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@polyspastos7 ай бұрын
hey @CosmicSkeptic, doing piecemeal content, especially prerolling for three days is dishonest as fc*k, and deteriorates goodwill. well, if you need low quality people, then i guess, yay for audience capture! you lost me, though
@AnonymousWon-uu5yn7 ай бұрын
Not having kids maximizes well being. No life = no suffering.
@crabb99667 ай бұрын
@@AnonymousWon-uu5yn what happened to evolution?
@AnonymousWon-uu5yn7 ай бұрын
@@crabb9966 evolution is still going on. Why do you ask?
@billwalton45717 ай бұрын
If we are soulless then it would be stupid to do 'moral good' whatever that would be. It is those that take advantage of others that are smart in that case.
@truthbetold82337 ай бұрын
I don't think it's limited to community. I think the actual beliefs provide people some level of order in a sea of chaos. It gives them a structure to calm their minds. I imagine the idea of a loving ruling force is inherently calming IF you can sincerely believe in the idea. I'm an Atheist, so I'm fundamentally unconvinced by the claim of a deity but I can easily understand how it can potentially structure or order reality and in doing so provide some level of comfort.
@truthbetold82337 ай бұрын
Just to elaborate - Because I don't think you can reliably argue unconvinced people into believing, the question effectively becomes 'should we indoctrinate kids into religion, if religion is reliably shown to increase well being?' I think there is probably a good enough argument against deliberate deception. That an uncomfortable truth might still be preferable to a comforting lie, but I guess there's a lot of grey area.
@kangaroomax81987 ай бұрын
Agreed. Churches tell people their decisions mean something, that morality matters, that the creator loves them so much they’d die for them, that there is objective good and bad, and that following the rules has a real, powerful outcome. To believe it’s only community is absurd. It’s the beliefs themselves.
@AlmightyFSM7 ай бұрын
I think this is generally true. Confusion about the nature of the universe ("God" made it), fear of death (eternal life), and pain of lost ones (you'll see them in heaven) are the bedrock of faith that almost all religious people, I suspect, struggle to let go. I'd be willing to wager many religious folks would give up all the other things (the weird songs, the funny hats and the bizarre rules) if they could still hold on to those three things. The biggest problem that a non-religious proposition presents is that it can't provide a satisfactory answer to these deep, deep concerns. "We don't know what before the big bang even means", "Nothing happens after you die", and "make the most of it now because it's all you'll get", are catastrophically unsatisfying for most religious folks. I mean... they're unsatisfying to me too, but I'm aware that these are the best answers we currently have.
@kangaroomax81987 ай бұрын
@@AlmightyFSM It's not just the religious folks that those answers are unsatisfying for, it is the VAST majority of the world. Atheists are usually educated, scientifically literate, thoughtful, and introspective. The New Atheists and their early supporters were scientists and mathematicians. The flaw of these people was believing that everyone else in the world was like them. Most average people are just trying to get through the day. They don't have the time, space, or intelligence to consider their grand purpose, to ponder the value of life in a disteological universe - they raise their family and contribute to society because it's what they 'should' do. And in the West, that 'should' is primarily based on Christian ethics. That purpose has to be ground into people's brains every single day. It needs to be an ever-present reminder, or else there is literally nothing preventing someone from slipping into hedonism and self-serving behavior at the expense of the community. China did this with Communism, Japan did it with Bushido, the West did it with Christianity. Atheists don't have that. They have nothing. Sam Harris and others have realized they have created an enormous lack of purpose for most people, and in that void is only darkness and depravity. It's why he's trying so desperately to make 'objective morality' into a real concept - so we can teach morals as if they were scientific facts. But he is undone by his own skepticism.
@Blobbybobbyboy7 ай бұрын
I think ritual structures are a great example of this. In ritual, what matters is that people orient around some kind of higher- order framing, which can really be directed at anything. Some ritual cultures were quite violent and chaotic. Chinese ritual culture orients around the concept of 'propriety' or right way of doing. Other rituals orient around beliefs in gods, reverence to nature, myths etc. We need to be collectively engaged in some kind of value system outside of the material/individual framework, but this deosn't neceessarily have to be a religious framework.
@MattCrawley_Music7 ай бұрын
"Community" is the keyword here. People in religious communities are better because they are in community.
@BeyonceStan957 ай бұрын
100% I cannot find a community that resembles church in a secular environment. An intergenerational group of people who (in the best circumstances) care about you and your wellbeing and check on you when they haven’t seen you in a couple weeks!? Yah it’s very helpful for the community part
@Jd-8087 ай бұрын
Yes, that’s what religions are
@brianh93587 ай бұрын
I think that the concept of "community" could be expanded to include "positive social interaction". In the US we have obliterated just about every chance for that. Our cities are no longer walkable, everyone drives to and from home and remain isolated from their neighbors once they arrive at home, children don't play outside anymore, social clubs in small towns are dying or gone (my town use to have many - Civitans, Masons, Rotary Club, Kiwanis, American Legion, etc). I myself have joined a FreeThinkers group in my area, but we don't meet often enough. However, I don't think that religion is the only thing that can improve the sense of community. Many Scandinavian countries are considered the happiest in the world but religion has a lesser role. What they DO have is much stronger communities than we have in the US. I'll give you one example - I visited Iceland a few years back. I noticed one place where social interaction takes place are the natural hot baths. Everybody goes there and they talk to each other in this setting.
@belgiumhr35247 ай бұрын
There are a lot of toxic "Communities' out there and a lot of those have some religious ground. Forced communities are not a good thing.
@danielholder79797 ай бұрын
I agree that is part of the equation but speaking as a religious person my self the main joy of attending a religious service for me is not just that there is community there but that I actually experience God in those settings.
@jordanbabcock7 ай бұрын
Alex is excellent at playing devil's advocate. I think this is because he is legitimately curious, and is honestly seeking the truth. He is able to steelman views that he doesn't hold himself (like religion in this case). You can tell a lot of commenters haven't listened to much of Alex or of Sam before seeing this clip. Alex is NOT religious and does not ACTUALLY want Sam to remove The Moral Landscape from publication lmao get a grip. He is just pushing Sam on these points so he can understand his position better!
@judegrindvoll84677 ай бұрын
This is definitely a quirk of British interviewers - I think it stems from the BBC having to be fully impartial so we now just accept it as an excellent interview technique. I remember Ben Sharpiro being subjected to this by Andrew Neil and he stomped off set like a petulant child ranting about how biased and liberal Neil was (words to that effect) and of course Neil is known for being fairly conservative 😄 Alex did a great job here I think.
@noorzanayasmin78067 ай бұрын
I think Alex has been on both side of the isle. It is easier to play devil advocate if you were on that side at one point
@JohnnyTwoFingers7 ай бұрын
I don't know of anyone that can practice login in realtime at the level Alex can, he is exceptional. He's deceitful sometimes, but I'm pretty sure he knows he's doing it, so I don't mind so much.
@mindovermatter33287 ай бұрын
I agree, but I think it speaks more about the lack of integrity in Sam as a philosopher or seeker of wisdom. His attachment to his own judgment is ridiculous and glaringly obvious. I can't take his views seriously because of it
@bastiaanvanbeek7 ай бұрын
Alex's devil's advocate role is a sign of honesty. However, people must understand that it's a role and that it has a specific purpose. I saw him doing it in the case of Dawkins and Hitchens too. In the case of William Lane Craig it's better to be a real devil (figuratively speaking) though, because those types need to be tested more since they have a lower level of thinking.
@cod-the-creator7 ай бұрын
The part where you say people go to church even when they don't want to is an important note. Think about how hard it is to get people to go to a birthday party for example - something that is almost always a blast. Getting people to put on clean pants and leave their house is really hard for some reason.
@AndarManik7 ай бұрын
When you take church out of many peoples lives, like my parents who have no kids at home, they wouldn’t have much of a reason to go out to meet people.
@Hreodrich7 ай бұрын
@@AndarManikI got to church weekly and I loathe meeting new people. It’s a duty the way I see it.
@stephenzaccardelli58637 ай бұрын
I go to churches cathedrals and public houses when others die if the religion of your choice is heading to worse potentially then get out when you have the chance that's a free moral decision.
@iamjwns62777 ай бұрын
@@Hreodrich yes
@Brissles7 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977whose
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
I’m Christian and I don’t dream about heaven. I’m too busy with what needs to be done on earth and how I can serve others.
@BobbyFriston7 ай бұрын
"When one loses the deep intimate relationship with nature, then temples, mosques and churches become important." J. Krishnamurti
@dharmayogaashram9797 ай бұрын
So too schools, sports arenas, business....Krishnamurthis comment very shall and selective.
@IrishIwasJewish7 ай бұрын
those are not the same@@dharmayogaashram979
@BobbyFriston7 ай бұрын
@@dharmayogaashram979 "If you have no relationship with nature, you have no relationship with man." J. Krishnamurti
@cyberneticbutterfly85067 ай бұрын
Sounds like a patently untrue and unconvincing statement for anyone who isn't already in that camp.
@BobbyFriston7 ай бұрын
@@cyberneticbutterfly8506 Camping in nature ?
@jshauns7 ай бұрын
In my thirties, I was drawn to secular humanism, influenced by Hitchens and Harris. Their arguments seemed compelling, but as I’ve grown older, I’ve realized their limitations. Life is more complex than any single ideology can capture. My views have evolved, reflecting the richness and nuance of human experience. This journey of learning and self-discovery continues, making life an ever-evolving process of growth and understanding.
@flybefree7 ай бұрын
It’s wonderful to be free of religious dogma and all its rules and limitations and able to swim in the vast lake of spiritual ideas.
@charliekowittmusic7 ай бұрын
This has been my experience as well. All people, of all beliefs, and places, enjoy the full spectrum of human experience. Christians have their own brand of intense joy, deep mourning, and experience of the profound. Muslims, Buddhists, southern whites, and Hindi people enjoy the richness of life in their own ways. And something else I’ve learned through psychology and interaction, is that we ALL hold irrational beliefs. Keeping to one ideology, or worse, embracing only the negation of an ideology, is to limit the richness and depth of your own life.
@TheWanderingPensioner7 ай бұрын
@@charliekowittmusic Are the women of Afghanistan enjoying the richness of experience in their own ways? Well, yes, if you include under the definition of richness ... richness in ways to suffer. In pursuit of richness of experience, should one seek out and embrace all the ways to live in pain and ignorance? Harris's point is that there is richness and there is poverty of experience, and we can discriminate between them, and it is sensible to seek out the peaks, rather than wallow in the valleys. And to your final point, to negate fascism is to limit "richness and depth of your own life"? What about negating cannibalism, as a way of life? Harris supports evaluating ideologies on the basis of their capacity to provide better or peak experiences of well-being, versus other ideologies. He does not advocate nihilism (which I think you are confusing with atheism).
@Netomp517 ай бұрын
@@flybefreethe rules or limitations you are talking about are misleading the audience here, the highest spiritual mystics promise that those “limitations” are the actual discipline to become free… I invite you to read “The Spirit of the Disciplines”, you will increase in wisdom and if you try, you will experience real freedom..
@charliekowittmusic7 ай бұрын
@@TheWanderingPensioner Yes, every group of people also has their own claim to cruelty as well. I did say the FULL spectrum of human experience, didn’t I? Secondly, YES! Even fascists and cannibals teach us about what it means to be human! The Third Reich taught us how dark and horrific humans can be! I don’t get your point about the Taliban and Afghanistan. Did I say every ideology is good and enacted in a morally good way? That’s very, very silly of you. Lastly, I didn’t say anything about atheism, or nihilism, or Sam Harris. Did you mean to respond to somebody else? My point was that every group of humans endures life with all of the aspects we do: Monotony, joy, grace, despair, etc. and we can learn so much from each other.
@PriddyBoy19927 ай бұрын
Great questions Alex, as always.
@hokiturmix7 ай бұрын
Uploading this as a playlist is another good way of presentation.
@wread19827 ай бұрын
Alex you did an excellent job interviewing Samuel 💪🏽🙌🏽🫡
@petereames30417 ай бұрын
I recommend Robin Dunbar's book. How religion evolved and why it endures.
@ShirleyTimple7 ай бұрын
I mean, lying to yourself can be beneficial in some instances.
@Jonas-gl9ke7 ай бұрын
You just keep telling yourself that. 😂
@MorbiusBlueBalls7 ай бұрын
@@Jonas-gl9kewhere is the funny
@ShirleyTimple7 ай бұрын
@@Jonas-gl9keprove me wrong, then, champ. You're saying the placebo effect isn't real? You legitimately think that self delusion can't be beneficial in any way? Then prove it... I'll wait😅
@Danila4387 ай бұрын
@@ShirleyTimple you should prove that lying to yourself is beneficial, not a person you saying it to should prove it otherwise
@ShirleyTimple7 ай бұрын
@@Danila438you should probably read the words in front of you before commenting on them. The placebo effect was mentioned, and is a proven response to untruth being helpful. It's the belief in something that works, not the thing itself. Do you need further hand holding on this?
@christhetanman26397 ай бұрын
I’ve listened to Sam Harris for years and he reminds me of a quote from CS Lewis: You cannot go on 'seeing through' things for ever. The whole point of seeing through something is to see something through it. It is good that the window should be transparent, because the street or garden beyond it is opaque. How if you saw through the garden too? It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see. Sam seems to see “through” all of human experience in a way that leaves it devoid of wonder. Instead of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts, it becomes somehow less and that will NEVER lead to a secular community that can rival or even come close to that a religious community.
@AlanDantes767 ай бұрын
There are hundreds, if not thousands of religious communities that have died out, along with the religions they practiced. There's no reason, absolutely none, to believe that our current religions will not share the same fate.
@buglepong7 ай бұрын
@@AlanDantes76 perhaps you could say the same for rational materialism
@AlanDantes767 ай бұрын
@@buglepong Perhaps I could say that if my grandma had wheels should would have been a bike.
@thomaspopescu99527 ай бұрын
@AlanDantes76 That's like saying, "Many car companies have failed, therefore Ford will fail". Except Ford won't fail because their engines still facilitate combustion, their wheels still turn, and you can get from point A to B. It's the exact same as Christianity. It works, and so it will never fail, and nothing you say can prove otherwise because you're fighting against an 100% success rate.
@AlanDantes767 ай бұрын
@@thomaspopescu9952 What a dumb ass comment, and a strawman. Ford was set to fail, as were most automakers years ago, but Obama bailed them out. Guess you missed that. Your mommy and daddy indoctrinated you into Christianity. It's sad you can't think for yourself. If you had grown up in Indonesia you'd be a different religion.
@graemezimmerman1097 ай бұрын
I agree with the lack of community in atheism and the benefits of church in that regard. I’ve been toying with the idea of starting an “agnostic church” with some friends; basically get together, have food/coffee, talk about life and literature. The goal is to have everything that organized religion offers in terms of community minus religious dogma
@LightbulbTedbear27 ай бұрын
Clubs like that tend to have one or two awkward meetings and then peter out. To keep people coming back, you need them to be emotionally invested. In a church community, that comes from a shared belief. But it's very hard to generate an emotion in someone to the same extent that religion does.
@mattb44947 ай бұрын
In England this kind of thing used to exist. We called it a pub.. people used to congregate almost daily after work to chat and drink together for about 3 hours before going home to bed. Now we have the screens
@IrishIwasJewish7 ай бұрын
secular states tried that, look at USSR or the n@zis, we need God!
@myhatmygandhi62177 ай бұрын
This has happened in many places before and they tend to quickly fall apart. It also get's a lot of atheists/agnostics to question it because it's basically a religion in everything but name. Non-believers don't like doing things similar to what religious people do, they actively try to avoid it, hence why it's one of the reasons atheists find it so hard to create secular communties, they naturally become religious/spiritual-type spaces.
@Soapandwater67 ай бұрын
Check out the Unitarian Universalist "church." I consider them to be an "agnostic church." They will meet those goals.
@JMRBR7 ай бұрын
Best ASMR video I’ve ever watched.
@lifequotient7 ай бұрын
This is a great question to pose to him
@krishnapartha7 ай бұрын
Alex, brother, thank you for the good work and meaningful discussions… keep it up! I ask selfishly because your work has improved my well being!
@rawcopper6047 ай бұрын
My father's biggest Mathematical breakthrough came to him in his dream. He is an atheist/agnostic, and I think he explains how this can take place very well. During REM, our brain goes through our memories/ experiences, and interprets them subconsciously, giving us a new perspective. It's as simple as that: our mind rummages through all of our information, and sometimes happens to combine it in just the right way.
@Envi-jm8mi7 ай бұрын
That's how some of the greatest musicians have made some of their pieces. Just because something was revealed in a dream doesn't necessarily mean anything more than that. It's just a dream.
@Jeremyramone7 ай бұрын
His aversion to religion, in the sense usually attached to the term, was of the same kind with that of Lucretius: he regarded it with the feelings due not to a mere mental delusion, but to a great moral evil. He looked upon it as the greatest enemy of morality: first, by setting up factitious excellencies - belief in creeds, devotional feelings, and ceremonies, not connected with the good of human kind - and causing these to be accepted as substitutes for genuine virtue: but above all, by radically vitiating the standard of morals; making it consist in doing the will of a being, on whom it lavishes indeed all the phrases of adulation, but whom in sober truth it depicts as eminently hateful John Stuart Mill
@tubsy.7 ай бұрын
What do you mean by genuine virtue? 😂 The audacity for an Atheist to mock Christianity and yet pretend like they can still have objective morality.
@ryanhenneberger26797 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977there sure is. it’s just not the abrahamic god accompanied with some delusional mythology from ignorant bronze age old men
@McLovin2017 ай бұрын
That's why atheists all have the same moral code. They're free from the "dogma" of religion. They never had any mass murder, preventable starvation, arbitrary "purification" of races etc 😅
@bunny444897 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977why do you believe what you believe? As an agnostic, my outlook is without teaching. I didn’t come to believe anything. You were taught something, likely as a child, that formed your belief probably right? Not tryna be snarky btw
@liberatesweden24047 ай бұрын
This is a good topic! ❤
@Satyr_allyn7 ай бұрын
Believing that you have a sense of freedom/ autonomy certainly maximizes well being.
@omp1997 ай бұрын
What do you mean by "freedom"? What do you mean by "autonomy"?
@mikehutton39377 ай бұрын
@@omp199 I think he's referring to free will , as opposed to determinism.
@Wurldly7 ай бұрын
I spent my entire life as an agnostic. Became a Christian a year ago. I know every atheist talking points and now the Christian/theist rebuttal. While alive, I feel now a lot happier and hopeful and the choices I’ve made with Christian morals have made me become a better person to those around me and noticed by even my atheist friends. So my faith is rewarding me while alive, even if wrong in the end. If my faith proves to be right then I’m further rewarded upon death.
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
Amen! Happier now and forever. I’ve been Catholic for about 10 years now, and I’m immensely more happier. My life has meaning and purpose.
@robertylonen18967 ай бұрын
Blissful ignorance is the best
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
@@robertylonen1896 I think time is telling that blissful ignorance is not the best - all the so-called blissful freedoms of doing whatever you want, the sexual revolution, liberal feminism, hook-up culture, harmless pornography continues to have a devastating effect on the world. Try truth - God, based on faith and reason.
@robertylonen18967 ай бұрын
In the context of religion, the concepts of truth and reason require careful consideration. Truth is generally understood as the correspondence between a statement or belief and objective reality. However, in the realm of religion, statements and beliefs are often not subject to empirical verification or objective measurement, nor is there any evidence for it. Reason, on the other hand, refers to the capacity for logical, rational, and analytical thought. When applied to religion, reason can be used to examine religious doctrines, rituals, and practices to determine their logical coherence and consistency. However, it is important to recognize that religious beliefs often transcend rational explanations and may be based on faith, intuition, or personal experience. Therefore, when interpreting the relationship between truth and reason in the context of religion, it is essential to consider both the objective and subjective dimensions of religious experience. While reason can provide valuable insights into the logical aspects of religion, it may not fully capture the deeper spiritual and emotional dimensions that are central to many religious traditions.
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
@@robertylonen1896 Empirical evidence is hardly the only source of truth. I would conjecture that the deepest truths are outside the realm of scientific experimentation. If you are limiting your discussion to objective truths, your statement above is correct. BOTH faith and reason are sources of authority for our beliefs. Faith includes reason, but it is beyond reason -- suprarational. Since God is not in any genus, both faith and reason are necessary components. He is not a being inside our world. As Thomas Aquinas succinctly said of God, "God is the subsistent act of being itself," where essence and existence coexist. Thus, it would be impossible for us to "prove" the existence or non-existence of God, but there are many rational statements one could make for their belief in God. Two books I highly recommend for the rational side are Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis and The Language of God by Francis Collins. Francis Collins was director of NIH for years, serving under three presidents. He is a Physician/Scientist who received a PhD from Yale and an MD from UNC before heading the Human Genome Project. He was an atheist, but after reading C.S. Lewis' book, which has converted so many, he wrote books on intelligent design and the rationality of a Creator. If you don't like to read, check him out on KZbin.
@experiencer-kk6xb6 ай бұрын
I have lived an incredible life of spiritual experience and I hope spiritual growth. I've meditated 3 to 7 hours a day for over 25 years and I've experienced incredible things and have a state of consciousness that I don't know a single atheist that has. On my journey with people who believe in some kind of God, I've met many similarly devoted people who have attained very high states of consciousness. Some have attained the fullness of enlightenment. Not a single one of these people is an atheist. It's very hard to imagine a person devoting themselves to love who is an atheist in the same way that the religious people I have known do. Community is part of it, but it's the God that we all share that brings us together and it's the God that we all experience that is responsible for our awakenings. When asked about this phenomenon, Sam Harris seems to appeal to the future and a kind of faith that one day secular reality will/could produce the same results, but it hasn't and I don't think it ever will. Maybe if we get an atheist version of the Buddha with equal and profoundly deep consciousness that could happen, but I'm doubtful it ever will. Most of what Sam Harris uses for secular spirituality was borrowed from religion and would have never been discovered without it. His entire approach to secular spirituality seems to be borrowed mostly from Buddhism.... Sam Harris also seems to recognize some quite subtle and profound states that spirituality can produce, but he does also seem to reject the many miracles that sometimes come with those states of consciousness. Although rare and not under personal control I've known many people who have experienced them and I've experienced at least two in person. Miracles are a kind of proof that what we're dealing with is not just a state of consciousness, but it's a state of consciousness that can affect the physical world and affect other people's consciousness. Most deep seekers have experienced this kind of thing enough to know for a fact that there's something more than just our minds at play. For most people it would be a profound loss to not have experienced that and to not know it and would weaken everybody's commitment I think. I do not think secular spirituality can ever rise to the place that religion holds.
@tonywallens2177 ай бұрын
Maybe everything just isn’t about maximizing well-being, but it’s about being and doing what is true good and beautiful, regardless if it maximizes whatever your definition of “wellbeing” is
@Netomp517 ай бұрын
What is true, good and beautiful?
@tonywallens2177 ай бұрын
@@Netomp51 what is true is that which conforms to reality, what is good is that in which perfection Is actual, and what is beautiful is that in which there is right proportion.
@Netomp517 ай бұрын
@@tonywallens217 Focusing solely on what's true, good, and beautiful without considering well-being is like using a compass that always points to north when you're trying to find east-not wrong, but not the whole direction you need, also your definition of true, good and beautiful is lacking objectivity, I have a better response: Jesus Christ, he proclaimed to be the truth the way and the life, his teachings are the true good and beauty of life to maximize the well being.
@tonywallens2177 ай бұрын
@@Netomp51 what is true good and beautiful is ultimately God. So yeah I’m with you. But if I just say that in this comment section no one will take it seriously.
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
Truth, beauty, and goodness are the transcendentals that lead one to God.
@gorgzilla17127 ай бұрын
Honestly, I think the closest thing to what Sam talks about is Zen Buddhism. Has founders and saints, gets together a few times a week, has rituals and community, has a focus on the transcendent, features meditation and ethics, is focused on truth and not dogma, and is even willing to put metaphysical speculation aside to focus on the practical.
@clemonsx907 ай бұрын
This is true, but once I started to get into Zen Buddhism, I realized that all of the great religions are actually quite similar, and that my rejection of Christianity was an inauthentic striving. Actual Buddhists pray for the dead and are open to a realm of religious experience that's foreign to the Western spiritual materialist who just wants to get high on his own supply. Invariably, I ended up becoming Christian, both because I saw Christ as the actual manifestation of the Tao and because I realized how important not being Christian was to me. Look up Seraphim Rose, who was a student of Alan Watts, but who later on became a Christian monk.
@Archeidos-Arcana7 ай бұрын
Every teaching or body of knowledge becomes dogmatic given enough time. My biggest issue with Sam's version of atheism is that it unfairly and erroneously attributes all the problems of doctrine to religious teachings and metaphysical philosophies themselves.
@constantchange11457 ай бұрын
@@clemonsx90 have you tried a Vipassana 10 day silent meditation course? I don't think anyone should be making their mind up about meditation and it's actual purpose or potential unless they've done one or two of those courses as taught by S.N Goenka. It's entirely Non sectarian. (Not bhuddist)
@constantchange11457 ай бұрын
@@Archeidos-Arcana he doesn't attribute all problems due to those things. He simply highlights that progress is contigent on many factors including the rejection of dogma and un-scientific beliefs
@susie40457 ай бұрын
Being introduced to most every religion out there, starting in my early childhood. I always went back to my practice of Buddhism, specifically the teaching of Nichiren Daishonin, chanting daily to elevate our life condition. It’s a truly humanistic practice. And there is so much support and community within the sgi organization. Main focus is world peace by doing our own human revolution.
@hunter_lite7 ай бұрын
Comfort more so than well being, at a serious cognitive cost.
@PARiderinHickory7 ай бұрын
I really like your content Alex. Have you given any thought to sharing your thoughts on Buddhism and Daoism? I’d be very interested in your take on the value of these things amongst others, those just being used for example
@brandonbooth8267 ай бұрын
It is such a joy to listen to two very smart people converse. Just astonishing the range Harris has. And O'Connor is coming up fast.
@oscargiovanniruiz83447 ай бұрын
"Sometimes people deserve to have their faith rewarded" - Batman
@mark_tolver7 ай бұрын
There was an Ohio University study in 2018 that found that those with religious beliefs had an average increase of life expectancy of about 4 years. Don’t know how credible the study was or if it’s been replicated but it’d be interesting to know what aspects of religious belief have a significant impact if accurate.
@SOak1452 ай бұрын
Its an interesting theory but it still wouldnt jsutify the actual religious belief itself.
@mark_tolver2 ай бұрын
@@SOak145 Does the fact that placebos have been shown to work justify the belief in the placebo effect?
@SOak1452 ай бұрын
@@mark_tolver Let's say that hypothetically, that religious people live longer on average. Does that occurrence in any way give a demonstration of any valid evidence, for any religious beliefs ? Or give any justification for religious beliefs ?
@mark_tolver2 ай бұрын
@@SOak145 It doesn’t provide evidence but it does provide a justification. If someone said to you, “Take this placebo pill, it’ll help you live on average 4 years longer” then you’d be justified in taking it. You can argue about the validity of any particular religious belief until you’re blue in the face, you can’t prove or disprove that belief one way or the other, however, if such a study was replicable and repeatedly showed that the effect of religious belief was to increase lifespan by an average of 4 years then that would have massive ethical implications for atheists. Would you try to convince a person to abandon their religious beliefs in favour of what you believe to be true if you believed that it was, on average, going to reduce their lifespan by four years if you were to convert them to atheism?🤷♂️ It’s certainly an interesting ethical quandary!
@veljkosimic21497 ай бұрын
I think it's not about religion, it's about collectivitist mindset. People tend to do better in supportive environment.
@SoroushTorkian7 ай бұрын
Nice video as always! :)
@KGchannel017 ай бұрын
Fascinating question to explore, thanks for digging in a bit! My uninformed guess is that the experience of enhanced wellbeing by religion depends on the individual; that it is true for many, and untrue for at least a significant minority. If so, to maximize wellbeing, it is important to give people options. A book undermining faith can be therapeutic to people for whom faith is not experienced positively, helping them let go and move on to something that works better for them. For people who experience faith as a wellbeing enhancing influence, it would still be important to educate them about the risks associated with various forms of belief, and teach critical thinking skills; so that they can better sift through the good and the bad of religion, and maximize the good. Anyway, just thinking out loud, this question (whether religion enhances wellbeing) is admittedly not something I've researched, outside of belonging to various online support groups for people whose religious beliefs have crumbled, and who are trying to find ways to move on.
@justinalvis44097 ай бұрын
Alex O’Connor is the most intellectually honest and sophisticated atheist/agnostic in the bunch.
@30Salmao7 ай бұрын
You got the words out of my mind. Exactly. Love this boy.
@JohnnyTwoFingers7 ай бұрын
Yep, I do not like 95% of atheists but Alex is great, so so smart.
@ManGoatHamburger7 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyTwoFingersyou’ve met them all?
@wzywg7 ай бұрын
A sense of purpose and a sense of belonging. Clearly seen as better than reality.
@cassif197 ай бұрын
I think that there are definitely things out there that provide us with social and persomal wellbeing better than religion does. But for many people, religion is the best tool they have access to for that purpose. Edit: I used the term "tool" to replace the term "technology" so that everyone can be happy ✌️
@pnut3844able7 ай бұрын
Technology??? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@fordprefect19257 ай бұрын
He’s embodying sam harris with the weird vocab lol
@cassif197 ай бұрын
Alright, let's use the term "tool" instead of "technology" so that we don't have to focus on semantics I'm really not that interested in 🤷
@360.Tapestry7 ай бұрын
such as.... ???
@TikkunFiat7 ай бұрын
Examples?
@AlmightyFSM7 ай бұрын
Sam's response here feels undercooked. I think a far better argument would be something like: "There may very well be a marginal improvement in wellbeing, or at least a religious individual's perception of their personal wellbeing, but the goal shouldn't be an incremental improvement. I think we'd all agree that on a scale of 1 to 10, we're barely a 1 when it comes to creating a society which enables and actuates universal wellbeing, and what we're looking for is a pathway toward this. The problem with religion is not that it provides a fleeting, ephemeral hit of comfort, it's that it actively retards progress towards a much, much more long-term and difficult goal of universal wellbeing; and the best, likely only, pathway to that is via reasoned, rationale, and critical thinking which above all prioritizes intellectual and factual honesty about the nature of humanity and the universe in which we find ourselves."
@Pheer7777 ай бұрын
Not sure how we’re “barely a 1” on the scale
@AlmightyFSM7 ай бұрын
@@Pheer777 The poorest countries have a third of their population below the poverty line. Life expectancy in the worst countries is around 30 years less than the best countries, and for all of recorded history there hasn't been a single year without war. One can argue that universal well-being is not an important goal, but if it is, we're pretty bad at it.
@Pheer7777 ай бұрын
@@AlmightyFSM Sure but most relevant well-being metrics have been on nearly constant upward trajectories for decades, it’s very easy to miss that fact that billions have escaped poverty in that timeframe, and the world is becoming more wealthy with each passing year.
@AlmightyFSM7 ай бұрын
@@Pheer777 Fair point. We can amend my response and say, "barely a 3" then. Fortunately this doesn't really change anything in the spirit or substance of my point. Unless you're arguing that we're more like an 8 or a 9, in which case it's unlikely that debate would be resolved here.
@AlmightyFSM7 ай бұрын
@@Pheer777 Addendum.. an interesting side effect of your point is that all those improvements in wellbeing you mention, emerge from science, and essentially zero emerge from religion... so that's actually an interesting addition to the argument 🙂
@hmb88017 ай бұрын
🎤I was once atheist due to Harris and others like him but i finally reverted back to faith of god and Islam.✊
@islamvibe26 ай бұрын
alhamdullah 🎉 🎉
@TaninshqDesai6 ай бұрын
Why?
@SalmanMalik-eo8uo4 ай бұрын
Alhumdhulillah ❤️
@MikkoRantalainen3 ай бұрын
Could you elaborate a bit? What made you revert back?
@hmb88013 ай бұрын
@@MikkoRantalainen I realize I need Faith and Hope and faith has this utility of providing purpose and meaning and morality to life .
@lowhat7 ай бұрын
the phrase maximize wellbeing makes me gag. it betrays a misunderstanding of human nature.
@MikkoRantalainen3 ай бұрын
They were discussing theoretical concept of maximal well-being and about the question "What if religion maximizes wellbeing from the options that are available to humans right now?" - the underlying idea being that we know that religions are based on imaginary stuff that cannot be proven but it seems to lead to somewhat successful life. If we cannot know what parts of the religion are important, should we be teaching religious stuff to our children even though we know it's not real (that is, there's no god or heaven).
@perfectdawah45357 ай бұрын
At the age of 25, i decided that God doesn't exist. That was because I didn't have the right knowledge. Many years later, I gained knowledge and realized that I was wrong, so I converted to Islam and I am very glad.
@MikkoRantalainen3 ай бұрын
What kind of knowledege did you gain to come to conclusion that Islam is the reality?
@perfectdawah45353 ай бұрын
@MikkoRantalainen if you are interested, I can share it with you. I am releasing my book in a few days about my journey to Islam. If I should tell you shortly, I found the source of all the problems humanity is facing, and the solution was in Islam. The source is the jungle system rolling the planet, and the solution is equallity, which Islam recommends it.
@SQ131618 күн бұрын
@@perfectdawah4535 did you publish your book?
@perfectdawah453518 күн бұрын
@SQ1316 hi. Thanks for asking. Yes, I have. It is called "Why Islam? A Journey from Doubt to Belief. "
@perfectdawah453518 күн бұрын
@SQ1316 it is on Amazon. Please let me know what you think if you read it. 🙏🏻😊
@TheGolfCommunity17 ай бұрын
What did he just waffle about, "is that the best way to that better" well if religious people do better, then it is the best way. The level of mental gymnastics with sam harris is beyond belief
@MikkoRantalainen3 ай бұрын
I think you missed the point. I interpreted that the point was that should we intentionally lie because it seems to work, even though we don't understand why it works?
@teampower78207 ай бұрын
I think of religion as a feeling of being connected to "the one", meaning you are not alone. Also community is big, as someone else mentioned. It does not exclude pursuing truth, logic or anything else. A positive aspect of Christianity is that it promotes self reflection and work on one self. All major religions probably do that but this is the one I'm most familiar with.
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
Religion gives you the bookends of life - you know where you came from and you know where you’re going. Religion answers the soul’s deepest questions- why, instead of how. Without religion, you’re just floating and teetering around in life. Life with little meaning and purpose. I’ve been Catholic for almost 10 years and I’m far happier now than in the past. I’m content.
@threestars21647 ай бұрын
Would any of these religions still exist if I went back in time and randomized the human population? Would Christianity still exist if I relocated the Jewish people to the Amazon? Without the specific cultural, historical, and social factors that contributed to the formation of all religions, I imagine they would be drastically altered, leading to the potential emergence of entirely different religious traditions or the absence of organized religions seen currently on this planet altogether. A much more important thought experiment instead of wellbeing I think.
@giuffre7146 ай бұрын
That is a great question. I think Roman gods would still be all the rage. 😀
@shredx817 ай бұрын
I suspect the positive benefit is one of placebo. People of faith are capable of deluding themselves into believing that god will make everything alright. No different to Ron Weasley winning Quidditch for Gryffindor after ‘believing’ he’d taken a luck potion.
@pixboi7 ай бұрын
Having belief in whatever, despite cold material circumstances, can be highly beneficial.
@travisbloomfield3037 ай бұрын
Placebo is denying God
@troyzieman71777 ай бұрын
I had to have a defibrillator procedure in the hospital. I was put under with Ketamine. I can assure you there is no religious or secular belief to emulate the experiance . You are totally conscious just completely unaware of the outside world. It was a disconnect from all external stimuli. A fascinating and wonderful experiance . You are not high , you are clear minded in a way you have never experienced before . I am not advocating it as a recreational experiance . I am just saying that of everything that can be thought, felt or experienced. Those moments I was under Ketamine, are a stand alone. There is no category to insert them in
@gavinriley52327 ай бұрын
It is not only community. Judaism teaches me that each and every action I take is in an effort to repair the world and bring heaven closer to earth. When I say a blessing over my food, when I put on tzitzis, when I put on tefillin, when I pray, when I give charity, etc. etc.. The fact that on even my worst day, when I feel I have accomplished nothing, or my plans are falling apart, I can look at the tzitzis hanging from my shirt and say to myself “I am bringing heaven down to earth by wearing these fringes.” Is immeasurably beneficial to mental health.
@jarrichvdv7 ай бұрын
As long as you can admit your wellbeing is being maximized by actively believing in foolery; then yes. It’s one or the other.
@TheRaveJunkie7 ай бұрын
It‘s a powerful delusion, yes
@gavinriley52327 ай бұрын
@@jarrichvdv No. I believe to Torah to be absolute truth. The world being 5784 years old, the whole 9 yards. It is not possible to believe in something that you also think is “foolery”. You cannot hold a belief that you also believe to be false.
@jarrichvdv7 ай бұрын
@@gavinriley5232 I do respect your personal rights to hold these beliefs; but I cannot grasp (I tried) being a serious adult in the 21st century who still holds on to ancient relics and mythical books to find comfort; especially when the sole reason you hold these beliefs is because you just happened to be born in the country and family and culture you were born into. That in and of itself should immediately disqualify any legitimacy that we still grant to these belief systems. I am not trying to be disrespectful; I just really struggle trying to understand.
@gavinriley52327 ай бұрын
@@jarrichvdv I was not born Jewish. I was not born in a Jewish community. I had never met a Jew until I was in college. And a proper Orthodox conversion (that I went through) is a years long process where the Rabbis are required by Halacha to discourage you. My family, while ultimately supportive of me overall, made sure to consistently remind me of the Holocaust and Pogroms. Until I went to Rabbinical Seminary where I met a few other converts, there was not a single human being that encouraged or promoted this to me. To be frank, there is no logical reason for belief. And I am more than willing to admit it. What ultimately drew me in was an internal innate need that I cannot explain. When I saw tefillin being wrapped, I simply needed to do it. When I saw the Torah, I simply needed to read it. When I saw the Talmud, I simply needed to study it. I am obviously not trying to convince you. I have no desire to do so. But the closest I have ever been able to get to explain how I feel (and the other converts I have spoken to seem to agree) is the following: Yes conversion was a choice. But it did not feel like one. In the same way as feeding you children is a choice that you make every single day, but ultimately you cannot choose anything else.
@pcnoad7 ай бұрын
The problem is, we can't determine what story is the most beneficial to believe unless we know all the alternatives including the objective truth. So knowledge of the objective truth would still be important regardless. Also, who gets to make that determination? For me the truth is important. I'm not saying I would necessarily be able to handle learning the truth. However, assuming I'm ever presented with the opportunity, I think that should be my decision.
@LeoDas6887 ай бұрын
Religion made sense when we didn't know about scientific facts, and we needed answers,it is no longer the case
@tylere.84367 ай бұрын
Scientific facts like two genders?
@cybersandoval7 ай бұрын
some secular community gatherings: sporting events, fine arts down to amateur theater, local to national political action, professional cultures, conferences
@TonyKeeh7 ай бұрын
Lol imagine centering the core of your existence around one of these
@jacksonelmore62277 ай бұрын
Those are all religious yet you call them secular Secularity may be their religion
@aitismarka94837 ай бұрын
@@TonyKeeh What's that got to do with anything?
@TonyKeeh7 ай бұрын
@aitismarka9483 did you watch the video? I just mean in the context of centering a community around something transcendent...which Alex and Sam seem to agree is good.
@aitismarka94837 ай бұрын
@@TonyKeeh To be brutally honest, I didn't. I was just browsing the comments. Anyway, I don't see why a community would need to be centered around something transcendent in order for it to increase the well-being of its members. Furthermore, I don't see what any of this has to do with the core of anyone's existence.
@joshuagonsalves39047 ай бұрын
I'd say going to the gym is better than church by a landslide.
@mikeuk20007 ай бұрын
Alain De Bottom wrote a great book about this called “Religion for Atheists”. He would be a good choice for Alex to Interview
@MelFinehout7 ай бұрын
Comparing someone with a religious practice and community against someone with no practice and not community is the problem. Find a group of people that gather for secular spirituality and meditate daily. Compare them against the Christians and see what happens.
@Raphael47227 ай бұрын
That's hard to do. Even if you get a group of atheists to meet up, they are not going to have the same sense of comradery as a group of religious people will.
@darbymori3507 ай бұрын
Maybe replace secular spirituality with secular volunteering? Like a group that does river clean ups, birdwatching or Comic Con. Those are communities not based on religion, that promote relationships/social interaction.
@mpeters997 ай бұрын
@@Raphael4722 and I think you hit the nail on the head. Is it even possible for a group of secularists to gather and discuss a topic that has as much meaning as God would amongst religious people. If the secularists can’t find the same amount of meaning in that group that makes the camaraderie to them that much more special, then it’s unlikely they will achieve the same wellbeing as churchgoers.
@jacksonelmore62277 ай бұрын
If you gather together to meditate daily, you ARE Christians But you’d need not call yourself one
@jacksonelmore62277 ай бұрын
@matthewphilip1977in our infinite multiverse all things are both possible and manifest; yet you say “no such thing”
@davidmontoya66727 ай бұрын
If you ever wanted to learn how to have a good conversation. Watch every single one of Alex's videos. It's pleasing and chill to listen to them they are like lofi beats
@user-soon3007 ай бұрын
i love that
@rogeriopenna90147 ай бұрын
why go for witchcraft? A much simpler example is horoscopes and astrology! My horoscope told me I would not get COVID, so I relaxed and I didn´t. Simple eh? (just kidding)
@SemiPerfectDark7 ай бұрын
I was hoping there would be a part where Sam gets up and says I actively hate you and then storms out
@stevenlancestoll6297 ай бұрын
The humanist community where I used to live has a weekly get together as well as book and movie discussion groups and talks. It depends where one lives.
@MelFinehout7 ай бұрын
And compare these people against Christians and see what happens. What the studies reveal is the community is important. Not the actual belief in a creator deity.
@riverjustice7 ай бұрын
You are meeting up for socialization and shared interest. Going to church is not for socialization, but to consciously get together to know there's something beyond yourself.
@buglepong7 ай бұрын
@@riverjustice id say churchers are 99% socialisation
@MelFinehout7 ай бұрын
@@riverjustice well, then have someone do the study. I’d update my hypothesis. This is my intuition based upon my experience and is possible to be wrong.
@gsp34287 ай бұрын
humanist communites must suck.
@partydean177 ай бұрын
Excellent clip
@lolersauresrex88377 ай бұрын
Every time I hear this guy talk I wonder why I ever thought Sam Harris was a formidable mind
@paddleed61766 ай бұрын
Ok.
@r34ct47 ай бұрын
Psychedelics can serve and reclaim its place as the religion and community that weve been without for thousands of years.
@somersetcace17 ай бұрын
It's a bit of a false correlation between `wellbeing` and religious communities. It's more about community and fellowship in general. That appears to be the common thread. Slightly different context, but it reminds me of a movie quote, _"in all our searching, the only thing we've found that makes the emptiness bearable... is each other."_ In my experience over 58 years, I've found that the more meaningful relationships I have, the richer my life is. Moreover, the more people I care about individually, the more I tend to care about people in general. Seems to be a natural consequence.
@jacksonelmore62277 ай бұрын
All is Self, that’s why Christ said the first two commandments are most relevant because they demonstrate that All is Self, and embodying them is acknowledging Truth
@stephenzaccardelli58637 ай бұрын
Is that consequential to yourself or religion?
@somersetcace17 ай бұрын
@@stephenzaccardelli5863 I'm not entirely sure what you're asking here. Can you reword/clarify it? I just don't want to give an irrelevant answer.
@drewmcmahon26297 ай бұрын
Wrong
@somersetcace17 ай бұрын
@@drewmcmahon2629 Oh well, silly me. Thanks for the wise explanation. 🙄
@jellslixcy61687 ай бұрын
There are many secular examples of community that are as useful as religious communities for mental and moral wellbeing. If you think about those that did badly / worse during COVID you get an idea of them- sport (watching and participating), art, music, exercise, reading. We do have secular versions of religious communities that share moralities and are mentally beneficial. People get together to go to music gigs, art shows, sports fixtures etc. it’s ridiculous to argue that these don’t have equivalency with religious get togethers. The morality may be different but no less important. Hearing your favourite band play your favourite song is transcendent, watching Djordevic score against Caen for Nantes is transcendent.
@orthochristos7 ай бұрын
Sam Harris has become the living walking meme of idiocy
@MattT-P7 ай бұрын
How so? 🤔
@thomaslodger76757 ай бұрын
@@MattT-Pthe way he completely dismisses opposition with wild assertations and how he can't just stay consistent and say "yes, if lying maximizes wellbeing we should do that." Speaks Volume that he doesn't really believe what he's saying
@nicholasbowerman80407 ай бұрын
Alex is so freakin’ wise. I know Sam is an incredibly smart man whose ideas are important, but he’s the guy sitting here telling you that your method is wrong and can be achieved in many ways whilst ignoring the fundamental ideas of what makes your method work.
@olaf31407 ай бұрын
What is Alex's method?
@AshBowie7 ай бұрын
Nowhere in this discussion did Alex suggest that Sam is "wrong". He's inviting Sam to defend a steelman critique of it, which only strengthens it.
@alspezial27477 ай бұрын
As someone who was an atheist for 20 years, i can say that even without comunity, live gets immeasurably easier when comming to believe in something. Believe provides comfort and certainty for the mind.
@TonyLambregts7 ай бұрын
For me, the only way to achieve any degree of certainty is through evidence. Wishful thinking provides me with no comfort. Delusion looks counterproductive to me.
@tedarcher91207 ай бұрын
Why would you believe in Jewish zombies tho?
@petereames30417 ай бұрын
And religious rituals enhance social bonding.
@alspezial27477 ай бұрын
@TonyLambregts it might sound cringy, but finding the love of god is some sort of evidence. When you follow gods guidance, and everything just works out against all odds, i think you can call that evidence.
@TheHuxleyAgnostic7 ай бұрын
@@alspezial2747 That sounds like you haven't read an ounce of history. And, why does Finland top the list of happiest countries, with only a third of the population saying they believe a god exists?
@constantchange11457 ай бұрын
I honestly don't know how I would have ever gotten the chance to experience the actual potential of meditation ( which is worlds apart from just feeling calmer or "quieting the mind" etc). Without doing a 10 day silent Vipassana course. The paradoxical nature of the goal, the reasons for sitting, the benefits and the how easily they all come is astoundingly beautiful with this alternate dimensional expansion in perspective. And it's attained through the simplest forms of self observation. All I needed was a tiny bit of guidance and support to sit down long enough and persist long enough to experience it. Without that wisdom from others who have experienced it I would never have even tried, and without their gentle encouragement and quiet/patient support I would have given up on day 2. It's funny when the answers we've been searching for were under our noses all along 😉 I wish you all the very best in your journeys to truly know thyself from experience. ❤
@LilySage-mf7uf7 ай бұрын
The most religious countries on Earth have the highest crime rates, highest poverty rates, highest rates of disease, lowest rates of education, least amount of human rights, and the shortest lifespans
@thekillshootable7 ай бұрын
China has good human rights?
@LilySage-mf7uf7 ай бұрын
@@thekillshootable No, but that's not because of lack of religion, it's because of communism and totaIitarianism
@thekillshootable7 ай бұрын
@@LilySage-mf7uf Right, so maybe when there’s a lack of religion authoritarianism and communism may fill the void which was originally filled by religion.
@prime126027 ай бұрын
@@thekillshootableSouth Korea doesn’t have a religion and the only issue there is lookism and sexism.
@prime126027 ай бұрын
@@thekillshootablenot necessarily, just look at South Korea.
@equi7 ай бұрын
"Is that the best way to do that better" uhh ok.. even if its not, its better than the currently known alternative. Just sounds like he doesnt want to admit that could be the case.
@Tohlemiach7 ай бұрын
"Hey Sam, it turns out religious people are happier. What now?" "Well, that might not be true, and if it is, there's a better way to be happier." Serious intellectual, btw. Objective thinker, btw.
@pnut3844able7 ай бұрын
Religious people aren't happier though.
@silvastomp7 ай бұрын
"Being deluded makes you happier" Shouldn't the objective in life try to align your views on what reality ACTUALLY is. While trying to maximise wellbeing of yourself and others. It just seems a no-brainier.
@seriously587 ай бұрын
...turns out (some) religious people are happier, but also prone to attacking people who believe in another god or based on what their god tells them supress parts of their society. What now?
@MrMrprofessor123457 ай бұрын
There's nothing wrong with that kind of response. It acknowledges the data could be inaccurate, then starts a claim about how while that could be true for some, there are other ways to achieve that. The only questionable part would be claiming one is truly "better" than the other, since different people value different things, and just don't factor in the same requirements for ways to be happy.
@Tohlemiach7 ай бұрын
@@pnut3844able I was using a bit of hyperbole, but actually in general religious people tend to report higher well-being, happiness, and sense of purpose in pretty much all polling data. That's what Alex was referring to. The question now remains: if Sam is truly committed to "well-being" as his moral outcome, then it shouldn't matter how you get there. If you have to be deluded to be happy and the goal is happiness, then we should all be deluded. If, on the other hand, the goal is knowledge and awareness, then we should sacrifice whatever happiness we could have by being delusional and live in the potential misery of an absurd and unfair world. The reason I have no personal issues with religious people is because I think it's totally fair to live in a delusion that makes you happier. I don't accept the excesses of this delusion, i.e. the mistreatment of sexual orientation minorities, but if my dad is happier thinking the Earth is 6,000 years old, I don't really feel any moral imperative to change his mind. That's why I don't personally *encourage* people to be religious because you can get things like Michael Knowles who wants a theocracy, so there still needs to be accountability for these people, but the level to which Sam Harris seems to want the eradication of religion is equally foolish.
@wMerlinw7 ай бұрын
If lies maximize well-being, why stop at a specific amount of lies as laid out in a religion? Why not add more and more lies to it, until we've maximized well-being as much as possible?
@deegobooster7 ай бұрын
The intrinsically (not extrinsic) religious overwhelmingly correlate positively with higher mental and social wellbeing. Sam’s skepticism is too late.
@AlanDantes767 ай бұрын
Someone should tell the catholic church this.
@FleeingAmoeba7 ай бұрын
I heard a statistic that Nordic countries get the same benefits from religion as they practice christian rituals in large numbers, even though they are mostly atheist, suggesting belief is optional.
@barryjb7 ай бұрын
No matter the number or magnitude of the benefits of ignoring, trivializing or being too stupid to understand or value what is true; lies, untruths and fiction will never maximize wellbeing. The benefits of actually living in a world where the number one priority by far is trying to establish what is true far outweigh living in any alternate world. Furthermore, despite how stupid the world has been and currently is in so many ways, the only way things become irredeemable is if we get to a post-truth world where we are living in a way where what is true is no longer the most valued principle. Some people and corporations already operate in this way but it is not yet the majority. If it becomes the majority, it's game over.
@BeccaYoley7 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more 💯
@ericcurtis71767 ай бұрын
I never knew Ben stiller was so well spoken
@stuffystuff34827 ай бұрын
Harris's MO: "Don't buy into organized religion, it's all a made up lie. Instead, buy my book and I'll show you how to live your life" 😂😂😂
@tox_ph0b0s807 ай бұрын
I don't understand how people have become overly cynical like this about authors. Harris absolutely does not pitch his books as if you need to buy them to lead an enlightened life. You're talking about the guy that makes his podcast available for free for people who are poor and request access. Why should someone NOT get paid for their work is a better question.
@SpaveFrostKing7 ай бұрын
That's the most over-the-top, cartoon strawman of Harris I've ever heard. Besides, it's not as if people don't give a lot of money to organized religion.
@bra-o-bra7 ай бұрын
@@tox_ph0b0s80well said, i agree and i would take it a step further and say that the appropriate reaction is gratitude to the fact that he shares his knowledge and wisdom. And on top of that im grateful that he is rewarded for it so that he is free to spend his time on doing more of this type of thing and not sacrifice time and energy doing something else to keep food on the table.
@stuffystuff34827 ай бұрын
@@tox_ph0b0s80 So Harris doesn't write books decrying and bashing religion and proposing his own ideas as to what people should do with their lives morally speaking? And he doesn't write these books hoping they sell by the millions? Are you this simple minded on purpose or just selectively?
@tox_ph0b0s807 ай бұрын
@@stuffystuff3482 In basically none of the books Harris writes does he specifically advocate how someone should lead their life. On religion, he critiques it, like people have done for thousands of years, and he's a specific advocate for the idea that you can replace much of the 'good' functions of religion with secular practices. So in other words secularists don't have to deprive themselves of certain things that most people only get through church, etc. Also, his harshest critique of religion is basically focused on the more hardcore religious zealotry that is causing immeasurable suffering. He doesn't care about your average dude who goes to church once a week, leads a normal life, and is content. The idea of the books is to simply remove people from being steeped in dogma. The only book where he takes a specifically strong stance about a specific behavior is his 'lying' book, in which he argues that even 'white lies' are worse than you think, etc. But even then, he's not *telling* you what to do to be happy or to lead your best life. He acknowledges that 'don't lie' shouldn't be applied universally, but the point is to to challenge oneself to really think about if they *need* to lie in any given situation and the potential ramifications of said lie, instead of just doing it without thinking.
@dkmagos7 ай бұрын
Sam doesn't acknowledge how much what he rests on (his intellect, morals, skills) rests on generations and cultural context of religious and spiritual life. Its normal to resent it the way we resent having stinky feet. it still give you something to stand on.
@paulelago94537 ай бұрын
Sam Harris is unfortunately not that sharp
@Shawn-nq7du7 ай бұрын
After listening to Sam Harris, who would want to be an atheist? He’s lost all of his luster. Maybe his enthusiasm is in his shoes.
@avivastudios23116 ай бұрын
Atheism is not something people want to be. It's a lack of belief. Sam Harris is popular because he told people to meditate I believe.
@Shawn-nq7du6 ай бұрын
@@avivastudios2311 it is amazing what people get sold on and they think believing people are gullible
@avivastudios23116 ай бұрын
@@Shawn-nq7du All people need is something to make them feel good and they subscribe to it.
@MathiVelan2 ай бұрын
He himself is a non-resistant non-believer. Many of us are. We try to find truth in gosepls, church community, religious writings, etc, and are hit with silence from God. A religious person would say we are not truly "non-resistant", but putting yourself in the same position, what can you do? Belief is not something a human can truly choose. If the Bible says my carpet is actually hardwood, I cannot just convince myself that what I'm seeing is hardwood. No matter how much I want the carpet to be wood, I cannot convince myself, just as I cannot convince myself of belief.
@Shawn-nq7du2 ай бұрын
@@MathiVelan Have you tried prayer? That is how I found God, or should I say, that is when I responded back to God's thirst who is always thirsting for us. He nudges us all the time. We can choose to believe, but not on our own. Jesus says, the Spirit draws us to him. So, pray for the Holy Spirit to lead you to God. Prayer is powerful. God bless!
@scottlarson2817 ай бұрын
"Sam, if this were true, and this were true, and this were true, and this were true....would you pull your book from the shelves?" "That's a LOT of ifs...."
@stephenholmgren4057 ай бұрын
I doubt this. Sweden and Denmark are overwhelmingly atheists and have virtually no crime, higher education, long lifespans and generally happier people. In the USA the more religious a state the higher crime and poverty. In the middle-east that argument speaks for itself. Desperate people will believe in whatever placebo effect remedies sadness
@Chewis5557 ай бұрын
Finland is statistically the happiest country in the world and also a majority 66% Evangelical Lutheran Christians. Japan is among the least happiest developed countries and has a population of 65% atheists. That's not to say religion doesn't play a role in a nations wellbeing, but I think the fact there's no consistency in data shows there are plenty more factors to consider when assessing a nation's happiness other than religion.
@blazer67087 ай бұрын
UAE has 2x lower crime then Denmark and 3.5x lower crime then Sweden, Finland is "happier" and more religious then the two examples so the correlation isnt there, what does education and lifespan have to do with religion?
@roykeane19227 ай бұрын
Sweden has no crime? 😂😂😂 Wow you’ve been living under a rock. Have another go Stephen. It has one of the worst gang violence problems in the world. You should’ve listened to Mark Twain
@michaeldehart32537 ай бұрын
Isn’t “happier” a subjective measurement? I don’t put a lot of stock in self reporting surveys based on feelings. Feelings are gauged on expectations being met. Feed a starving country everyday for a year and I’m sure their “happiness” would improve dramatically.
@henkez69607 ай бұрын
Swede here. Sweden has no crime? It's the bombing capital of the EU and has the most non-wartime bombings second only to Mexico. 391 shootings last year and more bombings than any other country in the EU in a country of only 10mil.
@writerblocks95537 ай бұрын
How does he measure wellbeing, and how do we measure how our actions harm the wellbeing of others?
@koenigcochran7 ай бұрын
I think he concedes, in a different part of the interview, that no one knows the right way to do this calculus
@AshBowie7 ай бұрын
First we have to start by acknowledging that well-being is the goal and thus requires a scientific methodology to study it. We've already started to establish this-check out the studies behind Positive Psychology to start. This domain of inquiry is in its infancy and Sam doesn't claim to have all the answers. He is only claiming that we need to start asking the questions.
@charliekowittmusic7 ай бұрын
Alex’s challenge to Sam’s Moral Landscape here is nothing short of genius. Sam is contradicting himself. Either “truth” is the primary moral axis. In which case, spreading untruth is immoral. Or “well-being” is the primary axis of morality. In which case, a lie that improves well-being is moral. You can’t say “Well-being is the objective measure of morality” and then reverse course when that well-being is a result of religious belief.
@TheWanderingPensioner7 ай бұрын
Where does Harris say that “truth” is the primary moral axis? Surely he is saying that well-being is capable of being evaluated (scientifically) and those situations that promote it are more moral than those that don't. Certainly he would assert that truth (aka scientific method in search of best explanations) is a more useful tool to investigate how we get to well-being than adherence to dogma. I'd imagine he would concede that religious belief can and does bring about well-being, and in a particular time and place may be the only viable mode, but that other modes of belief/experience also can promote well-being, and that we should explore alternate modes in search of peak modes. This reference to a primary moral axis sounds very categorical imperative-ish. Harris is clearly a consequences guy, not a deontologist guy ... or only to the extent that moral rules lead to good/better consequences.
@Pietrosavr7 ай бұрын
@@TheWanderingPensionerYou don't have to be a genius to read between the lines... Sam definitely switched to "truth is the highest value" when he rejected the scientific data that religion provides more wellbeing.
@bishimback7 ай бұрын
I'm very interested in your and Sam's take on what prof. Dawkins said yesterday on lbc
@pockethook7 ай бұрын
What was it about?
@good_boy_137 ай бұрын
Dawkins has always maintained that he is a cultural Christian and that Christianity, in his view, is better than Islam. There's a 2007 BBC interview where he says this.
@bishimback7 ай бұрын
@@pockethookhe called Christianity a fundamentally decent religion and Islam not decent, and he finds it wrong for the government to decorate streets for Ramadan as opposed for Easter which is more of what the tradition should be.
@bishimback7 ай бұрын
@@good_boy_13 that's not the part I want commented on but the part when he said that Christianity is decent and Islam not.
@Fromtitwar7 ай бұрын
@@bishimback I mean you can argue christianity may not be that great , but at least the mainstream understanding of Christianity in this time is absolutely better than the mainstream understanding of islam , Maybe in the dark ages , they were the same . But not now .
@fzr10009817 ай бұрын
Darwinism is a religion. Hitler showed the full potential of Darwinism as a worldview
@bubaks27 ай бұрын
Why do some men wear eye liner, but never mascara? I just saw a mascara ad on youtube. Got me thinking.
@petereames30417 ай бұрын
Religion evolved for a reason.
@tedarcher91207 ай бұрын
It probably didn't. Most hunter-gatherers don't have religions. It's probably originated from how out evolved brains interact with big civilisations
@Chewis5557 ай бұрын
@@tedarcher9120 Religion stems from value hierachies, it can't have evolved by itself. Without value hierarchies societies wouldn't have developed and we wouldn't have any survival instinct. What sits at the top of our value hierarchies is our "God Value" where we derive most of our morals and is the lens through which we see the world. These can be either a spiritual belief, an ideological belief, or an interpersonal relationship. It's remarkable atheists don't seem to understand they also operate on the same system of values that spiritually religious people do. Atheism is a religion, political ideologies are religions, LGBTQ is a religion, patriotism is a religion, you can even be religious to your own emotions (hedonism). Nobody is free from this complex, everybody has a God Value, everybody derives their morality from somewhere, everyone is religious to something.
@noah26337 ай бұрын
@@tedarcher9120Perhaps large-scale societies require religions or something like them.
@threestars21647 ай бұрын
Ideas spread faster than genes, it didn't "evolve", muppet.
@cinnamondan49847 ай бұрын
I listened to Mormon Stories about building secular societies for post-Mormons. It seems that whatever the magic juice that Mormonism has cannot be artificially concocted by well-meaning individuals who in theory should have all of the tools to make a secular carbon copy of what they admired about being Mormon.
@milaloup7 ай бұрын
Purpose maximises wellbeing. Religion can be the purpose in people's lives. But so could binge-watching Netflix.
@noorzanayasmin78067 ай бұрын
The problem is Binge watching netflix doesnt tell you to be better. If you not being told to be better and try to be better then you feel empty inside. Binging on netflix will give you depression. There is new science out there proving so.
@milaloup7 ай бұрын
@@noorzanayasmin7806 not if you keep setting yourself goals for becoming a better netflix binge watcher.
@TheMoopMonster7 ай бұрын
Binge watching Netflix, is inherently purposeless. Progression for progression's sake has no intrinsic value, even though in the moment it feels so, regardless of the direction or content. Like progressing a videogame character, your brain feels satisfied, in the flow state, and there is of course some degree of value in the information, same as netflix, but ultimately you're left with nothing in the end. Progress is not purpose, purpose comes from love, passion, attention, and self sacrifice. If you are truly finding those things in binging Netflix, so be it, but it is easier than it would seem to deceive yourself.
@noorzanayasmin78067 ай бұрын
@@milaloup You can try and let us know how you feel. Usually people try to get out of mindless binge watching netflix or youtube browsing. But hey you might be the gem between all the other people
@MalachiWhite-tw7hl7 ай бұрын
They DO have a secular version Sam--it's called Unitarian Universalism., which has devolved into largely feelgood liberalism. Surprised he didn't know that. 7:01
@Howtobe7777 ай бұрын
What if alcoholism maximises wellbeing?
@chadreilly7 ай бұрын
Lol, I had the same thought.
@thegreatmoustachio6 ай бұрын
I feel like Harris is what Peterson wants to sound like. Harris says profound things that actually have a basis in reality. And, even better, he seems to actually know what he’s talking about most of the time.
@mpeters997 ай бұрын
I find it troubling when Harris writes off these studies Alex mentions as untrue because he thinks there was probably confirmation bias on the behalf of the scientists. Harris has a great financial reason for disagreeing with these studies as they oppose the ideas he espoused in his book. Pulling the books off the shelf would be a financial loss for Harris. How he can call the studies out for having confirmation bias without acknowledging his own confirmation bias is mind boggling to me.
@roykeane19227 ай бұрын
People are so fooled by his diction it’s honestly quite frustrating. Type up his responses to the challenges Alex poses in this chat, and read them through. There is so little relevant substance. A bloviator of the highest order.
@ordermind7 ай бұрын
I reacted to that as well, especially considering what Sam said about religious people believing in things on insufficient evidence (1:01). I thought it was ironic that his own conviction that there can be a superior, secular way of providing the benefits of religion seems to be based on a source of knowledge completely separated from the current scientific evidence which he dismisses without a second thought. He often seems to be promoting scientific sources of knowledge so I'm very curious to know what source of evidence he's found that can so easily supersede it.
@mpeters997 ай бұрын
@@roykeane1922 I’ll check them out. Thanks for the response
@mpeters997 ай бұрын
@@ordermind yeah I gave Harris the benefit of the doubt that he has actually read through the studies mentioned, but if these were simply his opinions without having read through the literature, then that is deeply concerning and deeply intellectually dishonest.
@ronmexico59087 ай бұрын
Life is freighting. Too many people are married to their ideas out of survival. Getting people to think and speak honestly is a long way away. Enjoy the hypocrisy or isolate away which seems to be our next step to truth
@BeccaYoley7 ай бұрын
Why can't we take the positives of religion but base it on premises that are true? This would eliminate much of the harm of relogion while retaining much of the benefit. Secular countries ae better of thsn almost all religious countries, so I think the harm we see in the US is mostly about going against the grain of the culture.
@melkicastillo33997 ай бұрын
Agree, most of the countries found a healthy relation with religion due to regulation, but americans keep blaming the church instead of the Congress. Any unregulated human institution gets corrupted.
@scottm49757 ай бұрын
Because you can’t. Atheists have been trying for years, but it’s not possible at scale. Religion is more powerful and effective because of the beliefs, not in spite of the beliefs.
@BeccaYoley7 ай бұрын
@@scottm4975 You talking to the wrong person. Christianity has caused so much damage to my family, and my life improved dramatically when I stopped trusting in Jesus. Religious untruths are not the path to optimal outcomes. It's about as healthy as crack, it's a powerful drug, but not overall beneficial.
@ali_haidar_3137 ай бұрын
@@BeccaYoley Then the problem with Christianity , I suggest you to read more about Islam
@gomerpyle77217 ай бұрын
Our area has being trying and mostly failing at creating a secular community that values “people more than dogma”. But it’s a struggle…there just is a “secret sauce” that religion will always have over these secular communities. If Sky Daddy isn’t watching, it’s hard to get people to do their part
@y5anger7 ай бұрын
There are so many factors at play with religion that you can't take a lot from those "religions increase happiness" studies. I suspect its belonging in a community rather than belief in a higher power that increases happiness. Would be interesting to compare the happiness of the religious to extroverted atheists who self-describe as socially fulfilled.
@lukemockabee74077 ай бұрын
I think it only fair to disclose that I am a Christian so my view is biased but I'm not trying to change anybody's views about views about whether that is true to reality or not. That being said, isn't that too simplistic of an approach? Scientific evidence shows pretty conclusively that what we believe about the world does shape our reality, i.e the placebo effect and various mental health disorders that can cause physical changes within the body. All things being equal in community between an Atheist and a Theist, how could believing that you'll see your loved ones again someday, believing an all-powerful being is looking out for your well-being, and believing that death is nothing to fear not have some benefit to mental health? Obviously there is a flip-side that religion can at times manifest in unhealthy feelings of guilt and shame but when it's healthy I think religion, even in social isolation, has undeniable benefits.
@mpeters997 ай бұрын
I think the struggle with that is that secular communities will likely never have something that genuinely means as much to them as God means to the religious person. And this shared maximal reverence for a greater being creates a strong community and camaraderie that I am suspicious secular people would be able to truly replicate. Would like to see studies comparing secular communities to church communities though.
@y5anger7 ай бұрын
@@lukemockabee7407 Personally, the issues you speak of never cross my mind. On the other hand, I have witnessed the service groups, social cliques, cookouts and campouts, and mutal aid that religious groups so often have. Maybe there are socially fulfilled atheists suffering from religious angst but anecdotally that is not the case.
@lukemockabee74077 ай бұрын
@@y5anger Well shoot more power to you man, I genuinely I'm happy that whatever coping mechanisms you have are working. But my best friend was a wreck for months when his dad died last year. My friend with cystic fibrosis was stressed about finances every time she had a doctor's visit. Those issues were incredibly real to them and no amount of community fully wash out the pain of the situations. I understand these are also anecdotal but since you're speaking solely from your own lived experience all I can do is speak from mine.
@bike4aday7 ай бұрын
There are many factors, but I don't think community is one. Monks have found liberation on silent retreat. Their brains and nervous systems are completely changed as a result. Community is great, but the contentment and peace that people seek has to come from a more reliable source, something less conditional.
@HonestlyAtheist7 ай бұрын
Humanist Congregations like Ethical Societies, Oasis, Sunday Assembly, etc., currently exist all over the US and offer all the traditional benefits of shared community and moral reflection without any of the dogmatic baggage or commitment to supernatural elements of reality of any kind. If you wish there were more communities like this, you should check them out and see if there is one near you that you can support!
@Seethi_C7 ай бұрын
Are you sure there’s no dogmatic baggage? Is it like the ACA where you get shunned for having unpopular beliefs about trangenderism etc?
@HonestlyAtheist7 ай бұрын
@@Seethi_C they do tend to be pretty progressive spaces, but I can confirm that there is no bar to membership in Ethical Societies based on your beliefs. If you can't handle being challenged on your beliefs, or if you are asked to leave for becoming belligerent or disruptive, then that's on you.
@SerendipitousProvidence7 ай бұрын
It does maximize well-being because God exists and what He wants for you is infinitely better than anything your non-omniscient mind could ever possibly imagine. And what he desires in you isnfor a strong character like God himself. Character > pleasure, arrogance.
@ShirleyTimple7 ай бұрын
Oh look, an actual child in need of a sky daddy... how adorable😅
@nagranoth_7 ай бұрын
lying doesn't support your position gov'ner
@crabb99667 ай бұрын
@@ShirleyTimple Something about this wonderful comment made you spiteful, what might that be?
@ShirleyTimple7 ай бұрын
@@nagranoth_when their entire world view is fictional, what's another fib here and there? 😅
@calebr71997 ай бұрын
"god exists" citation needed
@laurajarrell61877 ай бұрын
Alex O' Connor, Cosmic Skeptic! Thankyou for posting these great interviews in bits. I think humans want an afterlife, more than a god because we hate the thought of our loved ones are just gone. Even pets! That's a hard thing. 👍💙💙💙🥰✌
@Soapandwater67 ай бұрын
Yes! Many Christians believe that they will see their beloved pets in heaven. It is comforting, so they choose to believe it.
@Nah_Bohdi7 ай бұрын
Sam needs to stop resisting his God, his Lord, Donald Trump. Submit, Sam...its time.
@KC_Streams7 ай бұрын
He very conspicuously does not answer the question directly in a way that feels less like, "It's important to discuss all these other considerations for context" and more like just "I'm going to be annoying and waffle"