Hiddenness is only a problem when you are punished for not finding god. It's like playing hide and seek, but the seeker gets tortured if they don't win.
I don't see punishment as necessary or even reasonable for " not finding God". From my understanding, those who do find God and reject his invitation to "follow me", have freely chosen to "turn away". Humanity reveals a life of tears. Is the afterlife any better? That's why I reject "the seeker gets tortured".
@@johnbrzykcy3076 Oh yes, if I were god, I wouldn't create Hell and then set people up to go there. That would be monstrous. Are you freely choosing to turn from god if you don't think he exists? It seems like hiddenness necessarily eliminates freedom in this case.
nobody deserves to have the most heinous torture, worse than anything ever done on Earth, inflicted on them for eternity bc they were otherwise good ppl who did not believe in God
I looked at the comments on the full discussion over on Capturing Christianity, and many of them were complimentary/appreciative of Alex's conduct. I'd like to bring that energy over here and say that Trent Horn seems very genuine and understanding. I disagree with him, but it's always useful to have a back and forth with someone like Trent, to make sure you're getting the other's points correct. He's not the type to degrade the conversation when it might suit him and I appreciate that. For a talk to be productive you need both parties on board, and this is a good example of that kind of genuine intellectual interest that allows for productivity. Thanks Trent and Alex
CC is one of the most dishonest christian channels you can find. He never makes a single honest point even when someone explains anything he instantly lies about it, misrepresents it or goes on some dumb rant. His gullible zealots arent that different.
@@Z4r4szHere is the generic negativity comment without substance lol. Examples? Or just braindead negativity because someone doesn't share your opinion?
As a victim of torture, I know first hand that there is nothing that could be learned that would be worth being tortured. There is absolutely no justification.
There is a lot of insight and things you can learn from the nature of torture. For instance I have gone through terrible toxic narscisstic relationship with my mom and my family most of my life and it made me adapt in a way that other people did not so in a sense I feel like it gave me superpower or sixth sense. I am immensly aware of people emotion. It made me a very empath. The idea here is to overcome the evil. IT is the overcoming part that sthengthen your character. If your whole life went comfortably without any issue then you will not learn nor grow.
@@noorzanayasmin7806Glad that you were able to gain Something from your suffering. But there's other cases like a child being abducted, tortured raped and killed. What could that child ever gain from that? Even If you argue the Patents would raise awareness of Kidnapping, the child suffered without redemption.
Hey, I'm a Christian,but I can't get enough of your content, Alex. You're such a young guy, which really impresses me you can compete at such a high level. You're a fascinating person, and I'm learning so much from your page. I think I'm sick of bad arguments and excuses from christians. I want the most challenging person to ask these questions. You are unforgivingly inquisitive
Do you believe in heaven and hell? If you went to heaven but knew people you were close to such as, loved ones, friends etc. were in hell, how could you actually 'enjoy' heaven, it would never feel pleasurable because I would be too concerned about how what my friends were going through in hell.
Yeah those two ideals can't co-exist, you can't have your cake and eat it too by sitting on both the table of authoritarian religion that crushes questioning of it and the table that quite rightly rejects the unproven notion of it.
@@firehot006hell wasn't even a real place until Dante conceived it to be in his 14th century poem dantes inferno, before that it was never called the gates of hell but the mouth of hell as in the dangers of speaking with evil intentions, heaven is also not a real place it is the mental space that Joseph of the middle east inhabited when he consumed the smoke of the burning Bush of the acacia tree which is rich in DMT. Ingesting this chemical rockets the users consciousness into a space where you are experiencing the "divine" which he sermonsised as being "god".
@@firehot006 Yeah, I've considered all you said, and I think either I don't care about people as much as I think, or I just don't really believe in heaven/hell, God and the afterlife. Maybe I'm in denial... Honestly, I don't want to think about it too hard anymore because I don't really reach a conclusion. I know a lot of Christians like this. That's why people like me just kind of keep to themselves when it comes to their belief in Christianity... Ultimately we define our reality and moral system based on practical notions of pain avoidance and ideals towards the greater good. So don't think most Christians are that much different than the average person who doesn't think about these things.
@@Paulstrickland01 Actually you can; it's called cognitive dissonance. It's sort of a limbo state. If you're being honest, you hold many similar belief structures, especially as a "skeptic." What is truth?
"epistemic distance" giving more freedom is nonsensical and immoral. Imagine a doctor in a clinical trial saying they will not give more information to patients so that "they have more freedom to decice on whether or not to take part in the study." I would like to see the Ethics Committee that is okay with that. More information gives you a more informed decision, hence informed consent and the possibility to keep asking further questions throughout any clinical trial.
@@JD-wu5pf And the same theists who make that argument use their experience with god encounters to claim he is real. But somehow their free will wasnt violated. Its so absurd.
No evidence is enough in the end. It can always be countered with 'oh it was a hallucination, oh it can be explained away by natural laws, oh it happened thousands of years ago, oh it was unreliable witnesses' Even if God were to realign the stars, made His power explicit and made everyone today believe and worshipped him, generations thousands of years later will say oh we were hallucinating, we were unreliable etc. I believe in God because of the Catholic Church and her witness all the way from the beginning to Christ, his works, miracles and mission. Because of her martyrs, her impact on the culture thousands of years ago to today. And it makes sense to me that God chose the Church to manifest Himself for these past 2 thousand years. As for why, all i can say is i have faith this is the best way to win humanity back in relationship to God
@@Z4r4szthat is a fantastic point. Christians who believe that it wouldn’t be right for god to just reveal himself to Alex must also believe that all instances of god revealing himself to others are fake, all religious experiences Christians have were not real.
@@AthanaSus *_"No evidence is enough in the end."_* When has a theist ever presented evidence? All we heard for over two milennia are claims that defy reality without any evidence that prove any of the supernatural claims are even possible. Christians have nothing. Muslims have nothing. Jews have nothing, Hindus have nothing. But all of you claim to be the next nobel prize winners. *_"Even if God were to realign the stars, made His power explicit and made everyone today believe and worshipped him..."_* Yeah, > IF
Imagine having visions of heaven, visions of angels, and having a deeper understanding of jesus and god....spanning a few months....and coming to realize you were experiencing a bipolar manic episode. Yeah, that didn't bring me closer to god, just made realize more that god and the afterlife is a condition of the mind.
@@20july1944a “science argument”? And condescendingly asking if this person is smart enough to understand you? Oof, not a great start if you’re looking to convince anyone. Perhaps try showing a little Christian humility and kindness, because you didn’t start with any of that here.
Or take drugs as an example, LSD, mushrooms or Ketamine, this kinda Stuff. I had such ''seeing god'' kinda experiences while on them back in the days. They can be really vivid, but once you realise it would be a pretty impotent god that needs this kind of tools to get through you, rather then through real experiences or even miracles, everything falls apart. And just like you said before, it's you, your condition of mind that makes those things up, and not an omnipotent all knowing being.
6:32 shifting to an argument for “free will” and away from the challenge posed which was: why would God not reveal the truth to honest people earnestly seeking the truth?
If you're really searching, and wanting to be a Christian, you know you can just accept the truth of the propositions, right? And start living in accordance with them? Like, you can actually do that, you don't need a sign or an experience. No, people say this, but there's a deeper- but no less free- will choosing to disregard the testimony of all those who came before and not wanting to die to themselves.
@@wondergolderneyesNot right. Apparently some people can believe whatever they want to believe but not everyone's beliefs are so easily shaped by their wants. Apparently Alex has beliefs that need more coaxing than merely wanting in order for them to shift
@@abdmznor judaism. I would like to see people of different religions explain why they chose to believe in their religion and why they wouldn't shift to another one, and discuss this same point with people who have shifted
He has grown up surrounded by Christian values and friends, and it shows. I like him. Like Dawkins and many others, he seems to love truth, and has been brought up to believe that it is superlative, perhaps worth more than his own life. Unfortunately the atheist system of thought cannot recreate this worldview without recourse to Christian presuppositions so it is more rare than it once was in the west. That kind of stubbornness to truth is essentially Christian or close to it. Such attitudes were deemed troublesome and worthy of death pre-Christianity. A report from a roman leader basically said they had killed some early Christians simply for refusing to deny Christ after three opportunities because he thought such behaviour either stupid or rebellious.
"There is only one happiness: to please Him. Only one sorrow, to be displeasing to Him, to refuse Him something, to turn away from Him, even in the slightest thing, even in thought, in a half-willed movement of appetite: in these things, and these alone, is sorrow, in so far as they imply separation, or the beginning, the possibility of separation from I lim Who is our life and all our joy. And since God is a Spirit, and infinitely above all matter and all creation, the only complete union possible, between ourselves and Him, is in the order of intention: a union of wills and intellects, in love, charity." Thomas Merton "The Seven Storey Mountain"
His belief system is based on evidence. Atheism isn't a belief in itself, it's just a rejection of things that are asserted as truth but based on nothing but conjecture.
They are both great. As a Christian I obviously side with Trent (he is my favorite Christian apologist) but I love consuming both their content and hearing Alex's and Trent's arguments in their videos - I think it's healthy to gain perspective like this.
Its not an inherent human emotion though. If you are an atheist, which I presume you are, think about this through the lens of evolution. Humans are selfish creatures and it is not an evolutionary advantage to place others over self. You were looking at his statement in 2D.
That’s a low blow my brother in Christ. He’s saying there’s an innate feeling we have the help others without good reason, almost the opposite of Alex’s stance on his refuting of God because suffering is his opinion unjustified in some cases, the same way it may seem unjustified it exists, it’s like the ultimate red pill lol. If God real why bad thing happen? Nah if God not real why good thing happen 🤙🤙🤙 Get it bro?
@@carlosz.5460 An emotion called empathy, which every sane human has. The reason why this "innate feeling" exists in all non-pathological people "without good reason" is because we are social creatures and have evolved to help each other, thus furthering our survival. In other words, there is a lot of reason why we help each other. N.B., it is nonsense to suggest that because "good things happen", god exists. Given that things happen, some will be good and some will be bad. Only someone claiming that a god is looking after us, needs to explain why bad things happen to the atrocious extent they do happen. What great god that would be who acted in ways that are good for people without giving them the means to see why even the most atrocious tragedies are "good". What a great god that would deny eternal happiness to people who happened to have been born in a wrong region on earth and hence never received the doctrine necessary to let them enter the gates of heaven.
@carlosz.5460 There is a good reason animals (which includes humans) have empathy, it makes sure genes get passed on better. As the commenter above me said, things happen and we just classify them as good or bad. If God exists and is almighty (which is the case for most believers), he can control bad and good. If god doesn't exist, good and bad are simply just events that happen, which we choose to classify. What do you think about my thoughts?
I love this…when you questions gods motivations religious folks will say “well who am I to question gods motivations?”….who am I to question? I’m the one that god put here and I’m the one who is enduring this life of regular suffering. That’s who I am. I have some stake in this life. It’s like me saying to my child when they question my judgement “who are you to question me?” ….The child should say “who am I? I’m your child and you chose to have me and your choices and motivations matter very much to me so please explain why I have to go to school or can’t eat sugar before bed. Explain it to me. Make it make sense because I’m learning and it’s important you train me well so I don’t suffer more”…..That’s when I would stay silent and just tell them to go read the book I wrote 20 years ago, all the answers are in that book.
This makes sense under normal circumstances if the individual is talking about some random intelligent being that's extremely powerful. However the God Trent is thinking about is identical to goodness itself. When you're thinking about the perfect light or pure unlimited goodness that context to what Trent is saying. Like who am I to question God. The issue is you're not looking at the conversation in this context.
@@supermandefender where in the bible does god actually embody goodness? He's clearly a cruel, petty jerk from cover to cover - simply asserting otherwise doesn't do much to improve his characterization.
@@aosidh It's in the New Testament. Jesus is equated with actually being the "light" on numerous occasion. For example, John chapter 3 verse 19 it says "and this is the judgment: the light come into the world and people and people loved darkness rather than the light because their deeds were evil." The follow verse John 3:18 specifically talks about those who believe in Jesus and those who don't so it's clearly referring to Jesus as being "the light". You will also notice it equivocates light and darkness with good and evil. Anyway passages like these are althroughout the new testament.
@@supermandefender you can't fix a whole old testament about god murdering babies by asserting that his son/self persona is good. Actions speak louder than words, you know?
One thing that strikes me whenever a believer says “who are we to question the will of god” like this fellow did when arguing that only god can know his reasons for allowing suffering, as a rebuttal against Alex asking for just one experience, is this: If people who believe can point to their own anecdotal experience to say they KNOW god exists, why do atheists just have to believe without having such an experience? Simply because supposedly we can’t questions god’s will? Would the believer still believe without their experience? Or would they questions god’s will too? Faith is a funny thing. If you don’t have it, no explanation will suffice but if you do have it, no explanation is necessary.
Very well said. I never thought about that way. I guess with that in mind, anyone who claims that a personal experience with god contributed in any way to their certainty of his existence isn't truly working off of faith alone. If they don't have to work off of faith alone, why do I?
His comment on questioning god makes sense though, if he claims the god is all knowing then his knowledge would be way beyond our understanding. I don't see this as a logical problem, but say for a second that the god does not exist. Someone created the perfect manipulation system to make people do whatever they want under the excuse of "god is all knowing".
@@OmniversalInsect The establishment of most religions were achieved with persecution/control/ostracizing the people, using their illiteracy against them and forbidding dissent. No manipulation necessary. These days it persists because it became so widespread to begin with and most believers are either raised into it and told to interpret their lives through that lens (indoctrinating kids has been an effective way of inculcating strong beliefs) or by way of a person’s need to find meaning and comfort to reconcile their experiences. No manipulation necessary.
@@dannielz6 Of course. Because until I have such an experience to which I can confidently ascribe to a god, the human need to understand things naturally seeks a logical explanation for the claim being made. I can accept other people believe and leave it at that. However, when I’m asked to believe because this other person believes because they had this one experience; I’m going to need more than “trust me bro” as evidence and will absolutely question their story. If I had my own experience though, one that convinced me, I have no one to question but myself, hence why an atheist would ask to have their own experience. This is why I find it hypocritical to be told I can’t question god’s will by someone who already believes. They had an experience I didn’t have. And if god gave us free will and he does things in his own time, in his own way and he speaks to open hearts differently; all I can do is wait and keep an open mind. Thus far though, despite my efforts to pray worship and believe; I haven’t ever felt that thing called faith. Which is why I find the parable I used earlier so compelling. “If you don’t have faith, no explanation will suffice but if you do, no explanation is necessary.” Believers would not have me question their faith if they didn’t insist I must believe because “insert personal anecdotal experience here” and tell me I can’t question the will of the god they want me to believe in when I ask why I haven’t had my own sign like they had.
Before the age of 10 at my school the nuns told us that fear of god in enough justification for us not to sin. I twigged at that age that all they were doing was justifying using corporal punishment.
Life gives you pain if you aren't careful. Smart people learn BEFORE life gives them pain. Average people learn AFTER life gives them pain. Stupid people never learn even after life's pain happens. Corporal punishment is for average people. That way they learn what actions are painful before life itself teaches them they're painful. A boy getting paddled by a nun after cussing her out is a much better way to learn to not cuss someone out than a young adult getting a beating from a 250 pound thug after cussing him out. Better to have a sore behind for an hour than a broken rib, broken jaw, and a large hospital bill. But it's best to just not cuss anyone out to begin with. Few people are that smart though, even after lots of verbal instruction and warning.
@@theboombody I think you're leaving out the fact that there are several non-violent, less severe courses of action that could potentially be taken instead of going straight to the physical violence option, like scolding someone, shaming them by making them stand outside the class, making them sit far away from their friends, detention etc. Of course there are some stubborn kids who just don't get the point until it's been whacked into them, but that should be the last option in my view.
I really like Trent Horn convos with ppl like Alex & Destiny. Idk if I’d necessarily say all his arguments are “good faith” but he’s super respectful and has a thought out train of logic that he’s willing to explain and engage with. It’s very refreshing compared to some other kinds of debates you can find online lol.
he's just another two-faced apologist, when no one is looking he's an atheist basher same as his youtube mates - never trust a christian. he's never respectful when he thinks atheists aren't listening - "new christian" subs, likes, patrons, revenue. if you want to be a good christian, be atheist.
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
@@alexkiaii6548 what do you mean who said that? How can you disbelieve in Allah when you were lifeless and He brought you to life; then He will cause you to die, then He will bring you [back] to life, and then to Him you will be returned.
I respect Trent for being respectful and articulate. but he's just rehashing the old "we can never truly know God's reasons for doing what he does" argument. This is such an annoying cop-out. Why even deal in the realm of reason or logic if you're just going to allow giant gaps in understanding or reason? Just tell people, "I believe for no rational reasons. I just want to, so I choose to."
My perfectly healthy older brother died at birth because the umbilical cord strangled him to death. I can either believe in all powerful God had some special mysterious reason for that to happen. Or I could just realize it’s just part of the natural world. I choose to believe that it’s part of just natural processes that happen. no all loving Go would allow something so horrible to happen, makes no sense at all.
Think on how it has affected your life and that of your family. Also, even if I believe in God, I don't think he micromanages everything to that extreme, and accidents are a part of our reality, or maybe our medical knowledge isn't advanced enough and he could've been saved in other situations. There are lots of variables and things we can't control.
@@20july1944 Apart from this being a horrible thing to say...... then why didn't Hitler or Stalin etc die at birth? Oh...it is all part of "god's plan"? Yeah, right...
@@Dan_Capone He certainly micromanages shit in a way that you get told what parts of your body to cover in church, what food to eat and not eat and your sex life. Or at least we are told he is very, very concerned with it and if you do not adhere to these rule...off to the lake of fire you go. Plus he is apparently also omnipotent and allknowing...how can he not micromanage everything? So in short...stop giving excuses....and if you start letting him off the hook, why pray and believe at all in him?
@@20july1944 *_"Maybe he was a monster in waiting -- who knows?"_* This from the group of people who pretend to be the only moral people in the entire cosmos... Absolutely disgusting!
It’s so weird that when it’s time to tell kids that Santa isn’t real, they instantly get it, mourn about it for a day or two, and move on. But when we tell adults that god isn’t real, we go to philosophy, analogies, arguments about reason, evidence, and hours upon hours of argument, and they still don’t get it.
This is the most braindead argument and pathetic attempt to downplay God that I've ever seen. The mere comparison between Santa and God and why we debate the existence of God is as childish as you can get. Then they ask why God doesn't reveal to them smh. Maybe the one who doesn't get it here is you mate.
probably because there are actually good arguments for Gods existence and reasons to believe it, whereas for santa there are not. The north and south poles are both barren deserts. They are monitored with radar 24/7 by independent countries around the world, and a flying sleigh has never even once been caught on said radar. Also it is objectively a mythological story that is self admittedly completely made up. But great straw man.
@@JD-wu5pf I thought your last comment was joking LMAO 🤣. But with this one now I see that you definitely are one of those generic triggered atheists that strawmans the argument, prefers to attack the person calling him "irrational" out of nowhere rather than give compelling arguments as to why God wouldn't be real and how the universe could've come to be the way it is. I personally acknowledge evolution, the big bang and other scientific data since I study Physics, but those don't disprove God nor give a complete picture as to how the universe came to be as it is. You also putting yourself in the rational side, thinking you're superior intellectually, assuming that I believe in Santa to suit your argument and desperate attempt to downplay me and diminish my beliefs without substance definitely just makes you look pathetic and insecure here mate. I don't want to assume all atheists are like you (or like the guy in the main comment), because I've definitely had good conversations with actual respectful, open minded and intellectual atheists who are interested in actually getting answers about our existence rather than being conformist, arrogant and close minded like you (like Alex for example. You might learn a thing or two from him since you watch his videos). Sorry bud, you strawmaning, throwing a tantrum about God and projecting your insecurities without substance won't disprove anything lol.
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
If god wanted us to have true free will, god would remove the threat of damnation. If you were held at gunpoint and threatened with death if you didn't comply with their commands, it's more than likely you'd comply.
to be fair though, in the christian/catholic view free will creates death/damnation not God. God isn't arbitrarily sending people to hell, He simply gives free will and we have the freedom to not choose him. Hell is just the absence of God.
@@entropy_yportneI’m not sure how you can simultaneously say god gives you free will, while saying an omniscient god created you. If a god knows everything, every single action you would take before he created you, then created you with those actions known to him, you have zero free will. I mean, if god knows you will end up in heaven or hell, before he creates you, how do you change that? If you changed your path god knew when he created you, then you’re conceding god isn’t omniscient because he would have been wrong about your future.
I also say that the most free will choice you can make is one where you have all the objective information involved in that choice. A person who wants to manipulate you would hide information, put a time limit on the choice, and threaten repercussions if you don't make the "right" choice. Sound familiar?
It’s good for parents to give their children distance… but you don’t question whether or not your parents ever existed. I love my mom. I don’t necessarily want to be around her 24/7, but I’d be heartbroken if she chose to distance herself from me to the point where I never got to see her again. I see my mom mostly every weekend… why can’t I visit god from time to time?
I 100% agree! That's where I think Trent misunderstood Alex's point. Nobody's asking god to run our lives for us, just to be the loving father he is claimed to be
@@polyurethanesealantyou see there's your problem- you don't want God to run your life. But Jesus asks us to die to ourselves and live for him wholeheartedly, without being lukewarm or double-minded. God completely reorders our priorities so that culture mocks, it always has. God could give you the world but as long as you're scared to do that it will just be added to the reject mountain. Have a look at what you already have, have a listen to the testimony of others, both now, and through history, right down to the very people who lived and walked with Jesus.
@@wondergolderneyes Let's structure this in the form of a logical syllogism with premises and a conclusion, then you can indicate which specific premises you disagree with that would invalidate the derived conclusion ........ *Premise one* The Christian God is said to be morally perfect, loving, omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent. *Premise two* Belief in this specific god is required to prevent an eternal torture and attain salvation. *Premises three* The Christian God wants all to know of his existence and thus be saved. *Premise four* The Christian God would have both the ability and desire to demonstrate his existence to all. *Premise five* More that three quarters of the world population do not think the Christian God exists. *Conclusion* The Christian God as described does *NOT* exist
@@trumpbellend6717 this argument is the same kind as just the general deductive argument from suffering- one that no serious atheist philosopher uses anymore because it doesn't hold water. And the reason it doesn't hold is not necessarily that the premises aren't true but that the conclusion doesn't follow. God having the ability does not necessitate that he use it, he might have other reasons unknown to us at of yet for remaining hidden to at least some level. Then additionally, your specific premise 4.5? (You missed a step) could be argued to be false and that God has demonstrated his existence to everyone through creation and to many people through the person of Jesus.
@@wondergolderneyes // "does not necessitate that he use it" // Logically incoherent, a perfect moral omnipotent beings desire for his creation not to suffer because of a lack of belief would be irreconcilable with his creations having a lack of belief and suffering. // "he might have some other reason as yet unknown to us" // Lol nope if that were indeed the case then those who claim to have been atheists before having a "personal experience" or a "Road to Damascus moment" that convinced them of gods existence are lying or your perfect moral god chooses to save some but allows others to suffer eternal torture. Again irreconcilable with the attributes claimed for the biblical God who allegedly loves ALL his creations. // "could be argued to be false and that God has demonstrated his existence to everyone through creation" // Lol firstly contradicts your previous supposed flaw and jesus himself says "there will be non believers" Secondly if I as an atheist were actually convinced of his existence what would I gain by claiming not to know ??? 🤔 I mean I could be a sinner and be forgiven under Christian soteriology but non belief is an unforgivable criteria that dooms one to eternal torture 🤔 *John 5 24* _"Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and _*_"BELIEVES"_*_ in Him who sent Me has everlasting life, and _*_SHALL NOT COME INTO JUDGMENT,_*_ but has passed from death into life"_ Don't forget there are *"BILLIONS"* of people who ARE _"convinced through creation"_ of the existence of God but they believe it was a *DIFFERENT GOD* and reject jesus being the cause of it. They too according to Christian soteriology are doomed to eternal torture because jesus did not convinced them of his existence or divinity, irrespective of them living a good loving and moral life. How telling that statistically in a world where an all powerful God wants all to be saved the biggest determining factor in one's eternal salvation or damnation seems to be the geographical location one is born into. If one is born in a place like Pakistan there is about a 95% chance that one will find the evidence for Christianity insufficient. Conversely you will however more than likely be convinced there is sufficient evidence to believe Islam, thus eternal torture is assured. How does that reconcile with a supposed PERFECT omnipotent omniscient omnibenevolent loving God who wants *EVERYONE* to be saved ? 🤔
As an atheist xChristian, I’m still mad that “God” created us as we are, however, he thought the Bible was sufficient for us to believe in him and understand him. Still makes me mad 😡 😂
It’s so annoying when people hand wave issues away by linking them back to “the fall” “Why do we have tonsil stones and wisdom teeth?” The fall “Why is god hiding and making it very difficult for innocent people to find him?” The fall…
Science is where the best, objective evidence of God is found. I won't refer to the fall, and I don't claim the Bible is inerrant. Are you educated enough to discuss some science?
@@20july1944 an assertion of: "herpy derp God done it" also is no explanation. It's simply an empty assertion that doesnt explain anything about the phenomena. Youre the same sort of people who would have said that thunder and lightning could not be explained and therefore it makes sense to say thor or zeus exist and explain them. They dont...
@@Apollorionand forget about it in next generation. We lost 16 million people in The Great Patriotic War. You would think we learn the bitterness of war, but look where we are... Fighting for 2 years in war that make no fuking sense.
I use a similar analogy to the dentist one but more simple.... If a parent and a toddler are wanting to cross a multi lane highway on foot and the parent simply sends the toddler out to lead the way and the toddler gets run over it is 100% the fault of the parent for being a terrible parent yet God can create us, not initiate a relationship with us, nor even let us know he exists yet if we don't find him we're banished to hell for eternity. How is God any different to the terrible parent who blamed the toddler for getting itself run over...?
@OmniversalInsect yeah that's a part of my point. God, if he exists is the worst parent possible to all of us. Even many Christians won't make it to heaven for various dogmatic reasons. Religion is hardly a trust worthy concept.
Yes, De God of de buy bowl is diss way. God said, He create Ted de righteous two bee righteous indie wicked four de they of judgment. God hardened pharaohs heart two show hisses power. God said heal have mercy own who (he won't) two show mercy. God create Ted Esau two bee wicked. God has isle red de chosen hisses pea pole, their is know free wheel indie buy bowl. If you're a atheist,it's knot your dew wing,God did not chose you,but it does ant mean it does ant exist. God is eternal. Meaning knot own Lee does he seas de future,He is isle red de indie future. God is indie past, present, and future ant de same time while hue men's are trapped indie present/ time God create Ted. Every thing is a part of Gods plan four hisses chosen. De world was made four dim.
@@iwkaoy8758 Respectfully the book has written by primitive men who had just discovered wine. Since then parts have been added and taken away including scrolls written by a woman! In those days when science and information were lacking these scrolls made sense because everybody was (SCARED) into belief of God. Nowadays there are more than enough means to know better. So, my analogy makes a "HELL" of a lot more sense than some meaningless scripture! Thanks for your comment all the same.
@@MuscleBandit Yes, De Is rail lights were primitive no buy dez,That's why God chose dim. De is rail lights were looked down own bee cause day were de own Lee pea pole width out a home land. Day was de scum of de earth,But Egyptians were de rules of de world. Egyptians were ruling width de most advanced sciences and technology and De most powerful gods two de world,But de God of de no buy dez/ goat herders took down Egypt. God use de Is rail lights two show hisses power. It's de same two day. Pea pole are say yin, look at hour advanced civilization and sciences,How Ken Ken goat herders know what day are talk king a bot. That's de egg zack reason God chose dim. God said, He wheel use de thing that are foolish two diss world two confound de wise. He wheel use de weak two confound de mighty. God lifted pharaoh up,Two bring him down. He placed de technologies inn men's hearts .Hue men's are just puns inn hisses game. God is like a lion playing width a baby any moles. De lion lets de baby head but him and run. It's fun four de lion bee cause de baby thinks it Ken win,but de lion nose de end of de store rie. De mighty nations think day no Moore den goat herders,But God is toying width dim. He de ultimate troll/ chess player/puppet master.
Id love to see Hitchens and Alex debate religion on the same "team". They have very different ways of attacking the problem. I think it would be interesting to see how they compliment each other. Hitchens would come in with more of a nuclear style showing the downfalls of Religion. Alex could come in and make mincemeat of the reply or opening statement by beautifully picking it apart.
If I witness a blind person is about to step into traffic i would intervene to stop them. In that moment, the issue of God's existence would be irrelevant to my decision to intervene. God is unnecessary. And my difficulty with the problem of evil is nowhere near as great as my difficulty with the problem of profound imperfection. There is no plausible explanation why a "loving God" would bake into His "perfect" design things such as severe birth defects, profound mental disability, psychopathy, etc.
Did trent forget that he believes in an omnipresent god who is already watching over everything you do even though he already knows what you will do before you do it?
@@doug2555 No,predetermined or not,there is no you choosing the action,a pseudo entity claims authorship of the action.This entity we identify as ourselves,though there is no evidence for its existence.
Someone else must have mentioned it. The Bible explicitly states “seek and you shall find”. As a child, I was told that God/Jesus was knocking on the door of my heart and all I had to do was open and let Him in. None of that is remotely compatible with the experience of earnest nerdy teenage Christians who become atheists/non-believers.
They just "nuh-uh" the idea of non-resistant non-believers. They victim blame saying that every single non-believer secretly doesn't want to believe because apparently they know what's in everyone's mind better than the actual person does.
@@Nymaz i've always been atheist, if there is a god then he seems okay with me bad mouthing him cos i've had a "blessed life", all i want is the question answered so religists will stop trying to dictate their stupid laws, if there turns out to be a god then A) i don't see what difference it will make B) i'll deal with it when it happens. (if hell is real then sure, i'll sign up, same as EVERY OTHER religist does) but i really couldn't care less what the answer is, i just want the answer - and looking in the bible isn't going to help, it's not helped anyone.
@@HarryNicNicholasHah, exactly my position, I've never seriously believed in a God even if I'm not a proper atheist or nor do I do any religious stuff like praying or visiting temples (yeah, I'm Hindu, which according to many Christians means that I don't know the one true God), and I've had a blessed life. Perhaps that's why I've never needed to find God or religion? I don't know, but apart from giving me comfort, I don't think praying or believing in a higher power makes much of a difference.
What if your experience was not Him knocking, but rather a need of a nerdy child/teenager to fit in? (using your example) This sort of experience is not Christian exclusive, nor is it even exclusive to those with religious beliefs. It is absolutely great that you have had this experience (I mean this whole heartedly), and it reinforces your faith, but to many it's something we've seen before, and will not be received as the absolute unquestionable evidence you believe it to be. Regardless, wishing you all the best.
The very existence of atheists, the very existence of thousands of religions, should make it abundantly clear (if you ever doubted) that there are nog gods.
That doesn't make any sense. And at best you would be arguing against some particular religion, because the idea of God as an omnipresent creator of the Universe can be defended with the same arguments by different religions like Christianity, Islam or Judaism. So even if they cancel each other out and they can't all be right, that doesn't mean none of them are, and it also doesn't mean that God doesn't exist.
@@Dan_Capone The fact that theists still argue for their gods with every fallacy instead of presenting any evidence and no gods appearing in reality is all we need to say those gods dont exist. If those gods existed they would be visible by now. But they arent.
@@Dan_Capone To push his point further, doing a historical, philosophical and evidence based analysis of the beginning, spread, and success of different religions, it can be reasonably said that no religions(that have had the chance to do those things) have the marking of a true religion. Thereby, old religions are seemingly false, just on that pretense.
@@Dan_Capone Non-believers aren't obligated to prove that a supernatural God or "higher power" of some kind *doesn't* exist. That said, we are certainly more than justified in dismissing the patently absurd and massively contradictory claims of competing religions, all of which erroneously purport to be true.
As a child I experienced inexcusable and hideous prolonged cruelty by an adult who was put in a position of authority over me (teacher). This already had me doubting if there was a god. Then, recently when I saw the suffering that my 10 year old my daughter went through after a medical operation, and her heart rendering pleas over a number of hours of "daddy, daddy, please help me!" - when I could do absolutely nothing, I became 100% convinced that there is no god - at the very least not a "good" one that I would allow myself to be associated with!
I beg you to reconsider the idea that God can only exist in a world with no pain or suffering. The Bible is filled with stories of suffering. It is not an ignored phenomenon.
@@ithurtsbecauseitstrue There is no turning back. The horse has bolted! What happened to me as a child made me start to question and I became agnostic (I did not not believe, but I started to doubt and was unsure). Yet I continued to go through the motions, e.g. going to church and trying to understand. I stayed in this state for close to 40 years. When my daughter pleaded incessantly for help for hours, it was the straw that broke the camel's back. I started to earnestly research what the bible says vis a vie using my training as a researcher - I am trained criminologist and have been for more than 30 years. The (1) logical fallacies I found in the bible (both new and old testament), as well as (2) the actual provable history (both literary and archeological) made up my mind. In short you can say I started to study the bible, and found it to be utter nonsense.
Did he just say that God hiding from non-believers is a subset of the problem of evil? Wow, really reveals the nature of the believer. The superiority complex is strong indeed.
Also - around 6:14 he says that if you see police lights behind you, you slow down not because you have consideration for the other drivers, but because you don't want to get caught. Just in that one sentence there is a lot to unpack. Reverse first: You're already caught. That's what the lights mean. You slow down because you don't want to make things worse than they already are. You want to obey the rules to limit damage. Second, by bringing this example up in relation to the idea of "divine hiddenness", he's implying that if you KNEW god was there, you'd change your behaviour. Well, isn't that the point? If you KNEW there were consequences to your actions that you would change your actions? Christians keep saying that "God doesn't send you to hell, you send yourself." But of course that's ridiculous. Even accepting the whole christian premise is true and that God & hell do exist, God is still sending you to hell by CHOOSING to not forgive you. We don't have any evidence that he exists and he chooses not to provide any, so if we don't believe the story due to lack of evidence that HE failed to provide, that's on HIM, not US. You can't make a correct decision unless you have the facts. If you were going to sit down to a meal, and you could choose chocolate cake or a salad, which would you choose, and why? The cake because it's delicious, or the salad because it's healthy? How about if the cake were delicious AND healthy and the salad still tasted like a salad but was now actually somehow bad for you? Would you still eat the salad? In other words, are you deciding which to eat based on the consequences you will experience afterwards (healthy vs unhealthy) or base on the pleasure you may or may not feel now (delicious vs bleah). If the consequencs changed, would you change your choice? By hiding himself (if he exists), god is denying us the necessary information for making an informed decision, so he's literally sending us to hell because of this.
Sin can't be in heaven. It would ruin it. So you have to turn away from sin in order to enter heaven's gates. No other way. And to turn away from sin you have to be willing. If you're not willing to turn away from sin no matter what, why would you want to go to a place that won't allow it? If you think sin is like Disneyland you'll never love heaven. Might as well not go there. It is possible to hate sin and still not believe in God. A lot of atheists really seem to hate the sin of lying.
@@theboombody The problem is that i dont know whats true, so i depend on my reasoning and evidence around me to come to what i think are logical conclusions. I have no good reason to believe in the claims of the bible because they have the same evidence most other religions do. I cant choose to believe in something im not convinced of first, so i cant turn away from heaven and choose sin if i have no idea if they even exist. Its not an open choice its a misinformed\hidden one.
@@theboombodyWhat do you mean "sin can't be in heaven"? You seem to know an awful lot about the mechanics of heaven. Heaven isn't even what you seem to think it is. First, there is no "heaven" - the "pearly gates" that everyone knows about are actually on a cubic "city" that God will supposedly lower to earth after he scorches it during Judgement Day (lol - he promised after the flood never to drown the world again, but he never said he wouldn't TORCH it! God is such a LOL troll). So the pearly gates etc are actually in a city that will drop onto where Jerusalem is now. The city's description is pretty funny - it projects 900 miles above the atmosphere, so I hope everyone has a space suit, because it's not enclosed or pressurised.
@@kevinsanchez-fr3pg Out of curiosity, how did you come to the conclusion that the Bible has the same evidence most other religions do? What do you consider evidence?
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby When i say same evidence as others im reffering to the idea that almost no religion is falsifiable, it cant be tested to be true or not because it has certain supernatural elements. Id say evidence needs to fit the severity of the claim. For example the claim that i own a dog is not impressive at all as many people own them and its extremely common. Now i could very well be lying however many people would trust just my word alone based on the prior experiences and history of this occuring with others. Making the claim that im keeping a dragon locked up in my garage is far far more impressive than a dog so i require incredible evidence to match the claim, most people would demand specific proof like showing you the beast itself where they didnt have the same inclination with the dog. The god claim is the highest claim any claim can possibly be. and its evidence does not match it.
Actually, uhm, you don't have free will. This question has been answered already by neuroscience. The decision to do anything happens in the brain before a person is aware of it and thinks they have made a decision. Look it up. No one has free will.
@@scottm4975you've got a lot of work to do to justify the idea that we live on after death in your specific god's afterlife. Better get started, it could take a while.
I'll never understand why God punishes people frequently in the Bible for relatively small things, yet lets others live who've commited severely inhumane and cruel things.
Because it was written by people who want to justify anything they do. Like a parent selectively saying that Santa won't bring gifts if they disobey in certain points.
9:37 Notice how his previously confident posture he had while he himself was talking, kinda falls apart when Alex's getting to the hard to talk about and moralic questions of the realtionship of humans and god?
Whenever I hear a Christian apologist assert that the “self” and free will are just obvious, it seems a dead giveaway to someone who has already accepted their faith as true and is unwilling to really grapple with these philosophical issues. It’s lazy handwaving.
@@JD-wu5pf it’s called choices. We all make them. It’s on the basis of free will and that morality is based on, and therefore the whole justice system with its penal law. If you’re willing to reject free will then you should also be willing to reject the need for law and punishment.
@@JD-wu5pf would you raise your children like that? “Hey son, I know you didn’t choose to bully that other kid, that was a predetermined inevitability based on biological impulse. But in society, it’s important to pretend that free will exists, so I’m predetermined towards punishing you now for something that you had no control over. And next time hopefully you won’t be predetermined to bully him again. You’re not really responsible for your actions so if you end up in jail for continuing to practice bad behavior just understand that it wasn’t of your own doing, but you were just predetermined to do that based on biology. No shame, and nothing to be proud of either. There just, is.” This is the only consistent way I could see to raise your kid without the concept of free will. Feel free to take that route, but good luck being happy at the same time.
@@JD-wu5pf idk what script you think you’re following. And I’m not sure how to prove to you that I’ve made choices other than by telling you I’ve made choices and my life is a result of those. Are you looking for a scientific explanation for a metaphysical reality? Or are you looking for a mathematical proof of the concept of free will? Now that I’ve responded again, maybe you can respond to my question?
The Israelites were given plenty of evidence of God. He appeared as a burning pillar by night and a cloud by day he sent the plagues, turned the water to blood, and killed all the first born of Egypt and yet they still exercised the free will to turn from him and worship false idols.
I think the only way to reconcile the problem of evil, and other such conundrums of moral wrong which would include atheism in the Christian worldview is simply to shift the definition of good to mean god, and suddenly god being all good does not mean much at all, for all it means is that god is all himself.
This just feels like a very petulant and adolescent way of looking at things. "Bad stuff happens so I hate God!!! NYUHHH!" Like, okay? Bad things are necessary for good things to exist. We must cull deer in the Highlands - by killing them - in order to prevent them from destroying the ecosystem. "But why can't there be zero suffering or death or scarcity!!!" Because there's no system you could design that would work that way?
@@JD-wu5pf my source is any given ecosystem kek - did you not understand the original example? I thought atheists were supposed to be enlightened but you can’t grasp a simple analogy?
@@jordane5150 lol what utter piffle, what has freewill or "choice" got to do with BONE CANCER that causes untold suffering and death to millions of innocent children and their families. ? Just what "purpose" does it serve ? Did God not have a "choice" to create a world without bone cancer? How about the multitude of other Diseases, Tsunamis, Viruses, birth defects, Earthquakes, Floods, Famines, ect ect. ?? I think Epicurus put it much better than I ever could........ _"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able_ ? _Then he is not omnipotent_ _Is he able, but not willing_ ? _Then he is malevolent_ _Is he both able and willing_ ? _Then whence cometh evil_ ? _Is he neither able nor willing_ ? _Then why call him God"_ ? Epicurus Secondly, is heaven not supposed to be a place of perfection ?? a place where there is NO EVIL and sin is not possible !! So tell me dear is there no " freewill" in heaven ?? So you see it is entirely possible for an all powerfully all knowing "God" to create a state of affairs where there is no EVIL. If you think heaven has no "freewill" then clearly freewill is not important for us in a perfect environment. So which is it cupcake, does heaven have evil ? or does it have no freewill?
I think that is exactly what's going on in their minds: God is *literally* the definition of good to them so it's impossible for god to be anything but that. It's a very different definition of "good" than the one everyone else has.
@@habe1717 One could just as easily define God as "all bad" tautologies actually resolve nothing. One thing is for certain no God that was "all good" would create EVIL or allow suffering, yet according to the biblical naratives that's the case 🙄
7:00 I think you would have to say that if he truly loved us he wouldn't given us free will. By giving us free will it's allowed us to have suffering. If he really loved us he would have not allowed us to have that suffering which means he should not have allowed us have free will. We, as a collective of souls, would have been better off not having free will. That would have been a better choice if he was choosing to make the best choice. Which if he's all good he would be choosing to make the best choice.
Trent seems to think he's on equal footing with with non-believers. He's not. He's assuming his conclusion, then figuring out what evidence fits his conclusion. Alex starts from a position of neutrality and says show me the evidence. As anyone normally would, except when it comes to religion.
Being a Christian makes you morally blind. One you allow that “bad” things … are in fact good. Then your not in a position to say that anything is good or bad.
Book of Job is kind of the go-to book for understanding pointless suffering. The dentistry analogy is very good and is making me think, but ultimately the parent-child analogy does fall short when you consider that God is a different kind of person than us. He is not a being among us, but the ultimate source of our being. He he has asked us earnestly to love and trust him, which we should, but this is different than letting an abusive parent beat their child because “they may have good reason”. The creator and sustainer of this universe asks us to trust him despite the suffering in the world, and we get to choose what to do. If you choose to love God, you will be rewarded with perfect knowledge of and unity with him. If not, you will spend eternity in darkness and alone.
I saw it more as a man telling the devil (spiritually) he can throw whatever at him but heaven is worth the suffering. Even if you fall short while lamenting, it’s part of the rebirthing process by His loving grace. And as someone who lost a best friend and then fiancé back to back, heaven is worth the suffering. Humbly and appreciatively, of course, we never bear our cross perfectly at first
Totally agree with you about the parent child analogy, I've seen it used again and again. As an agnostic I can honestly say that this analogy never carries any weight or is ever convincing to any degree. For reasons that should be obvious, it just doesn't work.
This fails to acknowledge that god has let some of his children suffer to a degree that abusive parents have. A parent is to a helpless child the same as a god is to a mortal human. To not guide us through this life is to not guide a child through childhood.
@jimmymelonseed4068 What about those who are not given the chance to love your god? To hell with them, because they were born in parts of the world, where religions other than Christianity are taught? Did you choose with your free will to not live according to the teachings of Buddha? Do Indians "choose" to not love a Christian god? Are you failing your god right now, because your are not sufficiently proselytizing your religion all over the world to save innocent souls from ending up in Christian hell?
Exactly. They are Chimpanzees wearing suits. They have no intellectual value whatsoever, merely the trappings of philosophy. They wield ten dollar words like monocles, more to disguise than to explain.
The problem with Alex's final answer to the question (and I'm going to go hop into the full conversation next because I'm eager to hear the answer the opposition gave) is that he is still coming at it from the angle of "Why does God not stop evil?" instead of the question of Free Will and its logical implementation. If one grants free will, then that comes with a natural assumption that people will eventually use that free will to do immoral or evil things because that is ultimately what free will is. That includes if they use that free will to harm not themselves, but also harm others. It allows us the choice, but doing anything to stop us from making the choices no longer makes it free will. If you are a divine being, or even just a law maker, and you say "Okay, I'm allowing everyone to eat peanuts no matter what," and you bang your gaval and it passed into effect, and peanuts are now free for everyone. Shortly afterwards, you find out that some people are allergic to peanuts but are still choosing to eat them, and additionally people are taking peanuts and cooking with them and then serving it to other people who are allergic, either on accident or with malicious intent. If you then say "Wait hang on, I'm going to make new laws now to adjudicate that," then you are going back on your initial word of "no matter what." Obviously this example is very silly because being able to freely eat peanuts is in no way anywhere near the value of human life or humn consciousness, but I'm hoping it at least gives you thought on reversing the thought process from "bad stuff happen" to "free will has consequences." Oh, and for any of my stalkers out there, I'm actually not religious, I just find the debate fascinating.
lol what utter piffle, what has freewill or "choice" got to do with BONE CANCER that causes untold suffering and death to millions of innocent children and their families. ? Just what "purpose" does it serve ? Did God not have a "choice" to create a world without bone cancer? How about the multitude of other Diseases, Tsunamis, Viruses, birth defects, Earthquakes, Floods, Famines, ect ect. ?? I think Epicurus put it much better than I ever could........ _"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able_ ? _Then he is not omnipotent_ _Is he able, but not willing_ ? _Then he is malevolent_ _Is he both able and willing_ ? _Then whence cometh evil_ ? _Is he neither able nor willing_ ? _Then why call him God"_ ? Epicurus
To an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent entity, the outcomes of all choices using free will are known. Hence the idea of free will is an illusion. If free will was used to commit wrong, then this god would have known and allowed that to happen. Now you can say that then there could be a purpose unknowable to us for an all knowing god who has foreknowledge of all the outcomes, good and bad, to allow things to unfold without interference. But that's not really a description of a PERSONAL god with whom humans have a relationship. To have a relationship - and more importantly for god to demand worship from humans - there is an assumption of reciprocity. What do humans get in return when god simply allows things to unfold without interference bc it created free will for humans to make their ways through life? Further I find it quite perplexing that when suffering happens, religious people often blame free will - in short people are to blame for choosing to do wrong things resulting in suffering - but when good things happen they credit god. Why not either god is the source for both good and bad, or humans are? It's an undeserved free get-out-jail card for god.
I noticed that he also did not answer... " But I want to be a Christian, Christians don't want to be atheists".... He's ignoring the willing non-believer as being there at all. Once again he's just putting it off on us, because there's no good reason to believe and they can't come up with one. The subtle hint that our intellect may be wanting because we just don't understand... Or we can't connect.... Or we just don't believe because we're not convinced.... No that couldn't be it.
Of course there are. Of course it’s more subconscious. For example, many Christian’s despise the concept of hell and in many cases people find the concept unbearable so atheism could be a better position than to just die then hell to be true.
@@BackToOrthodoxy Personally, I have never met an atheist who was an atheist simply because the thought of hell was something they couldn't deal with. Hell is one more thing the atheist has no belief in. Belief in hell only affects the believer. If you still believe in hell and you still believe a god can send you there for not believing, you're not an atheist. Or did I misunderstand you in some way? An atheist is someone who is not convinced when they believer says "God exists". It would be the same for the believer saying "hell exists", we don't believe that either. What does the subconscious have to do with being open and willing/wanting to believe something and being unable to find convincing evidence? Are you saying that subconsciously we actually believe things, but we're just lying about it somehow? Please clarify.
@@20july1944willing in what sense? If I'm not convinced by something, then I'm not convinced. I cant just force myself to truly believe in something I find unconvincing.
@@BackToOrthodoxywrong, if you are really that scared of hell, you believe in god. I don’t not believe in heaven or hell, full stop . Neither makes sense, let alone telling me where these places exist. I just don’t believe the bible, that don’t mean there isn’t a god, just not the one , your telling me exists.
Why do people refuse to give themselves credit when they should, but give themselves all the credit when they deserve none? This man describes how he's a good person, but he refuses to see how that's a reflection of him. Instead, he gives all the credit for that to some unseen being he can't even prove actually exists. Why!?
@@daviddeida I never said anything about "objective truth". Nothing here mentioned "objective" morality or anything. I don't think morality is objective. There's literally nothing wrong with morality being our opinions. Morality and truth are NOT the same thing btw. That deflates your entire argument. And with this clarity, re-read my OP... Got anything else?
@@Richard_Nickerson You seem to be under the impression there is an entity to claim authorship regarding action and then subjectively form an opinion as it is good.There is no evidence such an entity exist.Action happens in spite of you,not because of you.That destroys your OP.
I find it weird when religious people say, "I want the truth." But do they? No positive, objective evidence comes forth for a God, and moreover, a specific God of a specific text. At the very least, this would leave one to logically conclude, I don't know, and doing so without the need to believe in it with some leap of faith. To me, that's never been wanting the truth, but just leaning into what one wishes to be true.
Which just goes to show that theodicies do not answer or get around the Problem of Evil. Instead they run straight into it and low-key pick one of its horns without admitting it. Denial 101. In the greater good defences' case, it seems like believers chose the Not-Omnipotent horn.
This is one of the most intelligent responses I've seen on this topic. Yes God would have to be evil if he is indeed omnipotent and omnicient. Omnicient means that God knows everything there is to know and always has. That means god knew before creating Lucifer what would happen. He did it anyway therefore God created evil. To create evil means that God can not be all good. So yes God is evil.
@@Andrea-zm1nl But from my understanding, if God is evil, then life on earth becomes even more depressing and the ultimate purpose of life becomes meaningless. Do I make any sense? Respectfully...
I once heard the argument maybe Satan is the good one and Yaweh is evil. After all Satan did tell the truth in the garden. Adam didn't die after eating the fruit. How can you tell which one is good or not? It's a thought provoking argument and a good way to introduce subjective morality into the conversation.
So incredibly amicable of Alex to converse with this theist and politely nod along as the nonsense spills from his mouth like some sort of silly fountain. The problem of divine hiddenness is addressed with “… due to the problem of evil, we can just call it bad stuff” can we all just see the adhoc bs and call it? When theists get creative and dishonest with the argument they’re like slippery seals, you can’t grab them and hold them to a point because they’re just flailing around and slipping away with another created line of spiritual woo woo from the void.
I’ll take the dentist analogy further. The parents aren’t evil for the suffering the child will feel to perform the surgery because they’re powerless to stop the pain. However, if these parents were all powerful and could do literally anything they desired and they still choose to go with the put my child in excruciating pain to fix the problem route then I would deem them not only evil but disgusting sadists as well
Well, didn't God give us knowledge for knowing (1) what is wrong with the child and (2) how to heal the child, versus not giving us knowledge and not giving us any tools to heal the child? What if the parents had a hand in giving knowledge to the dentist for how to perform the surgery? What if the parents had a hand in providing the plants and natural resources necessary to create painkillers, so the child wouldn't be in excruciating pain? Even in the olden days of the Old Testament, many of the ritual laws God passed down were shockingly modern. Stuff like washing your hands, quarantine for sick people, avoiding foods like pigs which are scientifically proven to have a very high rate of parasites & diseases compared with other meats. That is stuff no one knew back then, yet the Jews had knowledge through God of these things! Isn't that a sign of God taking care of people?
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby well your first paragraph finds itself more inline with Zoroastrian doctrine than biblical doctrine. And yes there was great hygienics practiced in Jewish law but that’s hardly proof of gods influence on the book. If God truly influenced the Bible, he would have mentioned slavery is disgustingly evil and should not even be remotely practiced. But again, that’s also more of a Zoroastrian religious belief and not a Jewish/Christian/Biblical one. The whole washing the hands thing is more proof that a broken clock is right twice a day than anything else
@@ufpride83 eh? How does my first paragraph find itself more with Zoroastrian doctrine than biblical doctrine? Funny enough, I was just reading about this like the day you posted your message. There’s a part in 1 Corinthians 7:21-23 talking about people who become Christians: “Were you a slave when you were called? Don’t let it trouble you-although if you can gain your freedom, do so. For the one who was a slave when called to faith in the Lord is the Lord’s freed person; similarly, the one who was free when called is Christ’s slave. You were bought at a price; do not become slaves of human beings.” so slaves were to gain their freedom if they could, and no one was to become a slave of other human beings. (being Christ’s slave would be following the words of Christ) but back then, if a person was poor and had nothing to help him live, they had the option of selling themselves into slavery so they wouldn’t die. So the Bible is permissive to an extent of humane slavery-slave masters were strictly told to treat their slaves well, as God judges all equally (including how the master treats the slave). Jesus taught to treat everyone with love, to “love your neighbor as yourself”, so cruelty was strictly taught against. This cruelty also includes kidnapping someone and forcing them into slavery (which was a capital offense punishable by death in the Old Testament). Also, the word in Hebrew for slave is the same as servant. So slavery as described was really more like being an indentured servant with rights, again often to help live in poverty, or pay off a debt, etc. There’s nothing in the Bible to allow for cruel, kidnapped slavery like the atrocious Slave Trade in America
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby your first paragraph is more in line with Zoroastrian doctrine because Zoroastrian doctrine teaches us to find knowledge and use it for good wherever it is found. Nowhere in the Bible does it encourage anyone to learn how to perform dental surgery and make the world a better place through scientific exploration and research. In fact the Bible is very much the opposite of that and that is why Christianity spent centuries oppressing people of science. And I’m glad you brought up slavery. In Zoroastrianism there is NO acceptable forms of slavery. And you can cherry pick all the different verses on slavery you want but the Bible condones it, e Bible commanded foreigners to be taken as slaves and also allowed those slaves children to be slaves as well. Not even Jesus who is suppose to be god could even be bothered to say “absolutely slavery is evil” But the prophet Zarathustra did thousands of years before Jesus existed. And luckily for the people of Judah that Zarathustra did preach than anti slavery and anti bondage message because a thousand years after Zarathustra preached that message, a follower of Zarathustra and Ahura Mazda named Cyrus The Great conquered Babylon and freed the people of Judah and returned them to their homes and rebuilt their temple. If Ahura Mazda was like Yahweh, then Cyrus the Great would have destroyed both the Babylonian and Judah’s religion at that time and then force people to choose between conversion, enslavement, or death.
or if at least half the struggle of your relationship with your spouse was determining if they're even real in the first place because you've never actually met them or actually interacted with them.
And among those bad things, to give more teeth to this argument, is his ultimately choosing to send people to hell. God created hell for the fallen, and though no one would ever truly choose it, we are repeatedly given the patsy that "we ultimately choose it.' Rubbish. God made it, is said to be omniscient, and ultimately has known for all eternity who would go there (ie, could intervene and show himself incontrovertibly to those souls to steer them to him)
Indeed, the entire construction of the Universe (with all attendant physical constants, logical outcomes like the need for 'free will', etc.) were, if God is as big and powerful as claimed, be completely arbitrary decisions made with no reasoning whatsoever - God doesn't need to allow free will, suffering (in this existence or in Hell) or any other complications to have a perfect Universe. To say a perfect Universe can't exist because of the need for free will or anything else limits God, which they and their Big Book of Fables already preclude, so there is literally NO reason any of this has to happen. And given all this could be avoided but is arbitrarily not through God's supposed decisions, how is that good or worthy of worship? We would never accept that a person is good or without moral culpability if, in their limited existence, they arbitrarily created suffering or issues for other people or living things, so why would an infinite being get a pass?
I never understood the defense of "god created hell for the devil" but at the same time condemns humans to it and knows where every human ends up after death before they are even born. But he really loves everyone unconditionally (with conditions) but his son (which was him disguised as a human) told his followers to hate everyone except him which isnt what I consider loving at all. Christianity just doesnt make any sense and is always the opposite of what christians preach.
You cannot say: - "I want the truth and atheism is not it" (Atheism) is where you land if the evidence for the God you believe in doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
Imagine believing that pain was categorically evil for every single animal. Imagine wanting to take away the greatest lessons an organism can learn for survival. Imagine being so utterly anathema to reality. My heart breaks for Christians like this guy. He’s so broken, and is relentlessly seeking to fix the worlds problems around him before witnessing his own. Man, know thyself.
So you agree that pain and suffering is not necessarily evil but can serve a greater purpose even if that purpose is unknown to the recipient? Hmm interesting.. What a wild critique of Christianity that is just not even a deal breaker for Christians, like, Augustine rebuked people who said animal death was always evil and wasn't a part of God's good order of creation. But he's still allowed to be sad when animals die, like what?
@@wondergolderneyes _So you agree that pain and suffering is not necessarily evil but can serve a greater purpose even if that purpose is unknown to the recipient? Hmm interesting.._ That's not the issue. The issue is that if a god exists who is omnipotent, then pain and suffering are no longer necessary to achieve any purpose, except to gratify said being.
@@Rogstin you don't know that. In fact you actually know the opposite. You know that sometimes suffering is necessary to achieve a purpose eg. Muscle soreness and fatigue is a necessary part of getting stronger, and you yourself said that animal death can serve a greater purpose. You also know that if the Christian God exists, he is utterly transcendent, which gives no necessity to humanity being able to know every purpose behind every instance of suffering. I also know, through experience and the testimony of others, that suffering often serves to bring people to Jesus. We have a God who is not distant from our suffering but has been through immense suffering of his own. Who, in all infinite wisdom and knowledge, deemed even his own crucifixion necessary for a greater purpose. I can't retain control of my life through suffering and neither can you, but we've seen this God through his sovereign control bring life out of death. You get to choose whether your suffering will benefit you in this way too.
@@wondergolderneyes You use a lot of words to say that God is evil. _You know that sometimes suffering is necessary to achieve a purpose eg. Muscle soreness and fatigue is a necessary part of getting stronger, and you yourself said that animal death can serve a greater purpose._ Again, you miss the point. This is not the suffering we are concerned with. If I want to get from California to New York and I have an airplane but decide to walk, I am inflicting an unnecessary condition on myself. An omnipotent god can make any path to any destination, why pick the one with such suffering as we experience? God knows how to bring everyone to Jesus without suffering, but He doesn't. We must conclude that God is either evil, incapable, imaginary, or Jesus is a human red herring and all are saved and so our suffering here will be made up for in some hereafter.
@@Rogstin "an omnipotent God can make a path to any destination" I think we need a slightly more nuanced concept of omnipotence. God can't do logically nonsensical things and he can't act in ways contrary to his character. Just as an example, I don't think there is a path to love that does not involve suffering. For us too, right? Love hurts! We get rejected and let down. But we experience a greater love because someone chooses us than if they involuntarily just did everything we asked of them. God can't make us love him because that destroys the definition of love as voluntary and greatly decreases the joy possible to find in it. There is no reason to say then, that there are not other goods, in addition to love, that suffering not only serves to produce but does so necessarily. But this God who deemed these goods worth suffering for, did not do so forever distanced from it but became human and experienced the worst of it himself.
Studying some biochemistry & physics taught me that all mass is made up of elements, made up of molecules, made up of atoms. And every living organism is made up of the same elements, in similar proportions. That makes all life related, all made of the same material I love that my life force is similar to the life force that grows a tree or a mushroom. When I see a picture of a rare flower blossoming in the dessert, I feel a kinship with that life struggling to grow & live & die. If human have souls which go to other plains or get reincarnated, it would make humans absolutely separate from the rest of life on Earth. That leaves me cold. I don’t want to be different, I like knowing I’m intrinsically linked to all other life. Like the dessert flower, I just want my chance to struggle, to live, thrive, reproduce, and ultimately die. Like all my brethren living organisms. It’s human hubris that imagines an eternal soul which sets us apart and make us unique in the animal kingdom. They say there is nothing more common then the desire to be unique.
@@20july1944 Why do yo ask random people on a TH-cam comment section? Why don't you use a peer reviewed article? Would you find any rando on the internet a reliable source of information? I thought you have more common sense than that! Disappointed.
"Why doesn't god provide evidence of his existence?" Apparently, evidence destroys free will. Only people who lack evidence of their beliefs could possibly think this way.
I always struggle with the fact that religious people cannot accept that existence just is but say it was all created by God. The obvious question then is who made God and you cannot say God just is because you have already denied that possibility with ecistence. It is a hard one to get your head around. Some people say faith but that can lead to people flying planes into buildings as well as the good it can bring. It is a big question.
When police and investigators have to search for someone that committed a crime, and they don't find them. The case goes cold. This is just life, their are other crimes, events and things to occupy a humans time. I dont defend my inability to find something that others claim to have found. There are over 42,000 christian denominations on earth. That means also that there are 42,000 opinions on "what it means to find god", who jesus is, what god and jesus expect from you, and how to interpret a book with more than 40 different authors who might not even be the true authors.
That was a brilliant way Alex pointed out the conflict of interest part way through, about how he’s an atheist that wants to be a Christian, but he’s a Christian that doesn’t want to be an atheist.
Alex simply wants the feeling of being a Christian because nihilism is the product of Atheism and the reality is even atheists know Christianity has something nothing else has. However Alex says he want to yet can’t accept the fact God lives in mystery, and it takes humility to have faith in a God. To accept you know nothing is the start of a relationship with God. Atheism is a deflection of the mystery of God, not a refutation of the existence but a mere stance that says I can’t accept the fact the world is this way and I can’t understand it therefore God is evil and doesn’t exist.
@@carlosz.5460 nihilism is the product of atheism? Your whole post reads as projecting what’s wrong with Christianity onto atheism. You can reject religion and still hold moral principles and a meaning to life. Historically, Christianity is rife with amoral acts, violence committed in the name of and in condoning from religion. How many people have committed atrocities in the name of atheism? You don’t need religion to be a moral person. There’s heinous laws within the bible which Christian’s ignore, because they know them to be immoral because (like atheists) they were imbued with a moral compass. All Alex means is that the thought of a heaven is appealing to atheists and Christians alike, that’s why the conflict of interest for non-belief is on the side of Christianity. To accept you know nothing is the beginning of a rejection of god. The humility comes from accepting we don’t know and likely will never know why (if there’s even a reason) we’re here or what happens when we die. God is a deflection of the mysteries of the universe. Not a logical assertion, but a mere stance that says I can’t accept the fact the world is this way and I don’t know these mysteries that surround my existence, therefore I will cling to a panacea, ie God.
The epistemic distance arguments made by Christians cannot be held in conjunction with an omnipresent god. You can’t say “God keeps his distance” and yet believe that god is quite literally listening to your every thought and watching your every action from birth to death lol
Free will is not mentioned in the bible once. The fact the bible claims god knows everything before it happens and that his will will always be done cuts clearly against the notion that god wants us to have free will.
Leviticus 22:21 " When anyone brings from the herd or flock a fellowship offering to the Lord to fulfill a special vow or as a freewill offering, it must be without defect or blemish to be acceptable."
@@nathanhaines1721 It isn't using "Freewill" as in neurologically unbound by one's own subconscious. It's a translational error for voluntary as in not under societal coercion. The verse uses voluntary in other translations.
I was an atheist until 17 when i politely asked God to speak to me and serendipitous coincidence ruled my life for the next 5 years. Im anti-religious but utterly devoted to God which has been shown to me as the conscious intent of the universe.
We firmly believed our children didn't belong to us, and were her to be the best themselves they could be. We gave them a great deal of freedom, but we're always there for them when needed - at least as far as we knew. They had no doubt about our presence and love for them.
Why doesn't God make his presence known in a way which is incapable of disbelief. He's God. He can arrange things so that that's possible. As things stand, we have to guess at God's existence and guess at which rule book to follow (Bible, Torah etc). If God just told us he was the umpire and what the rules were, it would be so much more straightforward. We would have to kill each other t Getting the answer wrong damns you to Hell if Christianity is the right religion. Even if you tried your genuine best.
Judas lived in the presence of Jesus and still did what he did. There are many examples but this doesn't solve the problem or change anything. If someone is closed off, they will just move the goal posts. Richard Dawkins even said that if God appeared to him, he would just assume he was hallucinating. Also, I disagree with your last part. I'm Catholic and we don't teach that non Christians automatically go to hell.
The whole christianic god argument is a texas sharpshooter fallacy. The analogy of someone shooting at a board and then drawing targets around the bullet holes to make it look like he hit the target. People first figure out what their conclusion is and then go looking for data that supports it completely ignoring differences and randomness.
As a Christian, I really enjoy watching Alex's videos, that challenge my faith, and give me something to philosophically think about. As opposed to other famous atheists, I believe Alex is the best one to listen to because he allows the opposing side to give their thoughts and ideas, while Alex responds with his logic, instead of resorting to narrative and other silly things
Trent talked for a long time without saying anything. He would not give specific examples. Why are your gods able to allow us to understand the reasons for some suffering but not the more severe ones?
As always trents word salads sound absolutely wonderful and dripping with conviction..........to the convicted. To any thinking person listening to his content its shallow , watery piffle. Epistemic distance...? How convenient
of course you didn't know. you're a theist. you dont read or listen to any works. you just cherry pick and react to buzz words! and it all stems from there. Trent used the term epistemic distance mate as a convenient cover/ dodge. clearly it works on the likes of you. snap out of it bro. its your life.
For those who are civil and earnest in this comment section, thank you. Everyone is benefited from as many discussions of this type as possible, Atheists, Christians, cheers! ❤😊
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
The guy is starting with the premise that the god he worships is good. Why does he believe his god is good? What standard is he using? Wouldn't it make more sense that if a god actually exists that the god is not good?
The usual christian standard is "god is good no matter how atrocious or evil the actions I claim come from god". And when someone compares evil in the bible with evil in reality, suddenly we get our morals questions because how dare we atheists (not jews, muslims, hindus, pastafarians...) question god without a moral basis. Or some bullshit along those usual lines.
Religion is backward. They claim that god is good and then try to justify that claim. And when backed into a corner, they'll argue that 'god moves in mysterious ways.' That's not how anything else in life works, why would it work that way in this specific instance? So bizarre.
I am convinced that someone in any atheist channel comment section will always say this on any video where a religious person talks, no matter what. It doesn't matter what they say. As soon as people know an individual stands in a different camp than them, any assertion whatsoever will be counted in the least charitable light. They could even have said "I see you got a hair cut" and someone in the comment section will always go: "Ohhh, the arrogance of the religious apologist assuming as fact what he has no proof for" "They think can read people's minds" "The dishonesty in assuming the only possibility for the shorter hair is cutting, when if they knew a lick of science, they'd know there are a variety of skin diseases, disorders, and deficiencies that can cause hair loss and lack of growth, but I expect nothing less from the people whose book teaches day and night existed before the sun did 🤣"
@@andrewprahst2529😂 I think you might be right. It's literally a video of two guys having an intelligent conversation and respectfully disagreeing - LIES, HYPOCRISY AND ARROGANCE
Such an empty state. Fart in the wind and then point the finger at a bystander. That's all you did. With full arrogance, I might add. It never ceases to amaze me either that people can be so bold, while only expressing childish tantrums. So I guess or never ceasing is on equal ground.
@@andrewprahst2529Because the primary position of the atheist is to mock and bully. If they position the others a liars and hypocrites in their mockery, they think it absolves them of having to deal WITH the subject of those supposed lies or hypocritical views. It's a cheap trick. It's also rampant on the left and in the atheist.
Shooting from the hip a bit here, but there's some limitations with the divine hiddenness that come to mind for me: The argument can be framed as such: 1. Let A be the set of prepositions that be that we have some final cause which is to know God, and that God, who governs the world by his providence and wishes for all men to know him, moves men by his grace to seek him and in seeking, find him. 2. Let B be the preposition that there are "non resistant non believers", i.e. there exist those who have been moved to seek God and have not found him. 3. A and B are incompatible. 4. B is clearly true and evident to our senses 5. Therefore A is wrong There's a lack of precision and distinction (common in modern philosophy, which is more concerned with persuasion than distinction) that I see in the second preposition. I think we need to consider, as a scholastic would, these two attributes of being non resistant and being a non believer. I'm not sure that any composite being could be non-resistant, simply, towards some end which its species has a manifest inclination towards and aversion to. Humans are simply fascinated with God. I think what "non resistant" is probably trying to imply is "not obstinately averse to." The second is "non believer", which is a complex attribute that is used as though it were simple in modern discourse. What prepositions are not being believed in? It doesn't appear that Alex (who seems to be the kind of good faith "non resistant" non theist the argument references) disbelieves in God simply and absolutely, only that he disbelieves certain divine attributes which Christians attribute to God. For instance, everyone believes in an uncaused first efficient cause (some people believe that the first efficient cause is an infinite regress of intermediary causes, but everyone believes that SOMETHING is uncaused). Everyone believes that something is non contingent. Alex would not debate anyone if he didn't believe in Truth, and as Scripture and Aquinas attest truth is the divine essence. There's another issue which arises here as to whether these non resistant non believers will ultimately remain non believers. Christians believe that God in his providence has provided for us an entirely life which he uses to move us to knowledge of him. Is it not possible that he foresees that some individuals may actually be better off in a kind of implicit natural theism until the very end of their lives, and in his providence order things such that they do not receive a fullness of revelation until the very end?
I still can’t understand how you can believe you have free will and simultaneously believe that a god created you knowing every single decision and event that will happen to you, before your conception and after your death. I mean, do they not understand that if god knows everything that will happen, there’s obviously a path laid out? Do they think they can actually “freely will” anything outside of what god knows will happen?
I guess the only way is to have a certain definition of free will. My question always is “what is the will free from” (the will being one’s faculty of intention/desire). If the will must only be free from ongoing intervention of other sentients then I guess you’re dilemma can be reconciled..if we ignore the fixed way everything was set up by god. I say “other sentients” because things like gut bacteria, immediate circumstances, what your mom ate during pregnancy etc. can affect the development/state of your thinking-feeling-behaving modality. I don’t think anyone can avoid the dilemma of god “winding the clock” with how we develop which indeed seems to fix our modalities, but what if someone simply defines free will to be the ability to act in accordance to one’s desires? Not a very deep definition at all..but at least it’s not nonsense I guess. If one’s will is only free if more than one sequence of intentions are possible given a single, fixed sequence of external conditions then…I think this is logical and indeed a property we posses so long as “external condition” denoted anything besides ourselves. The problem with this though is that, to me, it’s also not very meaningful; if we define any activity outside of our nervous system to “external” then ya of course we can have multiple possible intentions or wills given “external conditions”…if this wasn’t true then everyone would act the same under identical conditions. But you can probably see how cheaty it is to ignore the “internal” conditions of the nervous system as these seem just as out of our control as external ones and even antecedents like genetics. To be honest I don’t know where I’m going with this at all, free will is weird
@@Hursimear free will can be weird, however I am strictly speaking in the context referring to Christian belief. Typically their of free will would simply be the colloquial and oxford dictionary definition of free will. That being “The power of acting without the constraint of necessity or fate; the ability to act at one's own discretion.” Using the definition, you can obviously see where this would be a problem, if a god has not only set up a world with you in mind, but that god has also created you knowing exactly what you’d do for every second of your existence. He has created the conditions surrounding your existence. That would be the “path” or “fate” people speak of when referring to the “path god created”. In the end, if you’re telling me there’s a path god created, and then created you knowing everything you’d do on that path, I cease to understand how you’d have “free will” in that scenario
Hi, as a former Christian I think I have a good analogy for it. So imagine that you are taking a test. When your teacher is grading the test they already know all the answers and they will know which kid passes or fails. Even though you know the teacher knows the answers you will still try your best to get the right answers so that you can pass the test. The teacher can instruct and guide you before they grade the test but if you have bad attendance then it will be much harder to pass the test.
Love the conversation. You two give a wonderful example of dialog and deep consideration of reality. Alex: Without chemicals I get low grade mystical religious types of experiences on and off pretty regularly. Spiritual practice makes it more profound and far more metaphysical with echoes of agape ecstasy. Rushes of insight and eternal love. I'm studying Buddhism and meditating. It's inducing nice feelings of all reality being a self-aware infinity, which is fundamentally consciousness on literally unimaginable levels. An interdependent co-arising beyond comprehension. Psychedelics pretty reliably induce religious or metaphysical experiences with the correct set and setting, as well. The implication is that religious experiences are incredibly common throughout the history of the species. Considering the religious experiences I have had, I have profound belief I experienced divinity. From a materialistic standpoint I believe that the religious experience is a result of neurochemistry. Scientists know which neurochemicals interact with which areas of our brain which make religious experiences pretty routine. Whether or not having the neurochemical hardware and software for religious experiences is God's way of communicating with us, or if it simply is a quirk of evolution or is something completely else entirely is a tantalizing mystery to me. I don't expect I will ever unravel the mystery of consciousness or divinity. From my religious experiences I have complete faith that they are existentially real. I believe these states of consciousness are greater than just chemistry 100%. Rationally I deduce that non-ordinary experiences are most likely a quirk of neurochemistry. I believe both proposition because they speak to different realms of consciousness. So be prepared just in case you do have an unexpected non-ordinary ecstatic experience. It might be God and neurochemistry, or it is just neurochemistry.
Catholic here, and I sort of agree with you, but would like to point out that we really have no idea what consciousness is, let alone how the brain can generate it through chemical reactions, and that such a explanation doesn’t account for things like post death experiences where people Who did not have brain activity experienced observing the world around them and great detail, as far as I can tell the best explanation is that the brain is the hardware and has a copy of the software on it, but is not the origin of the software itself.
@allthenewsordeath5772 we actually have no verification as to the EEG tracing going on during NDEs. I suspect that the brain is basically having a specialized psychedelic experience. What we have is the heart stopping. We have a great idea of what is going on with the cardiopulmonary system. Brain waves are very faint. It requires lots of sensors and almost perfect stillness to get an EEG. The impulses of the skeletal muscles are overwhelmingly louder than those of both the heart and brain. The heart has louder impulses than the brain. In Code Blue, we are focusing on a lot of things. First is high-quality chest compressions. The chest compressions completely obliterate any telemetry or EEG data. You do, however, make excellent points. I agree that consciousness is still a mystery. We don't know the relationship between consciousness and the biological hardware and software. I'm a nurse. Before being a seasoned nurse, I believed NDEs to be absolute evidence for God. Now, I believe it is probably a quirk of neurochemistry. This quirk of neurochemistry may be the origin of much of religion. It may be a psychedelic trip. At the same time, the notion of a metaphysical divine first cause is a possibility I can neither prove nor disprove. There may be a divine ocean upon which human reality is but a ripple. I don't rule out the divine. I just find no convincing evidence. The thing that Christians are wrong about our understanding of what is going on biologically during NDEs isn't anything like they claim. The mistake is that they assume that if the heart stops biologically, the brain has stopped. This is extremely unlikely. The brain is being flooded with profound levels of chemicals. We have no clear way to know nature because CPR makes the investigation impossible. What is certain is that we have no reports from people we knew were brain dead as to what is out there. We haven't come close to even figuring out how to probe this mystery.
@@silverwolfmonastery I think actual scientific investigation of the subject runs into the wall of being completely unethical, in the sense that you can’t really conduct a study, where you stop the hearts of 20 people and see how many of them report a near death experience, there is also of course the chicken or the egg problem here in that we can see what part of the brain lights up when you think about a chicken, but does that mean that you thinking about a chicken was caused by that part of your brain lighting up? With how near death experiences seem to generally go, I think chemical reactions was doing a lot of legwork as an explanation, from the papers I’ve read on the subject, which is once again our best guesswork because any experiments regarding this are profoundly unethical for obvious reasons, Some explanations for individual aspects of near death experiences have been proposed, but are not exactly verifiable and much like the experience of consciousness, completely incapable of explaining the whole of it. On a sidenote though, as previously mentioned I’m a Catholic so near death experiences are not really something I pin my theology on, more so I work from the idea that there have been, currently are, and will continue to be people who are far wiser and more knowledgeable than me, but if I do my damnedest to be a saint Things will probably work out OK.
I’d wager it’s not inherent, his confidence stems from the fact that he’s highly educated on the subject and has had a lot of practice in this kind of discussion/debate.
Hiddenness is only a problem when you are punished for not finding god. It's like playing hide and seek, but the seeker gets tortured if they don't win.
I don't see punishment as necessary or even reasonable for " not finding God". From my understanding, those who do find God and reject his invitation to "follow me", have freely chosen to "turn away".
Humanity reveals a life of tears. Is the afterlife any better? That's why I reject "the seeker gets tortured".
@@johnbrzykcy3076the seeker is still getting tortured but you're basically saying they deserved it for turning away
@@johnbrzykcy3076 Oh yes, if I were god, I wouldn't create Hell and then set people up to go there. That would be monstrous.
Are you freely choosing to turn from god if you don't think he exists? It seems like hiddenness necessarily eliminates freedom in this case.
@@finntastic3711 We all deserve punishment. It's justice. So if someone dies and goes to Hell, that is justice.
nobody deserves to have the most heinous torture, worse than anything ever done on Earth, inflicted on them for eternity bc they were otherwise good ppl who did not believe in God
I looked at the comments on the full discussion over on Capturing Christianity, and many of them were complimentary/appreciative of Alex's conduct. I'd like to bring that energy over here and say that Trent Horn seems very genuine and understanding. I disagree with him, but it's always useful to have a back and forth with someone like Trent, to make sure you're getting the other's points correct. He's not the type to degrade the conversation when it might suit him and I appreciate that. For a talk to be productive you need both parties on board, and this is a good example of that kind of genuine intellectual interest that allows for productivity. Thanks Trent and Alex
Agreed!
Trent is a good faith actor.
CC is one of the most dishonest christian channels you can find. He never makes a single honest point even when someone explains anything he instantly lies about it, misrepresents it or goes on some dumb rant. His gullible zealots arent that different.
@@Z4r4szHere is the generic negativity comment without substance lol. Examples? Or just braindead negativity because someone doesn't share your opinion?
@@andresdanielem Nice projecting, douchebag.
As a victim of torture, I know first hand that there is nothing that could be learned that would be worth being tortured. There is absolutely no justification.
What a silly statement!
Torture is wrong in all its forms. I 100% agree.
Sorry to hear that and I hope you are doing better now.
There is a lot of insight and things you can learn from the nature of torture. For instance I have gone through terrible toxic narscisstic relationship with my mom and my family most of my life and it made me adapt in a way that other people did not so in a sense I feel like it gave me superpower or sixth sense. I am immensly aware of people emotion. It made me a very empath. The idea here is to overcome the evil. IT is the overcoming part that sthengthen your character. If your whole life went comfortably without any issue then you will not learn nor grow.
@@noorzanayasmin7806Glad that you were able to gain Something from your suffering. But there's other cases like a child being abducted, tortured raped and killed. What could that child ever gain from that? Even If you argue the Patents would raise awareness of Kidnapping, the child suffered without redemption.
That’s the brightest background to a set I’ve ever seen
They’re in heaven.
@@dadablueyou could certainly convince me that's Heaven's waiting room! (Pearly gates just out of shot.)
"heaven" my ass. More like a scuffed apple store or trumps basement
Go towards the light.
Which proves there is a GOD! Pwned again, libtard cucked soy atheist loser!
Hey, I'm a Christian,but I can't get enough of your content, Alex. You're such a young guy, which really impresses me you can compete at such a high level. You're a fascinating person, and I'm learning so much from your page. I think I'm sick of bad arguments and excuses from christians. I want the most challenging person to ask these questions. You are unforgivingly inquisitive
Do you believe in heaven and hell? If you went to heaven but knew people you were close to such as, loved ones, friends etc. were in hell, how could you actually 'enjoy' heaven, it would never feel pleasurable because I would be too concerned about how what my friends were going through in hell.
Yeah those two ideals can't co-exist, you can't have your cake and eat it too by sitting on both the table of authoritarian religion that crushes questioning of it and the table that quite rightly rejects the unproven notion of it.
@@firehot006hell wasn't even a real place until Dante conceived it to be in his 14th century poem dantes inferno, before that it was never called the gates of hell but the mouth of hell as in the dangers of speaking with evil intentions, heaven is also not a real place it is the mental space that Joseph of the middle east inhabited when he consumed the smoke of the burning Bush of the acacia tree which is rich in DMT.
Ingesting this chemical rockets the users consciousness into a space where you are experiencing the "divine" which he sermonsised as being "god".
@@firehot006 Yeah, I've considered all you said, and I think either I don't care about people as much as I think, or I just don't really believe in heaven/hell, God and the afterlife. Maybe I'm in denial... Honestly, I don't want to think about it too hard anymore because I don't really reach a conclusion. I know a lot of Christians like this. That's why people like me just kind of keep to themselves when it comes to their belief in Christianity... Ultimately we define our reality and moral system based on practical notions of pain avoidance and ideals towards the greater good. So don't think most Christians are that much different than the average person who doesn't think about these things.
@@Paulstrickland01 Actually you can; it's called cognitive dissonance. It's sort of a limbo state. If you're being honest, you hold many similar belief structures, especially as a "skeptic." What is truth?
"Maybe X explains Y" is the very start of investigation, not the justification for believing something.
"epistemic distance" giving more freedom is nonsensical and immoral. Imagine a doctor in a clinical trial saying they will not give more information to patients so that "they have more freedom to decice on whether or not to take part in the study." I would like to see the Ethics Committee that is okay with that. More information gives you a more informed decision, hence informed consent and the possibility to keep asking further questions throughout any clinical trial.
@@JD-wu5pf And the same theists who make that argument use their experience with god encounters to claim he is real. But somehow their free will wasnt violated. Its so absurd.
Christians making this claim are just plain dishonest. There is no way around that.
No evidence is enough in the end. It can always be countered with 'oh it was a hallucination, oh it can be explained away by natural laws, oh it happened thousands of years ago, oh it was unreliable witnesses'
Even if God were to realign the stars, made His power explicit and made everyone today believe and worshipped him, generations thousands of years later will say oh we were hallucinating, we were unreliable etc.
I believe in God because of the Catholic Church and her witness all the way from the beginning to Christ, his works, miracles and mission. Because of her martyrs, her impact on the culture thousands of years ago to today.
And it makes sense to me that God chose the Church to manifest Himself for these past 2 thousand years. As for why, all i can say is i have faith this is the best way to win humanity back in relationship to God
@@Z4r4szthat is a fantastic point. Christians who believe that it wouldn’t be right for god to just reveal himself to Alex must also believe that all instances of god revealing himself to others are fake, all religious experiences Christians have were not real.
@@AthanaSus *_"No evidence is enough in the end."_*
When has a theist ever presented evidence? All we heard for over two milennia are claims that defy reality without any evidence that prove any of the supernatural claims are even possible. Christians have nothing. Muslims have nothing. Jews have nothing, Hindus have nothing. But all of you claim to be the next nobel prize winners.
*_"Even if God were to realign the stars, made His power explicit and made everyone today believe and worshipped him..."_*
Yeah, > IF
Imagine having visions of heaven, visions of angels, and having a deeper understanding of jesus and god....spanning a few months....and coming to realize you were experiencing a bipolar manic episode. Yeah, that didn't bring me closer to god, just made realize more that god and the afterlife is a condition of the mind.
Science is where the best, objective evidence of God is found.
Are you smart enough to understand a science argument, Steve?
@@20july1944a “science argument”? And condescendingly asking if this person is smart enough to understand you? Oof, not a great start if you’re looking to convince anyone. Perhaps try showing a little Christian humility and kindness, because you didn’t start with any of that here.
Stevegovea1 Good for you for understanding this!
@@aaronmueller1560 Most people don't understand much science, and I'm being insulting to get a nonpassive response
Or take drugs as an example, LSD, mushrooms or Ketamine, this kinda Stuff. I had such ''seeing god'' kinda experiences while on them back in the days. They can be really vivid, but once you realise it would be a pretty impotent god that needs this kind of tools to get through you, rather then through real experiences or even miracles, everything falls apart. And just like you said before, it's you, your condition of mind that makes those things up, and not an omnipotent all knowing being.
6:32 shifting to an argument for “free will” and away from the challenge posed which was: why would God not reveal the truth to honest people earnestly seeking the truth?
If you're really searching, and wanting to be a Christian, you know you can just accept the truth of the propositions, right? And start living in accordance with them? Like, you can actually do that, you don't need a sign or an experience.
No, people say this, but there's a deeper- but no less free- will choosing to disregard the testimony of all those who came before and not wanting to die to themselves.
@@wondergolderneyes I search to know what is true. How can you know what is true without any experience or signs of what is true?
@@wondergolderneyesNot right. Apparently some people can believe whatever they want to believe but not everyone's beliefs are so easily shaped by their wants. Apparently Alex has beliefs that need more coaxing than merely wanting in order for them to shift
@@wondergolderneyesYou can also just accept the truth of the propositions of Islam too, just saying.
@@abdmznor judaism. I would like to see people of different religions explain why they chose to believe in their religion and why they wouldn't shift to another one, and discuss this same point with people who have shifted
Would love to see you & Trent Horn sit down and chat again. Your discussions are always fascinating and mind-provoking!
Whatever Alex believes ...he makes an enormous contribution to the promotion of civility and good manners ..
He has grown up surrounded by Christian values and friends, and it shows. I like him.
Like Dawkins and many others, he seems to love truth, and has been brought up to believe that it is superlative, perhaps worth more than his own life. Unfortunately the atheist system of thought cannot recreate this worldview without recourse to Christian presuppositions so it is more rare than it once was in the west.
That kind of stubbornness to truth is essentially Christian or close to it. Such attitudes were deemed troublesome and worthy of death pre-Christianity. A report from a roman leader basically said they had killed some early Christians simply for refusing to deny Christ after three opportunities because he thought such behaviour either stupid or rebellious.
"There is only one happiness: to please Him. Only one sorrow, to be
displeasing to Him, to refuse Him something, to turn away from Him, even in
the slightest thing, even in thought, in a half-willed movement of appetite: in
these things, and these alone, is sorrow, in so far as they imply separation, or
the beginning, the possibility of separation from I lim Who is our life and all
our joy. And since God is a Spirit, and infinitely above all matter and all
creation, the only complete union possible, between ourselves and Him, is in
the order of intention: a union of wills and intellects, in love, charity."
Thomas Merton "The Seven Storey Mountain"
@@joannware6228Unfortunately there is no evidence that any God exists, let alone the one that you were brought up to believe in.
His belief system is based on evidence. Atheism isn't a belief in itself, it's just a rejection of things that are asserted as truth but based on nothing but conjecture.
@@MrJ2theC No evidence. Really. Wow what a breakthrough. Where did you learn that? Atheism Kindergarten? Mickey Mouse philosophy.
listening to these two, smart and fair people disagreeing and arguing but seeking truth, being fair, is a breath of fresh air. love ‘em both
They are both great. As a Christian I obviously side with Trent (he is my favorite Christian apologist) but I love consuming both their content and hearing Alex's and Trent's arguments in their videos - I think it's healthy to gain perspective like this.
Trent is no better than most other Christian apologists, pushing nonsense up in academic language.
"i feel a command to help others"
my brother in christ, thats an emotion called empathy
Its not an inherent human emotion though. If you are an atheist, which I presume you are, think about this through the lens of evolution. Humans are selfish creatures and it is not an evolutionary advantage to place others over self. You were looking at his statement in 2D.
That’s a low blow my brother in Christ. He’s saying there’s an innate feeling we have the help others without good reason, almost the opposite of Alex’s stance on his refuting of God because suffering is his opinion unjustified in some cases, the same way it may seem unjustified it exists, it’s like the ultimate red pill lol. If God real why bad thing happen? Nah if God not real why good thing happen 🤙🤙🤙 Get it bro?
@@carlosz.5460 An emotion called empathy, which every sane human has. The reason why this "innate feeling" exists in all non-pathological people "without good reason" is because we are social creatures and have evolved to help each other, thus furthering our survival. In other words, there is a lot of reason why we help each other. N.B., it is nonsense to suggest that because "good things happen", god exists. Given that things happen, some will be good and some will be bad. Only someone claiming that a god is looking after us, needs to explain why bad things happen to the atrocious extent they do happen. What great god that would be who acted in ways that are good for people without giving them the means to see why even the most atrocious tragedies are "good". What a great god that would deny eternal happiness to people who happened to have been born in a wrong region on earth and hence never received the doctrine necessary to let them enter the gates of heaven.
@carlosz.5460 There is a good reason animals (which includes humans) have empathy, it makes sure genes get passed on better. As the commenter above me said, things happen and we just classify them as good or bad. If God exists and is almighty (which is the case for most believers), he can control bad and good. If god doesn't exist, good and bad are simply just events that happen, which we choose to classify. What do you think about my thoughts?
@@louiswestra8403 To add to your point, empathy is more present in social species who need it to survive.
The crossover we all needed
yooo Ruslan 😂
Christins, atheists, Muslims, scientologists... All agree on one thing and one thing only. This background is extremely bright
I love this…when you questions gods motivations religious folks will say “well who am I to question gods motivations?”….who am I to question? I’m the one that god put here and I’m the one who is enduring this life of regular suffering. That’s who I am. I have some stake in this life. It’s like me saying to my child when they question my judgement “who are you to question me?” ….The child should say “who am I? I’m your child and you chose to have me and your choices and motivations matter very much to me so please explain why I have to go to school or can’t eat sugar before bed. Explain it to me. Make it make sense because I’m learning and it’s important you train me well so I don’t suffer more”…..That’s when I would stay silent and just tell them to go read the book I wrote 20 years ago, all the answers are in that book.
This makes sense under normal circumstances if the individual is talking about some random intelligent being that's extremely powerful. However the God Trent is thinking about is identical to goodness itself. When you're thinking about the perfect light or pure unlimited goodness that context to what Trent is saying. Like who am I to question God. The issue is you're not looking at the conversation in this context.
@@supermandefender where in the bible does god actually embody goodness? He's clearly a cruel, petty jerk from cover to cover - simply asserting otherwise doesn't do much to improve his characterization.
@@aosidh
It's in the New Testament. Jesus is equated with actually being the "light" on numerous occasion.
For example, John chapter 3 verse 19 it says "and this is the judgment: the light come into the world and people and people loved darkness rather than the light because their deeds were evil."
The follow verse John 3:18 specifically talks about those who believe in Jesus and those who don't so it's clearly referring to Jesus as being "the light". You will also notice it equivocates light and darkness with good and evil.
Anyway passages like these are althroughout the new testament.
@@supermandefender you can't fix a whole old testament about god murdering babies by asserting that his son/self persona is good. Actions speak louder than words, you know?
Nonsense. @@supermandefender
One thing that strikes me whenever a believer says “who are we to question the will of god” like this fellow did when arguing that only god can know his reasons for allowing suffering, as a rebuttal against Alex asking for just one experience, is this: If people who believe can point to their own anecdotal experience to say they KNOW god exists, why do atheists just have to believe without having such an experience? Simply because supposedly we can’t questions god’s will? Would the believer still believe without their experience? Or would they questions god’s will too? Faith is a funny thing. If you don’t have it, no explanation will suffice but if you do have it, no explanation is necessary.
Very well said. I never thought about that way. I guess with that in mind, anyone who claims that a personal experience with god contributed in any way to their certainty of his existence isn't truly working off of faith alone. If they don't have to work off of faith alone, why do I?
His comment on questioning god makes sense though, if he claims the god is all knowing then his knowledge would be way beyond our understanding. I don't see this as a logical problem, but say for a second that the god does not exist. Someone created the perfect manipulation system to make people do whatever they want under the excuse of "god is all knowing".
@@OmniversalInsect The establishment of most religions were achieved with persecution/control/ostracizing the people, using their illiteracy against them and forbidding dissent. No manipulation necessary. These days it persists because it became so widespread to begin with and most believers are either raised into it and told to interpret their lives through that lens (indoctrinating kids has been an effective way of inculcating strong beliefs) or by way of a person’s need to find meaning and comfort to reconcile their experiences. No manipulation necessary.
Its easier than that. Just says you are not questioning God, you're questioning the human that claims to speak for god.
@@dannielz6 Of course. Because until I have such an experience to which I can confidently ascribe to a god, the human need to understand things naturally seeks a logical explanation for the claim being made. I can accept other people believe and leave it at that. However, when I’m asked to believe because this other person believes because they had this one experience; I’m going to need more than “trust me bro” as evidence and will absolutely question their story.
If I had my own experience though, one that convinced me, I have no one to question but myself, hence why an atheist would ask to have their own experience. This is why I find it hypocritical to be told I can’t question god’s will by someone who already believes. They had an experience I didn’t have. And if god gave us free will and he does things in his own time, in his own way and he speaks to open hearts differently; all I can do is wait and keep an open mind.
Thus far though, despite my efforts to pray worship and believe; I haven’t ever felt that thing called faith. Which is why I find the parable I used earlier so compelling. “If you don’t have faith, no explanation will suffice but if you do, no explanation is necessary.”
Believers would not have me question their faith if they didn’t insist I must believe because “insert personal anecdotal experience here” and tell me I can’t question the will of the god they want me to believe in when I ask why I haven’t had my own sign like they had.
Before the age of 10 at my school the nuns told us that fear of god in enough justification for us not to sin. I twigged at that age that all they were doing was justifying using corporal punishment.
Not even just "using corporal punishment" but systematically hurting and abusing children.
@@hartyewh1Yeah Martin Luther said they had problems in the 1500s.
Life gives you pain if you aren't careful. Smart people learn BEFORE life gives them pain. Average people learn AFTER life gives them pain. Stupid people never learn even after life's pain happens. Corporal punishment is for average people. That way they learn what actions are painful before life itself teaches them they're painful. A boy getting paddled by a nun after cussing her out is a much better way to learn to not cuss someone out than a young adult getting a beating from a 250 pound thug after cussing him out. Better to have a sore behind for an hour than a broken rib, broken jaw, and a large hospital bill. But it's best to just not cuss anyone out to begin with. Few people are that smart though, even after lots of verbal instruction and warning.
@@theboombody This is so stupid it's impressive. Don't have kids and I assume your parents ought to have skipped it too.
@@theboombody I think you're leaving out the fact that there are several non-violent, less severe courses of action that could potentially be taken instead of going straight to the physical violence option, like scolding someone, shaming them by making them stand outside the class, making them sit far away from their friends, detention etc.
Of course there are some stubborn kids who just don't get the point until it's been whacked into them, but that should be the last option in my view.
I really like Trent Horn convos with ppl like Alex & Destiny. Idk if I’d necessarily say all his arguments are “good faith” but he’s super respectful and has a thought out train of logic that he’s willing to explain and engage with. It’s very refreshing compared to some other kinds of debates you can find online lol.
he's just another two-faced apologist, when no one is looking he's an atheist basher same as his youtube mates - never trust a christian. he's never respectful when he thinks atheists aren't listening - "new christian" subs, likes, patrons, revenue.
if you want to be a good christian, be atheist.
I agree, he actually brings some new interesting arguments to the table unlike vomiting the same stuff that has been debunked 10000 times.
Never seen him before but I thought his arguments in this video were pretty pathetic in all honesty.
@@fantasypgatour And OP didn't say they weren't, they just said they enjoyed his willingness to explain his train of thought.
@@fantasypgatourwatch more. Trent is pretty good. And i am no Catholic
"Who are we to say what God wants?" but "I know he's moral". WHAAAT!!??
Cognitive dissonance is strong with this one.
yes the theism ?@@haneytr3s
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
@@Rojav255 aka... Allah does not exist beside in the mind
@@alexkiaii6548 what do you mean who said that?
How can you disbelieve in Allah when you were lifeless and He brought you to life; then He will cause you to die, then He will bring you [back] to life, and then to Him you will be returned.
I respect Trent for being respectful and articulate. but he's just rehashing the old "we can never truly know God's reasons for doing what he does" argument. This is such an annoying cop-out. Why even deal in the realm of reason or logic if you're just going to allow giant gaps in understanding or reason? Just tell people, "I believe for no rational reasons. I just want to, so I choose to."
That last sentence, when you were a child, is that what you said about your parents?
My perfectly healthy older brother died at birth because the umbilical cord strangled him to death. I can either believe in all powerful God had some special mysterious reason for that to happen. Or I could just realize it’s just part of the natural world. I choose to believe that it’s part of just natural processes that happen. no all loving Go would allow something so horrible to happen, makes no sense at all.
Maybe he was a monster in waiting -- who knows?
Think on how it has affected your life and that of your family. Also, even if I believe in God, I don't think he micromanages everything to that extreme, and accidents are a part of our reality, or maybe our medical knowledge isn't advanced enough and he could've been saved in other situations. There are lots of variables and things we can't control.
@@20july1944 Apart from this being a horrible thing to say...... then why didn't Hitler or Stalin etc die at birth? Oh...it is all part of "god's plan"? Yeah, right...
@@Dan_Capone He certainly micromanages shit in a way that you get told what parts of your body to cover in church, what food to eat and not eat and your sex life. Or at least we are told he is very, very concerned with it and if you do not adhere to these rule...off to the lake of fire you go. Plus he is apparently also omnipotent and allknowing...how can he not micromanage everything? So in short...stop giving excuses....and if you start letting him off the hook, why pray and believe at all in him?
@@20july1944 *_"Maybe he was a monster in waiting -- who knows?"_*
This from the group of people who pretend to be the only moral people in the entire cosmos... Absolutely disgusting!
It’s so weird that when it’s time to tell kids that Santa isn’t real, they instantly get it, mourn about it for a day or two, and move on. But when we tell adults that god isn’t real, we go to philosophy, analogies, arguments about reason, evidence, and hours upon hours of argument, and they still don’t get it.
No one wants to hear you are a meat puppet with no free will
biggest brain atheist argument on the internet right here
This is the most braindead argument and pathetic attempt to downplay God that I've ever seen. The mere comparison between Santa and God and why we debate the existence of God is as childish as you can get. Then they ask why God doesn't reveal to them smh. Maybe the one who doesn't get it here is you mate.
probably because there are actually good arguments for Gods existence and reasons to believe it, whereas for santa there are not. The north and south poles are both barren deserts. They are monitored with radar 24/7 by independent countries around the world, and a flying sleigh has never even once been caught on said radar. Also it is objectively a mythological story that is self admittedly completely made up. But great straw man.
@@JD-wu5pf I thought your last comment was joking LMAO 🤣. But with this one now I see that you definitely are one of those generic triggered atheists that strawmans the argument, prefers to attack the person calling him "irrational" out of nowhere rather than give compelling arguments as to why God wouldn't be real and how the universe could've come to be the way it is. I personally acknowledge evolution, the big bang and other scientific data since I study Physics, but those don't disprove God nor give a complete picture as to how the universe came to be as it is.
You also putting yourself in the rational side, thinking you're superior intellectually, assuming that I believe in Santa to suit your argument and desperate attempt to downplay me and diminish my beliefs without substance definitely just makes you look pathetic and insecure here mate. I don't want to assume all atheists are like you (or like the guy in the main comment), because I've definitely had good conversations with actual respectful, open minded and intellectual atheists who are interested in actually getting answers about our existence rather than being conformist, arrogant and close minded like you (like Alex for example. You might learn a thing or two from him since you watch his videos).
Sorry bud, you strawmaning, throwing a tantrum about God and projecting your insecurities without substance won't disprove anything lol.
I just want to applaud both parties of the conversation for letting each other finish what they are saying and staying respectgul
It's a bit (a lot) of pity that we have to acknowledge such a trivial behaviour, in a world where it seems to be the exception, not the norm.
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
If god wanted us to have true free will, god would remove the threat of damnation. If you were held at gunpoint and threatened with death if you didn't comply with their commands, it's more than likely you'd comply.
Good point. Christianity resembles coercion under duress more than free will.
to be fair though, in the christian/catholic view free will creates death/damnation not God. God isn't arbitrarily sending people to hell, He simply gives free will and we have the freedom to not choose him. Hell is just the absence of God.
@@entropy_yportneI’m not sure how you can simultaneously say god gives you free will, while saying an omniscient god created you. If a god knows everything, every single action you would take before he created you, then created you with those actions known to him, you have zero free will.
I mean, if god knows you will end up in heaven or hell, before he creates you, how do you change that?
If you changed your path god knew when he created you, then you’re conceding god isn’t omniscient because he would have been wrong about your future.
I also say that the most free will choice you can make is one where you have all the objective information involved in that choice. A person who wants to manipulate you would hide information, put a time limit on the choice, and threaten repercussions if you don't make the "right" choice. Sound familiar?
correct. its a hostage situation
It’s good for parents to give their children distance… but you don’t question whether or not your parents ever existed.
I love my mom. I don’t necessarily want to be around her 24/7, but I’d be heartbroken if she chose to distance herself from me to the point where I never got to see her again.
I see my mom mostly every weekend… why can’t I visit god from time to time?
I 100% agree! That's where I think Trent misunderstood Alex's point. Nobody's asking god to run our lives for us, just to be the loving father he is claimed to be
@@polyurethanesealantyou see there's your problem- you don't want God to run your life. But Jesus asks us to die to ourselves and live for him wholeheartedly, without being lukewarm or double-minded. God completely reorders our priorities so that culture mocks, it always has.
God could give you the world but as long as you're scared to do that it will just be added to the reject mountain. Have a look at what you already have, have a listen to the testimony of others, both now, and through history, right down to the very people who lived and walked with Jesus.
@@wondergolderneyes
Let's structure this in the form of a logical syllogism with premises and a conclusion, then you can indicate which specific premises you disagree with that would invalidate the derived conclusion ........
*Premise one*
The Christian God is said to be morally perfect, loving, omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent.
*Premise two*
Belief in this specific god is required to prevent an eternal torture and attain salvation.
*Premises three*
The Christian God wants all to know of his existence and thus be saved.
*Premise four*
The Christian God would have both the ability and desire to demonstrate his existence to all.
*Premise five*
More that three quarters of the world population do not think the Christian God exists.
*Conclusion*
The Christian God as described does *NOT* exist
@@trumpbellend6717 this argument is the same kind as just the general deductive argument from suffering- one that no serious atheist philosopher uses anymore because it doesn't hold water. And the reason it doesn't hold is not necessarily that the premises aren't true but that the conclusion doesn't follow. God having the ability does not necessitate that he use it, he might have other reasons unknown to us at of yet for remaining hidden to at least some level. Then additionally, your specific premise 4.5? (You missed a step) could be argued to be false and that God has demonstrated his existence to everyone through creation and to many people through the person of Jesus.
@@wondergolderneyes
// "does not necessitate that he use it" //
Logically incoherent, a perfect moral omnipotent beings desire for his creation not to suffer because of a lack of belief would be irreconcilable with his creations having a lack of belief and suffering.
// "he might have some other reason as yet unknown to us" //
Lol nope if that were indeed the case then those who claim to have been atheists before having a "personal experience" or a "Road to Damascus moment" that convinced them of gods existence are lying or your perfect moral god chooses to save some but allows others to suffer eternal torture. Again irreconcilable with the attributes claimed for the biblical God who allegedly loves ALL his creations.
// "could be argued to be false and that God has demonstrated his existence to everyone through creation" //
Lol firstly contradicts your previous supposed flaw and jesus himself says "there will be non believers" Secondly if I as an atheist were actually convinced of his existence what would I gain by claiming not to know ??? 🤔 I mean I could be a sinner and be forgiven under Christian soteriology but non belief is an unforgivable criteria that dooms one to eternal torture 🤔
*John 5 24*
_"Most assuredly, I say to you, he who hears My word and _*_"BELIEVES"_*_ in Him who sent Me has everlasting life, and _*_SHALL NOT COME INTO JUDGMENT,_*_ but has passed from death into life"_
Don't forget there are *"BILLIONS"* of people who ARE _"convinced through creation"_ of the existence of God but they believe it was a *DIFFERENT GOD* and reject jesus being the cause of it. They too according to Christian soteriology are doomed to eternal torture because jesus did not convinced them of his existence or divinity, irrespective of them living a good loving and moral life.
How telling that statistically in a world where an all powerful God wants all to be saved the biggest determining factor in one's eternal salvation or damnation seems to be the geographical location one is born into. If one is born in a place like Pakistan there is about a 95% chance that one will find the evidence for Christianity insufficient.
Conversely you will however more than likely be convinced there is sufficient evidence to believe Islam, thus eternal torture is assured. How does that reconcile with a supposed PERFECT omnipotent omniscient omnibenevolent loving God who wants *EVERYONE* to be saved ? 🤔
As an atheist xChristian, I’m still mad that “God” created us as we are, however, he thought the Bible was sufficient for us to believe in him and understand him. Still makes me mad 😡 😂
It’s so annoying when people hand wave issues away by linking them back to “the fall”
“Why do we have tonsil stones and wisdom teeth?”
The fall
“Why is god hiding and making it very difficult for innocent people to find him?”
The fall…
Science is where the best, objective evidence of God is found.
I won't refer to the fall, and I don't claim the Bible is inerrant.
Are you educated enough to discuss some science?
@@20july1944weird how science works without that hypothesis then.
@@justadude7752 Science can't explain the beginning of the universe nor the beginning of living things.
So. no it doesn't explain observable reality.
@@20july1944 So how exactly can it contain evidence for the existence of god? (the "best, objective" evidence)
@@20july1944 an assertion of: "herpy derp God done it" also is no explanation. It's simply an empty assertion that doesnt explain anything about the phenomena. Youre the same sort of people who would have said that thunder and lightning could not be explained and therefore it makes sense to say thor or zeus exist and explain them. They dont...
or another way : you can experience harm as a learning experiences, but you learn nothing if the harm kill you.
.. but even if you die, your population and/or its genes might still learn from the event that killed you.
@@Apollorionand forget about it in next generation. We lost 16 million people in The Great Patriotic War. You would think we learn the bitterness of war, but look where we are... Fighting for 2 years in war that make no fuking sense.
If a population's genes learn, they won't forget very quickly.
Zenkai boost philosophy??
@@whelperw what’s the great patriotic war? Is this the soviet in the eastern front?
I'd love to see Trent demonstrate how it is patently obvious free will exists, that should be good. No doubt there is more to it than just feelings.
Spoiler alert: it's feelings all the way down 😂
Do you have a conscience, MQ? I'd say a conscience is good evidence of a free will.
@@20july1944 Agree to disagree.
@@20july1944Even now no one fully understands what consciousness is so I wouldn't use it as justification for free will.
@@20july1944 watch Sam Harris' talk on the topic and then think again
I use a similar analogy to the dentist one but more simple....
If a parent and a toddler are wanting to cross a multi lane highway on foot and the parent simply sends the toddler out to lead the way and the toddler gets run over it is 100% the fault of the parent for being a terrible parent yet God can create us, not initiate a relationship with us, nor even let us know he exists yet if we don't find him we're banished to hell for eternity.
How is God any different to the terrible parent who blamed the toddler for getting itself run over...?
Does the terrible parent sentence you to eternal torture?
@OmniversalInsect yeah that's a part of my point. God, if he exists is the worst parent possible to all of us. Even many Christians won't make it to heaven for various dogmatic reasons. Religion is hardly a trust worthy concept.
Yes, De God of de buy bowl is diss way. God said, He create Ted de righteous two bee righteous indie wicked four de they of judgment. God hardened pharaohs heart two show hisses power. God said heal have mercy own who (he won't) two show mercy. God create Ted Esau two bee wicked.
God has isle red de chosen hisses pea pole, their is know free wheel indie buy bowl.
If you're a atheist,it's knot your dew wing,God did not chose you,but it does ant mean it does ant exist.
God is eternal. Meaning knot own Lee does he seas de future,He is isle red de indie future. God is indie past, present, and future ant de same time while hue men's are trapped indie present/ time God create Ted.
Every thing is a part of Gods plan four hisses chosen. De world was made four dim.
@@iwkaoy8758 Respectfully the book has written by primitive men who had just discovered wine. Since then parts have been added and taken away including scrolls written by a woman! In those days when science and information were lacking these scrolls made sense because everybody was (SCARED) into belief of God. Nowadays there are more than enough means to know better. So, my analogy makes a "HELL" of a lot more sense than some meaningless scripture! Thanks for your comment all the same.
@@MuscleBandit Yes, De Is rail lights were primitive no buy dez,That's why God chose dim. De is rail lights were looked down own bee cause day were de own Lee pea pole width out a home land. Day was de scum of de earth,But Egyptians were de rules of de world.
Egyptians were ruling width de most advanced sciences and technology and De most powerful gods two de world,But de God of de no buy dez/ goat herders took down Egypt.
God use de Is rail lights two show hisses power. It's de same two day. Pea pole are say yin, look at hour advanced civilization and sciences,How Ken Ken goat herders know what day are talk king a bot. That's de egg zack reason God chose dim.
God said, He wheel use de thing that are foolish two diss world two confound de wise. He wheel use de weak two confound de mighty.
God lifted pharaoh up,Two bring him down. He placed de technologies inn men's hearts .Hue men's are just puns inn hisses game.
God is like a lion playing width a baby any moles. De lion lets de baby head but him and run. It's fun four de lion bee cause de baby thinks it Ken win,but de lion nose de end of de store rie.
De mighty nations think day no Moore den goat herders,But God is toying width dim. He de ultimate troll/ chess player/puppet master.
Id love to see Hitchens and Alex debate religion on the same "team".
They have very different ways of attacking the problem.
I think it would be interesting to see how they compliment each other.
Hitchens would come in with more of a nuclear style showing the downfalls of Religion.
Alex could come in and make mincemeat of the reply or opening statement by beautifully picking it apart.
If I witness a blind person is about to step into traffic i would intervene to stop them. In that moment, the issue of God's existence would be irrelevant to my decision to intervene. God is unnecessary. And my difficulty with the problem of evil is nowhere near as great as my difficulty with the problem of profound imperfection. There is no plausible explanation why a "loving God" would bake into His "perfect" design things such as severe birth defects, profound mental disability, psychopathy, etc.
Did trent forget that he believes in an omnipresent god who is already watching over everything you do even though he already knows what you will do before you do it?
No he did'nt.I'm sure you think there is self watching and choosing actions before they happen.Equally bogus
@@daviddeida that was pretty incoherent, please try again
@@nickrondinelli1402 Pretty simple,you think you exist and there is no evidence for it.
@@daviddeidaAre you talking about the belief that every action in the universe is predetermined or set down a certain path?
@@doug2555 No,predetermined or not,there is no you choosing the action,a pseudo entity claims authorship of the action.This entity we identify as ourselves,though there is no evidence for its existence.
Someone else must have mentioned it. The Bible explicitly states “seek and you shall find”. As a child, I was told that God/Jesus was knocking on the door of my heart and all I had to do was open and let Him in.
None of that is remotely compatible with the experience of earnest nerdy teenage Christians who become atheists/non-believers.
Bruh they would tell you that you had “epistemic skill issues” today
They just "nuh-uh" the idea of non-resistant non-believers. They victim blame saying that every single non-believer secretly doesn't want to believe because apparently they know what's in everyone's mind better than the actual person does.
@@Nymaz i've always been atheist, if there is a god then he seems okay with me bad mouthing him cos i've had a "blessed life", all i want is the question answered so religists will stop trying to dictate their stupid laws, if there turns out to be a god then A) i don't see what difference it will make B) i'll deal with it when it happens. (if hell is real then sure, i'll sign up, same as EVERY OTHER religist does) but i really couldn't care less what the answer is, i just want the answer - and looking in the bible isn't going to help, it's not helped anyone.
@@HarryNicNicholasHah, exactly my position, I've never seriously believed in a God even if I'm not a proper atheist or nor do I do any religious stuff like praying or visiting temples (yeah, I'm Hindu, which according to many Christians means that I don't know the one true God), and I've had a blessed life. Perhaps that's why I've never needed to find God or religion? I don't know, but apart from giving me comfort, I don't think praying or believing in a higher power makes much of a difference.
What if your experience was not Him knocking, but rather a need of a nerdy child/teenager to fit in? (using your example)
This sort of experience is not Christian exclusive, nor is it even exclusive to those with religious beliefs.
It is absolutely great that you have had this experience (I mean this whole heartedly), and it reinforces your faith, but to many it's something we've seen before, and will not be received as the absolute unquestionable evidence you believe it to be.
Regardless, wishing you all the best.
“We have different kinds of evidence”
That’s not how it works.
My biggest obstacle in believing in God is that it’s being conveyed to me through other humans and one thing I know about humans is: they lie.
The very existence of atheists, the very existence of thousands of religions, should make it abundantly clear (if you ever doubted) that there are nog gods.
Nog gods rule!
That doesn't make any sense. And at best you would be arguing against some particular religion, because the idea of God as an omnipresent creator of the Universe can be defended with the same arguments by different religions like Christianity, Islam or Judaism. So even if they cancel each other out and they can't all be right, that doesn't mean none of them are, and it also doesn't mean that God doesn't exist.
@@Dan_Capone The fact that theists still argue for their gods with every fallacy instead of presenting any evidence and no gods appearing in reality is all we need to say those gods dont exist. If those gods existed they would be visible by now. But they arent.
@@Dan_Capone To push his point further, doing a historical, philosophical and evidence based analysis of the beginning, spread, and success of different religions, it can be reasonably said that no religions(that have had the chance to do those things) have the marking of a true religion. Thereby, old religions are seemingly false, just on that pretense.
@@Dan_Capone Non-believers aren't obligated to prove that a supernatural God or "higher power" of some kind *doesn't* exist. That said, we are certainly more than justified in dismissing the patently absurd and massively contradictory claims of competing religions, all of which erroneously purport to be true.
As a child I experienced inexcusable and hideous prolonged cruelty by an adult who was put in a position of authority over me (teacher). This already had me doubting if there was a god. Then, recently when I saw the suffering that my 10 year old my daughter went through after a medical operation, and her heart rendering pleas over a number of hours of "daddy, daddy, please help me!" - when I could do absolutely nothing, I became 100% convinced that there is no god - at the very least not a "good" one that I would allow myself to be associated with!
I beg you to reconsider the idea that God can only exist in a world with no pain or suffering. The Bible is filled with stories of suffering. It is not an ignored phenomenon.
I’m so sorry that you and your daughter went through that.
@@ithurtsbecauseitstrueDoes your god need you to beg on his behalf? Your god can't talk for his self? Sounds pretty weak.
Every parents nightmare. I hope you are doing better now.
@@ithurtsbecauseitstrue There is no turning back. The horse has bolted!
What happened to me as a child made me start to question and I became agnostic (I did not not believe, but I started to doubt and was unsure). Yet I continued to go through the motions, e.g. going to church and trying to understand. I stayed in this state for close to 40 years.
When my daughter pleaded incessantly for help for hours, it was the straw that broke the camel's back. I started to earnestly research what the bible says vis a vie using my training as a researcher - I am trained criminologist and have been for more than 30 years.
The (1) logical fallacies I found in the bible (both new and old testament), as well as (2) the actual provable history (both literary and archeological) made up my mind. In short you can say I started to study the bible, and found it to be utter nonsense.
Alex O’Connor, you’re amazing. Thank you.
Did he just say that God hiding from non-believers is a subset of the problem of evil? Wow, really reveals the nature of the believer. The superiority complex is strong indeed.
Also - around 6:14 he says that if you see police lights behind you, you slow down not because you have consideration for the other drivers, but because you don't want to get caught.
Just in that one sentence there is a lot to unpack. Reverse first: You're already caught. That's what the lights mean. You slow down because you don't want to make things worse than they already are. You want to obey the rules to limit damage. Second, by bringing this example up in relation to the idea of "divine hiddenness", he's implying that if you KNEW god was there, you'd change your behaviour.
Well, isn't that the point? If you KNEW there were consequences to your actions that you would change your actions? Christians keep saying that "God doesn't send you to hell, you send yourself." But of course that's ridiculous. Even accepting the whole christian premise is true and that God & hell do exist, God is still sending you to hell by CHOOSING to not forgive you. We don't have any evidence that he exists and he chooses not to provide any, so if we don't believe the story due to lack of evidence that HE failed to provide, that's on HIM, not US.
You can't make a correct decision unless you have the facts. If you were going to sit down to a meal, and you could choose chocolate cake or a salad, which would you choose, and why? The cake because it's delicious, or the salad because it's healthy? How about if the cake were delicious AND healthy and the salad still tasted like a salad but was now actually somehow bad for you? Would you still eat the salad?
In other words, are you deciding which to eat based on the consequences you will experience afterwards (healthy vs unhealthy) or base on the pleasure you may or may not feel now (delicious vs bleah). If the consequencs changed, would you change your choice? By hiding himself (if he exists), god is denying us the necessary information for making an informed decision, so he's literally sending us to hell because of this.
Sin can't be in heaven. It would ruin it. So you have to turn away from sin in order to enter heaven's gates. No other way. And to turn away from sin you have to be willing. If you're not willing to turn away from sin no matter what, why would you want to go to a place that won't allow it? If you think sin is like Disneyland you'll never love heaven. Might as well not go there.
It is possible to hate sin and still not believe in God. A lot of atheists really seem to hate the sin of lying.
@@theboombody The problem is that i dont know whats true, so i depend on my reasoning and evidence around me to come to what i think are logical conclusions. I have no good reason to believe in the claims of the bible because they have the same evidence most other religions do. I cant choose to believe in something im not convinced of first, so i cant turn away from heaven and choose sin if i have no idea if they even exist. Its not an open choice its a misinformed\hidden one.
@@theboombodyWhat do you mean "sin can't be in heaven"? You seem to know an awful lot about the mechanics of heaven. Heaven isn't even what you seem to think it is. First, there is no "heaven" - the "pearly gates" that everyone knows about are actually on a cubic "city" that God will supposedly lower to earth after he scorches it during Judgement Day (lol - he promised after the flood never to drown the world again, but he never said he wouldn't TORCH it! God is such a LOL troll).
So the pearly gates etc are actually in a city that will drop onto where Jerusalem is now. The city's description is pretty funny - it projects 900 miles above the atmosphere, so I hope everyone has a space suit, because it's not enclosed or pressurised.
@@kevinsanchez-fr3pg Out of curiosity, how did you come to the conclusion that the Bible has the same evidence most other religions do? What do you consider evidence?
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby When i say same evidence as others im reffering to the idea that almost no religion is falsifiable, it cant be tested to be true or not because it has certain supernatural elements. Id say evidence needs to fit the severity of the claim. For example the claim that i own a dog is not impressive at all as many people own them and its extremely common. Now i could very well be lying however many people would trust just my word alone based on the prior experiences and history of this occuring with others. Making the claim that im keeping a dragon locked up in my garage is far far more impressive than a dog so i require incredible evidence to match the claim, most people would demand specific proof like showing you the beast itself where they didnt have the same inclination with the dog. The god claim is the highest claim any claim can possibly be. and its evidence does not match it.
Police Officer: Maam why did you let your kid walk off that cliff?
Christian Lady: I love him so much that I didn't want to violate his free will.
Actually, uhm, you don't have free will. This question has been answered already by neuroscience. The decision to do anything happens in the brain before a person is aware of it and thinks they have made a decision. Look it up. No one has free will.
Almost as if there’s more to life than mortality. Crazy idea right?
@@scottm4975you've got a lot of work to do to justify the idea that we live on after death in your specific god's afterlife. Better get started, it could take a while.
@@scottm4975
There's a cliff waiting for you, why don't you show us how strong your faith is?
@@scottm4975no there's no more living after dying. that's like the definition of dying
I'll never understand why God punishes people frequently in the Bible for relatively small things, yet lets others live who've commited severely inhumane and cruel things.
Because it was written by people who want to justify anything they do. Like a parent selectively saying that Santa won't bring gifts if they disobey in certain points.
the only excuse in God's behavior is his non-existence!
9:37 Notice how his previously confident posture he had while he himself was talking, kinda falls apart when Alex's getting to the hard to talk about and moralic questions of the realtionship of humans and god?
Noticed that too.
Whenever I hear a Christian apologist assert that the “self” and free will are just obvious, it seems a dead giveaway to someone who has already accepted their faith as true and is unwilling to really grapple with these philosophical issues. It’s lazy handwaving.
I do think that most people intuit both of those.
Idk, it sounds pretty obvious to me. I freely wrote this comment afterall
@@JD-wu5pf it’s called choices. We all make them. It’s on the basis of free will and that morality is based on, and therefore the whole justice system with its penal law. If you’re willing to reject free will then you should also be willing to reject the need for law and punishment.
@@JD-wu5pf would you raise your children like that? “Hey son, I know you didn’t choose to bully that other kid, that was a predetermined inevitability based on biological impulse. But in society, it’s important to pretend that free will exists, so I’m predetermined towards punishing you now for something that you had no control over. And next time hopefully you won’t be predetermined to bully him again. You’re not really responsible for your actions so if you end up in jail for continuing to practice bad behavior just understand that it wasn’t of your own doing, but you were just predetermined to do that based on biology. No shame, and nothing to be proud of either. There just, is.”
This is the only consistent way I could see to raise your kid without the concept of free will. Feel free to take that route, but good luck being happy at the same time.
@@JD-wu5pf idk what script you think you’re following. And I’m not sure how to prove to you that I’ve made choices other than by telling you I’ve made choices and my life is a result of those. Are you looking for a scientific explanation for a metaphysical reality? Or are you looking for a mathematical proof of the concept of free will?
Now that I’ve responded again, maybe you can respond to my question?
finally, a debate thats calm and doesn't consist of two men shouting at each other
when he said "yeah i just want the truth" blew my mind, a faith based truth, weird
Don't we all just want to know the truth about the world? :>
What is your view of what the truth may be, if I may so ask?
The Israelites were given plenty of evidence of God. He appeared as a burning pillar by night and a cloud by day he sent the plagues, turned the water to blood, and killed all the first born of Egypt and yet they still exercised the free will to turn from him and worship false idols.
I think the only way to reconcile the problem of evil, and other such conundrums of moral wrong which would include atheism in the Christian worldview is simply to shift the definition of good to mean god, and suddenly god being all good does not mean much at all, for all it means is that god is all himself.
This just feels like a very petulant and adolescent way of looking at things. "Bad stuff happens so I hate God!!! NYUHHH!" Like, okay? Bad things are necessary for good things to exist. We must cull deer in the Highlands - by killing them - in order to prevent them from destroying the ecosystem. "But why can't there be zero suffering or death or scarcity!!!" Because there's no system you could design that would work that way?
@@JD-wu5pf my source is any given ecosystem kek - did you not understand the original example? I thought atheists were supposed to be enlightened but you can’t grasp a simple analogy?
@@jordane5150
lol what utter piffle, what has freewill or "choice" got to do with BONE CANCER that causes untold suffering and death to millions of innocent children and their families. ? Just what "purpose" does it serve ? Did God not have a "choice" to create a world without bone cancer?
How about the multitude of other Diseases, Tsunamis, Viruses, birth defects, Earthquakes, Floods, Famines, ect ect. ??
I think Epicurus put it much better than I ever could........
_"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able_ ? _Then he is not omnipotent_
_Is he able, but not willing_ ? _Then he is malevolent_
_Is he both able and willing_ ? _Then whence cometh evil_ ?
_Is he neither able nor willing_ ? _Then why call him God"_ ?
Epicurus
Secondly, is heaven not supposed to be a place of perfection ?? a place where there is NO EVIL and sin is not possible !! So tell me dear is there no " freewill" in heaven ??
So you see it is entirely possible for an all powerfully all knowing "God" to create a state of affairs where there is no EVIL. If you think heaven has no "freewill" then clearly freewill is not important for us in a perfect environment.
So which is it cupcake, does heaven have evil ? or does it have no freewill?
I think that is exactly what's going on in their minds: God is *literally* the definition of good to them so it's impossible for god to be anything but that. It's a very different definition of "good" than the one everyone else has.
@@habe1717
One could just as easily define God as "all bad" tautologies actually resolve nothing. One thing is for certain no God that was "all good" would create EVIL or allow suffering, yet according to the biblical naratives that's the case 🙄
A real god would be self-evident and known to everyone.
7:00 I think you would have to say that if he truly loved us he wouldn't given us free will. By giving us free will it's allowed us to have suffering. If he really loved us he would have not allowed us to have that suffering which means he should not have allowed us have free will. We, as a collective of souls, would have been better off not having free will. That would have been a better choice if he was choosing to make the best choice. Which if he's all good he would be choosing to make the best choice.
Good thing he hasn't... because free will doesn't exist
Trent seems to think he's on equal footing with with non-believers. He's not. He's assuming his conclusion, then figuring out what evidence fits his conclusion. Alex starts from a position of neutrality and says show me the evidence. As anyone normally would, except when it comes to religion.
There is zero evidence that you can present that you exist.Nothing but a construct with no free will or thought you can call your own
True, but at least he is respectful and actually discusses (or attempts to discuss).
@@OmniversalInsect Being polite should be expected, no matter the position. Nothing he has to offer is new, so being nice is all he has.
Neutrality? No he does not lol
@@axderka So what position does he start from? Considering he can be swayed by evidence either way, it appears he's nothing but neutral.
"Humans who suffer have a dignity and a value that animals do not." weird thing to say.
Right? That incensed me.
You clearly value human life more than animals
@@carlosz.5460 Situational. I value my non-human pets over human strangers.
@@scaryperi3051both deserve dignity and empathy untill they prove that they don't do.
@@TrivoMarjanovic Nobody inherently deserves anything -- that too is subjective -- and no one can prove as much because it is subjective.
Being a Christian makes you morally blind.
One you allow that “bad” things … are in fact good.
Then your not in a position to say that anything is good or bad.
Excellent job tackling the arguments and explaining your position.
Book of Job is kind of the go-to book for understanding pointless suffering. The dentistry analogy is very good and is making me think, but ultimately the parent-child analogy does fall short when you consider that God is a different kind of person than us. He is not a being among us, but the ultimate source of our being.
He he has asked us earnestly to love and trust him, which we should, but this is different than letting an abusive parent beat their child because “they may have good reason”. The creator and sustainer of this universe asks us to trust him despite the suffering in the world, and we get to choose what to do. If you choose to love God, you will be rewarded with perfect knowledge of and unity with him. If not, you will spend eternity in darkness and alone.
I saw it more as a man telling the devil (spiritually) he can throw whatever at him but heaven is worth the suffering. Even if you fall short while lamenting, it’s part of the rebirthing process by His loving grace.
And as someone who lost a best friend and then fiancé back to back, heaven is worth the suffering. Humbly and appreciatively, of course, we never bear our cross perfectly at first
Totally agree with you about the parent child analogy, I've seen it used again and again. As an agnostic I can honestly say that this analogy never carries any weight or is ever convincing to any degree. For reasons that should be obvious, it just doesn't work.
This fails to acknowledge that god has let some of his children suffer to a degree that abusive parents have. A parent is to a helpless child the same as a god is to a mortal human. To not guide us through this life is to not guide a child through childhood.
@jimmymelonseed4068 What about those who are not given the chance to love your god? To hell with them, because they were born in parts of the world, where religions other than Christianity are taught? Did you choose with your free will to not live according to the teachings of Buddha? Do Indians "choose" to not love a Christian god? Are you failing your god right now, because your are not sufficiently proselytizing your religion all over the world to save innocent souls from ending up in Christian hell?
Yeah, he’s either the ultimate source of our being, or non-existent.
I’ll go with the latter.
I always have a hard time taking people like Trent seriously. I know he believes crazy things all his positions are tailored to support his dogma.
he's just another dishonest apologist, how anyone can confess (!) to being catholic surprises me, organised crime is what it is.
@@HarryNicNicholas You believe that the Catholic Church plans out and controls crimes? Such as?
Exactly. They are Chimpanzees wearing suits. They have no intellectual value whatsoever, merely the trappings of philosophy. They wield ten dollar words like monocles, more to disguise than to explain.
I feel sorry for your hubristic closed mindedness.
@@HarryNicNicholas Just when I thought that religious intolerance was a thing of the past...!
The problem with Alex's final answer to the question (and I'm going to go hop into the full conversation next because I'm eager to hear the answer the opposition gave) is that he is still coming at it from the angle of "Why does God not stop evil?" instead of the question of Free Will and its logical implementation. If one grants free will, then that comes with a natural assumption that people will eventually use that free will to do immoral or evil things because that is ultimately what free will is. That includes if they use that free will to harm not themselves, but also harm others. It allows us the choice, but doing anything to stop us from making the choices no longer makes it free will.
If you are a divine being, or even just a law maker, and you say "Okay, I'm allowing everyone to eat peanuts no matter what," and you bang your gaval and it passed into effect, and peanuts are now free for everyone. Shortly afterwards, you find out that some people are allergic to peanuts but are still choosing to eat them, and additionally people are taking peanuts and cooking with them and then serving it to other people who are allergic, either on accident or with malicious intent. If you then say "Wait hang on, I'm going to make new laws now to adjudicate that," then you are going back on your initial word of "no matter what."
Obviously this example is very silly because being able to freely eat peanuts is in no way anywhere near the value of human life or humn consciousness, but I'm hoping it at least gives you thought on reversing the thought process from "bad stuff happen" to "free will has consequences."
Oh, and for any of my stalkers out there, I'm actually not religious, I just find the debate fascinating.
lol what utter piffle, what has freewill or "choice" got to do with BONE CANCER that causes untold suffering and death to millions of innocent children and their families. ? Just what "purpose" does it serve ? Did God not have a "choice" to create a world without bone cancer?
How about the multitude of other Diseases, Tsunamis, Viruses, birth defects, Earthquakes, Floods, Famines, ect ect. ??
I think Epicurus put it much better than I ever could........
_"Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able_ ? _Then he is not omnipotent_
_Is he able, but not willing_ ? _Then he is malevolent_
_Is he both able and willing_ ? _Then whence cometh evil_ ?
_Is he neither able nor willing_ ? _Then why call him God"_ ?
Epicurus
To an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent entity, the outcomes of all choices using free will are known. Hence the idea of free will is an illusion. If free will was used to commit wrong, then this god would have known and allowed that to happen.
Now you can say that then there could be a purpose unknowable to us for an all knowing god who has foreknowledge of all the outcomes, good and bad, to allow things to unfold without interference. But that's not really a description of a PERSONAL god with whom humans have a relationship. To have a relationship - and more importantly for god to demand worship from humans - there is an assumption of reciprocity. What do humans get in return when god simply allows things to unfold without interference bc it created free will for humans to make their ways through life?
Further I find it quite perplexing that when suffering happens, religious people often blame free will - in short people are to blame for choosing to do wrong things resulting in suffering - but when good things happen they credit god. Why not either god is the source for both good and bad, or humans are? It's an undeserved free get-out-jail card for god.
I noticed that he also did not answer...
" But I want to be a Christian, Christians don't want to be atheists"....
He's ignoring the willing non-believer as being there at all.
Once again he's just putting it off on us, because there's no good reason to believe and they can't come up with one.
The subtle hint that our intellect may be wanting because we just don't understand... Or we can't connect....
Or we just don't believe because we're not convinced....
No that couldn't be it.
Of course there are. Of course it’s more subconscious.
For example, many Christian’s despise the concept of hell and in many cases people find the concept unbearable so atheism could be a better position than to just die then hell to be true.
@@BackToOrthodoxy
Personally, I have never met an atheist who was an atheist simply because the thought of hell was something they couldn't deal with.
Hell is one more thing the atheist has no belief in. Belief in hell only affects the believer.
If you still believe in hell and you still believe a god can send you there for not believing, you're not an atheist.
Or did I misunderstand you in some way?
An atheist is someone who is not convinced when they believer says "God exists".
It would be the same for the believer saying "hell exists", we don't believe that either.
What does the subconscious have to do with being open and willing/wanting to believe something and being unable to find convincing evidence?
Are you saying that subconsciously we actually believe things, but we're just lying about it somehow?
Please clarify.
@@ChixieMary Are you a willing atheist?
@@20july1944willing in what sense? If I'm not convinced by something, then I'm not convinced. I cant just force myself to truly believe in something I find unconvincing.
@@BackToOrthodoxywrong, if you are really that scared of hell, you believe in god. I don’t not believe in heaven or hell, full stop . Neither makes sense, let alone telling me where these places exist. I just don’t believe the bible, that don’t mean there isn’t a god, just not the one , your telling me exists.
Why do people refuse to give themselves credit when they should, but give themselves all the credit when they deserve none?
This man describes how he's a good person, but he refuses to see how that's a reflection of him. Instead, he gives all the credit for that to some unseen being he can't even prove actually exists.
Why!?
Objective truth defines the possibility of a good person,otherwise its just your opinion man
@@daviddeida
I never said anything about "objective truth". Nothing here mentioned "objective" morality or anything.
I don't think morality is objective. There's literally nothing wrong with morality being our opinions. Morality and truth are NOT the same thing btw.
That deflates your entire argument. And with this clarity, re-read my OP... Got anything else?
But they never blamed him for shits happened to them
Right?
@@Richard_Nickerson You seem to be under the impression there is an entity to claim authorship regarding action and then subjectively form an opinion as it is good.There is no evidence such an entity exist.Action happens in spite of you,not because of you.That destroys your OP.
Right they take 100% responsibility and not blame anyone.@@rasol-007
I find it weird when religious people say, "I want the truth." But do they? No positive, objective evidence comes forth for a God, and moreover, a specific God of a specific text. At the very least, this would leave one to logically conclude, I don't know, and doing so without the need to believe in it with some leap of faith. To me, that's never been wanting the truth, but just leaning into what one wishes to be true.
Maybe God is evil and any apparent good deeds by God are part of that greater evil.
That would make a lot more sense than what religions 🗄 preach.
Which just goes to show that theodicies do not answer or get around the Problem of Evil. Instead they run straight into it and low-key pick one of its horns without admitting it. Denial 101.
In the greater good defences' case, it seems like believers chose the Not-Omnipotent horn.
This is one of the most intelligent responses I've seen on this topic. Yes God would have to be evil if he is indeed omnipotent and omnicient. Omnicient means that God knows everything there is to know and always has. That means god knew before creating Lucifer what would happen. He did it anyway therefore God created evil. To create evil means that God can not be all good. So yes God is evil.
@@Andrea-zm1nl But from my understanding, if God is evil, then life on earth becomes even more depressing and the ultimate purpose of life becomes meaningless. Do I make any sense?
Respectfully...
I once heard the argument maybe Satan is the good one and Yaweh is evil. After all Satan did tell the truth in the garden. Adam didn't die after eating the fruit. How can you tell which one is good or not? It's a thought provoking argument and a good way to introduce subjective morality into the conversation.
So incredibly amicable of Alex to converse with this theist and politely nod along as the nonsense spills from his mouth like some sort of silly fountain. The problem of divine hiddenness is addressed with “… due to the problem of evil, we can just call it bad stuff” can we all just see the adhoc bs and call it? When theists get creative and dishonest with the argument they’re like slippery seals, you can’t grab them and hold them to a point because they’re just flailing around and slipping away with another created line of spiritual woo woo from the void.
You gotta love that British politeness😊
People who tell you that you can't know God do tell you a lot about God.
I’ll take the dentist analogy further.
The parents aren’t evil for the suffering the child will feel to perform the surgery because they’re powerless to stop the pain.
However, if these parents were all powerful and could do literally anything they desired and they still choose to go with the put my child in excruciating pain to fix the problem route then I would deem them not only evil but disgusting sadists as well
Well, didn't God give us knowledge for knowing (1) what is wrong with the child and (2) how to heal the child, versus not giving us knowledge and not giving us any tools to heal the child?
What if the parents had a hand in giving knowledge to the dentist for how to perform the surgery? What if the parents had a hand in providing the plants and natural resources necessary to create painkillers, so the child wouldn't be in excruciating pain?
Even in the olden days of the Old Testament, many of the ritual laws God passed down were shockingly modern. Stuff like washing your hands, quarantine for sick people, avoiding foods like pigs which are scientifically proven to have a very high rate of parasites & diseases compared with other meats. That is stuff no one knew back then, yet the Jews had knowledge through God of these things! Isn't that a sign of God taking care of people?
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby well your first paragraph finds itself more inline with Zoroastrian doctrine than biblical doctrine.
And yes there was great hygienics practiced in Jewish law but that’s hardly proof of gods influence on the book.
If God truly influenced the Bible, he would have mentioned slavery is disgustingly evil and should not even be remotely practiced. But again, that’s also more of a Zoroastrian religious belief and not a Jewish/Christian/Biblical one.
The whole washing the hands thing is more proof that a broken clock is right twice a day than anything else
I don't care. Islam will rule your nation someday.
@@ufpride83 eh? How does my first paragraph find itself more with Zoroastrian doctrine than biblical doctrine?
Funny enough, I was just reading about this like the day you posted your message. There’s a part in 1 Corinthians 7:21-23 talking about people who become Christians: “Were you a slave when you were called? Don’t let it trouble you-although if you can gain your freedom, do so. For the one who was a slave when called to faith in the Lord is the Lord’s freed person; similarly, the one who was free when called is Christ’s slave. You were bought at a price; do not become slaves of human beings.”
so slaves were to gain their freedom if they could, and no one was to become a slave of other human beings. (being Christ’s slave would be following the words of Christ)
but back then, if a person was poor and had nothing to help him live, they had the option of selling themselves into slavery so they wouldn’t die. So the Bible is permissive to an extent of humane slavery-slave masters were strictly told to treat their slaves well, as God judges all equally (including how the master treats the slave). Jesus taught to treat everyone with love, to “love your neighbor as yourself”, so cruelty was strictly taught against. This cruelty also includes kidnapping someone and forcing them into slavery (which was a capital offense punishable by death in the Old Testament).
Also, the word in Hebrew for slave is the same as servant. So slavery as described was really more like being an indentured servant with rights, again often to help live in poverty, or pay off a debt, etc. There’s nothing in the Bible to allow for cruel, kidnapped slavery like the atrocious Slave Trade in America
@@Sammy-Dontpassmeby your first paragraph is more in line with Zoroastrian doctrine because Zoroastrian doctrine teaches us to find knowledge and use it for good wherever it is found.
Nowhere in the Bible does it encourage anyone to learn how to perform dental surgery and make the world a better place through scientific exploration and research.
In fact the Bible is very much the opposite of that and that is why Christianity spent centuries oppressing people of science.
And I’m glad you brought up slavery.
In Zoroastrianism there is NO acceptable forms of slavery.
And you can cherry pick all the different verses on slavery you want but the Bible condones it, e Bible commanded foreigners to be taken as slaves and also allowed those slaves children to be slaves as well.
Not even Jesus who is suppose to be god could even be bothered to say “absolutely slavery is evil”
But the prophet Zarathustra did thousands of years before Jesus existed.
And luckily for the people of Judah that Zarathustra did preach than anti slavery and anti bondage message because a thousand years after Zarathustra preached that message, a follower of Zarathustra and Ahura Mazda named Cyrus The Great conquered Babylon and freed the people of Judah and returned them to their homes and rebuilt their temple.
If Ahura Mazda was like Yahweh, then Cyrus the Great would have destroyed both the Babylonian and Judah’s religion at that time and then force people to choose between conversion, enslavement, or death.
Imagine if a parent gave their child "epistemic distance" to decide whether their parents existed or not.
This doesn’t make sense
or if at least half the struggle of your relationship with your spouse was determining if they're even real in the first place because you've never actually met them or actually interacted with them.
Sometimes its braver to admit you were duped, and change course, rather than continue with the lies and deception
And among those bad things, to give more teeth to this argument, is his ultimately choosing to send people to hell. God created hell for the fallen, and though no one would ever truly choose it, we are repeatedly given the patsy that "we ultimately choose it.' Rubbish. God made it, is said to be omniscient, and ultimately has known for all eternity who would go there (ie, could intervene and show himself incontrovertibly to those souls to steer them to him)
Indeed, the entire construction of the Universe (with all attendant physical constants, logical outcomes like the need for 'free will', etc.) were, if God is as big and powerful as claimed, be completely arbitrary decisions made with no reasoning whatsoever - God doesn't need to allow free will, suffering (in this existence or in Hell) or any other complications to have a perfect Universe. To say a perfect Universe can't exist because of the need for free will or anything else limits God, which they and their Big Book of Fables already preclude, so there is literally NO reason any of this has to happen. And given all this could be avoided but is arbitrarily not through God's supposed decisions, how is that good or worthy of worship? We would never accept that a person is good or without moral culpability if, in their limited existence, they arbitrarily created suffering or issues for other people or living things, so why would an infinite being get a pass?
I never understood the defense of "god created hell for the devil" but at the same time condemns humans to it and knows where every human ends up after death before they are even born. But he really loves everyone unconditionally (with conditions) but his son (which was him disguised as a human) told his followers to hate everyone except him which isnt what I consider loving at all.
Christianity just doesnt make any sense and is always the opposite of what christians preach.
You cannot say:
- "I want the truth and atheism is not it"
(Atheism) is where you land if the evidence for the God you believe in doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
But is there meaning to life "where you land" ( Atheism )?
Respectfully..
@@johnbrzykcy3076
Yes of course, but what if there wasn´t.
Would you have meaning still believing something you knew was false?
Adam and Eve walked with god daily, but they still managed to have free will. Surely this destroys the position that absence is needed for free will
Would you put a poisonous plant in the same room where your kids live?
Yes, or No?
Imagine believing that pain was categorically evil for every single animal.
Imagine wanting to take away the greatest lessons an organism can learn for survival.
Imagine being so utterly anathema to reality.
My heart breaks for Christians like this guy.
He’s so broken, and is relentlessly seeking to fix the worlds problems around him before witnessing his own.
Man, know thyself.
So you agree that pain and suffering is not necessarily evil but can serve a greater purpose even if that purpose is unknown to the recipient? Hmm interesting..
What a wild critique of Christianity that is just not even a deal breaker for Christians, like, Augustine rebuked people who said animal death was always evil and wasn't a part of God's good order of creation. But he's still allowed to be sad when animals die, like what?
@@wondergolderneyes _So you agree that pain and suffering is not necessarily evil but can serve a greater purpose even if that purpose is unknown to the recipient? Hmm interesting.._ That's not the issue. The issue is that if a god exists who is omnipotent, then pain and suffering are no longer necessary to achieve any purpose, except to gratify said being.
@@Rogstin you don't know that. In fact you actually know the opposite. You know that sometimes suffering is necessary to achieve a purpose eg. Muscle soreness and fatigue is a necessary part of getting stronger, and you yourself said that animal death can serve a greater purpose.
You also know that if the Christian God exists, he is utterly transcendent, which gives no necessity to humanity being able to know every purpose behind every instance of suffering.
I also know, through experience and the testimony of others, that suffering often serves to bring people to Jesus. We have a God who is not distant from our suffering but has been through immense suffering of his own. Who, in all infinite wisdom and knowledge, deemed even his own crucifixion necessary for a greater purpose. I can't retain control of my life through suffering and neither can you, but we've seen this God through his sovereign control bring life out of death. You get to choose whether your suffering will benefit you in this way too.
@@wondergolderneyes You use a lot of words to say that God is evil.
_You know that sometimes suffering is necessary to achieve a purpose eg. Muscle soreness and fatigue is a necessary part of getting stronger, and you yourself said that animal death can serve a greater purpose._
Again, you miss the point. This is not the suffering we are concerned with.
If I want to get from California to New York and I have an airplane but decide to walk, I am inflicting an unnecessary condition on myself. An omnipotent god can make any path to any destination, why pick the one with such suffering as we experience? God knows how to bring everyone to Jesus without suffering, but He doesn't. We must conclude that God is either evil, incapable, imaginary, or Jesus is a human red herring and all are saved and so our suffering here will be made up for in some hereafter.
@@Rogstin "an omnipotent God can make a path to any destination"
I think we need a slightly more nuanced concept of omnipotence. God can't do logically nonsensical things and he can't act in ways contrary to his character.
Just as an example, I don't think there is a path to love that does not involve suffering. For us too, right? Love hurts! We get rejected and let down. But we experience a greater love because someone chooses us than if they involuntarily just did everything we asked of them. God can't make us love him because that destroys the definition of love as voluntary and greatly decreases the joy possible to find in it.
There is no reason to say then, that there are not other goods, in addition to love, that suffering not only serves to produce but does so necessarily.
But this God who deemed these goods worth suffering for, did not do so forever distanced from it but became human and experienced the worst of it himself.
Studying some biochemistry & physics taught me that all mass is made up of elements, made up of molecules, made up of atoms. And every living organism is made up of the same elements, in similar proportions. That makes all life related, all made of the same material
I love that my life force is similar to the life force that grows a tree or a mushroom. When I see a picture of a rare flower blossoming in the dessert, I feel a kinship with that life struggling to grow & live & die.
If human have souls which go to other plains or get reincarnated, it would make humans absolutely separate from the rest of life on Earth. That leaves me cold. I don’t want to be different, I like knowing I’m intrinsically linked to all other life.
Like the dessert flower, I just want my chance to struggle, to live, thrive, reproduce, and ultimately die. Like all my brethren living organisms.
It’s human hubris that imagines an eternal soul which sets us apart and make us unique in the animal kingdom. They say there is nothing more common then the desire to be unique.
That is a beautiful ideology.
Loved that!
OK. How did the atoms arise? Are they infinitely old?
@@20july1944 Google it and cry!
@@20july1944 Why do yo ask random people on a TH-cam comment section?
Why don't you use a peer reviewed article?
Would you find any rando on the internet a reliable source of information?
I thought you have more common sense than that!
Disappointed.
@@dorkception2012 Asshole, I'm not asking for information, I'm asking to start a conversation.
"The Church refuses to explain sin away or make excuses for it or call it by another name. " Bishop Robert Barron
We don’t appreciate Alex enough.
Christians
100s of hospitals
100s of Unviversities
100s of Charities
Atheists 0
@@PInk77W1 wow. You’ve totally changed my mind. That’s all it took. Incredible.
@@LAHowell
The first 38 popes were kllld in office
@@LAHowell
Jesus said his church would last forever.
It was illegal to be a Christian for 300yrs.
Now 2 billion Christians
Would love to see you reconnect with Destiny on some broader stuff! Also if you can manage to talk to Dennett that would be fantastic
"Why doesn't god provide evidence of his existence?"
Apparently, evidence destroys free will. Only people who lack evidence of their beliefs could possibly think this way.
I always struggle with the fact that religious people cannot accept that existence just is but say it was all created by God. The obvious question then is who made God and you cannot say God just is because you have already denied that possibility with ecistence. It is a hard one to get your head around. Some people say faith but that can lead to people flying planes into buildings as well as the good it can bring. It is a big question.
God created all things. He is the beginning and the end. Call upon the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be Saved!
@@MichaelAChristian1 Thanks, that clears everything up.
When police and investigators have to search for someone that committed a crime, and they don't find them. The case goes cold. This is just life, their are other crimes, events and things to occupy a humans time. I dont defend my inability to find something that others claim to have found. There are over 42,000 christian denominations on earth. That means also that there are 42,000 opinions on "what it means to find god", who jesus is, what god and jesus expect from you, and how to interpret a book with more than 40 different authors who might not even be the true authors.
That was a brilliant way Alex pointed out the conflict of interest part way through, about how he’s an atheist that wants to be a Christian, but he’s a Christian that doesn’t want to be an atheist.
Alex simply wants the feeling of being a Christian because nihilism is the product of Atheism and the reality is even atheists know Christianity has something nothing else has. However Alex says he want to yet can’t accept the fact God lives in mystery, and it takes humility to have faith in a God. To accept you know nothing is the start of a relationship with God. Atheism is a deflection of the mystery of God, not a refutation of the existence but a mere stance that says I can’t accept the fact the world is this way and I can’t understand it therefore God is evil and doesn’t exist.
@@carlosz.5460 nihilism is the product of atheism? Your whole post reads as projecting what’s wrong with Christianity onto atheism. You can reject religion and still hold moral principles and a meaning to life. Historically, Christianity is rife with amoral acts, violence committed in the name of and in condoning from religion. How many people have committed atrocities in the name of atheism?
You don’t need religion to be a moral person. There’s heinous laws within the bible which Christian’s ignore, because they know them to be immoral because (like atheists) they were imbued with a moral compass. All Alex means is that the thought of a heaven is appealing to atheists and Christians alike, that’s why the conflict of interest for non-belief is on the side of Christianity.
To accept you know nothing is the beginning of a rejection of god. The humility comes from accepting we don’t know and likely will never know why (if there’s even a reason) we’re here or what happens when we die. God is a deflection of the mysteries of the universe. Not a logical assertion, but a mere stance that says I can’t accept the fact the world is this way and I don’t know these mysteries that surround my existence, therefore I will cling to a panacea, ie God.
@@carlosz.5460 Nope, nihilism is in Ecclesiastes and Christianity is just another failed apocalyptic religion.
The epistemic distance arguments made by Christians cannot be held in conjunction with an omnipresent god. You can’t say “God keeps his distance” and yet believe that god is quite literally listening to your every thought and watching your every action from birth to death lol
😂. Well it must be rationalized through language to make the narrative fit the conclusion
Free will is not mentioned in the bible once. The fact the bible claims god knows everything before it happens and that his will will always be done cuts clearly against the notion that god wants us to have free will.
We have operative free will, but not destinational free will, if that makes any sense.
Leviticus 22:21 " When anyone brings from the herd or flock a fellowship offering to the Lord to fulfill a special vow or as a freewill offering, it must be without defect or blemish to be acceptable."
@@nathanhaines1721 It isn't using "Freewill" as in neurologically unbound by one's own subconscious. It's a translational error for voluntary as in not under societal coercion. The verse uses voluntary in other translations.
@@Ninthtail9 free will is behavior free of coercion
@nathanhaines1721 Free will is an illusion. your sub conscience mind chooses things all the time preprogrammed by your upbringing
I was an atheist until 17 when i politely asked God to speak to me and serendipitous coincidence ruled my life for the next 5 years. Im anti-religious but utterly devoted to God which has been shown to me as the conscious intent of the universe.
The fuck are you talking about?
@@rajdhillon1362 a personal experience.
We firmly believed our children didn't belong to us, and were her to be the best themselves they could be. We gave them a great deal of freedom, but we're always there for them when needed - at least as far as we knew. They had no doubt about our presence and love for them.
Why doesn't God make his presence known in a way which is incapable of disbelief. He's God. He can arrange things so that that's possible.
As things stand, we have to guess at God's existence and guess at which rule book to follow (Bible, Torah etc).
If God just told us he was the umpire and what the rules were, it would be so much more straightforward. We would have to kill each other t
Getting the answer wrong damns you to Hell if Christianity is the right religion. Even if you tried your genuine best.
Judas lived in the presence of Jesus and still did what he did. There are many examples but this doesn't solve the problem or change anything. If someone is closed off, they will just move the goal posts. Richard Dawkins even said that if God appeared to him, he would just assume he was hallucinating. Also, I disagree with your last part. I'm Catholic and we don't teach that non Christians automatically go to hell.
The whole christianic god argument is a texas sharpshooter fallacy. The analogy of someone shooting at a board and then drawing targets around the bullet holes to make it look like he hit the target.
People first figure out what their conclusion is and then go looking for data that supports it completely ignoring differences and randomness.
As a Christian, I really enjoy watching Alex's videos, that challenge my faith, and give me something to philosophically think about. As opposed to other famous atheists, I believe Alex is the best one to listen to because he allows the opposing side to give their thoughts and ideas, while Alex responds with his logic, instead of resorting to narrative and other silly things
Why are you Christian and not Hindu?
I've consumed Alex for 6 years straight...❤ from Kenya
Are you an atheist?
Keep on fingering my comments
Thats a long time for a meal :D
@@Z4r4sz wish you got it in my dialect 😁😁😁
@yourstruly9170 what is your dialect?
Trent talked for a long time without saying anything. He would not give specific examples. Why are your gods able to allow us to understand the reasons for some suffering but not the more severe ones?
As always trents word salads sound absolutely wonderful and dripping with conviction..........to the convicted. To any thinking person listening to his content its shallow , watery piffle. Epistemic distance...? How convenient
“Philosophical Terminology” how convenient.
@@withlessAsbestos you're aware that it was Trent that used the term you're referencing, right ?
of course you didn't know. you're a theist. you dont read or listen to any works. you just cherry pick and react to buzz words! and it all stems from there. Trent used the term epistemic distance mate as a convenient cover/ dodge. clearly it works on the likes of you. snap out of it bro. its your life.
For those who are civil and earnest in this comment section, thank you. Everyone is benefited from as many discussions of this type as possible, Atheists, Christians, cheers! ❤😊
Those who associated with Allah will say, "If Allah had willed, we would not have associated [anything] and neither would our fathers, nor would we have prohibited anything." Likewise did those before deny until they tasted Our punishment. Say, "Do you have any knowledge that you can produce for us? You follow not except assumption, and you are not but falsifying.
The guy is starting with the premise that the god he worships is good. Why does he believe his god is good? What standard is he using? Wouldn't it make more sense that if a god actually exists that the god is not good?
I would think it’s hard to make the claim God is not good if you value your existence.
Well you could be unable to die and life could be suffering nothing of beauty i think it's fair to say God isn't bad
@@jamespeterson3868 Simply procreating doesn't equal being a good parent or a good person.
The usual christian standard is "god is good no matter how atrocious or evil the actions I claim come from god". And when someone compares evil in the bible with evil in reality, suddenly we get our morals questions because how dare we atheists (not jews, muslims, hindus, pastafarians...) question god without a moral basis. Or some bullshit along those usual lines.
Religion is backward. They claim that god is good and then try to justify that claim. And when backed into a corner, they'll argue that 'god moves in mysterious ways.' That's not how anything else in life works, why would it work that way in this specific instance? So bizarre.
The lies , hypocrisy and sheer arrogance of " religous " people never ceases to amaze me .
I am convinced that someone in any atheist channel comment section will always say this on any video where a religious person talks, no matter what.
It doesn't matter what they say. As soon as people know an individual stands in a different camp than them, any assertion whatsoever will be counted in the least charitable light.
They could even have said "I see you got a hair cut" and someone in the comment section will always go: "Ohhh, the arrogance of the religious apologist assuming as fact what he has no proof for" "They think can read people's minds" "The dishonesty in assuming the only possibility for the shorter hair is cutting, when if they knew a lick of science, they'd know there are a variety of skin diseases, disorders, and deficiencies that can cause hair loss and lack of growth, but I expect nothing less from the people whose book teaches day and night existed before the sun did 🤣"
@@andrewprahst2529😂 I think you might be right. It's literally a video of two guys having an intelligent conversation and respectfully disagreeing - LIES, HYPOCRISY AND ARROGANCE
Such an empty state. Fart in the wind and then point the finger at a bystander. That's all you did. With full arrogance, I might add. It never ceases to amaze me either that people can be so bold, while only expressing childish tantrums. So I guess or never ceasing is on equal ground.
@@andrewprahst2529Because the primary position of the atheist is to mock and bully. If they position the others a liars and hypocrites in their mockery, they think it absolves them of having to deal WITH the subject of those supposed lies or hypocritical views. It's a cheap trick. It's also rampant on the left and in the atheist.
@ithurtsbecauseitstrue1922 that's a perfect description of yourself and other self absorbed and fraudulent religous people . Thank you !
Shooting from the hip a bit here, but there's some limitations with the divine hiddenness that come to mind for me:
The argument can be framed as such:
1. Let A be the set of prepositions that be that we have some final cause which is to know God, and that God, who governs the world by his providence and wishes for all men to know him, moves men by his grace to seek him and in seeking, find him.
2. Let B be the preposition that there are "non resistant non believers", i.e. there exist those who have been moved to seek God and have not found him.
3. A and B are incompatible.
4. B is clearly true and evident to our senses
5. Therefore A is wrong
There's a lack of precision and distinction (common in modern philosophy, which is more concerned with persuasion than distinction) that I see in the second preposition. I think we need to consider, as a scholastic would, these two attributes of being non resistant and being a non believer. I'm not sure that any composite being could be non-resistant, simply, towards some end which its species has a manifest inclination towards and aversion to. Humans are simply fascinated with God. I think what "non resistant" is probably trying to imply is "not obstinately averse to."
The second is "non believer", which is a complex attribute that is used as though it were simple in modern discourse. What prepositions are not being believed in? It doesn't appear that Alex (who seems to be the kind of good faith "non resistant" non theist the argument references) disbelieves in God simply and absolutely, only that he disbelieves certain divine attributes which Christians attribute to God. For instance, everyone believes in an uncaused first efficient cause (some people believe that the first efficient cause is an infinite regress of intermediary causes, but everyone believes that SOMETHING is uncaused). Everyone believes that something is non contingent. Alex would not debate anyone if he didn't believe in Truth, and as Scripture and Aquinas attest truth is the divine essence.
There's another issue which arises here as to whether these non resistant non believers will ultimately remain non believers. Christians believe that God in his providence has provided for us an entirely life which he uses to move us to knowledge of him. Is it not possible that he foresees that some individuals may actually be better off in a kind of implicit natural theism until the very end of their lives, and in his providence order things such that they do not receive a fullness of revelation until the very end?
I still can’t understand how you can believe you have free will and simultaneously believe that a god created you knowing every single decision and event that will happen to you, before your conception and after your death. I mean, do they not understand that if god knows everything that will happen, there’s obviously a path laid out? Do they think they can actually “freely will” anything outside of what god knows will happen?
I guess the only way is to have a certain definition of free will. My question always is “what is the will free from” (the will being one’s faculty of intention/desire). If the will must only be free from ongoing intervention of other sentients then I guess you’re dilemma can be reconciled..if we ignore the fixed way everything was set up by god. I say “other sentients” because things like gut bacteria, immediate circumstances, what your mom ate during pregnancy etc. can affect the development/state of your thinking-feeling-behaving modality. I don’t think anyone can avoid the dilemma of god “winding the clock” with how we develop which indeed seems to fix our modalities, but what if someone simply defines free will to be the ability to act in accordance to one’s desires? Not a very deep definition at all..but at least it’s not nonsense I guess. If one’s will is only free if more than one sequence of intentions are possible given a single, fixed sequence of external conditions then…I think this is logical and indeed a property we posses so long as “external condition” denoted anything besides ourselves. The problem with this though is that, to me, it’s also not very meaningful; if we define any activity outside of our nervous system to “external” then ya of course we can have multiple possible intentions or wills given “external conditions”…if this wasn’t true then everyone would act the same under identical conditions. But you can probably see how cheaty it is to ignore the “internal” conditions of the nervous system as these seem just as out of our control as external ones and even antecedents like genetics. To be honest I don’t know where I’m going with this at all, free will is weird
@@Hursimear free will can be weird, however I am strictly speaking in the context referring to Christian belief. Typically their of free will would simply be the colloquial and oxford dictionary definition of free will. That being “The power of acting without the constraint of necessity or fate; the ability to act at one's own discretion.”
Using the definition, you can obviously see where this would be a problem, if a god has not only set up a world with you in mind, but that god has also created you knowing exactly what you’d do for every second of your existence. He has created the conditions surrounding your existence. That would be the “path” or “fate” people speak of when referring to the “path god created”. In the end, if you’re telling me there’s a path god created, and then created you knowing everything you’d do on that path, I cease to understand how you’d have “free will” in that scenario
Hi, as a former Christian I think I have a good analogy for it. So imagine that you are taking a test. When your teacher is grading the test they already know all the answers and they will know which kid passes or fails. Even though you know the teacher knows the answers you will still try your best to get the right answers so that you can pass the test. The teacher can instruct and guide you before they grade the test but if you have bad attendance then it will be much harder to pass the test.
The guy on the right sure said a whole lot of nothing.
And your comment was then about nothing. Moving on.
@@conquisitorveritashuh
@@Zoinks3245 meh
Perhaps what is perceived as hiddeness is attributable to how amenable one is to the usage of certain terms and one's preexisting notions and biases.
Love the conversation. You two give a wonderful example of dialog and deep consideration of reality.
Alex: Without chemicals I get low grade mystical religious types of experiences on and off pretty regularly. Spiritual practice makes it more profound and far more metaphysical with echoes of agape ecstasy. Rushes of insight and eternal love. I'm studying Buddhism and meditating. It's inducing nice feelings of all reality being a self-aware infinity, which is fundamentally consciousness on literally unimaginable levels. An interdependent co-arising beyond comprehension.
Psychedelics pretty reliably induce religious or metaphysical experiences with the correct set and setting, as well.
The implication is that religious experiences are incredibly common throughout the history of the species.
Considering the religious experiences I have had, I have profound belief I experienced divinity. From a materialistic standpoint I believe that the religious experience is a result of neurochemistry. Scientists know which neurochemicals interact with which areas of our brain which make religious experiences pretty routine.
Whether or not having the neurochemical hardware and software for religious experiences is God's way of communicating with us, or if it simply is a quirk of evolution or is something completely else entirely is a tantalizing mystery to me.
I don't expect I will ever unravel the mystery of consciousness or divinity. From my religious experiences I have complete faith that they are existentially real. I believe these states of consciousness are greater than just chemistry 100%. Rationally I deduce that non-ordinary experiences are most likely a quirk of neurochemistry. I believe both proposition because they speak to different realms of consciousness.
So be prepared just in case you do have an unexpected non-ordinary ecstatic experience. It might be God and neurochemistry, or it is just neurochemistry.
Catholic here, and I sort of agree with you, but would like to point out that we really have no idea what consciousness is, let alone how the brain can generate it through chemical reactions, and that such a explanation doesn’t account for things like post death experiences where people Who did not have brain activity experienced observing the world around them and great detail, as far as I can tell the best explanation is that the brain is the hardware and has a copy of the software on it, but is not the origin of the software itself.
@allthenewsordeath5772 we actually have no verification as to the EEG tracing going on during NDEs. I suspect that the brain is basically having a specialized psychedelic experience. What we have is the heart stopping. We have a great idea of what is going on with the cardiopulmonary system.
Brain waves are very faint. It requires lots of sensors and almost perfect stillness to get an EEG. The impulses of the skeletal muscles are overwhelmingly louder than those of both the heart and brain. The heart has louder impulses than the brain.
In Code Blue, we are focusing on a lot of things. First is high-quality chest compressions. The chest compressions completely obliterate any telemetry or EEG data.
You do, however, make excellent points. I agree that consciousness is still a mystery. We don't know the relationship between consciousness and the biological hardware and software.
I'm a nurse. Before being a seasoned nurse, I believed NDEs to be absolute evidence for God. Now, I believe it is probably a quirk of neurochemistry. This quirk of neurochemistry may be the origin of much of religion. It may be a psychedelic trip.
At the same time, the notion of a metaphysical divine first cause is a possibility I can neither prove nor disprove. There may be a divine ocean upon which human reality is but a ripple. I don't rule out the divine. I just find no convincing evidence.
The thing that Christians are wrong about our understanding of what is going on biologically during NDEs isn't anything like they claim. The mistake is that they assume that if the heart stops biologically, the brain has stopped. This is extremely unlikely. The brain is being flooded with profound levels of chemicals. We have no clear way to know nature because CPR makes the investigation impossible. What is certain is that we have no reports from people we knew were brain dead as to what is out there.
We haven't come close to even figuring out how to probe this mystery.
@@silverwolfmonastery
I think actual scientific investigation of the subject runs into the wall of being completely unethical, in the sense that you can’t really conduct a study, where you stop the hearts of 20 people and see how many of them report a near death experience, there is also of course the chicken or the egg problem here in that we can see what part of the brain lights up when you think about a chicken, but does that mean that you thinking about a chicken was caused by that part of your brain lighting up?
With how near death experiences seem to generally go, I think chemical reactions was doing a lot of legwork as an explanation, from the papers I’ve read on the subject, which is once again our best guesswork because any experiments regarding this are profoundly unethical for obvious reasons, Some explanations for individual aspects of near death experiences have been proposed, but are not exactly verifiable and much like the experience of consciousness, completely incapable of explaining the whole of it.
On a sidenote though, as previously mentioned I’m a Catholic so near death experiences are not really something I pin my theology on, more so I work from the idea that there have been, currently are, and will continue to be people who are far wiser and more knowledgeable than me, but if I do my damnedest to be a saint Things will probably work out OK.
I would sell a kidney to have Alex inherent self confidence
I’d wager it’s not inherent, his confidence stems from the fact that he’s highly educated on the subject and has had a lot of practice in this kind of discussion/debate.
Deal.