Why Atheists Can't Blame Christians for Anything

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июл 2024
  • In this episode, Trent reveals how atheist's moral indignation at some Christians is inconsistent with a worldview that denies the existence of free will. He shows that God's existence makes the most sense of our unique ability to be morally responsible for our actions.
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    Timestamp:
    00:00 - Intro
    00:10 - Reconciling Atheists' moral disgust towards Christians
    02:22 - Atheists' believe we do NOT have Free-Will
    04:08 - Atheists can only blame Christians if they believe in FREE WILL
    09:25 - Can humans have free will if determinism is true?
    10:10 - Does moral responsibility exist?
    11:20 - Is compatibilism true?
    12:35 - Frankfurt counterexamples
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @Theophan123
    @Theophan123 2 месяца назад +478

    I could have cared less over what they say, when their biggest influencer admits he would rather live in a society with a Christian culture after all his work to dismantle said Christian culture

    • @sidwhiting665
      @sidwhiting665 2 месяца назад +119

      Agreed. Dawkins said outright he wants Christianity... but he doesn't want Christ. In other words, he wants all of the benefits, but none of the responsibility that comes with it.

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +4

      @@sidwhiting665
      What responsibility do Christians have that others don't?

    • @thekatarnalchemist
      @thekatarnalchemist 2 месяца назад +69

      It's not so much that Christians have a responsibility that others don't, inasmuch as it is that Christians observe a responsibility that others won't - to worship God and give Him the honor that He is due.

    • @wordforever117
      @wordforever117 2 месяца назад +3

      @@sidwhiting665 Yes he portrayed by characters all throughout salvation history in scripture!

    • @tafazziReadChannelDescription
      @tafazziReadChannelDescription 2 месяца назад +30

      ​​@@avishevin1976Christians in baptism recieve the call to be saints. If you look what kind of lives the canonized saints went through, that's something to chew on isn't it?
      So if you want a christian society without being a christian yourself, you want to benefit from the love of neighbor the saints are trying to have, withoit giving them back what they're due. That's morally bad. It's also morally bad to reap the benefits of God's love to you, like existing, without loving Him back by recieving baptism, that's why you have the responsibility to get baptized and recieve that call too.

  • @Kjt853
    @Kjt853 2 месяца назад +266

    In “The Brothers Karamazov,” Dostoevsky stated that if there is a God, anything is possible; if there isn’t a God, anything is permissible.

    • @bucksfan77
      @bucksfan77 2 месяца назад +6

      Great book and author, even though he hated the Catholic Church

    • @Kjt853
      @Kjt853 2 месяца назад +11

      @@bucksfan77 That is an unfortunate trait of the author and his works. Late last year, “Crisis” magazine published an online article by Darrick Taylor that goes into the topic. It’s worth checking out.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +3

      Just finished the book. Don't remember reading that first part, but yes Ivan believes the 2nd part. Worth the read, not for its answers but for its questions.

    • @analyticallysound2716
      @analyticallysound2716 2 месяца назад +4

      And that's a stupid quote from Dostoevsky. It presupposes that morality or moral obligations cannot exist without theism, a position overwhelmingly rejected by most professional ethicists.

    • @Tzimiskes3506
      @Tzimiskes3506 2 месяца назад

      @@analyticallysound2716 Yeah and most "professional" ethicists also support abortion and all kinds of evil.

  • @ChristusAeternitas
    @ChristusAeternitas 2 месяца назад +505

    As a former atheist, I didn’t, at first, realise the blatant hypocrisy of the atheist position on these matters. When I look back at some of Hitchens’ arguments, for example, they’re embarrassingly poor. And I feel some shame in parroting them. That said, I also understand that I had to go through that stage in order to later truly appreciate Christ as our real and living God. I can only strive to right those former wrongs. And so in some way I wish I never doubted to begin with.

    • @Dram1984
      @Dram1984 2 месяца назад +54

      Same. I thought I was soooo smart. 😂

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +10

      You can't cite a single one of the arguments you feel is poor because you don't want to embarrass yourself.

    • @ChristusAeternitas
      @ChristusAeternitas 2 месяца назад +37

      @@Dram1984 Oof… same! That sense of feeling so much smarter and wiser than those who are and have been duped, only to later realise your own foolishness and arrogance… priceless feeling that is🤣

    • @thekatarnalchemist
      @thekatarnalchemist 2 месяца назад +7

      I know the feeling.

    • @ChristusAeternitas
      @ChristusAeternitas 2 месяца назад +37

      ​@@avishevin1976 Sure, one that is on topic and which I think is my favourite one, is where he does a complete revisionism of history and modern politics, and makes the claim that North Korea, the USSR etc., are always examples of theism, as opposed to atheism and the moral bankruptcy that follows it.

  • @learneternal-english3417
    @learneternal-english3417 2 месяца назад +380

    "Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools," Romans 1:22

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +9

      and? really, that verse may as well be replaced with a meme depicting non-believers as soyjacks and believers as chads for all the good it does

    • @matsanw
      @matsanw 2 месяца назад

      @@ChristineVress Except if you little liar actually read it, you'd know it's talking about people who lost the real faith and follow things of the world, which perfectly describes atheists. Nice try, though.

    • @greenbird679
      @greenbird679 2 месяца назад +27

      @@thejuiceking2219 cope

    • @greenbird679
      @greenbird679 2 месяца назад +11

      @@ChristineVress if you are bothered to comprehend, it is referring to people who have moved away from god. If you think that the letter is only for the christians in rome, why it is included in bible?

    • @scottmcloughlin4371
      @scottmcloughlin4371 2 месяца назад

      @@thejuiceking2219 You are deeply historically illiterate. Christianity was born of a POLYTHEIST world. You cannot grasp what God means and is without first grasping what gods meant and were. That requires a full Classical Education. Do you have one? Obviously not. Go get a real education.

  • @VincentDaly-cp6yq
    @VincentDaly-cp6yq 2 месяца назад +676

    Christ is King 👑

    • @epicofatrahasis3775
      @epicofatrahasis3775 2 месяца назад

      King of the failed end times preachers.
      ---------------------------------------------------------
      *Jesus is clearly speaking to the disciples and gives a timeframe for when the Son of Man would come.*
      "Jesus sent these twelve out, charging them, saying: Do not go into the way of the nations, and do not go into a Samaritan city. But rather go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. And going on, proclaim, saying, The kingdom of Heaven has drawn near" (Matthew 10:5-7)
      “Truly I say to you, ***you will not finish going through the cities of Israel until the Son of Man comes”*** (Matthew 10:23);
      For the *Son of man* shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; ***and then he shall reward every man according to his works.***
      Truly I tell you, ***some who are standing here will not taste death*** before they see the *Son of Man* coming in his kingdom (Matthew 16:27-28)
      Truly I tell you, ***some who are standing here*** will not taste death before they see the kingdom of God (Luke 9:27)
      Truly I tell you, ***this generation will certainly not pass away*** until all these things have happened (Mark 13:30)
      *He says that the coming of the Son of Man will be accompanied by:*
      The sun will be darkened,
      and the moon will not give its light;
      the stars will fall from the sky,
      and the heavenly bodies will be shaken.
      Then will appear the sign of the *Son of Man* in heaven. And then all the peoples of the earth will mourn when they see the *Son of Man* coming on the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory. And he will send his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of the heavens to the other.
      Truly I tell you, ***this generation will certainly not pass away*** until all these things have happened (Matthew 24:29-34)
      There will be signs in the sun, moon and stars. On the earth, nations will be in anguish and perplexity at the roaring and tossing of the sea. People will faint from terror, apprehensive of what is coming on the world, for the heavenly bodies will be shaken. At that time they will see the *Son of Man* coming in a cloud with power and great glory. When these things begin to take place, stand up and lift up your heads, because your redemption is drawing near. When you see these things happening, you know that the kingdom of God is near.
      Truly I tell you, ***this generation will certainly not pass away*** until all these things have happened (Luke 21:25-32)
      He also falsely prophesied to the high priest, the Sanhedrin and Nathaniel.
      *Jesus falsely prophesied to the high priest and the Sanhedrin*
      Jesus also falsely prophesied to the high priest and the Sanhedrin (assemblies of either twenty-three or seventy-one rabbis appointed to sit as a tribunal)
      You will see the *Son of Man* sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and ***coming on the clouds of heaven*** (Matthew 26:64) (Mark 14:62)
      Except the high priest and the Sanhedrin never saw Jesus sitting at the right hand side of God, or coming on the clouds of heaven, or any such thing.
      *Jesus falsely prophesied to Nathaniel*
      Jesus also falsely prophesied to Nathaniel when he declared, “Rabbi, you are the Son of God; you are the king of Israel.”
      Jesus said, You believe because I told you I saw you under the fig tree. You will see greater things than that. He then added, ***“Very truly I tell you, you will see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man*** (John 1:50-51)
      *Nathaniel never saw any such thing. Neither did anyone else.*

    • @johnhenry1791
      @johnhenry1791 2 месяца назад +13

      Romans, Chapter 11.

    • @tylere.8436
      @tylere.8436 2 месяца назад +9

      ​@@johnhenry1791
      Zechariah 14:9

    • @johnhenry1791
      @johnhenry1791 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@tylere.8436 Yep, the Lord shall be King over all the earth. And that Kingdom belongs to (and will be inherited by) those who remain in God's kindness (Romans 11:22).

    • @vincentfarrell3868
      @vincentfarrell3868 2 месяца назад +3

      @@johnhenry1791”As concerning the gospel, indeed, they are enemies for your sake: but as touching the election, they are most dear for the sake of the fathers.”-Ro. 11:28.

  • @ill_steal_your_pbj7363
    @ill_steal_your_pbj7363 2 месяца назад +277

    They argue that free will isn’t a real thing, yet they constantly try to change people’s minds and move their will.

    • @sidwhiting665
      @sidwhiting665 2 месяца назад

      @@LilySage-mf7uf I think that's where the OP was headed. According to atheists, Christians are programmed to be Christian. We cannot believe otherwise, even if we wanted to, and even our wants are programmed, so ultimately, according to the atheist, we are not responsible for anything we think, do, or feel. We are literally dancing to our DNA. It's like blaming a rock for not giving a treatise on the laws of Thermodynamics.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +2

      This is why the logic of atheism leads to violence rather than persuasion to "change minds."

    • @johnxina-uk8in
      @johnxina-uk8in 2 месяца назад +11

      ​@LilySage-mf7uf Being convinced and agreeing are 2 different things, a madman could eloquently convince you that murdering people is a good cause, that doesn't mean you'd voluntarily agree

    • @johnxina-uk8in
      @johnxina-uk8in 2 месяца назад +3

      @LilySage-mf7uf If you're an NPC maybe, but for human beings they're definitely distinct.

    • @Daniel-cz9gt
      @Daniel-cz9gt 2 месяца назад +8

      What is the inconsistency here?

  • @vtaylor21
    @vtaylor21 2 месяца назад +443

    Any argument against God’s morality is moot when you believe there is no free will.

    • @jonathanw1106
      @jonathanw1106 2 месяца назад +14

      I disagree, you can still argue that the actions of a nondeterminative force (like God) are moral or not whether you believe you are ultimately in control. Free will is concerned with the responsibility, not morality of an action. For example, if you are on medications that make you go into a psychosis and you kill someone you have objectively committed an immoral act, even if you are not responsible due to your lack of "free will". The better argument for Trent to make is not that the lack of free will removes your ability to object to God's morality, its the lack of a non arbitrary moral standard that does. Under atheism there is definitionally no objective standard of right and wrong, and so if you are critiquing God's morality you are doing so under a completely arbitrary moral position. Whether you are capable of acting one way or another only affects your ultimate responsibility for your actions, the quality of the actions themselves being moral or not is nonsensical if you do not believe in a natural objective moral law grounded in God

    • @jacobleith6369
      @jacobleith6369 2 месяца назад +10

      @@jonathanw1106 Contemporary ethicists don't hold that definition of morality. So, it wouldn't be 'by definition' that atheists, in virtue of not having a god in their worldview, couldn't have an objective standard of morality. In fact, it's quite an unpopular position the one that says moral realism requires God to exist. I can elaborate more on that if you want.

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +2

      @@jonathanw1106
      Under theism there is _also_ no objective standard of right and wrong. Not one that any single person has ever adhered to, at any rate.

    • @Wisef1sh
      @Wisef1sh 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@jonathanw1106That is the most longest and most boring paragraph i ever read.
      But i love the amazing way u put it. This actually gave me an new perspective on atheism as a whole.
      Congrats mate thanks 🎉

    • @jonathanw1106
      @jonathanw1106 2 месяца назад +18

      @avishevin1976 uh are you sure about that? It's one of the most popular arguments for God's existence and a topic of countless scholarly works, the foundation of natural law principles that led to the Bill of rights and our present state of government, it's literally the dividing principle that separates post modernism from classical ethical theory, and I could go on. I'm not sure I have ever heard a theist claim their is no objective morality, ever

  • @LL-bl8hd
    @LL-bl8hd 2 месяца назад +39

    I believe in God, the Father almighty. God have mercy on me.

    • @davido3026
      @davido3026 2 месяца назад +8

      The Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!!

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +5

      Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, have mercy on me, a sinner.

    • @user-jr2ed7my1b
      @user-jr2ed7my1b Месяц назад +1

      You need to submit to Jesus, in that, faith in him, is all you must accept to be saved

  • @danielfertig6168
    @danielfertig6168 2 месяца назад +39

    Funny how arguing against atheists sounds an awful lot like arguing against Calvinists.

    • @bikesrcool_1958
      @bikesrcool_1958 2 месяца назад +6

      It’s sad how much Calvinism is pushed in Protestantism

    • @wesleydahar7797
      @wesleydahar7797 23 дня назад

      Calvinists believe in free will, with the same definition you do.

  • @jamesbishop3091
    @jamesbishop3091 2 месяца назад +92

    Trent, I think you’re underrated as an opponent to atheism. Of all the topics you discuss, refuting atheism is one of your best skills. Much love from an orthodox Christian.

    • @TheCounselofTrent
      @TheCounselofTrent  2 месяца назад +31

      Wow! What a comment! Thanks for watching the channel! -Vanessa

    • @michaelsbeverly
      @michaelsbeverly 2 месяца назад +2

      @@TheCounselofTrent Yeah, well, he hasn't chatted with me yet. I'm ready, anytime.

    • @glof2553
      @glof2553 2 месяца назад +1

      @@ChristineVress Please go into detail on each one and provide timestamps, if you could. I'm deeply skeptical of "fallacy mongerers" and don't think of them as particularly intelligent.

    • @Tinesthia
      @Tinesthia 2 месяца назад +1

      @@glof2553
      Well right at ~3:00 the start of the first claim “this seems to contradict.” Notice the soft language, he isn’t willing to strongly get behind the claim, it just seems to, to Trent. But it isn’t a contradiction. Telling someone that they can be better or do better and hoping for that outcome does not imply that they must have some free will choice to do so. The criticism, if heard, just becomes one more data point in a vast sea of the variables informing future reasoning.

    • @esterhudson5104
      @esterhudson5104 2 месяца назад +3

      @@michaelsbeverlythat comment cost you the argument already.

  • @Crystalupnorth
    @Crystalupnorth 2 месяца назад +67

    I'm a former pagan looking into Catholicism. Thanks for the videos you made and will make. You're a huge help with healing past religious trauma and false information.

    • @davido3026
      @davido3026 2 месяца назад +5

      Listen to Bishop Robert Barron

    • @LilabeanAnn
      @LilabeanAnn 2 месяца назад +9

      I used to be pagan too! I’ve been Catholic for two years now this year and people have been so welcoming and kind to me even after telling them what I converted from. God bless you on your journey! :)

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад +2

      i would avoid any religion that supports slavery and discrimination like Catholicism

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад

      @@gatsbygoodwood2575 ya same i never cared enough to look in to it much.

    • @archived2714
      @archived2714 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@gatsbygoodwood2575Well, the Church does have a bad history. Secrecy? They've been very open about their beliefs from the start. The Papacy is fine, but Papal supremacy is neither biblical nor historical. And Catholics and Orthodox do not worship Mary. We simply venerate her because she gave birth to God in the flesh, or Jesus.
      However Catholicism just has so many theological issues and inconsistentsies that that's why I encourage people to look to Orthodoxy which has remained unchanged since it was established.

  • @tonyl3762
    @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +88

    “If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true… and hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms.” -Prof Haldane via CS Lewis

    • @ianb483
      @ianb483 2 месяца назад +18

      It's even worse than that. If your mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in your brain, then you don't even objectively *have* beliefs with content that can be true or false, and there isn't even any "you" to have them.
      So it's not just that you have no reason to suppose that your beliefs are true under materialistic reductionism, but that it's an impossibility, as the entire category of truth is completely eliminated under that view.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +7

      @@ianb483 BINGO! 💯 Determinism destroys personhood and the rights that come along with them.

    • @nsinkov
      @nsinkov 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@ianb483you're begging the question. I think therefore I am. And I also think that I am chemical reactions without a soul. You're just claiming it's a-priori impossible for me to be thinking chemicals.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +2

      @@nsinkov So chemicals/molecules/atoms can think? How does mere matter in motion create thought? What does "I" and "me" and "you" even mean in a universe of mere matter without any souls?

    • @Const1
      @Const1 2 месяца назад +5

      @@nsinkov How do you define the term "think" and what does it mean to "think chemicals"? Chemicals, as everything empirical can only be experienced, not thought of. Similarly, you cannot physically experience a logical argument, you can only think of it. That's why your argument is wrong. The cogito argument you're implying was (much ironically) used by Descartes to prove the existence of the rational soul you despise.

  • @Isaac-vj2xn
    @Isaac-vj2xn 2 месяца назад +48

    I do find Rovert Sapolsky's account of no free will interesting. During his conversation with Alex O'Connor he did mention that he only practices the philosophy of no free will for something like 3 minutes a month.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +33

      Even he freely chooses not to believe his own philosophy, lol

    • @johnxina-uk8in
      @johnxina-uk8in 2 месяца назад

      Usually the proponents of "no free will" do some pretty nefarious things behind the scene, (Stephen hawking). So it makes sense why they push it so much

    • @Eliza-rg4vw
      @Eliza-rg4vw 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@tonyl3762Free Will may not exist, but that does not mean it's obvious that it doesn't exist.
      We may be able to know that in any kind of ultimate sense, uou are not 'responsible' for your actions, but even in that case, if you tried to kill someone, it still looks as though you wanted to killed them. No free will does not mean that feeling is immediately alleviated.
      The way I put it is by comparing free will to optical illusions. There are tons out there you can try, and even though you may be hyper aware of the fact that it is an illusion, you see them nonetheless.
      I can be knowledgeable in the idea that free will does not exist, though that doesn't render me unable to feel as though it was I who created an artpiece and still feel proud about it.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +2

      @@Eliza-rg4vw Or perhaps you don't really ultimately know that but merely have a desire to avoid responsibility for something or anything? (You certainly did NOT provide a demonstration or argument, lol.) Are you choosing to believe free will is an illusion like an optical illusion?
      You might as well disbelieve anything and everything (including your own "knowledge" regarding free will) if you are going to choose to believe reality is inherently deceptive and illusory. But that itself is self-defeating/self-refuting. Imagine a world of deception/illusion and contradiction all you want, but don't claim to have any "knowledge."

    • @Eliza-rg4vw
      @Eliza-rg4vw 2 месяца назад

      @@tonyl3762 Perhaps! I do think you'd need to provide evidence for that, as as far as I can tell, I am not saying what I am now in order to avoid responsibility. If free will does exist, I'd take as much responsibility then as I do now. I'm aware my actions have a lot more non-me things than I'd like to the point where I don't have free will, but that doesn't mean I don't have the illusion of responsibility either. If I say something to someone that hurts them, sure, I said that because of some external stimuli that had me say that, but it still looks and feels as if I said those things to hurt the person, and I would take responsibility for it.
      From what I can tell, free will is, in effect, like an optical illusion. You can try inserting words like "choose" there all you want to make it sound like free will needs to exist for this to happen and / or like it's not a serious option, but it's just more simply the conclusion I'm currently at given what I know about our decision-making processes. Does the analogy at least make sense?
      P2 is a slippery slope and quite frankly I don't really care for it at this time.

  • @DUDEBroHey
    @DUDEBroHey 2 месяца назад +114

    It's funny when the atheist who doesn't believe in freewill seems to get angry at the theist's actions or beliefs. It's like dude, but I couldn't believe anything else...

    • @zerokillerpt
      @zerokillerpt 2 месяца назад +6

      To be fair, I think an atheist who does not believe in free will wouldn't be mad at the person, but at the ideology. Something like I wouldn't hate the Germans in 1945, but I would definitely hate the Nazi ideology. As such, since you assume people have no blame for what ideologies they choose, you only try to change or remove toxic ideologies.

    • @wordforever117
      @wordforever117 2 месяца назад +9

      Yes and if we evolving by means of survival of the fittest, then surely evolving in such a way as to obtain eternal life is the ultimate survival instinct. Must be a natural process!

    • @Boundless_Border
      @Boundless_Border 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@wordforever117
      Yeah... several issues with that. The belief that you have it despite not having it can help soothe the mind but it doesn't help you survive beyond that. If you actually aim to get eternal life then recognizing you don't have it and striving to attain it will yield better results than simply believing you have it when you don't.
      In the context of actual evolution would say the inclination towards supernatural beliefs was fostered and the much more common aversion to death with that is what amounts to making up a supernatural eternal life. So it is more of a byproduct of what early minds did rather than directly evolution itself.

    • @RationalistMH
      @RationalistMH 2 месяца назад +3

      @@wordforever117the brain rot in this comment section is truly astounding

    • @wordforever117
      @wordforever117 2 месяца назад +2

      @@Boundless_Border It is an interesting theory but I don't think there is any evidence to back it up. Man has been religious since pre-historic times. All civilisations at all times have been religious. It transcends cultures and societies. The evidence point much more to man being instinctively religious because even self proclaimed atheists. They will consistently appeal to a higher power or external measure of goodness, or make statements of absolute truth for which there must be a transcendent arbiter.
      All instincts within man have two things in common.... the thing they strive for exists, and the same thing is required to sustain life.
      Food, water, oxygen, reproduction, even fight or flight...and prayer.
      When it comes down to it, when a crisis gets too much to bear, when there is no hope left.... *everyone* prays

  • @dukeofdenver
    @dukeofdenver 2 месяца назад +96

    This is the main reason I'm not atheist. There is no foundation for objective moral obligations or free will.
    It is manifestly untrue upon observation of the world

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +9

      All morality is subjective, even yours. Free will exists or it doesn't. The existence of a deity doesn't change that.

    • @analyticallysound2716
      @analyticallysound2716 2 месяца назад +3

      Wrong. Do some research, there are plenty of foundations for moral obligations outside of divine commands.

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +27

      @@avishevin1976 "All morality is subjective", as the vast majority of societies agree and have arrived to this morality independently.
      I think you know that you don't actually believe this.

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +5

      @@newglof9558
      The most significant moral issue in the US today is abortion. There are vehement disagreements, sometimes leading to violence, over the morality of the practice.
      Explain how morality is objective if there are two camps at polar opposite positions, with a whole spectrum in between.
      And that's just the most obvious example. People disagree on the morality of minor acts all the time. Morality is subjective.

    • @agarztheyounger
      @agarztheyounger 2 месяца назад +1

      Or if you see it my way, moral truths and conscienceless is inherit in every aspect of reality and more broadly the understanding of the whole and therefore the Whole is a directing mind, as truth, morals, perfection, beauty, make no sense unless they are inherit in the nature of the Whole, and moreover they are understood truths and therefore require a trinitarian conscienceless as the directing Whole.

  • @tonyl3762
    @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +107

    "Are you freely choosing not to believe in free will?" -me asking a fellow college PHIL 101 classmate who said he didn't believe in free will

    • @CalebLove-ci8bv
      @CalebLove-ci8bv 2 месяца назад +19

      @@LilySage-mf7uf Which is exactly why this atheistic position provides no rational grounds for moral judgement. It only allows for mere feelings.

    • @Ben-hn4nw
      @Ben-hn4nw 2 месяца назад

      @@LilySage-mf7ufyeah so if I believe something you find morally evil, you can’t blame me because I didn’t choose it. Your position is like a perverted sort of reverse-calvinism

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +9

      @@LilySage-mf7uf OH, so your position is just "a given"? Ever heard of begging the question? Circular reasoning? Assuming what you should be trying to prove/demonstrate?
      People often choose not to be convinced, even in the face of air-tight logic/arguments. People often don't want to be convinced for various selfish reasons (the examples are endless). People are not machines that have to follow logic to its natural conclusions.

    • @CalebLove-ci8bv
      @CalebLove-ci8bv 2 месяца назад +4

      @@LilySage-mf7uf yes, you can make a judgement, but not a rational one. For it to be rational, there would need to be free will, as well as real values of good and bad. I appreciate the example of the tree you used, but it still "falls" short, lol. I'll see myself out, but before I do, can you show that the tree falling is bad? Sure it could be harmful, but why is harm bad? Is it because we just don't like it?
      What if someone does like, and prefers the tree to fall and hurt someone? Is it then good? I don't believe this framework can account for any moral choice in terms of judgement, as the only judgement or conflict would be conflicted feelings.

    • @CalebLove-ci8bv
      @CalebLove-ci8bv 2 месяца назад +4

      @@LilySage-mf7uf you haven’t answered my question. Why is harm or causing pain a bad thing in an atheistic world. Do you just not like it? Did we deem it bad because the majority doesn’t like it?

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 2 месяца назад +6

    I already know how the anti-free will types will respond to that first point. They'll say "It's true that we don't have free will and people can't choose a different path, but we're saying 'be better' to make them go down that determined pathway instead."

    • @adanalyst6925
      @adanalyst6925 19 дней назад

      That’s interesting to me. At what point does the question of whether we “actually” have free will matter, if at all certain point not having a choice is indistinguishable from what having a choice looks like.

  • @charlesiragui2473
    @charlesiragui2473 2 месяца назад +90

    I lived in Paris for 5 years as a young person, a city full of atheist smarty-pants. While eating in Resto-U, a system for subsidized food open to university students, I would regularly encounter people who wanted to discuss the idea that there is no right or wrong, ie morality is imaginary. This was in the context that I am an Orthodox Christian, so this was a natural response for them. Each time, I stipulated that therefore the Nazis were perfectly justified in putting the Jews in ovens: There is no right and wrong and they felt like it. Oddly, this put them in knots every time, as though they had never considered this implication of their ideas. They were all quite committed to moral outrage at the Nazi crime.
    This (existence of good/evil) isn't the exact same issue as whether or not free will exists but I would claim that it is closely related.

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад

      I'm an agnostic so I'll have a crack at this.
      I think there is a right and wrong, it's just that rather than dictated by a god who isn't personal despite claiming to be, it's dictated by the balance between empathy, compassion, logic, evidence and democracy.
      Why are Nazis bad according to me? Well, they hurt people. There isn't logical justification. It was unnecessary agony and suffering, and that's why they're evil. It's the good old "I wouldn't want to be treated badly by Nazis, so I wouldn't like others being treated badly either"

    • @BornAgain223
      @BornAgain223 2 месяца назад +6

      a consistent atheist will usually have to concede that the concentration camps and the ghoulags are only subjectively wrong, in their opinion, but not objectively wrong.

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад

      @@BornAgain223 I think they're fairly objectively wrong, because of the disastrous observable impacts on human health which you could measure objectively by simply talking to a sample size of survivors or reading testimonies, analysing the conditions etc.
      This is my subjective view of the evidence to reach what I see as an objective conclusion, but other people can look at the evidence and see if they agree with me. You can also look at what trained people like in a courtroom might say.
      My question is: Is the Bible opposed to concentration camps and ghoulags? Is there specification on what sorts of prisons are permitted and what abuses are / are not allowed?

    • @Electricalpenguin
      @Electricalpenguin 2 месяца назад

      @@BornAgain223Why? Atheism and moral anti-realism are not synonymous.

    • @charlesiragui2473
      @charlesiragui2473 2 месяца назад

      @@BornAgain223 If one denies the possibility of objective morality, that would follow logically. I'm not really that worried about consistency: I am glad that they felt confusion, did not hold to their theory and continued to reject the crime.

  • @berserker9682
    @berserker9682 2 месяца назад +63

    Thanks for making this Trent. I came to the same conclusion 3 years ago, glad to be Catholic now. There is no epestemic justification for morals and logic in a naturalistic worldview

    • @franslair2199
      @franslair2199 2 месяца назад

      Have you considered just being a good and moral person without the threat of being raped by demons?

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад +1

      I disagree. Evolution explains it fine enough.
      Morals exist because we are a social species. So, by helping others in a society we ourselves survive. So, we got empathy and compassion to help us do this. This same empathy and compassion is how you can know things are right or wrong. But of course, people can still choose right from wrong because evolution requires variation to act on, so there must be variation in how individuals behave and react differently to different things.
      With logic, this is because we have big brains, and solving tricky situations helps us to get past obstacles to help us survive and reproduce. Loads of other animals show logic. Crows for example using tools to get food, for example

    • @berserker9682
      @berserker9682 2 месяца назад +4

      @@hydraph4843 Except both are not possible in a naturalistic worldview. And to add, empiricism is circular and self-defeating, it relies on non-empirical things (logic) to work. And your conception of morals is just an ad populum, which is a fallacy. Morals reflect man choosing between good and evil, which cannot be justified outside a theistic worldview. Thats the real epestemic and philosophical problem. You might wanna dig up som philosophy and metaphysics. To add any kind of comparison involves smuggling in a standard, which by your own logic cannot even be known let alone justified. I have been here 3 years ago and I see that you have not taken naturalism/atheism and darwinism to its logical conclusions. Watch Thomistic Instititute and their video against reductionism it shows the problems of your reasoning.

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад

      @@berserker9682 "Except both are not possible in a naturalistic worldview. ".
      I literally explained how it is.
      "And to add, empiricism is circular and self-defeating, it relies on non-empirical things (logic) to work. ".
      I had to look up what empiricism is, and I don't know what you are on about. The whole point of it is literally to use empirical evidence to discover truth: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empiricism
      " And your conception of morals is just an ad populum, which is a fallacy.".
      How is it? I came to this conclusion on my own. I read what people thought on it yes, but I applied my own critical thinking and whether it makes sense rather than blindly accepting it. An ad populum would be where I say it is true because this scientist said so. No, I am arguing this with my own logic because I personally think it's true.
      Just because a lot of people had thoughts on it you agree with doesn't make it ad populum. For example, lots of pastors have spoken on the Bible. Does that mean your interpretation of the Bible is an ad populum because a lot of people have said that thing before you did? No, of course I wouldn't say that.
      "Morals reflect man choosing between good and evil, which cannot be justified outside a theistic worldview. ".
      Yes, it can, because a variety of strategies is favoured by evolution, so all animals show a variation in how they approach situations in different ways.
      If we didn't have variation in how we act, we wouldn't be able to adapt.
      I think the perspective outside a theistic worldview makes more sense because other animals can actually help each other out: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altruism_(biology)
      So, it's not just people who can choose whether to do good things or not.
      "To add any kind of comparison involves smuggling in a standard, which by your own logic cannot even be known let alone justified. ".
      What do you mean? A moral standard? In which case, mine is weighing up empathy, logical understanding, evidence and what opinion is to reach a conclusion you agree with. I am not saying my opinion is correct. But, I am valid for having that opinion, and through talking to other people we can try to come to some agreements like a middle ground based on what we all agree with.
      "I have been here 3 years ago and I see that you have not taken naturalism/atheism and darwinism to its logical conclusions. ".
      I literally study zoology, which includes quite a bit on evolutionary biology, so I think I am fairly confident in my knowledge for the most part.
      "Watch Thomistic Instititute and their video against reductionism it shows the problems of your reasoning.".
      I don't feel like watching a video. Could you summarise it?

    • @CartoonistDave
      @CartoonistDave 2 месяца назад +2

      @@hydraph4843atheistic worldview tells you how things are. But it cant tell you why you should live the “right” way. Its all up to relativism. You cant tell me why the great evil people in history were in fact “evil” without borrowing from our God. If morals are so relative, you should be able to justify them and provide why you chose those specific value judgements. We’re waiting…

  • @BibleSongs
    @BibleSongs 2 месяца назад +6

    So right! I woke in the middle of the night with that podcast running through my mind. I couldn't sleep while my mind, over and over again, ran through the very argument you make here.

  • @SurrenderNovena
    @SurrenderNovena 2 месяца назад +38

    Clear. Simple. May atheists see this and, using their free will, reflect and discern deeply on your arguments! Thank you, Trent!!

    • @Galaksyxxxht
      @Galaksyxxxht 2 месяца назад +1

      Atheism is the world's biggest dead end mistake. The person who denies says there is no Creator, but imagine a big disaster is coming, drought, war, hunger or an accident. Let's say I am in a difficult situation, who will help? Of course, you pray to the Almighty Creator and billions of people pray. It is Allah who answers prayers and relieves the troubles. The person who denies this denies the truth is that man is weak and in need of help at all times. Islam commands people to have good morals and good deeds.

    • @greenbird679
      @greenbird679 2 месяца назад

      @@Galaksyxxxht rasulallah was fra ud. He invented verses to suit his needs. Ex: when companions of rasulallah accused him of ste aling red velvet under garment, he pretend to get quran revelation 3:161, saying "it is not for the for prophet to embezzle".
      If allah was real god, he would have shown who stole the red velvet, instead of telling that rasulallah is not thi ef.
      Do we really need to take him seriously? Is allah real god?

    • @willt3982
      @willt3982 Месяц назад

      @@Galaksyxxxht Yes people all randomly start praying to Allah in wars and hard times, we really see this in ww2 all those people instantly started praying to Allah. Come on you know this isn't true, most people for most of history have been religious and pray to the God they personally believe in in hard times whilst atheists wouldn't pray they would hope their situation gets better or do some other mechanism to cope.

  • @raymk
    @raymk 2 месяца назад +9

    4:40 I'm looking forward to seeing Trent exercising his smooth transition speech to a sponsored segment.

    • @Galaksyxxxht
      @Galaksyxxxht 2 месяца назад

      Atheism is the world's biggest dead end mistake. The person who denies says there is no Creator, but imagine a big disaster is coming, drought, war, hunger or an accident. Let's say I am in a difficult situation, who will help? Of course, you pray to the Almighty Creator and billions of people pray. It is Allah who answers prayers and relieves the troubles. The person who denies this denies the truth is that man is weak and in need of help at all times. Islam commands people to have good morals and good deeds.

  • @ninjason57
    @ninjason57 2 месяца назад +51

    Why do these atheists not blame Orthodox Jews for the Old Testament?

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 2 месяца назад +6

      They do although the Book of Revelation is much harsher.

    • @noneofyourbusiness7965
      @noneofyourbusiness7965 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@tomasrocha6139Since when? I never see Jews being held to any such account.

    • @Chicken_of_Bristol
      @Chicken_of_Bristol 2 месяца назад

      To steelman it, Orthodox Jews don't actively proselytize like Christians do. So while I'm sure they would be happy to bring the argument up in a debate with an orthodox Jew, Jews are not the primary group of people telling atheists "you need to believe this book."

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 2 месяца назад +15

      @@noneofyourbusiness7965 Watch Alex O' Connor''s debate with Ben Shapiro, he brings up slavery forced marriage to female captives.

    • @bria1648
      @bria1648 2 месяца назад

      cause if you put blame on Jews then you anti-sematic and a Nazi, which is mind boggling given that somewhere around 1-3 million Catholics also died in the holocaust

  • @michaeltamajong2988
    @michaeltamajong2988 2 месяца назад +18

    For the record, Richard Dawkins does not want to debate philosophers like Craig because Craig's methodology is: "Premise 1, Conlusion 2, ... " 😂😂😂😂

    • @bigdiccmario
      @bigdiccmario 2 месяца назад

      Sounds like a disjunctive syllogism

    • @charles13773
      @charles13773 2 месяца назад +10

      He keeps on changing his reasons 😂😂

    • @esterhudson5104
      @esterhudson5104 2 месяца назад +1

      @@charles13773And? When you wipe your ass after a shitstorm, is there more than one reason?

  • @usernameryan5982
    @usernameryan5982 2 месяца назад +5

    “Therefore I will hold you morally responsible for this channels lack of growth” lol this is awesome

  • @notavailable4891
    @notavailable4891 2 месяца назад +39

    If you're inclined, it can get even simpler: If you don't have free will, and all your thoughts including propositions are determined, then you eliminate the possibility for propositions to have any truth value to them including the proposition, "I have no free will". It is self defeating because if it is true then it cannot be true. So atheists have to accept free will, the only question is whether they can justify free will.

    • @sidwhiting665
      @sidwhiting665 2 месяца назад +10

      Sort of like someone saying, "There is no objective truth".... the proper response is "Is that claim objectively true?"

    • @avishevin1976
      @avishevin1976 2 месяца назад +4

      You are not logical. There is nothing inherently contradictory in the claim "I have no free will", therefore it can absolutely be true if free will does not exist.

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +11

      “If my mental processes are determined wholly by the motions of atoms in my brain, I have no reason to suppose that my beliefs are true… and hence I have no reason for supposing my brain to be composed of atoms.” -Prof Haldane via CS Lewis

    • @tonyl3762
      @tonyl3762 2 месяца назад +7

      "Are you freely choosing not to believe in free will?" -me asking a fellow college PHIL 101 classmate who said he didn't believe in free will

    • @batglide5484
      @batglide5484 2 месяца назад +6

      @@avishevin1976if you say “I have no free will,” then I don’t believe you. After all, if you had no free will, then you would have no other choice than to say that. To say “I have no free will,” is to say that there is no such thing as reason. This means that even if it were true that there is no free will, it would also mean there is no good reason to believe it.

  • @georgebashour4333
    @georgebashour4333 2 месяца назад +1

    All love and prayers to you brother trent from an Eastern Orthodox in Syria.

  • @FreshPrince0fMiami
    @FreshPrince0fMiami 2 месяца назад +2

    16:51 this just made me think, there’s 2 different charges for undeadly physical harm to a person ~ attempted murder and aggravated assault, even though the victim didn’t die in both, each charge carry a different weight.
    Also there’s murder, kill, and manslaughter. They all are physical harms where someone dies, but all 3 carry different weight/ moral responsibilities

  • @JHeb_
    @JHeb_ 20 дней назад +3

    4:32
    The conclusion doesn't logically follow from the premises.
    And no, atheism doesn't make a statement about free will and lack of free will doesn't mean we shouldn't hold people responsible.

    • @jamesc3505
      @jamesc3505 7 дней назад

      I'm pretty sure the conclusion does follow from the premises. I'd just question the first premise.

    • @JHeb_
      @JHeb_ 7 дней назад +1

      @@jamesc3505
      True, my mistake.

  • @GOATEditz204
    @GOATEditz204 2 месяца назад +5

    You need to do more rebuttals of memes, is so funny

  • @alwayslearningtech
    @alwayslearningtech Месяц назад +1

    Determinism isn't an atheist argument. It's held by many people of different beliefs surrounding the subject of belief in gods. You can hold people responsible while still believing in determinism.

  • @mckleynhans04
    @mckleynhans04 2 месяца назад +1

    The thing is, i think alex and other determinists would agree with what you're saying about free will. But i think what happens is that we simply preclude the our conceptions of free will so as to be able to engage in other discussions that build on foundational beliefs in free will and discuing issues in that context. For example i can argue with a utilitarian about morality using their assumptions, operating on the foundations of that view without being a utilitarian myself. The same applies here when making moral critiques even though someone might not believe in free will. Because if we focus on the fundamental disagreement, then it may impair the capacity to talk on subjects that presuppose free will and so we just preclude it for the context of a discussion.

  • @ryandeems1558
    @ryandeems1558 2 месяца назад +34

    Love your content Trent.

  • @timothy2794
    @timothy2794 2 месяца назад +5

    The bad guy from the Frosty the Snowman cartoon always putting bombs in peoples heads on election day.

  • @wessmith3960
    @wessmith3960 2 месяца назад +2

    Trent, would love a video of you talking about the Baptist “Trail Of Blood” it was brought up in a conversation with some friends about church history.

  • @mbalicki
    @mbalicki 2 месяца назад +1

    Hi, @TheCounselofTrent ! Is there a reason why this episode wasn’t posted on the audio version of the podcast? 🤔

  • @xehaexox
    @xehaexox 2 месяца назад +3

    Can you respond to Joe Schmid's rebuttal of this video?

  • @UnstoppableFloridaMan
    @UnstoppableFloridaMan 2 месяца назад +28

    I used my free will to like and subscribe Trent!

    • @thekatarnalchemist
      @thekatarnalchemist 2 месяца назад +3

      Nobody stops the Florida Man!

    • @UnstoppableFloridaMan
      @UnstoppableFloridaMan 2 месяца назад +3

      @@JustADudeGamer Oh a lot of things can go wrong, thus why we live in a fallen world. Without God’s grace we are lost. We have the free choice to follow him and forever have everlasting life if we repent for our misdeeds.

    • @UnstoppableFloridaMan
      @UnstoppableFloridaMan 2 месяца назад

      @@JustADudeGamer Anyone can do bad things out of the blue, but it does not mean it's good that they do it. Certain people can have mental issues which may give us less of a reason to punish them societally but it does not change the fact you can punish people for what they do because they out of their own free will did it. There are certain reasons and desires that make us act a certain way yes, but that does not mean it was the only thing making us do what we did. Ultimately we can decide what we do.

    • @trompette4485
      @trompette4485 Месяц назад

      That's actually hilarious buddy. You didn't choose anything, it's his words that made your brain react and caused you to subscribe.

    • @UnstoppableFloridaMan
      @UnstoppableFloridaMan Месяц назад

      @@trompette4485 His words certainly had an effect, but ultimately it was me who decided to press the button and subscribe. You ever heard the classic saying you can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink? Same principle.

  • @SevereFamine
    @SevereFamine 2 месяца назад +2

    Trent, what are your thoughts on theistic compatibilism?

  • @shadowpony9312
    @shadowpony9312 2 месяца назад +1

    Atheists also believe that artificial intelligence can think and learn and become sentient and make it's own choices, etc. It has free will in other words. But humans don't, we are binded to determinism via materialism.

    • @edisonchin2463
      @edisonchin2463 10 дней назад

      Who made that claim for all atheists?

  • @mement0_m0ri
    @mement0_m0ri 2 месяца назад +3

    The alien on Simpsons is called Kodos, not Kronos.

    • @xehaexox
      @xehaexox 2 месяца назад

      That’s the Klingon homeworld

  • @AsRolfes
    @AsRolfes 2 месяца назад +5

    Even insurance companies describe these as Acts of God...🤔

  • @mattstiglic
    @mattstiglic Месяц назад +2

    All of these pop atheists' arguments can be boiled down to one simple statement: "If God, why bad thing happen?"

    • @willt3982
      @willt3982 Месяц назад +1

      No it can't, my lack of a belief in Gods has got nothing to do with the problem of evil😭. I just don't believe it because I haven't seen any decent evidence that suggests the God's any religion describe exist, That is the main argument for atheism (the lack of beliefs in God not the truth statement "there is no gods" btw)

    • @mattstiglic
      @mattstiglic Месяц назад

      @@willt3982 did I say your specific argument? Or did I say "pop atheists"?

    • @willt3982
      @willt3982 Месяц назад +1

      @@mattstiglic My bad, but I still disagree. I'm sure these pop up atheists which are probably smarter then me can come up with better arguments then the problem of evil.

  • @AussieCatholic
    @AussieCatholic 2 месяца назад +2

    Devils Advocate here:
    Could this same argument be used against Theism? Theism holds that predestination and free will are compatible does it not?
    Isn't this the same as arguing that determinism and free will are compatible?

  • @danvankouwenberg7234
    @danvankouwenberg7234 2 месяца назад +32

    Whenever I hear an atheist talk, I get kinda sleepy.

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад +6

      lacking intelligence can do that.

    • @danvankouwenberg7234
      @danvankouwenberg7234 2 месяца назад +12

      @@hippywill 😴😴😴
      I'm taking a nap until I hear an argument.

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад +1

      @@danvankouwenberg7234 ya thinking can be hard for you to do. atheists have morals with out the need for an imaginary figure.

    • @danvankouwenberg7234
      @danvankouwenberg7234 2 месяца назад +2

      @@hippywill 😴😴😴😴

    • @danvankouwenberg7234
      @danvankouwenberg7234 2 месяца назад

      @@hippywill 😴😴😴😴 put down the bong and pick up your cross.

  • @turningproductive
    @turningproductive 2 месяца назад +4

    Hi Trent!
    Could you do a episode about the government banning contraception (all/just the bad for health/just the abortifacient) or banning civil divorce (all/whiches?)?
    Sometimes these themes are discuted and I don’t think there is a Church’s document about this.
    Thanks!

    • @jags6868
      @jags6868 2 месяца назад

      There are multiple sources and documents from the Catholic Church regarding divorce and contraception. As for divorce only being allowed in situations of danger, divorce can also be granted in cases of adultery.

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад

      advocating for discrimination and dictatorship is the religious way it seems. removing free will is what religiously immoral people seem to want to do.

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад +1

      @@jags6868 but its discrimination that is being applied here.

  • @RoderickEtheria
    @RoderickEtheria Месяц назад +1

    Atheists can have their own sets of morals that do not need to come from somebody else. I don't know why so many theists think they need to be told by somebody else what is moral. Atheists can judge by how they set their own morals how they feel about others' morals. Anything that is considered contrary to one's own set of morals is what is considered evil.
    And often, the atheists ask how theists can justify something that according to their own book is commanded and yet sinful.

  • @kingomar7332
    @kingomar7332 20 дней назад +2

    If funny cuz these atheists would say will my arguments are “an internal critique” of the religion, to try to brush this argument.

  • @laserwolf65
    @laserwolf65 2 месяца назад +5

    Maybe I'm just dumb, but why would free will and atheism be incompatible with each other?

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад +5

      its not the video is just intellectually dishonest

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 2 месяца назад +6

      They are not, religious apologists are unable to be honest

    • @glof2553
      @glof2553 2 месяца назад +4

      There are non-determinist atheists, but many of the prominent ones are determinist. This video was to them.

    • @Cklert
      @Cklert 2 месяца назад

      Because it's very difficult for atheists to demonstrate that free will actually exists within the parameters of materialism. Outside of Providence, there's very little indication that free will exists. It would seem that it is all chemicals in our brains reacting to stimuli. Thus being deterministic.
      It's much more consistent for an atheist to reject free will than presuming it and not give a coherent reason.
      I'm sure it can be done. But I haven't actually found a good argument that doesn't have some incoherency within itself.

    • @unknowninfinium4353
      @unknowninfinium4353 2 месяца назад

      I am dumb - This is because free will is a result of chemical reactions in your brain or the synapses that happen before an action or thought. So there is no way about it. There is no Free-Wi cir Aethiests. No god. Then the rational explanation is science.
      Unless you dont believe in Science.

  • @imimpo9316
    @imimpo9316 2 месяца назад +3

    Great video!
    You very concisely explained the matter
    Christ is King!

  • @imherwerdio6852
    @imherwerdio6852 2 месяца назад +1

    8:20 through 9:05, excellent points. Another fine video here, Trent :)

  • @gerardosanchez6567
    @gerardosanchez6567 2 месяца назад +1

    God bless you brother i am a Christian but the way you explained that, it made me think if they really thought what God did to the Cannanites was wrong that means they have their own idea of how to deal with the Cannanites, what would that have been ? 🤔 If they have no problem with certain moral issues now i wonder what resolve they would have for that

  • @anooshmichael
    @anooshmichael 2 месяца назад +34

    Wonderful logic ! Way to go Trent!

    • @skigui9078
      @skigui9078 2 месяца назад +2

      Not really. He doesn't understand what makes people make choices. He just thinks we are made of magic or something and have complete control of everything all the time. Let me ask you this. If you are hungry do you get more easily upset? You do no question about it. Thats because our body and brain is lacking nutrients wich effects our mood and mental state. We are slaves to things our body needs not slaves to morality, morality is a made up concept the reality is people act and work differently because their mind and body works differently. You in reality have 0 control over yourself. You can regulate these changes in a more negative mindset like eating in the previous example but in the end you can't stop that from happening if you don't eat you are guaranteed to get more angry and upset if you are on an empty stomach meaning you don't have free will, you have the power to prevent the situation of getting hungry from happening and in extension getting angry but you don't have the power to go without food and and control how your emotions and how you act. This means that no we don't have complete control of our actions only the power to prevent that situation from occuring. We don't have complete free will. We have a lot of free will but not complete

    • @justinx6498
      @justinx6498 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@skigui9078 Uhh, If there's freewill then there's some transcendence, no two ways about it. It's like an ocean that delivers water to a tap which delivers water to a household. The ocean symbolizes the much bigger complex transcendence of the consciousness of the soul, while the tap represents the body and the household represents the physical world. If the tap is damaged(body is damaged) then the water supply to the household(how you perform in the world and interact with the world) is affected despite the fact that the ocean is doing just fine( so a damaged body manifests negatively despite the soul being intact). Likewise, if the ocean becomes salty, there's nothing the tap by itself can do, so we have a negative outcome from the tap despite the tap being completely functional (a healthy , well fed, educated person can still make bad decisions and do evil). So you see, it's a mutual interaction, the soul needs the body to interact with the world and so if the body is damaged or needs something, it can inhibit the workings of the soul, our thoughts, our choices. However the body can be perfectly catered for but we still make bad or detrimental decisions. So it's not either body or soul, it's body and soul involved in the equation here.

    • @trompette4485
      @trompette4485 Месяц назад +1

      No logic was used in this video. Only logical fallacies. The one he used the most is called "appeal to consequences" fallacies.

  • @beastmode4865
    @beastmode4865 2 месяца назад +19

    You're awesome trent. Keep going!

  • @reviewspiteras
    @reviewspiteras 2 месяца назад

    That book quote from Sapolsky a showed me who are the ones that are ideologically captured. When someone wrongs you so bad your body naturally reacts in anger to seek retribution but I guess the feelings of the victim doesn't matter, they are unnatural but what ever the criminals does was not his choice.

  • @blsi4037
    @blsi4037 2 месяца назад +1

    What is incredibly ironic about their reactions is that they are moral relativists treating morality objectively. Do the rational and overtly logical skeptics suppose to subject their OPINIONS onto everybody else? Because according to them, I thought morality was subjective and determined by one's cultural affiliations and not objective? Unless genocide is the one exception, in which case I forgot to watch their videos about that....

  • @ubergenie6041
    @ubergenie6041 2 месяца назад +3

    The argument I gave below is another way to respond. As to free will, not only do we need a standard to call anything “good” or “bad” we need rationality and free will.
    On naturalism and evolution we don’t seem to have an account of either free will or rationality.
    Since evolution’s mechanism is on survivability rather than obtaining true beliefs there seems to be no way that true beliefs would survive the survival of the fittest function! The football players would always obliterate the chess team leading to brawns but not brains.
    For more see Plantinga’s Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад

      first off, figuring out what's true and what's not true can be useful in regards to survival
      second off, survival of the fittest is sketchy in that regard, it's more a case of 'what works works', like butt fluff, scientists couldn't figure out the purpose of butt fluffy, so the general consensus as to why we have it is simply that there wasn't enough of a reason for us to get rid of it, not having butt fluff wasn't enough of an evolutionary downside to phase it out
      thirdly, just because those mechanisms weren't based on obtaining true beliefs but survival doesn't mean they can't be used for that, in the same way wood wasn't formed for the purpose of making fires, but it can be used for such a purpose

    • @harsha6937
      @harsha6937 2 месяца назад

      ​@@thejuiceking2219
      But the problem is sometimes both can be true and you have to make utility based choice
      And even tho other thing could be less rational if it's more beneficial
      You will still have to accept it
      Statistically Religion is better
      And therefore since the position of God can't be falsified
      And We can take culture and Some morals from Religion
      Then we have to practice religion

    • @harsha6937
      @harsha6937 2 месяца назад

      ​@@thejuiceking2219Your third point
      That would be an intelligent Choice by the Organism
      And not Evolutionary gift by Nature
      I can also apply the same logic
      And then say similarly about religion and God

    • @harsha6937
      @harsha6937 2 месяца назад

      ​@@thejuiceking2219Survival of Fittest is not hard to understand
      There are cases where it's difficult to put things into places or understand them well
      But in most cases we can easily see what is happening
      And it's basically
      "Who adapts will survive,those who don't won't survive"
      I can say same things about non Religious and Atheist societies
      And make a Utility based claim

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад

      @@harsha6937 okay, just to be clear, when you say God can't be falsified, are you specifically talking about the christian God, or just any creator deity?
      because the christian God can be refuted, since the bible is the source of the christian God, so if you can refute the bible you can refute God
      for just any creator deity not defined by a religion, i'll be 100% honest, i don't think i could dispute that for any reason outside of 'i see no reason to believe that'

  • @user-cg2ij7ow5u
    @user-cg2ij7ow5u 2 месяца назад +9

    This was excellent. I wonder about the uncaused cause as well- I am searching for that explanation from Trent !

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +1

      why does there have to be an uncaused cause?

    • @patrickbarnes9874
      @patrickbarnes9874 2 месяца назад

      @@thejuiceking2219 because causes are effects from previous causes but the first effect's cause cannot itself be an effect from a previous cause, so therefore there must be an initial cause that is uncaused which started the chain of causation that led to the current state of affairs.

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад

      @@patrickbarnes9874 why does there have to be a first effect?

  • @NFITC1
    @NFITC1 25 дней назад

    14:15 - This is called a Hobson's Choice, in case you're interested.

  • @brockjones3569
    @brockjones3569 2 месяца назад

    Is there a reason you aren’t posting this on Spotify anymore?

  • @jakeraymond8963
    @jakeraymond8963 2 месяца назад +7

    Great timing! I'm currently working on a paper defending free will for my philosophy class. I'd like to use your burning building example for my paper to demonstrate the necessity of moral responsibility in society, if that's okay.

  • @user-gs4oi1fm4l
    @user-gs4oi1fm4l 2 месяца назад +4

    When they parade their own definition of morality over that of the God who made the universe that tells you how much they think of themselves.

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +3

      that doesn't make sense, of course they'd value their definition of morality over the morality of someone they don't believe to exist, by that same logic i could call you arrogant for believing your morals to be superior to those of, say, Allah

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад +2

      You would rather take morality from an ancient book written by people likely affected by socio-economic factors of the time long considered outdated over morality based on empathy, logical understanding and democratic opinion?
      Also, the Bible doesn't explicitly condemn pedophilia as far as I am aware. If I am wrong, feel free to correct me on that but if I'm right, know you worship a religion that doesn't condemn pedophiles

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 2 месяца назад +1

      You mean what all christians do, interpret the bible according to their own sense of morality or the one of some religious authority?

    • @user-gs4oi1fm4l
      @user-gs4oi1fm4l 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@thejuiceking2219 Since I root objective morality in the historical Christ and His teachings rather than solely my own reason your analogy does not work. Especially when compared to the a-historical claims made by Islam.

    • @user-gs4oi1fm4l
      @user-gs4oi1fm4l 2 месяца назад

      ​@@hydraph4843 pedophilia is explicitly contrary to Christian Doctrine on marriage since such unions are not oriented to procreation or the mutual partnership toward Holiness. Rather they are rooted in mere subjectively rooted justifications much more appropriate to individualist materialist atheism as paraded on campuses across the country. Your misunderstanding of christian teaching is not surprising given the apparent materialist bias you admit accreditting to history.

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic9016 Месяц назад

    Really appreciate this video.

  • @philippedersen2411
    @philippedersen2411 2 месяца назад +2

    Hello Trent, can you please make a video refuting the claim that "Rome never fell, it just became a church". I hear that argument often, and protestants/athiest often point towards that fact that *most* Catholic countries in Europe today, where once part of the Roman empire.

    • @adanalyst6925
      @adanalyst6925 19 дней назад

      Why does that need to be refuted though? If you believe in the church, that could be God placing his church within an institution that it could easily spread within.

  • @johnxina-uk8in
    @johnxina-uk8in 2 месяца назад +8

    The whole "theres no free will" is so stupid. Most of the argument is based on a purposefully misinterpreted study from the 80s on the sub conscious and "readiness potential", which the researchers explain can be consciously cancelled by the person

    • @nsinkov
      @nsinkov 2 месяца назад +1

      I think that I am made of atoms and have no soul. If that were true, would you say I have free will?

    • @stephengalanis
      @stephengalanis 2 месяца назад

      All this raises a question for the philosopher - what are the implications of advances in knowledge about human decision-making for our conception of free will? Will scientific progress undermine our sense that we have free will? Will it eventually lead us to conclude that free will is an illusion?
      Take the following notorious real-life case from a decade ago.
      A once happily married middle-aged man begins to develop a fascination for child pornography and prostitution. Until this moment he has exhibited no unusual sexual appetites. Matters deteriorate, his wife becomes alarmed, and when he makes an advance on his step-daughter, his wife informs the police. Her husband is compelled to go and have therapy - but that doesn't deter him. Indeed, he harasses women at the centre at which he is being treated.
      A prison term seems inevitable. But just before he is due back in front of the courts, he begins to complain of headaches. He is rushed to hospital, where a scan reveals a massive tumour. Once this tumour is removed, his behaviour returns to normal.
      The story has a further twist. After several months, his aberrant behaviour returns. An investigation reveals that the tumour has not been entirely eradicated. A further operation sees the man back to his old self once again.
      In this case most people will probably feel that the man with the deviant sexual behaviour wasn't really free. It was, as it were, the tumour that was responsible.
      But we are all physical beings in a (largely) deterministic universe. Why is one physical cause - a tumour - different from any other? Might, in future, neuroscientists be brought into court to explain away all manner of transgressions, for example: "This man can't be held responsible for his shoplifting - it was due to his unusually high levels of dopamine." There is evidence that some people treated with dopamine for Parkinson's have problems with impulse control, sex and gambling, for example.
      Most of our philosophical concepts go back to the ancient Greeks. Not the concept of free will.
      The Homeric Greeks believed in fate, rather than freedom. They believed that circumstances were beyond their control. In the writings of Plato and Aristotle, there is no term that would naturally be translated as "free will". The emergence of the concept of free will can be dated to about the 4th Century AD, and was an ingenious solution of Christian theologians to the so-called Problem of Evil. If God is all powerful, and God is all good, how come there is evil in the world? The answer, said Saint Augustine, is that man has free will.
      ---bbc/news/Magazine "What can a brain scan tell us about free will?" 13 August 2013.

    • @johnxina-uk8in
      @johnxina-uk8in 2 месяца назад

      @nsinkov From that worldview you wouldn't, but since I know that isn't true, it's a moot point. All this is is an attempt to bring socialism to western nations, demorilization is step one for these snakes. There's a reason every socialist state removes God and calls faithful people stupid and antiquated. Yet the enlightened atheists have a much higher rate of depression, suicide, sexual degeneracy, early pregnancy, less productivity and general unhappiness.

  • @jonathanw1106
    @jonathanw1106 2 месяца назад +10

    In fairness, determinism is not a unique idea to atheism nor did it come up with the theory. Reformed theology and Islamic fatalism both hold forms of this and have for centuries

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +5

      The theodicies for those two faiths are different than atheism's though, which rejects theodicy outright

    • @jonathanw1106
      @jonathanw1106 2 месяца назад

      @newglof9558 well obviously but I'm just pointing out that arguing that atheism is self refuting because it doesn't hold to free will is very bizarre apologetic. To me the better response Trent could have raised is the fact that atheists are entirely unable to make any moral judgments at all since they don't have an objective standard, and they can't fall back to making this an internal critique because Dawkins for example clearly argues against God and debating Craig due to his own perception of immorality in God's actions. The irony is that he has no basis to criticize God's actions since he can't say that anyone is responsible for their actions AND that actions have a moral value associated with them. For Dawkins, the problem is that his own moral intuitions (which are largely Christian whether he admits or not) are in his worldview completely arbitrary, and thus it makes no sense to criticize God for His allegedly arbitrary actions.

    • @charlesiragui2473
      @charlesiragui2473 2 месяца назад

      Very true. However, atheists raise this as a way to take away moral judgment, while the theistic traditions do not.

    • @thekatarnalchemist
      @thekatarnalchemist 2 месяца назад +2

      I would suggest that the argument for free will is in fact a major counterpoint against Reformed and Islamic theology.

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +1

      @@jonathanw1106 The point of the video is one element of atheism posited by many prominent atheists and why this element is inconsistent. That's it. It's like a 12 minute video. It doesn't promise much to you.

  • @omarvazquez3355
    @omarvazquez3355 2 месяца назад +1

    Another great argument by Tent ❤

  • @johannaquinones7473
    @johannaquinones7473 2 месяца назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤ your videos are great, blessings to you and yours

  • @FiatMihiSecundumVerbum
    @FiatMihiSecundumVerbum 2 месяца назад +6

    The question of free will is independent of theism or atheism. Atheists can believe in free will because it's only a lack of belief in gods. It does not inherently prescribe any particular metaphysical views about the laws of nature or human behavior. Atheists can believe in various forms of metaphysics, including those that allow for indeterminism or libertarian free will.
    Your argument that true moral responsibility requires free will, specifically the ability to have done otherwise is not universally accepted. Compatibilists, for instance, argue that moral responsibility is possible even under determinism, if individuals act according to their own reasons and desires, without external compulsion.
    But the dismissal of compatibilism as "unsatisfying" is a subjective judgment rather than a philosophical refutation. It holds that free will and determinism are not mutually exclusive and that what matters for free will is not the ability to have done otherwise in any absolute sense, but rather the alignment of one’s actions with one’s internal motivations and rational deliberations.

    • @internetghost1777
      @internetghost1777 2 месяца назад +1

      Atheism is a denial of Gods existence not a lack of faith. Agnostic is the lack of belief and belief.

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 2 месяца назад +1

      @@internetghost1777 That's not totally true as everyone has faith in something just like everyone have to believe in some kind of miracle.

    • @abc-ze5tm
      @abc-ze5tm 2 месяца назад

      When the final outcome, whether you’ve been the best person or the w0rst person, is the same, nothing matters. When it’s all just atoms moving, nothing matters. You also know that these atheists Trent is referring to believe in materialism, and I’m hard pressed to find any kind of such metaphysics that wouldn’t ultimately lead to a creator.

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 2 месяца назад

      ​@@abc-ze5tmjust because you say that nothing matters, doesn't mean it's true
      I'm sure the vast majority of non cult members would disagree

    • @marcoanor2601
      @marcoanor2601 2 месяца назад

      ​@@smidlee7747 i think you're confusing faith with trust. I have trust that i can trust person A for example because he has demonstrated that he is honest and sincere from my interqctions with him. Faith is when you believe something to be true in the absence of evidence, like when you trust person a to be honest even though you've never met the person

  • @hermanessences
    @hermanessences 2 месяца назад +6

    Not all atheists believe in determinism. Objectivists, for example, believe in free will.

  • @esgietheqroue
    @esgietheqroue 2 месяца назад

    The bomb-in-the-head scenario reminded me of the Marvel comic Secret Wars, where the heroes make the decision to fight Dr Doom, after he has stolen the Beyonder's powers. They are instantly annihilated after the choice has been made, but they still made the choice.

  • @asmodeuszdewa7194
    @asmodeuszdewa7194 2 месяца назад

    8:17 on the basis that it can make a difference. There is no reason for blaming animals without a sense of morality because the blame can't have any effect on the future behaviour of the animals. There is a reason for blaming humans with a sense of morality because their sense of morality can make them behave differently in the future.

  • @IndraRamakrishna
    @IndraRamakrishna 2 месяца назад +6

    Hello! I am a hindu whos trying to learn about christianity. Could someone please help me? Could someone please explain to me simply what christians mean by "salvation"? Ie-jesus is the only way to salvation. Ive watched mr.jhon mccarthur,jhon pipers,voddie bauchams etcs videos on it and i have no idea what it means. Does it mean getting an afterlife? If so does it also mean anything else? Are there some christians who dont believe in afterlife? Or is the belief in an after life a mandatory belief to be a christian? Please help me. May god bless you for you re aid

    • @violetblythe6912
      @violetblythe6912 2 месяца назад +2

      Salvation means the cost of our sins was paid for by Jesus Christ the Son of God, and our souls after death will live eternally with him.
      “For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord”

    • @IndraRamakrishna
      @IndraRamakrishna 2 месяца назад

      Thank you so much friend! Could i ask you a few more questions if you dont mind? Must all christians believe in an after life or is it something thats debated? For example,ive learnt that in judaism not all jews believe in an afterlife. Some jews do and some dont. Is it the same in christianity?

    • @violetblythe6912
      @violetblythe6912 2 месяца назад +1

      It’s kind of like moksha which might make more sense to you, although the concept in Christianity is different. We also don’t earn it by our works alone, but in accepting the gift of Christ’s sacrifice for us.

    • @ragequit7151
      @ragequit7151 2 месяца назад +1

      God is perfect. Perfectly good and perfectly just. Man's imperfection is called sin. Sin is the thing which separates us from God. Death is the cost of sin.
      In order to heal the rift between God and man, the debt that sin incurs had to be paid. For this to occur, a sinless man must have died in order to pay a debt which is not his. This, of course, is beyond the abilities of man. So, God gave us his only begotten son, whose sinless death absolved us of our sin.
      After the death of our Lord, we need to profess our faith in Him and accept the gift of salvation. To be saved is to never die. Eternal life is the just reward for faith in Christ.

    • @IndraRamakrishna
      @IndraRamakrishna 2 месяца назад

      ​@@violetblythe6912 and could you tell me or direct me to some experts who can tell me a little bit about what this after life is like please? Do we remember/ get to meet our loved ones in heaven? Or is it more like the hindu continuation of consiousness , where our personalities are completely changed into a desireless entity that has no likes , deslikes etc

  • @joshuacooley1417
    @joshuacooley1417 2 месяца назад +7

    Another major problem with determinism is simply the absurdity of the fact that if your thoughts are simply the result of molecules in motion, then you are not "thinking" your thoughts in any meaningful way. They are things happening as the result of natural processes, not intentionality.
    If you do not intentionally think your thoughts, then "You" do not exist in any meaningful way.
    The very idea of personhood depends upon free will. There is no such thing as a person without will. There is no such thing as intellect or mind, without will.
    Thus the notion of determinism creates and absolutely absurd image of reality in which a person that does not exist, is thinking that another person which does not exist is morally blame-worthy for thoughts that person did not think, and actions that the non-existent person took, because the non-existent person had desires which are also simply the result of molecules in motion.
    And yet they have the gall to think of themselves as rational and the proponents of reason. Ironically, this just adds another layer of absurdity to their situation. A person who cannot think, and doesn't exist, considers themselves to be better at thinking in accord with reality, than a person who also does not exist, and can't think, who has different molecules moving in a different pattern.
    Also, a comment on the whole conquest of Canaan thing. One of the charges that is leveled against Christians who defend God's command to kill the children is that they believe "God commanded it therefore it is just."
    Which can be seen as a Voluntarist, arbitrary position whatever God commands becomes good. In the Euthyphro dilemma this would be the "it is good because the gods love it" option.
    In this view there essentially is nothing which is objectively good, good and evil are subjectively determined by God.
    However, there is another possibility here.
    Consider that God knows the good and does good, because it is good.
    We know imperfectly and can know the good, but we also acknowledge that God's knowledge of the good is infinitely better than ours.
    Thus it is possible that God's knowledge of the good and our knowledge of the good can conflict because he would know something to be good that we would think is bad.
    Given that reality, a wise person could say "I believe this is good because God commanded it" without meaning that goodness is arbitrarily determined by God's fiat. Rather in this case, the statement would simply be a statement of faith, that I trust God to know the good, better than I know the good, thus I will defer my judgement to his judgement.
    This is, pretty much, what the entire book of Job is about.

    • @Hearth123
      @Hearth123 2 месяца назад

      I have also heard it argued that the utter conquest of Canaan was likely war hyperbole not literal which was incredibly common in literature at the time. There are many different explanations of that event in the Bible and I'm honestly still thinking through it. Now I'll have to listen to Horns apologetic on it to compare

    • @hippywill
      @hippywill 2 месяца назад

      but since god is imaginary its hard to say much about how it affects any thing.

    • @filler7149
      @filler7149 2 месяца назад

      ​@@hippywillimagination isnt real so how can you say that

    • @trompette4485
      @trompette4485 Месяц назад

      @@filler7149 What a brilliant strawman. How did you go from determinism to non existence ? Just because the universe is deterministic doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.

    • @filler7149
      @filler7149 Месяц назад

      ​@@trompette4485if everything is determined then imagination isnt real because imagination is a thought process and you as a robot cant think
      I was making a cheeky jab at the inconsistence
      You guys must hear strawmen in your walls

  • @GSpotter63
    @GSpotter63 2 месяца назад +1

    There can be no objective morality if there is no objective authority.

    • @BFizzi719
      @BFizzi719 2 месяца назад +1

      What is an objective authority? If an atheist, a Muslim, a Christian and Satanist were sat around a table and had to agree on an objective authority, how would they do it?

    • @EmperorofChinaItwillgrowlarger
      @EmperorofChinaItwillgrowlarger Месяц назад +1

      @@BFizzi719The Christian is correct

  • @flightless8903
    @flightless8903 2 месяца назад +2

    Thanks Trent always for defending/teaching our faith to those that are having a hard time comprehending God! I needed to hear this for such a long time. I just can’t fathom the mindset of atheists 😮God Bless you and your family ❤️🌎✝️

    • @TheCounselofTrent
      @TheCounselofTrent  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you so much for supporting the channel and watching! -Vanessa

  • @Logistikon_
    @Logistikon_ 2 месяца назад +10

    Trent is using transcendental argument now 😁

    • @whitemaster3268
      @whitemaster3268 2 месяца назад +1

      someone is copying Jay Dyer

    • @Logistikon_
      @Logistikon_ 2 месяца назад +5

      @@whitemaster3268 I mean we don't know if he is copying, but Jay is definitely vanguard of TAG apologetics

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +1

      criticizing epistemologies is using the TAG now. ortho apologists are ridiculous

    • @violetblythe6912
      @violetblythe6912 2 месяца назад

      @@whitemaster3268 Jay Dyer doesn't own the concept of transcendentalism lol
      It's one of the first arguments for the existence of God that I'd ever heard in my life and its a pretty common one, even if not everyone knows the name of it.

    • @Logistikon_
      @Logistikon_ 2 месяца назад

      @@newglof9558 he is not merely criticizing epistemology he is using TAG but maybe listen to your fellow Catholic friend, TAG is not exclusive to Orthodoxy or Jay Dyer, anyone can use it (ofc doesn't mean it works for everyone)

  • @Reloading20
    @Reloading20 2 месяца назад +7

    Why didn't you just make this video a direct response to Richard Dawkins instead of lumping Alex O'Connor into this? Alex never made the argument that WLC is morally reprehensible for his defense of biblical slaughter, but was rather challenging Craig on whether his viewpoint is consistent with his own views on morality and his moral argument for God, and how we can reconcile his defense with our own moral intuitions which Craig himself places such a high level of importance in. This video is the apologist equivalent of some atheist doing a take down video of Ken Ham and throwing some clips of Trent Horn in there to get a 2 for 1 special.

    • @aloneinbangkok8534
      @aloneinbangkok8534 2 месяца назад

      where did Trent say that Alex said any of those things?

  • @yorgoskontoyiannis6570
    @yorgoskontoyiannis6570 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm glad to see you making free-will-based arguments against atheism; they can be technical but they're what ultimately convinced me that God is real: the existence of free will is implied or necessary for all kinds of things we can't live without (moral blameworthiness, justice, etc.) but free will requires the real existence of something transcendent, and you can go from there.
    However, I think that when New Atheists are making these arguments about the apparent immorality of God in the Old Testament, their condemnations of thinkers like William Lane Craig are more rhetorical than anything. To steel-man their argument, they seem to me to be mostly making the case that Christian morality is *inconsistent*: something along the lines of, "If you believe in a moral law, and that this moral law alligns with intuition, why don't you condemn God in the Old Testament, on the basis of our intuitive disgust (at, say, the killing of the firstborns)?"
    I would love to see you tackle this argument directly.

    • @nsinkov
      @nsinkov 2 месяца назад

      I think there is no free will and no objective morality. Other than just it being unpleasant to accept this, what makes you reject this world view?

  • @joykeebler1916
    @joykeebler1916 2 месяца назад

    - the Land of Canaan, as in The Book of Exodus, was a stronghold of the Giants as according and so has been written

  • @nathancranford6369
    @nathancranford6369 2 месяца назад +4

    There doesn't seem to be room for free will in a universe run by an all powerful, all knowing God either. How does theism better explain - rather than hide -- the mystery of free will?

  • @J-ky8qg
    @J-ky8qg 2 месяца назад +3

    Calvinists are gonna be kicking up a storm lol....

  • @hacker4chn841
    @hacker4chn841 2 месяца назад +1

    I've thought through this issue before. In an atheistic view, every particle was set in motion 14 billion years ago and follows a set of universal laws of physics. If our particles have been destined to do something from the beginning of time, we can't have free will.

    • @babs_babs
      @babs_babs 2 месяца назад

      most the physicist i know are not determinists. they aren’t exactly the free will type either but land in some sense of both.

  • @observingyt6159
    @observingyt6159 2 месяца назад +2

    We should view God's commandments in light of the whole Bible. God's ten commandments are clearly moral. God has shown mercy to nations such as Nineveh who repented. He also died on a Cross for OUR sins. It's possibly God's very death and torture saved the souls of those nations who were killed in warfare with ancient Israel.

  • @unhingedconnoisseur164
    @unhingedconnoisseur164 2 месяца назад +9

    Joe Schmid is typing...
    edit: well well well this aged well

  • @jhoughjr1
    @jhoughjr1 2 месяца назад +13

    Sam Harris making that argumwnt is quite funny

    • @johncassidy3071
      @johncassidy3071 2 месяца назад

      You mean "basement full of baby corpses" Harris?

  • @christie5436
    @christie5436 Месяц назад

    I’m an infant nanny and what I know to be true is that people’s minds and behaviors are developed and influenced by the treatment they received during early childhood. For example an infant who is left to cry alone (more than the “occasional few minutes while you’re in the shower) but on a chronic level, that child’s mind will be damaged by the neglect of her mother/father. We do have free will but what happens in early childhood affects how we use that free will and a person’s behavior and understanding of every aspect of life.
    Do we kill baby Hitler or do we teach baby Hitler’s mother to be a better parent?

  • @EinSofVirtuoso
    @EinSofVirtuoso 2 месяца назад +1

    Majesty of Reason made a response, how deterministic of them.

  • @S.Awasstolen
    @S.Awasstolen 2 месяца назад +3

    Question: couldn't one undermine this argument by accepting Determinism (under an Atheistic/Naturalistic viewpoint), but point out that it's untenable for free will to exist under Theism (i.e, if God knows everything, doesn't that mean all events are predetermined/couldn't have occurred in such a way so as to surprise God)?
    Wherever you go, free will seems to be absent irrespective of the existence (or nonexistence) of God, or so the argument would go anyways.
    Just curious. Cool video otherwise.

    • @FuddlyDud
      @FuddlyDud 2 месяца назад +1

      I’ve got a thought:
      Does being predetermined remove the variable of a human’s free will in their choices being known?
      I’d say the variable of free will still is part of the outcome, rather it happens through time as said choices/events occur. :)

    • @S.Awasstolen
      @S.Awasstolen 2 месяца назад +2

      I appreciate the thought! :)
      With that being said, I'm unsure as to how experiencing free will ("it occurring through time," as you say) renders it real, when from God's perspective, we couldn't have chosen otherwise (given that God's knowledge is infinite, and consequently, nothing should surprise Him, lest that show gaps in His knowledge).
      Provided that an all-knowing deity exists (God), how can free will exist? It may feel like it does for us, but that's merely a qualia espoused by fallible and ignorant creatures like ourselves.
      (If I'm misunderstanding your thought, I apologize. I may lack the cognitive wherewithal needed to engage your point. I'm uneducated in matters pertaining to theology).

    • @FuddlyDud
      @FuddlyDud 2 месяца назад

      @@S.Awasstolen
      "With that being said, I'm unsure as to how experiencing free will ("it occurring through time," as you say) renders it real, when from God's perspective, we couldn't have chosen otherwise (given that God's knowledge is infinite, and consequently, nothing should surprise Him, lest that show gaps in His knowledge)."
      I understand the concern, but I feel like such a binary puts God as limited to time itself rather than being outside of time.
      I'd say we run the risk of, by our limited faculties, faulting God for our own inability to levy said critique. So, can you maybe help me out understand such a critique is reasonably possible for such truly infnite, timeless Being? :/

    • @FuddlyDud
      @FuddlyDud 2 месяца назад

      @@S.Awasstolen
      " It may feel like it does for us, but that's merely a qualia espoused by fallible and ignorant creatures like ourselves."
      I actually like this point a lot since I'd say this exact same concern would apply to being able to critique God as He is.
      And no, you are engaging more thoughtfully then probably 99% of folks I engage with. Thank you for this. :)

    • @S.Awasstolen
      @S.Awasstolen 2 месяца назад +1

      >> "So, can you maybe help me out understand such a critique is reasonably possible for such truly infinite, timeless Being? :/"
      No problem!
      Regardless of God's position to time (within or outside of it), assuming God is all-knowing, that'd entail His foreknowledge of events (past, present, and future). Wherever He's situated, He should know everything (including events that have yet to occur).
      He could be outside of time, and still be all-knowing, right? To be free is to be able to choose otherwise, but how can this be if God already knows what you'll choose (and moreover, you cannot surprise God, for that'd illustrate blanks in His knowledge).
      I'll grant you this: when considering the volume of conceptions of God (whether it be of an Judiastic type, Christian type, or Islamic type), it may be the case that one of these "conceptions" of God somehow allow for free will (like, for example, maybe under Judaism's theology, God's nature is less anthropomorphic, and more representative of "Goodness" as an abstraction. I'm just spitballing, but I'm sure you understand what I'm conveying: different theologies offer different natures of God, and maybe, one of these purported nature's solves this dilemma of free will).
      >> "I actually like this point a lot since I'd say this exact same concern would apply to being able to critique God as He is."
      Absolutely. Presuming (somehow) that human perception, for as rational and moral as it can be, is ALWAYS such (or even usually such) is an error made too frequently (and most astonishingly, by intelligent and well-reasoned people in most regards).
      >> "And no, you are engaging more thoughtfully then probably 99% of folks I engage with. Thank you for this. :)"
      You're too kind. I shudder thinking of what sort of company you keep if "99%" aren't as thoughtful as this meager post of mine. Nevertheless, thank you.

  • @ianb483
    @ianb483 2 месяца назад +13

    The problem for atheists runs even deeper that what you lay out here. Dawkins and co are mad at Craig because they think he was *irrational.* That is, they think he reasoned *incorrectly* and *should* have reasoned differently. But just as their determinism requires that Craig could not have morally chosen differently, so it holds that he could not have reasoned differently. In all cases, given the premises of atheistic materialism, one's decisions, choices, and conclusions are entirely determined by irrational, blind forces without remainder, and universal abstract laws of logic and objective truth have no actual part in it.
    As the atheists' primal anger suggests, morality and rationality are closely intertwined. In fact, man is a moral animal with free will *precisely because* man is a rational animal, and atheistic material determinism implies the non-existence of real moral choice only as a secondary effect, as it first and foremost implies the non-existence of real rational decision-making.
    So it's not just that materialist atheists have no grounds for condemning Craig morally. They have no grounds for holding that he's being any less rational than they are. In fact, they have no grounds for holding that a young-earth creationist or someone who thinks the universe is resting on an infinite pile of turtles is any less rational than they are. To be consistent with their view, they must accept that all of their views (including materialist atheism itself) are utterly arbitrary with no rational basis whatsoever.

    • @johncassidy3071
      @johncassidy3071 2 месяца назад +1

      Plus, you're actually arguing that given the factual account--without any mystical dressing--that genocide happened and could only happen. So you may be throwing a tantrum about what nobody could prevent, but you're not really providing that much more *opposition* to it--especially Sapolsky who thinks it's absurd to hate the Israelites for massive bloodshed, because it's not like they could do other.

  • @uzomaobasi3767
    @uzomaobasi3767 2 месяца назад

    I have a question: will this affect the moral significance of Christ’s choosing t live a sinless life? Common understanding is that Christ, being 2nd person of the trinity, could not really have done sin. So, if the possibility of alternate choices is paramount to convey free will, was Christ free (in a libertarian sense, not compatibilist) while on earth? Or can we explain this in terms of his two natures and say he had libertarian free will wrt to his human nature and the same freedom God had wrt to his divine nature: in so far as God the father is not limited bcus he can’t lie, for example, similarly Christ, in his divine nature, is also not limited bcus he could not sin?

  • @Mark-cd2wf
    @Mark-cd2wf Месяц назад

    No free will = no moral accountability.
    Moral accountability = free will.

  • @sentjojo
    @sentjojo 2 месяца назад +14

    atheism seems cool until you take seriously its logical consequences

  • @thejuiceking2219
    @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +2

    question: if everything we say and do is all part of God's plan, which has all been planned out ahead of time, then can christians really say we have free will either? is it really free will if all we're doing is following the plan, whether we know it or not?

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 2 месяца назад +3

      We don't have free will like driving on a four-wheeler going where ever you want but instead the Bible teachings is more like a train running on tracks and you can choice the track you travel but God ultimately is the one laying down the tracks. No matter which track you chose , rebel against God or repent and submit to God , God will carry out His plan.

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +1

      @@smidlee7747 except if God is all-knowing then he already knows which of those decisions i'll make, which 'tracks' i'll choose, and so we end end up back at square one; either God's plan isn't how it's laid out to be, or free will for christians in ultimately just an illusion, where everything's already planned out for you and you only think you have a choice in the matter, you have all these difference choices, all these 'tracks', but also i know which tracks you'll choose

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 2 месяца назад +2

      @@thejuiceking2219 You are assuming God is bound by time like you. The scripture clearly teach the opposite "Before Abraham was I Am" So it's not like God is looking in the future and see which track you chose , He is already there as well when you make your choice.
      Since God knows everything like you said He includes man in the judgment to judge himself. This is repeated many times in scripture.
      This is what we mean by free will , God steps back and allows man to judge. The men of Sodom and Gomorrah condemned themselves when they decided they would attack Lot who if it wasn't for him they would still be slaves. God could have judge them immediately for their sins yet He allowed them to judge themselves.
      This is why how you treat your fellowman is linked with your relationship with God.

    • @nsinkov
      @nsinkov 2 месяца назад

      ​@@smidlee7747why did God give me a soul + brain that is positively convinced that I have no soul?

    • @smidlee7747
      @smidlee7747 2 месяца назад +1

      @@nsinkov It's possible you are blind like a blind who can't see due to the failure of his eyes. I pray God will open your eyes.

  • @POPS417
    @POPS417 7 дней назад

    Your examples in logic regarding choices reminds me of the movie Saw.

  • @andrewtufillaro402
    @andrewtufillaro402 2 месяца назад +1

    Can you explain more from a Catholic perspective why you view “there is moral responsibility” as a given, since it is the crux of denying all of the pro-determinism arguments in the video? Incompatibilists like Sapolsky would just say that our perception of moral responsibility is evolved just like our “illusion” of free will is evolved

  • @mike16apha16
    @mike16apha16 2 месяца назад +15

    crazy how most atheist have such inconsistent and extremely polarized ideas and beliefs

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 2 месяца назад +6

      that's because atheism is pretty broad, honestly it's very much a trap to depict it as atheism vs christianity
      the only requirement to be an atheist is to not believe in a god, everything else is on the table. there are atheists who believe in souls, an afterlife, reincarnation, objective morality, all that stuff, just not a god
      also, i'm not sure christians are ones to talk about inconsistent beliefs considering there's been multiple wars over varying christian beliefs

    • @newglof9558
      @newglof9558 2 месяца назад +6

      @@thejuiceking2219 atheists propose that God does not exist. It is not a "lack of belief."

    • @epicofatrahasis3775
      @epicofatrahasis3775 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@newglof9558 No, it's actually a lack of belief due to insufficient evidence.

    • @hydraph4843
      @hydraph4843 2 месяца назад

      It's almost like atheism is not a religion and atheists are very diverse people who don't all believe the same thing because atheism is not a dogmatic religion that dictates how you should think. Shocker

    • @davido3026
      @davido3026 2 месяца назад

      ​@@newglof9558
      They call themselves free thinkers!!!

  • @Noah-cm6ek
    @Noah-cm6ek 2 месяца назад +6

    “God doesn’t do the things I want to do so that means he isn’t real.”- Atheists

    • @idgafidgaf3059
      @idgafidgaf3059 2 месяца назад

      But your god can command not to eat shellfish but somehow, cannot include in his commandments to NOT own slaves. Even worse, the bible condones slavery. Not the servitude, employer-employee relationship, I’m talking about the chattel slavery

    • @Noah-cm6ek
      @Noah-cm6ek 2 месяца назад +1

      @@idgafidgaf3059 God also addressed the shellfish question multiple times in the New Testament. If you are going to criticize the Bible, you should read it.
      Christianity abolished slavery, so try again. The New Testament clearly condemns slavery.

    • @adjustedbrass7551
      @adjustedbrass7551 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@idgafidgaf3059 you literally can't make an argument against slavery from atheism

    • @asmodeuszdewa7194
      @asmodeuszdewa7194 2 месяца назад

      @@adjustedbrass7551 but you can make many arguments against slavery as an atheist

    • @adjustedbrass7551
      @adjustedbrass7551 2 месяца назад +1

      @@asmodeuszdewa7194 you really can't. At the end of the day, if human lives don't mean anything, then there's no reason to own them.

  • @jameskent9590
    @jameskent9590 2 месяца назад

    I am commenting for my morality hahaha. You made me smile on the like and subscribe part. Hope you are having a wonderful day and God bless!

  • @johnalbent
    @johnalbent 2 месяца назад

    Hello, Trent.
    Would you please do a response to Sam Harris Demolishes Christianity. It's his first rebuttal to WLC...quote a bit in the video.
    Thank you.
    John