Just wanted to comment here to proudly share that I've been sober for 1,679 days.
@korpen28587 ай бұрын
Gj man
@fuferito7 ай бұрын
I'll drink to that.
@Johnnystammy7 ай бұрын
No you just wanted to comment a made up story in a totally unrelated place for some sympathy through the like counter to make you feel better.
@nanomoltoalto15897 ай бұрын
Wp, alcohol diff
@Frodo10000007 ай бұрын
@@Johnnystammywow
@WhiskeyActualTV6 ай бұрын
The title is perfect because I feel like I’m missing 30 years of context for this conversation.
@bernhardgapp38046 ай бұрын
Lol maybe you miss the pretentious attitude
@lVideoWatcherl6 ай бұрын
Might very well be, they are both going very deep with this because Alex really tries to understand Sam's point, where I think Sam's point is not accurate, so reaching an understanding won't be possible.
@TheFrancesc186 ай бұрын
More like 2000+ years of context. This is the kind of stuff that's been discussed since the Greeks, and we have about as good an answer on it as they did.
@maxkho005 ай бұрын
@@lVideoWatcherl But Alex's point isn't accurate, either. We don't value pleasurable experiences; we value meaningful experiences, whether they're pleasurable (sex with someone you love) or not (excruciating triathlon run). And meaning isn't encoded in our brains' biology.
@lVideoWatcherl5 ай бұрын
@@maxkho00 Why do you value meaning? Maybe because... ascribing meaning to a situation brings you pleasure? I would reckon you could totally express this all in terms of brain chemistry. In fact, current neuropsychology identifies multiple hormones, all linked to different kinds of 'feel-good', be it supression of pain, accomplishment or simply happiness. Se xual pleasure is just one of these, but of course Alex did not just mean that kind of pleasure, as we both are aware I'm sure. And also, _of course_ humans value pleasurable experiences in itself. Or, potentially and maybe more accurately, experiences that are especially pleasurable in any way _are_ what you likely deem 'meaningful'.
@mikethomas53316 ай бұрын
This is professional yapping
@alexanderchaplin67496 ай бұрын
Professional Yapping is a great title!
@KAIZENTECHNOLOGIES6 ай бұрын
Ranked yapping
@OriginalMindTrick6 ай бұрын
My intuition and analysis of these two is that Sam is a bit more "serious" in that he cares more about how these philosophical ideas play out in the real world while for Alex, all of this is just an exciting jungle gym for his brain.
@evelcustom98646 ай бұрын
@@OriginalMindTrickI don’t agree with that. I believe Alex is having a genuine philosophical exploration while Sam is simply trying to fit things into the view he already holds.
@paddleed61766 ай бұрын
@@evelcustom9864 Translation: You're an Alex fan.
@Pyriphlegeton7 ай бұрын
11:50 This is literally the crux of the disagreement. "Objectively better, *IF* better means navigating away from the worst possible misery for everyone [...]." Alex' point seems to be that the universe itself has no prescription to do what increases wellbeing. Sam's point seems to be that, if we agree that wellbeing is better than suffering and use that as a foundation for ethics, "right" behaviour is rather determined. The fundamental question is whether one accepts that suffering should be avoided and wellbeing enhanced.
@GyatRizzler69-of3wl7 ай бұрын
Isn’t well-being completely subjective?
@JoBo3017 ай бұрын
@@GyatRizzler69-of3wl exactly - how do you define wellbeing and how do you define suffering
@heylo52747 ай бұрын
@@JoBo301 they basically boil down to health. That’s the objective basis for suffering and wellbeing which is what’s agreed on between Alex and Rationality Rules when discussing Sam Harris’s objective morality.
@JoBo3017 ай бұрын
@@heylo5274 physical health or mental health or spiritual health or moral health??/
@Rave.-7 ай бұрын
The hilarity is the "IF". No Sam, if you use an "IF", you are no longer defining objective morality.
@TheHumanistKnight7 ай бұрын
the flaw with this line of reasoning is that morality is almost never an individual construct. It's a collective one. We don't follow moral rules solely to benefit our own personal pleasure, but in order to participate in a collective where we gain benefits from that participation. You don't need a moral framework to live as an individual. You only need one in order to live in a community as part of a collective.
@Egshsjsjsj7 ай бұрын
Say you are living as an individual, how would you know what to do with yourself without a moral framework? Morality is necessary to instruct behaviour toward others and oneself.
@sp-niemand7 ай бұрын
@@Egshsjsjsj Do whatever I want without considering morality. Could you give an example of using morality while being completely alone?
@TheHumanistKnight7 ай бұрын
@@Egshsjsjsj you don't need morality to treat yourself good. You do that automatically as part of instincts for self preservation. Morality is about our behavior toward others, not ourselves.
@Cannaburn7 ай бұрын
@@Egshsjsjsjhe’s not saying he doesn’t have a moral framework, he’s saying that framework is shaped largely by the society he wishes to benefit from.
@pj2345-v4x7 ай бұрын
This framing of morality as a “needed” tool is misguided. Objective morality people don’t view morality as instrumentally good, and they would hold that it is as necessary when living alone as in society. There simply is some objective standard for right and wrong and every action is subject to that analysis.
@dmc62626 ай бұрын
Sam always looks like he just woke up
@timducote57136 ай бұрын
If only!
@Taskforceandy2 ай бұрын
That’s why it’s called waking up with Sam Harris
@Sceme19912 ай бұрын
He's been waking up since he took MDMA with his friend, quit school and went to india
@Chazza-y3wАй бұрын
I get the feeling he meditates a lot and is always trying his best to stay mindful. This makes him come across very relaxed and chilled out a lot of the time
@zakkmiller82427 ай бұрын
Im just sitting here smoking a bong pretending like I have the slightest clue wtf they are talking about. Anybody else? lol
@myst936 ай бұрын
Well, you're a retarded pothead. Clearly nobody else is as adamant at proclaiming their loser status like you are.
@fanwee50486 ай бұрын
Just you bro cause you’re not smart and you lack the intelligence and comprehension to know what they’re talking about. You should do the world a favor and never give an opinion on the topic since you’re so uninformed. No offense tho.
@BerryCran4206 ай бұрын
Word bruh 💨
@evelcustom98646 ай бұрын
Harris is being a bit overly abstract simply for the sake of abstracting his abstract abstraction of abstractness. Aka, saying complex nonsense for the sake of sounding fancy.
@oskarlibelle17696 ай бұрын
Same, but without bong
@weedlol7 ай бұрын
Hearing Alex say "Minecraft" is something I never knew I wanted.
@otzenfree19987 ай бұрын
Mein krohhft
@fiatlux8057 ай бұрын
You should adjust your wants and desires 😂
@Raphael47227 ай бұрын
Timestamp?
@weedlol7 ай бұрын
@@Raphael4722 9:11
@basengelblik51993 ай бұрын
I like minecraft
@caine34107 ай бұрын
Sam finally respecting the coaster is the best in this.
@tpstrat147 ай бұрын
The conversation has at this point elevated to what Sam considers a civilized tone. This is why he now is respecting the coaster 😂
@Salipenter17 ай бұрын
Yeah I remember that Triggerpod episode where he kept putting the drink on the table
@Chewy4277 ай бұрын
the "boo watermark" was flipped
@penguin01016 ай бұрын
8:44 the there there is as
@BrandonCRFC3 күн бұрын
Sam is just a bitter rebel inside. Hence his refusal to use such "unnecessary creations". lol
@beliefisnotachoice7 ай бұрын
Alex nailed it, there are objectively better and worse ways to achieve my subjective preferences. Sam disagrees and then explains in a way that demonstrates that he actually agrees.
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
@@billtruttschel That sentence means literally nothing. The premise doesn't lead to the conclusion, other than being reported in the same sentence.
@jimmyalfonzo7 ай бұрын
@@billtruttschelclaiming other things are objectively contextualised by a subjective perspective is an oxymoron
@PercyTinglish7 ай бұрын
So what though? That's still subjective morality.
@ThePond1357 ай бұрын
@@billtruttschel I think you missed the point. What you said doesn't defeat the stance of the comment youre responding to. It's still only objective with respect to an arbitrary goal
@odinallfarther60387 ай бұрын
I think it's fair to say we can not be totally objective that dose not mean we are incapable of making an objective decision or at least aiming for it and over riding our bias providing it is not a blinding bias , our view will be coloured and viewed through our experience and knowledge (distorted and limited hue if you will ) objectivity is the light we reach for rather than to attain . Hope that makes some sense to some one .
@Carbonbank7 ай бұрын
I’ve taken that special Music pill before … and I’ll probably take it a few more times to come
@OhManTFE6 ай бұрын
What I don't understand about these experiences Sam keeps going on about is what is the point of doing it? Am I really worse off never having done it?
@frankforke6 ай бұрын
I'm a professional musician and I have been taking those music pills through my entire life😂
@drangus34686 ай бұрын
@@OhManTFE From what I infer, his line of argument was going to be something like, "you can't possibly have a subjective yuck/yum expression of this hypothetical experience-space that you don't understand...but objective data *can* say something about whether you might be likely to prefer it". Or something like that. But the argument never quite made it all the way out.
@cornsockgabz6 ай бұрын
@@drangus3468objectivity pertains to that which can be proven to exist without a subjective agent’s involvement influencing the outcome, it is fundamentally flawed. No philosophical theory of ethics has ever credibly found an objective basis for morality that is not axiomatic, and Sam Harris is indeed amongst those who are unable to reconcile the subjective-objective division without redefining objectivity to something wholly different. Inter-subjectivity is essentially ethics by committee which itself is corruptible by the theological bases he so vehemently opposes. He’s not really convinced anybody but himself on this, hence his derisive dismissal of the cognitive abilities of those who dissent.
@drangus34686 ай бұрын
@@cornsockgabz I think he's just being persistently imprecise about his language as a way of engagement farming (or perhaps out of obtuseness or unwillingness to concede or insecurity...idk). It seems clear to me that he is talking about *objective facts about subjective morality*, as opposed to *objective morality*. Which would be fine and uncontroversial and uninteresting except he insists on calling these things *objective moral facts*. Or perhaps he is actually making the strong claim of having derived ought from is. This also would not surprise me; I have a low opinion of his logical rigour.
@profundus93062 ай бұрын
I think the confusion is that that what we call "pleasant" or "painful" in the individual context becomes "right" or "wrong" in the social context. This is why Sam wisely remarked that the issue of moral truths becomes evident when you add more people into the picture. However, in Alex's defense, whether such an objective moral truth can be identified for a a group of people, at a certain moment in time, is questionable as it is highly volatile and involves just too many factors. Therefore when it comes to deciding what is right (or wrong) for a group, we are invariably stuck with approximations, which inevitably makes us do something wrong for a minority of people over the long run.
@briansanchez669928 күн бұрын
I think you completely missed what Alex is sayin. Sam says that it becomes right or wrong but Alex's point is that that is not the same right and wrong this is spoken of when talking about morals. Sam just doesn't get it.
@BrandonCRFC3 күн бұрын
@@briansanchez6699 This is because Sam is an idiot. (Im certainly not as intelligent as him, but he has exposed his ill-will towards people with different opinions than him and other greater minds have put his philosophy to the dirt)
@starfishsystems7 ай бұрын
A straightforward basis by which to parse this entire conversation is to notice that it's trying to get at the difference between DESCRIPTION and PRESCRIPTION. Everything else follows from this. Also notice that, except for this distinction, Alex and Sam are talking about the same phenomena and the same concerns. So is it a fundamental distinction, or something derivative or arbitrary? Well, I think it could hardly be more fundamental. It's the distinction between how things are and how things might be conceived. It's the distinction between (empirical) science and (conceptual) mathematics. It's the distinction between territory and map. It does not, however, provide a distinction between what is moral and what is not moral. Morality remains poorly grounded whether you attempt either a descriptive or prescriptive basis for it. Alex might say that it's sufficient to describe how preferences associate with possible choices. That's fine, but we aren't passive observers. Nothing happens until some choice is exercised, and that choice is ours to make. Sam might say that given these preferences, certain choices should be prescribed. That's fine, but we aren't emotionless robots seeking to optimize a set of parameters. If we can't sooner or later feel the preference, we have no warrant to follow the prescription.
@kyrothegreatest27496 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977 Sam would say that distinction doesn't stop prescriptions from fields like medicine for maximizing health, why the added skepticism toward prescriptions from ethics for maximizing wellbeing?
@magnusanderson66816 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977 I can get an ought quite easily by observing my own conscious mind. For example, I ought to stop writing this comment, because I am probably wasting my time arguing on the internet, and I also am extending my insomnia. But, I ought to continue writing this comment, because I could help you understand my point of view. It fulfills objective moral benefits to choose one way or the other. If I found another solution that achieved all my preferences, it would be objectively better to choose that one, compared to one of the two subpar options detailed above. This would be better, not for me alone, but for the entire universe, because I am a part of what is, and desires are the definition of "ought". If I have anything to contribute to this conversation, I think "wellbeing" is a trap word, which should be replaced with "fulfilling desires that are held". A universe full of blissful paperclip maximizers (experiencing qualia) is better than one where Yahweh tortures 90% of humans for infinite time, objectively, and you can tell because one contains desires being filled, and one doesn't. You can only tell this is the definition of "ought" by having desires yourself, just like you can only tell that you are conscious by being so (and a universe filled with nonsentient paperclip maximizers is amoral, or evil if filled with other sentient creatures that cannot defeat them). Desires are; they are an individuals experience of "ought"; "ought" exists, it is the desires.
@magnusanderson66816 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977 We ought to help those in need because if we do, there will be less conscious experiences of the sort "Boo my life! I am wretched" which are experientially and experimentally inferior, objectively (I observe, in myself; I extrapolate, for others), to "Yay my life! Yippee"
@magnusanderson66816 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977 > It is implicit, given that most people don’t want to waste time, or suffer insomnia, but given the context of the discussion, it's not enough for it be IMplicit. It's implicit for you, because you do not have direct access to my conscious experience? Are you saying that I can only infer I don't want to waste time (how?), but that this is not objectively true?
@magnusanderson66816 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977 > desires are not the definition of ought, far from it. Desire means to want, to wish for; ought, in this context, means should, in a moral sense, and in other contexts, means should in a mere strategic sense. And yet, if you look at the extreme, a world in which there are many desires, but they are never fulfilled, is terrible; a hell where everyone is tortured, constantly, wishing vainly their suffering would end; and imagining seeing their loved ones, but remembering those were taken already into ever greater horrors, is OBJECTIVELY ONE OF THE WORST THINGS THAT COULD POSSIBLY HAPPEN. The same thing in a philosophical zombie universe doesn't matter; there are no morals in such a universe (if you enter, and are the only conscious being, you have direct access to all moral events. Maybe you decide you don't like hearing the screams of the zombies; helping them is good only so far as you benefit from helping them). The fact that this is not a reliable way to make decisions easily (ought he to marry her? Well, her grandma hates him, but grandma will die in 3 years, and she loves him, but he's concerned about whether he really loves her, and life will certainly get easier for both, but she's secretly having an affair also) doesn't mean that we can infer nothing about the objective state of the world before/after because it's complex. It means there's no simple test for what ought he to do, and neither is there a simple answer. Two desires fulfill even different kinds of satisfaction. The fact your desires conflict with another's doesn't mean that neither of you experience them though. The _morally best_ outcome would involve both of you somehow achieving all goals. The BEST OBJECTIVELY POSSIBLE UNIVERSE would be one where people never experience suffering, are able to motivate themselves without it to accomplish all flourishing goals they want anyways. It could be a blissful paperclip optimizer, though existence of humans means transitioning to this universe would require objective evil (death of all humans) though the death of any humans as it exists today is an objective evil. That ought not to happen, either. Someday we will make it not.
@quaesitorsapientiae31076 ай бұрын
Can somebody please explain to me what I am missing about Alex’s overall philosophy of morality? If morality is purely a matter of preferences, why is he going on his vegan campaign? Sure, you can say he would just prefer somebody to not eat meat, but this isn’t what he does: he frames it as if eating meat is wrong. The views of a non-vegan who subjectively sees no issue with eating meat (and, let’s assume, prefers it) would have to be on the same level as Alex’s view. This means that now Alex has no moral high ground, since there is no moral ground at all. And if this is true, we might as well equate Alex’s veganism to companies advertising products, for example “Everyone knows that cardigans are itchy, and I don’t like it when people suffer. So I’m on a campaign to get people to buy my own jumpers instead; I think they’ll be a lot happier, and as a bonus I get paid!” Obviously, Alex isn’t in it for the money, but if he were, why would it be any different? It’s all about what he wants and feels good to him. So given this, Alex would have to either concede and say that veganism is only a matter of his own personal preference (which seems to be contrary to his entire cause) or say that this is not a fair analogy. But how can this not be a fair analogy when it’s all subjective to what the individual wants? I see no ability to escape this other than claiming that morality is objective, or inventing an entirely new worldview/religion. Finally, I don’t understand why (from what I’ve heard) Alex only speaks as if humans are the only ones to blame, when most of the animal torture and death is at the claws of other animals. Shouldn’t we also be trying to make meat supplements for lions and tigers and bears and expecting them to go vegan too? And if he were to say we’d let them off the hook because of some hand-wavy “humans are higher life forms” or something, then that begs the question of what exactly separates humans from animals? How are we to quantify that? Many religious people would say it’s a soul, etc., but I’m sure Alex would reject that. This is an extremely important question to answer before one can have a cause establishing animal rights that all humans must follow, yet claim that these very same animals need not respect them.
@chimchu32327 сағат бұрын
I think if there was a way to control the behavior of animals, he would be for that. I think that keeping predator animals from eating other animals would be an insurmountable task, and thus irrational to campaign for. Humans can be reasoned with and talked into new positions, you almost have to start with humans and then move into the issue of animals hurting each other. Alex's view would be "boo, meat eaters" he dislikes that people eat meat, and thus he's driven to campaign for veganism. He wouldn't say that objectively you are wrong for eating meat, he's just expressing that he doesn't like it. Likewise, people eating meat are saying "yum, meat" it's their preference to eat meat because they enjoy it. Just because his worldview doesn't allow for objective statements doesn't mean he's not compelled to do things that he feels would improve the world. For the record, I'm not vegan, and I don't think Alex is anymore either tbh. I'm just trying to explain it in the best way I can as I understand it.
@psychologicalsuccess34766 ай бұрын
I think the literal fact that morality is also expressed as "judgement" that judgement is only about taste, the judgement is not built on anything that isn't a person taste interaction.
@MrCmon1133 ай бұрын
No, it's not. "Taste" pertains to me personally. My preference for an ice cream flavour, for example, has no importance in a universe, in which I don't exist. But my moral preferences for a universe, in which I am not, are just as strong as they are for a universe in which I do exist.
@petew.e.39466 ай бұрын
I've already had this conversation in my head. I dont need to see two people talk about something I can discuss with myself. But i watched it anyway. 🤷♂️
@DemainIronfalcon7 ай бұрын
Excellent Alex, love it.. Definitely showing the value of definition or should i say honesty of definition..👍✌️
@rickfucci45126 ай бұрын
The objectives of psychopaths are way different than the objectives of normal people.
@Jake-mv7yo3 ай бұрын
That's because they lack empathy. There is no such thing as morality either. Everything is based on empathy and fear.
@rickfucci45123 ай бұрын
@@Jake-mv7yo don't forget they have an abundance of greed.
@Jake-mv7yo3 ай бұрын
@@rickfucci4512 Everybody has greed. It is just that people with empathy can understand what their greed can do to someone else and they fear living in a world where someone can do that to them.
@MrCmon1133 ай бұрын
Psychopaths also seek pleasure and avoid pain. Most people throughout most of history ate meat, doesn't mean that they don't have a preference, not to be eaten.
@milesduheaume2036 ай бұрын
This was a great rip! Really enjoyed it and following the joust is always instructional on some level, even if only to make one reflect on the matter of communication itself. Specifically I felt Alex was somewhat attached to the comfortable feel for him in the term "preference" (now that's a preference!) I felt it bogged things down a bit unnecessarily, and as a thinker he could have used the opportunity to re-asses how universally this term is appropriate. I would have been interested in where things could have moved on to. But no matter, I can find more content with Sam around to see what else he's got to say about this. Good Show.
@Ethan-qo9rx6 ай бұрын
Can’t you just say humans are essentially pack animals, we’ve evolved to be social and have empathy because we need to work together to survive. We also have a hierarchy. I think that is sufficient in explaining “morality”, it’s ingrained into us already.
@pablokaufervinent80125 ай бұрын
Very nicely put. Also this is being tested scientifically in primates. The books by de Waal are descriptions of the building blocks of morality and how it is the nature of the society or group that shapes it. But i guess this does not address the issue of whether the morality is objective or subjective. Because science describes a situation, it does not give a value judgement. So we can say morality has evolved, and this would imply that these values are not strictly speaking subjective but are also not objective in the sense Harris means.
@danielc61065 ай бұрын
I think that's more or less correct, but in many societies there was (and still is) a different morality for external and possibly competing groups. Sam would like the morality to be the same for all groups (ie no killing), which I also agree with.
@featherton33815 ай бұрын
Yes, but this description doesn't serve the purpose Sam is going for. He claims that morality can be defined objectively. He isn't just trying to figure out the basis of morality, but he's trying to argue that it's objective. You can see how he emphasizes that there are right and wrong answers to moral questions. Basically, he wants to be able to state his opinions as if they were facts. Your common sense explanation of the basis of morality does not give him that.
@billmartin35615 ай бұрын
But that logic means right and wrong are not objectively true. That would mean that terrorists killing newborn babies is not objectively (always) wrong. That cannot be.
@pablokaufervinent80125 ай бұрын
@@billmartin3561 Well you are making a statement but you provide no objective reason why it needs to be so. In fact the only reason you are providing here is an emotional subjective reason, which is precisely how Alex says people approach the issue of morality. Now some rules for groups are usually universal because they are advantageous for societies. Otherwise those societies do not survive So people need babies in order to survive, that is why generally societies dont kill many of their babies, but all societies kill some of their own babies. Abortion,infanticide for specific reasons have been sanctioned in many societies. Now in the Bible itself, God has sanctioned the killing of babies and children in certain situations, so even God seems to think that in certain situations it is Ok to kill babies. With this I am not trying to justify killing babies. It is abhorrent, but the reasons for not killing babies are either emotional and subjective or are derivations from adapted behaviour that is advantageous. So not objective in the sense you are proposing.
@chatzigeorgiougeorge8859 күн бұрын
I fail to understand what the term "objective" means in these philosophical discussions. Objectively wrong is the phrase "if I hold an apple and I open my hand, the apple will go up to the sky". Planet earth's gravity guarantees that it will go down to the ground, independently who holds the apple. If some people agree with murder, how murder is objectively wrong? Who or what defines objectivity in this case? It seems an abstract definition where I can claim whatever I want objectively right or wrong.
@mantori7 ай бұрын
But then again, what is freedom? And if freedom is what we strive for on an individual level what would that freedom look like? When 'my freedom is not the same as your freedom'... Because subjective experiences of the physical world is guided by totally different parameters in my case than the guy or girl next to me...?
@HIMYMTR6 ай бұрын
Freedom is sinlessness.
@smart-ass85186 ай бұрын
@@HIMYMTR Thanks for stating your subjective view on this.
@HIMYMTR6 ай бұрын
@@smart-ass8518 It's my objective understanding of freedom.
@Jack0trades7 ай бұрын
I'm a big Sam Harris fan, but I'm in Alex's camp here. No matter how you dress up a "should" or "ought", it remains firmly in the realm of subjective judgement. And "Subjective" doesn't mean "less worth standing up for" than "Objective". It merely means we are continually required to reargue and justify our claims regarding it to others in our society. We can put to bed questions such as what 1 + 1 is equal to, but we really have to continue negotiating questions like, "How much of our GDP should we spend on housing and feeding the poor?"
@omp1997 ай бұрын
I'm happy to see that someone gets it.
@willpower33177 ай бұрын
That is not a moral question, it’s a loaded one lol
@TheHuxleyAgnostic7 ай бұрын
Exactly. And, you might want to examine whether Sam's other arguments are just as poorly made (guns, torture, bombing people, etc.).
@MrShaiya967 ай бұрын
@@TheHuxleyAgnosticu sound dumb, just stop
@MrShaiya967 ай бұрын
@@TheHuxleyAgnosticjust stop. Ur wrong g
@julianvilsten17 күн бұрын
Some thoughts that came to me from this convo. 1. The core of the disagreement seems to be whether sufficiently objectively effective decisions towards individual or collective pleasure should be considered moral rules. I think of this as calling Newtons gravity equations a law. We're so good at predicting things based on it that it may as well be treated as a truth of the universe for daily decision making and serves as a pretty powerful rubric to this end. That said, treating it as a law doesn't allow for a true understanding of it's nature (i.e. relativity, which is probably also be incomplete), and means in extreme conditions relying on it would be problematic. Alex's approach protects against this and I think of it as considering the problem at the level of the physicist or the level of the engineer. 2. The iterative nature of moving towards pleasureable experience reminds me of gradient descent optimisation. Problem here is that there is a risk of falling into a local minimum based on starting conditions. This can be thought of locally (i.e. individual basis) and globally (i.e. societal or humanity basis). On an individual basis it might mean that based on your starting environment, genes, experience etc you might be doomed to a set of objectively effective decisions which are appicable to that environment but not others and there may not be a smooth pathway to a greater level of positive experience beyond a point. This puts an argument against Sam's approach given certain moral "certainties" may not be applicable to this individual and may even cause them direct harm, making them poor rubrics to follow. On a global basis, the same local minimum optimisation issue can be true, and so if the goal is absolute maximal pleasure for all there may not be a path there depending on starting conditions, or the path there requires going through worse experiences for all for a time as the broader space of possibilities is explored. Then the question of our ability to accurately predict the navigation comes up and would be inherently difficult. Different people would have different views and confidence in whether they believe they could accurately predict the impact of making things experientally worse for a time to make things experientially better later on. There would also be a lot of psychology in decision making relating to this and likely aspects of risk tolerance and various mechanisms for motivation towards and away from change. 3. Implied within Alex's stance, appears to be this iterative decent optimisation problem. I believe this is realistic in terms of how it points to how people tend to actually navigate the world with minor purtubations based on how well people think they can predict the future if they take on short term pain or discomfort. It doesn't: however, seem to consider if the ultimate conclusion of this optimisation problem will be the "best" objective outcome possible on all metrics. Although it equally, may well be the best realistic outcome. 4. Without knowing the full space of optimal solutions, it's possible that a distant global objective best outcome may supercede what is possible as a local objective best outcome given our starting conditions, which we can't reset. So the only way to get to the global objective best would be to intentionally navigate through worse conditions along the way, the process of which may result in a level of suffering that doesn't make the journey worth it (especially with the unknowns involved).
@nelsonrushton7 ай бұрын
What Harris misses, starting around the 10:30 mark, is that Adam and Eve will have conflicts of interest. Generally speaking, in between "the worst possible misery for everyone" and "maximal bliss for everyone", there is the possibility of bliss for me and misery for you. Whether that feels good to me depends on how much I value my own wellbeing over yours as an ultimate concern. In turn, the value system that maximizes my utility function depends on that. That makes the preference among value systems subjective, and, indeed *very* subjective.
@zephyrjmilnes7 ай бұрын
Exactly! How in the hell are we meant to decide what is ‘best’ for everyone? Our judgement is eternally clouded by our pride and our attachment to some individuals over others.
@McLovin2016 ай бұрын
Interesting we're introducing themes of pride and selflessness as virtue or lack thereof.
@zanbarlee61907 ай бұрын
I'm confused about whether Sam is actually an objectivist or not. Objectivism is generally a belief in immutable laws that are true regardless of personal preference. Murder is wrong because of X, Y, Z, and whether or not you personally like that is out of the question. It sounds like he's literally describing what Alex said: I enjoy this because I do. It isn't objective, it isn't factual, and it isn't set in stone. Now, it's totally true that we can come up with objective measurements to achieve these desires and find out which actions lead to the desires I have, but the fact that I even want this in the first place is totally up in the air and arbitrary. I like action-adventure stories with some romance along the way. If you were to scientifically examine my preferences and my brain, you'd find that there are certain things that improve this preference of mine, certain patterns that tick the story with my brain, right and wrong answers as to how I should go about finding my favorite books and things writers should do if they want my attention. There are even things that a story COULD do that I haven't even read yet and would improve my enjoyment of the book beyond my ability to comprehend until I experience it. This is all true, but the fact that I like action-adventure stories with some romance involved is completely arbitrary, and if I didn't like it, which is totally possible, then all of this scientific development is useless, and we'd start the process again to fit my new desires. The fact that you can objectively study the inner-workings of my arbitrary preference doesn't make my arbitrary preference objective.
@shamanahaboolist6 ай бұрын
Your reasoning is solid except for one problem. Very often many of our preferences are not arbitrary at all and can actually be completely founded in logic rather than emotion.
@Lamont_Smythe6 ай бұрын
Is doing heinous things to a young child for no reason objectively bad?
@lamestudiosinc418Ай бұрын
@@shamanahaboolist Why should I believe this? And logic does not mean something is true. Lamarckism is a perfectly logical and consistent view on evolution but it's wrong. Furthermore something having logic, even an internally consistent one does not mean that it is objective. There's a logic to why someone who dislikes the taste of coffee would dislike coffee flavored ice cream. If something tastes like coffee, they do not like it. Coffee flavored ice cream tastes like coffee. Therefore they do not like coffee flavored ice cream. Just because there is a logic to this person's dislike, does this suddenly make it objective that coffee flavored ice cream is bad?
@Iknowmorethanuknow5 ай бұрын
Probably my two favorite people to listen to, talking to each other. Love it! ❤
@TheFranchfry7 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this section more easily replayable until I wrap my head around the implications of what this all means.
@jfmgunner6 ай бұрын
Even as I read all these comments and struggle to keep the flow of the logic from turning into chaos in my mind I laugh at how aggressively everyone calls everyone else an idiot or illogical for their positions. When trying to debate something this fundamental it just seems silly how absolutist everyone is. No one really has a superior vantage point, even if I know I lean towards Alex's side heavily. I think we are all trying to wrap our heads around this and what it means. Even if some won't admit it. So I guess this is objectively a difficult question to answer because it inevitably leads to disagreement, wink wink.
@ecco2567 ай бұрын
Time to take up horseback riding if you haven’t already yet Alex; there’s two apocalyptic horses vacant. You should of course the one that pisses off Peter Hitchens the most.
@odinallfarther60387 ай бұрын
Could argue there are two horses seems Dawkins fell off his and Elmo here is riding a painted pony .
@anthonyberard35077 ай бұрын
Aron Ra and Matt Dillahunty, please.
@proudatheist20427 ай бұрын
Which one of these apocalyptic horsemen would enrage Peter Hitchens the most?
@zucc47646 ай бұрын
@@proudatheist2042his brother's of course
@TheDragonageorigins6 ай бұрын
@@anthonyberard3507 Neither of those two come close to being intellectual in any capacity.
@memphramagog2 ай бұрын
Starting on minute 6:00, Alex O'Connor is stating that there is no moral prescription for appreciating and enjoying beautiful music. Mortimer Adler deals with this in his book "Six Great Ideas". In the book he states that man has certain basic needs such as “love, friendship, knowledge, food, air and others things including beauty”. He goes on to say that when humans acquire things that they need, it "tends toward perfection". When they are deprived of things that they need, “it tends, toward destruction ”. Needs translate to rights. Deprivation of rights constitute injustice. This is where moral prescription comes in. The “Six Great Ideas” in book are "Truth, Goodness, Beauty, Liberty, Equality, and Justice."
@erlendnordstrand91962 ай бұрын
Saying something tends towards something seems more like a statistical observation, rather than a ground rule. To me it sounds very much like Aristoteles' explanation of the elements.
@mh4zd7 ай бұрын
Wow, reading the comments and seeing how many people are missing that living according to one's preferences IMPLIES the inclusion in those preferences to not be ill-treated by the group for one's said preferences trangressing predominate desires of individuals that have found, in the device of alliance, means to deliver said ill treatment. The group has predictable minimal standards (look at different cultures across time and space and see what moral attributes are common to them all) that are in-turn based on the subjective preferences of individual, predominate, human nature. This is why Alex's perspective is not an open door to chaos.
@ghostj55316 ай бұрын
This is actually helpful and interesting thanks
@mh4zd6 ай бұрын
@@ghostj5531 My pleasure.
@pb94052 ай бұрын
For the people who don't have English as their first language: "Wow, reading the comments, it's surprising how many people miss that living by your own preferences means also wanting not to be mistreated by the group for going against the group's dominant preferences. Groups have basic, predictable standards (you can see this in different cultures over time) which come from common human nature. This is why Alex's view doesn't lead to chaos."
@fredventure5 ай бұрын
Alex, you've become my new favorite intellectual! Absolute powerhouse. Just wanted to give couple of cinematic feedback in terms of production: a) Have the shadow on the face-side closest to camera. b) On the total, make sure you use rule of thirds and place the subjects head on the top third. c) On the shot of you, the ISO seems to have been set too high (on a camera that doesn't support it) which results in noisy image. I would suggest investing in a Sony FX3 so that you can have 12800 ISO and get a crisp image. Keep doing your stuff, it's gold.
@kimeriksson74452 ай бұрын
Good points. Though the "cinematic" aesthetic certainly should remain dialed back for a podcast setting. Just light a standard talking head.
@knng20085 ай бұрын
For me it boils down to the fact that some actions are objectively better than others and that there would be an optimal moral way of behaving for every situation, that would be objectively the best. However, we often lack the bigger picture to grasp it, or are missing the pieces of the puzzle to reach that decision of absolute moral good for any given situation. So, we are left to act on the information we do have and try to move in the most possible good, given what we have
@redeamed196 ай бұрын
I think the line "That does nothing deflationary for me" sums up my growing stance on this. morality is at its core subjective but so what? does that make it worse that something objective? That would require a subjective evaluation. many of the things we value most in life, indeed the vary act of valuing things is subjective. The short hands of "good" and "Evil" denote from a perspective what we believe to be beneficial of harmful to overall well being. Emotivism appears to be 90% correct in its observation of the state of things but goes to far in apparently discarding the value of value judgements and the short hands used by a moral system to denote those judgements.
@johndeighan24956 ай бұрын
"Nothing deflationary for me"... I don't think that's the issue, though. The question of the basis of morality is, in principle, a factual question. And we don't answer factual questions by commenting on the significance of the answer one way or the other. Who cares if Sam Harris feels quite relaxed about having a fundamentally subjective moral landscape? No-one. The point is not how we feel about the facts, but what the facts actually are.
@lovespeaks7776 ай бұрын
The problem is that saying morality is subjective means people are willfully living in delusion. It’s like saying, “there are no right and wrong behaviors, but I will act like there are.”
@neildodsworth486 ай бұрын
Has a massive impact on moral relativism and whether you believe that is real or not.
@featherton33815 ай бұрын
@@johndeighan2495 It's not though. Morality is not a question of fact but of definition. Everyone has a slightly different moral framework. There is no "true" moral framework because morality is a human construct. That's why morality is inherently subjective.
@johndeighan24955 ай бұрын
@@featherton3381 If you read the comment again, you'll see I was talking about the basis of morality, not frameworks of morality. If it has a basis, what is it? That's a factual issue.
@jjkthebest7 ай бұрын
It sounds to me like he just doesn't get what most people mean when they say "objective morality" or is actively trying to redefine it.
@SpiritualPsychotherapyServices7 ай бұрын
In your own words, define “OBJECTIVE”. ☝️🤔☝️
@ltmcolen7 ай бұрын
@@SpiritualPsychotherapyServiceswithout using words define "word"
@AggravatedAstronomer7 ай бұрын
It seems like Harris is talking about objective morality as an emergent property of how human brains work, rather than in the "prescribed from on high" sense you get from religion. Given how wildly differently different people experience the same things in some cases though, I'm not sure I understand how what he's saying works
@BoiledOctopus7 ай бұрын
@@ltmcolen 🤣
@tgenov7 ай бұрын
@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn In the limit objective morality coincides with the objective meaning of words. Do we have a shared definition of "right" and "wrong"?
@Pleistoneax3 ай бұрын
Great summary of the discussion. I struggle with philosoohers using modal universes to establish some doctrine or system. Seems to me that if a series of postulates are possible in a modal universe - a hypothetical universe that, in conception, does not offend logical rules - until such postulates can be seen to apply in the world in which humanity lives, they remain hypothetical. So, I see myself asking philosophers using modalities...why should I care? You've described to me a possible world that is not descriptive of the landscape in which I actually find myself. Why should I care about your conclusion?
@aeonexoriginal6 ай бұрын
I read up on A.J. Ayers a while back in my study on ethics in college. So forgive me if I'm inaccurate in my assessments anywhere. The main issue I have with non-cognitivists such as Alex's Ethical Emotivism stance is that there are, in fact, truth-apt claims in moral positions. For example, what emotional states you and your parents regularly express in your formative years during adolescence will shape what genes are expressed later on as you grow up. This is a known in the study of epigenetics. These emotional habits you have later on in life lead you in life. They can lead you into a more trouble adulthood (childhood deviance leading to criminal behaviors later on) or more harmonious lifestyles (becoming a caring nurse/doctor that genuinely listens to their patients needs). This realm of ethical study is known as evolutionary ethics and it made me doubt much of the non-cognitivists positions and claims about ethics overall. But I diverge away from Harris also. I'm not sure where to place Harris' ethical position just yet. Maybe a universal prescriptivist? that argues for objective morality. But that position also suffers a number of ethical dilemmas that a KZbin comment could hardly cover. I would rather steel man Harris and get a more proper scope of his ethical position before saying anything against it.
@deathstreak555555Ай бұрын
how is this evolutionary ethics in any way not compatible with emotivism? seems like your attitudes being shaped by environment is presupposed by this sort of meta-ethical framework
@deathstreak555555Ай бұрын
also not sure if evolutionary ethics is what you’re saying here after doing some research, seems like that has more to do with grounding moral statements in evolutionary nomenclature (cooperation is good because it helped our ancestors survive) what you described just sounds like epigenetics which is entirely compatible with emotivism, or even an essential part of it
@hamdaniyusuf_dani7 ай бұрын
There's no fruitful discussion before the morality as its subject is properly defined and understood. Things can be good or bad depending on the assigned terminal goal. Only conscious entities can have a goal, thus the existence of goals and morality depends on the existence of conscious entities.
@ericb98047 ай бұрын
Yes, and the difficulty is that people can disagree on the extent to which any given action helps them reach any given goal.
@hamdaniyusuf_dani7 ай бұрын
@@ericb9804 what makes things good or bad?
@ericb98047 ай бұрын
@@hamdaniyusuf_dani I'm not sure what you mean. But I would say "good" and "bad" are, at best, colloquial labels we apply to things or situations depending on context. Applying these labels serves more of a social function than an ontological one.
@hamdaniyusuf_dani7 ай бұрын
@@ericb9804 The context is the goal you want to achieve when labelling something as good or bad. Something is good if it helps you achieve your goals, and vice versa.
@ericb98047 ай бұрын
@@hamdaniyusuf_dani Ok, thats fine, but you seem to be ignoring that people can legitimately disagree over the extent to which any given "something" actually helps them "achieve their goals" or not - even if they also agree on what the goals are. In fact, its precisely these cases that are the source of our actual moral disagreements, so conceiving of "good and bad" in these terms isn't actually as helpful as you pretend.
@JosephTrimble-f9r4 ай бұрын
"And so I look around the world, and there are certain experiences that are gonna make me suffer and some that are not. And so I pick the ones that don't make me suffer because I prefer them." We also see certain experiences that we know will make us suffer, but because they hold such great value, so as to make the result of the experience worth the suffering it will require. Now we all do a certain form of this (mothers bearing children, athletes training, and basically any laborer, etc.), but I hope you will give this some thought--it is worth it. And you may be a much better man than I for it, because when I was an atheist I could not see it. But as a Christian now I can tell you that the Christians I know see experiences that they know will lead to suffering but do not turn away from them because the reward of the experience is worth the suffering. And here's the part that is different: they suffer, but another receives the reward. If you wonder what I mean by this, look at some who preach in public--if you think they want to do that of their own will, think again. They are only being obedient to God. They are mocked, ridiculed, hated, sometimes attacked, sometimes spat on, sometimes threatened. I could not see this when I was an atheist. It seems so strange now that I could not, like a lens was distorted and I saw what actually was but as it was not. I hope you who read this will give it some thought.
@NathanPK6 ай бұрын
“I,” “me,” “my”… That’s your problem right there. Morality is about considering the needs and desires of other people. As Levinas says, it begins when faced with another person. As long as all you’re thinking about is yourself, your happiness, your emotions, there’s nothing moral to consider.
@knightspygaming12872 ай бұрын
So basically selflessness? I think it is subset of morality, what you are talking about....
@NathanPK2 ай бұрын
@@knightspygaming1287 Not necessarily selflessness. You're correct that morality includes how we treat ourselves, so interactions with others are a subset. (I shouldn't have said "there's nothing moral to consider" in reference to oneself.) My point is that ethics is primarily concerned with how we treat others, so a completely self-centered focus misses the point. One doesn't have to be completely selfless to be moral--on the contrary, one ought to consider one's own good in addition to the good of others. To take a Kantian perspective, e.g., that one should treat all individuals as ends and not means, i.e. one should not treat others a means to one's own ends, then that also includes not treating oneself as a means to others' ends.
@angelicdoctor80166 ай бұрын
I wonder if Alex thinks "sacrificial love", whereby one gets fewer "yums" but does something for the sake of another's "yums", is in itself explainable by yums. Perhaps Alex would say there may be fewer yums but there could be at least one great big yum (in the mind) regarding sacrificial love (putting others' needs ahead of oneself). But does that really explain sacrificial love, since the best sacrificial love is getting no yums at all. I think Alex really has no explanation for sacrificial love - laying down one's life for others. Does Alex really think war vets defended our freedom by seeking the next set of yums?
@rich705213 ай бұрын
I'd explain it as one big yum in the mind, but also the avoidance of continuing a life defined by the yuck of knowing you weren't good enough to do what was necessary/right by your standards.
@christopherhamilton36212 ай бұрын
What a stupid comment…
@SipswithSerra3 ай бұрын
Dang I didn't know the guy from Zoolander was so smart
@patobrien2357 ай бұрын
As much as I like alax some talks he has with guests goes right over my head
@ianx-cast62897 ай бұрын
That's because he tries to hide his ignorance with complicated trains of thought that lead to nowhere.
@garythefishable7 ай бұрын
When I first started watching debates I would always have a Google search open so that I could quickly search anything that I didn't understand. Sounds a bit silly but it really does help.
@rasmuslernevall69387 ай бұрын
@@ianx-cast6289 Or maybe it's complicated for you because of your limited ability to understand. Alex is exceptionally intelligent after all. But that said, many of us have no probably following his reasoning.
@ianx-cast62897 ай бұрын
@@rasmuslernevall6938 It's not complicated for me at all. I understand what he is saying.
@GreenMorningDragonProductions7 ай бұрын
@@rasmuslernevall6938 Intelligence doesn't necessarily mean you're the best one to explain something. Knowledge, wisdom and experience, among many other factors often trump IQ.
@goldennuggets757 ай бұрын
No one believes there is no should or shouldn't. Anyone who walks down the street, gets attacked by a stranger who punches them in the face and breaks their legs will think their attacker shouldn't have done it.
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
The attacker doesn't agree with that.
@JacksonHighlander2 ай бұрын
@@ChristianIce If the attacker is the one attacking, then he isnt the one who was attacked now was he? Wheres the attacker's attacker if he STARTED IT?! How did close to a million psychopaths find a hive to psyc out together?
@birthing4blokes467 ай бұрын
This comment is meant as a comment and a question, not a judgement, even saying that first feels difficult. I have been look at the experience of psychopaths, Ive been wondering how this discussion of morality etc has an overlap with an exploration of psychopathology so called?
@coolcat232 ай бұрын
I believe the overlap is that psychopaths are not furthering the global well-being and that, potentially, if they could be healed, they would even reach higher quality levels of conscious themselves. I understand that Sam is not claiming that his system provides easy answers or can increase the experience for every individual; his only claim is that there are systematic ways to increase global well-being. The steps that help towards getting closer to that goal are the "good" ones, and if anyone likes to, they can call them the "moral" ones.
@DanFedMusic7 ай бұрын
Sam always sounds like he's just making it up as he goes along, and he does it with such confidence.
@MrShaiya967 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977are yall slow? 😂
@knightspygaming12872 ай бұрын
Making up stuff didn't get him the status of freethinker and rational thinker which he is known for. And especially for neuroscientist, his half life is about how mind works.
@demarek7 ай бұрын
I adore Sam Harris. Just how he approaches this conversation.. so clear, so smart, so fluent.
@steko18926 ай бұрын
so genocidal ...
@charliekowittmusic7 ай бұрын
I still haven’t heard Sam answer the obvious challenge: Why is human well-being objectively good???
@lllULTIMATEMASTERlll7 ай бұрын
I keep asking myself the same thing. Maybe I’m missing something but I think Sam is just saying a bunch of stuff to make it seem like he’s answered the question.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana7 ай бұрын
Humans just assume it is because humans are arrogant and vain 🗣💘. It makes no sense for an objective observer (a sapient non-human) to care about an arbitrary line in the sand.
@Mjhavok7 ай бұрын
I don't care for Sam's views on morality but its like you didn't listen to him.
@Somewhere_sometime_somehow7 ай бұрын
You guys genuinely doubt that tho?
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana7 ай бұрын
There is no reason for a non-human intelligence to believe in that arbitrary 🎲 line in the sand. Humans are just so arrogant and vain 🗣💘 they usually don't think like that. 🙄
@stevenanthony5787 ай бұрын
What Sam is missing is that what people agree to as being "moral" depends on the people involved. Even if being smashed in the face with a rock is universally DISLIKED, it doesn't make doing it morally wrong in an absolute sense.
@Neil_856 ай бұрын
How do we even know that we dislike it?
@jaijaiwanted5 ай бұрын
True. The universe has no opinions on what is right and wrong, we do however. Any discussion of morality should keep that in mind. Morality should really be defined based on how conscious creatures like us, perceive things, I.e. pain and discomfort = bad, and Happiness, satisfaction, etc = Good.
@featherton33815 ай бұрын
I don't think that's a fundamental flaw. I think the bigger flaw is that he never addresses conflict. If the two people on the island can only find enough food for one person, what's the moral way to split it? How do you weigh the well-being of one person against another? Virtually all moral dilemmas stem from conflicts in which one person's well-being is weighed against another's, and his framework is useless for handling such questions.
@Neil_855 ай бұрын
@jaijaiwanted how do we know that being slapped is a bad experience? How do we know it's not actually a good experience, and we just identify it as bad? Something outside of ourselves must be telling us that we like or dislike the experience. In other words, if we're just hunks of meat with no transcendent standard, then it's all a bunch of bogus for anyone to say "like, "dislike, "good, bad, etc..... these are just random, meaningless terms. Unless...... there's a transcendent standard. Which, of course, there is.
@jaijaiwanted5 ай бұрын
@@Neil_85 differentiating good and bad, and pain and pleasure in the way I see it won’t make sense to you unless you first change the definition you are using for these terms. You seem to be thinking of pain and pleasure as a sort of infinite truth everywhere (god given and eternal…), whereas I just see it as how whatever living organism interprets a sensory input. We evolved to be repulsed by Pain because doing so aligns with the goals of procreation, and thus those genes that were repulsed by pain became more common, and then eventually dominated the species gene pool.
@Captainofgondor6 ай бұрын
This conversation goes over my head.
@JAYDUBYAH297 ай бұрын
For me the push back against Harris on this topic is a classic example of where the intellectual sophistication of academic philosophy becomes useless and stupid. It’s the ethical philosophy version of freshman epistemic skepticism-in which the possibility of knowing what is true is just seen as radically impossible. It leads to utterly impractical relativism that is also dishonest; because nobody lives and thinks that way in reality except New Age fundamentalist idiots. In this case, one need only ask on what we base our legal system once we’ve moved beyond scriptural authority. Honestly I feel like the philosophers nitpicking of the Moral Landscape is more about an in-group fetishizing of the ought-is holy cow. What else could moral judgments be based upon but what causes harm or benefit to conscious beings? Or is neutral…
@lamestudiosinc418Ай бұрын
The is-ought gap is not a "holy cow", its simply true. Descriptive and prescriptive statements are fundamentally different categories of logic. Many criticisms have been made of Harris's book, but I fail to see a single one based on the premise that "knowing what is true is impossible". What else could moral judgments be based on? A number of things. Is there any particular reason utilitarian metaethics are superior to these other ones? Your comment seems more motivated by frustration than by sound logical reasoning. Who are the "nitpicking philosophers" you speak of? Why are they wrong?
@pepijnstreng464315 күн бұрын
To the last question: Values, for example. Being honest to someone, telling the truth, even though it may hurt them. Or rational thinking, even though it might lead to unpleasant conclusions.
@mattgerke32066 ай бұрын
I think consciousness isn't as subjective as everyone thinks. I keep amazing myself with how well a reference point works in discussions of every kind, including this one. That reference point being the natural world. Take the color blue, I can know that many of my fellow humans can precieve that color through a myriad of ways, scientific and not. Though the perception of the color is subjective, the color objectively exists. The color blue exists in nature, so do we, and evolution allowed our consciousnesses to detect its prescence. Likewise, genetics has clearly shown us that our DNA is extremely similar from individual to individual, across races, which means the conservation of genes responisble for my ability to see blue is in you and billions of other humans I share the planet with. And what's fascinating is our understanding of deficiencies in seeing color whereby those incapable of seeing blue can now ware glasses specially constucted so that one with color blindness can see blue. None of this is possible without the acknowledgement of an objective reality. Thus, statements of health, wealth and prosperity are not as subjective as I might think. Which means guiding principles of morals and ethics do impact objective truths about reality which means the impacts have a range or spectrum dependant on a multitude of natural varibles that truley exist and find varying degrees of overlap with everyone's ability to experience the same.
@garyluciani1082Ай бұрын
If a group of people agree that burning someone at the stake is immoral but that same group says that it's moral if the person is a witch; is that an example of subjective societal reality?
@Snuni937 ай бұрын
Hello friends, I understand Sam very well. We getting collectively hung up on the objectivity feels to me much like the hyperskeptic "but how do you know anything is real?" type of people. If we fight Sam's "objective" reasoning, we'll have to grand that absolutely nothing is objective, not the existence of matter, the past, of other minds, nothing. We could do that, but holy shit, that just kills the game on the spot. So if we had to pressume ANY objective realities, I think Sam is doing a good job
@xanopython90627 ай бұрын
How is the existence of matter not objective??
@Snuni937 ай бұрын
@@xanopython9062 ask a hardcore skeptic. "how do you know matter actually exists? How can you trust your senses? What if you imagine everything? What if xyz" It feels like Alex is doing something similar to Sam in terms of morality
@gergelymagyarosi92857 ай бұрын
Feels like Harris' argument is once again decapitated by Hume's guillotine.
@martiddy7 ай бұрын
@@Snuni93Well, it depends on what we meant by "exist". For example, let's say that I create a simulation where an AI character doesn't know that he is living in a simulation and everything he feels and experiences feels "real" to him. So from the AI perspective, all those experiences of the simulated world would be real for the AI, while from the outside perspective of the person in real life. The simulated world would not be real. Unless we consider the information of the simulated world as something that exists in our world, which could be true since matter and energy is also information in some sense.
@imnotabadslime6197 ай бұрын
I think you are correct in your understanding of Sam and the state of objective morality. "when we at the physics conference say physics for us is our understanding how matter and and energy behave in this universe if you know a Biblical creationist or somebody some other person you know unqualified for the job comes in and says well no you know I want to talk about physics but I have a different definition". This is an example Sam uses at another point in the conversation and Alex eventually turns against him. When Sam describes his morality as objective he is the person approaching a group of experts and saying "well no you know I want to talk about objective morality but have a different definition". For an average person going about their life Sam's framework of morality is usually good enough. But Sam does not solve objective morality for philosophers any more than his creationist solves the mysteries of matter and energy for physicists. As a philosopher it is Alex's goal to convey this.
@eddiebaby227 ай бұрын
Love this use of words :)
@eddiebaby226 ай бұрын
@dominionphilosophy3698 yes
@zeusthecat6295Ай бұрын
Here's a potential approach to objective morality: If we assume that the primary difference between living and non-living things is that living things serve as an "awareness" mechanism for the universe (or existence itself more broadly), then we could build a moral framework that is predicated on increasing awareness in the universe rather than decreasing awareness. In other words, stuff that helps life (i.e. things that are capable of being aware of and observing existence) proliferate and prosper is "good" and stuff that ends life and diminishes the overall awareness in the universe is "bad". There's obviously a lot to work through that can't be put in a KZbin comment. I don't think existence can exist without awareness. How can anything exist if there is no thing to be aware of its existence? While the ultimate reason is mysterious, it seems like that is the function that life serves.
@archsaint16116 ай бұрын
"Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools, And changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things." Romans 1:22-23
@MrCmon1133 ай бұрын
Your god agrees with all the the stupidest and most selfish opinions of Bronze age herder patriarchs.
@djksan17 ай бұрын
This is the most difficult to follow exchange I’ve heard in some time. I can’t make heads or tails of what’s being said by either at almost any point in the conversation.
@maidros857 ай бұрын
You're not alone. I see from comments this rests upon the "is/ought problem", which, no matter how many explanatory articles and videos I see, I will never understand.
@lllULTIMATEMASTERlll7 ай бұрын
@@maidros85 I think Sam doesn’t understand the is/ought distinction or willing to admit that he’s wrong about it.
@kizu54514 ай бұрын
@@lllULTIMATEMASTERlllwithin the philosophical community, the consensus is, is that Sam Harris Cannot or Does Not understand the IS-OUGHT Distinction, hence everyone thinks he’s stupid
@sayresrudy26443 ай бұрын
@@maidros85hilary putnam’s book on the fact/value distinction is relatively clear but i bet your consternation is bc you’re smart & you intuit the porosity SH cannot perceive.
@MrCmon1133 ай бұрын
@@lllULTIMATEMASTERlll He directly adresses that in his conversation with Alex: if you think the "is-ought" disctinction debunks objective morality, you're literally just talking about grammar.
@spankduncan11143 ай бұрын
This will be vague, Alex. You asked, "what am I missing". What you're missing isn't "what" it's "how". You and Sam want the same thing. How to agree on getting there is the "crux of the biscuit". It's not about how each of you think differently. That's baked into each of us by our uniqueness. It's how to put into our perspective the uniqueness of each other, and find the place for each of us to agree with the notion.,"that is objectively true". Good luck with that. The Golden Rule is something I use every day to inform my behavior. It covers my sense of morality and as I watch others adhere to the rule I find the approach works very well for me and them, getting along with others. I know that's simple. Sometimes it seems to me you're thinking too "hard".
@Brian-os9qj3 ай бұрын
And when we do, as you say you have every day, the world is capable of getting to a higher level, for all.
@Kookaburger7 ай бұрын
if every human being woke up tomorrow and believed the earth was flat, would that make it an objective truth?
@indiemagnet6 ай бұрын
It’d be an objective truth that they thought the world was flat. It is an objective truth that there is a range of preferable and non-preferable experiences and each of us helplessly must navigate in this space unless we choose to end experience. That’s all Sam is saying. There are objective fact-based ways to navigate more and less icky “boo” experiences and have more “yay” experiences…and science has bearing in this process because it arises out of whatever the nature of reality is.
@JohnRadley-dk5bk2 ай бұрын
No. That would be a belief, which is not an objective truth.
@cmorsley5 ай бұрын
What you are missing is an actual point.
@christopherhamilton36212 ай бұрын
Huh?
@allenkim666513 күн бұрын
We all have our model/conception of what the world is from our experiences. These two have an understanding of the language they use and their models they hold. They are both eloquent and intentional in describing their own models in their language(most of their language is common to each other), and finding disagreement and convergence. Alex's foundational framework is emotivism, which is similar to Sams foundational framework, which is "conscious experience", which contains "boos" and "yum".
@odinviken5 ай бұрын
Its fascinating that such intelligent people talk for such a long time without sharing any information at all. I am beginning to believe more and more in the quote "intelligent people are very good at seeming intelligent".
@Marknetics5 ай бұрын
"Tell me that the entire conversation went over your head without telling me it went over your head."
@odinviken5 ай бұрын
@@Marknetics “professional yapping”. It looks like magic to the simpleton.
@jackmerrideww5 ай бұрын
Its okay if you didnt understand the disagreement.
@odinviken4 ай бұрын
@@jackmerrideww 13 minutes to clearly describe Sam’s epistemological argument , already repeated 1000 times, is hardly worth it, even at 5x.
@jackmerrideww4 ай бұрын
@@odinviken yea man. Its not for everyone. Good luck tho
@mooooooooooooove7 ай бұрын
Alex you come across as quite closed minded in this exchange. You often cut off your interlocutor the moment they bring a slightly different angle to the topic, which I observe is your preferred mechanism for clarifying you both understand the foundation of what was meant previously, but it also shows you don't trust your interlocutor to navigate the complexities of your train of thought. When discussing these topics with a knowledgeable person, or a person with a lot of empathy (who repeatedly shows that they understand what you mean and that they will ask you to clarify if they're unsure), it would be nice to see you ease off the pressure and try harder to engage in a genuine exchange, to show you are willing to accept new information and perhaps even accept slightly different ways to arrive at a conclusion you previously did not see the value in. Love the content!
@iwack7 ай бұрын
It was clear to me that Sam was unable to understand truly what Alex was saying. That's okay, but it gets messy when he begins to answer as though he does understand. This causes him to answer more within his realm of understanding and floats above the actual discussion. Almost as if he's talking to himself. I believe Alex was correct to be led to the conclusion of Harris being unable to navigate the thought process.
@pj2345-v4x7 ай бұрын
This feels strangely uncharitable. I didn’t get the sense that he was disrupting the convo or in any way stifling the positions or speech of Sam at all. This was an absurdly respectful exchange.
@Michael-kf7gm7 ай бұрын
I think your interpretation is way off. When someone puts words in your mouth or does not follow your logic, you should interject respectfully as a means to keep them on course. It’s called managing the conversation. It’s not being closed minded; it’s being purposefully intentional.
@lllULTIMATEMASTERlll7 ай бұрын
No.
@zephyrjmilnes7 ай бұрын
@@iwacknah Sam understands - he just doesn’t have an answer. JP and him got hung up on the same point.
@Kdoggg947 ай бұрын
A while ago I thought: every act is selfish because even the “selfless” acts we do are in anticipation of the guilt we’d feel if we didn’t act selflessly. The selfless act is delayed gratification in pursuit of long term gratification for us or our genes. A smarter person than me pointed out that while that is a perfectly valid definition of the word selfish, it serves no practical use in reality. We would simply have to redefine the word selfless as a consequence. While I agree you can hold the framework Alex does and it could be perfectly logical, I would like to see some practical use for defining the word preference in this way. Otherwise we may have a hard time making progress in the reduction of suffering
@MP4_mafia7 ай бұрын
4:16 what does he mean IF sociology were a science?
@markt.atkinsonphotography7 ай бұрын
In with the very same question .
@kizu54514 ай бұрын
it’s ultimately difference between Hard Sciences & Soft Sciencex
@adamborowicz72093 ай бұрын
he means that sociology is not capable of giving us the sort of things (theories) that physics or even biology can
@MelFinehout7 ай бұрын
It’s an objective fact that we DO value certain things, by our nature. It’s not that we *should* (an ought) but we DO. There are better and worse ways to realize them. The ways to realize them, made a study, would be the study of morality. I swear I don’t see how people don’t see this. And, of course, we have to start with moving away from the things we don’t like, and moving toward things we do. Like medicine is a science. But, who is to say that health is better than sickness, or life better than death? We could easily find a place to stand, philosophically, that questions these values. But, we STILL have a science of medicine. This would be a similar assumption in a science of morality. Healthy > sickness + means = medicine Well being > suffering + means = morality. It is pretty simple. I don’t see the reason for all the confusion.
@soccutd777 ай бұрын
Is it an objective fact that all people value certain things? I would almost certainly disagree with that-like even some norms like murder, slavery, and cannibalism among others have been the standard in different societies. Morality much more seems to just be what people agree on at the time. I for one believe objective morality doesn’t exist and that it’s just a product of natural game theory-everyone wants what is best for themselves, and morality is just the optimal description of the solution that pops out maximizing outcomes for all the participants.
@MelFinehout7 ай бұрын
@@soccutd77 you can argue the exceptions. And I could say not everyone wants to live. Does this make medicine an invalid science?
@billguthrie22187 ай бұрын
Agreed. People criticize Harris for what? ...articulating the obvious in a way that confuses them? It's just a battle of semantics.
@autisticberserker18077 ай бұрын
No it is not. Not everyone values life the same. Furthermore, not everyone has the same nature. That is yet another problem with people like Alex and Sam. They try to get everyone to think there is but ONE human nature when, in fact, there are infinite different human natures: we are all different. They are assimilators: they want everyone to assimilate and therefore push the false narrative of 'One Human Nature'. Christians value a fairytale afterlife more than this very real and short life we have. They don't value life as much as they say they do and certainly not as much as atheist. Life is "The Good" imo but not so much to most people. Most people don't even think what "The Good" is. Alex and Sam are either to dumb to comprehend this or they are liars and simply propagandists for the oligarchs. It is pretty clear to me which one it is because they both appear to be very smart. That means they are psyop agents for Capitalism and The Oligarchs. They are happy being the brightest mental midgets as long as they are on top. They don't care that they could be the least smart mental giant if it means they are not on top. Even the powers that be are not free from a capitalist society.
@soccutd777 ай бұрын
@@MelFinehout Medicine (at least as we know it now) isn’t objective either. Most doctors will tell you that it is both an art and a science in how you care for a specific patient. Also things that are generalizable to populations have little precision when mapping to the individual-for example, if a drug has shown a 30% decrease in mortality from disease in a certain population, the probability that it will help one patient is essentially 0. Many people smoke and don’t develop cancer or heart disease-they are just more likely. All that is to say that maybe you could see “objective morality” as some well-described guidelines for the best general way to live life for good outcomes, just like medical protocol or standards of care are the best-known general way to save life. But on the individual level, that “science” or objectivity disappears. What we think is “objective morality” is just our best guess at what we think is best for all people to adopt, just like medical guidelines are just our best guess. But because both can clearly be wrong (and often are), for example slavery or COVID, I would hardly call either one objective.
@spridleАй бұрын
Alex, please write a book.
@lynnlavoy67787 ай бұрын
Mirrors pointing to mirrors with no hierarchy.
@clorofilaazul5 ай бұрын
I like that.
@doctornov77 ай бұрын
William Lane Craig destroyed Harris’s moral position years ago in their debate.
@damienschwass93546 ай бұрын
lol. Low bar bill couldn’t destroy a sand castle.
@lovespeaks7776 ай бұрын
He’s won every debate with flying colors
@Liveforever8986 ай бұрын
@@lovespeaks777watch Craig debate Christopher Hitchens, I mean you have to be trolling
@lovespeaks7776 ай бұрын
@@Liveforever898That was a great debate and showed how Hitchens had no good arguments to defend his position
@Liveforever8986 ай бұрын
@@lovespeaks777 Whatever helps you sleep, Craig moves the goalposts, talks ridiculous white noise. Look at his videos with Alex. How can you defend a god that let’s kids die of cancer that beg God for help and the let them die? You can’t …
@someguyusa5 ай бұрын
It sounds like Alex is arguing with infinity in his philosophy. In calculus, when dealing with limits and functions and stuff, your equation can have an answer that approaches infinity such that we call that answer positive or negative infinity. For example, if you have an x-axis and a y-axis, you can theoretically get a solution to an equation that reaches to infinity y without ever touching or crossing the x-axis. It's kind of like a game of "not touching you," but being so infinitesimally close that it kind of doesn't matter, or maybe it does. Anyway, for my analogy, Objective Morality seems like it could be the x-axis (either way honestly, I don't think it matters for the sake of the illustration), and Alex seems to think that because his perceivable answers on the y-axis never cross that x-axis line, then it must or must not be so. However, that may not necessarily be true, or it may or may not matter depending on the equation, so to speak. Limits and stuff are wild.
@vakusdrake32247 ай бұрын
One thing I haven't heard mentioned is how Harris's idea of the moral landscape seems really naively utilitarian: Like it seems like he would have to say that you ought always to pick options like wireheading or the experience machine, because he can't seem to justify not always picking the option which is "higher" on the moral landscape based on a simplistic utilitarian calculation.
@Matthew-cp2eg6 ай бұрын
sam describes the scorpion and the frog and somehow believe the scorpion won't kill the frog because it's not in its best interest... yet it does.
@vakusdrake32246 ай бұрын
@@Matthew-cp2eg It's not clear what point you're making
@Matthew-cp2eg6 ай бұрын
@vakusdrake3224 Sam referred to an Adam and Eve scenario and that there would be a mutual understanding and desire to work together, while not smashing the other. My point is Sam is niave and when you substitute his people with the scorpion and frog, you gain the understanding of just because it may seem a mutual beneficial relationship doesn't mean the nature of one will embrace that part, but rather the nature of the beast will show itself and what will result is not a utopia Sam wants
@vakusdrake32246 ай бұрын
@@Matthew-cp2eg I suspect I disagree with key aspects of your model of human evil here. Since it very much seems like when people behave selfishly or irrationally there's *usually* a reason why that was useful to one's genes in the ancestral environment. Which is to say that I don't think you're appreciating the ways these human flaws are not bugs they're usually features (though some are just bugs, since certain cognitive biases can also be observed in artificial neural networks) It's not just that people are randomly selfish and cruel, these things are the way they are for evolutionary reasons: People are selfish when they think it benefits them and they're cruel most often to people who are perceived as the outgroup or who personally wronged them. Hell even a decent fraction of our cognitive biases seemingly disappear when you ask people to put their money where their mouth is (as in when being correct actually matters). So I would not rule out rational cooperation in quite the same way you seem to be. Though I think that people's moral intuitions radically disagree in ways that cannot be easily or objectively reconciled, particularly when you start getting access to certain technologies. However, even the inability for everybody to get their most preferred outcome doesn't rule out rational negotiation for a compromise solution that completely satisfies nobody. I could also go on quite a lot about how much of what we think of as "human nature" is cultural adaptations that took off after we adopted agriculture. Since the most warlike and agriculturally efficient early societies would conquer their neighbors therefor creating a sort of cultural survival of the shittiest (since this translates to a far lower quality of life and physical/mental health for it's actual citizens) .
@Matthew-cp2eg6 ай бұрын
@@vakusdrake3224 I never said humans were evil or good. its much more like micro and macro economics, neither system works when applied to the other. And in this contradicting system there lies the ability for people to get along or not... However why there is competing systems, just like the overall system of economic there is a fundamental layer or driving force and that force for humans is one of self interest be it at a 1-1 or group level. This is about OBJECTIVE MORALITY, a structured framework that is supposedly within people to determine a right from wrong, something so inherently knowing that it doesnt need to be taught... If anything you laid the frame as to why there isnt an objective morality or is that your position? that there isnt one?
@Amor_fati.Memento_Mori7 ай бұрын
Sam Harris is speaking gibberish.
@penguin01016 ай бұрын
8:44 “…the there there is as…”
@titus12116 ай бұрын
i’m happy to see that i have some sort of understanding of this after watching debate and philosophy videos for like 6 months
@tournaline34487 ай бұрын
Does Sam not understand the question? It really seems like he’s just waffling without addressing the question.
@harlowcj7 ай бұрын
Listening to Sam talk about how to ground yourself morally is like hearing an overweight alcoholic doctor tell you to stop smoking.
@krisissocoollike6 ай бұрын
Sam Harris is immoral?
@Itsabigworldoutthere6 ай бұрын
What has Sam Harris done to render you to judge him in such a way?
@ck58npj726 ай бұрын
Right, he should be spending 90% of his wealth to supporting a village in a poor country.
@groundrunner7526 ай бұрын
Something tells me we're about to hear some river to the sea nonsense
@markbernhardt62816 ай бұрын
@@groundrunner752 Abrahamic religions are hilarious
@Klayhamn5 ай бұрын
I don't know why this topic causes so much confusion and raises so many discussions - for me as a materialist it's pretty simple: the idea of an "objective" morality doesn't exist in an ontological sense the same way that the sun or the moon or your mom exist - if it exists at all - then it "exists" in the minds of conscious beings, the same way "france" or the "2nd amendment" exist. and if it exists, and it is objective - then it is objective in the sense that the human brain is PRONE or BUILT in such a way that such morality arises within it. the same way that "love" seems to exist as an objective phenomenon - i.e. that people experience it universally and our brains are built in such a way so as to give way to this phenomenon to occur the things that challenge objective morality is simply the question of HOW universal is it really, IS there some common ground between all moral frameworks or human cultures throughout history, etc. i think there is a strong case to be made for SOME kind of objective morality in the sense described above, but it is too vague and partial to serve as a complete moral framework e.g.. "hurting one of us is bad" -- seems to be a universal moral concept among all human cultures: hurting yourself, your family, your tribe - seems to be perceived as an ill that should be avoided or punished. but the question here is who is "us"? does it stop at the tribe? is a neighboring tribe / clan / state / nation fair game? moral systems throughout history gradually evolved to EXPAND on this core concept of "us" to include more and more people and beings - even so far as including other animals or plants or inanimate things like the oceans Sam seems to advocate that there is this inevitable "conclusion" that all moral systems would seem to converge to - and i disagree with that. there are some fundamental "choices" that can be made when constructing a moral system, which CAN supposedly be consistent and congruent with the human brain's natural pattern of behavior and thinking. for example -a collectivist vs. individualistic society, or - one that enshrines cultural uniqueness and homogeneity vs multiculturalism, diversity and "melting pot" kind of existence i don't see why we should think the human brain necessarily favors one over the other -- OR - if it does, that it would necessarily be the kind of system that sam thinks it would be
@rondovk7 ай бұрын
Weirdly I can’t understand not understanding Sam Harris’ view of morality
@aiya57777 ай бұрын
he's using the probably principle probably, murder is not ok🤓
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
@@aiya5777 Self defence? Euthanasia? Death Penalty? War?
@azhwanhaghiri63367 ай бұрын
@@ChristianIce Look up what murder means.
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
@@azhwanhaghiri6336 "unlawful" killing. Which is subjective as well. Better luck next time.
@lsz68827 ай бұрын
I get what he means but he's still really bad at explaining it
@LancerFFS7 ай бұрын
You're really milking this one interview lmfao
@drv39736 ай бұрын
As he should.
@valentinewiggin9705Ай бұрын
This is literally what JP tried to explain to Sam when he debated with him. At that time JP, allowed Sam to pivot away and JP didn't pressure hard enough on this point to reveal Sam's hidden acceptance of 'divinity'. What Sam basically said is that he could stablish a secular moral system, but the problem with this is that at some point he should make an axiom that is purely subjective. By this I mean, an statement like humans are worth more than rocks. Why? Sam has no mathematical way to demonstrate this, he will end up saying this like: because humans have feelings. so are feelings more valuable than objects? yes, why? and he has been stoped, he can't argue past this point. He will try to dance around saying the same thing, 'one can achieve a state of constant improvement of emotions bla bla' but he circles back, 'what if someone finds joy in harming others?' are ones feelings more valuable than others? and he will need to forcefully make another divine statement 'because harming is bad'. and just like that, he has admitted to believing in divinity. JP, shouldn't have allowed him to pivot away.
@therealzilch7 ай бұрын
I'm an atheist, and I admit I have no objective morals. But neither do theists, even if they think they do.
@brainworm6667 ай бұрын
And the Theist would say you, the atheist, has objective moral values, even if you don't think you do.
@oliverthompson99227 ай бұрын
I agree, although I think I have an objective standard to base them on. Even if I am wrong though, and morals are objective, theists don't know what they are any more than I do. They can't even agree with each other what they are.
@luckyboy93397 ай бұрын
If God exists, and they follow his law, then they do.
@brainworm6667 ай бұрын
@@oliverthompson9922 I think a Theist would rely on the general principles behind what we think is "Good" and "Bad", and the innate feeling when we know we're doing something "wrong".
@oliverthompson99227 ай бұрын
@@brainworm666 Exactly, in which case, it would apply to all of us, not just people who believe in objective morality , that's my point.
@Copper_Life7 ай бұрын
Hi Alex :)
@jozefwoo80796 ай бұрын
Achieving as much wellbeing as possible is as objective as you can get. Almost everyone agrees with getting more wellbeing, just like we all subjectively experience gravity but agree that it exists in an objective way. We can kind of objectively say that more wellbeing is morally better.
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
Sam Harris, in a Bart Simpsons fashion, should write 50 times on a board: "Even if we agree on an opinion, that doesn't make that opinion objective"-
@AggravatedAstronomer7 ай бұрын
If we agree that the moon orbits the earth, are we merely expressing an opinion, or a demonstrable objective fact? Similarly if we agree that murder is deleterious to net human wellbeing in a society as defined through the lens of neuroscience and related sciences, are we not agreeing on a demonstrable objective fact? I think that is where he is coming from. Your criticism is of how he had deployed the word "objective" and I too usually dislike the concept of "objective morality", but in this framing I think it's sound. There are objectively good and bad ways to maximise human happiness.
@godless10147 ай бұрын
If you have the goal of human well-being (you don't have to . . . But IF you do) then your opinion of how best to achieve that becomes irrelevant as we can determine that some experiences are objectively better than others. You can have an opinion. Sure. And that opinion may or may not align with objective reality. I am of the opinion, for instance, that the principles of morality and governance mostly associated with modern western societies (individual liberty, skepticism, secularism, etc.) Are not merely different than their eastern counterparts, but objectively better at achieving human well-being. But my opinion might be wrong. The point is that we can determine whether or not that opinion is correct in the same way we might determine any other scientific fact. It may not be easy, but it can in principle be done.
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
@@AggravatedAstronomer "If we agree that the moon orbits the earth, are we merely expressing an opinion, or a demonstrable objective fact?" We don't agree on that, we measure it. THere is no arguments or discussion. "if we agree that murder is deleterious to net human wellbeing in a society as defined through the lens of neuroscience and related sciences, are we not agreeing on a demonstrable objective fact?" No, we agree on an opinion. For example, I think Death Penalty is murder, while somebody thinks abortion is murder. What are you gonna do, objective boy?
@ChristianIce7 ай бұрын
@@godless1014 Who's to say if abortion, death penalty and euthanasia are beneficial to the collective or murder?
@AggravatedAstronomer7 ай бұрын
@@ChristianIce That's obtuse - we do agree on it, precisely because we can measure it. And even then, there can be disagreement about how we measure it, what the right methodology is. There is nuance, for example its orbit is elliptical, as most are, so the distance to the moon changes all the time. It is also receding. We can also measure the rise and fall of human well-being in a society across it's various strata as conditions change, we can do this through a wide range of useful metrics. Would you seriously contest the there's no way to measure the wellbeing of human beings in North Korea and conclude that they are worse off than those in Sweden? Whether someone is experiencing joy, or pain, is objectively verifiable and even measurable in the brain. It's weird that you're coming off so churlish, immature, bitter and resentful, given the cordial manner in which I engaged you. I mean "objective boy"? What a melt. You are mischaracterising Harris' argument here, on the basis of what seems to be an entrenched emotional response, that has led you to stick your head in the sand and pretend objectively verifiable facts about the brain are unknowable.
@jeffryblair68167 ай бұрын
Everyone knows Sam is wrong - I suspect deep down he knows it as well - and most people appreciate his longing to be right. He wants there to be objective morality because he can’t not know that there is… as is true for us all. But he also must know that lexical sleight of hand won’t finally fool us, or himself, and that if one embraces a godless cosmos then one ought to summon the courage to face the ugly amoral reality. Let yourself let go, Sam… or let God take hold of you and be what God is: the eternal and universal ground of all truth, including moral truth, which is nothing other than the revelation of God’s nature.
@pedrorigoli43986 ай бұрын
In my opinion, what is missing in the desert Island is value in anything other than yourself. What I mean with this is: if we only drive ourselves by our own feelings and experience we prefer over others experiences, there is no actual sense of morality because you would just do whatever you like the most, and even doing something you don't like would be not wrong because you might just be experimenting to discover anything new you didn't know you like... The concept of good and wrong comes when you have to consider how you actions will affect something of value other than yourself. In this case, murder is not something one disapproves by itself as an experience, but as an outrage against something of value. For example, if we don't value a fly's life, there's no moral debate about killing it if my experience is improved by removing the fly from the picture... the "booo" about murder comes from thinking about murdering a person of something of value other than ourselves. Now where comes the idea of "something of value other than ourselves"? I think here is pure evolution, where the only system of value that works in a community is a system where my values don't contradict the values of others, therefore, things like "I like how it feels murdering someone else" can't prevail in time, since it would crush against another person's system of values, which would include himself by just survival instinct. Therefore, we would evolve in a way our system of value contemplates others, the same way it contemplates ourselves, and we should add things we need to survive too, so killing a pig to eat, would be consider good, but killing a pig for fun would be consider bad, because I'm damaging something I would might need in the future... Killing a fly won't make a difference in my life experience, so we didn't evolve into care about a fly's life. I also think the process of considering things of value from other things we already considered valuable, is an evolution of our reasoning, in which we could understand the world into more complex experiences or activities which might benefit the things we value even if its not obvious in first hand... like eating healthy because we value being healthy in the future.
@saltriverpirate31725 ай бұрын
Remarkable to see and hear two intelligent and rational people have a discussion. Most discussions are between people of reason and people of faith, always a mismatch.
@connorstar1646 ай бұрын
Listening to atheist is a fucking headache. When I listen to pastors for our Christian faiths, our imams or our Muslim brothers, and even Buddhist Bhodivistas and Hindu Adiyogis, it’s always a breath of fresh air. So much knowledge and wisdom simply explained in lessons, our chores and devotions, our priorities and our unity, we work in tandem for common goals, very natural and spiritual connection stays alive and worked on. When athiest talk, it’s always a probing, dissecting, splicing and over simplifying shit, it takes you hrs, to weeks to years to dance around a simple notion when it comes to them, when we hear our mentors in our faiths, it’s simple yet gravitates towards prudence, always on progress, always on results of fruition. I love my Bible, my Christian fellowship and my churches I go to, comfort in this world of peril, strife and sorrow. Most athiest I talk to are on a string line of meds, always figgity, always know it alls, always on the brink of suicide, yet all the brethren’s of faiths I talk to are always calm and collective, ensuring and comforting. I don’t even bother with the naysayers anymore. I just turn to the people of obedience and steadfast faith. Stay up brethren’s of faith. You couldn’t pay me to debate an atheist or sit through their bullshit, you’ll be sent to a realm of chaos and uncontrollable bullshit. Stick to practicing the Bible, the Quran, the Mahabharata, the Gita, the dhammapada and other holy books. Build stronger fellowships, and attend to your churches, mosques, temple gatherings and live.
@stefanheinzmann73196 ай бұрын
Funny how opinions differ. When I listen to pastors, I usually want to leave, thinking "why do I have to endure this bullshit?"
@DistrictN9ne6 ай бұрын
@@stefanheinzmann7319 Could you give an example of something a pastor said that made you feel that way?
@jvalfin33596 ай бұрын
Well, here's an atheist you can talk to that doesn't drink alcohol, doesn't use drugs and is happy with his life. You make it sound like you only know like 3 people or something! I get that it's comfortable to not think and just get told what to do; do this, do that, get a cookie. Simple things that are easy, that a child can do. But where's the challenge? As an adult, where's the interesting stuff and the understanding? There's none of that in church. You just get told and that's it. Have you ever thought that trying to understand things is difficult but it can also be rewarding?
@DistrictN9ne6 ай бұрын
@@jvalfin3359 Cute assertions. Though you still didn't answer the question.
@jvalfin33596 ай бұрын
@@DistrictN9ne what question? The commenter I responded to didn't ask me anything and neither did you
@Abracadabra2087 ай бұрын
The problem with the thought experiment involving taking a pill to gain a love of music is that it lends itself to infinite regression or recursion. Taking such a pill would entail a desire to have a desire for music. But what if you didn't have a desire for a desire for music? Does having a desire for a desire even make sense? And even if so, can we not take it even further, with questions about having a desire for a desire for a desire for music? And so on. To me, this suggests that a first-order desire for something is the only level of order that makes sense. I know that there's the complicated phenomenon of addiction, where a person desires a substance in one sense, while recognizing that the substance is harmful. In that case, though, I consider it a case of competing desires, in which case it's a matter of which desire is stronger, not a "nested" system of desires. And perhaps we can rethink the "music pill" thought experiment along those lines, too, where a desire to fit into wider society's love of music overtakes the personal aversion or apathy or music prior to taking the pill.
@PercyTinglish7 ай бұрын
I have the desire to desire healthy food and exercise because I'd rather be healthy, but I currently have the actual desire to be lazy and eat fried chicken.
@bike4aday7 ай бұрын
That has been a topic of contemplation for me over the past week or so. I was observing a desire to want to be compassionate and realized that wanting to desire something IS desiring it. This interesting string of logic seemed to come from self-criticism that I wasn't trying hard enough to be compassionate. After letting it go, I was able to return to my practice of cultivating compassion and trust the process with confidence.
@MrShaiya967 ай бұрын
The helmet example he mentioned is much better & more accurate. Let’s discuss it
@Abracadabra2087 ай бұрын
I didn’t hear about it in this clip. Is it in the larger podcast of which this clip is a part?
@PercyTinglish7 ай бұрын
@@bike4aday no, they're different
@hamdaniyusuf_dani6 ай бұрын
IMO there are two interpretations of the word "objective" which cause much of disagreements in discussions about morality. The hard interpretation says that objective means independent from any observer. A statement can be objectively true or false even when no one is observing or verifying it. For example, the existence of the sun is objectively true even if there's no conscious entity to observe it. The soft interpretation says that objective means independent from whoever makes the observation/evaluation. It implicitly assumes that there's always conscious entities to make the observation. By definition, morality exists to distinguish between good and bad things. This distinction requires a goal as the evaluation criteria, or something to compare against. In turn, it requires a conscious entity to pursue the goal. Those who said that there's objective morality must have used the soft interpretation, because otherwise, they are making an oxymoronic statement. On the other hand, hard interpretation leads to the conclusion that there's no objective morality.
@Jose-ru2wf29 күн бұрын
Emotivism is defeated by the question "what should I do?" If "I should go gym" and "yay gym!" were equivalent, I'd always be looking forward to going. However, despite always maintaining that I should go, my sentiment often is "ugh boo gym". So those two statements aren't equivalent. Likewise the inverse scenario: nutella. I know I really shouldn't, but ask my emotions and they'll go YAYYY every time. For those curious, Romans 7:15-25 famously resolves this by outsourcing the "should" part of the equation to you-know-who.
@x2mars3 ай бұрын
Two of the best, thank you
@TheEverydayGods6 ай бұрын
All action introduces duality in the human experience. If you walk forward, you forgo walking backwards. Walking to the left implies you forgo walking to the right. Everything you do is "right" and "wrong" for someone. If you choose to help your grandmother on your Saturday off it implies you are not helping your father. We have to ask, right and wrong for who??? The question of objective morality is answered when we realize what we are. Alex and Sam (two apertures of the universal process) are discussing this concept of "Objective Morality" on a podcast. The universe is experiencing itself through Alex and Sam and every other being in existence all of which having their own subjective experiences at varying heights of consciousness simultaneously. So from Alex's perspective the argument appears one way and in the eyes of Sam the argument appears another...but truth of the matter is the universe is taking the side of Alex and Sam at the same time! What is true and what is false is enveloped within truth. It has always been this way and always will. One could say that everything as it is, just the way that it is, is existentially right. Our codes of ethics are placeholders for "right conduct" at certain levels of consciousness. When we speak about objective morality, no matter what view you take on it, the one Self is providing the light of consciousness from both sides. At the level of the Self it is obvious that "what is right and what is wrong" are inseparable dualities on the level of the mind and the same thing at the level of truth. Know yourself and objective morality will take care of itself.
@chefbutchwild3 ай бұрын
The question factually is why is morality The answer is -you are all things- in that you undestand that the "purpose" of life is not (On the scales of balance) generally recognized to be desiring intentfully suffering- (ie; Pin-head) No living thing ( in general) seeks suffering. In that we use inference to determine that the intent of life is to seek expand grow multiply & avoid suffering for self. Enlightemnt dictates we are self- aware beings hence empaty- (Treat others the way you seek to be treated) This is the Truth underpinnings of Morality If Life = Desire & desire seeks non suffering Then living non suffering for everything is alignment of the intent of life - ie; the moral arch bending towards Enlightemnt that one is all things and it's Desire is your desire meaning it's life is equal to yours (Love yhy neighbor as thy self. Morality is the understanding and expression of this knowledge. You are all things.
@MnyFrNthng2 ай бұрын
Morality that is based on maximizing (pleasure, utility, advancement etc) has to be subjective. Moralityncan be objective only if it is based on minimization of suffering and avoidance of death (survival) These two are the objectively observed truth in every sentient living organism. So you can base objective morality only on objectively observed reality. Pleasure or other positive experiences such liking music, advancement, having children etc are not objective reality of living things so they cannot be used for objective morality. I guess that's what you are saying in your message.
@Youttubeuser2093219 күн бұрын
What those of you who don't understand Sam's point are missing, is that the concept of morality related to "good vs bad" only makes sense IF it is grounded in well-being and suffering, and since those things do exist, and are objectively measurable, even if only subjectively experienced, morality is objective. Sam basically clears up the notion that "the universe", itself, "cares" (as if it were a caring self) about anything, independent of the conscious experience of wellbeing and suffering that some beings have, but he does so in a single sentence, so most people, even those who have read the book, assume that he means that there is some universal rule book about good and bad, that exists without the prerequisite of conscious experience of wellbeing and suffering. The fact that well-being and suffering are experienced subjectively doesn't make them any less objectively measurable. If someone subjectively experiences depression, his/her depression is objectively real (the realness of that experience doesn't depend on whether or not the person doing the measurement feels like it is real or not, but is based on a fact about the state of the universe - that specific person's mental state), and can be given a numerical score, for comparison with other similar, subjective experiences of depression. Whether or not, in practice, it is currently, or even always will be, impossible to perform such measurements with great precision, doesn't mean that, in principle, the facts are not objective. Just because we can't currently count every single grain of sand on the planet, doesn't mean that there isn't a correct answer, down to a single grain, and that all other answers are both incorrect, and incorrect to different magnitudes (with equal magnitudes existing only in opposite directions -> -1 vs +1).
@gardoc166919 күн бұрын
There are three problems with this. First, binding the concepts of good and bad to well-being and suffering is our personal decision. Why our well-being matters in the first place? Just because it's in our interests to feel pleasure and not feel pain doesn't say anything. Desire to avoid suffering and aim for pleasure is a biological mechanism that ensures personal survival and has nothing to do with morality. It developed naturally via evolution since those species who had no such mechanisms simply didn't make it to this point. Second, when a lion kills an antilope, it compromises antilope's well-being and causes suffering but if it won't, the lion will suffer itself. Whose well-being is more important then? This is the conflict of interests that shows that the universe can't "care" about everyone at the same time. Same with humans, why should i place someone else's well being higher than my own? And third, if we really use math to "calculate" the best moral decision it could be used to justify literally anything. For example. Of course suffering of a single human is less important than suffering of many people, right? (assuming these people are all identical) That means, that every decision we make should be made in favor of the majority to maximaze the outcome. That means killing any amount of people is morally justifiable if it leads to a bigger amount of people saved. That makes even genocide morally correct if one could prove it's positive outcome. For example, killing thousands human test subjects to create a vaccine from a horrible disease to save countless lives in the future or exterminating a warlike nation that threatens the whole humanity with it's nuclear weaponry. But that way any action isn't right or wrong by itself. It is the context that makes the difference, not the action itself. Which makes it... relative.
@eengel223 ай бұрын
I tend to agree with Sam. If we grant that yums are desirable and boos are avoided, it only makes sense that conscious beings will seek to maximize yums and avoid boos (suffering) and take whatever paths are available to get there. The problem Alex has is in calling that "objectively right." I don't know if you can really prove it one way or another since there's no explanation for consciousness/experience yet. Maybe if we ever get to the bottom of that we'll have a better framework for reasoning about these things.
@Infinite_Vacation7 ай бұрын
My take away is that it's good to try to see the good in other cultures ect, and when they can enhance my life and overall wellbeing.
@johngleue6 ай бұрын
When man's life is the set as the standard, morality becomes objective because what is required for man's life is dictated by reality and not subjective whims. So good and evil can be boiled down to a simple question, "Is this good for my life, bringing me closer to my values, or does this harm my life and compromise my values? The end goal being my own happiness." So morality comes down to a fundamental alternative for living beings with free will (humans), and that is life or death. Are your choices leading you towards pleasure and long-term happiness (life)? Or pain/misery and death? These choices aren't always obvious and will depend on one being explicit with oneself what their values or goals actually are, and why. This is done through introspection (looking inward). A value is something one acts to gain and/or keep. Values are essentially pro-life and are necessary for any living organism's survival. Now, with human beings, there are subjectively chosen values based on an individual's preferences. We're all different and will have different chosen values and things we want out of life. An example of this is I've decided i want to be a good doctor. The principles I embrace to become a good doctor will be dictated by reality. I can not just chew 100 pieces of bubblegum a day for 1 year and expect to gain the knowledge and experience I need to be a good doctor. In this way, achieving my value is not subjective. It's instead objective. As human beings, our metaphysics and epistemology is intertwined because the nature of our survival relies on our ability to reason. That's our unique ability to observe reality with our senses and integrate that with our minds in a process called concept formation. Concepts are what we use to package up perceptual observations into knowledge to be drawn upon again as we need them. They're like mental concretes that store information. Symbols and language are examples of these concepts.
@MikkoRantalainen3 ай бұрын
My rule of thumb is "can I apply game theory here?" As I see it, objective morality is the optimal long term play stragegy in game of life. That is, in long term applying this strategy results in least suffering (or maximal well-being) in long term over all the entities of the game that can suffer. For an individual, maximal well-being could be hedonistic and narcistic behavior but such a behavior would cause so much havok to the surrounding environment and individuals living in that environment that it would be a non-optimal long term strategy. I would say minimum time span to truly evaluate objective morality should be a million years. On such time scales, e.g. fossil fuels are really bad strategy.
@Chevalier_de_Pas6 ай бұрын
Maybe I'm not grasping what you're saying fully, but I believe there are moral values that are intersubjectively shared and are not merely expressions of individual emotions. Those values are honorifically objective as they are established by the moral assumptions shared by human communities. In other words, there is a basis for morality that transcends individual emotions. In fact, these values can be defended rationally and are susceptible to change and debate within a community, implying that they have coherence and persistence (coercivity) that go beyond instant emotional reactions. Any modification in moral values must endure the scrutiny of contrasting viewpoints and must evolve from the pre-existing moral framework, eventually becoming part of the community’s customs. I'm thus suggesting that morality possesses an objective aspect that is anchored in tradition, rationality, and communal consensus, and is accessible through reasoned moral discourse. Thus, even an atheist can advocate for an objective moral framework with honorific values, independent of the universe's lack of moral directives. So even if a psychopath feels approval towards the idea of killing someone, that would still be objectively wrong, and the intrinsic worth of an innocent human life retains its objectivity (being an atheist isn't being a nihilist). So maybe, ultimately, or in practice, the absence of divine or cosmic mandates is irrelevant to the establishment of moral truths.