Atheist Debates - Morality

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @claudiaquat
    @claudiaquat 9 лет назад +178

    That's the toughest looking golf course I've ever seen.

    • @thehaloofthesun
      @thehaloofthesun 4 года назад +4

      claudiaquat you’ve clearly never been to South Park.

    • @EmperorsNewWardrobe
      @EmperorsNewWardrobe 4 года назад +4

      claudiaquat thats not a tough golf course. It’s a tough scuba diving course

    • @hewhowatches5711
      @hewhowatches5711 4 года назад +3

      Pretty sure that's the fairway

    • @bugsplat2755
      @bugsplat2755 3 года назад +2

      @@hewhowatches5711
      Damn course designers. They simply do not understand a balls attraction to water, and waters generous donation of +2 strokes to my scorecard.

    • @chrisjohnson4380
      @chrisjohnson4380 3 года назад +2

      Guys, you're completely missing the picture. It's obviously an ice skating rink that is in hibernation over summer.

  • @rogertheshrubber2551
    @rogertheshrubber2551 9 лет назад +33

    As Matt's beard slowly turns him into a wizard. The proof is that you can plainly see him teleport around in the video. (Great series)

  • @SansDeity
    @SansDeity  9 лет назад +53

    Yes, I'm aware of the various color problems. I'm not sure why this happened or how I can fix it, but I'll look into it.

    • @greenjelly01
      @greenjelly01 9 лет назад +23

      Don't stand in the shade, with a bright sunny background. The camera balances color for the sunny area, which makes the shady area bluish. Also, the subject is dark and underexposed.

    • @tekhiun
      @tekhiun 9 лет назад +3

      It's called white balance, usually cameras do it automatically , which seems to be the case here . The camera adjusted for the light on the background, which is why you are slightly blue. You can set it up manually, just look it up on your camera manual and this website is quite helpful too www.wikihow.com/Adjust-Your-Digital-Camera%27s-White-Balance.

    • @amazingbollweevil
      @amazingbollweevil 9 лет назад +1

      I really appreciate that you take the time to find a good setting for these videos, but honestly, it's your content and delivery that is so compelling. I hope you eschew visual effects in your future submissions because your stuff is otherwise excellent for audio book listening.

    • @crediblemusic
      @crediblemusic 9 лет назад +4

      Auditioning for the blue man group.

    • @straubdavid9
      @straubdavid9 9 лет назад +3

      Thanks Matt, the only thing that mattered to me was the content - I don't let minor distractions detract from that. Btw - I didn't really have any distractions, so got your message clear as a bell.

  • @UTU49
    @UTU49 8 лет назад +5

    Dear Matt Dillahunty,
    I hope you know how much you are contributing to the world. People like you are providing what people like Dawkins have failed to provide: a calm, rational, humanist, constructive presentation of the Atheist perspective.

  • @MichalisCatinas
    @MichalisCatinas 9 лет назад +9

    Well done Matt! A beautiful mind at work. Great info and arguments as always, thank you. Warm regards from Greece.

  • @MEANlowGREEN
    @MEANlowGREEN 8 лет назад +5

    Thanks you Matt. This was just the information I needed for an ongoing online debate (as fruitless as it may be). As usual you are on point.,

  • @WessCNY
    @WessCNY 9 лет назад +76

    When you die and go to heaven Matt will be standing there, he will say "Were you expecting someone else?"

    • @Stevevick-ve6kh
      @Stevevick-ve6kh 4 года назад +2

      As a Believer that repented & Believed the Gospel Message before he died in his sins I hope so !
      But if a atheist stillll.......
      .... Not hardly !

    • @Stevevick-ve6kh
      @Stevevick-ve6kh 4 года назад

      Anti Theist
      sounds just like something the devil would say except , he decided he wanted to be “GOD “ , but to do that he’s got to try to over through GOD !
      His process is Lying , murdering , stealing , oh he is in a very bad since of denial about everything , Like Democrats , see he’s found a resting place with u.
      But sure your not gonna acknowledge that , huh !
      It will be brought to light one day soon, of ya Decision.

    • @Stevevick-ve6kh
      @Stevevick-ve6kh 4 года назад

      Anti Theist
      Christian 1st , American 2nd!
      Choices , choices , choices !
      Choice !, I Heard the Gospel message of Jesus Christ !
      My choice , .... it is the most truthful loving information that I have ever come across . I said yes ,in my heart , It is true . I repented , acknowledged in my Heart that He is God . That I was the sinner He died on the cross for . His spirit of truth entered my body , & I know the Bible is true ! But only the KJV Bible , that’s another subject though . I was saved & my life changed . My desire is to tell as many ppl as I can this story till I die ,
      Acts 2:36-42
      If u have considered that same story & said no , u will not believe it ,
      That was your choice !
      Even though it will go down as the worst decision you will ever make in this life . Should you stay your coarse .

    • @Stevevick-ve6kh
      @Stevevick-ve6kh 4 года назад

      Anti Theis
      Still your choice to believe such info !
      How much peace of mind do you have ?

    • @Stevevick-ve6kh
      @Stevevick-ve6kh 4 года назад

      Anti Theist
      Choice !

  • @juan3141
    @juan3141 8 лет назад +7

    this is my new favorite video of all time for many many reasons (:

    • @cineverse442
      @cineverse442 3 года назад

      Yaa he just F*ucked religious beliefs upside down right and left

  • @northernlight8857
    @northernlight8857 8 лет назад +12

    What kind of camera was used to film this? And I must say you are good in finding beutiful natural backgrounds in your videos. Your work is greatly appriciated. Thank you.

  • @dracdrum
    @dracdrum 9 лет назад +5

    Great stuff man, I have been consuming all of these! Thanks for making them!

  • @TheIronwil
    @TheIronwil 8 лет назад +9

    This might be my favorite video from you yet. I liked the comparison of ethics between a child who was threatened/bribed over one who has an explanation of how their behavior affects others. This illustrated the disconnect many theists seem to have with the moral argument - motivation. Later you talked about how doing unto others as you would have done unto you, and how this doesn't necessarily reflect what another person might want. This is the only point in your presentation where I'd see a logical hole for a theist to drive a wedge into, though I don't personally consider it a hole. Here's my two cents on why I agree with you, but see a possible avenue for misunderstanding:
    Your first comparison was between two children whose motivations differed, and why that's important to the development of morality. This resonated strongly with me, and offers a possible explanation of why so many fundamentalists seem to think we'd all run around causing as much harm as possible without their divinely prescribed moral system. I've heard Ray Comfort state he'd be in jail if he wasn't a Christian. Without the threat of hell and the promise of heaven, he feels he himself would turn to harmful actions. This could be a silent adherence to the second part in the quote you mentioned where the fool has said in his heart there is no god, where atheists can do no good. Or it might be something more inherently pathological, but either way it is demonstrably false.
    It's true to state that someone might not be adequately served by the Golden Rule, given they might have different preferences than you, and it's also true to state that children can be better taught through the Golden Rule than through threats or bribes. I don't think children generally have the maturity to understand not only the consequences of their actions as it would relate to them, but also to understand this in relation to others whose preferences they don't know, so your original comparison was an excellent one (in my opinion), while leaving just enough wriggle room for apologists to make an issue of it when related to the inadequacy of the Golden Rule in a complex social environment. As you mentioned, this is a complex issue that will have complex answers.
    I think it's necessary to have rule of law, or the threat of punishment, along with the understanding of the consequences of actions in relation to others. A combination seems to be the only viable answer at this point. Some people will be swayed by understanding morality as it relates to them and others, and some will require the stick and carrot. However, I agree wholeheartedly that if you're discussing morality, then the only "moral" decision comes from consideration of consequences, not via avoidance of threat or attainment of reward.

  • @GodWorksOut
    @GodWorksOut 9 лет назад +15

    Almost all of your debates come down to morality lol
    Thanks for making this video and keep up the good work!

    • @CopalFreak
      @CopalFreak 9 лет назад +3

      Is it any wonder?
      "Morality" encompasses a large fuzzy, vague, and general concept that MUST be
      skipped-over, cherry-picked, and individually-customized by theists just so they can accept their own doctrines.
      If they, as individual humans, believe it's morally wrong to take a life for any reason, but their primary doctrine talks about rules saying they are/were required to kill somebody if they see them working on a Sunday, they have to be able to explain that...not just to those who ask questions about it, or call them out on it, but also to themselves.
      In a way, 'morality' (of the self, of which being 'honest' is a quality) is what it all boils down to anyway.
      If theists truly accepted the generally accepted and followed a set of basic 'morality' rules set forth by their own societies (don't lie, cheat, steal, etc), they could not follow their own doctrines and be honest at the same time.
      To do so, they would have to be completely honest, and that would not allow them to have the financial, political, and social clout they enjoy now because most of the things they have to say or do to gain or keep those things require that they deceive, steal from, or kill others (if not directly, then in some round-about way that also breaks a firm set of morality rules).
      Just my thoughts on it.

    • @BaalBuster
      @BaalBuster 9 лет назад +4

      And thank goodness he does. High time we took back our morality from religion.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +CopalFreak There many kind of theist. I see millions of believers in the world and I do not see them not accepting the rules democratically imposed by society. A different thing is that they have to agree with everything that the majority of the people decides. They do not have to do that, and you do not have to do that either.
      Christians societies have evolved all of them into democracies. Those societies that are oficially atheist are the ones in which the values of freedom have been more damages.And with this I am not saying that you are an enemy of freedom.

    • @CopalFreak
      @CopalFreak 8 лет назад

      +Juan Llorente
      Theism is an enemy of freedom.
      It requires the placation of a deity in order to gain personal reward, has the threat of punishment for non-compliance, and uses group enforced peer-pressure and fear-mongering to impose it. That is not freedom, that is coercion.
      Christianity is not democratic..a god demands that you follow his rules, or else...even if you don't agree with them because they are immoral. Religious people make excuses for many of the rules they are supposed to follow but don't.
      They do not specifically have to agree with everything that the majority of people decide, they just have to agree with the doctrine of whatever particular sect of religion they are involved in. That said, if they don't like it, they can just leave that church and find another (most of the time...there are several exceptions in which they cannot leave without threat of serious consequences such as being ostracized or killed).
      There are no 'officially atheist' societies that I am aware of.
      If you are referring to 'officially atheist groups' or organizations that exists in the United States, what damages are you talking about?
      Those 'officially atheist' groups are trying to PROTECT freedom for the majority, by not forcing ALL children in public school to say religion-specific prayers, so that it's fair to those that are not a part of that specific religion and those that are not religious; thereby respecting the rights of ALL people in the fairest way possible.
      Despite the constitutional laws in the U.S. that clearly say that publicly funded schools cannot endorse or espouse any specific religion, Christians keep insisting they have the right to force their religion onto everybody.
      Those 'officially atheist' groups are trying to ensure that women have the same rights as men, and that the arbitrary rules of invisible and immoral deities do not govern our societies and impose rules that are damaging to societies as a whole.
      Rules and laws that prevent people from harassing, torturing, or killing others because of their difference in religion, gender, skin color, nationality, or sexual orientation.
      Laws are in place (in most countries) to prevent these things, but religious people are the majority that are breaking those laws, and they are doing so specifically in the name of their religion.
      It is only very recent in U.S. history that people of the same gender can get married, and it was not too long ago when there were rules in place that prevented people of different skin color from being married. Those rules were put into place because of RELIGION.
      Those 'officially atheist' organizations are trying to do more good for the RIGHT reasons, as opposed to religious organizations who only do what their perceive as 'good' when it falls within their particular realm of morality and rule-sets. ( e.g. they only help other people for personal gain (karma, soul-saving, social acceptance, etc), or they will help one group of people, but not another...like a Christian group typically would not publicly donate time and money to an outwardly atheistic or Muslim cause, even if the cause itself is the most important, unless it specifically empowered their group in some way. (political for instance).
      Religions are in no way, democratic. Individuals do not get to 'vote' on which rules in their holy book they follow and which ones they don't...some choose to override the legal laws in their area because of their religion (killing people because of they are a different religion..even though it is against the law, they feel their deity gives them the right to do so).

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      Theism evolve in way in which societyies that were overewhelmingly christians became democracies. Along with comunism came atheism and were atheism has become official there is nothing but authoritarian criminal states that has destroyed anything that has to do with freedom. Stop living in the past and focus more in the recent history of humanity.
      Believers do not try to impose anything. Atheist do.

  • @steveneaton9611
    @steveneaton9611 9 лет назад +84

    Thank you again, Matt. Now I know the right counter arguments to use in the break room at work. My girlfriend was a Jehovah's Witness when we first met, had been her whole life. Was completely devoted. She met me we started watching some Matt Dillahunty Atheist Experience and Aron Ra. Now she thinks all religion and Gods are laughable. Couldn't have done it without you guys. I think anybody could be converted if they just had an atheist friend that sat down with them and watch RUclips. By sitting down and watching and letting the geniuses speak for you, you can be sure to not get your facts wrong and you can be sure that any argument the person you're watching these videos with can be addressed with a small amount of patience and friendship. You will at the very least, plant the seeds of admitting agnosticism.

    • @steveneaton9611
      @steveneaton9611 9 лет назад +10

      And when I said converted there, I meant to say de-converted.

    • @tkvsevolod
      @tkvsevolod 9 лет назад +12

      Wow dude great job of de-converting her out of that cult. You're lucky she would even consider thinkin differently. Most jws would just completely ignore videos like this, or say it's from the devil or something of that sort. Completely brainwashed people who can't think for themselves.

    • @gendergoo1312
      @gendergoo1312 9 лет назад +4

      Very cool story.
      I think probably the most important factor is having an atheist friend to watch videos with. If someone is left to themselves to challenge their faith, they'll likely get uncomfortable and scared about what it means to abandon their faith, and just turn right back to it. Having someone there to meet them at their de-conversion shows they aren't alone. All atheists need to know that they're not alone.

    • @andrewtall2047
      @andrewtall2047 9 лет назад +1

      ***** It is a sad fact that many people tend to be open to believe only what people around them profess to believe, and that the truly deconvert people you frequently need to make sure that they are proximate to deconverted people - it is exactly the reason why so many cults ban contact with non-believers and encourage shunning of those who leave the cult.

    • @gendergoo1312
      @gendergoo1312 9 лет назад +4

      Andrew Tall It is sad. I guess I should add to that, that de-conversion will only "stick" if the people that de-convert, do so of their own volition, after reviewing the facts. Someone conned into atheism will be conned right back into religion.
      I've come across a couple arguments in my repertoire that have been proven faulty and so I've abandoned them. If I'm going to assist in someone's de-conversion, I want it to be with an intellectually honest discussion.

  • @TheDevian
    @TheDevian 7 лет назад +27

    I am fond of the Asian version of the 'golden rule', "Do not do to others, what you do not want done to yourself."

    • @a.brekkan4965
      @a.brekkan4965 3 года назад

      Why on earth do you favor this quintessentially Christian value?

    • @TheDevian
      @TheDevian 3 года назад +4

      @@a.brekkan4965 Just because they stole it, doesn't make it theirs.

    • @Diamondraw4Real
      @Diamondraw4Real 3 года назад

      Want for your brother what you want for yourself. Also, don't be greedy for what others have. Like the Bible says, "don't covet your neighbour's wife"?

    • @TheDevian
      @TheDevian 3 года назад +2

      @@Diamondraw4Real What if she wants to be coveted? What if he is into that? What if he dies? What if you just find someone similar?
      Besides, there is nothing wrong with coveting, we all want things, the problem is how some people go about getting them. As long as you are not stepping on anyone else's toes, I don't see a problem.

    • @a.brekkan4965
      @a.brekkan4965 3 года назад

      @@TheDevian Of course, it is theirs, It has been theirs since the beginning of their religion. Also, if you accuse Christianity of stealing it, you must prove the theft. Can you?
      As a rule, human civilizations borrow from and copy one another. To call it theft is utterly adolescent. You, according to your own understanding, steals The Golden Rule from the Asians. That makes you as much of a thief as you accuse Christianity of being.
      Anyway, if you were to reject this as BS, you would be standing further away from Christianity (and other religions). Don`t you want to do that?

  • @soupalex
    @soupalex 9 лет назад +7

    TIL: Matt Dillahunty has the power of instantaneous teleportation. Hail Matt!

  • @mitchfindergeneral
    @mitchfindergeneral 9 лет назад +22

    Beard is looking dope as fuck.

    • @GrifMoNeY
      @GrifMoNeY 9 лет назад +1

      "Come, then, Epictetus, shave yourself."
      *"If I am a philosopher, I will not shave myself."*
      "But I will take off your head?"
      *"If that will do you any good, take it off."*

    • @Calyptico
      @Calyptico 9 лет назад

      GrifMoNeY The context in that dialogue is extremely important. It's not about the beard per se.
      www.sacred-texts.com/phi/epi/disc.txt

    • @5tonyvvvv
      @5tonyvvvv 9 лет назад

      Abiogenesis has no evidence! Scientists have created enzymes and RNA . But it took teams of researchers working hard and the use of supercomputers and designed sequencing machines! To do it!!! This shows obvious DESIGN, not abiogenesis: which is life arising on its own from strictly naturalistic processes, and without intelligent direction.
      Its not from 'scratch,' but based heavily on design concepts already found in living cells! This is different from abiogenesis and has no bearing on it because the life they are trying to create would be Designed. It DID NOT FORM BY CHANCE CHEMICAL PROCESSES!!

    • @GrifMoNeY
      @GrifMoNeY 9 лет назад +4

      5tonyvvvv Complexity does not imply design. Isn't it strange that when we're trying to understand this complex universe, we ignore the possibility that God Himself is likely in a far more complex meta-universe? What if God was designed by transdimensional thought entities?

    • @mitchfindergeneral
      @mitchfindergeneral 9 лет назад +9

      My comment about his beard still stands. Fuck you guys.

  • @samsendar5155
    @samsendar5155 3 года назад +7

    A lot of Christian "morality" is nothing but PRUDISM anyway, which I think people can really DO WITHOUT.

  • @thehaloofthesun
    @thehaloofthesun 4 года назад +2

    This is one of the best videos on youtube. Maybe even top 10.

  • @billkeon880
    @billkeon880 8 лет назад +6

    One objection to the claim that we teach children everything about morals. All the recent work by psychology (as popularized by Steven Pinker) says that we are not blank slates and have a great deal of genetic predeterminants for intelligence, behaviours, moral dispositions etc. Animal biological studies also show innate tendencies for cooperation, reciprocity, shame, shunning - a primordial grounding for human moral behavior. Morality seems to have a evolutionary basis and in that way starts as a kernel of objectivity. It is also tempered by rational decision-making to flesh-out these questions, but the genetic grounding seems to be solid.

    • @whittfamily1
      @whittfamily1 7 лет назад +1

      I agree with you. I think Matt emphasizes nurture over nature too much. Both interact to produce the morality of a person.

    • @drg8687
      @drg8687 5 лет назад

      You also see tiger mom smacking the cub when it acts like an asshat. I’m guessing you never saw lord of the flies?

  • @DRayL_
    @DRayL_ 9 лет назад

    Very cool backdrop for this well constructed and insightful video, Mr. Dillahunty.

  • @aquamarinebarbie
    @aquamarinebarbie Год назад +3

    Matt, you are a good man.

  • @Mariomario-gt4oy
    @Mariomario-gt4oy 9 лет назад +2

    Great video. Keep them coming!

  • @IOverlord
    @IOverlord Год назад +4

    "Secular morality resulted to the Holocaust"
    *glances at the Old Testament carnage and immorality

    • @kelliepatrick519
      @kelliepatrick519 Год назад

      Point out that Nazis were Christians. Then they'll argue that Hitler wasn't a Christian. Then point out it doesn't matter because...The Nazis and the German people were Christians who either committed the atrocities or allowed it to happen.

    • @joe5959
      @joe5959 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@kelliepatrick519Hey remember that time when atheist regimes threw sticks of dynamite in churches, murdered and persecuted Christians within the last century? I sure do.

  • @germanshepherd2701
    @germanshepherd2701 6 лет назад +2

    Sometimes you sound just like Jeff Goldblum and I love it. It’s a subtle cadence that you carry when you speak, it’s not all the time (in fact it usually just comes out with little inflections and pronunciations and how long you say a word, just aspects of your overall speech), but it’s awesome lol
    Makes listening to you even better than it already is.

  • @douglasschnabel4480
    @douglasschnabel4480 2 года назад +4

    So many advances in morality and ethics, like vastly improving the treatment of women and getting rid of slavery, have occurred in spite of religious teaching and not because of it. Secular morality is not perfect, but it is responsive to changes in culture and understanding and gives us a change to progress beyond bronze-age thinking.

  • @stoicsquirrel
    @stoicsquirrel 8 лет назад +2

    In case anyone is wondering, parts of the movie Predators was filmed at Pedernales Falls (where this video was shot).

  • @dillondecal
    @dillondecal 6 лет назад +16

    Matt Dillahunty is philosophically the most rational person on the planet. I agree on every topic and argument he presents. I’ve never had someone I wanted to be like throughout my life but you would be the first! You aren’t the atheist they wanted, you are the atheist we needed!

  • @crazycrimess
    @crazycrimess 4 года назад

    I Love These Segment Formats Matt Thanks Soooooo Much Your My Hero I Have Madd Respect For You

  • @whittfamily1
    @whittfamily1 7 лет назад +3

    Thanks Matt for a nice overview of morality. I mostly agree with you. I think you should develop your ideas in this area further. Who should decide correct morality? How should they decide? Is objectivity of morality an all-or-nothing phenomenon or does it fall on a continuum? More thought and research is needed in this area.

  • @frank95xxx
    @frank95xxx 3 года назад +2

    The only bad thing about this video is that I can't give it more than one like.

  • @LeoWhalen1933
    @LeoWhalen1933 5 лет назад +3

    I love these videos and being able to read all the comments. Its like my own little rational community.

  • @whatevs4531
    @whatevs4531 8 месяцев назад

    Matt. You once said in a video and I quote. "I get my morality from the careful consideration of my actions. I get my morality from an understanding of reality not an assertion of authority" and then you kept going but I can't remember what you said or which video you said it but I love that explanation

  • @Kee2Oz
    @Kee2Oz 9 лет назад +24

    If I were God, I would be disgusted by people who do good things just to kiss my ass. I would look much more favorably on people who don't believe in me and do good things for the purpose of helping others without a reward in mind.

    • @chadfleming3590
      @chadfleming3590 7 лет назад +2

      Chris AA well said. I held a supervisor position at work and some of the help would try hard to kiss my ass and it was so annoying

  • @makeupyourmind2019
    @makeupyourmind2019 9 лет назад

    I'm really enjoying this video so far.

  • @kevrocks01
    @kevrocks01 9 лет назад +9

    I am a social worker and one day a suicidal caller called in. I got the call and thankfully so, because I had to send the police out to take her to the hospital, thereby saving her life. The caller mentioned she had talked to one of my co-workers, (a devout christian). I confronted my co-worker and she said, "it's not my day to take calls". She blindly transferred the call and it went to another of my co-workers voice mail. Did jesus say it wasn't his day to heal people? So the christian couldn't be bothered and the Atheist saved the callers life. So who has moral/ethics and who doesn't? Try and defend this persons behavior, because you can't. Further, my co-worker stopped talking to me because I reported her to management. Wouldn't a good christian have realized their mistake and gone to their brother to seek forgiveness? Matthew 18:15 - Moreover if thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother.

    • @kevrocks01
      @kevrocks01 9 лет назад +7

      What exactly is a real christian? I've heard so many times that other christians aren't real christians. Having a bad day, are you serious??? Someone almost died and called this lady for help but has to wonder if she's having a bad day. I swear, the christian bullshit just never stops flying.

    • @kevrocks01
      @kevrocks01 9 лет назад +1

      Thank you and I wish you well

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 9 лет назад +2

      +BiggerThanHeidi
      Some of those features are terrible and others are irrelevant. You're ignoring the vast majority of the bible and apparently living in a bubble. If that you're definition, then there's no such thing as a "real christian."

    • @rtek5
      @rtek5 9 лет назад

      +BiggerThanHeidi I think I can accept what you say to a point. I had a coworker that said he was a Christian and went to church semi-regularly. He was often cantankerous, cussed liked a sailor and even hinted once he approved of what happened to MLK.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +Kevin Kurtz Believing doesn't make you good, and being a good doesn't mean that you are always right

  • @DaffyDilLollyPop
    @DaffyDilLollyPop 8 лет назад

    Thank you so much for this video! I've subscribed and look forward to more.

  • @carolinajimenezgarcia9166
    @carolinajimenezgarcia9166 8 лет назад +4

    This is gold :) Thanks Matt.

  • @Smiling_Tears
    @Smiling_Tears 9 лет назад

    This is very good. Although I've heard many of the topics discussed before, there were new twists that provided deeper insights into the Gordian's knot that is religion.

  • @titusgray4598
    @titusgray4598 4 года назад

    Matt, you really picked some distracting backgrounds. I kept zoning out (despite my interest) and had to rewind and listen again because I was looking at the contour of the ground. It's not your fault, I'm hopelessly ADHD, but I thought you'd appreciate that I got at least an hour of fun out of a 30 minute video.
    Edit: also, thanks for the content, it's helped quite a lot with pinning down my own thoughts on morality and helping deepen and enrich my discussions/debates with theists about morality. Which I suppose was your goal, so thanks!

  • @slackjaw703
    @slackjaw703 9 лет назад +4

    It never ceases to amaze me that people can't see our morality evolve over time. We have greatly improved over the centuries, and hopefully will continue to improve as we grow and evolve. The only thing that can stop us is religion.

    • @slackjaw703
      @slackjaw703 3 года назад

      @BruderShaft1
      Source? Because you’re wrong. The exact opposite is the case. As a matter of fact, this is the very best time to have lived upon this earth as a human. People always seem to believe the opposite is the case, having not lived in the times they’re glamorizing, or even looking back at past years they did live in with rose colored glasses. When you look at the empirical facts, we are indeed living in the golden age for humans. That said, our morality keeps improving, as does out medicine, policing, living standard, availability of food & clean water, job safety, etc, etc, etc., so in one hundred years we should be much better than today.

    • @slackjaw703
      @slackjaw703 3 года назад

      @BruderShaft1
      Really? Name a single time in history when we have had devastating wars & genocides, brutal dictators, racist, misogynist, homophobic, ignorant leaders (like Trump) & horrific forms of government. I’ll wait. After that, you should really do a little investigating as to what time period has been the very best time period go be alive as a human, ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. You have to look no further than the population explosion to understand that many more people are living as compared to dying than during any other time in our past. Thanks to advances in science, medicine, some forms of government & morality overall, we are thriving as a species. We still have so far to go, but we are farther along now than we’ve EVER been before.

  • @hardheadjarhead
    @hardheadjarhead 4 года назад +1

    “Do unto others as they would have you do to them” could lead to a person to being taken advantage of. The Golden Rule can’t be boiled down to a simple sentence.

  • @richardblais5232
    @richardblais5232 8 лет назад +8

    Where do I get my morals from ? I don't have any ... I make judgements based on my conscience, but morals are man-invented rules that no one agrees on - just like God.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад +1

      +Lionel Richards Actually we agree on many things. There are many laws that regulate moral issues that believers and not believers agree to be right.

    • @C3l3bi1
      @C3l3bi1 7 лет назад

      Juan Llorente some agree on others dont depends in the society you live in

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 7 лет назад

      Depend the society in which you live and also depends of what you believe. My point is that if someone religious, based on his morals reach to the conclusion that death penalty is bad. Nobody would say that the argument of that person is not rational because is based on religious beliefs.

    • @C3l3bi1
      @C3l3bi1 7 лет назад

      Juan Llorente agree

    • @richardblais5232
      @richardblais5232 7 лет назад

      Your point is insane ... ANY conclusion that is based on ANY religious belief is irrational ... you cannot make decisions based on non-existant mythological beings and expect to be rational ...

  • @MrRhomas913
    @MrRhomas913 6 лет назад +2

    Bottom line: why do I care about someone else at all? In the end, I want to thrive and if I can do something that will get me ahead, I will do it. I want to maximize my well being. For example, a coworker develops a useful spreadsheet; I take it and re-brand it as my own work and submit it up the food chain and get recognition. I advanced my well being despite doing what most would think is immoral.

    • @friedfrog5447
      @friedfrog5447 4 года назад

      Matt would probably say you still did something wrong

    • @MrRhomas913
      @MrRhomas913 4 года назад

      @@friedfrog5447 - I think you hit the nail on the head. We can all say that what I did was wrong...but what is the foundation of saying that it is objectively wrong? If morality is determined by the majority then we could have a society that is morally wrong about something from an outsider's perspective but held as moral by the majority of the society. e.g. the majority of the population of the Aztec kingdom could feel that it is morally right to sacrifice people to their Gods while the nearby Teotihuacan society may consider it immoral. Dillahunty seems to be saying that a moral system is "objective" if we define goal(s) and then strive to reach those goal(s) through setting rules. The problem is that the goals are set by the majority and they can change. I would use the word "objective" to mean universal and eternal and I am in more in line with Hitchens where we are hard-wired to be moral - that is that man is basically good - which puts me in a quandary since it conflicts with Dawkins (selfish Gene) and Darwin (Survival of the Fittest) and puts me in cahoots with Christians (who believe God is love, God created man, therefore man is good; and their moral law is love your neighbor as yourself).

    • @friedfrog5447
      @friedfrog5447 4 года назад

      @@MrRhomas913
      *Dillahunty seems to be saying that a moral system is "objective" if we define goal(s) and then strive to reach those goal(s) through setting rules.*
      Exactly. And someone else could have their own goal or come to different conclusion while having the same well-being goal. Matt comes off as arrogant a lot of the time. And as usual, the instant knee-jerk reaction from so many atheists is just to attack and be condescending to anyone who disagrees with them.

    • @NelemNaru
      @NelemNaru 3 года назад

      > _For example, a coworker develops a useful spreadsheet; I take it and re-brand it as my own work and submit it up the food chain and get recognition. I advanced my well being despite doing what most would think is immoral._
      How would you feel about coworkers taking your work and rebranding as their own? Probably not very good. If you don't want to live in that kind of society, then the moral thing is to not contribute to that kind of society. Simple. Because you live in a society, your actions affect others and their actions affect you. This was explained in the video. Your example of well-being was shortsighted.

    • @NelemNaru
      @NelemNaru 3 года назад

      @@MrRhomas913 > _We can all say that what I did was wrong...but what is the foundation of saying that it is objectively wrong?_
      If we agree that well-being is the goal, then we can objectively observe actions and their consequences, and make conclusions about whether it benefits well-being or not. If well-being is not your goal and you want to go around killing people, then you would not be welcome to participate in a society that cares about well-being. A society that doesn't care about well-being will not survive. Well-being can be debated, and there is always a tension between individual and collective well-being in doing so. Sacrificing people is objectively not conducive to their well-being, even if the majority is mistakenly convinced their own well-being will be increased by influencing the gods. It has been shown that killing innocents who could grow up and contribute to society is not overall beneficial. There is always room for improvement, which is why morality is not absolute. "Objective" does not mean universal and eternal, "absolute" does. The goal itself is subjective, but once we agree on a goal, we can make objective comparisons according to different contexts.

  • @justinboggin9086
    @justinboggin9086 9 лет назад +6

    There is an aspect of the apologist argument that if morality is subjective or made by man then it isn't good enough, wrong, etc. It strikes me as anti-humanity. We aren't good enough to decide for ourselves what is right or wrong. We cannot make a functioning society without being told how.
    I personally reject the premise entirely. Anti-humanity is not a worthy starting position for any kind of constructive decision making.

    • @nitehawk86
      @nitehawk86 9 лет назад

      I agree, this is the same line of reasoning that leads to "morality is whatever god says it is". I believe Matt has asked the question, "If God says it was moral to do X, would you do it." The answer is always "Yes". Even when X = murder, rape, etc.
      If reason cannot reach a person like that, I suppose nothing can.

    • @robertmiller9735
      @robertmiller9735 9 лет назад

      Hardly surprising. Christianity is inherently anti-human.

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 9 лет назад

      Loads of apologists love to espouse the canard that "subjective" and "meaningless" are synonyms. It would take more than a few blows to the head from a baseball bat to make me believe such obvious garbage.

    • @leechesinmybreeches29
      @leechesinmybreeches29 9 лет назад

      Ever heard of empathy?

    • @leechesinmybreeches29
      @leechesinmybreeches29 9 лет назад

      Oners82 Yes why?

  • @MangledMarionettes
    @MangledMarionettes 9 лет назад

    I've been waiting for this particular topic for a while, excited to see it's being addressed here.

  • @JohnCrawley1
    @JohnCrawley1 9 лет назад +3

    Awesome video

  • @TheIbanezerScrooge
    @TheIbanezerScrooge 9 лет назад

    Great video, Matt! Where was this filmed? That location looks beautiful. It'd be cool if you'd include the location in the video description when you do these outdoors.

  • @Arkloyd
    @Arkloyd 9 лет назад +21

    Next time I get the morality argument I'll be asking if the ten commandments are an example of god's absolute morality.
    Then I would ask which set of ten commandments, since we all know there's two.
    Then I would ask if 'Thou Shalt Not Kill' is an example of this absolute morality.
    Once they say 'Yes' I'll ask them if there's any situation that might occur that would be right to kill another person.
    IE: Self Defense.
    More likely than not theists will miss the point of this, or they'll cut me off once they see where I'm going.

    • @cornbreadatheist2137
      @cornbreadatheist2137 9 лет назад

      Hey, as you can tell by the name, I'm an atheist too. I'm sorry to say I've never heard about the two sets. Would you elaborate, please?

    • @Arkloyd
      @Arkloyd 9 лет назад

      Cornbread Atheist We have the set that's always quoted in American courthouses, then we have the set that's actually labeled the Ten Commandments:
      *Exodus 34;14-28* _King James Version_ (KJV)
      *14* _For thou shalt worship no other god: for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God:_
      *15* _Lest thou make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land, and they go a whoring after their gods, and do sacrifice unto their gods, and one call thee, and thou eat of his sacrifice;_
      *16* _And thou take of their daughters unto thy sons, and their daughters go a whoring after their gods, and make thy sons go a whoring after their gods._
      *17* _Thou shalt make thee no molten gods._
      *18* _The feast of unleavened bread shalt thou keep. Seven days thou shalt eat unleavened bread, as I commanded thee, in the time of the month Abib: for in the month Abib thou camest out from Egypt._
      *19* _All that openeth the matrix is mine; and every firstling among thy cattle, whether ox or sheep, that is male._
      *20* _But the firstling of an ass thou shalt redeem with a lamb: and if thou redeem him not, then shalt thou break his neck. All the firstborn of thy sons thou shalt redeem. And none shall appear before me empty._
      *21* _Six days thou shalt work, but on the seventh day thou shalt rest: in earing time and in harvest thou shalt rest._
      *22* _And thou shalt observe the feast of weeks, of the firstfruits of wheat harvest, and the feast of ingathering at the year's end._
      *23* _Thrice in the year shall all your menchildren appear before the Lord God, the God of Israel._
      *24* _For I will cast out the nations before thee, and enlarge thy borders: neither shall any man desire thy land, when thou shalt go up to appear before the Lord thy God thrice in the year._
      *25* _Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leaven; neither shall the sacrifice of the feast of the passover be left unto the morning._
      *26* _The first of the firstfruits of thy land thou shalt bring unto the house of the Lord thy God. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother's milk_.
      *27* _And the Lord said unto Moses, Write thou these words: for after the tenor of these words I have made a covenant with thee and with Israel._
      *28* _And he was there with the Lord forty days and forty nights; he did neither eat bread, nor drink water. And he wrote upon the tables the words of the covenant, the_ *ten commandments.*

    • @therealjammit
      @therealjammit 9 лет назад

      Cornbread Atheist
      The Decalogue, aka the Ten Commandments
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ten_Commandments
      The Wikipedia page is rather complete on this.

    • @cornbreadatheist2137
      @cornbreadatheist2137 9 лет назад

      Xyander Thank you so much for the reply. I'm a little fuzzy on what those 10 commandments mean. I read them, but it was very dense. Lots of admonitions, and I guess I was expecting the old "thou shalt" type of commandments.

    • @cornbreadatheist2137
      @cornbreadatheist2137 9 лет назад

      Jammit Timmaj Thank you. You are rifht, it is very thorough. Both you and Xyander have been a lot of help. It's appreciated!

  • @5driedgrams
    @5driedgrams 3 года назад

    Great video. Never gets old.

  • @hansombrother1
    @hansombrother1 5 лет назад +3

    Unfortunately, as an atheist, the subject of morality becomes an unnecessary over - complicated intellectual exercise, when actually the perfect moral precepts have been given to us by all the great saints and sages many thousands of years ago, simply “Do onto others as you would have them do unto you”. Your secular morality amounts to re-inventing the wheel.

  • @theatheistpaladin
    @theatheistpaladin 9 лет назад

    That is a perfect opening title. I couldn't help but laugh.

  • @potatoesislife6365
    @potatoesislife6365 8 лет назад +6

    Great video Matt, I've found that many theist I debate retort like a child and force us to constantly define what a moral is even though they accept the definition I lay out. They are obsessed with subjective opinion verses reality.
    I try to tell them how we can make comparisons of different worlds where the difference between one world is an action is deemed moral or immoral. We can plug in the information about who is affected by these actions and what the effects are then compare the models to see which one provides the better universe to live in. This is a way that we can determine our morals in terms of our definition we agreed on.
    But that often doesn't work because they just claim I must have some sort of external anchor point. They can't explain why except for saying that my opinion would be subjective. It can be frustrating.

  • @drg8687
    @drg8687 5 лет назад +1

    Don’t worry Matt, I was looking out for the mountain lions.

  • @pumpuppthevolume
    @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад +16

    where do u get your morality if not from god
    my answer
    where do u get your morality if not from Zeus

    • @pumpuppthevolume
      @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад

      ***** moral is just the word we use for someone who is promoting well being

    • @pumpuppthevolume
      @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад

      ***** well yeah it's not always as clear cut as math......ant yet it's completely clear that cutting a kid's legs off is harmful and giving the kid food is the opposite of harmful.....and even a psychopath can recognise this even if they might not be compelled to promote well being......and if someone can't recognize that cutting someone's legs off for no reason and against their will as harmful ....they r completely detached from the human experience

    • @pumpuppthevolume
      @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад

      ***** like I said psychopaths can distinguish between harm and well being..........I am saying that if someone actually thinks that removing a kid's legs is actually not harmful .....they completely lack an understanding of what harmful means or anything else probably
      and all that is necessary for someone to understand what harm is ....is just having a barely functioning cognition

    • @pumpuppthevolume
      @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад

      ***** so examples r not evidence ...... XD
      what I am talking about is ...harm.....it's an actual thing no matter how we struggle to define it and no matter how it evolves and it depends no a thousand factors ....there r actions that r in fact harmful and those that r the opposite of that ....and moral and immoral r just different words for that

    • @pumpuppthevolume
      @pumpuppthevolume 9 лет назад

      ***** haha no evidence that harm is immoral ....like I said what I mean by immoral is literary smth that is harmful .....u can even forget that word because u already have a better non convoluted hijacked word....harm
      ......and like I said it can depend on social constructs and whatever and yet there is such a thing just like our understanding of some phenomenon can depend on all sort of stuff.....there is in fact a thing like removing a kid's legs for no reason against his will ...which is harmful ....and it cannot be called anything else....because it is only limiting the kid and it is not providing any benefit

  • @macgrunt8598
    @macgrunt8598 9 лет назад +1

    great product placement matt.

  • @baburali8230
    @baburali8230 6 лет назад +4

    Please debate Subhoor Ahmad on evolution, he needs to be educated.

    • @Sammie551
      @Sammie551 3 года назад +1

      Suited for Aron Ra

  • @kizzume
    @kizzume 9 лет назад

    Great subject!
    Your goatee looks great, really really nice, woof (yeah, I know you're straight [or at least I thought you were], but oh well), I hope you keep that. Sorry for not commenting on the actual subject *yet*. I'm glad Mangled Marionettes commented on it and I saw it on my G+ feed; I didn't know you had a separate channel.

  • @coreybray9834
    @coreybray9834 3 года назад +3

    Matt claims that reality should be the arbitor of right and wrong. Unfortunately, it was reality that gave rise to the mechanism of natural selection that empowered and exalted the fittest members of species to be able to leverage their survival advantages to opportunistically exploit and harm others. So, if reality is the cause driving carnage and harm at such a grandscale throughout the duration of the existence of species on this planet,then exactly what are we supposed to conclude about the moral guidance that reality is providing there if not that it is perfectly okay to harm others as reality has arbitrated in line with Matt’s initial claim?

    • @Ansatz66
      @Ansatz66 3 года назад

      Reality is not a person giving advice, and reality doesn't want us to do this or that. Reality is more like a box that we're trapped in, constraining our actions. Reality dictates what we can and cannot do, and reality determines the results of our choices. If we're trying to make the world better, reality dictates what we must do in order to make that happen. That is how reality is the arbiter of right and wrong.

    • @coreybray9834
      @coreybray9834 3 года назад

      @@Ansatz66
      Ansatz: Reality is not a person giving advice,
      I don’t know that such a characterization of reality is accurate, seeing that at least a portion of reality contains people giving advice. Or, do you imagine such individuals to exist outside of the broader scope of reality?
      Ansatz: and reality doesn't want us to do this or that.
      That may be true as concerns the nonliving portions of our reality, but may not be so true as concerns the living portions of our reality.
      Ansatz: Reality is more like a box that we're trapped in, constraining our actions.
      I suppose it is convenient to view it that way.
      Ansatz: Reality dictates what we can and cannot do,
      That seems reasonable, to the extent that all that we actually manage to do exists as a part of reality.
      Ansatz: and reality determines the results of our choices.
      Or, at least, it leaves a space for such choices to be carried out, assuming we are not victims of fate.
      Ansatz: If we're trying to make the world better, reality dictates what we must do in order to make that happen.
      I think the problem with the above point is the word “better”! Which is better, vanilla, chocolate, or strawberry ice cream? This concept of “better” is often little more than a matter of personal taste and too subjective in scope to identify any kind of genuinely realistic goal for the state our world should be striving for which is why logicians tend to remove it outside the domain of factual inquiry.
      Ansatz: That is how reality is the arbiter of right and wrong.
      But, it doesn’t really explain what is right or wrong about reality in any moral sense-especially if one employs a rather Naturalistic world view. It merely tells us what is the case under the present state of conditions governing the scenario being played out. I believe it was here that Sir Richard Dawkins kind of painted a rather dystopian view of existence in that he felt there is no right or wrong or justice in nature and people are going to get hurt and you won’t find any real rhyme or reason for it. Instead of morality, Naturalism simply employs mechanisms like natural selection, adaptation and so on to determine if you are fit to survive or not. Why a natural atheist would ever see a need for ethics, morality or the right or wrong inherent in concepts like “good and evil” is only because such natural atheists are still desperately clinging to these guilt-based religious teachings they failed to dump at the door when accepting their Atheist club membership card. And so, that guilt keeps coming back to haunt them as they strive to find meaning in the heavily religious oriented notions of morality, ethics and the right and wrong of concepts like good and evil. It really makes one wonder why such folks left religion only to continue to hold so tightly to their deep seated religious beliefs as they pretend to be atheists when in reality they still have one foot firmly planted in their religious principles and upbringing.
      The primary goal of nature, as it applies to species, would be survival of the fittest. What would be a higher principle to appeal to than that for a natural atheist, and such a principle leads logically and ultimately to whatever opportunistic bent is required to maximize one’s own survival advantages.

    • @Ansatz66
      @Ansatz66 3 года назад

      @@coreybray9834 "Which is better, vanilla, chocolate, or strawberry ice cream?"
      Morality isn't about those sorts of preferences. Choosing the wrong flavor of ice cream is not immoral. When we speak of morality we're talking about things far more substantive than matters of taste. We're talking about the good of the world, about people's material prosperity, about the difference between war and peace, sickness and health, terror and security, life and death. This is not like vanilla and chocolate where some people like one and others like the other.
      "It was here that Sir Richard Dawkins kind of painted a rather dystopian view of existence in that he felt there is no right or wrong or justice in nature and people are going to get hurt and you won’t find any real rhyme or reason for it."
      Why call that dystopian? It sounds more like an unfortunate but inescapable fact about this world that we actually live in. It would be nice if we could improve the situation, but so far it's the world we find ourselves in.
      "Naturalism simply employs mechanisms like natural selection, adaptation and so on to determine if you are fit to survive or not."
      Isn't that something everyone agrees upon, not just naturalists? Animals live and die in the wild based upon their biological traits and their survival depends upon how well adapted they are to their environment. Regardless of what philosophy we subscribe to, we cannot escape reality.
      "Why a natural atheist would ever see a need for ethics, morality or the right or wrong inherent in concepts like 'good and evil' is only because such natural atheists are still desperately clinging to these guilt-based religious teachings they failed to dump at the door when accepting their Atheist club membership card."
      Many atheists have never been religious, and even people who have never been indoctrinated into any religion still concern themselves with morality. We all have to live in this world and so we all have reason to concern ourselves with the world's welfare. Aside from a few bizarre cases like serial killers, we all want to see other people thrive and prosper, regardless of what we believe about gods or the origin of the universe. It's not about guilt. It's about striving for a better world.
      "That guilt keeps coming back to haunt them as they strive to find meaning in the heavily religious oriented notions of morality, ethics and the right and wrong of concepts like good and evil."
      Why are good and evil religiously oriented notions? If we give food to a starving family, isn't this a worldly act that produces worldly benefit? We're talking about a physical transfer of material, and when their hunger is sated it is because material nutrients have entered their bodies. What part of this is religious?
      "It really makes one wonder why such folks left religion only to continue to hold so tightly to their deep seated religious beliefs as they pretend to be atheists when in reality they still have one foot firmly planted in their religious principles and upbringing."
      They left religion because they stopped believing that their religion was real. They faced the horrible realization that no one in their religion really knows what they are talking about, and it is all just stories being passed back and forth between them. Just like all those other religions, they discovered that their own religion had no better basis in fact, so even if it might be true, there's no good reason to believe it. Once they stop blindly trusting the words of preachers and scripture and take a look for themselves behind the curtain to see that there's nothing to be found but empty words, then there's no way to go back to blind trust no matter what they may think about morality.
      "The primary goal of nature, as it applies to species, would be survival of the fittest."
      Nature does not have goals. Nature is not a person.

    • @coreybray9834
      @coreybray9834 3 года назад

      @@Ansatz66
      @Corey Bray "Which is better, vanilla, chocolate, or strawberry ice cream?"
      Ansatz: Morality isn't about those sorts of preferences. Choosing the wrong flavor of ice cream is not immoral.
      Well, I was focusing more on your subjective use of “better”, such as in your phrase, “If we're trying to make the world better,…”, because when you ask people what is better, some like vanilla, others like chocolate and still others will like strawberry, because people have different subjective opinions as to what they like and dislike about varying flavors of ice cream when it comes to assessing which flavor they view as “better”, just as they have varying subjective opinions about what they like, dislike and want to change about our world and what they feel would constitute our world being “better”.
      Ansatz: When we speak of morality we're talking about things far more substantive than matters of taste
      Unfortunately, the problemnatural atheists often run up against is how to objectively establish a moral framework without falling prey to such subjective sentaments as preferences and tastes getting in the way. And that immediately raises the question of where a natural atheist should turn to get guideance in matters of moral clarity.
      Ansatz: We're talking about the good of the world,
      It’s not clear what possesses you to think the world would be good or evil either one or why such assignments would even matter in a model of natural atheism. Usually, atheists tend to harbor extreme skepticism over such ideas of “good and evil” carrying any real meaning or weight in such discussions, not to mention placing general skepticism over the entire domain of morality altogether for that matter. This again raises the critical question of where natural atheists turn for guidance in developing a moral framework.
      Ansatz: about people's material prosperity, about the difference between war and peace, sickness and health, terror and security, life and death. This is not like vanilla and chocolate where some people like one and others like the other.
      It is one thing to say it isn’t like choosing vanilla and chocolate, and another thing entirely to demonstrate that is actually the case, Ansatz. Just take the issue of people’s material prosperity. Some people believe that it is morally good to be blessed with material prosperity. Others think material prosperity is inherently morally corrupting of those who possess it. Still others hold no position on material prosperity being morally relevant at all. So, if we can reason isomorphically from here, some choose vanilla, others like chocolate, and still others like strawberry ice cream. And we find this being pretty much the case across the board when it comes to how people approach making moral assessments on most issues thought to belong to the moral domain. People simply have a tendency to gravitate towards their likes and preferences even when it comes to issues of morality. Just as people have a tendency to gravitate towards their likes and preferences when it comes to assessing what a “better world” looks like in their grand utopian view. Consequently, it is rather unclear why a natural atheist would think morality is even relevant in a model of natural atheism.
      Corey: "It was here that Sir Richard Dawkins kind of painted a rather dystopian view of existence in that he felt there is no right or wrong or justice in nature and people are going to get hurt and you won’t find any real rhyme or reason for it."
      Ansatz: Why call that dystopian?
      Because Dawkins characterized nature as being a cause for great suffering and without justice, so it isn’t far from a dystopian definition.
      Dystopian - relating to or denoting an imagined state or society where there is great suffering or injustice.
      Ansatz: It sounds more like an unfortunate but inescapable fact about this world that we actually live in.
      If you feel that the situation being “unfortunate” is a more appropriate characterization, then I don’t think that would take away anything substantive from the ideas Dawkins was setting forth as it concerns his personal views of nature. Whether his view constitutes a guarantee that the universe in which we exist, for which he makes his observations, is actually naturally occuring, however, would be a very different matter entirely. I do find Dawkins to be somewhat lazy in that regard, and suspect that he simply takes his belief that our universe is naturally occuring mostly on faith.
      Ansatz: It would be nice if we could improve the situation, but so far it's the world we find ourselves in.
      But, if the world we find ourselves in has no right, wrong or justice to speak of, as Dawkins suggests, then how would you get any kind of meaningful moral framework out of such a world view??? Even if we assume that the world in which we exist is natural, as Dawkins does, it would be ridiculous to imagine that an unaware, unintelligent system of nature would possess anything close to a moral compass, or for that matter a basis for a moral compass or have anything similar to impart in our general direction to support us in an attempt to develop any kind of moral framework: a framework whose relevance is again called into question by the very assessment of nature itself that Dawkins provides when he dismisses such a system as having no right, wrong or justice to speak of. Consequently, if morality exists, it doesn’t appear that such a system is a naturally occuring one, but is derived from other nonnatural principles and considerations instead.

    • @coreybray9834
      @coreybray9834 3 года назад

      @@Ansatz66
      Corey: "Naturalism simply employs mechanisms like natural selection, adaptation and so on to determine if you are fit to survive or not."
      Ansatz: Isn't that something everyone agrees upon, not just naturalists?
      No, because Christians, for example, believe that God can circumvent such considerations by way of the power to resurrect the dead and to grant eternal life to those deemed to be righteous (where the character of the individual is what God views as being the central trait that determines the fitness of those he chooses to survive versus those who he intends to show deserves to perish when it comes time to carry out the final executive judgment). They would also tend to view that the mechanism you think of as natural selection is really a designed mechanism within a system of mechanics that is not naturally occuring at all, but highly balanced and finely tuned for such optimization. Ideas like “nature” and the naturalism that eventually arose out of observations of mechanical mechanisms providing this optimization is not an idea born out of or even relevant to original Hebrew thought, but appears to have arisen many centuries after the writing of Biblical Torah among the 6th century BC. presacratic Greek philosophers, dating back to at least the time of Anaxamander or earlier--along with such ideas as “spontaneous Generation”: a form of Abiogenesis that was debunked by scientists like Redi, Spallanzani and Pasteur and which reoriented science to the more biogenesis centric view of the law of Biogenesis as the dominating model for why life exists in our universe.
      Ansatz: Animals live and die in the wild based upon their biological traits and their survival depends upon how well adapted they are to their environment.
      That would seem to be the case. One does not have to subscribe to naturalism to reach that conclusion though, because this conclusion has been reached by observation whether the mechanics driving such biological systems was naturally occuring or designed into place, either one.
      Ansatz: Regardless of what philosophy we subscribe to, we cannot escape reality.
      One would tend to think that is the case. The problem is that our grasp of reality and how it truly works may be extremely limited. This is constantly suggested by the fact that we keep discovering new things about our reality that we weren’t aware of before said discoveries were being made. Also, as was hinted at in Nova’s “The Elligant Universe” where Brian Green was trying to show a dog what a Ricci tensor was used for, our ability to grasp the essential truths underlying the reality in wich we exist at a high level may be even further limited simply by the limitations of our brain as many scientists often suspect.
      Corey: "Why a natural atheist would ever see a need for ethics, morality or the right or wrong inherent in concepts like 'good and evil' is only because such natural atheists are still desperately clinging to these guilt-based religious teachings they failed to dump at the door when accepting their Atheist club membership card."
      Ansatz: Many atheists have never been religious,
      I find such a claim to be rather dubious-especially among those atheists who claim a belief in “nature” which has been a central and potentially ancient belief inherent in many of the world’s religions long before it was adopted as a part of the modern atheist movement. In fact, I find that atheists start to get a little testy when you ask them to explain how they came to the conclusion that the universe they exist within is itself naturally occuring, because I suspect these individuals do not like to have their faith questioned-especially when they run around pretending that they are faithless, rational thinkers which is something so laughable it is absurd. If these folks ever actually took the time to look up the meaning of an axiom of logic and grasped how much assumptive faith underpins the entire rational domain of thought in the axiomic layer of reasoning, they would truly crap their pants to learn just how much faith they have been dependent upon and employing the entire time. And the other side of this problem is that people can be fully indoctrinated into religious ideas and beliefs without even realizing that is happening in their case. Just consider how much time is spent conditioning people from an early age to ideas like “nature” and “morality”. Most people don’t even pause to question it, let alone recognize how deeply such ideas pervade society and the particular cultural structures they are a part of to the point that the faith in which they invest in such ideas is deeply conditioned faith, not even faith they adopted by making well informed choices.

  • @capoman1
    @capoman1 9 лет назад

    Keep them coming Mr. Dillahunty.

  • @hasatantheadversary8873
    @hasatantheadversary8873 8 лет назад +6

    If anyone needs a book to tell them what's right and wrong then they don't know what morals are. Morals should be learned through living life. Like Matt says morals should come from reality and some being that first has not even been shown to be real and second is outside of our known shared reality. Most atheists I have met have really high moral standards. I know I do.

    • @hasatantheadversary8873
      @hasatantheadversary8873 7 лет назад +2

      finalfantasy8911 Because that would be intellectually dishonest. Not all of any group is going to be anything.

  • @Skute
    @Skute 9 лет назад

    Hey Matt ,
    Been watching/ listening to you for a long time. You've been very helpful of course. I was wondering ,however, why your patron account is per video instead of monthly. I wanted to support you but didn't want to have an unknown amount taken each month.

  • @gnagyusa
    @gnagyusa 9 лет назад +6

    Q: What do religions and vacuum cleaners have in common?
    A: They're both human inventions and they both *suck*.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +lnpilot Why ois impossible to debate with atheist without having lots of them being irrespectfull with other peoples ideas? Because athism always result in lack of tolerance to the others and limitations on freedom individuality.

    • @gnagyusa
      @gnagyusa 8 лет назад

      Juan Llorente Ok, what exactly do you believe and *why*? What evidence do you have?

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +lnpilot I don't know if you remember the video. but I believe in that source of morality that Mr. Dillahunty said that we call God and that we call it something else. I believe that we have to search for that source of morality and this search is not different that the search the scientist. After you discover something there is gonna be something else. If you think that the name of that source of morality is not God but Rick and that you believe that is your duty has human being to search for the things that are right. Go ahead, go and look for Rick I am perfectly find with that.
      I do not have evidence of my believes, but we all have believes. You might believe that abortion is good or bad for our society, but you do not have evidence of that. You might believe that voting one party or the other is gonna be the best for our country, but we do not have evidence of that. Indeed there are many things that we believe despite of the fact that there are many evidence against those believes. For instance I believe that the world is plenty of evidence that indicate that socialism does not work and still we have Bernie Sanders as a serious candidates to be the president of the USA. Perhaps socialism can work despite all the evidences.
      I don't have evidence of God because I do not even know how Gods look like. I just believe that we have to look for him. I believe in a sphere of reality that are not just empirical, morality is that reality. The God I believe in is defined by the own reality so those that are actually trying to explain the physical world are also trying to find God. I do not have problem with them.
      The fact that we do not have evidence of things, does not mean that believing in them is irrational. I do not think that morality is irrational, and I do not believe that the reason of morality might be found in the field of science.
      I also believe that is terrible that some people is prevented to search for the truth because of religious reason. Do you really believe that are secular society do not prevent us to search for some truths in the name of the new values that t our society maintain? I do not believe that and I have proofs of what I am saying.

    • @gnagyusa
      @gnagyusa 8 лет назад

      Juan Llorente If you don't have evidence for god, then *why the hell would you believe in it*?
      If you don't require evidence, then *how* do you even decide what to believe and what not to believe?
      *What is your thought process*?
      Do you flip a coin?
      Do you just believe *everything that people tell you*?
      Then, I'm a Nigerian prince...send me your money.
      :)
      If there's no evidence for gods, then how is it any different from imagination?
      A god that has no observable effect on reality, is *indistinguishable from one that does not exist*.
      If I told you that you owe me a thousand bucks, I bet you'd demand evidence before you sent me the money.
      So, you require evidence for certain things, but not for others.
      Why are you so *inconsistent*?
      Atheism is simply being consistent about requiring evidence for *every claim*.
      _Without evidence, a sack of claims is worth the sack_.
      - lnpilot
      As for morals:
      How do you know that god is the "good guy"? You had to reach that conclusion somehow!
      So, you do have a sense of morals outside of god's influence.
      Or, did god just program you to think that he's the good guy?
      That's exactly what a mind-controlling dictator would do...
      Oh, and I sure hope your morals don't come from the Bible: genocide, child sacrifice, stoning children to death for misbehaving, torturing your children for eternity *simply for not loving your enough* (WTF?) all committed or commanded by the "all loving" god. Ahhem, *bullshit*.
      If you do take your morals from the Bible, please stay very far from me and my family...

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +lnpilot The answer is in my previous comment. We all believe in things without having evidences of them. Read the part about believing in things that are good or not and argue that part.

  • @endoalley680
    @endoalley680 9 лет назад

    Hello - Where do you do your videos from? Always a different but tremendous natural background. Must be a meaning in this.

    • @mgrey9066
      @mgrey9066 8 лет назад

      Or he lives in Texas and has an appreciation of nature and uses it to give us something pretty to look at behind him.

  • @EyesOfTheInternet
    @EyesOfTheInternet 9 лет назад +5

    His beard is too long and out of control. . .just like religion!

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +Dorian McCloud Athikst states=Dictatorships in every single state in which athism has been declared official. You are right, atheism=absolute control

  • @bizzee1
    @bizzee1 9 лет назад

    14:44 "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." vs. "Do unto others as they would have you do unto them."
    Great points made in this video. The one spot of disagreement I have is that I don't find the above two ways to state the ethic of reciprocity to be significantly different, because the first way seems to me to imply the second. Do you like others to treat you like /you/ want to be treated? Obviously, that is true. So, to "do unto others as you would have them to do unto you" means that you will in fact try to "do unto others as they would have you do unto them."
    Specifically addressing the first formulation of the ethic of reciprocity, if you have no way to know specifically how another wants to be treated, it makes some sense to use your own likes as a rough model to try to predict another's likes. If you find that they do in fact like the same things as you, then your prediction has succeeded, and you can keep doing those things to the other person. If you find that they do not like the same things as you, then your prediction has failed, and you shouldn't keep doing those things to the other person anymore.

    • @bizzee1
      @bizzee1 9 лет назад

      ***** I already explained how one can derive the 2nd formulation of the Golden Rule from the 1st. However, in my second paragraph, I allude to how the first formulation can likewise be derived form the second. That is to say that, when one has no way of knowing another's informed opinion about how they want to be treated (for example, a small child or a person in a coma), it is reasonable to use one's own preferences as a predictive model and then use the 1st formulation of the Golden Rule- "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." In such cases, one would actually be violating the 2nd formulation of the GR if one didn't act in accordance with the 1st formulation.
      The hairdresser example is a case where the hairdresser has access to the knowledge of another's informed preferences (i.e. I'm assuming that the person who wants a haircut is a conscious adult who is of sound mind). So, that is a case where one actually violates the 1st formulation of the GR if one does not act in accordance with the 2nd formulation- "Do unto others as they would have you do unto them."
      So, I hope that you can now better understand why I don't think that the two formulations are so different, since in the two different cases discussed above, one actually violates one formulation of the GR if they don't act in accordance with the other formulation of the GR.
      I think much of the confusion is that people tend to interpret the 1st formulation of the GR as a commandment that one never, under any circumstances, seek another's opinion about how they want to be treated. Likewise people seem to me to be interpreting the 2nd formulation as a commandment to never, under any circumstances, use your own preferences as a predictive model for how to treat another person. I think that it is neither reasonable nor workable to interpret each of the formulations that way, and I hope that my previous paragraphs make it clear why I think that.

    • @bizzee1
      @bizzee1 9 лет назад

      *****
      I see the difference that you are referring to. It's just that, because you can derive each formulation from the other, and there are situations where you violate one by not practicing the other, they are actually only opposed to each other in a superficial, at first glance, sense.

  • @MrTechFox
    @MrTechFox 9 лет назад +5

    With respect Mr Dillahunty,if I have understood your view on morality correctly, right and wrong are determined by how ones actions affect other people. I think that this definition does not capture what most people mean when they talk about right and wrong.
    If I were to encounter a homeless stray puppy in some back ally and then lure that puppy into my car with some treats, take it home where I torture it in the most painful and horrific ways imaginable for 16 hours straight before finally ending its life as gruesomely as possible. Further, lets say I enjoy my experience. As the only human involved in this encounter who received enjoyment at the cost of hurting zero other humans, on your view, shouldn't we conclude that nothing morally wrong was done?
    If instead you conclude that this action WAS morally wrong because of something along the lines of "it caused harm to the puppy", as most of us would feel is correct, then what conclusion does your view of morality have with regards to choosing to eat meat instead of being vegetarian, given that science shows we can live with either diet, why chose the one that causes suffering unnecessarily to animals?
    Thanks for your time.

    • @Jarb2104
      @Jarb2104 9 лет назад +3

      I am not Mr. Dillahunty, but I would love to answer your dilemma.
      First, you are assuming all animals have the same level of consciousness as humans, I agree that animals are sentient and because they have nervous systems we see they can translate something similar to what we would describe as pain or several degrees of suffering.
      Now you would agree that a cow or a pig does not grieve in the same way an elephant or a dog would, so we start to clear the path to a better understanding. I disagree complete on the topic of raising cattle in a complete "inhumane" way, but that is as far as my disagreement goes.
      I can understand that a cow, pig, and other animals are not self aware, and their survival instincts are the only triggers we recognize in their attitudes, and I mean, they run away from harm and defend themselves, not because they have an intrinsic will to survive, and think of if it in that way, but because their instincts tell them so.
      In that regard, I can kill and eat animals for my own sustain, (which I have), with no dilemma in my moral paradigm, as long as I am aware of how the animal was treated from conception to dead.

    • @Jarb2104
      @Jarb2104 9 лет назад

      It very much is, because it demonstrates self awareness, which is what you are trying to dispute in my comment.

    • @Jarb2104
      @Jarb2104 9 лет назад

      *****
      You are proposing the claim that those animals have self awareness.
      I proposed one way in which we can determine that fact.
      Now unless you can demonstrated what you are claiming I can't believe in your god.
      Edit: sorry in your claim that those animals are self aware.

    • @SnokenX
      @SnokenX 7 лет назад +2

      MrTechFox - You say that meat and animal products are not nessesary for human survival in the modern day era. You are partially correct. In the western world with well stocked shelves with imported goods from all over the world and vitamin pills to correct the absence of B12 it is fully possible to live a fully vegan life while sustaining a good health. However in most developing countries living as a vegan is impossible. The human brain and nervous system is dependent on essential amino acids that the body cannot create on it's own and minerals and vitamins only found in animal products. In short, the human body is constructed to eat some levels of meat and there is not a single native population that live off a vegan diet. However living as a vegetarian is quite possible but also has it's drawbacks for at least 50% of the population. In many cultures meat is considered food for men, making meat unavailable for women. That is one of the reasons why anemia is widely spread in these countries which in term affects the womens reproductive health and the risks of child delivery. Also the children are born anemic and because the breast milk is low in essential amino acids due to a heavy vegetarian diet these children become susceptible to infectious diseases which increases child mortality rates.
      Knowing all this it is easy for me to consider killing animals to be morally defensible. However just as in killing human beings, intent becomes important. It is morally defensible to kill animal and human alike if the aim is to survive. If the aim is to gain pleasure most would agree that the same act would be considered immoral.
      Things become more difficult in the case of causing suffering. First of all suffering cannot be judged from someone on the outside nor do beings feel the same degree of suffering from the same type of stimulus. How we deal with suffering is based on how we view the world and how we have dealt with suffering in the past which makes comparing suffering between individuals impossible. But non the less this is often done when viewing the world through utilitarian glasses where the action that causes the least suffering is considered the morally right one. For instance: You have a pig and your family is starving and your wife is pregnant and exhausted. You bring your pig to the backyard, feed it it's favorite meal and the swiftly club it in the head so that it dies instantly without feeling any pain or expecting to die. The end result is minimal suffering on the pigs part and maximal gain for the family who now have food to survive. Thus the action becomes morally defensible. In the another example: the family is rich but in the mood for pig for dinner because they enjoy the taste. They go into the pen of pigs, pick up a piglet and swiftly slaughter the squealing animal while still in the pen in front of the other animals. Was it is still morally acceptable to kill that animal? No, because the killing act caused suffering both for the killed pig and the other pigs in the pen without easing any of the non-existent suffering of the human family.

    • @BurakovAS
      @BurakovAS 7 лет назад

      Matt has addressed this very question many times. It basically comes down to moral virtue vs. moral obligation.

  • @deletthis5040
    @deletthis5040 3 года назад +1

    POV: You're on a hike at your favorite park and Matt comes spitting facts.

  • @ziliath5237
    @ziliath5237 9 лет назад +3

    i have problems with moral realism, even if we decide to predicate morality on what helps or harms... the lines become blurred as you realize that morals have always been relativistic...
    injecting someone with snake venom is Bad M'kay.... using snake venom as a anti-venom is good....
    in both cases it causes harm, but in only 1 of the cases it saves a life for a bit of harm...
    there is no objective morals... even if we go with moral realism.... what is helpful and or harmful is still predicated on opinion....
    lets say i have a flesh eating disease on my hand... its harmful to chop it off. but doing so saves my life.... the ends justify the means.... now lets say there was a cure... for it, but ti was not available at the time...and in this case i could of gotten it in time, but the person opted to chop it off anyway... even tho we have established that cutting it was harmful but good, is it then back to being harmful if i could of saved it with the cure?
    Morals are far more relativistic than people like to admit and dwell within the grey zone, not in reality in the conceptual, the arbitrary
    MORALS ARE ARBITRARY, regardless if we like moral realism or not.... thats what they are...

    • @MikeTall88
      @MikeTall88 9 лет назад

      You are portraying it as both cases with venom is equally bad, which is false. One results only in harm and the intention was to cause harm.
      The other results in some harm and a lot of good and the intention is to help.
      These two are on not close on the moral spectrum, as you make it out to be.
      And second, what alternative view on morality are you proposing?

    • @ziliath5237
      @ziliath5237 9 лет назад +1

      MikeTall88
      *"You are portraying it as both cases with venom is equally bad, which is false."*
      then you misunderstand the concept of moral relativism... neither is more moral than thew other...at least inherently
      *"The other results in some harm and a lot of good and the intention is to help."*
      completely arbitrary and intent was ignored,,, only the act of putting venom int he body was counted...
      *"These two are on not close on the moral spectrum, as you make it out to be"*
      by your opinion perhaps, im not trying to be a dick here, im pointing out that where they fall IS arbitrary to the relativistic context...
      *"And second, what alternative view on morality are you proposing?"*
      Moral relativism...
      its not useful iin every day life... and i say we should continue to cooperate using moral realism within the society we find ourselves..
      but moral relativism just points out that its not that way in reality...
      murder is only wrong because we arbitrate it to be.....either by law or by gods..maken' laws
      yes... practically all societies have come to the same arbitrary conclusion... because it was naturally selected for by evolution..
      murder doesn't help to perpetuate our species... bu it does however help perpetuate ones power over others...
      why things are good or bad has always been arbitrary from place to place, epoch to epoch...
      what was immoral in younder's past may be the fad of the Epoch. its all relative to the whims of man.

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 9 лет назад

      Ziliath
      *why things are good or bad has always been arbitrary from place to place, epoch to epoch*
      Then we're talking about two different things. You're not talking about morality in the sense that the rest of us are. I would argue that slavery has _never_ been moral despite the opinions of people. The opinions of what is moral and what is actually moral are two different things.
      *practically all societies have come to the same arbitrary conclusion... because it was naturally selected for by evolution*
      That makes it not arbitrary. Insert Inigo Montoya meme.

    • @ziliath5237
      @ziliath5237 9 лет назад +3

      TheZooCrew
      *"You're not talking about morality in the sense that the rest of us are."*
      Actually, i am.... few people just get the concept of moral relativism...
      *" I would argue that slavery has never been moral despite the opinions of people"*
      Moral relativism irrevocably requires the opinions of people (or moral agents) to make a context... Slavery was good for the Slavers....it was the moral thing to do...(in their opinionated context)
      *" The opinions of what is moral and what is actually moral are two different things."*
      even if they are... i'd argue that there is NOTHING that is "Actually moral"... and its only the Opinions of what is moral become practiced... not what is moral...
      In other words... people only practice what they think is moral... there is no standard to what is "actually moral" BESIDES the opinions of a Moral agent
      *"That makes it not arbitrary"*
      its still arbitrary.... the fact that it was a benefit in later generations where it was selected for does not mean it wasn't originally arbitrary...
      there could of been alternatives to the rule that would of allowed for the same result and or a different result....
      there is no objective rule that says Murder is intrinsically wrong, one such alternative is, if the word came tot he same conclusion that murder is fine... but do not murder under [these circumstances]... as long as there is a transition of generations, and they keep this rule... and we do not go extinct...the rule was still a benefit to the society for propagating their genes... its just slightly less fair then what we have in our reality.. but still serves the function of allowing genetic propagation... and people can still murder...
      so long as our species survive, reality does not care... and in this case humanity wouldn't care either...
      so if we compare this possible word to the actual word, we find that its not immoral to murder in one of them... and for something to always be Immoral or wrong, it must be the case 100% of the time NO MATTER the circumstances.
      and thats simply not the case with murder...or may other things we call 'objectively' bad... making them arbitrary compared to all these possible words where a different result could of taken hold.
      its arbitrary because there are many such positions on murder that if were selected would still function the same and be selected for by evolution all the same as a total ban on murder...

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 9 лет назад

      Ziliath
      *its arbitrary because there are many such positions on murder that if were selected would still function the same and be selected for by evolution all the same as a total ban on murder*
      This is nonsense, and your waffling and obnoxious amount of ellipses don't change that. The British called this "two-tonne square wheel syndrome." You're arguing that a two-ton square concrete wheel works just as well as a tire on a car because both will roll "given certain circumstances." It's just a useless deepity.
      *the rule was still a benefit to the society for propagating their genes... its just slightly less fair then what we have in our reality.. but still serves the function of allowing genetic propagation... and people can still murder...*
      What planet are you from?
      Also, "not sufficiently negative to cause extinction" and "positive" are not synonymous. You're arguing that they are. There was a fairly recent episode of the Atheist Experience where some annoying caller was arguing that true beliefs are of no value because in any given situation, a set of false beliefs are just as useful for benefit and survival as true beliefs. It's utter hogwash.

  • @davedumas0
    @davedumas0 9 лет назад

    i really like the place you chose to do this video looks like a cool place to be

  • @J.T.Stillwell3
    @J.T.Stillwell3 9 лет назад +13

    +Matt Dillahunty it is fallacious to argue that one can derive oughts(prescription) from reality(description/is). Also life is not preferable over death nor pleasure over pain but rather these are preferred or not. In the words of Hume "Tis not contrary to reason to prefer the destruction of the entire world (death) to the scratching of my finger" ( it's just unusual ). Yes it is the case that most people prefer x but that doesn't make x an objective moral ought. I would argue and have argued that secular ethics is not objective or binding and that whether God exists or not moral nihilism is the case.

    • @PrimalCulture
      @PrimalCulture 9 лет назад +21

      Please, show the fallacies committed on this video. ... here is a "moral ought"from the "holy book" -kill the non believers, their children, the animals too; just keep the virgins-

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 9 лет назад +21

      *I would argue and have argued that secular ethics is not objective or binding and that whether God exists or not moral nihilism is the case*
      So why are you still alive?
      *Yes it is the case that most people prefer x but that doesn't make x an objective moral ought*
      Stop conflating "objective" and "absolute." "Objective" refers to an ideal. In chess, there are objectively bad moves according to the rules and goals of chess. When the well-being of yourself and humanity is the ideal, we can indeed make objective judgments.

    • @TheTavo5150
      @TheTavo5150 9 лет назад

      Matt never makes a deductive argument concerning the "ought" dilemma. He is making appeals to facts of the universe. It could be that he believes that the "ought" dilemma can be "solved" using a inductive argument rather a syllogism.

    • @SansDeity
      @SansDeity  9 лет назад +56

      It'd be nice if you were actually accurately responding to my position, rather than what you mistakenly think my position is.

    • @MMDelta9
      @MMDelta9 9 лет назад +11

      "Also life is not preferable over death nor pleasure over pain"
      If that is the case, how are you still alive and not in constant pain?

  • @Bella-vt7ol
    @Bella-vt7ol 9 месяцев назад

    I wish I could articulate things as well as Matt does...good grief just WOW 🫶🏻...you sir...I look up to you So Fuk Much 🤜🏻🤛🏻

  • @apsarator
    @apsarator 9 лет назад +2

    I am European and was born into a 100% secular community. I did not even know, that religion even existed until i was 10 years old. I consider,although i live in Asia now, the society i was born into as to be highly morally, without cynicism and bigotry - and without the necessity of a commander in heaven

  • @perhlom
    @perhlom 9 лет назад

    Hi Matt, the "color" problems you have are primarily exposure problems. Try to have a background that's in the same exposure range as yourself. You should also do manual white balance of your camera, or at least be familiar with the color-temperature settings of the camera -- don't leave it on auto. If you have as much dynamic range as you have with the sun in the background, the camera might decide that the background is the focus of the frame and white-balance for that, and then you'll turn blue by comparison.

  • @suprensa4393
    @suprensa4393 6 лет назад

    Phenomenal talk Matt.

  • @oO_ox_O
    @oO_ox_O 9 лет назад +1

    "Let's take a look…" Suddenly he is 5 cm in front of the camera. I just love this style. Also the uptight position in the first second. ;D

  • @AlaricHolmes
    @AlaricHolmes 8 лет назад +1

    I enjoyed this monologue quite a bit. I don't think I learned anything _new_, per se, but I think it's beneficial to see these ideas presented in a clear and structured way such that one can see more easily how A leads to B, etc., etc.
    At 13:55, you assert that children don't come with morality prepackaged, but rather learn it from their parents, peers., and so on, but I'm not entirely sure that this is true. I've been intrigued by the implications of the work of people like Dr. Karen Wynn, and her husband whose name I can't recall off hand, in the field of very early child psychology and the experiments that she's conducted which, to my mind at least, indicate that even infants have rudimentary, very black-and-white senses of morality. The results would seem to indicate that we do in fact have senses of right and wrong -- although the correlations aren't 100%, and so that leaves the question open as to whether there are varying levels of morality with which individual infants are born (and some other questions as well) -- but that our morality expands and becomes more refined (shades of gray, to continue the metaphor) over time.
    I fear I'd do a disservice to their work by trying to go into serious detail here or even attempting to defend it, per se, but I would sincerely recommend at least looking into their work -- particularly, Dr. Wynn's -- unless you already have and have, for whatever reason, dismissed it or found it wanting in key areas, which I'd be interested in hearing about, since I'm more interested in the truth than I am in any particular worldview.

    • @TheZooCrew
      @TheZooCrew 8 лет назад +1

      +Alaric Holmes
      There's a fine distinction here. Children may have an inherent sense of "fairness," but we have to learn through interaction what is actually fair. That's a bit different.

  • @theuncalledfor
    @theuncalledfor 9 лет назад +2

    As far as I know, the definition of "objective" is "independent of any mind".
    When using this definition, morality cannot possibly be objective, as it only even exists in the presence of at least two minds.

    • @Konstruktivismus
      @Konstruktivismus 9 лет назад

      +theuncalledfor
      Is science objective? A scientific knowledge only exists in the presence of minds? Is anything objective according to this definition?
      I think the main problem isn't whether ethics are objective or not, but what objective even means in the language. Why do we attribute objective to some hypotheses and to some not.

  • @aquamarinebarbie
    @aquamarinebarbie Год назад +1

    20:56 SUCH GREAT POINTS

  • @qwertydog9795
    @qwertydog9795 2 года назад

    as someone who was largely raised on fear to make me behave, the effects can still be felt today. hopefully parents stop raising their kids like that one day...we can only hope.

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Год назад

      The world's a scary place, even if you take the afterlife out of the equation. Smart to be afraid of a lot of things out there.

  • @billkeon880
    @billkeon880 7 лет назад

    great video as usual. Work by psychologists and anthropologists (like Steven Pinker and Pascal Boyer) show that even in preverbal children, we can demonstrate a well grounded moral sense. Our subconscious moral feelings and drives are evolved brain functions that are inextricably wound up with the way we process information and think about our world. In this sense there is an objective morality (which could further evolve over time) as well as our reasoning capacity, which helps us navigate through new or complicated moral circumstances. Religion Explained by Boyer is absolutely excellent as well as most anything by Pinker.

  • @amv062184
    @amv062184 9 лет назад +1

    morality is things like not killing, not stealing, and not being mean to people.

    • @amv062184
      @amv062184 9 лет назад +1

      ffairlane57
      wtf are you talking about?
      i dont believe in god, so stop talking about him to me... i am a man of science.

    • @amv062184
      @amv062184 9 лет назад

      ffairlane57
      whats your point?

    • @amv062184
      @amv062184 9 лет назад

      ffairlane57
      i agree that morality is not dependent solely upon religion...
      what you fail to realize is if you continue to even acknowledge the concept of a god, you are only making their cause stronger...
      if you want to erase religion from the map, then cease and desist your obssession with religion in its entirety...
      hate brings more hate... and hate is a double bladed sword dude.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +ffairlane57 And some people believe in God and think that the porpuse of morality is similar than the one you think it is.

  • @stevendunn4096
    @stevendunn4096 4 года назад

    I love watching your videos, Matt. I sent you a FB friend request. I'm from KCMO too.
    Humans are an animal species. Wolves, chimpanzees, etc. live by their own social moral codes. Humans do too. Morality enables us to live together successfully and survive as a species. Religions were our early means to codify ethics during the early formation of large civilizations during the Bronze Age. I would argue that they were helpful to us in the past, but they are archaic now. Our morals are a product of human evolution.

    • @keithhunt5328
      @keithhunt5328 3 года назад

      Our instincts are a product of human evolution, not morality. We also have instincts for taking pleasure in horrible things.

  • @mshahnazi7636
    @mshahnazi7636 9 лет назад

    Hi Matt, This is the first time that I have watched one of your videos. I must say that you present a great discussion, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. My parents were both Atheists (Bourgeois Left), however they sent me to a Private English School (Church of England Episcopalian Variety!!!!), and we lived in a Jewish Neighbourhood in a Moslem country. Therefore I was exposed to all the insanity and superstitious of the 3 Abrahamian religions along with my Sane Atheist Parents. This allowed me to be somewhat open minded about religion and philosophy of life as most of my friend were and still are Jewish, However I am still searching as I am on the fence about all of this (Kind of playing self mind games), and find your debate about morality very refreshing as I keep telling my wife (who believes deeply in God) that it is ONLY us who decide on morality of what is bad or good. But such is my dilemma, but I have allowed my children to explore for themselves to find the eventual truth.

    • @juanllorente3504
      @juanllorente3504 8 лет назад

      +M KH TI think that self mind playing is a way to look for God. Believing or not believing is almost irrelevant. The important thing is looking, and if you look you will find good things.

  • @REDCAP32X
    @REDCAP32X 9 лет назад

    Thanks for your OPINION

  • @janlim9374
    @janlim9374 2 года назад

    The best way to teach morality is through stories. The study of morality is a life-long practice that requires a humble heart. Human brains have the tendency to view the world in ways that selfishly benefit themselves, and we will tend to rationalize our worst actions as morally correct. Belief in an ultimate authority in morality can help humble us. If we rely solely on our favorite moral philosophers as our teachers, we will tend to idolize them and begin rationalizing all their actions as moral.

    • @mouthofspaghetti7817
      @mouthofspaghetti7817 2 года назад

      I have no need, I have never needed a Ultimate Authority to tell me how to be moral. None of the Ultimate Authorities I have seen in religion/ myth are better morally than I am.
      These gods are just reflections of the people who made them up, so convenient the god people worship just so happen to share them same bigotry.

    • @joe5959
      @joe5959 Год назад

      ​@@mouthofspaghetti7817"so im better than everyone, because i say so?"
      Cmon😂

  • @tobybiscuits
    @tobybiscuits 8 лет назад

    There was an episode in 60 min with babies and morality. Babies young as 6 months were picking puppets that were doing morally right things like helping another puppet.

    • @whittfamily1
      @whittfamily1 7 лет назад

      Yes, we probably have predispositions to behave in some ways rather than others, but still we need to use reason to establish morality.

  • @MrHapraker
    @MrHapraker 9 лет назад

    Was reminded of this video in light of Phil Robertson's latest publicity stunt, whether he intended it to be or not.

  • @gwf1213
    @gwf1213 7 лет назад

    cant wait for your book.

  • @Marcozz87
    @Marcozz87 9 лет назад

    Very good video. I would really like to see a book from Matt Dillahunty covering all those topics (atheist objections to theistic arguments for God) in your videos.

  • @metroidmayhem8463
    @metroidmayhem8463 4 года назад

    This always reminds me of what hitch asked."Whats one moral thing only a believer can do that an unbeliever cant do? Whats one evil thing a believer can only do that an unbeliever cannot do?

  • @Cthulhu013
    @Cthulhu013 9 лет назад

    Yet again, another great video by Matt Dillahunty.

  • @todbeard8118
    @todbeard8118 8 лет назад +1

    I get a kick out of watching Matt's debates when morality comes up. Matt really caught Jay Lucas off guard in their debate when Lucas thought he had Matt by the balls and then Matt pointed out the slavery issue. Lucas' jaw dropped. Watching Lucas trying to come back on that was hilarious because Lucas was either dishonest or misinformed in his response. I tend to think he was being misleading. Matt said he would address the slavery issue in his closing. And you could tell worrying about what Matt was going to come back with messed Jay Lucas up in the rest of the debate. And Matt did come back with a great response and explained Exodus 21: 20-22 and more scripture on the issue, like the champion he is. Matt was clearly the champ and Jay was the chump. Matt's always outstanding in his debates but he was really on the ball in this one. If you haven't seen it I suggest you watch it. I guarantee you'll be entertained.

  • @lostdarkside
    @lostdarkside 7 лет назад

    I define morality to the degree to which a situation is voluntary or not . Because is objectively there are only two transactions a human can engage in ... voluntary or coercion

  • @nitehawk86
    @nitehawk86 9 лет назад

    Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together... mass hysteria!

  • @davidreich7809
    @davidreich7809 3 года назад

    This guys presupposition that we are merely physical creatures in a physical universe means none of the different circumstances regarding driving a cat over someone matter. Physical creatures in a physical universe don’t experience guilt or shame or remorse but alas we do.

  • @kalibos
    @kalibos 9 лет назад

    Rocking a pretty sweet beard there Matt

  • @MarkRosengarten
    @MarkRosengarten 9 лет назад

    Your beard is entering Jordan Rudess territory. :) Looks epic. Thanks for these videos!

  • @browndog666ify
    @browndog666ify 9 лет назад

    Situations that call for some sort of moral choice or decision I think of as "emergent properties". I only need to do or say whatevr is necessary and in proportion. My Morality emerges as a response to the immediate situation.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 7 лет назад +1

    16:00 I heard a great argument for this. If morals come from an all knowing all good god then we would expect those morals to be the same all over the world and throughout all of time. They would be perfect and unchanging.
    If morals come from people then we would start out with a set of morals that were not so great, that would leave large segments of the population (those people who have less power) to be exploited and repressed. As time goes on those less powerful people would gain more power and the ability to shape societies morals and the morals would change to the moral standards to include themselves. This would continue making moral standards more inclusive of more segments of the population.
    When we look at reality we see the latter, not the former.
    Just 200 years ago it was perfectly okay to kill some people, assuming you owned that person. And if you killed someone in that class who you didn't own, you only had to pay for that person, in the same way that you would be expected to pay for your friend's car if you wrecked it.
    Today the penalty for killing a friendless homeless person is more or less the same as killing even a very important popular person.

  • @SnakeAndTurtleQigong
    @SnakeAndTurtleQigong Год назад

    Thanks so much!