Science can answer moral questions | Sam Harris

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 21. 03. 2010
  • www.ted.com Questions of good and evil, right and wrong are commonly thought unanswerable by science. But Sam Harris argues that science can -- and should -- be an authority on moral issues, shaping human values and setting out what constitutes a good life.
    TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes. Featured speakers have included Al Gore on climate change, Philippe Starck on design, Jill Bolte Taylor on observing her own stroke, Nicholas Negroponte on One Laptop per Child, Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Bill Gates on malaria and mosquitoes, Pattie Maes on the "Sixth Sense" wearable tech, and "Lost" producer JJ Abrams on the allure of mystery. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design, and TEDTalks cover these topics as well as science, business, development and the arts. Closed captions and translated subtitles in a variety of languages are now available on TED.com, at www.ted.com/translate. Watch a highlight reel of the Top 10 TEDTalks at www.ted.com/index.php/talks/top10
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 11K

  • @Heavynprog1
    @Heavynprog1 Před 6 lety +3015

    ''I almost burst into tears when describing the practice of honor killing. I knew that I was going to talk about fathers who murder their daughters for the crime of being raped, and I knew exactly what I was going to say about them. But I hadn’t known that my own daughter would take her first steps the morning of my lecture. When delivering my lines exactly as I had rehearsed, I suddenly awoke to the reality of what I was talking about.''
    -Sam Harris
    (On his blog entry ''The Silent Crowd'')

    • @ruofanyu6699
      @ruofanyu6699 Před 5 lety +52

      oof

    • @kantvishi
      @kantvishi Před 5 lety +196

      I did notice some discomfort in his voice there, I dismissed it as him having cold or cough.

    • @EpicMRPancake
      @EpicMRPancake Před 5 lety +18

      Don't know where you got this quote from, because I remember him saying in a later video that he simply had a cold that day.

    • @j.oaklley8965
      @j.oaklley8965 Před 5 lety +7

      None that has anything to do with Jesus he stoped the bad old testament laws!!!

    • @EpicMRPancake
      @EpicMRPancake Před 5 lety +2

      @Nix Far out.

  • @HanZhang1994
    @HanZhang1994 Před 8 lety +4452

    Many know what Sam Harris knows. Few can explain it as clearly and concisely as he can. What a brilliant speaker.

    • @HanZhang1994
      @HanZhang1994 Před 7 lety +138

      ***** No, reading alot of books will help, but Sam speaks like someone who's had training in math, or at least symbolic logic. The power of his words is their precision. It's very unlike many other speakers who can move you, or paint their vision in poetic speech. Sam's speech is rigorously accurate and that's why it's so convincing. You'll notice for example, he uses alot of limiting cases such as "We know throwing acid on children's faces isn't moral and we should not find it acceptable simply because it comes from a culture other than our own." This is a limiting case argument where he takes something so far in one extreme that his point is completely clear and not ambiguous like with something closer to the gray area. This is a strategy of argument employed by philosophers and mathematicians frequently.

    • @bryanzhang4377
      @bryanzhang4377 Před 7 lety +8

      Han Zhang I agree

    • @ReckoSong
      @ReckoSong Před 7 lety +48

      I understand his talk, but I don't see it support the title well.
      By far science can tell us (possible) relations between our biological characteristics and behaviors/decisions, and social science can interpret (possible) functional origins of some aspects of culture. However, we don't know whether this is the correct way to reach the 'ultimate' mortal. In science, experiments play the role of adjudicator. Therefore, science does not deny possibilities beyond the current experimental results, except the fundamental concept 'realism', and it can correct itself in such a way. Can we do experiments about mortal questions? In addition, this question contains itself. Can it be solved within itself (Gödel's incompleteness theorems)? I haven't thought throughly, but I don't see clear logic of a 'yes'.
      Secondly, actually more fundamentally, how to quantify the concept of 'good' and 'evil' is not clear. Sam merely touched this point, but bypassed it with extreme examples to modern Western people. The final question of Chris Anderson goes deeper. I think that Sam has no concise answer to it.
      Complements. Some scientists believe that new phenomena arises from complexities (emergence). Ourselves are examples. Genes encode our brain which is more complicated. As a result, we can 'cheat' genes. Similarly, culture is another level. The moment we ask ourselves 'is this mortal?', the influence of culture sets in. Then measurements on molecular level are not sufficient to define unified 'good' and 'evil'. Sam does not discuss this at all, which is disappointing especially science is the theme here.
      Science has already influenced our view of mortal value, and it will. But after this talk, I still don't see how it can be an authority of mortal issues.
      And by the way, the analogy of chess is flaw. 'Don't lose your queen' is a strategy rather than a principle in chess. Strategy does not exclude exceptions, principle does. This kind of analogy serves well to lead people's thoughts to the desired direction, but not scientific :)

    • @MrSterlingHarris
      @MrSterlingHarris Před 7 lety +1

      Right!? What a champion.

    • @petersparks7363
      @petersparks7363 Před 7 lety +3

      Recko, read all the words son. Prefered Sam's chat. Dont give up. Please attend TED. I think you could make it..............

  • @superface
    @superface Před 4 lety +1129

    Sam Harris: "We can no more respect and tolerate vast differences in notions of human wellbeing than we can respect and tolerate differences in the notion of how disease spreads."
    2020: "Hold my beer."
    Rewatching this video now it strikes me how sad it is that, instead of slowly moving towards Sam's vision of a future where we can apply our scientific understanding to questions of morality, we're instead sliding into a world where we apply our moral ambiguity and relativism to questions of science. We're well and truly screwed.

    • @adamdouglas5596
      @adamdouglas5596 Před 4 lety +8

      why is sams vision what we should move toward

    • @benp9793
      @benp9793 Před 4 lety +25

      @@adamdouglas5596 Because reality is real

    • @adamdouglas5596
      @adamdouglas5596 Před 4 lety +4

      @@benp9793 who told you that

    • @BatmanHQYT
      @BatmanHQYT Před 4 lety +12

      This is a great way of putting it.

    • @benp9793
      @benp9793 Před 4 lety +6

      @@adamdouglas5596 Reality. Try perceiving it.

  • @moathdw910
    @moathdw910 Před 2 lety +896

    The good days when Ted used to be brave enough to bring controversial subjects

  • @drkim4077
    @drkim4077 Před 5 lety +1988

    Thank you.
    That’s all I can say.
    As a closet ex-Muslim girl with a younger sister,
    having videos like these helps me keep my sanity, this religion has already taken so much from,
    I can’t bear losing anymore.

    • @xmus577
      @xmus577 Před 5 lety +5

      czcams.com/video/dNVZ0ZPfE8s/video.html
      tell me when you find a mention to Islam there.

    • @nishantintouch
      @nishantintouch Před 5 lety +233

      Ex-muslim atheists are one of the best people to hang out with and talk to.

    • @mrloop1530
      @mrloop1530 Před 5 lety +115

      Same for me. I can't tell you, how much my Christian upbringing destroyed for me.

    • @Wassim971
      @Wassim971 Před 5 lety +32

      "closet ex-Muslim", can't get more cliched...

    • @sarenareth689
      @sarenareth689 Před 5 lety +218

      @@Wassim971 Because they need to hide for their own safety? Yes a sad thing indeed, a shame they're required to be closet.

  • @James-cb7nb
    @James-cb7nb Před 6 lety +2777

    Damn, Ben Stiller really is a man of multiple talents

  • @kvartlapp9724
    @kvartlapp9724 Před 3 lety +104

    I had compassion for rocks (and other objects) as a kid, and my brother used to kick them and call them ugly to make me cry ...

    • @jukaa1012
      @jukaa1012 Před 3 lety +8

      The questio here is not if having emotions for rocks is good or not, but if making your brother cry is good or not

    • @user-rd8rv6nb7f
      @user-rd8rv6nb7f Před 3 lety +8

      Hey you are a really nice guy ) The best thing about you is that you have empathy for everyone) You are very sweet ❤❤❤

    • @pinchebruha405
      @pinchebruha405 Před 3 lety +3

      What that says is that your brother was jealous and probably a psychopath

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Před 2 lety +1

      That's pretty interesting. I don't know if I've heard of anyone ascribing feelings to inorganic material before, other than inorganic material that LOOKS organic, like a stuffed animal or a doll. But man, trying to protect every rock in the world will really wear you out, that's for sure.

    • @finch1187
      @finch1187 Před 2 lety +4

      @@pinchebruha405 lol cmon bro😂 that’s a bit of a stretch. I think if u have ever had siblings, u would understand the motives for these types of actions is just fun and entertainment. I’m not saying the older brother was right to do that, but siblings mess with each other. As they grow older, the teasing typically becomes funny and enjoyable for both parties and can really help build their relationship.

  • @dn-dk2ei
    @dn-dk2ei Před 4 lety +218

    Basically Sam is saying well-being should be our guiding doctrine of morality. And there might be multiple answers to how we can maximize/increase well-being in different states (the moral landscape) but, there are some answers that are worse than others, and we can map that out by considering the impacts on well-being/human suffering.

    • @lizzard13666
      @lizzard13666 Před 2 lety +44

      It does sound good in principle, but the defeating problem is "Who gets to decide what counts as "wellbeing". Any sliding scale has to start at the maximally negative and end at maximally positive, and this implies there is some "maximally positive" state of wellbeing. Who decides what that state is? Sam Harris provides an interesting way of justifying an individuals actions as "good" or "bad" by their own individual subjective standards, but he does nothing to touch on what standard we should look to when two individuals differ. He seems to confuse "absolute vs relative" morality with "objective vs subjective" morality, which are two related but different issues.

    • @MyBuzzL
      @MyBuzzL Před 2 lety +5

      on adition of @dean above me already said, it is very superficially thinking that human morality is based on wellbeing. every one have different perspective about wellbeing, take look at basic human right for example, everyone have to respect human live, even mass murderer. in this case tax payer subsidize the mass murderer to live separately and remotely without have to work for the rest of his life, so mass murderer is given present named lifelong food and roof. see drug traffickers documentary, most avoided country is the one who killed and violated human right. drugs also become problem, who to say that taking drugs is dangerous and offensive. it is within their right to taking it, just like in Switzerland the most human right country, it legal to choose how to die, that have to included drugs like cocaine or meth.
      the example of chess is way to stupid, and it is contradict himself latter. the game of chess is always have win and lose, and the best one is the one who always win or we can say the smartest just like physicist. than the most wellbeing in life is also holding the most morals, whether he is robber, mafia or mass murderer. and just like he said it is wrong to have morality don't get queen killed in chess, same like it is wrong to have ur daughter raped, so u killed ur daughter that is why u will never have raped daughter.
      it sick

    • @lizzard13666
      @lizzard13666 Před 2 lety +5

      @Davy Anthonissen That's anything but simple in YOUR view! Under you and Sam's view, "child marriage" in animals and other organisms is EXACTLY what got us to where we are, then according to you and Sam, there was a sudden and arbitrary distinction between the animal called "human" and all the others? What about other hominid species like Neanderthals, do they share the moral value you arbitrarily put on humans? Your system CANNOT account for why that is immoral, mine can! Luckily, under my view, each human has inherent moral value, and as such we should respect them. Your view is fundamentally incoherent seeing as evolution BENEFITTED from murder, stealing, and non-consensual experiences etc, yet we KNOW these things are morally wrong for a human to do. So to summarise, it is under YOUR view that those negative moral actions benefit humanity, without them we wouldn't be here to flourish! Under MY view, we can say with certainty that those are NOT moral actions!

    • @lizzard13666
      @lizzard13666 Před 2 lety

      @Davy Anthonissen I did.

    • @lizzard13666
      @lizzard13666 Před 2 lety

      @Davy Anthonissen Nice, enjoy your car!

  • @Tesserex
    @Tesserex Před 7 lety +870

    11:21 He seemed to have genuine trouble getting through this section, emotionally. He has two daughters. Definitely shows how invested he is in the seriousness of the subject beyond the theoretical.

    • @brunowalker99
      @brunowalker99 Před 7 lety +15

      I don't want to have a daughter because of that.

    • @aadams9808
      @aadams9808 Před 7 lety +100

      I've never seen him get emotional before this. Damn.

    • @mmemo7703
      @mmemo7703 Před 7 lety +30

      On a podcast where Sam was a guest, he spoke about this talk and what you see as emotional state he admits he had a cold and had a difficult time going thru the whole speech :) But he is never the less serious about the subject

    • @bravetraveller3305
      @bravetraveller3305 Před 7 lety +2

      What podcast?

    • @aadams9808
      @aadams9808 Před 7 lety +1

      M Memo
      Which podcast was this?

  • @muralin239
    @muralin239 Před 5 lety +1029

    I admire how calm and eloquent he is in whatever situation.

    • @Anna-cx4tg
      @Anna-cx4tg Před 4 lety +36

      it's all that meditation

    • @deeninspire3149
      @deeninspire3149 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Anna-cx4tg lol its all the 11 years of hindu and Buddhist training - the irony hahaha

    • @tg3137
      @tg3137 Před 4 lety +11

      Yeah that's what long term meditation practice does, you can sometimes spot people who meditate or practice mindfulness just by the way they act

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 Před 4 lety +6

      Murali N
      That's because his audience including the commenters here are unfamiliar with his tactics. Lot of his talk is flawed and he appears to trick his unsuspecting audiences. I will give you just two examples.
      First, what is the relevance of mentioning bombing the nuclear facilities of Iran in relation to science's answers to moral questions? Bringing the case of Iranian nuclear facilities into this discussion turns the discussion on moral question into political question. And when it becomes political question it can be asked in an other way, that is, why not to bomb Israeli nuclear facilities, as for some, Israel is morally more culpable than Iran because Israel has almost eliminated a whole nation of Palestinians to make their own place in Palestine. Sam Harris cannot raise such question because the real agenda here is to prove Iran morally inferior and culpable. Now he doesn't have to name Israel as morally superior because audience already know the relationship between Iranian nuclear facilities and Israel. By subtly mentioning it he successfully reinforces the idea into his audiences' minds. This is how these people trick their audiences. By siding against Iran and therefore in favour of Israel he is clearly showing his bias. True intellectuals and scholars never take sides, especially in political matters.
      Second, his mentioning of suicide bombers and the 72 virgins. Now if Sam Harris truly understands Islamic teachings he should have known that suicide is haram (strictly forbidden) in Islam. Using suicide to kill noncombatant innocent civilians is double haram in Islam. Moreover, there is no mention in Quran of any promise for suicide bombers having 72 virgins. In spite of these facts ( of course only if he is knowledgeable enough to acknowledge these facts), his mentioning of these misconceptions in his argument against religion as basis for morality constitutes dishonesty and malice against Islam. And he very subtly brings this across his audience's subconscious.

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 Před 4 lety +2

      j s k
      Your statement is exactly like confidently telling that the horse is black without looking at a white horse.

  • @robsquared2
    @robsquared2 Před 3 lety +55

    It's good that we remove the idea that we remove the taboo of comparing religious ideas against each other and against secular ideas. There can be no progress of society without frank and open discussion.

    • @hankdieselify
      @hankdieselify Před 6 měsíci

      It needs to go beyond all of that someday when religion is seen by everybody as made up and frankly silly to believe in. It can be great to be spiritual, but the beliefs that stem from religions have held us back and have caused many atrocities.

  • @spygulturtle2322
    @spygulturtle2322 Před 4 lety +168

    "String theory doesn't resonate with me" hehehe

    • @partydean17
      @partydean17 Před 3 lety +2

      Lol

    • @WigganNuG
      @WigganNuG Před 3 lety

      The real punch was. "I'm not a fan" ... lol :)

    • @AmasaTony81947
      @AmasaTony81947 Před 3 lety +1

      I’m glad that someone else picked up on that. I had a little smidgeon of doubt that he said that purposely. That someone else picked it up is comforting. I love his subtle word plays and his modest self-depreciations. See, atheists can be funny!

    • @JAM-hg4mp
      @JAM-hg4mp Před 3 lety

      I don't get it.

    • @xRedSmartiesx
      @xRedSmartiesx Před 3 lety +2

      ​@@JAM-hg4mp String theory, summed down, suggests the universe is made of tiny strings resonating. The different frequencies of the strings make for the different particles we observe. Sam does not resonate with the theory. Just a subtle play on words.

  • @bahbcat
    @bahbcat Před 9 lety +543

    "Whenever we re talking about facts there are certain opinions that must be excluded."

    • @artieche9
      @artieche9 Před 8 lety +9

    • @erasmusso
      @erasmusso Před 8 lety +90

      +Bahb Woolley Actually, ALL opinions must be excluded. Scientists don't discuss their feelings about a theory, they discuss hypotheses, evidence, experiments, etc. Feelings tell you absolutely nothing about reality.

    • @bahbcat
      @bahbcat Před 8 lety +61

      erasmusso Dude, I was just quoting the video. Opinions are not always about feeling either. An hypothesis is an opinion.

    • @erasmusso
      @erasmusso Před 8 lety +19

      Bahb Woolley I know that's a quote, I just wanted to comment on it, but sorry if it came off as a criticism, that wasn't my intention.
      About a hypothesis being an opinion, I guess it depends on how you define an opinion - what's the opinion based on. But it makes sense, sometimes you have an opinion and then find out it's testable and you can do something practical with it. I was thinking for example about the opinion: "homosexuality is wrong". You can't perform an experiment to find out if it's wrong or not, it's just an opinion...

    • @Murph1989sean
      @Murph1989sean Před 8 lety +2

      +erasmusso I would venture to say you could. Again, as we start to know more about the human mind, it may be very possible that homosexuals are actually more or less happy than their heterosexual counterparts. Not including in the context of society, what is better for everyone as a species, that would answer the question.

  • @ninnymonger
    @ninnymonger Před 4 lety +427

    I’ve watched this talk once, every year, since this came out on the TED website (which is a little before it came to CZcams). Only after hearing him speak of this on his podcast in mid November 2019, did I actually catch his tearing up at 11:20. Now I’m tearing up at having this realization.
    His fury is well placed. More people should be as livid as he was.

    • @strumspicks2456
      @strumspicks2456 Před 4 lety

      czcams.com/video/wxalrwPNkNI/video.html

    • @ericwalker3588
      @ericwalker3588 Před 4 lety +1

      I have watched it many times also and didn't notice that also. But it looks like alligator tears. I used to think he was ok. But now I wonder if he is the antichrist. He wants to get rid of all religious beliefs.

    • @shampoozm
      @shampoozm Před 4 lety +53

      He’s closer to Christ in ideas than most people on earth. I would guess than you, too. To suspect people of fake tears. He has a daughter of his own, and I think he’s capable of empathizing enough to cry.

    • @bommie
      @bommie Před 4 lety +47

      @@ericwalker3588 lmao I hope this is a troll response. He's since revealed that, the morning of this TED talk, he was informed that his infant daughter had taken her first steps.
      When he arrived at this point in his speech, touching on the lunacy of Islam's view and treatment of women, he was ambushed by the emotion of imagining his daughter living in such an environment.
      It was genuine emotion.

    • @manavm
      @manavm Před 4 lety +5

      @J P did you just attempt to justify or otherwise support honor killings?
      You have access to the internet so you cannot even plead ignorance.
      How incredibly disgusting and psychopathic do you have to be to supporting killing someone because they were raped - something they have no control over.
      Abortion should be legal so that people like you never get to be born.

  • @josvanderspek1403
    @josvanderspek1403 Před 4 lety +127

    Does CZcams have a superlike button?

    • @rarevisitor1250
      @rarevisitor1250 Před 3 lety +7

      I'll use your comment as one

    • @agentprismarine2778
      @agentprismarine2778 Před 3 lety

      why ? are you saying minimising human suffering isn't morally better ? are you saying that causing human suffering is morally better ?
      The only subjective questioning is whether ending human suffering is morally better and whether ending suffering at the cost of other desirable things like freedom is morally better ... I'm sure the answer to the first question can be universally agreed upon. The second one is up for debate otherwise that's the only subjective answer.

  • @freethinker8199
    @freethinker8199 Před 3 lety +84

    I have watched this video at least six times, but never get bored. Best regard, Afghan exmuslim

    • @arianagrandaremix8858
      @arianagrandaremix8858 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes @Sam S

    • @GH-wy9mo
      @GH-wy9mo Před 3 lety +4

      @SAM - just like he brainwashes. Brainwashing cannot be avoided at all in life as a philosopher says "man is free but everywhere in chains".
      What exactly was your problem with Islam itself?

    • @nourae8866
      @nourae8866 Před 3 lety

      @Rebel Shinobi why are you do butt hurt they can say what they want

    • @-ahmed121
      @-ahmed121 Před 2 lety

      How’s taliban going

  • @YivvaMedia
    @YivvaMedia Před 9 lety +407

    Once again, faith in humanity almost 100% restored after watching the video, followed by agonising disappointment when reading through the comments.

    • @christinarasmobeymer
      @christinarasmobeymer Před 9 lety +10

      Yivva I agree. I loved how they gave him a standing ovation.

    • @afaultytoaster
      @afaultytoaster Před 9 lety +13

      Yivva you have crappy expectations of humanity if a 20 minute video changes your opinion

    • @TooleyPeter
      @TooleyPeter Před 9 lety +9

      afaultytoaster Or he has a newspaper.

    • @TooleyPeter
      @TooleyPeter Před 9 lety +2

      ***** Five paragraphs, my goodness, you are definitely not taking this personally.

    • @TooleyPeter
      @TooleyPeter Před 9 lety

      ***** Then you have a complicated relationship with Mohammed.

  • @ajsim
    @ajsim Před 6 lety +180

    "How have we convinced ourselves that every culture has a point of view on these subjects worth considering? ... There are right and wrong answers to human flourishing..."

    • @WastedTalent83
      @WastedTalent83 Před 5 lety +4

      its because humans are bigots, they think that giving others the freedom to choose, and even to make VERY bad decision should be a right, and that you will pay the consequences of that action later on (if they catch you)
      Its just a consequence that there is chaos with such a stupid menagement of human resources.

    • @prometheus5405
      @prometheus5405 Před 4 lety +5

      @@WastedTalent83 at least young people have liberty to think outside the box and not be boring.
      People don't want to be controlled by anyone who isn't their chosen leader.

    • @Mobiusu2b
      @Mobiusu2b Před 4 lety +1

      That statement is completely true if you aren't religious and believe in "yolo". Religion's worry more about the afterlife, not the physical being.

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 Před 4 lety +6

      Who will decide, and how, which is right answer and which is wrong? When no one has this authority we will have to fall back on the experiences of those wise people who, over the millennia, pulled humankind from savage animal-like state to present state of advanced human beings. When we do that we might find that the best contribution in this moral progress from savages to thinking humans was made by religion. Main advantage of religion is that it provides a reference point that rises above all humans and everyone must follow that reference point. It is morally superior to declare "O' mankind, we created you from a pair of man and woman, and divided you in nations and tribes so that you may recognise one an other. Verily, superior among you in the sight of your Lord is the one whose deeds are the best" than declaring that superior among you are those who endear their national interests as compared to the universal interests.

    • @DavidRussellM
      @DavidRussellM Před 4 lety +4

      Anaesthesia The purpose of this talk and the premise of Sam’s book the Moral Landscape is to establish a set of values and morals universally revered by all to promote the most well being outside the purview of the prominent dogmatic faiths which come equipped with loads of damaging philosophy. i.e in this talk, ‘honor killings’.

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark952 Před 3 lety +23

    "“There is nothing divine about morality; it is a purely human affair.” Albert Einstein. From the book ... The Final Inequality, by L. J. Ludovici."Morals at any given moment have always been as good, or as bad, as our imaginations credit them, for the morals (from the Latin, mores: customs) means simply customs, and they keep changing all the time in all the corners of the world."

    • @user-og1nm6gq1l
      @user-og1nm6gq1l Před rokem

      Albert Eonstein was a Khazarian mafia fraud.

    • @oldegeezer
      @oldegeezer Před měsícem

      If it is purely human, cultural, prone to change, then there are not objective right or wrong answers to morality because we can change.

  • @michaelrecine7626
    @michaelrecine7626 Před 4 lety +122

    Science can be used for deductive reasoning. It can be used to derive the best (if there is a best) possible action given a set of values. That being said, he never actually displayed how science can yield those values. It can't. It gives us an "is", not an "ought". He makes a fatal error in assuming that one "ought" to desire these more "desirable" moral spaces, or that we "ought" to care for the suffering of others, etc... He assumes certain values to judge what "human flourishing" even is, AND that it is preferable (albeit we may grant that that is a sort of self evident idea). He is using values derived not from science to suggest that science can provide these values. These values are an inductive reasoning. Science relies on philosophy, so even the idea that science can provide values relies on values on how to conduct this science.

    • @rodsz1784
      @rodsz1784 Před 4 lety +2

      Have you read that Moral book? It's really horrific.

    • @fredheimuli5913
      @fredheimuli5913 Před 3 lety +3

      That's because it's a book about life, our circumstances, and our struggle for meaning. Life is a grimey experience, rife with pain, suffering, and conflict. If that's the case, Did you expect that moral book to be a cute Hallmark greeting card? You have to be more sophisticated than that my Friend

    • @michaelrecine7626
      @michaelrecine7626 Před 3 lety +1

      @@rodsz1784 Even if I were to agree, these two things can be true at the same time

    • @CosmicValkyrie
      @CosmicValkyrie Před 3 lety +1

      @@fredheimuli5913 Well the moral book asks for genocide of certain people. You don't have to be sophisticated to realize that the moral book is utter garbage.

    • @fredheimuli5913
      @fredheimuli5913 Před 3 lety +2

      @@CosmicValkyrie the book merely exposes people's desires. People also do many heinous crimes in the name of science with ulterior motives. Study Big Pharma, and research agencies who are paid to back crooked objectives. Does that mean science is evil or bad? No, it just exposes mankind. People misunderstand and don't interpret the meanings of those books properly. It's a book about "the evolution of our own moralities" and how they've been corrupt many times.

  • @lSomeRandomGuyl
    @lSomeRandomGuyl Před 8 lety +327

    I love the regressive at the end who implied that since he's been to these muslim countries, he knows that women have a free choice to wear the burqa. And then Sam curbstomped him by saying it's not free choice when there are death punishments in place.

    • @spamwithrice
      @spamwithrice Před 8 lety +54

      +SkepticOwl death or burqa, what a choice!

    • @hajtom6280
      @hajtom6280 Před 8 lety +38

      you know what we are talking about, you can't call it freedom if you are in danger from fellow human beings hurting you for doing something that won't affect them.

    • @blocksy6772
      @blocksy6772 Před 8 lety +10

      But surely you must see that when submerged in a situation, where you are told to hide you body or you will be butchered, there is at least a limitation on that free choice.
      Technically they all have free choice, they could take off all their clothes and walk around naked while singing 'Mary had a little lamb' if they chose to, but that would mean the end of their existence. So saying 'free choice' is simply a way of easily stating that there is no free choice as there is in compared to the other places in the world. But saying this over and over is rather tedious, so 'free choice' should suffice.
      So the problem they are talking about here is not whether they should have 'free choice' , as you mean it. But more whether the atrocious limitations placed upon the little free choice they have should be lifted, allowing them to for example sit in a park feeling the sun on their arms and legs, without having the fear of having stones thrown against their faces until they died.

    • @miksmasellistasjateg
      @miksmasellistasjateg Před 8 lety +29

      Giving him the benefit of the doubt, he could just be a good interviewer playing devil's advocate (allah's advocate?).

    • @PongoXBongo
      @PongoXBongo Před 7 lety +19

      Which is exactly what I think he's doing. Chris is the primary organizer and host for TED talks, and likes to either dumb things down for the audience during super technical talks, or apply balm to open wounds when touchy subjects are raised. It's his job to moderate and find the peak of human experience for everyone involved. ;)

  • @dteselle
    @dteselle Před 5 lety +1011

    So appreciate such an articulate and deep thinker as Sam Harris having the courage to address the illogical assumptions that many in the West accept in the name of diversity.

    • @dinodino5602
      @dinodino5602 Před 5 lety +2

      +

    • @heyalun
      @heyalun Před 5 lety +15

      He's fighting fire with fire, though. He assumes much

    • @alexandercanella4479
      @alexandercanella4479 Před 4 lety +7

      @@heyalun give an example of one of his assumptions....

    • @heyalun
      @heyalun Před 4 lety +12

      @@alexandercanella4479 Sorry, I don't remember everything.
      I just watched it for under 2:00 and the first one I found was at 1:43 - something like "we're more concerned about our fellow primates than ants because we believe they have a greater emotional experience." That's an assumption.
      "We're" not more concerned about apes than ants. SOME of us are. I don't think that value is based on intelligence, emotional or otherwise. When I came back to this talk I remembered that I couldn't even make it through because it was so irrational and empty. He holds himself out to be rational but made irrational argument after irrational argument. His logical house is built on quicksand because he's in denial.

    • @alexandercanella4479
      @alexandercanella4479 Před 4 lety +11

      @@heyalun hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha

  • @annajoy3323
    @annajoy3323 Před 2 lety +18

    “String theory doesn’t resonate with me”
    I’m not sure if he recognized the pun there, but it made me giggle.

  • @JD-ul2bt
    @JD-ul2bt Před 3 lety +38

    A few hours prior to going onto the stage, Sam Harris had learned that his daughter had just taken her first steps. Which is why he choked up at 11:20

    • @loriw2661
      @loriw2661 Před 3 lety +1

      I can’t personally verify this claim is true (& I hope it is😊), that’s amazing to know what’s behind it.

    • @Anicius_
      @Anicius_ Před 2 lety +10

      @@loriw2661 where are you from?. I am an ex muslim living in Orthodox muslim society in the third world and there is not one damn thing he said that was untrue, exaggerated or inaccurate. This is the truth of islam. Denying it is standing up on the face of truth and turning your back to it

    • @lisadabbs2181
      @lisadabbs2181 Před 2 lety

      @@Anicius_ I am curious to know if most Muslims do even know who really Mohammed was.
      They question where atheists derive their moral values from. So I question, what is the source of their morality, knowing as we know, what a despicable man Mohammed was.
      So, are they being dishonest or simply in denial?

    • @Anicius_
      @Anicius_ Před 2 lety +2

      The way kids are raised here is different from how they're raised in the west.
      When as a child you drop a piece of paper with quranic verse or name of mohammad or allah written on the ground the extremity of the response the parent or the teacher shows tells the child that this is one thing that can never be criticized or disrespected. So they don't think the contrary thought in their minds or question the scripture. Curiosity is important and doubt even more so.
      It is that when these children see their doctrines questioned by their betters they go out on streets with fire and rage to give clarity to atheist's criticism And demonstrate the validity of our Arguments while being oblivious.
      So yes they're in denial and they're ignorant though quran tells you that you can lie too if its to spread the religion. Dishonesty also is permitted.

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 Před 2 lety

      @@Anicius_
      Your first observation is true and is a reaction based on exaggerated sense of respect for the sacred text by the practitioners. Text itself does not necessarily demand from the followers such kind of exaggerated response.
      Last part of your observation is totally absurd and shows your total ignorance of the faith of Islam. Lying is not allowed to spread the religion. Please quote any verse from Quran where it says lying is allowed to spread the religion. It’s only allowed under life threatening situation to save your life. Perhaps you yourself are lying. If you were ever a Muslim and studied the Quran you should’ve known this.

  • @kickssass
    @kickssass Před 8 lety +272

    rarely seen a standing ovation on a TED talk lol

    • @hajtom6280
      @hajtom6280 Před 8 lety +10

      and yet the guy who runs TED does not like Sam's point here and did not at all agree with that standing ovation.

    • @DigiDriftZone
      @DigiDriftZone Před 8 lety +28

      I think he challenged him to close common counter arguments from the other side. I am pretty sure he, himself strongly agreed, it just would not be productive to come on stage and say you're a genius and walk off :)

    • @hajtom6280
      @hajtom6280 Před 8 lety +4

      I hope that is the case.

    • @offthekirb
      @offthekirb Před 8 lety +1

      Sadly atheism is always a winner with everyone these days...

    • @frustled7056
      @frustled7056 Před 8 lety +25

      What's so sad about that?

  • @LucisFerre1
    @LucisFerre1 Před 8 lety +468

    I just read a news story about a father in dubai who prevented lifeguards from saving his daughter from drowning because it would be less shameful to allow his teenage daughter to drown than endure the humiliation and shame of "strange men" i.e. rescue workers, touching her body.
    Religion poisons everything.

    • @Tempust97
      @Tempust97 Před 8 lety +16

      +LucisFerre1 Not sure that it had ao much to do with religion than culture... Im not religious at all but just saying that I dont think you really can blame religion for what this man did... his poor daughter

    • @mancubthescrub
      @mancubthescrub Před 8 lety +43

      +Alle H that explanation only begs another question. What shaped the culture? And since it's on the topic of father feeling shame for the daughter, look no further than the Kuran, notice the gross similarities between how it's was described in memory by the above user, and how it is describe in what they believe to be the literal word of their god.

    • @Tempust97
      @Tempust97 Před 8 lety +3

      +Mark Bristol how are you sure the father was muslim?

    • @mancubthescrub
      @mancubthescrub Před 8 lety +31

      Alle H by asking an honest question, what kind of culture could release the product that is this man? What cultures view it a "dishonor" to the father when touched by "strange men". Today what are the cultures that endorse that kind of behavior. Oh by the way, it is not illegal to kill your daughter in Dubai, as long as it's an honor killing.

    • @LucisFerre1
      @LucisFerre1 Před 8 lety +21

      Alle H
      EVERY culture that has honory killing is islamic. Do the math.

  • @vinniedavies7047
    @vinniedavies7047 Před 2 lety +46

    I've been having a sort of existential dread and panic the past week that I have no way to validate my morals objectively and as such can't trust them. This video really helped ground me and reassure me. Thank you Sam.

    • @topdog5252
      @topdog5252 Před 2 lety +3

      That’s great! Really hope you’re over it.

    • @dcarnage9211
      @dcarnage9211 Před 2 lety +4

      I have also received this reassurance from his speech. I often feel misunderstood because I see things the way he does. I feel more grounded than I have for some time.

    • @alirezased2673
      @alirezased2673 Před 2 lety

      I think we should seperate our thoughts from the world we live in so we don't act out these often uncertain notions in seemingly irrational ways in random settings spontaneously and in appearance maliciously.

    • @areuarealman7269
      @areuarealman7269 Před rokem +1

      Validate your morals ?Are you a knight in an old school adventure?

    • @G_Demolished
      @G_Demolished Před rokem +3

      It might help to ask yourself why your morals would have to be objective to “trust” them.

  • @farokmo4946
    @farokmo4946 Před 2 lety +23

    11 years later and all of the sudden his talk is much more relatable …

    • @jimmymags6516
      @jimmymags6516 Před 2 lety

      just like your folks .

    • @aylerayler
      @aylerayler Před 6 měsíci

      And in my case, tragic. I am Chronically ill and my elderly parents are antivaxxers.

  • @OlinScharm95
    @OlinScharm95 Před 8 lety +562

    6 years ago... How come I have never seen this?

    • @thefourthone1843
      @thefourthone1843 Před 8 lety +4

      I believe I have just felt what you did one month ago. This was incredible.

    • @CiudadanaHerzeleid
      @CiudadanaHerzeleid Před 8 lety +4

      Don't worry, I've just found out about Sam Harris three weeks ago, and watching this today :)

    • @OlinScharm95
      @OlinScharm95 Před 8 lety +8

      CiudadanaHerzeleid Then you still have a lot of great content to watch...

    • @maxorbit357
      @maxorbit357 Před 8 lety +15

      I found out about Sam 4-5 months ago. He's spot-on every time I've seen him talk. You can't help but listen and say "yep, he's totally right and I never thought of it that way".

    • @chadgrov
      @chadgrov Před 7 lety +4

      Max Orbit I highly suggest checking out Christopher Hitchens as well.

  • @bvishal2kn
    @bvishal2kn Před 6 lety +45

    Damn!
    11:48 it's the first time i have seen Sam get emotional.

    • @timmarrier
      @timmarrier Před 4 lety

      His daughter was either just born or it was her first birthday, I can't remember which he said.

  • @ninpot2765
    @ninpot2765 Před 4 lety +198

    So profoundly moving to see a man of such immense wisdom show such emotion on such crucial matters. A champion.

    • @user-og1nm6gq1l
      @user-og1nm6gq1l Před rokem

      Lio you are not serious.

    • @Jb22372
      @Jb22372 Před rokem

      What a pitiful soul, desperately searching for answers in a world view that offers zero hope and morality.

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Před rokem

      The man's brilliant, but his argument relies on emotion, not science. Science doesn't care if anybody kills anybody. That's one of its limitations.

    • @theunknowncommenter725
      @theunknowncommenter725 Před 9 měsíci

      Where was he? I didn't see him anywhere in the video.

  • @blinertasholli1280
    @blinertasholli1280 Před rokem +6

    I see two problems. How do we define well-being (Brave new World type of scenario) and how do we get a Should from an Is?

  • @drclairejones
    @drclairejones Před 8 lety +231

    I have never heard this debate explained like this before. I am the wiser for watching this talk.

    • @MouseGoat
      @MouseGoat Před 7 lety

      By being stupid in his logic?
      no no.. i do like him... but i'm seeing gebing flaws in this argument... even if i agree the world could use a lot more of the western way of thinking.
      But there is the problem, values... its a nobel thing believing all humans deserve to live happy lives... but it also a western value.
      it's never gonna be a universal value, because the universe does not have a will, for it to have will it would need a god.

    • @i2pjd6hRw5P
      @i2pjd6hRw5P Před 7 lety +10

      +Nekogami-Crystal I think he is arguing that all humans have a fundamental desire to live happy lives. I think he's right in that sense. The only thing that would convince anyone to think otherwise is religion.

    • @iwantyou8990
      @iwantyou8990 Před 7 lety +2

      Or less wise--
      His intellectual sleight of hand is less discrete than he would like to believe.
      He conflates human perception with value as human perception of facts, when the two are not interchangeable from a logical standpoint.
      He's pretty cool, though.

    • @rutkayugurdurgun5998
      @rutkayugurdurgun5998 Před 5 lety

      Have you ever read a book on ethics, Claire? Aristotle, Kant or John Locke maybe?

    • @nathanielcatt380
      @nathanielcatt380 Před 5 lety

      Of Course being from the West i like the western way of thinking more, but who are we to go tell groups that outnumber us that their ''morals are wrong'' and that ours isn't?

  • @mastertheillusion
    @mastertheillusion Před 10 lety +90

    Let that detonate in your mind for a moment.

  • @sepanta4021
    @sepanta4021 Před 4 lety +23

    I just started to read the moral landscape, and I'm already fascinated by how beautifully he describes the situation!

    • @Marius.82.
      @Marius.82. Před 2 lety +1

      You should see Sam Harris vs Jordan Peterson ep 4!

    • @acraze2287
      @acraze2287 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Marius.82. they need to have more debates

  • @edgecrusherhalo
    @edgecrusherhalo Před 3 lety +33

    I rewatch this like once a year or so. It’s equal parts amazing and frustrating. Amazing because of how sensible and powerful it is. Frustrating because of how stuck in the past we are and I realize so many people either don’t think about life like this or they just plain dismiss it in favor of superstition.

  • @purumr
    @purumr Před 4 lety +589

    Yasmine Mohammed brought me here after many years.

    • @anothercrappypianist
      @anothercrappypianist Před 4 lety +35

      Likewise. That was a harrowing and fascinating interview. I watched this talk three or four times over the past decade, and just now again after in that interview Sam revealed that he almost broke into tears at the point he was making at 11:20 because he had just learned before walking on stage his daughter took her first steps. Heartbreaking.

    • @PresidentialWinner
      @PresidentialWinner Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah m 2

    • @CamLaw97
      @CamLaw97 Před 4 lety +4

      Lmao I’m not done with the podcast. I immediately came here when she started crying

    • @nsldsfv1202
      @nsldsfv1202 Před 4 lety +2

      Minutes after finishing the podcast this shows up #1 on the feed.... thanks algorithm spying on me

    • @RM-fs8ub
      @RM-fs8ub Před 4 lety

      Me too, just now....

  • @MinamuTV
    @MinamuTV Před 8 lety +664

    It is absolutely shameful that corporal punishment by teachers is still legal in 21 states because of its biblical roots. That truly is a national embarrassment.

    • @thedon008
      @thedon008 Před 7 lety +2

      Really?! Damn...
      LE: yeah now i saw that...

    • @Personnenenparle
      @Personnenenparle Před 7 lety +21

      How about the fact that you kill hundread of thousands of animals every single day to eat their dead corpses even if you can survive without meat?

    • @thedon008
      @thedon008 Před 7 lety +64

      Personne n'en parle - Nicolas Sicard Let's take it one problem at a time. You can go to infinity if when discussing a problem you come up with your own priorities instead of staying on subject?

    • @Personnenenparle
      @Personnenenparle Před 7 lety +9

      thedon008 Well, if you want to avoid the importance of the greatest genocide in human history, you might not have good priorities.

    • @thedon008
      @thedon008 Před 7 lety +80

      I'm a vegetarian. If you ever want to actually make people WANT to stop on their own, without being forced, you have too see that beating kids, and making it legal is a sign of many people not even seeing children important enough to not be educated with corporal punishments. So how can you then go to those people and say "Hey! Stop eating meat!"? Come on, be real. There are different crowds for different problems, and you have to target your objectives to the right people. Plus, there have been some more significant genocides in the human history against humans themselves and you're just being ridiculous if you deny that. Animals have eaten animals since ever, and we are such animals that benefited from eating them. Only until recently can we say that we have the means to live a better life. Don't be a zealot. You'll only piss people off, not convince them of whatever you believe in.

  • @out-of-the-boxsystems3091

    "I'm the Ted Bundy of String Theory" 15:52 That got me! Best punchline ever.

  • @CaptivateThoughts
    @CaptivateThoughts Před 3 lety +12

    If humans were totally objective robots then yes but I think the best wisdom comes from a balance of objectivity and profound feelings for humanity.

  • @Rients96
    @Rients96 Před 5 lety +445

    If only 1% of people on Earth thought like Sam Harris, we would have been in a totally different place than we are now.

    • @nathanielcatt380
      @nathanielcatt380 Před 5 lety +38

      if only 1% of people on earth thought like ted bundy we would live in a different place than we are now

    • @TheRedMooncorp
      @TheRedMooncorp Před 5 lety +22

      I don't think his views are that uncommon, many students I know think like him

    • @satanslittlehelper802
      @satanslittlehelper802 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TheRedMooncorp Who do you mean? Is it a bad sign I have to ask this?

    • @TheRedMooncorp
      @TheRedMooncorp Před 5 lety +16

      @@satanslittlehelper802 Well I study economics in Germany and many of colleagues think similar to the speaker. In fact using science, in our case mostly statistics to rationalize and operationalize normative ideas and observe their level of achievement is very normal, it is basically what you do in economics.
      I would have assumed, that a small majority of the academic population thinks like this^^.
      Why, is rational, scientific thinking for social issues something so rare, among your social circles? (Not trying to mock, just confused^^)

    • @satanslittlehelper802
      @satanslittlehelper802 Před 5 lety

      @@TheRedMooncorp Oh boy, this was just meant as a joke towards Nathaniel Catt's response: "if only 1% of people on earth thought like ted bundy we would live in a different place than we are now", me asking who of the two students tend to think like today.. those Germans man, no humor. (Keine Sorge, ist nur Spaß. :D)

  • @misc.2331
    @misc.2331 Před 8 lety +909

    This guy is light years ahead of every other human

    • @roblaquiere8220
      @roblaquiere8220 Před 8 lety +30

      How can that be? That is a measure of distance!

    • @misc.2331
      @misc.2331 Před 8 lety +39

      Rob Laquiere
      Exactly why I chose light years. The distance between where he is and the nearest human being on a map of intelligence requires a measure light years

    • @TheBMP09viperproduct
      @TheBMP09viperproduct Před 8 lety +14

      +Misc.2 Stop glorifying humans ..

    • @misc.2331
      @misc.2331 Před 8 lety +28

      TheBMP09viperproduct
      dumbest, most pointless comment ever

    • @TheBMP09viperproduct
      @TheBMP09viperproduct Před 8 lety +5

      +Misc.2 How is that ?

  • @BolasDaGrk
    @BolasDaGrk Před rokem +2

    Such a brilliant speech to hear and rehear over the years. Sam Harris really is brilliant, and hits points people would be lucky to reach themselves and understand with clarity.
    It truly is a shame that no matter how many of the speeches are heard by society, the underlining conditions that make people fanatics is ultimately based on poverty in a class system, not lack of reasonable debate or philosophy in schools.
    If the most brilliant people at the top of the ladder are too infatuated with the status quo and making money to undo their biases and take a reputation risk by exposing class and money as the clearly evident enemy of humanitarianism, what makes anyone think the people at the bottom will be capable?

  • @bretnetherton9273
    @bretnetherton9273 Před 3 lety +31

    "Awareness is known by awareness alone," is the sole irreducible axiom of reality.

  • @douglasmatsenguest5337
    @douglasmatsenguest5337 Před 4 lety +44

    Came back here to listen again after Sam’s recent podcast. Such a powerful talk. We are so lucky to have Sam speaking out about this. Spread the word, share this video.

    • @RustleInThaBush
      @RustleInThaBush Před rokem

      Was that the Yasmine Mohammed conversation? He just re-released this week, which i why im here again!

  • @EmperorsNewWardrobe
    @EmperorsNewWardrobe Před 5 lety +22

    11:27 for anyone who listened to Ted interviewing Sam recently where he’s defending the idea that he’s unemotionally rational, this is the bit that he mentioned about fighting back tears while going this talk

  • @buzzin6895
    @buzzin6895 Před 3 lety +86

    He is indeed a talented communicator.

  • @dorothybarron6115
    @dorothybarron6115 Před 2 lety +24

    I love his calm spirit and the very basics of thought, thoughts and being thoughtful

  • @alejandroaguilar9223
    @alejandroaguilar9223 Před 9 lety +110

    Faith in humanity restored. Guys a genius in reasoning and , at the same time, hes not, hes just as I am, with a very sofisticated brain fot analysis and reflection. I believe we all are capable of being this way. Amazing talk.

    • @sgtsnakeeyes11
      @sgtsnakeeyes11 Před 9 lety +11

      +Alejandro Aguilar yeah thats actually the saddest part, he's just using basic reasoning and yet that's so much more than most others seem to be able to do

    • @zemorph42
      @zemorph42 Před 8 lety +9

      +sgtsnakeeyes11 That's basic reason!? Now I feel like an idiot! Not that it's a new feeling for me, but it's better than the idiots that never realize that they're idiots. I need to study more.

    • @MsThesios
      @MsThesios Před 8 lety +8

      +Alejandro Aguilar You are astoundingly arrogant i mean to say "as i am, with a very sofisticated brain" is so incredibly ironic its insane.

    • @lebohangmohapi8605
      @lebohangmohapi8605 Před 3 lety

      What did you get out of it, that the brain will one day determine morals?

    • @G_Demolished
      @G_Demolished Před rokem

      @@lebohangmohapi8605 That WE determine morals based on consequences, and that we shouldn’t rely on what Bronze Age goat herders thought their deity had to say about it.

  • @gregorcollins
    @gregorcollins Před 7 lety +708

    Sam Harris 2020.

    • @gregorcollins
      @gregorcollins Před 7 lety +1

      very well said:)

    • @music10095
      @music10095 Před 7 lety +31

      someone like him wouldn't want to be president.

    • @rylandelap4734
      @rylandelap4734 Před 7 lety +48

      he is extremely logical, intelligent, and atheist. America has a long way to go before we advance to using someone like that in government

    • @bjergtrold
      @bjergtrold Před 7 lety +11

      He is what the founding fathers were, in many ways.

    • @rylandelap4734
      @rylandelap4734 Před 7 lety +8

      Troels Berg he is certainly one of the most reasonable persons in the world.

  • @shyraz9536
    @shyraz9536 Před 2 lety +9

    Sam Harris you are a legend . Proud to be a exmuslim athiest .

    • @RA-ie3ss
      @RA-ie3ss Před 2 lety

      You bought this theory?

  • @lordvoldemort4242
    @lordvoldemort4242 Před 3 lety +32

    I could listen to him speak all year, only taking breaks to fulfill basic needs lol, but that's how much I like his Ideas

    • @cosmoslady
      @cosmoslady Před 3 lety +1

      Get on his podcast if you haven't yet. Best podcast!

    • @some2199
      @some2199 Před 2 lety

      @@cosmoslady bro, can you tell me how many podcasts he has, I mean his own, there are many channel.

  • @magnusfischer3073
    @magnusfischer3073 Před 7 lety +321

    "I'm the Ted Bundy of string theory."
    S.H.-2010

    • @Tyrantula4
      @Tyrantula4 Před 7 lety +70

      "OK OK. Let's stop right there for a moment. OK? He just compared himself to Ted Bundy. HE'S A RAPIST AND A MURDERER!!"
      - Cenk Uygur

    • @Hushiramu
      @Hushiramu Před 6 lety +1

      Now I agree and disagree with that.

    • @thankshi2815
      @thankshi2815 Před 5 lety

      OQO0 😂

    • @thankshi2815
      @thankshi2815 Před 5 lety

      Tyrantula4 did he really say that?

    • @AlanGarciaC.1093
      @AlanGarciaC.1093 Před 5 lety +2

      @Thanks Hi. Sam's point is that morality is really about knowledge or ignorance.
      What his analogy to Bundy means is that Bundy is a moral IGNORANT. (and Sam is ignorant about String Theory).

  • @julietrogers4554
    @julietrogers4554 Před 4 lety +226

    Did Sam just get choked up? Omg i fing love him so much.

    • @CsavsRacing777
      @CsavsRacing777 Před 4 lety +40

      Yes he did, he mentioned this in a podcast, just prior to this talk his daughter took her first steps. When talking about female oppression he admitted he was on the verge of breaking down in tears/

    • @AC-mp7cx
      @AC-mp7cx Před 3 lety +1

      hes horrible

    • @williamconway7313
      @williamconway7313 Před 3 lety +1

      @@CsavsRacing777 do you know what podcast that is?

    • @matthewharris8819
      @matthewharris8819 Před 3 lety

      Unfortunately, he's a white supremacist, so..

    • @stefanbjarnason251
      @stefanbjarnason251 Před 3 lety +16

      @@matthewharris8819 You just accused Sam Harris of being a white supremacist. That is a very serious charge.
      Would you be so kind as to provide evidence? Thank you.

  • @simonreich9304
    @simonreich9304 Před 3 lety +68

    Exactly!! It’s funny to think that we are so far technologically speaking but have so fucked up morals at the same time. This is by far one of the best ted talks I’ve ever seen. It absolutely describes our modern day issues as we come to understand what’s actually better for our society overall and move away from egoism

    • @ajenks9
      @ajenks9 Před 3 lety

      We are also so far scientifically speaking than ever, so why is the case for science any more compelling?

    • @zachkariotis9982
      @zachkariotis9982 Před 2 lety

      @@ajenks9 that's a pretty dumb question. Obviously we look to science for certain things, but don't recognize its full potential

    • @alirezased2673
      @alirezased2673 Před 2 lety

      Let's collect our good thoughts and put them to use wherever we have the power to influence. Although, reading what I've written, it all seems a little too active, but being passive is not the answer either. I guess 😸 I am in the limbo, climbing up and droning over these moral landscapes in my head but too afraid to move in these moral landscapes in real life. I have too much security to lose you know...

  • @chrisefc3579
    @chrisefc3579 Před 3 lety +66

    You have to watch Sam 10 times over to even comprehend the words he fluently speaks, but my word when you do you realise this guy was born with a gift, and on top of that clarity to see the world as it really is.

    • @s1Lence_au
      @s1Lence_au Před 2 lety +16

      Nah you're just a bit slow

    • @chrisefc3579
      @chrisefc3579 Před 2 lety +13

      @@s1Lence_au Thanks my friend. Belittling a person for trying to educate themselves, well played. Classy. Say hello to r/Iamverysmart over on Reddit, you are their star of the day.

    • @rustycherkas8229
      @rustycherkas8229 Před 2 lety +1

      The only criticism I'd make of your comment is "born with a gift".
      He has said that his 'awakening' came with the planes flying into the WTC.
      The act shocked a lot of people, but 'Sam' has used the trigger to arrive at what seem (to me) to be rational observations and criticisms of ALL religions.
      Particularly profound is his theme that, in the 21st century, it's time to cast off iron-age superstitions and prejudices, less we be the cause of our own end.
      Turn the tables on "religious intolerance" and stop tolerating and graciously allowing those who believe in fairytales to dominate societies.

    • @s1Lence_au
      @s1Lence_au Před 2 lety +2

      @@chrisefc3579 is there an r/iamverydumb because you'd fit right in

    • @lightbeforethetunnel
      @lightbeforethetunnel Před 2 lety +1

      He's a good speaker but his Scientism detector is broken. This video is just Scientism fallacies over and over. That's literally all it is.

  • @MrCmon113
    @MrCmon113 Před 9 lety +79

    Would you refrain from going to the doctor just because you cannot define health well enough?
    Would you refrain from consulting an engineer from building a bridge, just because you are not sure enough where to place it?
    Science will never tell you how to behave, but it tells you how to behave when you want to pursue well being.
    Of course it can also tell you how to achieve suffering.
    The doctor can tell you how to best kill someone.
    The engineer can tell you how to destroy the bridge.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 9 lety +1

      dirzted
      I guess you replied to the wrong person?

    • @standev1
      @standev1 Před 8 lety +12

      +Taxtro What Sam Harris deliberately forgot to establish is why we ought to pursue well-being. And he 'forgot' to establish that because he's unable to do that using only science.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 8 lety +5

      standev1
      Why should we heal people?

    • @standev1
      @standev1 Před 8 lety +2

      Taxtro It depends. Do you want an atheist science-only answer or a Christian answer?

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před 8 lety +3

      standev1
      Are you ok with medicine as we practice it?

  • @AFCoulthard
    @AFCoulthard Před 8 lety +418

    Back when TED Talks was worth a damn, now they have the worst apologists and regressives on; spewing non scientific studies and presenting very trivial, opinionated conferences.

    • @nickbobba
      @nickbobba Před 7 lety +15

      You are an idiot

    • @jarfuloflove7320
      @jarfuloflove7320 Před 7 lety +45

      Why's he an idiot, Manzu?

    • @77Night77Shade77
      @77Night77Shade77 Před 7 lety +29

      To be fair, TED is still largely about the things it's always been about, that being scientific innovations and the like, it's mostly TEDx that has decided to give voice to a rather toxic group of people.

    • @HHLPA
      @HHLPA Před 7 lety +7

      Which is stupid. Their channel is for science and then they have ideologues passing their bullshit as "kind of science" so it legitimates it.

    • @nickbobba
      @nickbobba Před 7 lety +10

      There have always been better and worse TED talks, OP is just too stupid or ignorant to see it. He is trying to mask his opinion about the topics people discuss on TED as a consensus about the quality of their content. I'm sure some people are interested in the opinion of "the worst apologists and regressives" and would say the same thing about the amount of "new atheists and rationalists" taking over TED. TED is an open form for intellectuals from the whole spectrum of ideas to put forward their reasoning, thoughts and sometimes discoveries, not an organization dedicated to reporting facts.That's why OP is an idiot.

  • @SangMism
    @SangMism Před 2 lety +8

    I was trilled to hear that. He is very smart and brave to bring out very conservative topic. This ted talk should be watched.

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 Před 2 lety

      No one with their right mind can support honor killing no matter what crooked logic the perpetrators put to justify this abhorrent crime. Sam has every right to be outraged.
      Similarly, no one with their right mind can support bombing of Baghdad with the strategy of Shock & Awe and it’s aftermath no matter what crooked logic the perpetrators put to justify this abhorrent crime. But Sam Harris supports invasion of Iraq.
      No one in their right mind can support aerial bombardment of Gaza city and its aftermath no matter what crooked logic the perpetrators put to justify this abhorrent crime. Again, Sam Harris supports Israel.
      In conclusion his outrage over abhorrent crimes is very selective therefore not genuine.

  • @YoYo-gt5iq
    @YoYo-gt5iq Před 3 lety +7

    When I was in Iraq, I commonly saw the poorer men wanting to hold down their women by walking ahead of them and having them covered, and the seemingly wealthier men to hold their wife's hand or to be holding their child despite the heat and the obvious pain doing so did.

  • @Tomn8er
    @Tomn8er Před 4 lety +74

    Great speech but title is a little misleading. He didn't really explain in any depth how science can answer moral questions. He simply said that morality has a real basis in facts and therefore not all moral values are equal.

    • @firstnamelastname1368
      @firstnamelastname1368 Před 4 lety +12

      He's establishing the premise of a minority opinion. The details and examples can be found in the book. This is a 20 minute speech to generate interest, not a research article up for peer review.

    • @76JStucki
      @76JStucki Před 4 lety

      @@firstnamelastname1368 What's the title of the book?

    • @firstnamelastname1368
      @firstnamelastname1368 Před 4 lety +2

      @@76JStucki Moral Landscape. It's referenced in the talk.
      Here's a link:
      dl.uswr.ac.ir/bitstream/Hannan/130172/1/Sam_Harris-The_Moral_Landscape__How_Science_Can_Determine_Human_Values-Free_Press%282010%29.pdf

    • @alejandrotellez2962
      @alejandrotellez2962 Před 4 lety

      @fynes leigh Morals are norms. Morals can change throughout history depending on the society. Morals help us distinguish what we should or shouldn't do in a set society.

  • @bea.c.a.m
    @bea.c.a.m Před 4 lety +252

    This talk is timeless!

    • @radutomoiaga994
      @radutomoiaga994 Před 4 lety

      I love how science adepts use absolutes...just like religion.

    • @PredatorH2O
      @PredatorH2O Před 4 lety +8

      @@radutomoiaga994 Guess who has better reasons.

    • @syphonyousa7125
      @syphonyousa7125 Před 4 lety +2

      Did you mean useless?

    • @cgme7076
      @cgme7076 Před 4 lety +3

      Radu Tomoiaga :: What absolutes? Just because you struggle to follow along doesn’t mean science speaks in absolutes.
      Let me ask you these three things to see where you’re at for your science knowledge:
      1) What is a scientific fact?
      2) What is a scientific theory?
      3) Are the models for a scientific law able to change?
      If you have a problem answering these three simple questions then I’m going to suggest you read up on the answers. I’ll bet you’re smart enough to understand what the answers are, you just have to be willing to open your mind a tiny bit.

    • @legalfictionnaturalfact3969
      @legalfictionnaturalfact3969 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cgme7076 yes, morality is an absolute: the golden rule. men especially hate when i say this because men like to treat women in ways they'd never want to be treated. just saying. :)

  • @Dusk-MTG
    @Dusk-MTG Před 4 lety +32

    It's easy to say that some points of view on morality are definitely wrong and are not worth considering and it's also easy to make the most obvious examples. But when you try to apply this concretely, you find out that very rarely this is the case in real life, so either you end up with the impossibility to judge or with a negation of democracy.
    In my opinion China is the best example of this: can we say that their beliefs are definitely correct or definitely wrong? Many people say that "Communism is good in theory but bad in practice" and that seems to be the case. But what I see in China is the application of this model of thought: "My idea is correct, and if you think elseway you're wrong (and you go to jail, but that's another story)".
    And if we really want to be honest here, we think that China "has moral values that aren't worth considering", but why is that? Is it because of the Communism or because they jail or kill anybody who is against it?
    It's really the second one so what does this show? It shows that this way of thinking may be harmful, also more harmful than a lot of our current beliefs.
    That being said, I see that what Sam Harris says is very interesting and it would be nice to live in a world where everyone shared the same "correct" point of view, everyone would want that. But the question we have to pose ourselves is: Is it possible? And the question is most clearly no. By the definition of point of view, we can't all have the same opinion and, unlike science, we don't have a way to say what is correct and what is wrong.
    I'm a physicist and what we do is elaborate theories and then verify with experiments. Sometimes (a lot of times in the history of physics) we believe our theory is correct, it seems reasonable and it really seems to work well. Take the Galileian relativity for instance: anyone before Einstein (Maxwell, Poincarè, etc...) believed that spacetime is flat and that was the "correct" way of thinking. But was it actually "correct"? Indeed, it was not, and there was no way to know it before the special and general relativity theories.
    So my point here is: How do we know that what we now think is "correct" IS ACTUALLY CORRECT?
    Science can't really give answers by certainty, but by a process called corroboration, which means that we try to find every weak spot in a theory, and if the theory resists, it means that is good enough for the moment. But there may be some other weak spots that we haven't considered yet and that make that theory false. In physics we never say that a statement is ABSOLUTELY CORRECT, we say that the theory passed all the tests, for example.
    Absolutism is not the way to go in science, and if we want to create a science of morality we may as well do it, no problem, but we have to consider our best moral values just like any other theories: they seem to be good now and here, but we can't really be sure that they're the absolute best moral values we'll ever get.

    • @jabesmedeiros
      @jabesmedeiros Před rokem +3

      Very interesting comment! That makes my point: morality is not a matter of science is a matter of minds. An absolute morality can only come from an absolute mind. An absolute mind is God´s or is nothing.

    • @stevenkrizsan3891
      @stevenkrizsan3891 Před rokem

      @@jabesmedeiros indeed

    • @steven_king
      @steven_king Před rokem +3

      I don’t think Sam would disagree with you there. As one physicist to another, our theories are always changing, but the point is, we continue progressing ideas. Yes, it’s true that what we know today will likely be nonsense in 100 years time, or perhaps even less. Yet, we strive to keep pushing the ideas further, standing on the shoulders of giants, we continue to progress. I believe we will never have the “right” answer, and I don’t think that’s what Sam is arguing. I think the biggest takeaway I got was that we can, and should keep exploring these views, and from a scientific standpoint. Will we always do the right thing? Absolutely not. But will we continue to learn through hypothesis to theory and more observation? Yes. And we should.

    • @sgdsingh9123
      @sgdsingh9123 Před rokem

      But Sam firmly believes humans do NOT possess Free Will, which opens up the possibility of a “homogenous moral landscape” for humanity, if only the “right” people were to decide on the “best” cultural future for the rest of us, no?
      With 8 billion wildly varying and chaotic humans to implement this utopia upon, I don’t see it as POSSIBLE, but it would be interesting to live for 300 years and see what the action/reaction of that would ACTUALLY look like🤣

    • @motorhead48067
      @motorhead48067 Před rokem +1

      @@jabesmedeiros This seems sort of muddled and sloppy to me. “Morality is not a matter of science it’s a matter of minds.” What exactly is this supposed to mean? For one, minds do not necessarily fall outside the purview of science. You’re setting up a dichotomy between “minds” and science that I don’t think makes sense. And as Harris has stated over and over in other contexts, when he talks about science, he doesn’t mean men in white lab coats, he means the entire enterprise of making sense of the world through reason and evidence. And what does this making sense? Minds, of course. Minds can both use science and be described by science, so again, I’m not really getting your dichotomy between science and minds.
      And what does “absolute mind” even mean? And if God said “human beings should do x”, where would that get us? How would that bridge the is/ought divide any better than Harris has done? *God says we should do x* is just another *is* statement- another fact. It’s a fact about what God wants us to do. How does that translate into an ought? Why ought we do what God says we ought to do? And don’t just say “well because he’s God duh.” Come up with a real argument with “We ought to do what God says we ought to do” as your conclusion, and support that conclusion.
      There’s really nothing that matters more in human existence than morality, so why would you want to abandon reason and evidence on the most important topic in human in life and just defer to a book that is supposedly the result of an “absolute mind” (again, what does this even mean?), even though the book is clearly written by Iron Age scribes and not an omniscient “absolute” mind? And sorry if my comment comes across at all rude that is not my intention, I’m just trying to pressure your ideas because I’m genuinely curious too see how they hold up to pressure.

  • @boya92_
    @boya92_ Před 4 lety +4

    The foundations of many of the answers to the queries that humanity has ever questioned as far as morality is concerned, are intrinsically correlated to a process of thinking that ocurrs as a logical reasoning based on facts, this facts are respectively concerned with the inherently conceivable feelings associated to the human nature such as pain, for instance, we take for granted the idea of "pain" as bad on the grounds that, as humans, we are subject to be sentient beings, and on this regard, the matter of whether or not causing pain to somebody is objectively wrong depends on the grounds of a greater good which is ultimately concerned with the notion of community.

  • @ZesPak
    @ZesPak Před 4 lety +15

    First time I saw him speak I thought he was somewhat condescending, but I really like Sam Harris. What he said makes sense. He isn't the Hitch in terms of historical knowledge, but his rebuttal in the end (about killing your gay son) was quick and on point.

  • @davidchall7684
    @davidchall7684 Před 8 lety +34

    "If questions affect human well-being, than they do have answers, whether or not we can find them" Simply perfect.

  • @cambodialiving4186
    @cambodialiving4186 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Can’t believe this video is 14 years old. Sam hasn’t changed at all and is still promoting the good will of science. This just shows that his words, even 14 years ago, has the same importance as much as it does in this day and age.

  • @matthafer2415
    @matthafer2415 Před 10 měsíci +3

    The clarity and precision the way he takes a thing and makes you see it so clearly so few can do it as well as Sam

  • @SMCca
    @SMCca Před 8 lety +35

    Wow that countdown timer is super distracting..

  • @sagebias2251
    @sagebias2251 Před 4 lety +243

    The moment podcast listeners are looking for is 11:20.

    • @sophonax661
      @sophonax661 Před 4 lety +3

      Thanks

    • @gitlyndon
      @gitlyndon Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks dude

    • @robieosborne7369
      @robieosborne7369 Před 4 lety +2

      More around 11:40 isnt it or am i missing it? The camera is super far away from him at 11:20

    • @MonteiroM
      @MonteiroM Před 4 lety +2

      ​@@robieosborne7369 I think Sage Bias pointed when he stars the topic of raping/killing so we get the context.

    • @stephendevincenzi8386
      @stephendevincenzi8386 Před 4 lety +1

      merci

  • @jusTarung
    @jusTarung Před 3 lety +25

    How am I just found this video now?? The Moral Landscape and this video answered my doubt and confusions about the divering argument about moral relativism. Thank you so much!

  • @lino2896
    @lino2896 Před 3 lety +1

    I haven't watched the video yet but base on the title I would like to say " morality and good and bad has no dimension in science in which can be determined " and if I changed my mind I'll edit my final conclusion.
    Very nicely said as Sam always does but I'd like to share my thoughts 😅 on it in quite deferent direction :
    I absolutely do agree that morality and science are both subjected to facts but the value and methods in which both can be determined can be slightly tricky some times , even tho both do share some aspects aspects in which both can be determined some times they hold deferent standard or separate aspects of evaluations and in other cases where moral values contradict science , and in that capacity nor morality or science have completed answer to each other nor they have a sufficient answer to all the questions the human asks , and I believe that was the main reason way human civilization progress in a such away that lead us to our modern society because simply without questions there will be no progress what so ever , therefore over the years and my intense study of both subjects looking for an answer to it I've concluded there will be no answer to it because simply that will stop the human civilization from progressing farther to the future human by nature have to keep questioning every thing or there will be no progress.

    • @knowledgeablebro6970
      @knowledgeablebro6970 Před 2 lety

      If morality exist, morality is objective. Because if morality was subjective that would mean that it would depend on peoples opinions. And because everybody have different opinions, then morality would mean anything. Right could be wrong and wrong could be right, depending on the person, and there would be no distinctions. Which would be contrary to the definition; " Distinguishing right from wrong ". Therefore, to believe in morality being subjective is to think that morality doesn't exist.

    • @vinsanity982
      @vinsanity982 Před rokem

      He's describing a secular process by which we can get answers, not "the answer" as an alternative to moral relativism or religion. There will always be questions, especially since the world will always continue to change.

  • @DeJake
    @DeJake Před 5 lety +192

    9:29 His chess point is BRILLIANT. I got shivers. That's beautiful

    • @Timaeus3
      @Timaeus3 Před 5 lety +32

      DeJake Actually, the chess comparison is a “false analogy” that Sam Harris might have realized if he had any knowledge of epistemology.

    • @TheSrishanbhattarai
      @TheSrishanbhattarai Před 5 lety +50

      @@Timaeus3 It would be great if you could explain why it's a false analogy for us mortals rather than just stating it as a fact

    • @Raiko01
      @Raiko01 Před 5 lety +14

      Chess is a purely logical game; life isnt. It may be, when we get the brain entirely figured out, but we cant atm so it isnt.

    • @garnauklaufen6704
      @garnauklaufen6704 Před 5 lety +24

      @@Timaeus3 It's not just a matter of epistemology, but also of ethics: What we should want is an ethical question, and once it is answered, we can look at ways how to accomplish that. Harris takes for granted, that we should determine our will according to some utilitarian principle, apparantly. But there are strong philosophical arguments against that. In chess, the goal is clear, and therefore sound sacrifices of queens are absolutely valid. In real ethics we debate, weather mating the other king is actually a kategorical imperative that needs to be pursued by any means necessary, or weather the preservation of the queen might be ethical by itself. Since the content or form of a good will itself is what we inquire about in ethics, Harris just skips the essential ethical question and presents it as though it was allready answered, simply ignoring ethical arguments from various philosophers. He should actually heed his own words and exclude his own oppinion on ethics, and rather refer to actual experts on the matter, like, well, David Hume or Immanuel Kant.

    • @elljay3453
      @elljay3453 Před 5 lety +8

      The goal of chess isn't necessarily that clear. Some may prefer an interesting or romantic move over the dull move most likely to win. A player may, like other sports, throw a game if there is a bet on it; or to lower their rating in order to qualify in a lower division in a more important tournament. They may lose on purpose to make their opponent feel good. Etc.

  • @IBADSNU
    @IBADSNU Před 7 lety +13

    Easily one of my favorite talks. This is the type of video that should go viral!
    Well done, sir.

  • @user-ib6ih8lz6n
    @user-ib6ih8lz6n Před 4 lety +7

    많은 생각을 하게 해줘서 감사해요 ㅎ
    몇번더 돌려 봐야겠어요 ㅋㅋ

  • @deepakmishra96
    @deepakmishra96 Před 4 lety +13

    What a brilliant series of questions the buddy asked in the end? 😢

  • @Godlessmom
    @Godlessmom Před 10 lety +74

    "I'm the Ted Bundy of String Theory". I love this man.

    • @GarryMcCaw
      @GarryMcCaw Před 10 lety +1

      I'm not really a fan.

    • @420MusicFiend
      @420MusicFiend Před 10 lety +19

      Harris is brilliant. Definitely my favorite of the "horsemen". Looking forward towards his new book. 

    • @kaibe5241
      @kaibe5241 Před 10 lety +3

      Musi cFiend hey, could you elaborate on your horsemen comment? I'm not following, feel like I'd like to know/read some more on whatever it is you're referring to :)

    • @Chamelionroses
      @Chamelionroses Před 10 lety +1

      Harris is good but Ted Bundy never was.

    • @jamesmcmillan6913
      @jamesmcmillan6913 Před 10 lety +4

      Kirk Bushell The four horsemen of the new atheist movement are Sam Harris, the late Christopher Hitchens, Daniel Dennett, and Richard Dawkins.

  • @Seven-zr5fi
    @Seven-zr5fi Před 9 lety +278

    Is it just me or will Harris be quoted for centuries to come? =)

    • @isodoublet
      @isodoublet Před 8 lety +24

      +Seven It's just you and his other acolytes.

    • @liamvanderspek572
      @liamvanderspek572 Před 8 lety +3

      +avicenna Won't be TYT and Glenn Greenwald anyway...

    • @wellbi
      @wellbi Před 8 lety +16

      +Seven Man, this is just the thing I was thinking while listening this. Sam Harris is so much ahead of time. If we as species will survive next few centuries, not Hitch, not Richard Dawkins ... Sam Harris will be in text books. Because if we want to survive, as species, from Darwinian viewpoint, we need to adapt the mentality that comes from Sam's (universal) worldview.

    • @isodoublet
      @isodoublet Před 8 lety +1

      wellb0t People don't generally end up in textbooks for being wrong unless they're wrong in spectacular ways. Not the case with our friend Harris.

    • @jasonhaze5349
      @jasonhaze5349 Před 8 lety +4

      +wellb0t I totally agree with you, and this is from a guy who really used to prefer Hitch to Harris. Harris's work and ideas carry so much depth with them, and are by design intended to be much more universally relevant. Instead of getting bogged down in specific events and policies, focuses on how people think and why things are how they are. And that helps him come up with ideas and systems that are more rugged and universal and would have worked as well in the past as they would in the future.

  • @socksoppressmytoes476
    @socksoppressmytoes476 Před 4 lety +5

    Standing ovation for this talk, I doubt Sam gets invited to Ted nowadays.

  • @25jpg
    @25jpg Před 2 lety +1

    Yes, science helps us to describe our world; however, I still believe it cannot tell us what we ought to do objectively.
    E.g. Science can help us to describe the consequence of our actions, I.e. action x will produce y amount of suffering, but that description alone does not tell us WHY we should reduce suffering or why we should thrive/prolong survival.
    The science is simply a description of the facts. To infer the 'why' is up to us to come up with based on our ideologies about what we THINK should be and how we THINK things ought to be. It is simply an opinion that we should minimise suffering unless there is some universal moral code that exists regardless of our individual opinions. A code that exists independent of human thought.
    The problem is that history reveals that when we deny the existence of such a moral law, we enter into the 'wild west' of ideologies where extreme ideologies tend to proliferate and what's right and wrong becomes less clear and easy to discern especially in larger populations.
    I don't deny the harm that religion has caused and can cause, but we need to be careful not to oversimplify the issue and 'throw the baby out with the bath water.'

    • @alexanderkaiser89
      @alexanderkaiser89 Před 2 lety

      But does science need to be able to explain everything? It’s seems quite odd, that people who cannot understand something tend to rely on a fantasy, such as God. Religions, all religions, were made to describe things humans didn’t understand - afterall, also power, money and control.
      As a sane and rational human, you should learn to accept, that everything doesn’t have an answer. Though, does that not mean it’s explainable with the made up idea of God.

  • @TrollinJoker
    @TrollinJoker Před 8 lety +620

    Thank you. We need a universal concept of human morality. Very wise, very true, very urgent.

    • @anthonypc1
      @anthonypc1 Před 6 lety +36

      ! as long as it's adaptable and based on evolving science!
      lets not do a repeat of the past millennia of religious enforced morality, and require violent revolutions every time it's inevitably necessary to change with the times.

    • @nicktanner8231
      @nicktanner8231 Před 6 lety +12

      how much are you going to enforce it? at gunpoint? wait until vegans get enough power and claim moral high ground, wait until people dont want it legal to drive your own car... morality will never be agreed upon and is a cancer to humanity

    • @jesuslovesyou8039
      @jesuslovesyou8039 Před 6 lety +7

      Alex Ander We already have that. It is called the Ten Commandments. 😉

    • @RockyKarthik
      @RockyKarthik Před 6 lety +6

      We already have. Have a look at Humanism

    • @sven7308
      @sven7308 Před 6 lety

      you are insane. no thank you.

  • @TheSunlight74
    @TheSunlight74 Před 4 lety +45

    His eloquence is astounding, not only in prepared talks like this but in general conversation.

  • @marcschulze6290
    @marcschulze6290 Před rokem +2

    I am not sure there is a clearer voice today on ideas centred around reason, morality, kindness, compassion, etc, than Sam Harris. This man is truly my hero.

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před rokem +2

      Translation
      "I'm not sure anybody voices my worldview like this man"

  • @khantmyoaung8885
    @khantmyoaung8885 Před 3 lety +7

    one of my favorite ted talk, should have discovered it years ago.

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před 3 lety

      but the thesis is wrong

    • @motorhead48067
      @motorhead48067 Před rokem

      @@goyonman9655 This kind of comment is the worst. You challenge someone’s view of the situation which leaves them questioning if maybe they’re missing something, but you do nothing to explain why you think they’re wrong. So you’re not helping the discourse in any way and are merely sowing seeds of doubt in people’s minds about whether or not their perception is reliable. If you’re going to say that others are wrong the least you can do is explain why you think they’re wrong so they can evaluate your reasoning against their own.

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před rokem +1

      @@motorhead48067
      The Idiocy of Harris in this talk is so overwhelming you have to take things slow

  • @stefanburns735
    @stefanburns735 Před 9 lety +13

    I've watched this over 10 times and I still can't believe how brilliant Sam is.

  • @kingcarisma
    @kingcarisma Před 4 lety +76

    "Who are we to say?"WE are to say..This is such a good speech, I almost wanna say holy God..

    • @goyonman9655
      @goyonman9655 Před 3 lety +2

      you really wanna do
      because you're involved in a religious experience

  • @fast_harmonic_psychedelic

    Sam Harris should read Leon Trotsky's pamphlet "Their Morals and Ours" which deals with morality from the perspective of Class. Moral questions have answers -- but the answers change and diverge and in fact go against the other based on class. The proletariat has its OWN morals that deal with its own well being as a class and which point towards revolutionary morality.
    The bourgeoisie has ITS own morality, and in the epoch of imperialism, the highest stage of capitalism,. it is a morality of the most reactionary type which they propagate through society to benefit them and their bourgeois culture. There is not one morality because there is not one humanity - we are a society divided by class. As long as two classes exist, two moralities will exist, not a single objective morality. www.marxists.org/archive/trotsky/1938/morals/morals.htm

  • @mayya9004
    @mayya9004 Před 2 lety +2

    I never thought of Moral being something you can be an expert in. But it does make so much sense. We all have opinions of being right or wrong but some people's opinions seem to be very off and from some we can learn. We know what is needed for human flourishing.
    Just one thing: On women covering themselves. Clearly we don't want them to be forced and we want them to choose.. but is there free will? Can we choose?

    • @YagamiKou
      @YagamiKou Před 2 lety

      if ur curious about the basics of freewill in philosophy
      I recommend the "crash course philosophy" videos on freewill
      short answer, fully free will, likely cannot exist
      but determined actions can still be considered "free"
      the most oblivious way to tell if a determined action is free imo
      "did u want to do it?" even if ur not free
      if u want to do it... it doesnt matter, u evolved in such a way
      that u "want" most of what u are "determined" to do
      and people can consider this a kind of "freedom"
      but true freedom
      probably a nope 🤔

  • @ddavidpanah
    @ddavidpanah Před 4 lety +60

    Love for you from Iran Mr Harris. You have always inspired me

  • @OpinionsMatterNamesDont
    @OpinionsMatterNamesDont Před 5 lety +108

    1:34 “Values are facts about the well-being of conscious creatures” - that’s exactly where he nailed the subject!

    • @TinoMT
      @TinoMT Před 5 lety +21

      except we do not all have the same value, we do not all get well being, from the same values.

    • @deadeaded
      @deadeaded Před 4 lety +6

      @@TinoMT Of course we don't all have the same values, but that's just because some of us are wrong. We have "alternative facts".

    • @TinoMT
      @TinoMT Před 4 lety +17

      @@deadeaded Wrong in what? How can you say someones value is wrong? Who are you to say that? And why does it even matter who you are, to say it?

    • @deadeaded
      @deadeaded Před 4 lety +1

      @@TinoMT The alternative is that all value systems are equally conducive to moral flourishing. If you reject moral relativism, which I do, it immediately follows that most of us, probably all of us, are wrong.

    • @TinoMT
      @TinoMT Před 4 lety +8

      @@deadeaded Yeah, IF you reject moral relativism.

  • @gussampson5029
    @gussampson5029 Před 2 lety +2

    The talk about children being hit in schools is funny because I just watched a Jonathan Haidt video where he mentioned that having a punishment exist encourages both the good and the bad to engage in better behavior. So the good kids are more likely to be even better and the bad kids are less likely to be bad. The good kids buy into the system more when they believe that destructive behavior is punished. So they contribute more altruistically to the group.
    As unpleasant as it is, punishments are necessary. I personally wouldn't advocate hitting children, but they need a punishment that matters to everyone.

  • @mitchellvines176
    @mitchellvines176 Před měsícem +1

    The fact / value problem reflects an understanding of true statements as correct descriptions of an external reality independent of human perception.

    The post-modern insight that displaces that understanding is often expressed as “truth is just a social construct”. But this simply reflects the failure of post-modernism to turn the insight back on itself. Truth is not _just_ a social construct-the pejorative spin is a false analogy comparing a more insightful concept of truth with a naive concept of truth that doesn’t exist.

    Understanding truth as a “social construct” destroys the fact / value illusion. Everything we believe to be true has an intrinsic relationship to human effort-and effort reflects intention, desire. Reasoning about how we collaborate more effectively, rather than injure or kill each other, is clearly subject to fact-based argument and falsifiable conclusions: an objective secular ethics.

  • @nickdags4646
    @nickdags4646 Před 7 lety +10

    This clip of Sam is really good, but who can TRULY say this is better than his episode "The Best Podcast Ever".

  • @TatonkaJack
    @TatonkaJack Před 5 lety +199

    Interesting idea. But it still isn't really saying science can answer moral questions. Essentially he's putting forward a simplified version of consequentialism, which on a personal level can be a useful decision making tool, but on a larger scale logically leads to utilitarianism, which can be problematic in a Thanos kind of way. It also doesn't address the underlying "why?" He's saying we should value human well-being through the criterion of consequentialism. But why should person A care about the well being of person B? Why shouldn't person A maximize his/her well-being at the expense of person B? Obviously society thinks taking advantage of other people that way is wrong, but that's because of the values we collectively carry. Really, what this talk boils down to is saying that science can measure well-being (although he did admit it doesn't work in morally complicated matters), and human well-being should be our moral compass. Which again, can be problematic on a large scale. So in conclusion, science can't answer moral questions, it can merely help quantify consequences in a specific moral framework.
    That's all heady stuff. In more practical terms he's saying think about how actions affect yourself and others which others which I think is a great idea.

    • @NateDOGG3024
      @NateDOGG3024 Před 5 lety +10

      Kaden Gilchrist plus, the epistemology he consistently refers to isn’t necessarily scientific

    • @jeffberlin4179
      @jeffberlin4179 Před 5 lety +4

      Or you can just say.
      I'm not comfortable with that question. And with those 6 words just shut down the discussion. Because your not the one with the boot on your neck.

    • @ilcrawfo
      @ilcrawfo Před 5 lety +6

      We have evolved to be very social beings that live in and rely on close knit groups. That and empathy are two good reasons not to be a selfish jerk.

    • @DanaMeise
      @DanaMeise Před 5 lety +4

      Just because you can stitch words together for sheep doesn’t mean the rest can be fooled by your weak arguments

    • @myoung48281
      @myoung48281 Před 5 lety +10

      If science shows that global warming is manmade, then the effort to stem it becomes a moral imperative. If smoking is shown to cause cancer and other health issues, morally it should be something to be shunned. If lead in the water supply....etc.
      There is a strong impetus to change judgements as to what and what not to do based on science (moral decisions based on science, it's bad to get sick from smoking to the RIGHT thing to do is to stop). This is more than utility, it's literally a moral persuader.
      The problem is that the acceptance of the science is usually challenged as being incorrect or somehow misleading or inconclusive, all in the service of maintaining the value of maintaining the status quo for reasons of personal enjoyment, economy, not wanting change, and other cultural or practical reasons.

  • @Rofl890
    @Rofl890 Před 3 lety +6

    5:52 Actually, I'm pretty sure a supercomputer *_will_* one day be able to answer all of those questions! (especially if the core of your talk is correct)

    • @AmasaTony81947
      @AmasaTony81947 Před 3 lety

      Beware of the omnipotence of super computers. Not too many years ago, I was giving a series of lectures at MIT. They had just adopted the practice of liberalizing minimally supervised super-computer time to undergraduates. One of these exuberant geniuses bubbled up to me after my lecture and reported excitedly and proudly that he and some of his buds had just accomplished the questionably useful feat of running pi out to ten billion digits and that it’s irrationality still held up. I asked him why he hadn’t just asked a prof or a sober grad student. They could have saved a lot of time and thousands of dollars of computer time!

    • @-dash
      @-dash Před 3 lety

      The last thing he listed, sure computers can query the tax code. A computer could answer the first two _based_ on a program imbued with values by humans. This guy is waving his hands around as if our values aren’t derived from the ancients or from the divine.

  • @joeyt8256
    @joeyt8256 Před 3 lety +3

    His segment on how society deals with women's bodies is amazing!

  • @nandokgg
    @nandokgg Před 8 lety +333

    Brilliant Harris. Atheism enabling the turning of age to adulthood of humanity

    • @thomasoxford2140
      @thomasoxford2140 Před 8 lety +6

      And vegans growing roots, sprouting leaves and turning into vegetables.

    • @thinkingmouse2751
      @thinkingmouse2751 Před 7 lety +1

      fernando martins
      questioning cave runes does not make you smart idiot.

    • @Volmire1
      @Volmire1 Před 7 lety +9

      Wow, another atheist youtuber that thinks atheism is linked to the maturity of humanity. There's no evidence for that...

    • @eosapienrancher4045
      @eosapienrancher4045 Před 7 lety +4

      Fernando's is a philosophical claim. What would "evidence" of that statement even look like? You'd have to define what a mature global society means in the first place. Granted, that's a rather vague idea, but to draw an analogy to individual maturity, can we all agree that the ability to reason with one another without resorting to violence is a hallmark of collective maturity, yes? If that's the case, atheism clearly facilitates that kind of maturity by discrediting, as a matter of principle, any claim that cannot be substantiated in terms of objective criteria. As long as faith and dogma remain central factors in people's moral intuition, we will continue speaking past one another on moral issues, because there will always be this component of morality that can only be understood subjectively and cannot be properly communicated to others. In that sense, atheism does good work in helping humanity progress towards some kind of moral consensus on issues of fundamental importance.

    • @anthonypc1
      @anthonypc1 Před 6 lety

      QuisUtTiamat Love your comment.
      I'm used to youtube comment sections being mostly 'a wretched hive of scum and villainy...'
      But I should read respectable comments on scientific videos more -- giving me Pride in the Atheist/secular humanist community. :)

  • @zane98zane
    @zane98zane Před 9 lety +6

    Many people seem to be misunderstanding what he is saying. He is claiming that morality is based upon suffering and science can determine what may or may not cause suffering.

  • @blacky93able
    @blacky93able Před 2 lety +1

    I sincerely love and respect many religious people, and I believe that their faith inspires them to act with kindness and if it just stayed that way there would be no problem. The real problem lies in the idea of ​​the "afterlife" and as the Bible and the Koran express it, it seems to me a form of "spiritual blackmail"; "God" is shown as a "lender" who, in exchange for offering you salvation and avoiding condemnation, asks you double in prayers, sacrifices, servitude and even kill "infidels", until your death, without questioning anything, without protesting, without rebelling, NOTHING! !!
    I believe that reason and self-esteem should be our moral compass to guide us in creating a freer, fairer and more democratic society, instead of dogma, myth, tradition and superstition.
    Thanks Sam, you are a great scientist and lecturer, just like Charles Darwin, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin, Stephen Hawking, Temple Grandin, Robert Lanza and Rita Levi-Montalcini.
    PS: Your Atheist Manifesto greatly inspired me.

  • @alexisjuillard4816
    @alexisjuillard4816 Před 4 lety +19

    as someone once pointed out to me , regardless of what you think of harris (i don't think anyone could argue he is a very special sapiens) Sam is the most "clear thinker" i've encoutered. agree with him or not, he has a unique talent in communication, in making his points in the simplest and most appropriate terms

    • @acraze2287
      @acraze2287 Před 2 lety +1

      meditation being a big proponent in his life probably helps him a lot with that