The Closing of the Modern Mind | Tim Keller & Jonathan Haidt at NYU | Feb 2017

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The Veritas Forum

The Veritas Forum

Күн бұрын

Social psychologist and atheist public intellectual Jonathan Haidt and author and pastor Tim Keller discuss religion, morality and pluralism. | New York University, 2/20/2017 | Explore more at www.veritas.org.
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Over the past two decades, The Veritas Forum has been hosting vibrant discussions on life's hardest questions and engaging the world's leading colleges and universities with Christian perspectives and the relevance of Jesus. Learn more at www.veritas.org, with upcoming events and over 600 pieces of media on topics including science, philosophy, music, business, medicine, and more!
Timestamps:
00:00 Introduction
02:20 Tim Keller | Opening Remarks
18:45 Jonathan Haidt | Opening Remarks
31:01 Panel Discussion
56:45 Q&A

Пікірлер: 393
@TheJust22az
@TheJust22az 5 жыл бұрын
Keller is truly an intellectual Christian of our time. I need to find out more about him.
@mariagastelum7923
@mariagastelum7923 3 жыл бұрын
I have learned a lot from him.
@kulak8548
@kulak8548 7 жыл бұрын
Tim Keller is my favorite Christian so far!
@DavidinSLO
@DavidinSLO Жыл бұрын
"consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith" (Hebrews 13:7) I'm so thankful for the impact and legacy of pastor and theologian Tim Keller (1950 - 2023) who today passed into eternity
@takornjang7900
@takornjang7900 6 ай бұрын
😭😭🙏🏽 I love him so much!!! RIP TKelz! I can’t wAit to see him in Heaven!
@BrianDikasdaybyday
@BrianDikasdaybyday 5 жыл бұрын
Tim Keller is truly an anointed and well educated individual
@christieatkerson5771
@christieatkerson5771 2 жыл бұрын
Amen to that. He has been greatest Christian preacher even in my life.
@mthivier
@mthivier 7 жыл бұрын
This was a great discussion. I've been a longtime fan of Jonathan Haidt's work, but had not previously heard of Rev. Keller, but will now try to look him up and learn more about his work, as result of this video.
@jimland4359
@jimland4359 7 жыл бұрын
He is fantastic.
@timhatch27
@timhatch27 7 жыл бұрын
he is worth reading.
@dwells826
@dwells826 7 жыл бұрын
You won't be disappointed with Keller.
@lanceg6828
@lanceg6828 7 жыл бұрын
Mar Thivierge The a Reason for God is a modern classic. One of my favorite goto resources.
@hyaesook4841
@hyaesook4841 7 жыл бұрын
Daniel Wells wu7
@joeashbubemma
@joeashbubemma 7 жыл бұрын
I don't think there is a book that Tim Keller has NOT read. The man is a walking library on social/moral/philosophical/religious topics.
@garydean777
@garydean777 5 жыл бұрын
Lol it would appear so.
@billince2505
@billince2505 4 жыл бұрын
I agree
@NelsonCummings
@NelsonCummings 4 жыл бұрын
Hmm , ever hear of Christopher Hitchens? kzbin.info/www/bejne/fpKleneLjrx-sKM Genius, cerebral, ( if not , just wow ) read every book ? Library , Be amazed, then we also have the amazing , calm, eloquent Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins,, I just love eloquent, cerebral, funny people who help us evolve intellectually and broaden our minds, we must not follow blindly Just saying worth sharing and we need to start to think Sheeple and a follower? Some want to not stretch and be a thinker, Hay they got you .. Ya think?
@plekkchand
@plekkchand 4 жыл бұрын
Strictly speaking, that is not true of anyone.
@chrisbessey358
@chrisbessey358 4 жыл бұрын
Nelson Cummings The problem is that Athiests can become easily trapped inside an echo chamber. I am an evolutionist, but I find great wisdom and actual concrete moral truth from many wise Christians, Buddhists, and Hindus. The problem is when we hear someone speak and discount everything they say without actually listening to their thoughts and doing the hard work of using logic to doing battle with those ideas in our minds. I’m often guilty of lacking empathy and humility in my discussions with others and it is something I must continue to be mindful of.
@lestariabadi
@lestariabadi 5 жыл бұрын
The best, most polite & civil talk between 2 men with opposite beliefs. Bravo!
@julianfloyd4418
@julianfloyd4418 7 жыл бұрын
Timothy Keller is a great man!! May God be with him :)
@aaronneil780
@aaronneil780 7 жыл бұрын
I want Keller's reading list! What a well read guy.
@pianomaly9859
@pianomaly9859 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I've written some of them down.
@oliviakramer2245
@oliviakramer2245 3 жыл бұрын
@@pianomaly9859 would you mind sharing?
@pianomaly9859
@pianomaly9859 3 жыл бұрын
@@oliviakramer2245 I just have some hastily scribbled down in a number of places, I would recommend listening to the sermons with pencil and paper at the ready.
@captainamerica3814
@captainamerica3814 3 жыл бұрын
Dr. Keller is a blessing to the world. Get a copy of one of his books, especially, "The Prodigal God".
@yangzhougirlful
@yangzhougirlful 6 жыл бұрын
Tim Keller , I am inspired by your words and the truth of what you shared resonates with my soul. Thank you!
@danesi2044
@danesi2044 2 жыл бұрын
Timothy Keller is one of my favourite preachers on the internet! I’ve learned so much from him. Thank you Timothy!!
@MrStrawberryfields4
@MrStrawberryfields4 3 жыл бұрын
My man really wasted time on asking Keller on the Problem of Evil like there hasn't been responses to this in 3,000 years.
@FlowLai
@FlowLai 3 жыл бұрын
There are something like maybe 100 ways to answer this famous question. But I am glad that Tim brought up the uniquely Christian response.
@erc9468
@erc9468 3 жыл бұрын
Mo kidding. Dude acted like he was the first person to ever think of that question. LoL.
@snippletrap
@snippletrap 3 жыл бұрын
Not enough recognition of the moderator in the comments. She was great.
@chadapol8056
@chadapol8056 3 жыл бұрын
Agreed!
@deanclark2670
@deanclark2670 3 жыл бұрын
What I found absolutely amazing was her honesty about things she feared; however, she willingly listened. Kudos to her!! I agree with your comment!!
@helenmcmichael2122
@helenmcmichael2122 3 жыл бұрын
Agreed, I’d love to hear her give a talk, and know her viewpoints. She’s a very classy host.
@jemimaakinola
@jemimaakinola 4 жыл бұрын
Tim is such a wise man, and one thing I have taken from this disussion is the importance of reading, and reading outside of our own world-views!
@sergkapitan2578
@sergkapitan2578 3 жыл бұрын
Read N.Berdyaev "The destiny of man":) Really, one of the best authors ever!
@ChernobylPizza
@ChernobylPizza 7 жыл бұрын
Finally someone who points out what actually makes sense: human rights are non-provable at best. They are a leap of faith. I almost never hear anyone admit this. It's inconceivable to them.
@dereklaing2929
@dereklaing2929 4 жыл бұрын
I think you missed the point pizza guy.
@sergkapitan2578
@sergkapitan2578 3 жыл бұрын
:))))))) Exactly!!!!! Without Highest Reality you cannot ground almost any ethical issues at all...
@eriklucasmusic
@eriklucasmusic 2 жыл бұрын
I think they’re self evident if you have a relationship with God.
@leonscott543
@leonscott543 7 жыл бұрын
This forum should have been titled "Correct Political Correctness"
@nancyredford7149
@nancyredford7149 5 жыл бұрын
This was one of the most interesting of all the Forums I’ve listened to. Mainly because although they disagree on God, they agree on other issues. In a world where so many people are constantly angry in their discussions, it was nice to hear one where the students got an opportunity to hear what a great discussion on a good topic sounds like. Very well done! Thank you for this presentation.
@passteve1
@passteve1 9 ай бұрын
I don’t know
@katymoran-huang7994
@katymoran-huang7994 3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic discussion and debate... Tim Keller was amazing in his thoughtful and insightful responses!!
@jacobsnodgrass13
@jacobsnodgrass13 5 жыл бұрын
tim keller at 35:00 is blowing minds
@rs5352
@rs5352 7 жыл бұрын
My favorite video / lecture in many many years. This kind of collaboration is exactly what we need right now. I can't share & like enough, but I will try try try.....
@christianacker3543
@christianacker3543 3 жыл бұрын
A long time fan of both of these men. I am coming back to this video four years later for a second or third listen. My first impression back in 2017 was that I wanted them to get deeper, disagree and debate more explicitly. I was concerned they were self-censoring their public conversation in an effort to model a civility that was more necessary than the issues they were speaking about. In 2021 this has aged well, but the environment of the Coddling of the American Mind is even more intense. It is hard to imagine moral teachers better equipped for the issues the world and the emerging generations of Americans are dealing with today. Incredibly thankful for them both and Veritas for hosting. Wholly encourage anyone tempted to read (and listen to) all you can by both of these men.
@candicegerber9641
@candicegerber9641 2 жыл бұрын
Well said, thank you.
@sarahdrawz
@sarahdrawz 4 жыл бұрын
“Although I am doubtful that you will” savage
@michaelhand4246
@michaelhand4246 6 жыл бұрын
8 Minutes in, and Keller is already criticizing John Rawls. I love this guy. For a great rebuttal of John Rawls' "Theory of Justice", check out "Anarchy, State, and Utopia" by Robert Nozick.
@dsutter777
@dsutter777 7 жыл бұрын
the fact that keller didn't bring up the blind men holding on to different parts of the elephant, shows his restraint in the pursuit of agreement with haidt.. Cuz I would argue that's exactly where haidts view of others is originating
@room2growrose623
@room2growrose623 6 жыл бұрын
Excellent discourse, this is what America is about, not categories of people locked in hatred. Love it!!
@nancyschaecher7125
@nancyschaecher7125 5 жыл бұрын
Great conversation. Please, another discussion around points where you both differ.
@jewishbride5010
@jewishbride5010 4 жыл бұрын
God bless in Christ Jesus, amen! Annelies, the Netherlands.
@normbabbitt4325
@normbabbitt4325 5 жыл бұрын
I so enjoyed this conversation and discussion. Thank you, so much!
@calkrahn9961
@calkrahn9961 Жыл бұрын
Excited to listen to 2 of my favourite thinkers
@claimouth662
@claimouth662 5 жыл бұрын
So Haidt is like an atheist who's an evangelist for religion. Good for him! 🤣
@JamesTsividis
@JamesTsividis 7 жыл бұрын
That was a great discussion. Thanks for hosting guys.
@mtcstyle
@mtcstyle 7 жыл бұрын
Loved the ideas presented. I hope both secular and sacred groups can perspective-take, remove the "otherness" and see we're all in this together.
@fartsinurmouth123
@fartsinurmouth123 3 жыл бұрын
Tim is the best but I also enjoyed this dude
@lincolnskinner
@lincolnskinner 2 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this! Thank you for sharing
@paul_devos
@paul_devos 6 жыл бұрын
Good chat. Enjoyed both speakers. Thank you.
@FreddoFrappe
@FreddoFrappe 6 жыл бұрын
EXCELLENT!
@imcat-holic10
@imcat-holic10 6 жыл бұрын
This is an excellent discussion. I think that Jonathan Haidt is right-on about identity politics as a way of invalidating your opponent by teaching young people to make slurs against and not engage in intellectual arguments or solving injustice, but instead linking them to racism. we need convincing arguments not forcing intimidation.
@Isaiah49.16
@Isaiah49.16 8 ай бұрын
There is a quiet calm in Mr. Keller because he has the Holy Spirit in him. He is not on the defensive, about to attack or wanting to get his point across in any ill will manner. I do not see any of that in the other gentleman who does not have a higher power other than himself.
@TheNewYorker360
@TheNewYorker360 Ай бұрын
Good to see a program on the late Tim Keller. I still remember that review on Yelp about Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Nothing I've ever heard or read about Redeemer has ever been proven more accurate or cogent. Excerpts edited for brevity and clarity: COMMENT: I have been to Redeemer West side and East side services. I still go from time to time. I used to take part in several of the volunteer opportunities at Redeemer. So why only 3 stars? Because a church is more than just a pastor. Now there is no perfect church. But there are some serious things lacking here: First of all, there is no prayer meeting or focus on corporate prayer for the entire church. The very basic part of the Christian faith that Jesus himself said with his own lips was Matthew 21:13. "It is written," He said to them, "'My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers." Prayer is just talking to God, it doesn't require any special talent, skill or training. So the lack of prayer at this church is very alarming to me. And I haven't heard anyone speak of repentance at Redeemer --- ever. Again, I have listened to hundreds of sermons and been to at least a hundred services both on the West and East sides. The church ministries are called "ministries" but are run like any secular organization. Redeemer Presbyterian is run like a business, a well-oiled corporate machine, and not a church. The other 2 things which are cultural and not spiritual but are off-putting to me are: 1. Most of the members and regular visitors to Redeemer are transplants, not New Yorkers, so the church is a large city church but run like a small town church where there are very few native New Yorkers. It seems most of the members are not established in the city and are just passing through. 2. The other is that it seems the majority of the congregation is looking for a spouse, and very aggressively. When you walk in, the first thing people do is look at your hand for a ring, and then are bold enough to ask if it is a wedding ring. That experience is not unique to me, but to all of the guests I bring here. In addition, in any volunteer group I have been to, the small talk from both men and women centered around trying to find a spouse. Then the few married people were usually complaining about their marriages. The pastor knows about this, and does see it as a problem because he addresses it in his sermons. But people don't seem to listen. It is like they are all living in 1950's rural America. One other major problem I have with the church is that it is mostly white and Asian. I believe the reason is that the congregation ---- and this is not the pastoral team's fault --- seems to be focused on their careers and making money, and not on God at all. God is there to bless their agendas; this is how they seem to operate. I believe this is true for a few reasons. One, the culture of the church and focus of the congregation seems to be on Whites and Asians who make good money and have high-end careers, rather than on God. A huge basic tenet of the Christian faith is Death to Self. But at Redeemer, when you hear testimonies approved by the pastoral staff, they usually start with the person's professional credentials. I do not see any Death to Self there, but actually the opposite: It's "Look at what I can do for God because of my high income and education." It is not wrong to have a high income or education as a Christian. But the focus (at Redeemer) is wrong. So for these reasons, I think the church is best for those who are not Christians yet but are seekers of God, or those established in the faith already. It is not good in my opinion for the average believer looking for a home church. The church in my opinion is more intellectual than spiritual.
@joshuagreen9584
@joshuagreen9584 7 жыл бұрын
Very impressed by both speakers here.
@annemarie4107
@annemarie4107 7 жыл бұрын
Is there a transcript of the chat or captions? Great talk, not deaf friendly though. :(
@mikeday1562
@mikeday1562 6 жыл бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed the discussion, thanks Veritas for bringing these thoughtful and respectful conversation partners together - a model of how we might implement pluralism in practice today!
@JasonLeonPike
@JasonLeonPike 3 жыл бұрын
Great discussion. Thanks for posting.
7 жыл бұрын
This si so great and very important.
@andonedave
@andonedave 3 жыл бұрын
Professor Haidt would do well to have a discussion with Bishop Robert Barron. Bishop Barron is a Catholic intellectual well versed in Philosophy, Theology, cultural issues, history etc. He has a worldwide audience and he's a great communicator. It would be an engaging and fruitful discussion.
@joelowen3347
@joelowen3347 4 жыл бұрын
How have I not seen this till now...
@frankguan5044
@frankguan5044 6 жыл бұрын
Brilliant people.
@localfox1000
@localfox1000 6 жыл бұрын
This is great
@jonnyj7137
@jonnyj7137 7 жыл бұрын
First, a great discussion I am happy to have come across. I expect to return often to The Veratis Forum. To add to Tim Keller's comments on suffering- As a member of the Mormon faith, a huge part of our understanding of God's plan for us is agency. We have the freedom to act, and have always had this freedom- it is inherent in what we are. While we can use that agency for good, we are also free to use it for bad, and so to summarize this idea as simply as possible, much of the world's suffering then is a product of this agency- the choices some might make which inflict suffering on others, the choices we ourselves might make which bring us suffering and so forth. God will respect this agency regardless of it's externalities. I also believe that there is light in the concept of working in this life to become like God. Through suffering... though it should be stated that suffering isn't the only avenue for this learning or progress, there are myriad ways of which suffering is only one... we become more like Him as we gain patience, empathy, strength etc. However, it would be ignorant to ignore the countless examples where suffering does not bring these kinds of benefits, or teach us God-like lessons. It is with these scenarios where faith in Christ's atonement is the only answer. His power to make whole the weak and broken. To have faith that those that have suffered will find peace, not in death, but in life beyond this one. And so it's beneficial to remember, this life is a means to different ends, it is not the end itself. The claims of the Christian faith are lofty, to be sure, but I have faith in them and that faith is a living thing.
@kathleencassel1350
@kathleencassel1350 3 жыл бұрын
Well done, but I wish guys like you could give more specific examples of how to deal with ideas that seem to threaten our very idea of what is basic to survival, or at least to the well being of our children. For example, how do you have a conversation with someone who supports a law that installs curriculum dealing with sexual identity that not only does not line up with science, but tears down everything you are teaching in your home about the subject.
@sergkapitan2578
@sergkapitan2578 3 жыл бұрын
Who likes Tim Keller just read N.Berdyaev "The destiny of man" ... Really deep stuff!!!
@taracrist4126
@taracrist4126 Жыл бұрын
I love how Tim Keller brings up the non-provable aspect of morality. When people take the view that it must be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that God exists, it actually flies in the face of reason. We live in a world where we won't always understand everything, and where having scientific explanations for everything is actually irrational and, frankly, deadening. We live in a world where it is always necessary to believe in something. Some are just appalled at the idea of believing in God/Jesus, even when there are true reasons to do so. AND, yes! So on point about true Christianity being humbling. The center of our faith is one who died for love, and for the love of us sinners no less.
@krustysurfer
@krustysurfer 3 жыл бұрын
*Universal Morality* - Do onto others as you would have done unto you. It is very simple, very, Very simple, so simple a 4 year old gets it.
@TOOTSWEET61
@TOOTSWEET61 4 жыл бұрын
it's also empathy for suffering, that makes people understand human rights. you don't necessarily need to have faith to believe in human rights.
@jeffcokenour3459
@jeffcokenour3459 3 жыл бұрын
I hope they gave credit to professor bloom for his book which discusses his topic
@RafaelArandas
@RafaelArandas 5 жыл бұрын
Most Americans today despise religion, certainly many at their university does. It is no longer the norm, more like a counter-culture of some sort.
@irenechoe
@irenechoe 5 жыл бұрын
"It's all about the attitude."
@erc9468
@erc9468 3 жыл бұрын
It is about the attitude. But it's also about the government. The government ruins everything. By trying to gain political power thru grievance and resentment, we are destroying the ideals of tolerance.
@imcat-holic10
@imcat-holic10 6 жыл бұрын
Four Ways in which Christians are exclude: Elimination(get them out), domination(you can be in my space but you have to have an inferior spot, Assimilation( you're ok as long as you go along), Abandonment(you may have needs but I don't care). Do We really want a truly pluralistic society and how we can get there. allowing Christian speech? Human Rights 9:58
@davidstout6051
@davidstout6051 5 жыл бұрын
New Amsterdam was pretty close to pluralistic because no one group could survive without the others. (See the book, Island at the Center of the World) I suspect this is the only way pluralism can take hold. Even then it's iffy. Majorities are not fond of dissent, much less opposition.
@et4213
@et4213 2 жыл бұрын
We’ve lost meaning with the push for secularism. The scientific answer is great for the researcher and practitioner in many cases, because of possibly the intrinsic value for those persons, however for the common person and other professionals science can hold little value in the manner of meaning, numbers don’t often if ever hold deep emotional connotations!
@cofty
@cofty 7 жыл бұрын
As an example of an all all-too-rare reasonable conversation this video is recommended by Douglas Murray in the latest edition of Standpoint magazine.
@lolalola8918
@lolalola8918 6 жыл бұрын
There are also these nice reads... Practical meditation and The way and goal of Rajyoga ... these are from Brahma Kumaris (omshantistore).
@et4213
@et4213 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe we suffer because we love, God’s greatest expression of love was seen in His own suffering in Christ crucified, a self sacrificing act, the epitome of real love we give our life daily for others
@sunshinebee3040
@sunshinebee3040 5 жыл бұрын
Taking it literally not seriously ;) , how many understand this reference :)
@eunicep.9525
@eunicep.9525 3 жыл бұрын
Peter Thiel
@catascopic9542
@catascopic9542 6 жыл бұрын
I really got annoyed at that guy who disregarded the discussion topic because he just had to bring out his knockdown argument against Christianity... and it's just the problem of evil!? Like yeah, that's an important question, but come on. Don't give atheists a bad name.
@jilltalbot5508
@jilltalbot5508 7 жыл бұрын
Haidt is the only speaker against identity politics who hasn't taken up the same tactics as those engaged in identity politics (snarkiness, attack, outrage, self-righteousness...) I am tempted to send this to some of them but I can no longer cope with their lunacy. They even have created their own new slurs (eg snowflakes, etc).
@just_another32
@just_another32 3 жыл бұрын
That is a good point. But I think it is out of sheer frustration and the need to describe what is happening. I definitely appreciate JH though. He aims to keep everyone on board rather than inadvertently causing more division.
@KaiseruSoze
@KaiseruSoze 5 жыл бұрын
Ok.... good talk ... but. Ignores social "loading". "loading" is a term that refers to the capacity of a "risk diverse system". Too much load & the system will fail. Or ... too little risk & the system will fail (adapt) or too much risk fail (grow).
@esprit-critique
@esprit-critique 5 жыл бұрын
I have a problem with the idea (of Miroslav Volf) that "assimilation" amount to excluding. In fact, it is the opposite! Assimilation is a social process and the necessary condition NOT to be excluded from a group or a society. What needs to be assimilated (or respected) to be accepted? These are the habits and customs, the mores, the great social codes (dress, moral, interaction and so on). In other words - the culture of a group or a society. Culture is what constitutes the cement of a society and what allows its members to really live together. Assimilation is not a matter of "opinion" as it is suggested here (6:44-6:48). It a necessary process in the formation and the perpetuation of groups or societies. "Necessary" because there is no possibility of a common life without an homogenous culture. A "truly pluralistic society" - a liberal dream - is an impossibility! Exclusion and inclusion are part of an unavoidable phenomenon and must be studied and examined from an anthropological, sociological (and even sociobiological) perspective and not a moral one! This fundamental process is part of the creation of a all societies. Social mechanisms have long been unconscious. Anthropology and sociology have brought them to light, but it would be very presomptuous to believe that because they are now known, they can be controlled or even ignore. Sooner or later, there will be a violent return of the repressed or the ignored. It will be interesting to analyse the tensions created by religions (mainly judaïsm and islam) which sanctify a cultural order considered to be "divine" and explicited in a thorah or a sharia. The main problem we see is precisely a "refusal of assimilation" with the inevitable consequence of a rejection by groups or societies that rightly see this refusal as a threat to their own cultural order! What is very interesting is that "elimination" and "domination" are strong tendancies of islam (and in a lesser extent in judaïsm), its texts and doctrine.
@StephenDeagle
@StephenDeagle 7 жыл бұрын
Neglecting Rawl's resolution to stick to good reasons to agree isn't going to get us any closer to a pluralistic society. The paths of least resistance towards realizing our shared ambitions are the avenues where we have some chance still of encountering each other as fellow citizens, through the overcoming of those struggle we share in common, and a positive universal project of that sort demands universally acceptable reasons to coalesce.
@akindelebankole8080
@akindelebankole8080 7 жыл бұрын
There is a psychological outcome or impact with every idea or philosophy. Although every idea gets watered down over time, some ideas are so rigid or near inflexible that they are almost better abandoned than be perpetuated, simply because their fundamental use do irrevocable damage to the minds and bodies of the users over time. There are parts of Human identity that are essential to the individual. Unfortunately, we often find that the tenets of a particular people's religion are inherently the denial of the humanity of another people (often their neighbors or some past perceived enemy). The fact that an idea is used for a considerable amount of time, does not necessarily mean the idea is good for every people. Most ideas are not created with a veil of Ignorance. What I mean is that the formulation and evolution of an idea, like Christianity for example, evolved and became codified to serve some particular thought patterns​, approaches and people or group of people. The claim of or outrage against the so-called identity politics is a tactic of implying that all peoples have the same historical and cultural experience, and therefore, everyone should march in lockstep. That is how we came to call people of European descent, "white", people of African descent, "black" etc. By using such vague terms, often many essential features of people's identities get erased, and people often compromise their authentic self in deference to other's. Unsustainable self denial ensues, which makes the self denier resentful and alienated. The lose of power becomes the catalyst for negative differences within pluralistic societies. An idea that is not capable of incorporating new ideas is obviously too rigid to bare the emerging and/or pluralistic Society. It is bound to fall.
@renzo6490
@renzo6490 5 жыл бұрын
Haidt says that he thinks the future is uncertain. What does that mean? What does an 'uncertain future' look like? A military takeover? Civil war? What??
@BlackJar72
@BlackJar72 4 жыл бұрын
It doesn't look like anything because it is unknown -- that's what "uncertain" means.
@ivansu2269
@ivansu2269 6 жыл бұрын
The way I understand professor Haidt's speech is that he is basically saying that we need to create a religion (a religion of plurality). However, it would be a religion that's saying that the only turth is that there is no truth, which is in itself not a truth by its own definition. Furthermore, a created religion is not possible, for it is basically self-worshiping, only that the self is humanity instead of individuals. Well, we will never agree on how to worship ourselves, I don't think. Lastly, created or discovered, they are still religions. instead of worshiping god/gods, you worship humans as gods. What is the difference? In the end this is no religion vs. atheist talk, but talks between two different religion. I think.
@cherylsmith233
@cherylsmith233 5 жыл бұрын
Yes, you've hit on a fundemental truth; atheism and evolutionist beliefs both conform more to the definition of "religion," rather than "science."
@breambo3835
@breambo3835 7 жыл бұрын
Haidt states that "Gold is more valuable than silver" is a fact and not his opinion, and this is how we can develop moral values. But what he fails to mention is, that there is a standard (the metals market)that we can point to, that makes it a fact. If it is wrong to murder, then Haidt needs to point to something outside of his opinion to indicate what makes it wrong. Keller rightly pointed out to him that he is just espousing moral relativism.
@mackdmara
@mackdmara 5 жыл бұрын
Nick Ioakimidis I agree with one caveat. Gold is only worth more than sliver if you appeal to that index. In fact, it is not more valuable. There are many times this is true. What if you have gold, but what you need is sliver? Then sliver is more valuable. What if gold is extremely down on the market & silver is extremely up (happens), then silver is worth more than gold by the standard. What if in the future you had a replicator (like in Star Trek)? Then the value of gold vs silver, only comes down to what it takes to replicate it. That may make food more valuable than both, due to complexity. It is not a fact that gold is worth more than silver. It does take more money to buy gold though, right now.
@olpossum5186
@olpossum5186 5 жыл бұрын
another obvious problem with 'emergent morality', as he explained it, is if human rights have indeed 'emerged' via cultural interaction over time, then they cannot be universal in the timeless sense, because if they 'emerged', they can 'disappear' as well. there's nothing concrete upholding them outside of human interactions. so yes, that's just another fancy bit of moral relativism.
@rhyca4804
@rhyca4804 4 жыл бұрын
mackdmara That is not a weakness in his argument because he is implying economic value specifically in his example. It is factually accurate that gold is more economically valuable than are coconuts. However, if you are on a deserted island and need coconuts to survive, then coconuts are factually more valuable to your survival than is gold. That does not contradict the fact that gold is more economically valuable in the global marketplace. In other words, facts always have a context in which they exist, and one factual context does not inherently contradict another; indeed, that is merely a *different* fact altogether.
@chrisbessey358
@chrisbessey358 4 жыл бұрын
Rhyca Exactly. And it seems to me that truth (or valence) can be knowable, yet is applied differently depending on the context. I think many people see the varying ways that truth can manifest and think that it is, at its essence, completely relative and unknowable.
@Prophecynut
@Prophecynut 3 жыл бұрын
@@chrisbessey358 sounds like ypu just disagreed with Rhyca. You can't bend absolute truth or it's a false positive
@alexdahn5329
@alexdahn5329 5 жыл бұрын
It isn't so much the closing of the modern mind but the decay of it.
@glennsimonsen8421
@glennsimonsen8421 Жыл бұрын
Right away it appears Haidt's world view and religion is social Darwinism for which there is no empirical evidence. "We evolved to...blah, blah, blah...tribalism..., blah, blah blah", is his evolutionary belief system. His personal world view reigns supreme. Which is fine, he's a learned academic. However he doesn't seem recognizant of this, or at least, acknowledge the possibility that his own beliefs may be false or only partially true. I think this hobbles him greatly in a discussion over pluralism and the differing world views in society.
@robinhoodstfrancis
@robinhoodstfrancis 3 жыл бұрын
I like Keller and his intellectual weight, but he´s a little short on the combined empirical basis of Christianity that goes with the foundations of pluralism and its issues of integrity. I´ll have to lay my thinking out more explicitly and contact him.
@ronaldlogan3525
@ronaldlogan3525 6 жыл бұрын
Very condescending to say to young people that they have been taught to be more sensitive to identity, with respect to racial justice. John says that things have gotten way better. I am 63 yo and I used to think things were getting better but that is before i found out i was wrong. Racism in the 50's was institutionalized. We thought we fixed that. We were wrong.
@iain5615
@iain5615 5 жыл бұрын
Identity politics and secular globalisation which have infected all of the western institutions (politics, media, academia, etc. even courts). These ideologies pretend to be caring and inclusive but what they state shows intolerance, hatred, bigotry and racism. These are destructive and nihilistic ideologies that will cause a lot more damage before they are removed.
@JosiahFickinger
@JosiahFickinger Жыл бұрын
16:48 - And everyone else is welcome!
@jkk45
@jkk45 11 ай бұрын
R.I.P Keller
@john.bautista
@john.bautista Жыл бұрын
dddaannnngggg. Tim Keller wanted all the smoke.
@DAVIDPETERS12C
@DAVIDPETERS12C 2 жыл бұрын
Human rights: when more humans have rights, more talented thinkers, engineers, inventors, athletes, artists are given opportunities.
@Ben-oq5wp
@Ben-oq5wp 7 жыл бұрын
It is unfortunate that NYU makes Haidt hesitant to get into specifics given the entire enterprise of accommodating conservative religion in a modern secular society lives or dies in the details.
@jakeb3055
@jakeb3055 7 жыл бұрын
Hi Ben. I think I understand your comment but I'd be interested in understanding it more fully (I'm sincerely asking, not being snarky). I did find Haidt's comments about not being able to discuss "sacred values" as disturbing. If you (or anybody) cannot engage with people about certain topics, then that strikes me as very problematic and a threat to true learning and exchanging of ideas...it's also a lead into a form of assimilation that I believe Keller was talking about (you are ok as long as you conform to whatever set of beliefs the social elite have determined are right for you).
@christeah12157
@christeah12157 2 жыл бұрын
35:57 - 36:31 That truth still needs to be explained to parts of the church.
@krileayn
@krileayn 7 жыл бұрын
centripetal
@majmage
@majmage Жыл бұрын
I think it's largely a consequence of how common block/ignore functionality is nowadays, making it easy for people to isolate themselves into echo chambers. Personally I think any belief that can't withstand an honest conversation about truth isn't a good belief to have. I wouldn't have mentioned atheism/theism since it didn't seem on topic to this conversation at first glance, but the talk does bring it up and _man_ do I see a ton of theists simply ignore an explanation of why their evidence of god isn't logical (and therefore not actually evidence). It's frustrating, because I wish there was an easy way to get them to care about truth. I do think Keller's method (if you believe in A why don't you believe B) is great. _However it does seem to overvalue consistency and undervalue truth._ After all we can imagine some guy Gary arguing that leprechauns are the creators of the universe, and presenting a _perfectly internally consistent worldview_ about leprechauns. Would that consistency mean leprechauns exist? Of course it wouldn't. So how then do we help Gary know that his belief isn't justified by the evidence?
@taracrist4126
@taracrist4126 Жыл бұрын
I would love to hear your views on A Case For Christ. The evidence for Jesus is quite different from leprechauns, the tooth fairy, and the like! This is coming from someone (me, and also the author of that book) who used to think Christianity was ridiculous. Obviously I didn't think so anymore for a variety of reasons. :)
@majmage
@majmage Жыл бұрын
@@taracrist4126 Well maybe go back and rewatch (or reread) The Case for Christ and tell me how many times extrabiblical evidence is provided for any supernatural claim of the Bible. That's why he takes a lot of time to focus on things he does have evidence of (like Christ _dying,_ where I think the evidence is fairly reasonable) and then by the time he gets to the supernatural claim (that Christ _resurrected_ ) mysteriously you'll notice there's no longer outside evidence corroborating the story. So then...there's no case.
@thespiritofhegel3487
@thespiritofhegel3487 Жыл бұрын
'Religion. It's given people hope in a world torn apart by religion.' Ok I'm not James Corden so I'll own up about stealing that. From Jon Stewart.
@EmperorsNewWardrobe
@EmperorsNewWardrobe 4 жыл бұрын
18:43 the reverend JH begins
@TiempoNuevo-ew7ty
@TiempoNuevo-ew7ty 4 жыл бұрын
I would love to hear what these same people would think today. I wonder if they would notice the fact that the MainStreamMedia is mainly a Propaganda Machine. I wonder if they would recognize the very real "enemies" within who have played and are playing their part in the destruction of America. The entire world has a common enemy. I'll just call them the Globalists who are for the most a moral. They are in partnership with anyone who will support the end game... that is the global dominance of all people to the few who will end up directing every facet of life in the future, including life and death, who lives and who dies.
@MrDeicide1
@MrDeicide1 3 жыл бұрын
There's a place for wastes of time like this It's called the city dumpyard
@mysteriousjungalist
@mysteriousjungalist 2 жыл бұрын
Silver is much more abundant than Gold therefore Gold is objectively more valuable regardless of the culture/people.
@samdgh9473
@samdgh9473 2 жыл бұрын
*"Gold is objectively more valuable regardless of the culture/people"* That is quite ridiculous. Surely it is my want/need that determines value. I live in a world with little gold and lots of water. I'm in a jewelry store on a lakeside beach. The gold ring is virtually 1,000's of times more 'valuable' than water. I'm dying of thirst as I walk through the desert with gold jewelry an empty canteen. I'd give all of my jewelry for some water. My child is sitting in my jewelry store, surrounded by gold jewelry. He would happily have me trade all of the gold for a toy that he doesn't have.
@bobvadney7240
@bobvadney7240 2 жыл бұрын
The " modern mind" has never been opened...
@alphablitz1024
@alphablitz1024 7 жыл бұрын
interesting how Haidt is far more generous to the WASPs than Keller.
@andrewdussault2315
@andrewdussault2315 5 жыл бұрын
That's how this kinds of debates should be done. More grace shown to our "enemy" tribes than to our own.
@snippletrap
@snippletrap 3 жыл бұрын
Evangelicals aren't WASPs.
@acejackson5527
@acejackson5527 3 жыл бұрын
@@snippletrap Tim Keller is a WASP. He was criticizing his own tribe.
@StraightOutOfPuertoRico
@StraightOutOfPuertoRico 3 ай бұрын
One of this two individuals beliefs are incorrect, and the consequences are eternal.
@samdgh9473
@samdgh9473 2 жыл бұрын
At 1:19:04, Haidt attempts to explain what a moral emergentist is. Does anyone think he is successful in even describing it as a real thing? As Keller says it sounds a lot like moral relativism.
@ibperson7765
@ibperson7765 2 жыл бұрын
No. He failed. He really just says numbers of people in agreement help make it real
@leefury7
@leefury7 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, the Christian God is good. He is also love. But neither circumscribe Him. The governing attribute is holiness. i.e. total otherliness. "My ways are not your ways. My thoughts are not your thoughts. Evil necessarily has a symbiotic relationship with good. However, good has no need of evil. Evil does manifest/magnify good. Good, however, is good no matter if evil ever occurred or not. Evil is only evil in relation to good. The hope of Christianity is that evil will be extinguished at some point in the future (but not until all restraint is removed to show its true face).
@amerbur
@amerbur 5 жыл бұрын
My answer to the question of why we have suffered. Without choice, there is no Love. God wanted a relationship with his creation. He wanted to Love us. We cannot know him if we do not have a choice to choose not God. If you are a fish in water, you do not know you are in water unless at some point you are a fish out of the water. The result of choosing not God leads to suffering because God is Love, and life and good. So not God, tends to result in being non-harmonious with his creation, which results in suffering. A person may prefer to be nonharmonious with creation in order to be a God unto himself. The fact is, it leads to pain because God is the Father of all that is good.
@robbert7599
@robbert7599 2 жыл бұрын
so the opposite of love is suffering? wouldn't it just be the 'absence' of love, which is apathy? I'm not sure suffering and apathy is remotely equivalent, no matter how much the bible tries to convince you otherwise.
@snippletrap
@snippletrap 3 жыл бұрын
I like much of what Tim Keller says, but I'm not always a fan of how he says it. I mean the way he prefaces his opinions with the statements of others. So-and-so says, Dershowitz wrote, philosophers have argued, etc. It lacks force and gives the impression he has no original thoughts of his own.
@davidakinyemi1257
@davidakinyemi1257 3 жыл бұрын
What they said proves his point i.e 'thoughts of his own'?
@GospelMeetsBushcraft
@GospelMeetsBushcraft 2 жыл бұрын
I'm with you that it gets a bit predictable. But he is quoting sources his intellectual opponents find credible in order to strengthen his case. He's arguing from within his opponents' framework in order to be more persuasive to them.
@ribbonsofnight
@ribbonsofnight 2 жыл бұрын
doing the opposite can create the impression that one believes ones every thought is wonderful because all you ever do is tell everyone about them. I think he went just a bit overboard in this talk but in moderation I approve.
@ricardoalmeida4719
@ricardoalmeida4719 6 жыл бұрын
Human rights are man-made, as every other moral or ethics source they hold dear - including the bible, the quran, talmud, etc. No one says human rights came from god. That's obvious. But I never heard a decent argument against any of the content of the human rights declaration. Only objections to its source: faliable humans. That's pretty weak imo. Human rights don't make destinctions between different people and their particular identities or characteristics. They don't imply in groups and out groups. Exactly the opposite of religious belief systems.
@davidhawley1132
@davidhawley1132 5 жыл бұрын
I say human rights comes from the dignity of being created in the image of God. Of course, I'm not the only one.
@simonskinner1450
@simonskinner1450 4 жыл бұрын
Of course Jesus was a Philosopher who had access to all philosophies that tuned into liberty and prosperity for ALL, and saw the difficulties that a rich person who does not love your neighbour to be righteous and just, and his Jewish inheritance had the wisdom built in inclination also to be righteous.
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