Frans de Waal: Morality Without Religion

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2013
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @user-cr3pn7rk2v
    @user-cr3pn7rk2v 9 лет назад +460

    I live in Japan. One of the least religious countries in the world. Also one of the most moral and respectful societies in the world.

    • @ozskipper
      @ozskipper 9 лет назад

      collosoll Well said!!

    • @rmwtsou
      @rmwtsou 9 лет назад +44

      collosoll Japanese developed a high sense of morality (to fellow Japanese--since Japan is a racially homogenous country) because for millenniums, they were so tightly packed into a few small islands. If they didn't behave morally toward each other, they would be at each other's throats all the times, killing each other off (which the high-born and all-powerful samurais did just that). So morality had definite survival value for the vast majority of the common folks. The same reason goes for courtesy. Even 150 years ago, a samurai out for a leisurely stroll was fully within his rights to pull out his sword and BEHEAD a lowly peasant for failing to kneel on the side of the road and show proper respect when he passes. This is why the Japanese are all so courteous to each other and bow constantly. Now, the situation may change when they confront non-Japanese or "others". That's when their innate vigilance for showing morality/courtesy relaxes. This explains why such seemingly gentle, moral and courteous people can be so brutal in war and in the treatment of the defenseless POWs and civilians. In short, what I am saying is that the Japanese morality and courtesy has its origin in fear and survival. It is self-serving, not altruistic.

    • @SAAMIAM99
      @SAAMIAM99 8 лет назад +24

      +rmwtsou "Even 150 years ago, a samurai out for a leisurely stroll was fully within his rights to pull out his sword and BEHEAD a lowly peasant for
      failing to kneel on the side of the road and show proper respect when he passes. This is why the Japanese are all so courteous to each other and
      bow constantly."
      No one in their right mind would think that the cause of Japanese courtesy is this one particular thing. Societies are multifaceted and complex. They just don't work that way. Your conclusion is simplistic. I take that you are not a sociologist or historian who specializes in this. That is pretty clear.

    • @rmwtsou
      @rmwtsou 8 лет назад +11

      +SAAMIAM99 In feudal Japan, there were 4 classes of people, in descending order of importance/prestige: (1) the armed warrior class (shoguns, daimyos, and their samurais), followed by the unarmed (2) peasants, (3) workers and (4) merchants. The latter 3 classes were prohibited from owning weapons of any sort by the ruling warrior class. Contrast this to that of the social structure of ancient China: they were (1) scholars (intelligentsias) (2) peasants (3) workers and (4) merchants -- there wasn't even a "warrior class" to figure in on this. So, as you can see, the vast majority of the people of Japan throughout history were ruled by brute force only. After centuries of brutalization, they learn very quickly, like a beaten dog, that those with brute force are to be RESPECTED. Courtesy and politeness is thus always a virtue when dealing with those that can potentially kill you. That's why they as a people worship POWER and despise meekness. That's also why they love and respect America -- because we BEAT them. The only way to earn their respect is to be more powerful than they are. The moment you become weaker, they will jump on you mercilessly.

    • @SAAMIAM99
      @SAAMIAM99 8 лет назад +9

      rmwtsou
      Your argument is flawed. The Japanese were not the only ones with this type of society. One that I might add you continue to oversimplify. Your generalizations and conclusions are simplistic.
      There were many other civilizations (most of them actually) that went through the kind of thing you described. it is IMHO a natural progression through which most civilizations must go. Medieval Europe went thorough something similar, where peasant were very poorly treated, and there was a hierarchy to society.
      Why have they not all turned out the same way?

  • @Aran_BB1
    @Aran_BB1 11 лет назад +52

    "One of the great tragedies of mankind is that morality has been hijacked by religion"
    - Arthur C. Clarke

    • @sundeutsch
      @sundeutsch 3 месяца назад

      Wow. Such a great quote.

  • @psychotic17
    @psychotic17 11 лет назад +55

    When I was a little boy, I kept asking God to give me a bicycle. Then I realized that this is not the way God works. So I stole a bike and then asked God to forgive me. Religious morality in action :-D

    • @antonioa3078
      @antonioa3078 3 года назад +3

      @@ALIIMRAN558 god made everything right?, and all is his. So guess he did.

    • @elijahlingbanan1430
      @elijahlingbanan1430 3 года назад +3

      sure? Are you asking? or are you demanding?

    • @JordanPeterson.
      @JordanPeterson. 3 года назад +4

      @@antonioa3078 no but you have now wronged a human in this world...therefore you must asked forgivness from him

    • @antonioa3078
      @antonioa3078 3 года назад +2

      @@JordanPeterson. Forgive me, great *omipresent commenter* ♤♡◇

    • @mryup6100
      @mryup6100 3 года назад +1

      That's not genuine though.

  • @Nonnimable
    @Nonnimable 11 лет назад +11

    Also, the Netherlands,Belgium, Denmark and Germany to a certain extent. Overall happiness rating is extremely high in Northern-European countries (happiness index) and the higher amount of cases of depression and mental illnesses is strongly connected to the fact that there are doctors who can identify these illnesses in these countries and people have access to them; other countries might have more people with mental illnesses, only they are never actually diagnosed with them.

  • @dlp3350
    @dlp3350 11 лет назад +7

    I'm looking forward to hearing more commentaries from de Waal. He's a great speaker, and his decades of research needs to be shared in social forums like this one.

  • @sundeutsch
    @sundeutsch 3 года назад +12

    What a great speech. Religion has more side effects than it teaches us morality, because religion is a little bit of morality mingled with a set of illogical practices.

    • @DavidKnowles
      @DavidKnowles 2 года назад +1

      Have you seen Jordan Peterson's lectures on the utility of faith?

    • @dhaxpegdhaxpeg2144
      @dhaxpegdhaxpeg2144 2 года назад

      Wow, that's a very clever thing to say

    • @shabistantaqvi2404
      @shabistantaqvi2404 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@DavidKnowles Can you share the link?

    • @Supvia
      @Supvia 3 месяца назад

      The big question that religion asks is: What does your morality come from? Who or what is the ultimate judge of what is right and wrong?

    • @sundeutsch
      @sundeutsch 3 месяца назад

      @@Supvia This is a very typical argument given by the believers. Morality can't come from a non existing entity. There is no evidence for any gods. The very source of morality is animals. They take care of their family and also of other species.
      Now tell me where the human cruelty comes from.

  • @Arachnoscribe
    @Arachnoscribe 10 лет назад +8

    Apart from providing symbolic answers to the unknown elements of life+death, religions (including the ones that Frans has apparently deemed irrelevant) serve to justify warfare, geographic expansion, social hierarchies and a host of other things that are incongruous with the notions of (a) perfect being(s).

    • @intranext1359
      @intranext1359 2 года назад +2

      As if those things don't exist without religion.

  • @Johnny5477
    @Johnny5477 10 лет назад +19

    He points out that most of the world's religions are 2,000 to 3,000 years old, and thus he concludes that morality existed beforehand and the religion was, in his words, "tacked on" to them... what he neglects is that there were many religions then, as well... religions that are now largely dead.

    • @iainjames03
      @iainjames03 8 лет назад +2

      But if you're talking about monotheistic religions then he's right, though... Maybe 4000 years...

    • @megitopuridze
      @megitopuridze 6 лет назад +16

      But why are they dead then ? because its archaic system of values are not compatible with current norms of society. Religion is just ONE of the mechanisms of different cultures for experimenting on various types of social conduct. You can argue for religion as a form of codified system of right and wrong, but to conclude that it is a foundation of morality is utterly wrong.

    • @SillyTubereal
      @SillyTubereal 4 года назад

      True religion have always existed, people corrupted it and made up their own religions.

    • @mystdragon8530
      @mystdragon8530 4 года назад

      Iain Meldrum but the three monotheistic religions already say that there were other people and religions.

  • @soccafan5
    @soccafan5 11 лет назад +8

    It bothers me when my parents think I'm going to live a lonely and sad life because I'm an atheist.... I wish they could understand that my life will be even more joyous knowing that these 80-90 years on this planet are all I got so I'm gonna make the most of these years.

    • @Science10s
      @Science10s 2 года назад +1

      Hey, it's been eight years, can you share with us if you or your parent were right?

    • @DavidKnowles
      @DavidKnowles 2 года назад

      My experience is the exact opposite. I wasn't raised with any faith or religious teaching. My life was an empty, self-destructive mess.
      However, when Christ came into my life, everything changed. I genuinely cared for the first time, and it was liberating.
      30 years later, I have learned that the purpose of life is to love and be loved. Everything other aspect of existence is in service of this truth. When I live with this as my focus, life is exhilarating and fulfilling. When I get distracted, life becomes futile and burdensome.
      To love is to make the most of life.
      Most people on their death beds are not concerned with FOMO. They regret all the wasted time they spent not loving those around them.
      All the best Soccafan5

    • @kellycushing2904
      @kellycushing2904 2 года назад

      @Milk man The gamer Magic sky daddy 🤣🤣🤣

    • @ismailmounsif1109
      @ismailmounsif1109 2 года назад

      @Milk man The gamer but they do atheists take the lead in suicide rates

    • @ismailmounsif1109
      @ismailmounsif1109 2 года назад

      @Milk man The gamer that’s a fact according to the statistics atheists countries take the lead in suicide although they are developed and rich countries like Sweden and the other Scandinavian countries and Japan as well also there is a study that shown people from non religion are the highest when it comes to suicide

  • @92blim
    @92blim 11 лет назад +7

    That depends on how you define (moral values).

  • @Nonnimable
    @Nonnimable 11 лет назад +1

    I understand another factor in the high rate of depressions in these countries is that kids generally grow up within a bubble (making them the happiest kids in the world) and don't quite get to experience hardship until they have to fend for themselves, outside of their parents' nests. Sorry for wrongly referring to the happiness index: I meant, in particular, the 'experienced well-being' (which pertains to happiness). The HPI also takes into account ecological footprint and life expectancy.

  • @JamieHumeCreative
    @JamieHumeCreative 11 лет назад +6

    very candid and genuine. I agree with this premiss myself. Only those without empathy need a structure to have a guide to moral behaviour...

    • @FredFlintstone-
      @FredFlintstone- Год назад +1

      The problem is in it’s defining. He said human morality and attacks the argument from saying that our current religions are only 2000-3000 years old, but that only Islam, Christianity and Judaism as in its current interpretation. People believed in God way before Mozes as in these three faiths you had Abraham before Mozes. And not even considering the ‘Abrahamic’ faiths you had other people believing in God(maybe other interpretations or views of God) like the Hindus who are from 15th-5th centhury BCE or the Zoroastrianists(10th-5th century BCE) or even older the San civilization which is arguably the oldest civilization according to most archaeologists(however, some archaeological evidence supports the view that the San should be attributed to the Early Later Stone Age), and they believed in God. So the logical conclusion then is that human morality comes from religion/God.
      If you want to argue that animals also have ‘morality’ and animals predate humans and so morality doesn’t come from religion, fine. But at least admit that human morality comes from religion and I don’t understand why the professor in the video would make such a bold statement while scientifically be so wrong. You definitely need religion to be moral. All our current morals systems are derived, influenced or in some sense intrinsically found in ‘religion’. Philosophy is the little misguided child of theology.

  • @ranjitshastry
    @ranjitshastry 11 лет назад +11

    Wow! that's what I'd call a 'monster' of a perspective :) Thanks for sharing that thought!

    • @DavidKnowles
      @DavidKnowles 2 года назад +1

      Are you familiar with the writer Tom Holland and his book, 'Dominion (The making of the western mind)'?
      His work is an incredibly strong challenge to Mr de Waal's perspective.

  • @officialpjkillah
    @officialpjkillah 10 лет назад +31

    In order to live in morality without religion is to teach the basics of psychology and the theory of nature & nurture to everyone. We are our own believe system if we can influence making the right decisions on one another and keep the motivation to evolve our world for the greater good. Than yes we are absolutely capable of morality without religion.

    • @thebadgeclanfilms8002
      @thebadgeclanfilms8002 4 года назад +8

      Where do the right decisions come from? Who established what is right and wrong?

    • @jaredthomas6136
      @jaredthomas6136 4 года назад +6

      So since “we are our own belief system” was hitler right in killing Jews? He was doing what he thought was right. If we are going to use humans as the standard, why is using hitler as a standard inherently worse than using Mother Teresa as a standard? Maybe because there are certain things that are right and certain things that are wrong that extend BEYOND humans and human nature. This, my friend is God. You can’t have a moral law (right and wrong) without a moral law giver. This points to God. I pray for all of you searching for answers that your view won’t be swayed by this one dimensional thinking. “If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved.”
      ‭‭Romans‬ ‭10:9-10‬.

    • @couldyounotdude3168
      @couldyounotdude3168 4 года назад +6

      I think y'all forgot that human empathy exists, with or without god.
      Humans feel a need to help others, it's in our nature.

    • @couldyounotdude3168
      @couldyounotdude3168 4 года назад +1

      @Omair Shakir it goes hand and hand. We have a need to be right and to feel secure, and dislike challenges to our belief and moral systems. It feels like an attack on character.

    • @couldyounotdude3168
      @couldyounotdude3168 4 года назад +4

      @Omair Shakir I has never saying all humans have the same values. I was saying that humans all have empathy, usually that empathy aligns with their moral system.

  • @TZ3Z
    @TZ3Z 10 лет назад +1

    Cool how he talked on the concept of god being implemented into those big societies where we might struggle to keep watch on each other in order to scare the people into obedience to law.

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark952 2 года назад +2

    From the book ... The Final Inequality, by L. J. Ludovici. "Morals at any given moment have always been as good, or as bad, as our imaginations credit them, for the morals (from the Latin, mores: customs) means simply customs, and they keep changing all the time in all the corners of the world."

  • @RabbyArt
    @RabbyArt 11 лет назад +11

    "that's a big nono" XD

  • @rolandorodriguez9625
    @rolandorodriguez9625 4 года назад +12

    I totally agree with this. I'm more interested in hard truths than in comforting fantasies. I was rise as christian then I opened my eyes to the world. Is hard to confront life knowing that there is no god out there to protect you and make justice for you. Also the terrifying reality of one death's is the end of the consciousness and nothing of what we do really matters in the end. I came to think that religious people definitely have a more happy life than us. Yet I cant afford to lie to myself.

    • @DavidKnowles
      @DavidKnowles 2 года назад +2

      Mr de Waal seems like a nice, honest guy, but his example is flawed. Current western society is built on a 2000 years old Judeo-Christian foundation, therefore our values are without doubt unquestionably influenced by the traditions and norms of our past.
      Religion is man's attempt to appease the gods and doesn't address the root problem mankind has; our destructive tendencies.
      I was not raised with any religion, so I lived for myself. However, that life was empty, and I was making a mess of it.
      One day, in my despair, I called out these words "God if you are there, I need you".
      From that moment on, my heart was changed. For the first time, I truly wanted to connect to others and help. Life wasn't all about me any more. I cared and It was awesome. It wasn't a burden, it was liberating. I wanted to read the bible. I later learned that this is what the Jesus called being born again. I was given the free gift of a new heart.
      Once I had learned this I 'officially', turned away from my old life and decided to follow Christ. (This is the micro version of my story).
      I don't know what you were taught, and I'm sincerely sorry for your experience, but I can't deny what happened to me, Christ set me free.
      For that, I am eternally grateful.
      Rolando, I wish you all the best.

    • @rolandorodriguez9625
      @rolandorodriguez9625 2 года назад

      @@DavidKnowles Thanks man! I can't say that religion would work for me. There is always men behind it. In the end what matters is whatever float your boat. So good for you. If you are happy, that's what counts.

    • @andreaandrea6716
      @andreaandrea6716 2 года назад +1

      @@rolandorodriguez9625 There IS a Divine force (look at nature! You think that that happened all by itself?)... it just has NOTHING to do with religion. Religion is Man's way of trying to control others. But don't confuse one with the other. Ask the Universe, your Angels (we ALL have them. 'Angel' is just a name for an entity that doesn't have a physical body. You don't have to call them 'Angels' or 'guides' ... you can call them anything you like!) to SHOW YOU in some way that they are present in your life. Ask for a sign that you will recognize. Ask for some sort of clear manifestation that they are at work in your life. You just ask, aloud, for this. I know it sounds really simple... just try it! It can be totally mundane; I ask my angels for parking spaces (especially when it's impossible). I ask them for help every day, all day long. (And I THANK THEM!!! Very important).
      EVERYTHING you do matters. And, inside, you KNOW this! But really, the only thing that matters is how we treat people (and ourselves). We should remember that Love is the greatest force in the Universe and it can transmute the worst situations. To view the world through the lens of compassion ... this is what I am trying to teach myself (I am very judgemental, so it's difficult!).
      Our bodies die, but our Consciousness is eternal. That should be a great relief (and it's true!).
      Have a wonderful life!

    • @rolandorodriguez9625
      @rolandorodriguez9625 2 года назад

      @@andreaandrea6716 I happy that you see it that way. I just don't believe your view. I envy your conviction that there is more after. I simply need proof of such things. Not signs not subliminal messages. I need direct proof but never seen it. BTW If I had angels watching over me Il be pissed at them and probably end up wanting killing them for invading my privacy and pulling strings in my life. Why would need angels for if we are eternal?

    • @Random-hi8yi
      @Random-hi8yi Год назад

      @@rolandorodriguez9625 i have evidence

  • @personwithskills
    @personwithskills 11 лет назад

    This has to be the most intellectual discussion on youtube. Kudos.

  • @JAJ1GreenberryHill
    @JAJ1GreenberryHill 11 лет назад +1

    As an atheist I can't get away with doing evil because my ethics/conscience/ society in general judge my behavior in THIS life. I don't have confession as an excuse for doing wrong or the long wait for the afterlife as an excuse for everything. I don't have the excuse for doing wrong because others are infidels and as such don't count. All people count for me.

  • @amitpaljitsingh9706
    @amitpaljitsingh9706 3 года назад +3

    Thanks. Was useful for my assignment

  • @clovisi7494
    @clovisi7494 10 лет назад +12

    Also Frans de Waal needs to answer a basic question: Why do we have morals in the first place?
    just for survival instinct!?

    • @Kyssifrot
      @Kyssifrot 7 лет назад +58

      Because it is a enormous evolutionary advantage.

    • @adamharrisakarexon9492
      @adamharrisakarexon9492 6 лет назад +2

      Kyssifrot WTF?

    • @CoenDeurloo
      @CoenDeurloo 6 лет назад +16

      One of the more beneficial moral systems humans have like no other animal is reciprocity. Reciprocity among individuals helps the whole group, which for example help us survive trough tough situations better, which is the enormous evolutionary advantage.

    • @deliciousdeviant5333
      @deliciousdeviant5333 6 лет назад +1

      Coen Deurloo You placed this comment in the video of the guy who literally started all the animal morality studies which include reciprocity...

    • @CoenDeurloo
      @CoenDeurloo 6 лет назад

      Brian Ng - My reaction was a response to Wasiq who seemed to have trouble understanding the comment of Kyssifrot, not a general comment on the video. Maybe I should have made that more clear, but I thought it spoke for itself as I replied to this comment thread instead of making a new comment.

  • @coolbeans8682
    @coolbeans8682 3 года назад +1

    Current reliogions? What about the older ones? I am not a believer in any god but I find this question very interesting. How do we find common grounds in ethics when all the gods are dead? Is it even something we should strive for? What is Fjodor doing today? How do we find common grounds to base morals upon if there is no god? Are morals needed?

  • @emredemir9852
    @emredemir9852 11 месяцев назад +2

    Such an amazing scientist. His book Our Inner Ape was brilliant, I am looking forward to read his other books. Thank you Mr. Frans

    • @GraysonGates-bh9pt
      @GraysonGates-bh9pt 2 месяца назад

      I plan on reading his books, which do you recommend reading first? Which is your favorite?

    • @emredemir9852
      @emredemir9852 2 месяца назад

      @@GraysonGates-bh9pt I suggest you to start with Our Inner Ape then read The Bonobo and The Ateist they are both great books.

  • @EugenAntunGojks
    @EugenAntunGojks 2 года назад +4

    The conclusion that "religion could not have induced our morality, because current religions are only 2-3 thousand years old, and morality existed before that" is logically unsound for two reasons. First, the conclusion states "current" religions, but religions existed long before the "current" religions. Older religions may have influenced morality. Second, there is an implicit assumption that morality had the same principles in the last 2 thousand years as it did 20 thousand years ago. There is a lot of evidence that this is not the case - morality evolved across cultures, over time, and across geographical areas. Current religion may have helped in shaping the current morality, just as older religions may have shaped older forms of morality.
    Frankly, sounds like a chicken-and-the-egg discussion.

    • @trumpbellend6717
      @trumpbellend6717 Год назад

      Religion may have played a role in our morality ( often not for the better ) but one could never claim any specific "God" is the source of it.

  • @DeanGoldbaum
    @DeanGoldbaum 11 лет назад +9

    Technology is my religion ;)

    • @adamwilbanks2681
      @adamwilbanks2681 2 года назад

      How dumb. Let me guess, gravity is your savior?!?

    • @8.ui13
      @8.ui13 2 года назад

      consoomer moment

  • @sethjohnson1286
    @sethjohnson1286 10 лет назад

    I have a question. Do atheist simply believe there isn't a god (or gods), or do they believe a god (or gods) is impossible (and yes there is a difference between the two)? Or does that vary amongst atheist?

    • @Arachnoscribe
      @Arachnoscribe 10 лет назад +1

      Atheism includes a broad range of concepts without formal consensus.

  • @laurenm635
    @laurenm635 11 лет назад +1

    I believe that some people really do need religion to be moral. They feel lost and without a purpose and religion is all they have to turn to.

  • @BanksHasBank
    @BanksHasBank 11 лет назад +13

    YES

    • @naina9783
      @naina9783 6 лет назад +3

      Im here studying for my essay on morality and all I see is FaZe Banks in the comments wow.

    • @morganfreeman5069
      @morganfreeman5069 6 лет назад

      heh

    • @Infernos01
      @Infernos01 6 лет назад +2

      Wow, what is FaZe Banks doing here..?

    • @AjMorganv16
      @AjMorganv16 3 года назад

      Wack

  • @YOSUP315
    @YOSUP315 8 лет назад +9

    Religion is a somewhat recent invention. Back in the day, you wouldn't say you were an animist or a monkey-god-ist, or a spirit-ist. They had tons of irrational and inaccurate beliefs about reality in general, not just on religion. As we attempted to understand the world around us, we had to put a divider between what's real and what is bullshit. The real stuff turned out to be scientific things. And the bullshit was either rejected upon closer examination or called religion if they wanted to have faith in it against all evidence.
    Faith in an instinct that needs to be scorned wherever is rears its ugly head, not given special treatment or laughed off as just some fundamentalist representing no general trend. Faith is rampant across the globe--as he said.

    • @BeTeVetv
      @BeTeVetv 7 лет назад +1

      we must put faith on ourselves, understand everything is from within...

  • @HelenisenSweden
    @HelenisenSweden 11 лет назад +2

    I think this topic is very interesting and I'm a part of this "experiment". Hope it turns out well! ;)

  • @Nonnimable
    @Nonnimable 11 лет назад

    Interesting fact:in the countries where religion is largely absent (de Waal speaks of Northern-European countries) crime rates are extremely low, living standards extremely high and people extremely happy.

  • @Thomaster9999
    @Thomaster9999 11 лет назад +3

    ''Truth is not a democracy.''
    Some parts of morality are obviously subjective, but I think we can universally accept that when you hurt another human, that's not good.

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 7 лет назад +1

    Well I think we can certainly all *behave* morally without religion. But to admit that we believe morality itself is *objectively* real is to at very least abandon evidentialism, which is something anti-theists use quite frequently in their opposition of theism. And that's despite evidentialism itself being invalid and self-refuting.

  • @valeriea4453
    @valeriea4453 11 лет назад

    I've always wondered if it were possible that the ancestors we had could have formed their own "spiritual belief" which then lead to the presentation of morality in society. His argument was that the current religions we have now are very young in comparison to the age of the human race; however could it be possible that other beliefs which no longer exist set the tone for moral behaviour in our ancestors. It's an interesting topic of discussion.

  • @0myjoe
    @0myjoe 10 лет назад +9

    I don't like the use of the word 'probably' - we know morality exists without religion, look at switzerland, Denmark. And we also know that morality did exist before religion (Confucianism) - the golden rule! "do unto others as you would have them do unto you" - one of the most important phrases representing morality.

    • @labonihira
      @labonihira 5 лет назад +2

      Because nothing is 100% confirmable.

  • @CheeseBac
    @CheeseBac 11 лет назад +4

    To those who know the truth: CHEEEEEESE

  • @darkbsp
    @darkbsp 11 лет назад

    If this a legitimate question, it's because of gravity. It pulls in all directions equally, thus creating a sphere (it's not technically a sphere since it's squashed at the poles.)

  • @RokkuNoBushi
    @RokkuNoBushi 11 лет назад

    by the way is it just me or is the video not loading

  • @jonnynice8366
    @jonnynice8366 10 лет назад +2

    The reason why all societies have religions is because religion and atheism fight an uneven fight. Religion has the weapon of indoctrination and atheism doesn't.
    when one group of people has been taught that their world view is superior and should be spread around the population and the other group doesn't, it isn't hard to predict what the consequence will be.

    • @Stan1026A
      @Stan1026A 10 лет назад +2

      It is actually quite amazing that atheist don't seem to understand the very science (biological evolution) that so much of their views are based on. If atheism rendered a society capable of competing with religious societies, than we would have had entirely atheistic societies long ago. There is clearly a valid scientific assertion to be put forth (hypothesis) that human civilization is mutually interdependent on religion.

    • @jonnynice8366
      @jonnynice8366 10 лет назад +4

      Stan1026A Why would you post a reaction to my comment if you didn't even read it?

    • @stanleyshannon4408
      @stanleyshannon4408 10 лет назад

      The Grey Area Cite a single religious belief I have promoted. I'm actually not all that religious. However, I am capable of observing reality as it is. The fact is that civilization is inseparable from religion. Where you find one, you always find the other.

    • @stanleyshannon4408
      @stanleyshannon4408 10 лет назад

      JonnyNice No, I read it and the fact is that a religious world view is superior in every evolutionary sense to an atheistic one. Atheism lost because it is simply incapable of sustaining a stable civil society.

    • @jonnynice8366
      @jonnynice8366 10 лет назад

      read my comment again

  • @goor1322
    @goor1322 6 лет назад +3

    Without God there is no objective moral standard. Otherwise it's just your opinion that something is unjust or evil. BUT, we do know some things are unjust and evil and it's not our opinion. Therfore by what standard do you call something evil. You see, without God you can't justify evil. You can know it, but you can't justify it. God exists because good exists. Good exists because evil exists. There can be no evil without good and there can be no good without God. Period.

    • @mhakoyMD
      @mhakoyMD 2 года назад

      Another Frank Turek tactic nice.

    • @TheRealTomWendel
      @TheRealTomWendel 2 дня назад

      With God, there are still innumerable version of morality.

  • @IISEZIKII
    @IISEZIKII 11 лет назад

    What's the experiment thats being done in the Netherlands that he refers to?

  • @MrMoaksy
    @MrMoaksy 11 лет назад +1

    Anyone can be a good person, regardless of religious beliefs, if they do what they feel is right and try to help others when they can. Enough people have used religion as a reason or excuse to do horrible things to prove that simply following a religion does not make you a good person, ultimately who you are, how you were raised (which religion is only a part of) and who you decide to be play far more into morality.

  • @vivalarevolucion3954
    @vivalarevolucion3954 10 лет назад +9

    A
    1. Morality is either innate(theism) or learned(atheism).
    2. atheism says it is learned
    3. Therefore every culture and society is moral
    4. Every culture is not moral, therefore morality is not learned
    5. If morality is not learned then it is innate
    6. If morality is innate then atheism is false
    7. if atheism is false then theism is true
    B
    for the atheist that believes we are innately moral, (Atheism is now a belief system)
    1. The notion of good comes from empathy
    2. Empathy, is a product of the realization of wrong
    3. You cannot have wrong without right
    4. The notion of right cannot be accounted for without God (Usually atheists will revert to morality is learned here see A, 1)
    5. Therefore the notion of good proves there is a god.
    It is proof of God because god is all that is good. It ties every human being to god whether you like it or not. Science cannot account for innate morality in the human which is my point even though atheists try to claim it does to no avail. 

    • @MkEpicness
      @MkEpicness 10 лет назад +8

      A) how come there is only the 2 options for one thing? Also how can you discern that all cultures are not moral? Morality is different in every culture which is even more proof that it is learnt. ie the treatment of women, laws, social sets of morals and etiquette are different across the entire world, how can you say that they would be all the same. If it was innate then everybody would have the same morals and there would be no question about it because we were born like that, it would be printed onto yourself like the need to breathe, the need to eat and to be loved but it isn't. Morality has evolved over time proof over time. If you looked at ancient bronze age to modern age, morals are very different. So then who is right here?
      If your hypothesis is true, then it would be implied that the bronze age of morals, ie the ancient set of morals because they follow the set of morals with would have been 'truer to gods, because people didn't learn and asses, where as now people are changing them because they are rethinking. So you have to wonder that if it isn't learnt and it is innate, that implies that we are going against what was implanted within us as morals. That type of thinking astonishes me.
      b) How do you asses what is right? it's like saying that you cannot have light without darkness They do not HAVE to coexist. Your statement is very black and white which is also troubling. How can anyone of us asses what is right if we are not moral? If we cannot determine what is right then how would anybody know if we saw it, even if we read it in the bible, how would we know that is right and everything else is wrong?
      I believe that it is definetly more learnt then it is innate. Bullies for example are a product of mistreat and hardship which has skewed their morals to be one of weakness (picking on others because they get picked on). rich people are also quite immoral in some cases ie doing things which would hurt others because they weren't received punishments for their actions and continue to do bad things because their parents money makes the problem go away. as a kid, if you hit another child, if you took something or did something wrong, you would get punished which would grow your set of do's and don'ts or in other words morals which generally results in
      Morally good = selfless actions
      Morally bad = selfish actions.
      which pretty much sums up the concept of morals in the simplest form.
      The last point i would like to make is the idea that your statement, which 'disproves' atheism, therefore proves there is a god. What rationalism is that? How does that single handedly prove there is a god? again, one does not equal the other and i know you're hoping there is a god and i'm not sure if there is, but the fact that we have morals does not prove anything of the existence of a god.
      I feel you have copy and pasted these posts from somewhere and you feel so smug about it that you wish to give it to everybody who would listen to it but it's wrong.
      Sorry for this essay but I saw just how many other videos you've put this garbage on and I had to say something you ignorant fool. Doubt you could read all of this because your brain is stuck in the 1st century A.D. where you left your morals.
      P.S. Atheism isn't a belief system you poor ignorant individual

    • @vivalarevolucion3954
      @vivalarevolucion3954 10 лет назад +8

      ***** word of advice dont insult people, if you want to be taken seriously.
      There is either immoral or moral, There is either right or wrong, innocent or guilty. And its funny you mention light and darkness. Because it is scientific fact that darkness is the absence of light. As is evil is absence of good. So without good, there is no evil. Hence our notion of right and wrong is given to us by god.
      But your B answers your A and supports my point that we are innately moral. Its kinda funny.
      But you are right when you say "how can we know what is good." As an atheist you can't.
      Therefore the fact that you know murder is wrong, proves there is a god.
      Different societies can be immoral, that's not the issue. Mankind still knows murder is wrong. Regardless of your society. So if your a mongol from the Philippines who kills people on a daily basis just because that's what your taught. It might be accepted in your society and culture. But it doesn't mean it is right.
      "Morally good = selfless actions
      Morally bad = selfish actions."
      These statements contradict your earlier point about morality being different in every society. Which is illustrating my point that there is an innate morality. However,
      What on earth makes you morally obligated to be selfless?
      What on earth makes you morally wrong for being selfish?
      Do you have a duty to be moral as an atheist?
      Do you have an obligation to be moral as an atheist?
      You should be answering No. If you answer yes then , where does this obligation/duty come from? You will say moral behavior, so you can revert back to my chart for clarification on why you are wrong.

    • @WhoresOfTijuanaBand
      @WhoresOfTijuanaBand 10 лет назад +3

      That is some idiotic logic... Section A, part 3 and 4 have a horrendous jump in logic. Each society defines what it feels is "morality" and creates laws to justify that. Certain humans chose to not follow those laws and what many consider common morality (murder, rape etc) and therefor there are punishments based on that. If you want to claim morality is "innate" yet you say we failed to innately learn it because we are not moral makes no sense whatsoever.
      Want an example of morality exists without the Jewish god? Are any of you parents? If your child was premeditating murder, do you or your society feel it is moral to stop your child from committing that murder? Christianity based religion believes that God is the Father, is all powerful, all knowing and we are all his children. He is aware at all times of all the premeditated murder that will be committed yet does not stop it. Humans are morally superior to the "great god in the sky" on that basis alone.

    • @vivalarevolucion3954
      @vivalarevolucion3954 10 лет назад +2

      Whores of Tijuana God allows evil because he allows free will. If there was no evil there would be no consciousness of wrong and right and therefore no free will. So yes there is evil in the world, but it is not because of god, it is because of man.

    • @estebanvelasquez9477
      @estebanvelasquez9477 9 лет назад +1

      viva larevolucion so logic is bigger than god, god cannot contradict logic?, cant it be both, like theres an innate ability to feel empathy but theres a ratinal process after that that determines beyond the empathy if its benefical for all the individuals in a grand time scale or not, arent there different laws in different societies? Also your pointing out a false dichotomy, you contradict science and then you use it to prove your points, youre cherry picking, please doubt of your thoughts as i am going to do with mine

  • @Science10s
    @Science10s 2 года назад +1

    Wait wait, he says "religion is 3k years" does he mean our religions today or religion in general? Didn't our ancestors have one god or the other?

  • @chrisgood2go
    @chrisgood2go 11 лет назад

    His message is pretty clear when you look at context both historical and literary. which might also be reason for their was a fear of the scriptures falling in the hands of laymen when the scriptures were being printed. Yes heretics would arise but also those who where not and so the leaders could be judged with the heretics not because there is no consistency but because there is, this is why you and I can carry a conversation and understand one another.

  • @angrydragon069
    @angrydragon069 11 лет назад

    We havent done this since we started to record stuff but we have been doing this long before that, and it seemed to have goon pretty well since our society has made it here.

  • @Henri_Ikari
    @Henri_Ikari 11 лет назад +1

    As they say, "do unto others what you want others to do unto you", and therefore, we should watch out for intolerant religions....

  • @JFamily2u
    @JFamily2u 11 лет назад

    He makes a good point about the origins of morality vs religion.

  • @MartinDxt
    @MartinDxt 11 лет назад

    i like that somebody with real knowledge is kicking unfunded arguments out of the way :D

  • @Zandonus
    @Zandonus 11 лет назад

    Probably not A-theists, but non-religious, like me.The process which i want to see is if such non-religious countries develop a certain clinging to being fans of one particular sport, or exhibit strong tendencies towards personality cultism.

  • @draymunoz
    @draymunoz 11 лет назад

    There it is! Thanks.

  • @mariojeromechavez6663
    @mariojeromechavez6663 3 года назад

    That's a definition of my father, a moral person without religion.

  • @cubedude76
    @cubedude76 11 лет назад

    I realize this is a late response but what I meant was what does it matter if I am "good" or "bad" if there is no consequence to actions. You might be put in jail or people might think poorly of you but that doesn't mean anything. The universe will end regardless of weather I steal something so for what reason would I behave morally? what does it matter if I want to keep surviving? Do my wants make a difference? does real morality exist or is it just a manifestation of evolutionary behavior?

  • @djunior874
    @djunior874 11 лет назад +1

    This is why I love northern Europe!

  • @carolames7624
    @carolames7624 4 месяца назад

    I believe that early humans had morality that included respect for other animals. Then along came animal domestication and devaluation (propped up by organized religion): Frans de Waal, a primatologist and professor of psychology at Emory University, in a New York Times article writes, “When our ancestors moved from hunting to farming, they lost respect for animals and began to look at themselves as the rulers of nature. In order to justify how they treated other species, they had to play down their intelligence and deny them a soul.”

  • @ryanmarin8060
    @ryanmarin8060 11 лет назад

    @Carlo Derwig (sorry I'm using mobile and can't respond correctly) If you read the Bible there are indications within that the doctrine itself dates back about 6000-7000 years maybe more.

  • @SinerAthin
    @SinerAthin 11 лет назад

    Morality is typically a large network of social rules, such as 'killing is wrong'.
    So even if you hate a person, someone might pull the morality card and and say you shouldn't kill that person because it is morally wrong; whereas an animal would kill it straight away without thinking about the moral implications.
    It is true that morality stems from our natural feelings, but they are different in the regards that we created them, while we did not create our primal feelings.

  • @Ospreymusic
    @Ospreymusic 11 лет назад

    Great video.

  • @matthewtenney2898
    @matthewtenney2898 4 года назад

    Morality is doing the right thing for the right reason. Feelings we get from mindless evolution such as empathy and sympathy are not rational so feelings cannot be a reason.

  • @kepspark3362
    @kepspark3362 8 месяцев назад

    Where is this place? I wanna live there.

  • @henk-3098
    @henk-3098 2 года назад

    I agree with him. Humans have an innate sense of morality. But to enhance and enforce it we need a form of social control. That is why religions are so succesful. They are systems in which people monitor and control each other's behavior. Similar to how humans functioned in tribes.

  • @Subrees
    @Subrees 11 лет назад

    Both of you are correct in the fact that with or without religion bad things will happen. The question is knowing that bad things will happen anyway why is religion needed. We have laws and an evolving moral system to keep us from regressing to old broken systems. So what is the point of using religion to create another moral system especially when it is hard to change?

  • @iiMooDz
    @iiMooDz 11 лет назад

    Immorality comes from what humans think is or isn't moral, Frans was saying that we used a moral system before religion, including what is immoral.

  • @slayerwulfe
    @slayerwulfe 11 лет назад +1

    this is one of the best on BT. i liked very much that U said society rather than individual, that needs 2 b understood. what could be taken as an advantage 2 society, can also be taking advantage of society by the elite(self appointed of course) religion does promote stagnation, and caring 4 each other is herd mentality female not male, yet religion is male domination. i hope you will do a follow up as a closer look at what were heading into
    slayerwulfe cave

  • @---Free-Comics---IG---Playtard
    @---Free-Comics---IG---Playtard 11 лет назад

    Great Think!

  • @RzzRBladezofoccham
    @RzzRBladezofoccham 11 лет назад

    Understandable, both Dutch and Deutsch come from the same root: Dietz, which is found in the The Dietz, a sort of old parliament, but meaning something like: the people/the gathering.

  • @Watcheruvdatube
    @Watcheruvdatube 11 лет назад

    as well as the fact that we can post scientific findings online, allowing many more people to free their minds to what they thought they knew.

  • @jmiller7378
    @jmiller7378 10 лет назад

    Parenting. role models are essential to the personality development of children.

  • @Rhian357
    @Rhian357 Год назад +7

    You don't actually need religion to be moral. Because that's what philosophy does prove, how and what is good and moral. I love videos that are educated like these. Helps with my anxiety disorder. Thanks so much.

    • @FredFlintstone-
      @FredFlintstone- Год назад

      It is. The problem is in it’s defining. He said human morality and attacks the argument from saying that our current religions are only 2000-3000 years old, but that only Islam, Christianity and Judaism as in its current interpretation. People believed in God way before Mozes as in these three faiths you had Abraham before Mozes. And not even considering the ‘Abrahamic’ faiths you had other people believing in God(maybe other interpretations or views of God) like the Hindus who are from 15th-5th centhury BCE or the Zoroastrianists(10th-5th century BCE) or even older the San civilization which is arguably the oldest civilization according to most archaeologists(however, some archaeological evidence supports the view that the San should be attributed to the Early Later Stone Age), and they believed in God. So the logical conclusion then is that human morality comes from religion/God.
      If you want to argue that animals also have ‘morality’ and animals predate humans and so morality doesn’t come from religion, fine. But at least admit that human morality comes from religion and I don’t understand why the professor in the video would make such a bold statement while scientifically be so wrong. You definitely need religion to be moral. All our current morals systems are derived, influenced or in some sense intrinsically found in ‘religion’. Philosophy is the little misguided child of theology.

  • @johnhunter8896
    @johnhunter8896 2 года назад

    I would agree that most religious morality has much more older roots based on basic human interaction and the development of an aggregate of humans living together in a more or less ordered community. However, one thing that seems stronger than any belief system or religion is the concept of what is fair, priests and judges can quote the scriptures or elders and present it as law as much as they want but if the people find it unfair, they will question it, this has been the basis of conflict for millennia. Research shows even animals have an instinctive reaction to “unfair” behaviour that threatens their long-term survival. Sadly, the focus today is a fixation on the concept social justice that refuse to acknowledge that some people could be more endowed by nature or fortune than others.

  • @blockhead0834
    @blockhead0834 11 лет назад +1

    If my empathy, compassion and love are all part of an evolutionary process, why does my moral assertion apply to anyone else. Who am I to impose my views on you another human?

  • @200058859
    @200058859 11 лет назад

    Interesting video. I think social trends can lead to changes in mora

  • @Sonyoooo3
    @Sonyoooo3 11 лет назад

    I dont know who is this man but he has a power to deside over my faith or path.

  • @MartinDxt
    @MartinDxt 11 лет назад

    We are not talking about the "original science" whatever you mean.
    Today we use modern science one of the first was Galileo Galilei
    with the scientific method basically making use of experiments to validate physical theories.

  • @blockhead0834
    @blockhead0834 11 лет назад

    Which consensus?
    Do you see the flaw in your objection?

  • @holiday07
    @holiday07 11 лет назад +1

    Wow. My thoughts the other day, morality is my god.

  • @cubedude76
    @cubedude76 11 лет назад

    Evil people may be much more likely to be shunned, disrespected, or hated but that isn't a guarantee. Some evil people have committed acts that most people would agree are evil and have gotten away with it and have never had it negatively impact their lives. so I don't think that could be a complete reason to act morally.

  • @ItsEasyIfYouThink
    @ItsEasyIfYouThink 11 лет назад

    Excellent. You've shown (and, actually, all that can EVER be shown is) that being an atheist can, at the very most, provide no resistance when considering doing something evil. As I said above, lacking belief in gods can never "drive" someone to kill people, or even make them *want* to kill people, as you suggested above.
    Compare that to the monotheistic religions of our day, whose holy books can be interpreted to commit genocide.
    Atheism can *never* be the motivation for action - religion can.

    • @intranext1359
      @intranext1359 2 года назад

      Soviet union would like to disagree with you

  • @blockhead0834
    @blockhead0834 11 лет назад

    "No absolute evil or absolute good," is a dangerous statement.
    Why is it that in our modern times we believe rape is wrong. Has it always been wrong, or did we only recognize it now?
    I would say even in ancient times, people knew their actions were wrong but did them anyway.

  • @valeriea4453
    @valeriea4453 11 лет назад

    I was also wondering about his implication that religion built upon an innate morality; this would suggest that morality is objective and we all had the caring nature within us before we realised it was nice to be nice to people. Is there a difference between this and a small group of animals coming together in a pack for safety and working together for order? Is that considered moral if it's for the benefit of the individual in the long term? Do other species have morality too? Just curious :)

  • @RzzRBladezofoccham
    @RzzRBladezofoccham 11 лет назад

    Well thank you.^^

  • @Imperiused
    @Imperiused 11 лет назад

    Now I know it's wikipedia, but the "Religious views of Adolf Hitler" page is pretty comprehensive. He seems more like a black box than anything, so I'd say putting him in the atheist camp (like Dortolevi did) or the christian camp (like you did) or the pagan camp (like I did) are all roughly on the same magnitude right and wrong.

  • @TheaDragonSpirit
    @TheaDragonSpirit 11 лет назад

    We need places to talk about morals and philosophy. That helps people have a good grasp on what is and isn't moral. People just tend to do that in churches.

  • @jarjar561
    @jarjar561 11 лет назад

    It would be pretty cool if there was some type of program were you could volunteer to move to a place with just atheists it would certainly be interesting to see how it turns out

  • @SootShade
    @SootShade 11 лет назад

    I'm kinda surprised that at no point he mentioned the explanation that I came to long ago.
    As far as I can tell religions have always been a simple way to explain what could otherwise not be explained. Which is why it's lost it's purpose with the advancement of human race.

  • @BoniekKurdupel
    @BoniekKurdupel 11 лет назад

    The first people believed in something. This is known because archeologists found old flower petal fossils near dead bodies, spread around them. They found a couple of these in the same 100km squared (they also found necklaces and other artifacts) . So they did have a 'religion' but it doesnt fall into any categories of religion we have today.

  • @ThatBoomerDude
    @ThatBoomerDude 11 лет назад

    The constancy of the speed of light merely requires a definition of velocity which is modified slightly from what we are accustomed to in our relatively slow-moving world of normalcy. This modified definition is described in the special theory of relativity.
    It is fairly simple. It is not "nonsense." And it certainly is nothing like 1=2.
    And furthermore, and most importantly, the modified definition of velocity accurately describes real observations of real events in the real universe.

  • @sasantarom
    @sasantarom 11 лет назад

    Wonderful points.

  • @shashikamanoj1160
    @shashikamanoj1160 3 года назад

    Read Frederick Nitzche 'Joyful Science'. There's a parable called "Parable of Madman at the market place". It would summarise the whole drama of a Society without a moral frame of reference.
    It all depends what do you mean by Morality and Religion and how you define them. Recently, Jordan Peterson tried Not to answer this issue but to demonstrate how complex it's to deal with. Check that

  • @Nonnimable
    @Nonnimable 11 лет назад

    That's all good and well, but one has to ask if this is necessarily a bad thing and doesn't abate the perceived happiness, low crime rates and high living standards. God-fearing people can't commit suicide, because they can be sent to hell for this in various religious denominations, nor is it generally accepted to divorce someone in religious communities. If one wants to end his/her life, should he/she not be allowed to do so? What if you don't get along well with your partner and want to part?

  • @davidoh14
    @davidoh14 11 лет назад

    That shouldn't be phrased as a static question. Throughout history, religion made total sense on every level - philosophically, culturally, technologically, politically. Now, that really depends of where you're talking about. The future, I have hopes it'll flourish. Humans command their own destiny.

  • @timothypeden3516
    @timothypeden3516 Год назад

    I recommend a book entitled Morality by Johnathan Sacks, it covers many issues one might ask relating to morality.

  • @MiinaVsWorld
    @MiinaVsWorld 11 лет назад

    That's odd, I don't remember violence stopping after religion either. As a matter of fact some of the major wars and atrocities in history transpired due to religion or in the name of religion. For example, The Crusades, The Thirty Years' War, French Wars of Religion, The Nigerian Civil War, The Lebanese Civil War, The Inquisition, (It's a long, long long list..I could on for days, seriously.) Point is Humans will always be violent with or without violence. It's a dark aspect of humanity.

  • @alexrcs8386
    @alexrcs8386 11 лет назад +1

    That was brilliant. And true.

  • @epithymbria
    @epithymbria 11 лет назад

    Nazi Germany was predominantly Protestant Christian, the Soviet Union was predominantly Catholic and orthodox Christian, Cubans are mostly Catholics. No matter what the politics of the country were/are, the fact is that the majority of the people in those places were religious in one form or another. What is unique about Scandinavian countries is that people have the freedom to choose, and they choose atheism and agnosticism. They are also some of the more peaceful places on earth.

  • @RzzRBladezofoccham
    @RzzRBladezofoccham 11 лет назад

    We could put it like this, both Austria and Germany were part of the Holy Roman Empire, that was dissolved like a century before, and both countries do speak German.

  • @LOUTENANT
    @LOUTENANT 11 лет назад

    I think it is possible for a society to live without religeon. However, in our history we rarely find a society with tolerance & morality without religeon which was not built on religeon. In other words, religeon has been the stepping stone to a secular moral society. As a spiritual but not religeous person it is important to remember that despite the fact that I see religeon as fables & good stories at best, it is a very important part other people and other societies evolutionary process.

  • @cubedude76
    @cubedude76 11 лет назад

    yet another late reply be me but my point still stands. if you KNEW you wouldn't ever be caught you still shouldn't do something immoral. I would like a reason to never be immoral in any situation.

  • @Jeremyramone
    @Jeremyramone 11 лет назад

    sounds like an interesting book, i wish northern europe wasn t so cold...