appropriating morality | how 'the Judeo-Christian tradition' takes false credit [cc]

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 ก.ย. 2024
  • Some thoughts about the tendency of religious groups to claim intellectual ownership of morality.
    You can support the channel at: / theramintrees
    --
    opening quote:
    Believers in religion teach us that God will reward men for good actions, but men who are intellectually free, know that the reward of a good action cannot be given by any power, but that it is the natural result of the good action.
    The free man, guided by intelligence, knows that his reward is in the nature of things, and not in the caprice even of the Infinite. He is not a good and faithful servant, he is an intelligent free man.
    -Robert G. Ingersoll
    --
    subtitles
    Arabic: TranquilOblivion
    Bulgarian: Djeitko
    Portuguese [Brazilian]: Débora T. F. Silveira
    Spanish: Martin Gonzalez
    --
    Correction: at 6:54, Matthew passage should read 5:38 instead of 5:43. Thanks to TranquilOblivion for picking up on that.
    --
    Animal studies
    Frans De Waal talk/articles:
    • Moral behavior in anim...
    Proctor, D., Williamson, R.A., de Waal, F.B.M. and Brosnan, S.F. (2013) Chimpanzees play the ultimatum game. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 110 (6)
    www.ncbi.nlm.n...
    Proctor, D., Brosnan, S.F. and de Waal, F.B.M. (2013) How fairly do chimpanzees play the ultimatum game? Communicative & Integrative Biology 6 (3)
    www.ncbi.nlm.n...
    see also:
    Vulcan and Virgil, the sharing capuchins:
    • Monkey cooperation and...
    chimpanzees conflict and resolution
    • Conflict and Reconcili...
    --
    Berkovits, E. (1975) Judaism in the Post-Christian Era. in Talmage, F.E. (Ed.), Disputation and Dialogue: Readings in the Jewish Christian Encounter. Ktav, New York.
    --
    Gill, J. (1746-63) Exposition of the Entire Bible.
    Psalm 137:9: ‘Happy shall he be that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the stones. That takes the infants from their mothers' breasts, or out of their arms, and dashes out their brains against a "rock", as the word (k) signifies; which, though it may seem a piece of cruelty, was but a just retaliation; the Babylonians having done the same to the Jewish children, and is foretold elsewhere should be done to theirs, Isaiah 13:16. Nor is this desired from a spirit of revenge, but for the glory of divine justice, and that such a generation of cruel creatures might be rooted out of the earth; see Revelation 2:2. Some allegorically understand this of crushing and mortifying the first motions of sin in the heart; but such a sense seems to have no place here.
    (k) "ad petram", V. L. Pagninus, Montanus, &c. "ad repem", Cocceius.’
    --
    Hobson, T. (2017) God Created Humanism: The Christian basis of secular values. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, London.
    --
    Paine, T. (1794-1807) The Age of Reason
    --
    Jewish biblical passages:
    Vayikra 21
    www.chabad.org...
    Vayikra 24
    www.chabad.org...
    Vayikra 25
    www.chabad.org...
    Bamidbar 31
    www.chabad.org...
    --
    music © theramintrees:
    Excerpt from Beethoven's seventh symphony, second movement.
    Full original music tracks used in videos are available to patreon supporters who pledge at the $1 per video level.

ความคิดเห็น • 2.8K

  • @FrancisRoyCA
    @FrancisRoyCA 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3301

    Has anyone ever given you the feedback that your verbal pacing is excellent?

    • @TheraminTrees
      @TheraminTrees  6 ปีที่แล้ว +956

      Thank you.

    • @dantoinettetaylor1663
      @dantoinettetaylor1663 6 ปีที่แล้ว +276

      Both his verbal placements and diction are excellent

    • @MsCaleb79
      @MsCaleb79 6 ปีที่แล้ว +297

      God has blessed him

    • @nathanmckenzie904
      @nathanmckenzie904 5 ปีที่แล้ว +279

      @@MsCaleb79 now that's funny

    • @hgternier
      @hgternier 5 ปีที่แล้ว +44

      Francis Roy I’m just waiting for him to say “winter is coming “

  • @jpfrssnv
    @jpfrssnv 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2462

    OH no! another guy that actually read the Bible....

    • @pttj9947
      @pttj9947 4 ปีที่แล้ว +81

      The judeo-christian holy text*

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 4 ปีที่แล้ว +147

      Weird (not really) that most of those are either priests or atheists. Like all scams, those who fall for it are the ones with less knowledge (I try not to be judgemental against those that never had a chance to learn, but there are some that are willfully ignorant, and they deserve judgement).

    • @RedbadvanRijn-ft3vv
      @RedbadvanRijn-ft3vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@57thorns
      Atheist countrys are the most succesfull and social places on OUR planet.
      But,,we have lots of islamics,who refuse to learn,because its not there nazi religion.

    • @AN-ou6qu
      @AN-ou6qu 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Redbad van Rijn China has loads of non-religious people.

    • @RedbadvanRijn-ft3vv
      @RedbadvanRijn-ft3vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@AN-ou6qu
      Wel the have some problems with Uyghurs.
      But the wil solve that problem in a proper way.
      Its a shame we in Europe can not do it the same way as China is doing.

  • @jayg342
    @jayg342 6 ปีที่แล้ว +862

    We evolved in a manner which made cooperation and altruism beneficial to the survival of our species. Morality is a genetic imperative. Of course, there is always variant, it is not written on our hearts. Religion co-opted morality and then claims to be its origin.

    • @pterafirma
      @pterafirma 5 ปีที่แล้ว +103

      Religion not only co-opts morality, but usually does so only after losing a long embarrassing fight against whatever moral advancement it finally comes around to.

    • @aaronsilver-pell411
      @aaronsilver-pell411 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@pterafirma what moral advancement did religion coopt? the polytheism of the Roman empire resulted in endless rounds of generals fighting each other to be emperor. The eastern roman empire stayed stable though and after adopting Christianity, Europe and then America became the most civilized and advanced places in the world, so I would be a little....wary of that assertion.

    • @aaronsilver-pell411
      @aaronsilver-pell411 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @Xadion Why does any empire fall in the end? shit still happens. yes- you can read about it in books. China has lasted longer than any empire Europe has ever had. What made China unique? It was super patriarchal and imperial. Christianity is probably not patriarchal enough.

    • @gildrax69
      @gildrax69 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Indeed, as social beings we naturally adopt pro-social behaviors

    • @weniswarrior666
      @weniswarrior666 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      I wouldn't necessarily say that morality per se was a direct result of evolution. We evolved to be empathetic because that was beneficial to us as social creatures, but the concept of prescriptive morals and the complex systems that arose from it is more a product of culture and philosophy that didn't arise until we developed higher order intelligence. That being said even this was well before the development of organized religion but I feel it's something to keep in mind. Religion I think was the first and most primitive attempt at creating a cultural moral framework that could be applied across a large organized society rather than merely within isolated tribal groups.

  • @Sknabc
    @Sknabc 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2980

    Another great video. I hate hearing theists ask me if I'm an atheist, why don't I go out and kill and steal and cheat. I always respond with, "All I hear you saying is that if you're religion didn't tell you not to do those things, that's exactly what you'd be doing."
    I don't murder and steal because it's wrong to do to somebody, not because I'm instructed not to.

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 6 ปีที่แล้ว +360

      *"All I hear you saying is that if you're religion didn't tell you not to do those things, that's exactly what you'd be doing."*
      And worse - their religion does call for murder. Modern Christians ignore those moral edicts which shows it's not Christian morals they are following; their morality is informed by something else.

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 6 ปีที่แล้ว +149

      I doubt it's true when Christians say things like that to me. I think they just associate their morality with their religion because they've had a lifetime of being told that's where their morality comes from.
      But if it is true that's possibly the only real advantage of religion. I'd rather these psychopaths be kept in check by their religion than out murdering and raping.

    • @graynoita
      @graynoita 5 ปีที่แล้ว +184

      "I murder, steal, and cheat all I want to. And that amount is ZERO."

    • @juanvaldez5422
      @juanvaldez5422 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Noones asks you that. What a bullshit, self-fullfilling prophesy ( pun intended) statement. A better question would be, why do you habitually lie from behind a keyboard?

    • @Abyzz_Knight
      @Abyzz_Knight 5 ปีที่แล้ว +136

      @@juanvaldez5422 nope theists definitely ask that A lot. Thiests also like to say "you do believe in God you're just angry at him" in one way or another but really it's mostly just flawed arguments like Pascal's wager or the God of the gaps fallacy. Oh I can't forget, using some anecdotal unverifiable miracle or some scripture to prove their God.

  • @dogless10
    @dogless10 6 ปีที่แล้ว +613

    Take that, Dennis Prager! 👍😁

    • @nicfarrow
      @nicfarrow 5 ปีที่แล้ว +123

      This will mean nothing to Prager. He has not a scrap of concern for truth unless it is something he can pervert to support his dirty views.

    • @musiqal333
      @musiqal333 5 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      Dennis Prager is cancer.

    • @ishzsbxux
      @ishzsbxux 5 ปีที่แล้ว +54

      This will not provide him with the thousands of dollars he gets for lying to people... woops, I mean preaching Chrsitianity.

    • @SilverSpoon_
      @SilverSpoon_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      >whole video is a mashup of cognitive bias interpreting bible as factual
      >this comment
      hurf durf how will he ever recover? vote democrat!

    • @NIHIL_EGO
      @NIHIL_EGO 4 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      @@SilverSpoon_ >Greentexting
      >On TH-cam
      >>>/out/

  • @ericspencer8093
    @ericspencer8093 5 ปีที่แล้ว +391

    My religious brother use to argue that Ancient Rome and Egypt fell (he termed it 'destroyed,') because they were intrinsically immoral... until I pointed out that Rome lasted 1200 years, Egypt 2000 years, and Ancient Israel.... 418 years.

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +82

      Remember in school how often kids bitched about dates when studying history. Having even a half-assed grasp of chronology is rare and now long after school... there even more of it. My father was born 1895, my mother in 1901, my paternal grandparents were both born before the American Civil War started. When I was born FDR, Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Churchill and Mick Jagger were still alive (I checked Jagger (he is so far). My father mined coal using black powder and mules and he could neither read nor write. I had two jobs, was unemployed for only two days in my life, I retired at 54 and only worked on avionics and computers that entire time. That doesn't even seem reasonable to me. Time is funny.

    • @orioleaszme3415
      @orioleaszme3415 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@dimbulb23 Really interesting! Thank you for posting.

    • @BlackEpyon
      @BlackEpyon 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Ouch.

    • @moongem4489
      @moongem4489 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Also by the time Rome fell, it was Christian. In fact, the Christian Romans spread Christianity through Europe. Their conversion to Christianity is part of the reason Medieval European rulers tried to emulate them. Doesn't really make sense for God to punish the Empire that helped tie Christianity to Western Civilization.

    • @kaptenlemper
      @kaptenlemper 2 ปีที่แล้ว +56

      By your brother's logic, wouldn't that make China the most intrinsically moral nation, given that they've survived in multiple iterations to this day?

  • @LimeyLassen
    @LimeyLassen 6 ปีที่แล้ว +454

    I think the problem with an ultimate theory of morality is that we aren't ultimate beings. Humans exist at a particular scale in space, time, and importance. At that scale, morality and meaning make sense. Elsewhere, not so much. Just because we aren't cosmically, vitally important cogs in a grand machine doesn't mean life has no meaning or that virtue is a chemical illusion. That's a poorly calibrated perspective.

    • @Krikenemp18
      @Krikenemp18 3 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      A fantastic way to phrase it. I haven't seen this argument expressed in that way before, thanks for sharing.

    • @May-ky4lu
      @May-ky4lu 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      .

    • @b.a.r.c.l.a.y
      @b.a.r.c.l.a.y ปีที่แล้ว +4

      damn
      i need to ponder that for some few moments

    • @dontseemyprofilepic3157
      @dontseemyprofilepic3157 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      This sounds like the most mathematically appealing description of existence I've seen. I can just picture a diagram of the infinitesimally small cube with it's 3 axis being stationed at the centre of a photo of the Milky Way.

    • @Rudxain
      @Rudxain 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      This is what I've been trying to say! good & evil don't exist in a cosmic (purely objective) context, but it does in a human context. At a human level, there's stuff that's "objectively" good or bad, if we take into account the survival of our species as the motivating factor

  • @ogsamuraijack6437
    @ogsamuraijack6437 4 ปีที่แล้ว +168

    Your channel is criminally underrated. I really love what you are doing here. Much love

  • @doublepipe.
    @doublepipe. 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    If you're acting morally right but you do it because you want the reward of being in heaven/don't want the punishment of being in hell, you are not a good person. You are selfish and you act the way you do out of selfish reasons. If you act morally right because you know it to be the right way to act without hope for a reward, only then are you actually a moral person.

  • @geoffcole2962
    @geoffcole2962 6 ปีที่แล้ว +155

    Can I just say as someone who was also raised Christian but eventually found myself befuddled by the ignorance and immorality I kept running into, your videos are a long drink of crystal clear water after a week in a desert. I love listening to folks like Hitchens and Harris, but your videos literally spell out my own train of thought so closely sometimes I wonder if I've holographically projected you and we're all in the Matrix. Fortunately the 2nd and 3rd movies prove that's impossible.
    But seriously, great channel. I may even send a link towards my deeply religious mother.

    • @MeattyOkra
      @MeattyOkra 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I would say "Don't bother" in reference to sending the link to your mom. It could help, sure, but it most likely will not.

    • @grovetender4713
      @grovetender4713 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Sending the link itself wouldn’t be enough, an explanation would probably be required too

    • @vindembmw6421
      @vindembmw6421 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I am still caught up in the endless trap of trying to prove to others that their beliefs are wrong, simply because I am irrationally mad for being so small and insignificant that I cannot even direct my life/myself properly.

  • @_the_watcher_2089
    @_the_watcher_2089 3 ปีที่แล้ว +480

    I had a close moral dilemma last week, my man slave was Messing around when he should have been working harder since he had time to play. So I got mad and beat him with an iron rod, my neighbor saw me & called the cops they said I killed him. I did get arrested & my slave was sent to the hospital, but luckily on the 2nd day he woke up and was ok. so all charges was dropped against me, the judge explained by law it was ok to beat him and knock him out for up to two days as long as I don’t kill him.

    • @IvanSensei88
      @IvanSensei88 3 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      My daughter got raped a few months ago.... luckily they got caught in the act, so the guy had to pay me, and now the sucker has to marry and live with her. That'll teach him! I can finally take a nice vacation while my daughter enjoys her life with her rapist.

    • @ahmeteminerdogan9266
      @ahmeteminerdogan9266 3 ปีที่แล้ว +161

      Other day we were returning from a raid to my neighbours house, which resulted the death of him but by God's grace I kept his wife alive to serve me as a sex slave. As soon as we made it back I dropped my panths and gave her a good thumble. Since then she has been a good, submissive companion to me and that is for her own good too. Obviously being a sex slave to someone morally superior is objectively better than being a wife to a heretic

    • @Chronorust
      @Chronorust 2 ปีที่แล้ว +85

      My mans is playing the Christian GTA 😩😂

    • @MrBryan-hr1rp
      @MrBryan-hr1rp 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Applying barbaric logic in the modern world is the basis of Judeo religions

    • @edwardmiessner6502
      @edwardmiessner6502 ปีที่แล้ว +62

      I saw my neighbor out in the town forest gathering sticks Saturday morning. I picked up a rock and bashed his head in with it, and he died instantly. I was promptly arrested and jailed for 2nd degree murder. Thankfully my attorney cited the law about not gathering sticks on the Sabbath Day to the grand jury, and they dismissed the charge and the judge let me go.

  • @positivistnullifidian4865
    @positivistnullifidian4865 6 ปีที่แล้ว +756

    “Secular humanism doesn’t have to account for life’s ‘meaning’ or ‘purpose.’”
    I could not agree more! Life’s ‘meaning’ or ‘purpose’ is what we as individuals internalize, and can never be externally imposed. It is arrogant to presume that the ‘meaning’ and ‘purpose’ one may embrace for their life, not only can, but must be applied to the lives of others. But this is the attitude of religion. Peace.

    • @TheraminTrees
      @TheraminTrees  6 ปีที่แล้ว +199

      Hobson's book is full of false accusations and red herrings. I noted the vagueness of his language - eg, claiming that christianity 'provides an account' of life's meaning/purpose. Anyone can provide an account - the question is whether the account has met its burden of proof. Christianity's account hasn't.

    • @jimheron4660
      @jimheron4660 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Indeed not.
      Still, I shall consult the Elder Chimps!

    • @basedzealot3680
      @basedzealot3680 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You ever heard of natural law?

    • @karlazeen
      @karlazeen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Yes and its a bogus concept.

    • @CodyCLI
      @CodyCLI 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So you don't agree with consequentialism or normative ethics? Could you explain why? Albeit not static and non changing morality systems. Do actions not have consequences? Can those consequences not be measured scientifically?

  • @toewoe
    @toewoe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +295

    Watching your videos makes me realize how fortunate I was. My parents didn't raise me to be any particular thing, but were happy to take me to a place of worship if I wanted to see what it was like and learn. They always answered any question I asked regardless of my age. When I was 8 I had heard the word prostitute but did not know what it meant, I asked my dad, and instead of saying he would tell me when I was older, he chuckled out of how out of the blue the question was and then just told me. The only lies about belief were Santa and the Easter bunny but I figured those out young. My parents read books to me and never kept me from hearing anything scary, obscene, or confusing. The only thing censored to me was when a show had a sex scene and my mom would tell me to close my eyes. I had catholic friends, orthodox friends, Mormon friends, even Hindu friends but never did any of those views make an ounce of sense to me. My mother was raised orthodox, and my father catholic, but they both fell out of those religions when they moved out and never pushed anything onto me, nor my sister, who actually tried church and just couldn't find any value in it. I was raised to just be kind to people without expecting any form of reward, no underlying message that a God wanted me to do it. I now try to think of everything all the way through. I think about why I'm kind to people, it's because making people feel undeserved negative emotions makes me feel disgusting because I made somebody's life objectively worse, although marginally. I credit my ability to think freely to my parents who never limited my thinking in any way. On political ideas they would do their best to describe both sides of the arguments to me, doing their best to leave out their feelings. I have good parents.

    • @kadran3263
      @kadran3263 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      If all parents were like yours, we would have a much better world.

    • @andg_rodg_4_real710
      @andg_rodg_4_real710 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Seriously the world would be a better place if everyone were as objective as your parents

    • @AS-bb7ey
      @AS-bb7ey ปีที่แล้ว +22

      your parents are a rare breed - you’re very lucky to have them

    • @RiskierGoose340
      @RiskierGoose340 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      I believe this is an approach I would want to take if I ever had children. Unnecessarily preventing a child from learning about something will only stifle their natural curiosity, and may only cause confusion or problems due to a lack of information.
      A very basic example could be representation in kids media. Some people believe that things like homosexuality should be kept out of kids media, on the basis that it would be “confusing to the kids,” that media should “let kids be kids,” and similar arguments. These arguments are flawed, however, because the idea that information, especially information that may be particularly useful to some kids, should be censored is not healthy. Kids will always be confused about many things in life, and withholding this info will only confuse them more. If a gay kid were to never see any form of gay relationships, and have it never mentioned around them, or have any mention of it be shut down because they’re too young, the child would likely feel confused and isolated, thinking they’re unnatural, when they’re not. It would also be unhealthy to straight kids, as a straight kid who undergoes a similar situation may be taught, intentionally or otherwise, that being gay is something to mock and shame, causing unnecessary harm, when it could have been taught early on that such relationships were harmless and valid.
      I saw a couple gay relationships in media as a kid. If I didn’t, I’d think gay people didn’t or shouldn’t exist for a while. Having this proper exposure taught me all I needed to know, and that is the most important thing for kids. The right to know.

    • @norikofu509
      @norikofu509 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      W PARENTS!

  • @fathybalamita1537
    @fathybalamita1537 6 ปีที่แล้ว +914

    I was taught that islam is the source of modern secular morality. Lucky for me, studying islam showed me the hard truth. Thanks for the great post.

    • @boliussa
      @boliussa 6 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      +fathy "I was taught that islam is the source of modern secular morality. "

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 6 ปีที่แล้ว +103

      It didn't? Are you so sure? If you study a bit of history, you'll find out that between Europe and the Caliphates there was a LOT more history in common, and cross-cultural contamination than what most people assume.
      Hell, the NUMBERS we use were the inventions of Arab scholars. And many cultural ideas were also carried over. Even through the iron curtain of religious conflict, people, ideas and notions travelled a lot.
      Revisionists would want you to believe that there has been nothing but continuous war between Europeans and Arabs/Moors/Egyptians/Middle Easterners, but it's the farthest thing from the truth.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 6 ปีที่แล้ว +40

      In fact, you could make a case for various humanistic values emerging in a lot of different civilizations, not just European ones.
      And in a lot of cases, those other civilizations were more consistent than Europeans in respecting those values.

    • @ErikB605
      @ErikB605 5 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      @@antonioscendrategattico2302 The arabic numerals originated in india.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 5 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      @@ErikB605 IIRC the system did, the numerals themselves were changed from the original Indian characters before they reached Europe.

  • @margaretjohnson6259
    @margaretjohnson6259 5 ปีที่แล้ว +172

    thank you for bringing up animal studies showing morality is not simply human and not based on religion. i had arguments with a man who has a MA in psychology who simply refused to accept the observations of researchers showing animals having moral bases.
    yes, he's a born again catholic. bizarre. i left that church never to return when i was 19.

    • @ceilingfanenthusiast6041
      @ceilingfanenthusiast6041 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      They covered how animals can behave morally in year 1 of my psychology course.
      Funny to think that a psychology student (someone who's supposed to be a scientist) would be so against the idea that humans are animals, given that it's like the whole premise of viewing psychology as a science.
      Edit: SOME animals have morality. Not claiming that animals are perfect and purer than humans or something.

  • @slightlytwistedagain
    @slightlytwistedagain 6 ปีที่แล้ว +905

    *The crucifixion story amounts to nothing more than a divine flirtation of sadomasochism*
    Hahahahahaha holy shit that's good.

    • @mimszanadunstedt441
      @mimszanadunstedt441 5 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      Its true, but I think that story helped them reel their egos in some and check themselves relative to how Islam is. Not alot though, as christians still have strong flaws.

    • @miskatonic_alumni
      @miskatonic_alumni 5 ปีที่แล้ว +115

      It's also really stupid. In the end, Jesus' great "sacrifice" amounted to him sacrificing his weekend and then coming back to life and flying up to Heaven. Meanwhile, when real people sacrifice themselves for a cause or other people, they don't come back. They're gone. But by some magic, the most empty, meaningless sacrifice of them all is the only one that Christians care about.

    • @anchorthesun3438
      @anchorthesun3438 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Captain Rhodes I don’t think you understand how brutal the crucifiction process is. Jesus suffered just as much on the cross as any human would

    • @miskatonic_alumni
      @miskatonic_alumni 5 ปีที่แล้ว +61

      @@anchorthesun3438 So? He only stayed dead for roughly two or three days, depending on which gospel you read. Then he predicted the end of the world within the lifetime of his present followers, and ascended into paradise. Meanwhile, every human that has ever died for something did not come back.

    • @tilltronje1623
      @tilltronje1623 5 ปีที่แล้ว +67

      @@anchorthesun3438 Correct. Which doesn't make him special. He is just another case of brutal torture, but unlike real victims he himself submitted himself to it, and then demands our everlasting thankfulness and whorship while threatening us with even more brutal torture

  • @Jahanam9994
    @Jahanam9994 2 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    This video prompted a very disturbing revelation in me about how Christianity frames crimes and punishment, which starts with the very first "crime" ever committed.
    Crime: Adam and Eve disobey God by eating from the Tree of Knowledge.
    Punishment: *Every single person that is descended from them, i.e. all of humanity, must suffer for it.*

    • @blusheep2
      @blusheep2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The story isn't so much about Adam's sin causing sin in everyone else, though he was chosen as the first representatives of humanity. It is about the knowledge of sin that came into the world after his meal. Man already had a sinful nature but he hadn't known sin yet. The "curse" (this doesn't mean "hex" it means loss of protection) of death was not something humanity didn't possess already. They were already mortal and would have died but for the tree of life which provided them with life. In Genesis 3:22 God removed them from the garden and access to the tree of life and so suffered death as they were already made to do. The rest of humanity doesn't suffer because of Adam. They suffer because they all sin. Adam was just the first, and "so through Adam, all men die."

    • @blusheep2
      @blusheep2 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Richdragon No. God made them with free will. He wanted an honest relationship not creatures that follow for fear. You can characterize it as you wish, of course.

    • @blusheep2
      @blusheep2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Richdragon No. I see where you think that is what I'm saying. I didn't mean it that way. An honest relationship means a loving relationship where the parities are mutually interested in each other on personal grounds. A relationship built in fear is no such relationship. If God came down and revealed himself to the world and demanded obedience with lightning bolts and fire coming from his mouth, we would all believe and do what he says for fear of His wrath. There wouldn't be any personal relationship.

    • @blusheep2
      @blusheep2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Richdragon For sure, the threat of justice and consequences may strike fear in someone guilty before that justice. The thing is, I know no Christian that is a Christian because they are afraid of hell fire. In fact, I would argue that anyone that comes to Christ for no other reason then fear of hell fire, never remains a Christian for long.
      I can say, for sure, that I didn't, haven't and don't follow God because of my fear of hell. All hell does for me is reveal what I deserve so that I can understand what I have gained.

    • @blusheep2
      @blusheep2 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Richdragon Being guilty is waving your social finger in God's general direction because you don't think you need him or because you think he is immoral or because you think you could do things better.
      The Bible says, "a fool says in his heart there is no God." It assumes the obviousness of God's existence.
      As for hell, I'm not sure that the Bible teaches eternal conscious torment. I'm still working that through. Not only that but descriptions of hell are obviously metaphorical. From the Lazarus parable to revelations the discussions about hell are painted in figurative language. The original illusions come from the burning trash pit outside of Jerusalem. The imagery begins with fire figuratively and ends in revelations with fire figuratively. Throughout the NT though hell is described as a place of destruction where the chaff is "burned" up. The verses about the smoke of their judgment rising up forever follows a verse just a chapter or so earlier where the great city Babylon is destroyed and its "smoke rises up forever," when the context is quite clear that the city is destroyed and is no more.
      Actually the Christians I run around with would. It would be hard to hide because the way they interacted with the things of God would be different. It would be soulless. It wouldn't be one of gratitude or humility. Now there may be some Christians that I have ran across and not really known who are Christians because of that fear but as I said before, I would bet my bank account that they won't remain a Christian for long because its much easier to accept post modernism or atheism then to struggle through a faith in fear. People that live in fear will find a way to justify their way out of it if they can.
      Even if there are some Christians that are so out of fear, it is an extreme minority. I should be clear, I'm talking about born again committed Christians. I'm not talking about the millions of people that have no relationship with God but only participate in the rituals because that is what they were taught to do from childhood. Among that group, many may choose God because of fear. I don't know. That isn't a type I'm around much.

  • @williamspell5692
    @williamspell5692 5 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    9:37. Hold up.
    Kill unruly children?!
    My parents may have been Christian, but at least they never went this far.

    • @elijahpadilla5083
      @elijahpadilla5083 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      The Bible is a dense book, full of many proclamations of things adherents must do, many of which contradict one another. There is no one alive who follows every rule set forth in the Bible as-is.

  • @Liphted
    @Liphted 6 ปีที่แล้ว +136

    Yo this is the weirdest channel ever, stylistically, but it's also my favorite channel on TH-cam. I probably love it so much because it's so stylistically different.

    • @CyberiusT
      @CyberiusT 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Weird? How so? His speech is slowish perhaps, but no more so than many others on YT currently, and given the concision seems reasonable. The animation style is unique, but hardly 'weird' - nothing Dali-esque.

    • @TheraminTrees
      @TheraminTrees  6 ปีที่แล้ว +40

      Cheers Liphted ;8)

    • @Liphted
      @Liphted 6 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      CyberiusT Calm down son, don't be all insulted for absolutely no reason and jump you the defense of someone who obviously can hold there own, that's even weirder than this channel. The dudes channel is weird because dudes logo is a floating baby, for one. His name is Theramin Trees [wtf?] for two. Those two things alone are weird as fuck! However, that weird shit was what attracted me. I'm super into researching the occult, even though it's mostly silly bullshit. One of the actual interesting aspects of the occult is the use of symbols to express deeper ideas; I wonder if the floating baby could hide some deeper, mental meaning to Theramin Trees. Or maybe not. But when I see an odd use for a symbol, or a symbol I've never encountered before, I dissect it. Anyway, yeah that kind of answers the question. I'm not trying to insult the guy, I'm saying he's bad ass, wanting to be "normal" leads to people being bland, paper thin eternally insulted internetites that jump to the defense of their favorite TH-camr their vicariously living through for no reason.

    • @Liphted
      @Liphted 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      TheraminTrees Yo! Cheers bro! Keep it up man your channel is great! I love it!

    • @CyberiusT
      @CyberiusT 6 ปีที่แล้ว

      Liphted: "Calm down"? WTF gave you the idea I was in any way upset - I was curious what you were on about. (I'm not *upset* now either - I'm baffled.)
      Man, the world is even more f*d-up than I thought if the first reaction you have is assuming any question is "leaping to someone's defence". :P

  • @mrcrowly11
    @mrcrowly11 6 ปีที่แล้ว +351

    Jordan Peterson needs to watch this.

    • @CayeDaws
      @CayeDaws 5 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      @@tteabag91 it depends on what you mean by "perspectives".

    • @pumpkinpartysystem
      @pumpkinpartysystem 5 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      Jordan Peterson is a megaweenie

    • @Phreemunny
      @Phreemunny 5 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Kyle Dawson -nicely played. Always amusing to see Peterson’s own quotes used against him.

    • @jmaniak1
      @jmaniak1 5 ปีที่แล้ว +56

      Jordan’s talent is sounding like he’s smart.

    • @CayeDaws
      @CayeDaws 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Phreemunny Thanks for telling me what I did.

  • @Colonel1954Dz
    @Colonel1954Dz 6 ปีที่แล้ว +187

    25:10 Graphic scene of a Christian cross penetrating a David star. Viewer discretion is advised.

    • @leerv.
      @leerv. 6 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      Yeah, got a little smutty there didn't it? :Ppp

    • @stegep99
      @stegep99 6 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      “Ohhh I dont know I dont know I dont know whyyyyyyyyyy ....
      I cant get enough of your loveeee baaaaaaabe”

    • @jonathandiaz3370
      @jonathandiaz3370 6 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Colonel1954Dz Arousing

    • @mmaverick9111
      @mmaverick9111 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      hawt.

    • @MegaChickenfish
      @MegaChickenfish 5 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      Rule 34. No exceptions.

  • @alphamikeomega5728
    @alphamikeomega5728 6 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    Beethoven's 7th Symphony, 2nd Movement, if anyone's wondering.

    • @daleeloph6888
      @daleeloph6888 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ah...lovely lovely Ludwig Van

  • @CHLOCHLOLP
    @CHLOCHLOLP 3 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    I grew up atheist and I remember other kids asking me once how I knew the difference between right and wrong if I don't have the bible to tell me and I was so baffled how they could need the bible for that. I told them something along the lines of if it hurts people, its wrong, if it doesn't, its right (pretty common sense) and I dont remember their response, but yea that was the first time I had a really noteworthy experience with religion. It really stuck out to me that they couldn't inherently tell the difference from right and wrong, as an outsider looking in, it really made no sense to me. Now as an adult I understand why they thought that. They did know the difference from right and wrong intuitively actually, but they didn't trust their own judgement, it seems very obvious now why they, and a lot of people need someone or something else to tell them right from wrong, its weird looking back on that, knowing what I know now. I looked at the world very differently then, I didnt realize how different my upbringing was from theirs, I knew they were religious, and that most people are, but I dont think I really grasped what that was, to me it was like a santa claus for adults and kids, thats really how I thought of it (I also knew santa wasnt real from a young age) and I knew that you werent supposed to break the magic for them, or they would get very upset. I actually pretended to be religious sometimes to fit in up until I was about 12. I just didnt want to hurt my friends feelings or to stick out and have them dislike me I guess. Sometimes I wished my parents were christians so I could have just fit in and lived in blissful ignorance, but Im so glad now that wasnt the case. I actually was quite ignorant of how insidious religion is.

    • @kaptenlemper
      @kaptenlemper 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @Ethnic Nationalist it isn't proof that a god exists, either. That's belief, not fact.

    • @kaptenlemper
      @kaptenlemper 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Ethnic Nationalist simply because there is no scientific evidence to prove the statement. Only belief, which is subjective.

    • @catarinamelchiorgomes8750
      @catarinamelchiorgomes8750 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Ethnic Nationalist god is not your imaginary friend

    • @catarinamelchiorgomes8750
      @catarinamelchiorgomes8750 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @Ethnic Nationalist theories have proofs, god doesn't. And you don't even follow a religion, so why believe? You deists are more disgusting than religious people, because the religious still accept the dogmas, while you make god at your own will.

  • @Eli-dx2uj
    @Eli-dx2uj 5 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    If God (YHWH) were truly all powerful, they'd be capable of judging people as they were, without having to conform to seemingly arbitrary criterion laid out by millenia old texts.

    • @pierrebe4492
      @pierrebe4492 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      And here is why I became agnostic :)

  • @cccaaawww8685
    @cccaaawww8685 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Did religion create morality? No
    Did religion impart many modern morals? Yes
    Do you need to be religious to be moral? No
    Does religion drive some people to lead more moral lives? Yes
    Does religion drive some people to lead less moral lives? Yes

    • @pigeonanimations6118
      @pigeonanimations6118 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Religion did not impart modern morals bruh

    • @Dock284
      @Dock284 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If Christianity never existed the same general moral ideals would still be adopted by the majority of people today (of course without accounting for how the butterfly effect might impact history)

    • @trithos7308
      @trithos7308 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Very easy for a religion to drive you to be less moral when your basis are things like the bible. Some good moral lessons in that. Some morals we discarded for very good reason also drin

  • @TheHigherVoltage
    @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +411

    How could I possibly derive my morals from my local religion, Christianity, when I find much of it's morality to be immoral, unjust, sadistic?

    • @TheHigherVoltage
      @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +62

      Luth, You're backwards. Christian morality is presented as 'priceless artifacts' by believers...but all they're selling is radioactive trinkets that look shiny while it destroys their health and well being.
      But hey, maybe I'm wrong. Let's find out. Is it moral and just to punish an innocent for the crimes of the guilty?

    • @TheHigherVoltage
      @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +72

      Luth, bible myths have bibleGod punishing innocent people for the crimes of the guilty all the time. King David's baby...the first born of Egypt...global flood story logically includes murdering infants...claiming generations after generations will be punished for the crimes of their offspring...the whole adam and eve original sin curse...etc. etc.
      In the real world, there's a whole legal libraries worth of argumentation defining and supporting what a 'miscarriage of justice' is.... primarily the conviction and punishment of a person for a crime they did not commit. ie. unjust.
      But that's 'man's justice', right? Imperfect, unjust, man's justice. I'm sure that if the police went up to your mother and shot her in the head and told you "oh, we caught her sister jaywalking right after we made a public announcement about all jaywalking must stop, so this is justice served" (akin to the King David story)...you'd rejoice and celebrate the objective justice of such an act. After all, that is the justice system of your fictional overlord...and your fictional overlord's suppose to be perfect, so that must be perfect justice. Right?
      Tell me all about how just such a system would be in reality and not just in the confines of your fairytale book.

    • @TheHigherVoltage
      @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      Luth, it's nearly impossible for you to discuss anything with people like me because we don't take your claims of truth at face value. We question. We think. We don't use faith to determine what truth actually is.
      I'm not pounding my fist saying "it's this way". I'm pointing out that no where on the planet, is there any country or legal argument that sells the idea of justice being served by punishing the innocent for the crimes of the guilty. Such a scenario is literally the definition of 'miscarriage of justice'. There's no emotion in stating that fact. It's just a verifiable fact.
      But I understand you have to get emotional and charge me with doing the same. You know that I'm right. You know that punishing an innocent for the crimes of the guilty is not justice by any sane definition of the word. But admitting that fact would undermine the position you've built on faith. So you have to attack me instead of being honest with yourself. I understand completely. Instead of addressing the facts, you have to attack whatever you don't like about how I present them, or me personally, or both. I was a Christian for the first half of my life. I understand how that works.
      In the real world, virtually everyone figures out and understands that punishing an innocent for the crimes of the guilty is not justice. Every legal system on the planet I'm aware of agrees. How is that not a statement of fact concerning 'the real world'?

    • @TheHigherVoltage
      @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      Luth, you sure do like barfing out deflective bullshit and logical fallacies.
      It is unjust to punish an innocent for the crimes of the guilty. It's called 'miscarriage of justice'.
      Don't blame me if you can't admit reality or your sadistic religion preaches the opposite.

    • @TheHigherVoltage
      @TheHigherVoltage 6 ปีที่แล้ว +46

      Luth, Your argument is a logical fallacy called 'special pleading'. Punishing an innocent for the crimes of the guilty is injustice. A miscarriage of justice. Everyone understands this. All you're doing is adding a label, 'atonement' (ie. special pleading) and claiming it gets a pass from logic. It doesn't. All you're doing is justifying injustice by calling it something else.

  • @nikdoesstuff9338
    @nikdoesstuff9338 4 ปีที่แล้ว +264

    Reminds me of a fight I had with my dad because he claimed judeo-Christian values ended slavery in the US
    That still remains one of the biggest load of bs I've ever heard

    • @NA-vz9ko
      @NA-vz9ko 3 ปีที่แล้ว +61

      I could accept the argument that some groups of people inspired by specific teachings of Christianity (Quakers) contributed to the eventual widespread condemnation of slavery, as much as I’m willing to admit that Christianity contributed to building a the system of slavery in the first place by citing rules to engage in slavery as written in their holy Bible.
      “Your male and female slaves are to be from the nations around you; you may purchase male and female slaves.” - Leviticus 25:44 CSB

    • @LarsPallesen
      @LarsPallesen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +51

      Then what values were in place when they started slavery in the US? Chinese Buddhist?

    • @wiwaxiasilver827
      @wiwaxiasilver827 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      @Ethnic Nationalist Where is he/she lying? Is that line not in the book? Did different American Christians not fight at both sides for or against slavery in the US civil war?

    • @wiwaxiasilver827
      @wiwaxiasilver827 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

      @Ethnic Nationalist Is it? I don’t think I saw a line in both the OT and NT that explicitly forbade or went against slavery, and the OT, as we see from examples like that Leviticus line above, at least appears to have condoned or treated slavery as a given, setting laws for how to own and manage slaves if not outright supported it. Even Jesus himself appears to have condoned the existence of slavery, telling them to obey their masters although he did tell the masters to give them basic human decency. So overall, I don’t think Christianity was actually against slavery, especially since pro-slavery people were able to quote freely from the Christian religious text as support of their slaveowning, including appropriation of the Curse of Ham idea.

    • @wiwaxiasilver827
      @wiwaxiasilver827 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      @Ethnic Nationalist Oh, in the least the OT is very partial to Israelites, made up racist backstories for other Canaanites and justified slaughtering or enslaving them. The only difference is the concept of African slaves didn’t occur to them, but since they differentiated non-Israelites they don’t exactly make a good case for racism either. It would be Paul that reached out to the gentiles, and again none of them decided to explicitly do away with slavery, be it motivated by racism or ethnicity.

  • @SimonOliverGLD
    @SimonOliverGLD 6 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    The most delicious fruit can be rooted in a pile of manure. Being rooted in a religious past does not make humanism part of that past, it is the redemption of that past. The beautiful arising from the shit.

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 6 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      *The most delicious fruit can be rooted in a pile of manure.*
      Nice analogy.

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 6 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      *You think a Humanistic driven world is a "delicious fruit"? Not much aware of history, are you?*
      Simon explicitly mentioned "redemption of that past" which seems to be a very clear statement of awareness of history.
      But forget that your point for the moment. We're talking of humanism here: What history are you referring to where bad things have been done thanks to humanistic ideology? On the face of it this seems to be a rubbish statement. But I did a quick Google search to see what you may be referring to. I can find no reference to any atrocities done in the name of humanism. I then went looking for individual murders. A few individual murders in the name of humanism wouldn't make your case at all, but at least I could see that there may be some basis for your remarks. But no, the only hits were about humanists wanting to abolish the death penalty.
      This is the second post in these threads where you have accused someone of being naive. In both cases you provide no evidence whatsoever, and in both cases you seem to ignore the entire context of the post you're replying to. It seems a lot like you're entirely full of shit.

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 6 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      *I must allow the humanists to define it for themselves. So I read the Humanist Manifesto.*
      Excellent.
      *Delicious fruit?*
      Clearly that's an analogy, with the point being that something good can come from something shit.
      But that's a distraction. You're responding to my questioning about your statement "Not much aware of history, are you?". I tried to look up this history that you seem to think is so obvious it doesn't even need stating, but that history seemed not to exist. I called you out for making accusations devoid of any evidence whatsoever. Your reply has still provided no evidence whatsoever, and has only attempted to divert conversation to whether the original analogy was too flowery. I'm happy to discuss that, but first either clearly state then provide some evidence for your accusation, or withdraw it.
      (For anyone reading, I mentioned a previous post made by LuthAMF that gave me the impression he's a troll, but I'm happy to say he replied again to that thread with a post that I thought was well-explained and reasonable).

    • @lil_weasel219
      @lil_weasel219 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@JohnSmith-fz1ih humanism is the source of the idea and perception that humans are a measure of everything and everything was made for man. Such a worldview was the fuel for the destruction of nature via agricultural practices which require the removal of naturally occuring vegetation and limitless animal killing for fun and trophies in colonial countries especially, and, in the hands of most, it was also the fuel for colonial racism and the justification for colonialism. Its one of the most antropocentric ideas ever

    • @JohnSmith-fz1ih
      @JohnSmith-fz1ih 5 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      @@lil_weasel219 *humanism is the source of the idea and perception that humans are a measure of everything and everything was made for man.*
      Not only is that not true, it's hard to imagine it being much further from the truth. How did you come to think this is what humanism is?
      Reading your statement about 'everything was made for man' immediately made me think of religion; particularly the creation story of the Abrahamic religions. And this is the complete opposite of what humanism says. At the core of humanism is the principle that evidence and critical thinking are the ways to understand reality, and the rejection of superstition and unfounded supernatural claims. Like I said; the complete opposite of what you claim here.
      *...it was also the fuel for colonial racism and the justification for colonialism.*
      More rubbish. Humanism teaches that all humans are equal, and should be treated as such. For a second time, what you blame humanism for is actually far more closely related to religion. Racism and colonialism happen when people become convinced that they have divine warrant. They are doing God's work, and the tribes/colonies they are taking over are not fully human. Again, this is the complete opposite of everything humanism stands for.
      It's funny - if I replace 'humanism' in your post with 'religion' or 'Christianity' it's suddenly quite accurate (at least, as close as such generalisms can be).

  • @anthonypc1
    @anthonypc1 5 ปีที่แล้ว +186

    Always wondered why, in his sermon on the mount in Matthew 5, Jesus INSISTS that we must NOT think he's come to change the slightest word of the old Jewish law of Moses and the Pharisees, and Jesus threatens that any man "who sets aside ONE off the LEAST of the old commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the Kingdom of Heaven"...
    And then a few lines later in the same speech the guy says 6:51 "You've heard that it was said, 'Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.' But I tell you...."
    UM Excuse me Jesus, that sounds like you ARE changing more than a jot or tittle... you wanna be thrown in the river of fire too Mr. Cheesus ? hhmm?

    • @chrissonofpear1384
      @chrissonofpear1384 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      It's possible he had to subtly undermine it. But then again, perhaps not.

    • @vallisdaemonumofficial
      @vallisdaemonumofficial 5 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      I agree with the theory that Jesus was just a proto-hippie, and that he & his followers were just intoxicated, thinking he was magic.
      It's not like Charles Manson didn't do something similar..

    • @mensetens6391
      @mensetens6391 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@vallisdaemonumofficial Oh, come. Manson didn't die for the sake of others. He made others die for his sake.

    • @Nognamogo
      @Nognamogo 5 ปีที่แล้ว +39

      @@mensetens6391 Jesus didn't die for anyone else either. He died because he was executed for starting a cult that threatened Roman rule, then people made up a story to attach meaning to his death, which resulted in a religion.

    • @mensetens6391
      @mensetens6391 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Nognamogo _He died because he was executed for starting a cult that threatened Roman rule_
      That was a very nice example of an assertion without evidence.
      _then people made up a story to attach meaning to his death, which resulted in a religion_
      As was that. Strike two.
      _Jesus didn't die for anyone else either_
      Now, here we agree. I didn't say 'die for someone else.' When I mentioned 'die for the sake of others,' I *said* 'die for the sake of others,' which is a case of a small change making a big difference. He died that we might see the power of God's love, that though it seems helpless it is really far more powerful than hate or human selfish ambition and shows us our way to God (whom we refuse in our false pride), who forgives and draws us through invitation to himself. He never demands, never orders, but draws in love.

  • @ElevatorEleven
    @ElevatorEleven 6 ปีที่แล้ว +469

    Whenever I hear someone saying that Christianity invented something intrinsic to human nature like morality and that there was no morality or true good society before it, I just imagine Ancient China looking up and going "hm? sorry what was that?"

    • @tijuanaforeplay8232
      @tijuanaforeplay8232 6 ปีที่แล้ว +120

      Oh god I had some psycho write three comments in a row 750 words each screeching obscenities all because I told someone else the Ancient Greeks have more to take credit for than "Judeo-Christianity" when it comes to the West.

    • @Ergeniz
      @Ergeniz 6 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      +Zempath What happened after you realized this?

    • @Aymeltea
      @Aymeltea 6 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      I hope you'll find a better partner.

    • @hectorvega621
      @hectorvega621 5 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Sumerian comes to my mind

    • @chrissonofpear1384
      @chrissonofpear1384 5 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      They hardly THINK about China...

  • @devonisboss9277
    @devonisboss9277 3 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    Listen, IDK if you'll ever see this, but i wanted to tell you that your "departure from theism" video honestly helped me a lot. Thank you so much.

  • @KAOS-rz1lb
    @KAOS-rz1lb 3 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    theramin you bring me peace and you help me break loose the shackles that Islam locked me into
    im still trying to heal from it but i am healing

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 4 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Around the 10 minute mark: that's the thing I can never understand about religious people. They say the bible is the foundation of their morality - or even *everyone's* morality - and when you point out they are morally opposed to slavery or murdering disobedient children, same-sex lovers, adulterers, blasphemers and unbelievers they acknowledge that those things are immoral acts - and yet *continue* to claim that their holy book is the source of their morality rather than rejecting it as a flawed source and questioning anything else it claims.
    Frankly, if I picked up a book on, say, "Life in the UK" and could see that there are numerous bits that are clearly factually incorrect, I wouldn't be inclined to believe anything else it told me about life in the UK. I mean, it _might_ have something correct, but how would I know? I'd have to fact-check *everything* in it to be sure - and it'd probably be easier just to forget the book entirely and find out for myself. Why can't religious people who already acknowledge that the bible contains immoral things presented as "God's Moral Law" (TM) just say, "OK, this book's clearly rubbish" and move on?

    • @KomatsuHB215LC-1
      @KomatsuHB215LC-1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Same sex lovers are immoral? Wtf?

    • @_tripalong
      @_tripalong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Fear of hell

  • @HassanRadwan133
    @HassanRadwan133 6 ปีที่แล้ว +208

    Your videos should be shown in schools & colleges all over the world.

    • @gurlpersonheretoday9498
      @gurlpersonheretoday9498 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hassan Radwan AGREE!!!!!

    • @bjornmendizabaldrums
      @bjornmendizabaldrums 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Absolutely.

    • @Moonlight-ju4qi
      @Moonlight-ju4qi 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Nice surprise seeing you here Mr.Hassan! Much love and respect!

    • @OmniversalInsect
      @OmniversalInsect 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Problem is they are too long for lessons really, even 10 minute videos take up so much time in school

    • @JustinWHY-zz7gz
      @JustinWHY-zz7gz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I dont think they would because in schools (at my 3 past schools i went to in my life atleast) they teach religion atleast an hour a week

  • @ryanlafollette4819
    @ryanlafollette4819 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    'Being an entirely voluntary exercise, the crucifixion story amounts to nothing more than a divine flirtation with sadomasochism.' I've never heard it said better.

  • @BlackEpyon
    @BlackEpyon 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    The fact that secular humanism doesn't account for life's meaning of purpose, means that your life's meaning or purpose belongs to you alone. What more could you ask for?

  • @Gandaleon
    @Gandaleon 6 ปีที่แล้ว +240

    As a student in school, a teacher sent me out of the classroom, because I dared disagree with her notion, that Christianity was the foundation of western morality and that there was no morality without it.
    Now, before my family moved to this country, I grew up in a place and time, where there religion had no influence in the state at all - let's say, practicing religion was not encouraged and churches didn't get any support - and atheism was (and still is) as widely spread like barely anywhere else in the world.
    Nobody in my family is Christian, I wasn't baptized and neither were my parents, my siblings or my cousins. I never even heard of Jesus before I moved to the west. But we still have a sense of morality and that's why I knew the teacher was wrong and I opposed her.
    Now, the cherry on top of this story is this: the class I attended was supposed to be about ethics. It is a class especially for kids, who did NOT want to attend the Bible class (because, yeah, that's a thing that needs to exist).

    • @spacedoohicky
      @spacedoohicky 6 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      That sounds weird. When I went to school they didn't have a Bible class, or an ethics class. I am American, but I've only heard of that existing in private Christian schools.

    • @Gandaleon
      @Gandaleon 6 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      It has been and still is standard in West Germany. Well, actually the name of the class is "religion" and I think, you *do* learn, about other religions, as well.
      And noone HAS to attend. But you have to attend something as a substitue.

    • @CheapSkateGamer96
      @CheapSkateGamer96 5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@Gandaleon Weird how we have this view of Germany in the US as a secular paradise/hellscape (depending on your view on religion), but Germans have religious literacy classes in public school and actual political parties dedicated to certain Christian denominations.

    • @mrsuspicious1743
      @mrsuspicious1743 5 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@CheapSkateGamer96 To be fair, what is the difference between "a place where, if you believe, you can be open about it, and if you don't, you can be open about it" and a secular paradise?

    • @fifthcolumn388
      @fifthcolumn388 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I suppose the argument isn’t that you can’t be moral, rather than there’s no compelling reason to be moral beyond your own boundaries which you can break because you have set them, and there’s no fear of inherent retribution for this act as there would be if you were disobeying a prescribed morality from a higher authority.

  • @lnsflare1
    @lnsflare1 5 ปีที่แล้ว +110

    I think that the secular equivalent of "sin" may be "thought crime."

    • @LarsPallesen
      @LarsPallesen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      How so? How does the secular world condemn and punish thought crimes?

    • @lnsflare1
      @lnsflare1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      @@LarsPallesen How does a god, as opposed to their mortal clergy, actually punish a sin in any provable way?
      That said, authoritarian dictatorships tend to be very heavy on punishing thought crimes pretty harshly.

    • @dfwazefefvdsfszdfgsdfgsdzf3714
      @dfwazefefvdsfszdfgsdfgsdzf3714 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@lnsflare1 You're lucky if it's merely considered thought crime, 1984 style. Human dictators are more merciful than imaginary Gods.

    • @augustuslunasol10thapostle
      @augustuslunasol10thapostle 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @Phoenix Victoria it does make sense never even occurred to me such that it was a theocracy because it was so detached from religion that I didn't even see the theocratic elements in it big brother being an all knowing God everything is monitored the hour of hate and all monotonous things damn

  • @SugarBunsHuns
    @SugarBunsHuns 5 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    You're a monstrously underrated fetus; you need 7.5 billion subscribers.

  • @davidbentley4731
    @davidbentley4731 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It is amazing that theists still trot out this rubbish despite such obvious flaws and easy rebuttals. Looking at you Jordan Peterson. I suspect it’s because they don’t actually believe in god but are grasping at anything else they can find to justify their religion.

    • @robwhite3241
      @robwhite3241 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Why do you think they don't believe in god? How is it any different than pointing out flaws in your beliefs? Unless what you believe in is flawless, then I would like to hear about it.

    • @davidbentley4731
      @davidbentley4731 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@robwhite3241 well firstly I don’t know whether they believe in god or not and each person’s beliefs will be unique to them. But often my experience is that these sorts of arguments are somewhat of a fig leaf. As for debunking my beliefs I’m always very open to being challenged. I at least try to have beliefs that are internally consistent.

    • @robwhite3241
      @robwhite3241 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@davidbentley4731 But why does it seem atheist are more open to the fact of there being a multiverse or there being a matrix? Im not saying you believe in such things, but I'm wondering why it seems more likely for an atheist to believe in there own thoughts and theories than except that there could be a higher power god?

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@robwhite3241 I'm an atheist and that's because of something I don't believe... gods. I think the ideas like the Multiverse or Matrix are seldom being preached as dogma that anyone would base their life on and expect others to do the same. God's are different. I think that all the things you listed from Higher Power to Matrix are equally inane, ill-defined and not worth considering as answers to any mystery until someone trots them out for examination. To me they are woo. People speculating mindlessly. So folk are desperate for answers and damned well feel entitled to them! I fully expect to die with many unanswered questions, and I believe that has been the fate of everyone so far.

  • @readingdino711
    @readingdino711 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Everyone that I asked why we need religion (which focuses only on christianity) as a subject in school always said the same things.
    "Kids wouldn't have any morals without religion."
    "It's the most important part of school." (Pretty sure that's learning to write and read.)
    "You have to learn about all religions and accept them, so we need it." (We only learn about one religion and are told not to accept any people with other believes, as they are all satanists.)
    "You only colour in things anyways, so it's just to relax." (Not remotely true, we usually only wrote stuff down, read the Bible or had tests. Relaxing can only be done at home and more free time would be way better, as maybe then kids would finally have free time and not spent all of it doing homework.)
    And so on. It's so stupid. Ethics would be way better, but no, then kids would start worshipping satan apparently.

  • @Troubleshooter125
    @Troubleshooter125 6 ปีที่แล้ว +85

    This was a biggie, TT. One of the most repeated claims I hear from believers is that all morality derives from their god and their religious belief, yet their holy book, supposedly the source of this morality, contains unspeakable violence, misogyny, and homophobia, all of which go unjustified, other than to say, Yahweh sez do it THIS way OR ELSE. If you'll permit me to draw a parallel between morality and decency, allow me to cite the following:
    _Human decency is not derived from religion. It precedes it._
    -- Christopher Hitchens
    P.S.: NICE use of the 2nd movement of the Beethoven 7th, a long-time fave of mine!

  • @HumanLiberty
    @HumanLiberty 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    My father had a colleague who openly told my father he would do those things if not for his Christianity. I wonder how prevalent that is.

    • @HumanLiberty
      @HumanLiberty 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Replying to Sknabc…

    • @moniqueloomis9772
      @moniqueloomis9772 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Incredibly. A morally mature individual gets to the point where they won't do these things because they don't want them done to them. Not because their God will send them to the Bad Place.

  • @LucreDenouncer
    @LucreDenouncer 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Ben Shapiro should watch this video.

  • @Mysticus11
    @Mysticus11 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Theodepndency! 🙌🏾 Will it ever make it into the DSM? 🧐

  • @Esther-1914
    @Esther-1914 4 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    TheraminTrees. I love your shows so much. I've been struggling with this idea for years now. This is such an informative video because for me it confirms that somewhere along the way, humanity got derailed and I think I understand now. Matrilineal cultures survived for thousands of years in a sustainable manner. Now that we are near extinction -- who's ruling but amoral, narcissistic, patriarchal Judeo-Christian men, while the women have become all but invisible. This doesn't apply to all men, but the rich and powerful are among the most abusive. Nothing could be worse for the planet. #InTheNameOfGawd religion has hijacked all common sense, intuition, imagination, and the natural. They call themselves "moral" yet somehow religion figures they are exempt from moral laws such as reporting child sex abuse. 🤦‍♀️

    • @TheraminTrees
      @TheraminTrees  4 ปีที่แล้ว +36

      In terms of inequalities rooted in Christian ideologies, there's so much wrapped up in the creation story right at the start isn't there. That uneven genesis tale is like the initial mistake in the knitting that distorts the whole pattern. So much of what comes later refers back to that. Anthropology was part of my first degree and it was invigorating to read about the tremendous variations in community structure that have existed - matrilineal and patrilineal - and the array of approaches to personal relationships, some of them achingly charming in their reverence to humanity, and frequently celebrating difference. It feels like some of the world's major religious groups have acted like steam rollers across the globe, flattening and extinguishing so many precious flowers.

    • @Esther-1914
      @Esther-1914 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@TheraminTrees I agree completely. I keep hoping humanity might take the helm and turn this ship around somehow. Thanks again. 💗

  • @PsycheTrance65
    @PsycheTrance65 2 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    This video reminded me of the time my mom said "but where did they learn good morals?" upon learning that my cousin was marrying someone who wasn't following a religion. Kinda shookt me to realize there really are people who think being a good person can only be taught through religious scripture

    • @PsycheTrance65
      @PsycheTrance65 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sentinelUSA05 I wasn't really talking about the philosophical/religious implications of being a "good person" on my initial comment.
      It was just disbelief that a person thought that someone raised without religion wouldn't have a concept of good or bad.
      And yeah, a "100% good person" most likely doesnt exist. Imperfection is part of being human.
      But I'd still consider someone whose bad actions don't outweigh the good that they've done a "good person" in general.

    • @PsycheTrance65
      @PsycheTrance65 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@sentinelUSA05 haha i tend to oversimplify, and im probably gonna end up doing so again.
      Some animals exhibit altruism despite not having the concept of religion. I assume its the same for someone who still does good things outside of spirituality. They do it because benefits the community. It may come as a detriment to them, but it could improve the community as a whole. This is probably a little more muddied now that towns arent as tight-knit as they used to be, but its just a guess based on experience as someone who isn't really religious.
      Also I mentioned a persons good actions outweighing their bad as criteria so I think your example of Jeff Bezos already kind of fails to meet that imo. Yes he donates to charity, but Amazon is notorious for its terrible treatment of its employees and other shady stuff.
      But hey im just a rando on the internet. At this point i think we're still limited to what we know about a person to determine whether they're "good" or not.

    • @iswitchedsidesforthiscat
      @iswitchedsidesforthiscat 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The next question gotta be asked: where were morals before judaism/christianity? Religious people are weird

  • @CteCrassus
    @CteCrassus 6 ปีที่แล้ว +118

    Humanism didn't come out of Judeo-Christian tradition; it came *in spite of it,* clawing its way out of religious miasma, gasping for air for every hard-fought inch as countless inquisitors and moral guardians harried it every step along the way in an attempt to beat it back into compliance. That so many zealots would try and appropriate of the values they fought so hard against as if they were their own all along sickens me to my very core, for it is naught but a mad and desperate scramble to steal the good will garnered by their old foe in an attempt to keep the waning embers of their relevance alive.

    • @mensetens6391
      @mensetens6391 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Desiderius Erasmus.

    • @aaronsilver-pell411
      @aaronsilver-pell411 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      I would agree that what you call "humanism" came "in spite of it" but then again just because it calls itself "humanism" does not mean it is necessarily very good for humans. religions encourage families and group cohesion at the very least. "humanism" seems to also encourage cohesion of a sort....but not families and it seems to put women at the center of everything.

    • @mrsuspicious1743
      @mrsuspicious1743 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@aaronsilver-pell411 Yes, humanism is absolutely best for humanity. This obsolete idea of "family values" being inherently good outside of an irrational, emotional level is misguided *at best,* and any ideology that encourages the weakness in the human psyche formally known as tribalism should be regarded as suspicious for that reason alone. Remember: Co-operation between different groups creates things like The Concert of Europe or the EU, some of the greatest achievements of some of the greatest civilisations in human history. Conflict between different groups created the Holocaust, and, ironically, considering it's promoters are often white racists, is the reason there are so many of the Muslims they can't shut up about in Europe.

    • @aaronsilver-pell411
      @aaronsilver-pell411 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mrsuspicious1743 If your humanism is not inclusive and supportive of families then there is probably something fucked up with it. and btw, the EU is a dysfunctional mess.

    • @aaronsilver-pell411
      @aaronsilver-pell411 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mrsuspicious1743 Family= terrible, bad, obsolete, misguided, absolutely bad for humanity. right. Ok. gotcha.

  • @bdf2718
    @bdf2718 6 ปีที่แล้ว +92

    Ingersoll and Paine. Two of my favourite freethinkers.

  • @Mars-ev7qg
    @Mars-ev7qg 4 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Even wolves have been known to allow injured pack members to feed at kills. They have also been obsessed to defend injured pack members from other Wolf packs and predators such as bears and mountain lions

    • @d4-v1d22
      @d4-v1d22 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @Ethnic Nationalist
      No they don’t. Humans wonder how we got here, and at some point came up with God. Animals don’t. They have their own sense of right and wrong.

  • @fishconnoisseur
    @fishconnoisseur หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Most disappointing thing here is the use of “Judeo-Christian” when this applies heavily to Islam too. I understand your choice to narrow and make use of the terms adopted by those you’re targeting, however there is a level of sacrificed informational value, no?

  • @piesho
    @piesho 6 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Brilliant, as usual. Specially the part where you explain the conflicts within the so-called Judeo-Christian values.

  • @dark_attribute
    @dark_attribute 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As someone raised in, hurt by, and still struggling with Christianity, this video makes me want to throw up. Thank you.

    • @acceptable1514
      @acceptable1514 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      what you mean "hurt by"? Does it mean you weren't allowed to do degenerate things like ur friends? lol cope

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@acceptable1514 Oh, how nice! Christian concern, compassion and kindness on display. Judging not only the Commentor but the commentor's friends too. How can anyone doubt the product of Jesus' teaching?

    • @ponponpatapon9670
      @ponponpatapon9670 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@acceptable1514 christian compassion on full display here, using the classic "U only want to sin!" COMBINED with twitter lingo! revolutionary

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    17:19 indiscriminate revenge:
    When police finds a suspect and parades them in front of the press, and they are then sentenced as guilty, despite there being no real evidence, because it is more important to find _someone_ guilty instead of _the_ guilty. This is sometimes referred to as "giving the relatives of a murder victim closure", and when the injustice is later revealed, those that defend the innocent (the condemned suspect) are often vilified for "opening old wounds". Sometimes the rationale is that the person the police pointed to was a known criminal, so "probably guilty of something".
    And that is not even with a willing subject, like the whipping boys (who mayor may not have existed) who took beatings for a prince or young king.

  • @HenrikGamborg
    @HenrikGamborg 5 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Isnt the word "Sin" appropriated from the greek word "Syn", which means "missing the mark". So we would have a description of it. Yet another word overtaken by religion?

  • @Unknown-sg4tv
    @Unknown-sg4tv 5 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    7:31 The Bible is full of errors/contradictions
    If the Bible was written by God it would have no errors/contradictions and
    Science would have already proven it to be true by now.

    • @Unknown-sg4tv
      @Unknown-sg4tv 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      4:06 Morality is observed by primatologists
      Proving that our morality came from primates

    • @Unknown-sg4tv
      @Unknown-sg4tv 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Animal studies
      Frans De Waal talk/ articles
      www.youtube.com/watch?v=GcJxR...

    • @AlexMint
      @AlexMint 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I do think it's worth noting that none of the translators of Jewish historical texts have been Jewish, and so transliterations tend to be really great at butchering texts. Christians are too proud to take the word of people whose job it is to learn Hebrew on translation duties, so they do it themselves, badly.

    • @sidney4022
      @sidney4022 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@AlexMint one of the first translators of the New Testament was William Tyndale was proficient in Hebrew and Greek, the original languages of the Old and New testament.

  • @starkcontrast8480
    @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +44

    THANK YOU!!! This video is much needed at least for my sanity and I’m certain the sanity of others as well.
    This seems to be an apologetic argument that refuses to die, and is becoming wildly popularized by Jordan Peterson. (Clinical psychologist of Canada)
    I find it all too infuriating and endlessly frustrating to point out the moral failures of religion and where secular humanism is succeeding, only to have all the foundational work behind humanism ripped out from underneath it!
    The tactics of claiming credit for humanistic morality and saddling it with the flaws of dogmatic religion is ridiculously dishonest and completely unwarranted!
    There’s a Christopher Hitchens quote that I can’t find but will attempt to paraphrase, (The religious try to project onto us their faults and beliefs that we refuse to share.)

    • @starkcontrast8480
      @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      LuthAMF
      You’re quite welcome to hunt for the full quote, if you find it please comment it below.
      However I feel you’ve completely missed the point.
      I can’t speak for all atheists, simply because we’re not a homogeneous group, but one that is greatly diverse.
      We have no universal texts or “holy” figureheads.
      For myself though, I don’t simply parrot back the words said by others or what I’ve reading in their books.
      I speak from a position of understanding and deep thought on the matters of religion, science, politics, ethics, and morality.
      Feel free to disagree, but don’t expect to get away with such condescension un-rebutted.

    • @starkcontrast8480
      @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      LuthAMF
      Oh, my opening paragraph was quite sincere.
      I’ve been looking for the direct Hitchens quote for a while, and if you find I’d very much like to reference it in future discussions.
      So if you truly think that level of honesty is snobbish, that might explain your infatuation with religion.

    • @starkcontrast8480
      @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      LuthAMF
      By “truncating history” I could only assume you’re conflating modern secular humanism with the forced atheism of communist Russia in the late 20th century.
      These two are very separate entities.
      The forced political atheism of Stalin’s Russia was a pseudo-religion in and of itself.
      It was also enforced by the state, although there were still plenty of Churches who were still allowed their regular services.
      Modern Secular Humanism is nothing like that, it only seeks to help those who leave religion and are persecuted for it.
      Most Humanist organizations are merely seeking to build a community and support structure for those who don’t find kinship with the religious.
      Many SH groups lobby for protection of Church State Separation, but then again, many Religious (Christian and others) organizations do the same.
      So I don’t know what slippery bslope propaganda you’ve been fed or are trying to push, but no one I’d recognize as a modern secular humanist is pushing for the forced de-conversion or extermination of the religious majority.

    • @starkcontrast8480
      @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      LuthAMF
      Ah, so your vague comment was meant to be in support of your position, thank you for the clarification 👌🏼
      I’m well aware of Christianity’s mixed history of peace and brutal war.
      Thankfully the Enlightenment came along to castrate the Church and it’s previously unregulated and unquestioned power.
      I’m so happy that America was founded on enlightenment principles, as the first truly secular country in history, what a precedent!
      The American constitution has stopped Christianity from running amok inside the democratic process, and protects religious minorities and other Christians from themselves.
      And with the Treaty of Tripoli stating clearly and without question,
      “The government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.”,
      Settled any argument attempting to twist this fine secular nation, retroactively, into a theocracy.

    • @starkcontrast8480
      @starkcontrast8480 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      LuthAMF
      I’m uncertain what form of criticism you’re attempting here.
      But similar criticism could be lobbed at Christianity with its innumerable sects and denominations.
      Yet they DO go around boasting about their latest error, but they try to call it “Truth” or “Divinely inspired revelation”.
      From the Pope, to Martin Luther, to southern baptist reformations.
      All thought they had the “Absolute Truth”, or “knew” they were in personal contact with God.
      If you’d like to have a conversation about our different viewpoints, I’d be happy to.
      I’ve never meant my messages to be combative, but when two diametrically opposed positions meet, conflict is usually not far behind.
      Especially if each think the other to be unreasonable or unreachable.

  • @alarmlessRifleman
    @alarmlessRifleman ปีที่แล้ว +8

    As a man who had lived the majority of his life as an atheist and is currently in the process of converting to Judaism, I really appreciate this kind of though-provoking videos. Everyone in their right mind needs to hear the criticism of their religion.
    As for me, the humanistic values such as freedom, acceptance, equality and scientific researches will always be above anything else. I have been a type of person who would rush to help one in need and defend the oppressed groups (such as LGBTQ+), and I remain that way. I didn't need a religion to be a moral person before, my personal experience was enough; and nothing changes now, I strive to be a moral person and help others around me on my own account.

  • @GenesisTheKitty
    @GenesisTheKitty 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Something I asked a lot as a kid in response to the absolutism of being saved by Jesus, or more specifically not saved, was "What happens to the people who never meet missionaries and never learn about Jesus?". My parents struggled to give me a satisfactory answer. They'd tell me about individual stories of people deep in the middle of Africa seeing Jesus in dreams and starting churches. They also said that God is stamped on our hearts at birth, so actually anybody who doesn't believe is choosing not to. Then I would ask why we need missionaries if God is stamped on each person's heart. It always seemed to go in circles and I never got a satisfying answer. I know why now.

  • @timhallas4275
    @timhallas4275 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    To the Christian, the character named Jesus Christ represents the path to self love. The relationship with Jesus, is the relationship with the self. In a sense, it allows the Christian to assume himself to be made clean, simply by absolving himself of all sin. This arrogance is born of selfishness, that is programmed into children by priests and parents. They are told that they are born as sinners, but hold the power to become sin free. They are convinced of their special status AS A CHRISTIAN over all others.. Herein lies the corruption of the mind, and the beginning of a lifetime of selfish pride.

  • @diskgrinder
    @diskgrinder 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    The New Testament is to the Old Testament, as bollocks is to slightly more bollocks

  • @bottlesparks1024
    @bottlesparks1024 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Christianity was about social control, and subjugating disparate groups into a controllable whole. Obedience is not religion.

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Actually it's about submission so you can pretend to know things, that you actually do not know.

  • @alterego8496
    @alterego8496 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    What annoys me the most about this entire thing is that it is meant to be a Christian propaganda and disregard other religions. I don't actually disregard higher power.
    Those other religions were not savages. In fact Abrahamic societies had far more wars and needless cruelty than others.
    It also puts West as frontier of morality. There are many nonWestern tribal societies that are far more peaceful . Like that of native American, some were of course barbaric but most were peaceful with little to no full blown wars, LGBT rights and a sense of community.
    This ethno centrism combined with religious centrism is what annoys me the most

  • @ViktirE1
    @ViktirE1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    If someone taught you Jesus is a victim and not a conquerer, then you had a bad teacher and you clealry dont understand the point of it all. Good luck explaining it to others. Blind guides...

  • @kakyoin3836
    @kakyoin3836 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    This video is unbelievably good. That Jesus could not have been a victim blew my mind. Why didn't I see that myself ?

    • @serenityssolace
      @serenityssolace 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I don't know how you couldn't see it. It's common sense. As a christian I always saw it like that. But I am not sure what he meant later on with the sadomasochistic part. I think Jesus suffered for ourselves from his own choice. And that is very inspiring and honorable.

    • @KomatsuHB215LC-1
      @KomatsuHB215LC-1 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@serenityssolace He said "Yet not my will, but yours"

    • @valroniclehre193
      @valroniclehre193 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@serenityssolace That sacrifice losses its meaning when you realize the entire set of events was his fault to begin with.

  • @jacobb8397
    @jacobb8397 6 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Fantastic topic, one of the few channels that convince me to stay on this platform.

  • @FrankLightheart
    @FrankLightheart 6 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    YES! Thank you! This is what I've been trying to tell people!
    Religion doesn't define morality, it's secular thought that develops morality, then when religious people realize the truth of a secular moral value, they claim it to be their own!

    • @FrankLightheart
      @FrankLightheart 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      First: Your god has to exist before he can do anything.
      Second: Morality is shaped by people and the realities of the environment they inhabit. Simply laying down laws and having the power to enforce them does not make your moral pronouncements moral.

    • @FrankLightheart
      @FrankLightheart 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      First prove that your god is all-knowing and that these moral laws given by your religious leaders are not just made up by other people who CLAIM to be speaking the word of an infallible god.
      It's pretty telling when secular ethics result in better outcomes than the moral laws given in holy texts. Abolition, freedom of speech and religion, equality of race, gender, and sexual orientation, protection of children from rape and parental abuse: none of these are values held by the Bible or Quran. These are all SECULAR values that religions have retroactively claimed as their own.
      A god approving of the conquest and rape of underage girls does not make the action moral. It violates their bodily autonomy and does long-term damage to them both physically and mentally. If we care about the health and well-being of other people, this is wrong and a pronouncement from your god doesn't change that.

    • @FrankLightheart
      @FrankLightheart 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I got news for you: if authority is all you value, then you don't really value morality.
      See, morality is concerned with actions and the consequences they have on other people. Humans must share this world with other humans and a level of codependence is necessary to survive. We say hitting is wrong because striking another person causes pain. It's inflicting unwanted damage and so we discourage the activity.
      But authority figures can make laws decoupled from the effects they have on other people. It might make laws against murder, but it might also make laws allowing slavery. Obedience becomes more important than the effect. Even if the laws in question were to definitively make society dysfunctional and miserable, the subjects would still be compelled to obey at the behest of the authority.
      +finalfantasy8911 Your god does not prohibit homosexuality because of any inherently negative effects of the activity, but rather because he simply does not approve of it and will punish people for engaging in it. The consequences come from HIM, not from the activity itself. Were he not to have anything against homosexuality, we, as a species and as a society, would suffer no ill effects from it and would, indeed, also enjoy many benefits for the increased freedom we'd have in society.
      Oh, and my list of secular values are not empty assertions. I challenge you to find anything in the Bible that expressly communicates any of those values.

  • @Aymeltea
    @Aymeltea 6 ปีที่แล้ว +58

    YES YES YES YESSSSSSS!
    A new video, a new learning experience.
    Thank you 💜

    • @Aymeltea
      @Aymeltea 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      OK, I have different points to address:
      The first one, just because you know it by age of 8, doesn't mean everyone else does.
      Not everyone retain/process/analyse/ knowledge in the same manner.
      You might get an idea from 1 video, others may need 10.
      More importantly, this video isn't just for you, in fact, I don't think it is even intended for atheists (although it is interesting/fun and can be educational), but more for those who are stuck in the middle, confused, where such videos can help a person clarify their thoughts beliefs and move on.
      The second point, your definition of atheism is wrong: atheism is saying you don't believe in god for the lack of sufficient evidence.
      If you believe that God does not exist, that is a totally different matter (and the burden of proof is on you to substantiate your claim.) So that is an important distinction.
      The third point, where I actually agree with you. I tend to dislike most pro-atheist tone and stance (Sam Harris to name an example), like we need to move on, but we also need to tackle this in a more tactful and useful manner other than 'lashing back in resentment'.
      The fourth point, you are being too judgemental. Just like so many people have car accidents, recover, and move on with their life, there are those who go through such an experience and become an advocate/activist in that area. Such thing apply to every field.
      So while I agree with you that the approach is not suitable, by no means it is not needed. Just like theists preach, atheists will preach too.
      Optimal? Maybe not, but shutting down one side because you think it is "obvious" is hardly a convincing or even a rationale argument.
      Have a good one mate,
      p.s. it has been a while since I watched the video, so I'm not sure about TT's position and claims made in the video. I'm merely addressing the points you've raised.
      So if he defined atheism in the way you projected then both of you are wrong. If he did claim that no gods exist, then the burden of proof is on him to make that claim (which is a difficult one, and to be honest, rather...pointless in my opinion, but then again.. that is who I am) I just want people to get along and move on.

  • @teehee4096
    @teehee4096 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I love that you have a patron named "Joder" 😂 that's fuck in Spanish fyi!

  • @FactStorm
    @FactStorm 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Much needed video, too bad most of the 4 billion or so Jews, Christians & Muslims will never see it.

    • @YushiBoy-js1nk
      @YushiBoy-js1nk 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      As a Jew, I'm glad to say I saw it 😅

    • @FactStorm
      @FactStorm 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Same here my Semitic brother :)
      I am not Jewish but I am Levantine like you. I am an Arab. Peace & love

  • @idiosyncraticlawyer3400
    @idiosyncraticlawyer3400 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Before this video started, I watched two unskippable two-minute Christian ads about their petty arguments.

    • @TheraminTrees
      @TheraminTrees  4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      That shouldn't have happened. I've disabled all non-skippable ads on videos. I'll make a note.

  • @jayg342
    @jayg342 6 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Great video, thank you. I have been arguing these points forever, it seems. Now I can just link them to this awesome video!

  • @lezbyanke777
    @lezbyanke777 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The Talmud is a group of Jewish legal and religious books which contain religious discussions and explanations for what is written in the Tanakh. Without the Talmud, unlearned people might have fallen into the trap of interpreting the Tanakh literally.
    This is why we have yeshivas where people study the written Torah [Tanakh] and the oral Torah [Talmud Bavli and Talmud Yerushalmi]

    • @sovl2178
      @sovl2178 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What does the talmud say about Jesus

    • @lezbyanke777
      @lezbyanke777 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sovl2178 I am not sure, but some rabbis are discussing if MAYBE there are two instances of a Yeshua being mentioned in the Talmud, but not completely sure

    • @InfernalLeo777
      @InfernalLeo777 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@lezbyanke777 he's in a pit of boiling shit.

    • @OmniversalInsect
      @OmniversalInsect ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Reminds me of another person saying that it's dangerous to read the bible without the church to guide you. I think what you mean is that you don't want people to make their own interpretations of the book, ensuring that any flaws or problematic lines can be covered up with an alternative interpretation plastered on by someone else.

  • @godlessrecovery8880
    @godlessrecovery8880 6 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    Theramin Trees! Always have to watch as soon as I see it in my feed.

    • @Aymeltea
      @Aymeltea 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Same man. God bless him (pun intended).

    • @goatgod2009
      @goatgod2009 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      He's an angel. Lol

    • @godlessrecovery8880
      @godlessrecovery8880 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Praise be to the Trees!

    • @George4943
      @George4943 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      As usual my Patreon support has contributed to an outstanding video.

  • @feltongailey8987
    @feltongailey8987 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Why would "God" create a person to burn in "hell"? I asked this in a bible study group I attended at someones behest. I was not invited back. I spent hours innumerable in service to the church and scared myself into submission concerning my countless questions. Yep, they still have yet to be answered. My heart knows and has known the answers.

    • @Nobody-tj9jo
      @Nobody-tj9jo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Just because your question has gone unanswered doesn’t mean there’s not an answer out there to it. There is an answer to your question, all you have to do it is go outside of your social circle to find it. Not all everyday Christians know a lot about theology. Go in some educated Christian spaces and maybe you’ll find an answer that tickles your ears. Seek the truth with all your heart and you will find.

    • @labranehit7687
      @labranehit7687 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Nobody-tj9jo how about the fact that the answer might not be known by Christians. I really like one atheist answer: "two options for this: God is not as omniscient as we are leaded to believe and has involuntarily created a soul that deserves to be punished. Or he did willingly creat a person to torture him later and letting him loos in the world to torture some of his innocent creations"

  • @unpronouncable2442
    @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +66

    I consider the source of morality to be pretty simple. we are thought this mechanism very early on in our lives. if we do something wrong the parent would step in and say "Don't do that. imagine how you would feel if you were on the receiving end of this action".
    A simple appeal to egoism. On the surface it seams simple but once you start considering more than one person the morality of the situation becomes exponentially more complex.
    Lets say there is a burning building. there is a person in the window of that building. What is the moral thing to do? Walk away? No because if "I" was that person in the building I would get angry or sad. What about running into the building? Yes. I would be happy someone came to save me. but the scenario changes if we consider a fireman spraying water on the fire. Running into the fire then becomes something morally dubious. As a competent fireman I would be very angry and annoyed that some shmuck ran into the fire and added more work and worry to my job. And the situation can be built up from there.
    Religious morality is parasitic to this mechanism. Instead of other person (empathy to humans) it inserts this god that followers of the religion would need to please.
    Pushing this homosexual off the roof of the building is a morally good thing. It makes the god happy.

    • @unpronouncable2442
      @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      did you miss the "Stop that. imagine how you would feel if it happened to you" part?

    • @unpronouncable2442
      @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Imagination is self adjusting if we were talking about the Klingons the same would work. "Stop showing mercy think how you would feel in his place. give the kid an honorable death and gut him"

    • @unpronouncable2442
      @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Yeah you clearly didn't get the joke.

    • @unpronouncable2442
      @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      no I don't. I'm also an atheist and I consider god to be a parasitic influence on the system presented. It supplants itself in place of the other person. people afflicted by god no longer think about "how they would feel in place of the other person" they think "How their abstract noncorporial imaginary friend that is controlled by the clergy would feel". The klingons in the joke above do the same thing with honor. I do not propose that all moralities are equal. I simply state that the system exists and that it is inherently human and does not require god to exist.

    • @unpronouncable2442
      @unpronouncable2442 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Sorry Sir but Moral Fundamentalism is not the same as Moral Relativism. I'm not saying Morality is subjective I'm saying that Every person has the organ of morality just like every person has an organ called heart that pumps blood and unless stricken with pathology that organ works the same in every person. so please do not tell me "so what you're saying is" and don't tell me what I love or don't. put yourself in my place and imagine how you would feel.

  • @TheTruthKiwi
    @TheTruthKiwi 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    It's just so painfully obvious that we naturally developed morals and ethics as instincts (and many learnt in childhood) as we evolved as a species. As our cognitive abilities developed so did empathy and understanding of how to create and maintain a civilized society. It's just common sense.

  • @christianegavino2020
    @christianegavino2020 5 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    I remember my professor and I having a discussion on my cousin's leaving of his religion. My professor asked what he'd do next. I said that my cousin would go and live his own life exactly as he chooses to live it. He then asked if he'd be joining another religion, like, say, Buddhism. I said no, my cousin wouldn't. The whole debacle with the religion he was in has just about turned him off from organized religion altogether. Then my professor brought up the subject of morality. I told my professor that really, you can get a sense of morality from anywhere, not solely from religion. For example, I get my sense of right and wrong from what naturally feels right and wrong to me, and how the actions of others affected me throughout my life.
    It was a weird conversation, if only because it was then that I realized that my professor was not as secular-minded as I thought. I wouldn't hold that against him though - he's a smart guy and generally seems to approach things with skepticism.

    • @sidney4022
      @sidney4022 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What feels right may not be actually be right though.

    • @rokor3578
      @rokor3578 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@sidney4022 and yet it most certainly cant be any worse than what god says is right.

    • @sidney4022
      @sidney4022 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rokor3578 a piece of advice I was given was that for every action I'm taking, I'd better have a good reason for doing it, not just on feeling.

    • @djungelskog3434
      @djungelskog3434 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      3 year late comment but funnily enough, Buddhism isn't really considered a religion, more of a way of life

    • @kadran3263
      @kadran3263 ปีที่แล้ว

      Religious people are threatened from day one with eternal torture for non-compliance. Is this the source of their moral superiority? Supremacist cults, all of them, need to be disbanded.

  • @PaulStringini
    @PaulStringini 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The opening quote by Robert G. Ingersoll is absurd navel gazing. "The Nature of things" is indistinguishable from the idea of infinite immutable power.

  • @Ratking45557
    @Ratking45557 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Why am I getting Christian dating app ads on this video😂😂

  • @MichaelSaniyan
    @MichaelSaniyan 6 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    It's not hard to imagine how the morals we live with today can have emerged from social evolutionary pressures. You did a good job of highlighting this. Thanks for another thought-provoking video.

  • @Remake5182
    @Remake5182 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    My favourite Judeo-Christian tradition is separation of church and state.

  • @squanchwater4715
    @squanchwater4715 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I stopped believing in the book of mormon when learned that it is believed the reason why people have darker skin is because they are stained in sin... there is no religious book that explains how racism is wrong, i already knew that was wrong

  • @oddviews
    @oddviews 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What's the point of Religious moral dogma that in reality makes good people bad and DOESN'T make bad people good?

  • @saraza4977
    @saraza4977 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I as a child went to a Christian preschool. I even at that young age recognized contradictions. When i asked questions my answers were "god works in mysterious ways".
    At home religion was not reinforced, my questions were answered. But I quickly learned not to question certain inconsistencies I recognized. As my questions undermined what was being taught even in public schools. I didn't like being forced to say the pledge every morning. "One nation under God" while also being taught of the separation of church and state and religious freedom. How is there religious freedom if we are forced to accept there even is a god? In god we trust on all our currency?
    Now with where America is politically. With lawmakers citing their bible as resons for draconian laws. In congress saying "we are a Christian nation" openly calling for the state to enforce their interpretation of the bible onto all citizens. Allowing discrimination against LGBTQ+ individuals if someone has stong religious beliefs. The Supreme Court turning back decades of precedent. Banning books now in schools but giving exceptions for the bible.
    As I continually educate myself, the fundamental contradictions I noticed as a child become clear as to where these beliefs and myths come from. Why things didn't add up. It was all taught from the canonized American mythos. Not history. The bad parts sped through.
    I recently helped my youngest sibling with their homework on America's westward expansion. Made another realization as to why theres this attack on CRT, how we are trying to 'change' history.
    Parents helping kids with history are experiencing cognitive dissonance, learning themselves about American history they weren't taught. Worried about how their white children might feel learng about the history of slavery in America. Its not all glowing "ra ra America is the best. We have done no wrongs". Instead of learning themselves they cry that "their trying to change history. Make kids hate America". Because this isn't what they were taught in school. Rather than having to face American history, they want it white washed again. Fighting tooth and nail to hold onto propoganda rather than doing any critical thought into maybe they have something to learn.
    Ignorance is bliss.

  • @ButterGamesRoblox
    @ButterGamesRoblox 4 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    "The notion of ordering people to love denies the autonomous nature of love"
    Damn

  • @TheXtrafresh
    @TheXtrafresh 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Does anyone else get ads seeking donations for mosque construction? I take great pleasure in knowing that's a completely wasted ad space that they are paying for.

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I seldom get ads in TH-cam / Window with Chrome/ Extensions in Chrome limit ads greatly... unlike TH-cam app with an iPad

  • @bluecoin3771
    @bluecoin3771 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Judie Christian tradition is essentially two enemies pooling their resources to have a better shot at the prize.

    • @vaiyt
      @vaiyt 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Or one guy dragging an enemy under their arm shouting "We're totally friends now!"

  • @hazelsunderstood6784
    @hazelsunderstood6784 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Don't worry if you see "Men's get End" this one is super self-triggered by the title of this video.
    They are on every comment, trying to tear down the smaller arguments, because they can not handle the bigger valid points that this video has made. It's quite sad, but good luck having to debate someone who doesn't directly face your point.

  • @willgeorge5644
    @willgeorge5644 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    look at Africa, they had kinks that ruled by terror, Zulus started as a small tribe, and by conquest took over half of South Africa. Shaka's police was simple: become a Zulu or die. This was very successful, he maintain absolute control by killing people randomly, hold a huge meeting and just point to people and command his impi's (soldiers) to kill that one, then the next. He marched his army through burning coals, if they hesitated, they died. The point is, he was very successful, brutality does work. Later the Zulu's were wiping out the Boers, until Britain started a war (the Zulu war) with them and broke their back.
    When the Romans invaded Britain, Boadicea led a attack on what is now London, they cut off the Roman women's breasts and sewed them to their mouths, drove stakes up their bodies and stood them up. Even Britain was brutal.

  • @guyfawkes8873
    @guyfawkes8873 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    It’s funny, because as the son of an atheist father, I’ve always been taught that western philosophy comes primarily from the criticism of Christianity, not from the application of it 😂

  • @rachelslur8729
    @rachelslur8729 5 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    That visualization was brought to you by Mastercard. 5:29

  • @pristineparr7509
    @pristineparr7509 5 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I am not an atheist but love your videos. I have had the experience of God and so could never deny the power that I know to be true. But what has been done to mankind by means of religion is an ongoing tragedy and as we embrace the value of our own experiences and do not seek to enforce them on others, the difference between true compassion and love versus the one size fits all adoption of values and morality that are indoctrinated in one who follows a religious Creed will be clearly evident.

  • @nemonada3501
    @nemonada3501 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is the logical fallacy Jordan Peterson commits on a daily basis

  • @Fstop313
    @Fstop313 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I get religious ads on your videos but I dont skip them because ad money.

  • @bradfordbelt5983
    @bradfordbelt5983 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The image of the cross inserted into the star of David might be a Freudian Slip, but it made me chortle.

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It's okay chortling is kosher but not while eating a bologna sandwich on Fridays in the 1950's if your Catholic?

  • @AlbinosaurusR3X
    @AlbinosaurusR3X 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    It's funny that this video came up on my feed today because I was thinking about it before I saw it and realized the same thing: Morality isn't the result of religious values; religious values are the result of morality.

  • @pavement66
    @pavement66 6 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    "Bloody hell, I'm going to die to Boney M"

    • @LukeFrisken
      @LukeFrisken 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      such a great film moment!

  • @raymondcarter1137
    @raymondcarter1137 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Is something still holy if I don’t think it is?
    If yes then what makes it holy if I disagree?
    If no then pay taxes for your property.

    • @dimbulb23
      @dimbulb23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Taxes are seldom paid when the law say's you don't have to pay.
      It's not about what's holy, it's about laws.
      VOTE !

  • @Muddytony20
    @Muddytony20 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I believe that religion is a good starting point for a person to start their look into the concepts of morality. But the extent of someone's moral compass shouldn't rely solely on what their religion states is "the best". That should be developed by the person on their own.