Despite the freaky thumbnail this was probably the best video of yours yet. You have a genius way of thinking and are a talented speaker. I really enjoyed this bro
This is just a self-contradictory mess. For example, you make the argument (surprisingly well) that our morality has evolved with our changing social structures, then follow it with a claim that ‘right and wrong’ are absolute. It’s like you’ve done some of the thinking, didn’t like the conclusion and decided ‘better believe in God anyway’, and that the responsibility of there being no God is ‘just too much for me’. Not everyone shares your yearning for an afterlife, maybe thinking about the possible reasons for this might help you come to terms with reality as it is presented to us. Might I suggest books.
That's the Paradox of life, I can make the strongest point about anything and completely reverse it and mean something else. I contradict myself because you need self reflection, being self aware of your own actions and thoughts allows oneself to look at both sides of the argument and then determine what to believe from there.
@@lukeskindaserious I agree. Our brains are not one monolithic unit, it’s more of a case of there being internal warring factions, and a position on a topic emerges from the struggle between them. There have been a number of interesting papers on this in the last decade.
There's probably thousands of religions in this world how do you know which one is yours and which one is false ? The only explanation is that all religions are true, and your belief determines your god
Despite the freaky thumbnail this was probably the best video of yours yet. You have a genius way of thinking and are a talented speaker. I really enjoyed this bro
Freaky thumbnail, 🤣 how so?
This is just a self-contradictory mess. For example, you make the argument (surprisingly well) that our morality has evolved with our changing social structures, then follow it with a claim that ‘right and wrong’ are absolute.
It’s like you’ve done some of the thinking, didn’t like the conclusion and decided ‘better believe in God anyway’, and that the responsibility of there being no God is ‘just too much for me’. Not everyone shares your yearning for an afterlife, maybe thinking about the possible reasons for this might help you come to terms with reality as it is presented to us.
Might I suggest books.
That's the Paradox of life, I can make the strongest point about anything and completely reverse it and mean something else. I contradict myself because you need self reflection, being self aware of your own actions and thoughts allows oneself to look at both sides of the argument and then determine what to believe from there.
@@lukeskindaserious I agree. Our brains are not one monolithic unit, it’s more of a case of there being internal warring factions, and a position on a topic emerges from the struggle between them. There have been a number of interesting papers on this in the last decade.
Cool
Whishing something is true does not make it true. Like religion for example.
But self-actualization is real, what if our belief, determines the God that watches over us?
@@lukeskindaserious
Not sure what you mean my friend.
Are you saying I have come to the conclusion that God is real therefore God is real?
There's probably thousands of religions in this world how do you know which one is yours and which one is false ? The only explanation is that all religions are true, and your belief determines your god
Just a concept
@@lukeskindaserious
Makes no sense to me, but what do I know, I am just a stupid atheist?