endure suffering against our wishes. Even if the result is a great reward in Heaven it does not negate the suffering we experience here on Earth as we are powerless in general when it comes to suffering. If we could choose the suffering and be sure of the reward in Heaven that would make is analogy hold. That's my summary.
@uniquearahill68192 жыл бұрын
Up
@chrisflowrhymes892 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. These are often objections of the unbeliever who has spent time thinking through the God of the Bible. I figured I would share with how the Bible responds to your main points. The most obvious passage that covers most, if not all of your questions/comments is found in Romans 9:14-24. You likely will not like the answer you find there, but it is nonetheless the response of the Bible so figured I would share!
@kamana64352 жыл бұрын
@@chrisflowrhymes89 Thanks for the reply I will have a read and see what it says.
@brianfarley9262 жыл бұрын
I think most of your post is flawed in the points your exist. For example God commanding the execution of the Cannanites. It is permissible because it is God passing judgement. In other words what he did was serve justice. Justice is about giving to someone what they deserve. Secondly I think you look at morality through the lens of the 21st century rather than in the infancy of civilization. Life was far harsher and those who got out of bounds with their tribe the consequences much more severe so the penalty one would accrue from justice being carried out back than we should expect to look vastly different than it would today. I became a believer from agnosticism not because I had some overwhelming experience in my heart that God exists. Reason is what brought me to God and what brought me to Christ was the Resurrection. There is nothing else comparable to it including what happened afterwards in my view. Perhaps you should really go and flesh out those points you listed and counter them with the best steel man arguments you can find on the pro Christian side and see if they hold up to scrutiny I’ve never found good reasons for the belief of atheism as being sufficient to explain why we are here, the universe, the mathematical probability we just exist by random chance Which the probability of that is what occurred makes even less sense. So I was never an atheist but I was agnostic for about 15 years.
@SeekingVirtueA2 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@bcarollo15 ай бұрын
The problem of suffering in life isn’t such a problem when you think about it in terms of existence and non-existence. In other words, I start from the premise that I exist. From there, I begin to think about the opposite of that, non-existence. Then, I begin to feel an overwhelming sense of gratitude for the fact that I exist. I then come come to the conclusion that no amount of suffering that I could experience in my existing that would make me choose, if I had the chance, to never have existed in the first place.
@Burberryharry2 жыл бұрын
I think I’m ready to be a stoic agnostic who’s with me! 😉
@AllothersweretakennАй бұрын
1:30:53 this is a difficult question since forever considering the fact that anytime we do get a new discovery the church is the first one to get their grimy hands on it and nobody knows what they do to it in order so they don’t lose the plot so to speak if it hasn’t already happened already
@cloudoftime2 жыл бұрын
As I said, on the roundtable debate from several days ago, if we lived in a world without suffering (deprivation), we wouldn't have a utility for understanding values of experience. Suffering (experience of separation) is necessary for desire. One could not desire a _better_ state if they were not in a state where they lacked something (deprivation causing desire). You could try to make an argument for excessive suffering instead, but that comes with its own problems. I am not a theist.
@alexanderrivas27622 жыл бұрын
Why should we have a "utility for understanding values of experience?"
@cloudoftime2 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderrivas2762 It's not a matter of "should."
@Nick-Nasti Жыл бұрын
I disagree. One could struggle without horrific “suffering”. Could a child learn the same lessons without dying of cancer?
@cloudoftime Жыл бұрын
@@Nick-Nasti Notice how the thing you put in quotes was the word "suffering"? That's because I used the word suffering. Now see how you put the word horrific in front of the quoted word suffering? I never used the word horrific. That's an addition you are making which has nothing to do with what I said. So, you're creating a straw man and then trying to argue against your straw man. That has nothing to do with my point. I also explained suffering, so you can refer to that which doesn't imply "horrific."
@Nick-Nasti Жыл бұрын
@@cloudoftime “suffering” includes all forms of suffering and not just some mild example of a dentist visit to represent all suffering. It is plainly not a strawman.
@Smilliztho2 жыл бұрын
It feels a bit like Alex is getting tired of this debate, atheism vs. christianity. And I understand him. I really appreciate him moving on and discovering other discussions like he have done with veganism!
@chrisvalenzuela79112 жыл бұрын
Lol, he's the one accepting the invitations. He can easily say no to them if he's tired of it.
@HarrDarr Жыл бұрын
@@chrisvalenzuela7911 he's probably tired because he had to spend half the video explaining the christian position to the christian
@pnut3844able Жыл бұрын
I mean you can only prove their arguments wrong so many times. Theism never changes, so you just prove the same things wrong over and over.
@miniwheatz93 Жыл бұрын
If you can spank/beat/assault your child because you gave them life and are morally responsible for them, you're just saying 'I can cause suffering because I am compensating them'
@wadeodonoghue18874 ай бұрын
The avoidance of pain and effort is the main driver of wealth inequality, obesity and the drug epidemic. Pain might not be as damaging as the avoidance of pain at all costs.
@miniwheatz933 ай бұрын
@wadeodonoghue1887 or is it that the organizations providing the necessaries of life (employers providing pay, health care providing care, etc.) have realized that they can treat those below them worse based on the fact that they are providing a necessity? Sounds like they can knowingly cause suffering because they are compensating the sufferers.
@wadeodonoghue18873 ай бұрын
@@miniwheatz93 As it is above so is it below. We make fancy hats and titles to make some of us feel superior and other inferior, but those hats and titles only have reality in the man made world, although we act like we made it all their is a "greater whom". You can be a rich king but get an illness and die, Nature still has us by the balls while we tread on each other's heads trying to overcome. Nature? To me it's like monkeys arguing who will go to space first, that's how the hierarchy fight of the modern world looks. A struggle for an empty prize. I'd rather be a Dolphin in the ocean than a man in his head... Boss, Money, Ownership these are man made concept that we may argue about, at the end of the day they are ideas, ideas also die in time.
@csar07.3 ай бұрын
A human is unqualified to hurt another human being just because one gave the other life and/or they are morally responsible for them. God's "compensating" comes from the idea of an eternal afterlife. A human cannot provide that.
@lith... Жыл бұрын
8:07 when the species proclaims itself more important than others... source: trust me bro. and many people think they are better than others, when in reality every living human on earth has the same inherent value. one thing is for sure, humans will always overestimate their worth and skills.
@missinterpretation4984 Жыл бұрын
I can’t reconcile severe suffering with a loving God. I also can’t reconcile the existence of the world and people without design. Plus I know that I process everything through my own limitations and biases so I don’t even know if the things that make sense to me are actually true. So I’m just out here doing my best. 🤷♀️❤
@nathanmckenzie904 Жыл бұрын
Nature is the designer.
@missinterpretation4984 Жыл бұрын
@@nathanmckenzie904 Nature is creation not the creator though. I can’t process that everything designed itself which is what that would mean.
@nathanmckenzie904 Жыл бұрын
@missinterpretation4984 take a biology class or there are TONs of videos on KZbin that explain it at a layman level
@ElectricLimeade Жыл бұрын
There are plenty of possibilities for there to be a creator that is not capital G God. The most relevant, of course, are those of indifference and limited influence. A creator may not care how we feel, or may even be explicitly avoiding interfering with the world for the sake of some other goal. I would imagine such a case to be somewhat like an ant farm or an experiment, where the purpose is to observe. A creator may also not be able to influence creation after the process has begun, or is otherwise limited in time, power, or both. I would liken such a scenario to a truly gigantic game of Sims - you may care about all of these creatures, but the scale is so enormous that you can't possibly give all of them individual attention even some of the time, much less most or all. And consider, perhaps, that we are not the only planet with beings on it. Even a creator that thinks thousands or millions of times faster than us would still eventually be unable to keep up as populations grew.
@zacdredge38592 жыл бұрын
1:43:33 No, it depends on *if* something is evil. I wouldn't accept payment from someone for them to do something I considered evil as it would make me complicit in the commission of that evil. In the case of arson there's a question of whether it's any different from demolition in this context especially when the payment is promised beforehand and the person's already thinking about the house they can build in its place.
@Bosse_C5 ай бұрын
Really great talk. Thanks to you both and special thanks to invloved effort to make ALL this happen, technicians and such
@Juanrepublicnotion Жыл бұрын
Alex lately categorized himself as a non-resistant atheist.. he genuinely seeking for the truth about Christ, but he just could not see it or at least not convincing enough for him.. but he is seeking at least.. in other words he is open to the idea of God..
@L-811 ай бұрын
4:26 Theists: Everything needs an explanation for its existence. Nothing can explain itself. Also theists: God doesn’t need an explanation for his existence. God is the uncaused cause.
@dominicluke7 Жыл бұрын
I’m Catholic and love these debates. Alex is incredibly respectful and knowledge. God bless💪🙏
@shuvamsingh702 Жыл бұрын
Science Bless ❤
@atomicvinylreviews342011 ай бұрын
With the point around the 1:20:00 mark about an atheist who put effort into learning and looking for answers compared to a theist who was raised into that belief system without giving it much thought. Yes, there is the possibility that even with the effort put in to educate yourself you'll end up believing stupid/wrong things, however on average doing so dramatically increases the likelihood of your views cohering with reality compared to those who don't give it any thought. It is unfair! Following Christian logic, God's the one who gave the atheists the ability to use logic and reason to examine the world around them, they put in the effort to educate themselves and as a result they're punished...
@oliverthompson9922 Жыл бұрын
The moral argument from Christians just seems contradictory to me. They say there is transcendental, objective morality , which is how we instinctively know what is good and bad, yet if we ask why there is so much suffering and terrible things happening or why the old testament condones slavery, its because we can't know God's mind or he's doing it for some greater good. That doesn't sound very objective to me at all.