Life, the Universe and Nothing: Why is there something rather than nothing?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2013
  • This is the second in a three-part discussion between Prof Lawrence Krauss and Dr William Lane Craig.
    Prof Krauss and Dr Craig discuss what is perhaps the fundamental question of philosophy and science: why there is something rather than nothing.
    The copyright for the Life, the Universe and Nothing videos is held by City Bible Forum. Prof Krauss has requested that these videos are not copied on to any device nor uploaded by anyone other than the City Bible Forum. The video Flavors of Nothing is used with the kind permission of Big Think.

Komentáře • 10K

  • @emeryemery4903
    @emeryemery4903 Před 10 lety +94

    This exchange proves that we NEVER need a moderator. Every time this discussion becomes interesting, she moves us to a new, unrelated point. It's maddening.

    • @sodalis
      @sodalis Před 9 lety +8

      I agree. Moderators are obstructive. I once moderated a panel at a comic book convention with Jonathan Frakes, Wil Wheaton, and the super cool LeVar Burton. I was in the way and unnecessary. It was still a good learning experience. If I had it to do over my only function would have been to take questions from the audience and keep them flowing, and I would have remained offstage. I had no business being up there. But I was invited, and I took the opportunity.
      I'll emcee anything.

    • @RiiSchob
      @RiiSchob Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah.. but a lot of people only agree to debate with a moderator.

    • @ApaX1981
      @ApaX1981 Před 3 lety +2

      Well, in this case you do not even need Craig.

    • @DannyBoy777777
      @DannyBoy777777 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@ApaX1981lol

    • @thecloudtherapist
      @thecloudtherapist Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@ApaX1981But if Kraus was absent we could finally be able to discuss 'nothing' without him confusing us.

  • @reubenyoung70
    @reubenyoung70 Před rokem +24

    I’ve been absolutely fascinated to watch LK speak on things. For some reason in this format he just gives me anxiety. Why is he so rude?! Constantly interrupting and getting off topic, absolute nightmare. Well done to WLC for staying cool.

    • @nosteinnogate7305
      @nosteinnogate7305 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Its understandable. Craig just asserts baseless propositions as if they are obvious.

    • @reubenyoung70
      @reubenyoung70 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@nosteinnogate7305 Not understandable at all in my book

    • @cdb5001
      @cdb5001 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@nosteinnogate7305ignorance must be bliss for you.

    • @heavybar3850
      @heavybar3850 Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@nosteinnogate7305 Baseless propositions?
      He doesn't even get a chance to explain them.
      Kraus is a pain to listen to. He's a good scientist but a terrible debater.

    • @Shehatescash
      @Shehatescash Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@heavybar3850Exactly. The person who committed couldn’t even stop to think that the interruptions is why he believes Craig’s points lack foundation 😂

  • @MrJoaoDD
    @MrJoaoDD Před 8 lety +12

    People, learn to listen, even if you don't agree, you first have to listen and don't just judge. Personaly i like to listen to these discussions. Just by listening you learn something, doesn't matter what

    • @sigururolafsson2257
      @sigururolafsson2257 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Its probably a matter of knowing how to listen and process what the other side is actually saying.

  • @praxitelispraxitelous7061
    @praxitelispraxitelous7061 Před 3 lety +18

    Well, no matter how one defies "no-thing" it still remains no more than what rocks dream about

    • @JackPullen-Paradox
      @JackPullen-Paradox Před 3 měsíci +1

      Exactly. Give me one miracle and I will explain the universe.

  • @MattSingh1
    @MattSingh1 Před 10 lety +34

    There's nothing more loathsome than a moderator that thinks/assumes they're part of the debate. I have utter contempt for this dozy, ego-led woman...

    • @greyeyed123
      @greyeyed123 Před 10 lety +1

      She also doesn't seem very bright.

    • @MattSingh1
      @MattSingh1 Před 10 lety +4

      greyeyed123 Yup, hence why I labelled her 'dozy'. She's also unnecessarily hostile/aggressive towards Krauss, in addition to giving her irrelevant opinion on whether or not a certain exchange is productive or not.

    • @Yossarian.
      @Yossarian. Před 3 měsíci

      Yeah. Christopher Hitchins was right all along.
      Women ruin everything.

  • @KMFCambodia
    @KMFCambodia Před 8 lety +95

    What an utterly useless moderator! The moment each 'argument' got interesting she killed it.

    • @joevete4384
      @joevete4384 Před 6 lety +4

      Agreed. She derailed the entire debate at 57:17.. totally useless.

    • @isaaq1393
      @isaaq1393 Před 6 lety +2

      Joe Vete judging from her clothing and this channel I am sure they planted her as the moderator to tip the debate in favor of Craig. I mean look at the way she cuts him Kraus but rarely William

    • @mathscience6829
      @mathscience6829 Před 6 lety +5

      That seems like a quite extreme statement saying based on her appearance you can categorise her to a certain bias. And she saved Kraus from attempting to explain absolute nothing is something.

    • @isaaq1393
      @isaaq1393 Před 6 lety

      I meant her extremely modest Christian type clothing. I also googled her and as suspected she’s a believer and “spiritual”. Just as she showed her bias through the whole debate.....

    • @isaaq1393
      @isaaq1393 Před 6 lety

      Their*

  • @vxenon67
    @vxenon67 Před 7 lety +12

    I'm a Christian. Krauss is one of those gifted teachers I don't mind learning his field of expertise. You will learn a lot from him. Reminds me of my civil engineering teacher that can make a boring subject interesting.

    • @iworship6951
      @iworship6951 Před 6 měsíci +1

      LoL 😂

    • @thecloudtherapist
      @thecloudtherapist Před 4 měsíci

      The only thing I learn from Kraus is how to lie with a straight face.
      He lies that a universe can come from (his definition of) nothing.
      He lies about the word nothing, as a universal negator.
      And he lies about the letter from Vilenkin.

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Před 3 měsíci +1

      You have (much) more respect than this agnostic atheist has for him.
      I could never get in tune with him and/or his attitude.
      In fact, I'm watching him right now to see if I can find something I can take seriously.
      Edit; I got bored.

  • @jesserochon3103
    @jesserochon3103 Před 9 lety +6

    Lawrence is like a pouty school child during the Q&A. I barely made it through. Craig was remarkably patient with the man.

  • @Microtherion
    @Microtherion Před 4 lety +8

    A lot of people were evidently annoyed by Krauss (!) In fact, there was one thing and one thing only which annoyed me. That was when he directly accused Craig of intellectual dishonesty. It's interesting because I recently watched another video in which Krauss participated, and the subject was prejudice (specifically xenophobia). Another speaker gave a quite persuasive definition of what prejudice is 'in itself'. It is when one person refuses to allow that another may sincerely hold a different view. In these situations, the former concludes that there are three possibilities: the other person is 1) dishonest (or not serious); 2) intellectually inadequate; or 3) insane.
    This is why what I sometimes call 'evangelical atheism' may rightly be considered an irrational prejudice (unlike atheism as such, which is a perfectly reasonable philosophy). Amusingly, Krauss savages the syllogism he attributes to Craig - which, we learn soon afterwards, originates with Leibniz, one of the finest scientific minds in history. Leibniz' syllogism is surely debatable, but it is far from nonsense or sophistry, as Krauss is implying. Ironically, for a moment there, Krauss is sailing close to item 1 of the prejudice triad just noted...

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 Před 3 lety +41

    Moderator: "Bill, you said that rubber duckies do not come in colors other than yellow."
    Bill: "No, I don't think I said that. I'm sure they come in all sorts of colors and-"
    Lawrence: "HOW DO YOU KNOW!? HAVE YOU *SEEN* ALL THE COLORS REPRESENTED IN RUBBER DUCKIES!??"

    • @joshua_wherley
      @joshua_wherley Před rokem +14

      Why does Krauss shout so much? I was getting a headache from listening to him.

    • @Raiddd__
      @Raiddd__ Před 10 měsíci +1

      Time stamp?

    • @calldwnthesky6495
      @calldwnthesky6495 Před 7 měsíci

      except bill wasn't talking about rubber duckies. he was talking about an infinite "after life"... bit of a difference there

    • @craigbacks
      @craigbacks Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@joshua_wherleybecause he is losing the debate. You can always tell.

    • @JackPullen-Paradox
      @JackPullen-Paradox Před 3 měsíci +1

      Lawrence interrupted all the time, usually with another question. William seems to attempt to entirely think on his feet in this debate. That means he needs time to think about each question instead of going to prepared material. Lawrence seems more interested in winning the debate that discovering knowledge, and he bombards William with questions and talks very fast so that he loads up what William (and the audience) has to process in a very short time.
      The debate or discussion was a bust because of Lawrence and possibly the moderator.

  • @convananthalfhand5183
    @convananthalfhand5183 Před 9 lety +3

    What an interesting debate! I come back and listen to it every other month and enjoy it each time.

  • @cranesebastian3809
    @cranesebastian3809 Před 6 lety +14

    Lawrence Krauss has finally met his match. I love it. Krauss is a scientist, not a philosopher. His expertise is strictly on observing the natural world; whereas the expertise of William Lane Craig is on asking and thinking about the deep philosophical questions about reality. Krauss, I advise you to leave abstract thinking to the pros.

    • @misterwhite1119
      @misterwhite1119 Před 6 lety +4

      Crane Sebastian BLEATED: “His expertise is strictly on observing the natural world; whereas the expertise of William Lane Craig is on asking and thinking about the deep philosophical questions about reality. Krauss, I advise you to leave abstract thinking to the pros”
      As Stephen Hawking famously wrote, philosophers have not kept up with the scientific advances of the last 150 years so they are uniquely UNQUALIFIED to speak about any of the deep Philosophical questions of the 21st century. And WLC is literally the worst of the modern philosophers as far as education goes. He is ridiculously unqualified to discuss any subject, even his own beliefs of Christianity
      Krauss on the other hand spends more time daily using the tools of science to address the deep philosophical questions than Craig ever has. That is why Krauss teaches at one of the best academic institutions in the world and Craig brainwashes illiterate children at a 10th rate Christian madrassa
      Krauss is correct. Craig is completely wrong about everything

    • @thesprawl2361
      @thesprawl2361 Před rokem +2

      Krauss is famous in these debates for absolutely crucifying Craig. It was such a mauling that afterwards craig complained about krauss being 'rude'.
      Also, please tell me you didn't accuse a *theoretical physicist whose specialty is the shape of space time and quantum field dynamics of not being up to the job of using abstract concepts... 😂🤦‍♂️

    • @thesprawl2361
      @thesprawl2361 Před rokem +1

      I clicked on this comment twice because I found it so amazing that anyone could genuinely watch this back and forth and come away thinking that _Craig_ performed well. I can only guess that you didn't watch it; I know that's a common accusation when people disagree but I really mean it.
      This was an evisceration by Krauss and it was so total it made me uncomfortable at points. WLC was utterly taken apart, quite aggressively, by Lawrence, and I felt like Krauss could've backed off sometimes because he was making WLC look like Grandpa Simpson in the Q and A and it was slightly pathetic.

    • @Check.ur.theism
      @Check.ur.theism Před 8 měsíci

      That's no different than saying a scientist met their match when attempting to have a physic explain how they can see visions in a crystal ball. What I find most astonishing is that anyone can find intelligibility in anything Craig says.

    • @oscarvelez5827
      @oscarvelez5827 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Krauss never took apart WLC 😂 people are such fanatics. This was a good debate.

  • @japanbeta
    @japanbeta Před 8 lety +33

    I loved it when he said "the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence". Yet one aaaaallways hears atheists whining, "but there's no evidence for God".

    • @SenorQuichotte
      @SenorQuichotte Před 7 lety

      wrong answer dumbass, mathematical proof by contra-positive

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Před 7 lety +1

      Majestic, unfortunately, you are using that principle in the wrong context. If one is making a positive claim that a god exists, one needs to provide evidence. Otherwise, there is no reason to accept the claim. It is not up to everyone else to try to disprove you.
      In other words, "the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" is not to be used here (and is unnecessary), because, by default, no one is claiming no god exists, rather, you just haven't met the burden of proof that a god does.

    • @Tony07UK
      @Tony07UK Před 7 lety

      What context? Either that statement is consistently true or always irrelevant. Many people believe in 'aliens' or life on other planets in the Universe, despite NO evidence having ever been provided. Even scientists have speculated with probablity and statistics affirming that there IS a high probability that intelligent life exists elsewhere and have even spent $millions on SETI because they 'firmly believe' in their delusion despite the 'absence of evidence'. Scientists distort science to suit their own purposes and agenda - same as the lying politicians.

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Před 7 lety +1

      First off, the SETI researchers are not spending money despite evidence. Quite the contrary. In this case, absence of evidence is indeed not evidence of absence. Why? Because the we find that the universe is isotropic and homogeneous, meaning, the distribution of matter is more or less the same, everywhere. Thus, the same laws of physics that permitted life to arise on Earth are the same working in solar systems very similar to ours.
      In other words, the probably is in our favor. The scary thing is why aren't there any intelligent communicating aliens?
      Just as well, we just started serious SETI searches only a few decades ago. And there is no guarantee that we can resolves radio signals, cover all the band reliably, throughout the whole sky, nor that any intelligent aliens are sending radio waves. Perhaps they are using optical communications (i.e. optical SETI) or other things.

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Před 7 lety

      You're an idiot. For example, my research group doesn't distort anything, nor do any of my colleagues in other labs. There are bad apples that serve to tarnish the images of groups in any human pursuit. The science we practice today has a major social component to it (we are not robots) and thus, errors, whether on purpose or accident, are made. But this is precisely why we have the methodology of science. To eliminate such errors.
      If any scientist or science group lies about major (or even minor) results, the beauty of science, unlike politics, is that they will eventually be found out and dealt with. Interestingly, I recently gave a talk on the Schön Scandal. You should take your ignorant brain and educate yourself about it to understand how we researchers really deal with the rare instances of liars in our field.

  • @vaderetro264
    @vaderetro264 Před 7 lety +15

    I've been an atheist since my early teens (I'm now 43yo), but since I started watching new atheists debates with Craig Lane about 10 years ago I'm getting closer and closer to the Christian faith. Dawkins, Harris and Krauss, who seemed to me 'heroes' of logic and reason, have become symbols of the ignorant and arrogant atheist community. Of course watching debates online hasn't been my main source of information: studying the Bible, philosophy, theology and science (especially quantum physics) is changing my world view to theism.

    • @misterwhite1119
      @misterwhite1119 Před 6 lety

      Pico della Francesca: You are moving towards theism because you are totally ignorant of “the Bible, philosophy, theology and science (especially quantum physics)”. If you had even the SIMPLEST understanding of anyone of these, you would realize that theism is unsupportable.
      Plus, I need to point out that you have NEVER been an atheist. You simply do not have sufficient knowledge to be one.

    • @vincenzodimasofootballandc748
      @vincenzodimasofootballandc748 Před 2 lety

      Pico Della Francesca doesn't exist!!!

    • @vegeta8169
      @vegeta8169 Před 2 lety +1

      And now?

    • @edgarvalderrama1143
      @edgarvalderrama1143 Před 3 měsíci

      I suppose there is always a strong temptation to invoke the magic word: "Goddidit!"

    • @mathewsamuel1386
      @mathewsamuel1386 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@vincenzodimasofootballandc748That's a positive claim. What's your proof for it?

  • @raamonkhan4909
    @raamonkhan4909 Před 8 lety +15

    "I dont know...and thats okay.."
    - Lawrence Krauss.

    • @gea2854
      @gea2854 Před 7 lety +4

      He says that in the sense that asserting something before any means to verify is useless knowledge and no better than blind guessing.
      It's healthy skepticism.

    • @sergiobfbarbosa
      @sergiobfbarbosa Před 3 měsíci

      That's the only true answer. Anyone might believe in a deity, but there's no way of knowing for sure.
      The problem is when people claim "scientists don't know, they can't explain, therefore why can't there be a god"...
      Usually when a scientists knows only 99.999% of something, they still say i don't know.

  • @JoelKingsley
    @JoelKingsley Před 10 lety +6

    Great debate. The way in which they say their facts reflect their faith. Wish I had such faith like Dr.Craig.:)

    • @DannyBoy777777
      @DannyBoy777777 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Why? To be imprisoned for eternity by a God, whether it be heaven or hell? Couldn't think of anything worse.

  • @fpxpGetReal
    @fpxpGetReal Před 3 lety +4

    Krauss says there is something in nothing but the main QUESTION is where did that "Nothing" come from ?

  • @mytuber81
    @mytuber81 Před 10 lety +21

    1:04:17 YES!! Oh my word,...LET THE MAN TALK, GEEZ!!! Yet he will keep interrupting Bill over and over and over again. If Krauss would shut his mouth and listen for 5 seconds Bill might not have to repeat himself. Krauss is so angry, he has no problem personally attacking/insulting anyone he disagrees with - he is one of the most ignorant people I have every heard in that regard.

    • @inpugnaveritaas
      @inpugnaveritaas Před 10 lety +13

      William lane craig is a vapid moron.

    • @inpugnaveritaas
      @inpugnaveritaas Před 10 lety +17

      The problem is that Craig continues to promote complete bullshit, and absolute factual inaccuracies, while telling people that they're fact. He deserves to be shouted down every time he says something idiotic.

    • @mytuber81
      @mytuber81 Před 10 lety +8

      Haha, YOU think it's factually inaccurate. Based on what you literally just said you have no clue of the arguments he is presenting b/c you don't care. Just like Krauss you are intolerant of any other worldview than your own which is why Krauss acted the way he did in this debate - like a 5yo. He will not only cut Bill off EVERY 5-10 seconds, but he will use insults in what is supposed to be a professional, public, civil debate. You hate religion therefore you are intolerant of it, and what's disturbing is you don't see anything wrong that or how Krauss acted.

    • @DanielFenandes
      @DanielFenandes Před 10 lety +6

      mytuber81 it is not intolerance to any other wordlview than yours, it is intolerance to a view that has absolutely no real evidence for it. Krauss does not have a worldview, he just acknowledges the evidence of the universe we have today, while Bill ignores it.

    • @mytuber81
      @mytuber81 Před 10 lety +6

      Daniel Dourado Again, YOU say there is "no real evidence". You, like Krauss, ignore/reject ANY evidence that may point to a higher being b/c you have a predisposition to believe there isn't one - that's called being close-minded. Science cannot explain everything - Krauss even admitted this - which is what a lot of atheists don't realize. There are other ways of garnering truth than through science. Never-the-less science is great and we should follow the facts wherever they lead us. With that being said Craig presents facts in science and logic that point to a higher being. Craig's arguments are more plausible than Krauss's arguments against a God he doesn't believe in. Krauss cannot refute the argument itself, which is why he is well-known for almost ALWAYS using red herrings. Anyone who uses insults as a tactic in an argument is one who does not have a good argument.

  • @JimMcCray
    @JimMcCray Před 7 lety +25

    This video reminds me of why I stopped watching Lawrence debates- I hate that he constantly interrupts and talks over his opponents.
    Same goes for that lame "moderator".What a bummer!

    • @Metalhead98793
      @Metalhead98793 Před 3 lety +2

      He’s a much worse and stupid version of Richard Dawkins when it comes to this stuff

    • @james-r
      @james-r Před 3 lety +1

      Jim McCray when someone linguistically and philosophically attempts to beat you in a debate which blatantly has a rational conclusion, I would be like Lawrence, constantly interrupt to correct Craigs bs interpretations and stance

    • @weston06.
      @weston06. Před měsícem

      @@james-rimagine trying to justify Kraus in this debate, lol. Dude is insufferable.

    • @james-r
      @james-r Před měsícem

      @@weston06. Nobody needs to “justify” Lawrence. We live in a world where somehow some peoples ideas of evidence is insufferable bs.

  • @acortes7771
    @acortes7771 Před 8 lety +3

    Very good dialogue and positions on both sides, much better than the Brisbane debate! Both science and philosophy/theology are not at odds with each other and complement each other well. Science explains the "how" and philosophy/theology attempts to explain the "why". In the end they both seek the truth!

    • @Johnsmith-pd3uk
      @Johnsmith-pd3uk Před rokem

      Theology is not truth. Neither is philosophy. Science is the only truth. How is the only question that really matters. Why questions are usually pointless. Does it matter why you were involved in a traffic collision? How is what matters. When speaking in scientific terms, how and why are essentially the same. The "why" questions of theology are meaningless. Fairy tales aren't facts. Fairy tales stop knowledge. Fairy tales destroy intelligence

  • @hofifut
    @hofifut Před 10 lety +11

    I'm an atheist. And Krauss would do himself and others on our side a favour by refining his mannerisms. That might go some way to making those sitting on the fence to take him/us more seriously.

    • @jscottupton
      @jscottupton Před 10 lety

      "hofifut"...I will second that. I truly wanted a high quality debate (I am not an atheist). But I was really disappointed in the way Krauss acted and some of his totally unnecessary attacks on groups he didn't like (Christians, republicans, Microsoft, etc).

    • @iamtherealrenedescartes
      @iamtherealrenedescartes Před 10 lety +1

      He would do us all a favour by not debating and stick to doing science. I don't think there is any room for Lawrence Krauss in the Atheism vs Theism debate. To me, he has jumped on the bandwagon. I like him and I am an Atheist but he can't and shouldn't debate Theism.

    • @hofifut
      @hofifut Před 10 lety

      bada9412"Spamming"?
      I've seen a number of his videos, and I've commented twice in this series only when he was in Austrailia. That's as in "2" times total. I don't consider that spamming. And no, it's not the exact same comment. Maybe the same idea, OK, but check the words. Care to clarify what makes that "childish"?

    • @hofifut
      @hofifut Před 10 lety

      ***** I don't go to church, don't know the scriptures, and accept the science indicating the earth is a few billion yrs old. If that makes me a Christian, so be it. Don't care much for labels. I only mention I'm an atheist because I know if I'd only made the statement regarding Krauss's behaviour, then I'd be labelled religious.

    • @iamtherealrenedescartes
      @iamtherealrenedescartes Před 10 lety

      ***** Do you believe in a God?

  • @LIQUIDSNAKEz28
    @LIQUIDSNAKEz28 Před 8 lety +9

    Nothing is NOT a possible state of reality, because of it's very nature, which means that the flat vacuum state is closest we can ever come to it. And that flat vacuum state is technically something. In other words, there always has been, always will be and currently is "something."
    So Instead of trying to find an absolute beginning, what we should try to do is find some sort of fundamental law where CHANGE is a constant and causality is emergent.

    • @acortes7771
      @acortes7771 Před 8 lety

      +LIQUIDSNAKEz28 both your point and grandmasterjoshh's point are strong and equally valid for both sides of the argument. The solution thus far is an intriguing evasive mystery.

    • @acortes7771
      @acortes7771 Před 8 lety

      +grandmasterjoshh both your point and Liquidsnakez28's point are equally strong and valid for both
      sides of the argument. The solution thus far is an intriguing evasive mystery.

    • @marybethmiranda3037
      @marybethmiranda3037 Před 8 lety

      Nothing is not a possible state....the implication that there must be space?

    • @LIQUIDSNAKEz28
      @LIQUIDSNAKEz28 Před 8 lety +2

      Mary Beth Miranda Sort of. Another way of thinking about it is this, Something and Nothing are exactly where they are supposed to be. "Something" is everywhere and "Nothing" is nowhere.

  • @ronaldderooij1774
    @ronaldderooij1774 Před 9 lety +23

    I wish this discussion had a different moderator. I was annoyed by her time and again. Am I the only one?

    • @manmaschine
      @manmaschine Před 3 lety

      no!

    • @xXxTeenSplayer
      @xXxTeenSplayer Před 3 lety

      And she really didn't seem impartial. I think she was part of the Christan organization that put on the event, and it was plainly obvious.

    • @guacamoleniqqapeniss7317
      @guacamoleniqqapeniss7317 Před 3 lety

      I'm annoyed by krauss. If he could just let wlc speak.

    • @phmayor
      @phmayor Před 2 měsíci

      I can’t listen to full-of-himself Krauss anymore.

  • @ASkepticalHumanOnYouTube
    @ASkepticalHumanOnYouTube Před 8 lety +5

    14:20 - One thing to note is that some physicists, despite this measurement, still believe that we live in a curved universe. Michio Kaku is one example. They maintain that the universe is so large that the curvature hasn't yet been detected by our methods of measurement. This would be analogous to standing on a flat field, for example, here on earth, and concluding that, as a result of your measurement, the earth is flat.

    • @Muongoing.97c
      @Muongoing.97c Před 2 měsíci

      I know that this is 8 years later, but that analogy is disingenuous. The curvature of the earth wasn’t calculated after traversing the whole planet or seeing it from above, it can be done using basic trigonometry. The same was done for measuring the curvature of the universe using the most distant observation that can be made, the cosmic microwave background.

  • @sexyassbrowneyes
    @sexyassbrowneyes Před 5 lety +10

    51:41 did Krauss really just ask why the cause of the universe has to be immaterial ?🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️

    • @Glasstable2011
      @Glasstable2011 Před 4 lety +1

      Does it have to be immaterial?

    • @johnlovestosing04
      @johnlovestosing04 Před 4 lety +1

      Glasstable2011 Yes!!! Because you enter into an infinite regress if you’re trying to determine the origin of something. The first piece of word could not have come from wood.

    • @MrVincehalloran
      @MrVincehalloran Před 4 lety

      sounds like something he would say. And indeed, why does "the cause" (assuming the concept applies at that "moment") have to be immaterial? In other words, what's the reason that it HAS to be immaterial? Like Krauss, I am REALLY asking.

    • @MrVincehalloran
      @MrVincehalloran Před 4 lety

      @TheBuilder I don't think that's Krauss's argument. It's certainly not mine. As a sentence in English it doesn't work. If there already is a "some thing" then "it" doesn't have to "create itself" because... it already is whatever it is.

    • @MrVincehalloran
      @MrVincehalloran Před 4 lety

      @TheBuilder I don't know that matter was "created". Why not say "matter" naturally occurs? That's what Krauss seems to argue. That fluctuations in the quantum wave (whatever that means; I don't really understand it; not a physicist!) result in energy converting to particles. What "created" energy...? I dunno either! I suppose you will say god. And then you will say, by definition, nothing/no one created god. That's "special pleading". Your explanation seems to be exempt from your challenge against infinite regress. But if infinite regress is allowed for your god, why not allow it for energy, matter, or the multi-verse? The point is... no one knows for sure. Krauss makes an argument for the plausibility of spontaneous "creation" because he understands/ has data about how energy and mass interact and behave. Sounds interesting. Who knows?! No one for sure. And god seems LESS plausible, and does not really explain anything. God did it. How? He's magic, he can do anything. Really? How did he get that way? He always was. That does not explain anything. And you might as well just stick with the Universe, because we know for sure that's There, and we can measure/ observe/ study it.

  • @defaultuser9423
    @defaultuser9423 Před 7 lety +29

    It's hard not to be condescending when you are as smart as Dr Craig and I really admire how he manages to remain humble especially when interacting with a "formidable" opponent like Krauss.

    • @ceceroxy2227
      @ceceroxy2227 Před 2 lety +3

      Krausse is incredibly obnoxious

    • @Johnsmith-pd3uk
      @Johnsmith-pd3uk Před rokem

      They're is no universe in which Craig is intelligent. None of what he said had any basis at all in fact. His "proof" is idiotic nonsense wrapped in pseudo-intellectual lingo, which people such as yourself hear and think "wow, he made some valid intellectual arguments! " No, he spewed stupidity, baseless, fact less garbage. Not one shred of evidence to back up any of his ridiculous claims. Biblical "scholars" are not intellectuals. Were that the case, then all of the people that have studied, digested, and analyzed The Lord of the Rings would be intellectuals. Craig is an idiot, believed by gullible people who desperately want their particular fairy tale to be true.

    • @heavybar3850
      @heavybar3850 Před 7 měsíci

      @@ceceroxy2227 Its hard to watch,

  • @4tunedf8
    @4tunedf8 Před 8 lety +63

    1) People who believe a supernatural force created the universe take 1 leap of faith
    2) people who believe this supernatural force has a will takes 2 leaps of faith
    3) people who believe this supernatural force's will is to be worshiped take 3 leaps of faith
    4)people who believe this supernatural force will punish its own creation take 4 leaps of Faith
    5)people who believe this supernatural force is Jesus take 5 leaps of faith
    Conclusion: Christians should join the Olympics for long jump

    • @jonkeene8788
      @jonkeene8788 Před 8 lety +6

      A Good Man by that logic,
      1) people who believe that the universe was caused by a natural force take 1 leap of faith.
      2) people who believe this natural force doesn't have a will take 2 leaps of faith.
      3) people who believe this cause doesn't want to be worshiped take 3 leaps of faith.
      4) people who believe this cause won't punish it's creations take 4 leaps of faith.
      5) people who believe this cause isn't jesus take 5 leaps of faith.

    • @4tunedf8
      @4tunedf8 Před 8 lety +5

      jon keene No, because rejecting negative claims is not a leap of faith. It's remaining objective.
      For example, are you making a "leap of faith" when you drink your coffee in the morning? That coffee could have been poisoned by somebody. Or you could choke on it somehow.
      You don't take leaps of faith when you reject things you have no reason to believe

    • @jonkeene8788
      @jonkeene8788 Před 8 lety +6

      A Good Man none of my points were based on the rejections of claims or beliefs. They were all "positive" beliefs or claims in there own right. For example, the first point was that "people who believe that the universe was caused by a natural force take 1 leap of faith." This isn't simply the rejection of the belief that it was caused by supernatural means, and the belief in the neutral claim that it was caused by natural means. As i see it, before any evidence, arguments, or whatever or whoever else is included, the two explanations are on an even playing field.
      Once all support, or objections and questions for each claim are taken into account, the supernatural claim is in fact shown to be stronger. But with anything short of certainty, how i see it is that one who believes the universe was in fact caused by natural means (or supernatural means) are exercising faith. I don't see how it could take absolutely no faith at all to believe that the universe was made by natural means, especially with no evidence or arguments in support of that claim.

    • @4tunedf8
      @4tunedf8 Před 8 lety +2

      jon keene I agree, believing the universe created itself is an equal leap of faith to believing the supernatural. However, to stop at that is only 1 leap of faith. If you start believing the supernatural force has a will you've taken a second leap because it's just as possible that it doesn't have a will. "will" is a man-made concept.
      Then to go on say that "will" is to be worshiped is another huge leap of faith because "worshiping" is huge man-made concept that has all kinds of moral degradations associated with it. It's quite simplistic to believe a super natural force desires worship.
      Then to go on to say this supernatural force will send it's own creation to hell is another huge leap of faith because "punishment" is flawed man-made concept. Especially eternal punishment.
      Then to go on to say this supernatural force is responsible for a deeply flawed and questionable book is an almost uncomprehensible leap of faith. One would expect that the only book in the world to be completely flawless in every way would come from a being as such.
      If I simply stop at saying a supernatural force created the universe but i don't know why I am no longer taking any leaps. This is the same with natural force

    • @ajaykumarsingh702
      @ajaykumarsingh702 Před 8 lety +2

      A Good Man
      Who said Universe created itself ?
      It always existed in form of Energy.
      That Energy simply changed it's form in Matter.
      Matter=Energy.

  • @DDoubleU8001
    @DDoubleU8001 Před 10 měsíci +11

    Often times, people get angrier and angrier when they know in their heart that they are losing an argument and have no chance of winning.

  • @Aguijon1982
    @Aguijon1982 Před 10 lety +16

    I agree with theists on one thing. God is immaterial. He is IMAGINARY.

    • @kwokl86741010
      @kwokl86741010 Před 10 lety +2

      And that's what "metaphysical" means.

    • @atheistsexposed6269
      @atheistsexposed6269 Před 10 lety +11

      You just made a negative claim. Prove it. And don't give me the FMS shit. We're talking about the First Cause concept here which you atheists can't even touch. But let's be honest. Your gripe is only with religion and theism. If I proposed deism you'd shut up. Unanswered prayers but a cosmos ruled by laws point to deism not to atheism.

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      Atheists Exposed
      "If I proposed deism you'd shut up. Unanswered prayers but a cosmos ruled by laws point to deism not to atheism."
      ****************
      Deism (a disinterested, impersonal deity who created the universe and gave humanity reason but does not intervene... and thus, unanswered prayers) is even more boring than theism. Now you posit an omnipotent and omnitient deity who doesn't give a damn.
      A; "I think I'll create a universe."
      B; "Okay, and then what are you going to do with it?"
      A; "Nothing at all... especially no answering of prayer."
      B; "What's the point?"
      A; "Just to mess with their heads."
      Seriously? Deism has been around since ancient Greece and likely earlier. Like theism, it's man-made superstitious nonsense. It's "Theism Lite".
      What laws rule the cosmos? Natural physical, chemical and biochemical laws rule the cosmos.

    • @Aguijon1982
      @Aguijon1982 Před 10 lety

      Atheists Exposed
      What the fuck a possible first physical cause (like a particle or a singularity) has to do with this "first cause" also being perfect, supernatural, intelligent law giver, all loving, moral, metaphysical and having a son named jesus and so on?

    • @hodagusarcticus
      @hodagusarcticus Před 10 lety +2

      Aguijon1982
      Wonderfully articulated! I won't assume your grasp of the spiritual is any more firm, than of the English language, and will explain that my first statement was sarcasm, and that God does exist. It's terribly unfortunate that God hasn't called you, but at least you have CZcams to vent to... It's my experience that "atheists" radiate an anger that is exeplified by your use of profanity. I pray the Almighty and Holy God will open your ears and your heart.

  • @evidencebasedfaith6658
    @evidencebasedfaith6658 Před 6 lety +15

    So Krauss' technique was to ask Dr. Craig a question and then when he started to give an answer to ask him another question and another. So is that how an intelligent person debates?

    • @hopaideia
      @hopaideia Před 2 lety +4

      No, that is how an arrogant person debates

    • @evidencebasedfaith6658
      @evidencebasedfaith6658 Před 2 lety

      @@MrVincehalloran No I don't think it is. The whole point of a debate is for two people to engage in dialogue about a particular topic. And that can't happen if one person is doing all of the talking.

  • @Steve-cd9ul
    @Steve-cd9ul Před 16 dny

    As an atheist, I give this one to Craig for not punching Krauss in the face.

  • @theforeverpuddle8754
    @theforeverpuddle8754 Před 8 lety

    Interesting conversation.

  • @TheNoobyGuy1
    @TheNoobyGuy1 Před 10 lety +5

    Wow, great debate! Just finished by math homework right on time. In a debate, I say the person who won is the person who used the best support. In this case, it's a tie. However, I do side with Dr. Craig overall. Krauss seems to look at things only from the perspective of a scientist. The better debater overall is clearly Craig. It's so aggressive and rude to interrupt someone speaking. Krauss got his emotions way too involved. When proving the existence of God, Craig made an excellent point about the given attributes of God. First of all, you need to prove that one exists, which can be done by science. After that, using historical evidence, which not only includes the Bible, but the documentation of the events occurring during the time, can it lead to believe in one particular one. This is why that we can give the attributes of "loving" and "omnipotent" to God. There are so many prophecies in the Bible that have come true. What other book can do that? I truly believe that faith is the MOST important ingredient to believing God, which is why I never argue with someone who does not believe in God.

    • @Logia1978
      @Logia1978 Před 10 lety +2

      *****
      I am muslim, and it does not make Krauss right...
      He is a fraud because he changes the meaning of nothing....
      When you undrestand this you can be anything you want and call krauss a fraud!

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      "When proving the existence of God, Craig..."
      ************
      Craig proved the existence of God?
      media-cache-ec0.pinimg.com/736x/98/04/d9/9804d98c6b6a994110ccc1e1ce6d9a9d.jpg

    • @jpchen0321
      @jpchen0321 Před 10 lety +1

      Krauss looks at things only from the perspective of a scientist (meaning to use rationality and empirical evidence). Would you suggest that someone should not use rationality and empirical evidence, and just make things up instead?

    • @TheNoobyGuy1
      @TheNoobyGuy1 Před 10 lety

      jpchen0321 I am not suggesting that my any means. These "things" are not made up. If you have ever felt Jesus' presence, wow it just feels fantastic. Totally can't even be explained the amount of love you feel when having accepted Jesus.
      As for this case, God exactly can't be proved, but I believe his existence can be supported by what we have empirically. Science can't disprove God, it only proves it to me. The amazing accuracy of the Bible proves it, and our Bible today is 98% accurate from when it was first written. It gets the creation spot on in terms of order. THOUSANDS of online testimonies prove God.
      But how can we have the same evidence, but come to different conclusions? I truly wonder this. Jesus in the Book of John did many divine, yet STILL people rejected him. (I am not sure if all historians believe he was the person he said he was, but they believe he existed.) With that, I have two answers. God has either not revealed himself, or a person has rejected him.
      Faith is what you need to know God, and even I as a Christian have to admit that at the end of the day to an atheist. I urge you to read the Book of John and just ask God to reveal himself. I would love to answer your questions via messaging or something!

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      Simeon Davis
      "The amazing accuracy of the Bible proves it, and our Bible today is 98% accurate from when it was first written. It gets the creation spot on in terms of order. THOUSANDS of online testimonies prove God."
      ***************
      fc02.deviantart.net/fs71/f/2013/345/4/6/jane_the_killer_facepalm_demotivator_by_angrydogdesigns-d6xmqyn.png

  • @coltsrule5150
    @coltsrule5150 Před 10 lety +7

    Arya Stark: Nothing can be worse than this.
    Dying Man: Maybe "nothing" is worse than this.
    Arya Stark: "Nothing" isn't better or worse than anything. Nothing is just... Nothing...

    • @jimothyhallsworth7540
      @jimothyhallsworth7540 Před 10 lety +3

      George R. R. Martin is a wise man, I think he could have accomplished a lot of good as a philosopher.
      I like how Sam Harris puts it too "You'll no more suffer the eternity after your death than you suffered the eternity before your birth."

    • @SolSilence
      @SolSilence Před 9 lety

      Wow, a quote, you must know the state and working of the universe. I envy you.

    • @jonkeene8788
      @jonkeene8788 Před 9 lety +1

      SolSilence He's appealing to sound philosophical reasoning.

    • @CeasiusC
      @CeasiusC Před 9 lety +1

      SolSilence It's a joke, you muppet.

    • @SolSilence
      @SolSilence Před 9 lety

      Ceasius A joke for a joke, you muppet.

  • @strategic1710
    @strategic1710 Před 7 lety +1

    Krauss asks the best question of the debate.
    Krauss: "You always say these things but how the hell do you know it?"
    Craig: Pauses while he thinks of something to say "Well... that's a different debate."
    If Krauss would just be quiet and let Craig continue to make wild ass assertions for which he has no justification the debate would be over. But instead he let's Craig off the hook and keeps talking, and Craig is all too happy to change the subject.

    • @jesseshaw5114
      @jesseshaw5114 Před 7 lety

      I agree, he was way too lenient on this debate.

  • @Drunkenprophet23
    @Drunkenprophet23 Před 10 lety +48

    I'm an atheist but I am just completely rubbed the wrong way by Krauss.

    • @crusaderking5387
      @crusaderking5387 Před 10 lety +9

      Well you should be. He's a used car salesman!

    • @Drunkenprophet23
      @Drunkenprophet23 Před 10 lety +2

      John Di Cresce No I believe he is sincere. And he is brilliant. He is just a complete ass and I don't care for him.

    • @012345678940975
      @012345678940975 Před 10 lety +3

      He's not the most tactful with his points, even though he's right. Where is Hitchens when you need him…lol

    • @weston06.
      @weston06. Před měsícem

      @@012345678940975nah hes wrong

  • @rickmg2552
    @rickmg2552 Před 10 lety +9

    22:22 - Krauss uses ellipses to cut out the part of Vilankin's reply which actually supported Craig's position. Vilenkin later wrote to Craig stating that Craig accurately conveyed his position and that Krauss did not. Krauss knew he was being deceptive on this point, and it's as bad as a 5 year old mumbling "I didn't take any cookies" through a mouthful of crumbs.
    Why tell a bald faced lie if your argument is strong, Lawrence?

  • @withoutlimits16
    @withoutlimits16 Před 4 lety +3

    The point Krauss tried to make made no sense when it came to Craig’s point about abstract objects. He says that you’re just demonstrating the limits of your knowledge and it’s like....yeah dude that’s how this works.

  • @DiSaValCrescerTranscender

    Just clarifying
    They had a debate in three parts in the same year and the same country (Australia), is this right?

  • @craigreeves5465
    @craigreeves5465 Před 9 lety +44

    Worst. Moderator. Ever.

    • @cmack-bz3re
      @cmack-bz3re Před 9 lety +1

      you couldn't do better.

    • @ebb3334
      @ebb3334 Před 9 lety +1

      Where do they find them, ugh... (the moderator from the first talk was terrible too).

    • @jamalchristian
      @jamalchristian Před 9 lety

      Craig Reeves It was as if there were no moderator.

    • @slayerjable
      @slayerjable Před 9 lety +3

      Lawrence likes it to be a discussion.

    • @crippledtalk
      @crippledtalk Před 7 lety +2

      Justin White he also likes the sound of his own voice

  • @greyareaRK1
    @greyareaRK1 Před 10 lety +14

    A disappointing debate. Krauss' was unable to talk at the limited capacity of his debaters, and they appeared unable to grasp basic linear reasoning. Craig's intent seems to be directing argument down rabbit holes.of rhetoric and untested rationalisations, then skipping away or obfuscating any direct challenge. It was ultimately the same old 'god of the gaps' bs. Plus the moderator was disappointing.

    • @ohhyeeahmerchant9334
      @ohhyeeahmerchant9334 Před 10 lety +6

      in that case we all look forward to seeing you present a much more intellectual debate the next time your on stage.

    • @ohhyeeahmerchant9334
      @ohhyeeahmerchant9334 Před 10 lety

      anders larsen i respect both intellects, the only low point in this debate was when krauss dismissed the nobel prize as nothing. absurd and offensive to the greats who hold this award for thier contribution to mankind in my opinion, absolute farce.

    • @ronm5769
      @ronm5769 Před 10 lety

      OhhYeeah Merchant Craig

    • @CovjekXX
      @CovjekXX Před 10 lety

      who is who, it's not up to you...

    • @insainbassist
      @insainbassist Před 10 lety

      OhhYeeah Merchant
      There is a lot of politicking involved in the Nobel prizes, which is probably why he said that. It doesn't mean that some winners weren't great scientists but the prize doesn't mean as much as people attribute to it and there have definitely been some who got it over others who deserved it more or who stole credit from others.

  • @bwbg1284
    @bwbg1284 Před 9 lety +3

    I give my respect to both men regardless of how i feel on the topic, however i think the one thing everyone here can agree on here is moderators get in the way. I like when you can see both men going back and forth with passion in their answers and they start to get really into it, then all of a sudden the moderator jumps in and says they have to move on to another question.

    • @trekkiejunk
      @trekkiejunk Před 3 lety +3

      More than that, we've all watched SOOOOOO many structured, back and forth debates, and it's just rehashing the same arguments over, over and over again. But having a free-form discussion is so rare, and its unfortunate that the moderator can't be there to bring up a couple topics, and then just let it go. There are natural lulls, and THAT should be when a topic gets changed. NOT in the middle of someone's sentence.

  • @qqqmyes4509
    @qqqmyes4509 Před 3 lety +4

    Krauss defines science as "empirical evidence and rational thought" (1:43:00)... but wouldn't this also include much of philosophy? For example, philosophy of mind uses the empirical evidence of how the brain works and our mental experiences, coupled with reasoning, to try to understand if mental states are physical. The kalam cosmological argument would fit the bill of combining empirical evidence and rational thought.

  • @GUPTAYOGENDRA
    @GUPTAYOGENDRA Před 6 lety +6

    Ask three questions from yourself after waking from a dream.
    1. The observer of my dream was conscious or unconscious?
    2. The observer of my dream was in my dream or in the universe?
    3. Is the observer of my dream still conscious and if so then where?
    Answers to these questions will enable you to understand how universe came from nothing.

    • @ibrahimsoylu3331
      @ibrahimsoylu3331 Před rokem

      wow, i have never heard of that perspective. Thank you after 5 years.

    • @DannyBoy777777
      @DannyBoy777777 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @ GUPTAYOGENDRA Another grand claim with falls flat on its face !

    • @JackPullen-Paradox
      @JackPullen-Paradox Před 3 měsíci

      What about the dream you apparently experienced but cannot recall. You apparently experienced it but you have no memory of it that you can retrieve.

    • @alekm4185
      @alekm4185 Před měsícem

      How the hell is this supposed to help me understand how the universe came from nothing

  • @jasrusca2566
    @jasrusca2566 Před 4 lety +21

    Laurence wait for your turn let bill finish his argument and explanation. Stop interupting him.

    • @grains425
      @grains425 Před 4 lety +4

      Craig is full of shit, i'd interrupt as well

    • @xXxTeenSplayer
      @xXxTeenSplayer Před 3 lety

      You can't just let someone pile shit on top of bullshit; it becomes impossible to address every false statement if someone as wrong as Bill is allowed to continue his "argument".

    • @guacamoleniqqapeniss7317
      @guacamoleniqqapeniss7317 Před 3 lety +2

      @@grains425 LMAO cuase he's destroying all atheists? Nice

  • @jordanhill5388
    @jordanhill5388 Před 6 lety +19

    Haha wow Craig nails it again! So fun to watch!

    • @davidblackburn3396
      @davidblackburn3396 Před rokem +1

      Yes, you can always count on Craig to serve up simple fare for simple folk.

    • @Johnsmith-pd3uk
      @Johnsmith-pd3uk Před rokem

      Craig wastes a lot of time and energy saying absolutely nothing worth hearing. Incoherent, illogical, idiotic, pointless, baseless, fact less drivel.

    • @stephenconnolly3018
      @stephenconnolly3018 Před 9 měsíci

      Are deaf his avoidance of all the question by quoting long dead philosophers. He did not once produce any tenderable evidence.

  • @abbeymaeliam1
    @abbeymaeliam1 Před 9 lety +4

    Man, Krauss is emotional.

  • @patrickkilduff5272
    @patrickkilduff5272 Před 9 lety +8

    Ok...now I understand 'nothing' ....it's the total sum of William Lane Craig's points. That man can sure talk a loooonggg time about 'nothing' (literally and figuratively). Craig makes zero claims that can be tested in any way. He just says, well I don't get it ...so...God.

    • @Kenzuko1337
      @Kenzuko1337 Před 9 lety +2

      lol ... the whole fact that you cant get enything out of nothing doesnt ring a bell?
      miracalous... after that he axplains that God is logic. and sience without logic is worthless. so yeah... Craigs won...

    • @SixStringStrumming
      @SixStringStrumming Před 9 lety +1

      Science describes whatever know of the universe. The universe we argue was created by God. The rules of scientific inquiry such as testable hypotheses do not apply to God. What kind of God would be easily measured by skeptical earthlings? Not a very great one.

    • @robertmenke4800
      @robertmenke4800 Před 9 lety

      SixStringStrumming What kind of God would obfuscate everything about itself and expect the beings he created to believe in it for no tangible reason (after establishing a remarkably scientific universe). A really, really, stupid one.

  • @GhostLightPhilosophy
    @GhostLightPhilosophy Před 3 lety +5

    Krauss is such a sophist.

  • @alobo2000
    @alobo2000 Před 10 lety +4

    I think definately Lawrence Krawze did a great job in preventing William Lane Craig to get away with elusive definition to support his claims...I think that's the great contribution of debating William L. Craig, which has elevated the debating skills of many atheist. I see a great improvement of Lawrence Krawze debating skills here...

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      Atheists Exposed
      Debate is the art of persuasion of the audience. It's not about establishing the truth and as the late Stephen Gould said, honesty is rarely the best tactic. That's why he never participated in debates, at least as far as I'm aware.
      Debates are won by grand oratorical style, excellent use of facial expression and body language, use of argument that superficially sounds convincing and rebutting the opponents arguments by use of clever word play and semantics.
      It's entertainment and theater.
      Craig is a master of debate tactics. He has his lines down pat. He relies on philosophical argument (If this, then that. If that, then the next thing. If the next thing, then God did it.). For a guy who admits he cannot prove the existence of God, he spends an awful lot of time establishing the existence of God.
      Granted, when pinned down, Craig will admit that his arguments give only a plausible conclusion but he then goes on with, "My premises are more plausible than your premises, therefore my conclusiona follow logically and necessarily whether you like it or not."
      First, his premises are rarely plausible and second, his "more plausible" is never defended. He always leaves that point to his end remarks where his opponent has no more time. And third, plausible premises do not lead to necessary conclusions. After watching several Craig debates, it gets nauseating.

    • @alobo2000
      @alobo2000 Před 10 lety

      Atheists Exposed Of course; L.Krawze might have been mouthed, obnoxious but let's not forget, LK was also VERY RIGHT and correct in his statements. L.Krawze does an amazing job in preventing Craig from getting away using debating tricks to misguide people by reshaping the definition of what “faith” is or elevating theology to the level of “science” so that his arguments remain valid. Atheist always lose? Hilbillies? and creationists? Is the best you got? The only time I’ve seen an atheist losing to a Christian is with Craig, not because he is right but because he has amazing debating skills, but unfortunately for him and his supporters, Craig’s tricks are becoming useless, clearly in this debate, it was Krawze who was at the offensive, he was the one doing the challenging bit and preventing Craig from misguiding people and steering the debate in his favor. Personally, It was Krawze who actually won the debate, and if he didn’t certainly neither did Craig who tried to prove the existence of god with philosophy? Objective morality coming from god? How can anyone say that if god can be proved in the first place?

    • @91Chanito
      @91Chanito Před 10 lety

      What makes you think Krauss is an atheist? He never claimed to be an atheist, and all he says is that "we do not know if god exists" which at best makes him agnostic.

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      91Chanito
      In this debate Krauss may not have said that he's an atheist but he has said so on many other occasions.

    • @alobo2000
      @alobo2000 Před 10 lety +1

      Agreed...In fact he is a confessed Anti-theist just as Christopher Hitchens was...by the way, don't you hate these people who edit and post videos of the debate saying "Lawrence Krauss beaten by William L. Craig" then they disable the comment section?..The fact they have to do this is a sign of lack of confidence in WL Craig who was at least the "only" christian with certain level of success in these debates.

  • @London_miss234
    @London_miss234 Před 11 měsíci

    Very interesting.

  • @ZinfinityX
    @ZinfinityX Před 8 lety +1

    How will you discover the ends of the universe when there is a suggestion that the bounds are set on expansion?

  • @raamonkhan4909
    @raamonkhan4909 Před 8 lety +3

    Please dont zoom in that close when interviewing Krauss.......thank you.

  • @albertvaldez8634
    @albertvaldez8634 Před 9 lety +14

    The moderators are always too week. They need to be more enforcing and control people like Krauss, who obviously lost this debate.

    • @jayman94fly
      @jayman94fly Před 5 lety +1

      I'm sorry for you're ignorance.

    • @trekkiejunk
      @trekkiejunk Před 3 lety

      I love how Jeremy called Albert ignorant (who misspelled "weak.") And then in his criticism, Jeremy misspelled "your." The irony is awesome. In any case, i disagree with the weak moderators claim. They should be almost non-existent. We've all seen soooo many structured debates. Watching a free-form discussion is rare and FAR more interesting.

    • @eternity6124
      @eternity6124 Před 3 lety

      @@jayman94fly something came from nothing... you will believe anything to try and escape The truth.

    • @xXxTeenSplayer
      @xXxTeenSplayer Před 3 lety

      @@eternity6124 What is the truth? What are you even talking about? Weak sauce!

  • @cockroachv
    @cockroachv Před 3 lety +2

    1:04:30 Warns Krause to stop interrupting. What does Krause immediately do right afterwards?

  • @jamesbentonticer4706
    @jamesbentonticer4706 Před 9 lety +1

    I think it's fair to say Dr. Krauss and Dr. Craig won't be BFF's after this.

  • @juancbra1579
    @juancbra1579 Před 3 lety +3

    Is it just me or it seems like Dr. Krauss spend half of the debate talking about other topics because he did not did research of his opponent books and works? It´s a pity, a "scientist" that goes to a debate without previous preparation. I think Dr. Craig deserved a better and more respectful opponent.

    • @YungM.D.
      @YungM.D. Před 2 měsíci

      Krauss is notorious for dismissing theology and philosophy outright; he probably didn’t think it was worth his time; ironically much like an evangelical, he dismisses subjects he doesn’t understand or care to understand and gets irritated and doubles down on his own ideas when that ignorance becomes apparent-he should stick to his research and stop debating, it does no favors to his field

  • @Avonidsed
    @Avonidsed Před 10 lety +4

    I can't get past the fact that at 1:07:26 WLC said that Islam got Jesus wrong because he is written about 600 years after his "death" when the bible accounts of Jesus could not have been written any earlier than 80 years after his "death"... The cognitive dissidence of this man is staggering.

    • @cbbuntz
      @cbbuntz Před 10 lety +1

      *cognitive dissonance
      sorry to be that guy.

    • @Avonidsed
      @Avonidsed Před 10 lety

      *****
      NP :)

    • @PatIreland
      @PatIreland Před 10 lety +1

      Actually, Craig's point was that the Koran was written about 600 ad, thus subject to exaggeration, legend, and alterations.

    • @Avonidsed
      @Avonidsed Před 10 lety +1

      Pat Ireland Hi Pat. I'm aware of his point. But he is saying the bible accounts are a reliable source when none of the accounts of Jesus were written during the lifetime of the followers of Jesus.
      As to why this is relevant, I'll tell you a tale that Pen Jillette said during the bible episode of Bullshit. 3 members of Elvis' entourage wrote books sometime over the years after his death. These were actually written by people who knew Elvis personally. All 3 books has recipes in them for Elvis' favorite fried chicken, all 3 have claimed to personally made this chicken for Elvis and he gave them the thumbs up; all claimed to be the "Official" recipe. And all three recipes are drastically different.
      So if none of these direct sources, who were Elvis' contemporaries, who walked with Elvis, talked with Elvis and knew him personally, got this detail right.How can we take the bible accounts of the life of Jesus, that contradict each other left and right, which most bible scholars say written anywhere from 70 - 200 years after Jesus was reported to have died, as an accurate historical document? This, and direct revelation from God, are what WLC's main reported sources. Although he seems to shoehorn quotes from philosophers and scientists into his argument to varying degrees of success.

    • @stephenland9361
      @stephenland9361 Před 10 lety

      Avonidsed
      Three different recipes for fried chicken from three different people intimately associated with Elvis tells us one thing (with reasonable certainty)...
      ...Elvis liked fried chicken...
      That three different people with three different recipes all claim to have the "One Recipe" tells us that people like to think they are special. I'm reasonably sure that the authors of various Biblical texts felt the same thing.

  • @zero132132
    @zero132132 Před 7 lety +3

    I love seeing the most obnoxious apologist and the most obnoxious atheist argue.

  • @badboy8526
    @badboy8526 Před 4 lety

    Great moderator!! People are saying she is bad because they are fully biased towards Krauss.

  • @Thormp1
    @Thormp1 Před 5 lety +5

    Science adjusts its views based on what's observed. Faith is the denial of observation so that belief can be preserved."

  • @alegendair
    @alegendair Před 9 lety +6

    I've seen this video, and I forgot that Lawrence Krauss never actually addresses the topic

  • @CynHicks
    @CynHicks Před rokem +1

    I'm not not at all arrogant because I expect the material world will give me the answers I need for reality.

  • @HM-vj5ll
    @HM-vj5ll Před 3 lety +2

    How to be a Moderator 101: DO NOT STOP THE CONVERSATION, That is why they are sitting there.

  • @drumrnva
    @drumrnva Před 10 lety +8

    Wow. While I expect that Krauss is more right about more things than Craig, Krauss REEAAALLLLY needs to learn to have a conversation. His interruptions are incredibly annoying.

    • @drumrnva
      @drumrnva Před 10 lety

      *****
      47

    • @yashaouchan
      @yashaouchan Před 9 lety +2

      I understand why he does though. wlc is SO dishonest and it infuriates me. He is hurting the world with his woo woo. I literally want to punch him.

  • @stephenireland3816
    @stephenireland3816 Před 7 lety +6

    When you rule out a creator, your then open to believe any self serving delusion , like believing something can come from nothing!

    • @leeweber645
      @leeweber645 Před 7 lety +6

      +Stephen Ireland So you allow God to come from nothing without any questioning, and without any evidence or explanation of how, because an ancient person who performed no research or experimentation in science said so?

    • @leeweber645
      @leeweber645 Před 7 lety +2

      Stephen Ireland Then are you claiming to be a Deist, or do you subscribe to absolute belief in a particular religion as perfect? I too have read through the Bible a good deal, and spent 20 years as a dedicated Christian, even fooling myself into hearing voices in my head from prayer;like I was told was supposed to happen. But I came to the conclusion this is what the minds of ancient men were. I would expect much more amazing wisdom if it was "from God", but then again, if there is a God, I would not attempt to define His character nor put Him inside a box the size of the human imagination.
      If you are arguing the Bible, or particularly the gospels, they disagree on several important points including apparently half of Jesus' most loyal followers being unaware that God was the father of Jesus, and not Joseph. There is evidence, this was added latter on and the conflicting genealogy of Jesus might point to that. Of course there is the Jewish argument, or rather simply pointing out that Jesus did not fulfill the multiple messianic prophecies in the Old Testament at all. A main point of that being, he was not from the line of David. Some argue, and I tend to agree, that the whole story of Herod(no evidence for this strange consensus) creating a situation that forces people to return to their home towns, is likely false. This seems strange, but if added later, would help to protect the story against the realization he did not originate from the town the messiah was supposed to come from. At any point, "God's chosen people" the Jews, point this out frequently as the reason..how else to put it..the story was made larger than life, or he was an outright liar.
      I don't see any particular reason to trust in a religion, as all of them are believed in the same way, and all are "infallible" in the minds of those biased against evidence(hundreds of small to large contradictions in the Bible, unexpected if written from God). They all use the mechanism, and make it a key principle: believing without evidence. Blessed are those who believe without seeing. I do not know of anything else in existence, where it would ever be good to believe without evidence; or at least if it was necessary, that in itself would certainly not be celebrated. And it would rightly be called a theory, and not proclaimed to be wisdom from a divine being..because some human apostle with no other record of existing, said so.
      The level of scrutiny applied to Socrates, even for his existence, is drastically higher than religious characters who through mob rule have been immune from historical questioning. God could show His power for 5 seconds, and I don't think there is a soul on Earth stupid enough to not bow down at that point. Strange how little effort it would take to simply give evidence that would prevent billions of humans burning for eternity; and yet no supernatural event in history has ever been proven to be true except by hearsay.

    • @stephenireland3816
      @stephenireland3816 Před 7 lety

      Lee so you were a Christian 20 years. Did you receive the gift of the Holy Spirit? If yes, then you have all the evidence you need. If you didn't receive the Holy Spirit I would ask what gospel message you accepted. Most professing Christians are not born again believers.

    • @leeweber645
      @leeweber645 Před 7 lety +1

      Stephen Ireland I was born into it, baptized, Catholic schools, "converted" to Baptist(I felt the near divinity of Mary was not Biblical). I wont go overboard here, but I lived it, loved it, believed it absolutely. I accepted all 4 Gospels but I may misunderstand your question there. I do understand the nature of God described in the Bible.
      It is a very long story, but all I will say is I went through a couple years when skepticism and belief did extreme battle in my mind. The only answers to prayers I ever received, where my "mind's voice", and it totally destroyed me. I developed a literal death wish that eventually overcame my fear of hell, did some stupid shit, then deployed overseas and learned a lot about reality.
      I absolutely believe religion has come past it's use, and humans should not accept absolute authoritarianism unless there is absolute proof. If there is a God who wrote a book, I believe He would have written a much better one(read the Quran, same BS). I do not believe a God of the power I imagine, if existing, would care to interact with our lives;any more than I would care to speak with or develop a personal relationship with a bacterium.
      That is, of course, my subtle little opinion on the matter haha. I respect your opinion, but I doubt either one of us can convince the other.

    • @stephenireland3816
      @stephenireland3816 Před 7 lety

      Lee if you had received the gift of the Holy Spirit, the same spirit that has been poured out since the day of pentecost, you would have known the nature of god which is described in the bible. "It's no longer I that lives but Christ that live in me"

  • @ErnestAdewoyin
    @ErnestAdewoyin Před 8 lety +2

    At around 1:44:50 - Lawrence Krauss just proved that theology would be a source of knowledge. William Lane Craig beat lawrence Krauss at every red-herring and straw man level hahahaha ... God bless you

    • @MISTERWHITE111
      @MISTERWHITE111 Před 8 lety +1

      +Ernest Adewoyin Craig was humiliated at every single time stamp during this entire video. But I could use a huge belly laugh tonight so I will ask you to identify the time stamp of any argument that you think that Craig made that was credible. Go ahead. Don't be terrified of how I will rip you to shreds. Give me the claim and the time stamp of ANY argument that Craig made that was credible

  • @userbeverage
    @userbeverage Před 9 lety

    What a great moderator she is!

  • @bradgrady7497
    @bradgrady7497 Před 10 lety +4

    ...In response to RagingBlast2Fan since I cannot reply to his comment -
    Craig's logical arguments are no different than making a well thought out logical case as to explain why Spock has green blood instead of red. Or, how about Whitley Strieber's 'Communion' in which he explains his case for extraterrestrial visitation in an entire book? Both are authors of science fiction. Both pretend not to be fictional authors in these particular cases. And, both appear to have had personal motivations and biases to create such a view of the world. In my view, Craig does 'just say it' with no evidence and no real world reason why his arguments carry any weight. Craig's assertions CAN be simply dismissed.

    • @Returnality
      @Returnality Před 10 lety +1

      You're completely clueless as to how these things work, aren't you? Can you come up with a logical argument for Spock's existence and for him having green blood? No, you can't. You would be laughed off stage if you tried to argue for that because there is no basis for it.
      However, there is basis for God and Craig argues for it. If you want to argue with Craig then address his arguments. Don't just dismiss them offhand because they seem ridiculous to you, or because you beg the question by a-priori deciding that God is fictional like Spock, or else you're just showing yourself to be willfully ignorant.

    • @bradgrady7497
      @bradgrady7497 Před 10 lety

      *****
      Not clueless at all. You need God and Spock as evidence of their own existence. The concept of God and the concept of Spock are concepts. The fiction of God and the fiction of Spock are fictions. Your beliefs about God and your beliefs about Spock are beliefs. Your logical argument for the existence of God and your logical argument for the existence of Spock are logical arguments.
      On those grounds, I can dismiss the existence of both.

    • @Returnality
      @Returnality Před 10 lety

      *****
      "You need God and Spock as evidence of their own existence" what is that even supposed to mean? Are you trying to say that something's existence needs to be confirmed before you're even allowed to argue for its existence? Sorry, but I don't speak nonsense. If you have an argment in which it logically follows that something exists, then you can't dismiss the argument by saying "oh yeah, well this thing needs to be evidence of itself", whatever the heck that is even supposed to mean.
      Fyi, there are a number of really god ontological arguments out there right now. Robert Maydole's ontological argument that he employed in the Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology is so good that even Quentin Smith has admitted that he is at a loss for words at how to refute it. So, if you want an argument in which the very concept of God implies its own existence, i would suggest learning mathematical logic and then reading Maydole's article.

    • @bradgrady7497
      @bradgrady7497 Před 10 lety

      ***** Right, so the arguments for the existence of God and Spock are arguments. Thanks. I think it is pretty obvious that if the existence of God and Spock were facts then you would need to bother arguing. You can't understand that?

    • @Returnality
      @Returnality Před 10 lety +1

      *****
      Wow. Just, wow. What do you consider a fact? When a proposition is outside of space and time do you expect us to find specific tangible evidence of that thing and call it a fact? Your point is completely irrelevant.
      Also, if the structure of an argument is valid and its premises are sound, then the conclusion must be true. Whether we have tangible evidence of something or not is irrelevant, so long as we have a valid structure and sound premises. Can you think of an argument with those features that is WRONG?
      Oh, and the fact that two things need to be argued over does not put those two things in the same ballpark. I argue against the law of identity, but that's not going to ever be in the same ballpark as arguing for a theory of ethics. Likewise, arguing for Spock is never going to be taken as seriously as arguing for God. God has major explanatory power and scope, given that he exists. That's what makes him worth arguing about. Spock has no explanatory power or scope, other than explaining that Spock exists.

  • @momentary_
    @momentary_ Před 10 lety +13

    I don't understand why theists find it necessary that the universe has a creator but not that the creator has a creator. If the creator can be eternal, then why can't the universe be as well.

    • @momentary_
      @momentary_ Před 10 lety +2

      John Abad
      The creator has no first cause or prime mover. Maybe the universe has no first cause or prime mover. We still have no idea what existed before the big bang.

    • @cbbuntz
      @cbbuntz Před 10 lety

      ***** Craig's argument is slightly more involved than your giving him credit for, His argument is contingent on attributes he gives God to give him a loophole out of this. It's still silly though.

    • @cbbuntz
      @cbbuntz Před 10 lety

      John Abad My point is that giving God specific attributes that are not proven to support God's existence is a leap of faith to prove a leap of faith.

    • @cbbuntz
      @cbbuntz Před 10 lety +1

      John Abad I still see it as a leap of faith. Different logical proofs could just as easily hold up in a polytheistic view. What if the Hindus got it right? How do you think you have have turned out if you were born in India? Most likely, you would think the Christian beliefs were very odd (they are when viewed objectively) and you would wonder how anyone could believe in such dogma. You will naturally gravitate toward what's familiar.
      I'm not going to beat this into the ground. It's very clear that neither of us will change our minds. Just make sure your beliefs make sense to you and that you don't believe it out of familiarity, pressure from others or fear of the consequences of unbelief / disbelief.

    • @bradgrady7497
      @bradgrady7497 Před 10 lety

      John Abad
      You could say an infinite regress can't exist as easily as you can say it can. Neither are known facts. The Prime Mover, First Cause and infinite regress argument can be refuted as easily as saying:
      Maybe, maybe not.

  • @themetsfan861
    @themetsfan861 Před 9 lety +2

    One of the big themes I'm noticing in comments is "Science proves things." That's not true in any sense of the word. Science creates models to best explain the evidence. Some of these models are almost assuredly correct (Newtonian mechanics, for example). Others may require refinement as new evidence emerges (evolution, Big Bang). Note: just because I said that evolution requires refinement does not mean I deny it. Evolution has changed massively since the advent of modern genetics. It's still correct, however.

    • @MISTERWHITE111
      @MISTERWHITE111 Před 9 lety

      themetsfan861
      Newtonian Mechanics is not "correct". It only applies in certain situations. It required "refinement". That is the reason we now have GR and QM.
      Evolution is FACT. Evolution is simply change over time. Everything evolves over time.
      Evolutionary Biology is FACT. Evolutionary Biology is simply the change in the gene pool over time.
      If Evolutionary Biology wasn't a fact, you would be able to look at every single organism and say, without correction, that every organism that ever existed on planet Earth is a clone of one of its biological parents.
      Big Bang is FACT. The Big Bang is simply the description of the EXPANSION of the universe from the time of the Planck Epoch until today.
      Our math/science/tools/brains are not up to describing what occurred prior to the point called the End of the Planck Epoch.
      But you are correct that science doesn't prove things. Science mostly disproves things. You can have a trillion examples of something but that doesn't prove that thing (Black Swans). All you need is a single example to disprove something.

    • @themetsfan861
      @themetsfan861 Před 9 lety

      No. You fundamentally misunderstand the philosophy and nature of science. Science doesn't prove anything. Mathematics "proves" things. Science constructs models that take into account the evidence. Read Michael Polanyi. I'm not denying either the Big Bang or evolution. Both of them are supported by the vast amount of evidence.
      Both of them may require refinement as we discover new evidence. For example, the "Cambrian Explosion" that ID people like to point to as "proof" of an "intelligent designer" is best explained by punctuated equilibrium. Punctuated equilibrium is not what Darwin proposed. The Big Bang may require refinement
      as new data arises.

    • @MISTERWHITE111
      @MISTERWHITE111 Před 9 lety

      themetsfan861
      You wrote: "Science doesn't prove anything. "
      If you will reread my post, you will see that I wrote exactly that.
      Here, I will save you some time: I wrote in my post "But you are correct that science doesn't prove things. Science mostly disproves things"
      You claimed: "Science constructs models that take into account the evidence. "
      Science constructs models varying initial conditions and checks those models against boundary values.
      You claimed: 'Punctuated equilibrium is not what Darwin proposed. "
      No, if I remember correctly, PE was proposed by Falconer a decade before Darwin's work. Falconer died before he could push his idea into the mainstream.
      But punctuated equilibrium, like classical mechanics, is a tiny subset of evolution.
      Different species have different metabolisms. Different metabolisms manifest at different evolutionary rates. These rates hinge on reproductive, feeding, predator/prey requirements, and ability to regulate their internal heat.
      So you will find a cold blooded clam, for instance, that has remained unchanged for 45 million years and a warm blooded mammal that explodes in a wide variety of species to occupy the available niches.
      You claimed: 'For example, the "Cambrian Explosion" that ID people like to point to as "proof" of an "intelligent designer" is best explained by punctuated equilibrium "
      Not really. It is better explained by the change in the food supply that enabled organisms to utilize calcium and other elements as structural frameworks. While called the Cambrian Explosion, changes that were occurring at that time evolved over a period of nearly 100 million years.
      Wiki states that the earliest Trilobite fossils date to 530 million years but were already widely diversified by that point indicating that the Trilobite was already an ancient life form by the date of the first fossils we have.
      You claimed; ''Both of them may require refinement as we discover new evidence. "
      Refinements to be expected will be of the order of "dinosaurs are warm blooded" which isn't quite the revolution that had GR overturning Newtonian Mechanics at the beginning of the 20th century.
      You claimed: 'The Big Bang may require refinement as new data arises "
      Again, the Big Bang only describes the evolution of our space-time since the Planck Epoch. Things like galactic evolution will be refined. But revolutions are to be expected as our incredibly primitive math/physics/tools develop allowing researchers to pierce the observable limits of light. Such things as gravity waves will allow a pushing of researchers observations back into the Planck Epoch.
      You claimed: "You fundamentally misunderstand the philosophy and nature of science "
      How is it that I misunderstand?

  • @dennisreforsado1850
    @dennisreforsado1850 Před 7 měsíci

    Intellectual debates such as this, including the first debate, would have been more exciting, interesting and productive if there were no moderators.

  • @LordNorthern
    @LordNorthern Před 8 lety +15

    My favorite part is Craig's "air tight" list of premises.
    If I rang a bell every time he said something either stupid, or made an unfounded assertion, I'd end up deaf.

    • @commonancestry8669
      @commonancestry8669 Před 7 lety +1

      the arguments are indeed airtight, meaning that if the premises are true, the conclusion follows to be true as well. i'm not saying that that makes the arguments correct. you can dismiss his arguments by refuting 1or more premises.
      i'm interested in hearing the premises you refute in his arguments, though.

    • @gea2854
      @gea2854 Před 7 lety +2

      Krauss actually points out his faulty premise, the second one. "If the universe has an explanation for its existence, that explanation is god."
      It doesn't even matter that that is at best an argument for a deistic god, but the sheer gall he has to insert god there as if that was a logical step from the first half of the sentence.
      That's akin to saying "If my migraine has an explanation for its existence, that explanation is god."
      He doesn't even explain that point. He just puts it there as if he expected noone to question why he just institutes god as the explanation.
      Or maybe I'm missing the part where he explains it, but he brought up the exact same points in the debate before this one, again, without any real explanation where he got the god explanation from.
      I mean I get that he then makes it all about the "transcended mind" then, but that's still not really an argument. Is it the watchmaker? The god of the gaps? Does it even matter? Either way, the best he can do is establish a shaky reason that the universe needs a kickstarter. But everything beyond that is a pure thought experiment with no real explanatory power.

    • @MarcusAsaro
      @MarcusAsaro Před 7 lety

      Good summary TyrantGea!

  • @kwokl86741010
    @kwokl86741010 Před 10 lety +4

    Just looking at the natural disasters that happen almost daily, killing and destroying us, you'd know there's no any deity intervening, taking care of, or protecting us. Nor has this deity designed a better sphere for us to live on.
    What Lao Tze says is the reality that we see :-------Heavens have no mercy on us, treating us just like straw dogs. -------天地不仁,以萬物為芻狗。
    The all-good God in whom William Lane Craig believes is absent from our horizon.

    • @brianmcmahon1546
      @brianmcmahon1546 Před 10 lety

      I can feel your pain, Steve. Sounds like your asking God to have mercy on you. I guess that universe that made you from slime also doesn't care about your well being then either. So if the universe is doing natural disasters to us, then I guess it's not such a beautiful universe after all?
      Your making the classic mistake that this IS heaven when in facts it's not. Earth is more hell as it sounds like your starting to see. It's even more like hell when one doesn't know God. Seek him in your heart.

    • @kwokl86741010
      @kwokl86741010 Před 10 lety

      Nature, as observed by Lao Tze, is emotionless and feelingless ; it doesn't care whether you live or die. It is the way it is, not what you wish it is.
      Seek God in my heart ? I went to church for two years and heard a lot of remarks like yours, which sound ridiculous, or even laughable to me. I have observed and heard enough what deluded peoople act and say.
      Pain ? I am human, I feel the pain as other people do, with you as an exception like what you say.
      Not one day in my life I've asked for or needed any religious or metaphysical consolations. I know you do, every day.
      Every time I pass by a church, I'm reminded that churches are but tombs and monuments of God. And that gives me, frankly, happiness rather than sadness.

    • @ronm5769
      @ronm5769 Před 10 lety

      Why would Heaven have mercy on a species that has no mercy on each other?

    • @brianmcmahon1546
      @brianmcmahon1546 Před 10 lety

      Steve Lee If nature is emotionless and feeling-less, then why are humans different then that? I thought we were nature, no?
      Why do atheists always have to use words like Church and Religion? Can't you just say 'Christ' who was a real guy? I'm not a big church goer as many of my Christian friends aren't either. If you saw me from across the room, the last you'd say of me is that I'm religious but that's a different debate. You say your not seeking God, then why are you watching this video? What do you care what Craig to say? Watching an hour and 50 minute video about wheather there is a God or not certainly tells me your seeking some kind of truth that you don't already have.

    • @brianmcmahon1546
      @brianmcmahon1546 Před 10 lety

      Ron M
      Well, Ron, you ask a good question. Your right, people often have no mercy on one another. That's called sin. Sin means 'to miss the mark'. That's why the world is a broken place today. Contrary to popular atheist ideas, even if all religions went away today, mankind would NOT be good to one another. We're just broken and that's how it is. That's why we need Christ. The worlds only perfect person. The Gold standard of which all men will be judged. The bottom line is, your right, we are not good to one another and that's why we need a savior. If we all lived as Christ did, the world would be closer to peace, but unfortunately that's not happening too much. I personally, am trying my best to do what I can. Of course I can only do so much but at least I can try.

  • @riaandoyle8196
    @riaandoyle8196 Před 5 měsíci

    Professing themselves wise they became fools.... oooh ,how true , how true !

  • @Zesprizhong
    @Zesprizhong Před 9 lety +1

    I like Craig's bright ball projections, which can be used as follows: Richard Dawkins and others are now saying that life on earth began through an outside being; they had to, because simple life cannot kick start itself into being. Let's project that a little: if life on Earth was caused by an alien, then the same can be argued for the universe, that is, life was caused by an outside party, called God!

  • @nelsonsoto741
    @nelsonsoto741 Před 2 lety +4

    The girl that sat in front of him in class, who was a radiant Christian, was simply a faithful and joyful sower of the word as Jesus described in his parable. She had no idea what the result would be.

    • @azertyqwerty5946
      @azertyqwerty5946 Před rokem +1

      Hunh what are you talking about?

    • @FaithfulMillennial
      @FaithfulMillennial Před 11 měsíci

      @@azertyqwerty5946he is referring to the story bill tells about how he came to faith. Through a girl that sat in front of him in class and gave a simple message

  • @onesandzeroes
    @onesandzeroes Před 9 lety +9

    It's funny that Craig uses Ockham's razor to opt for a monotheistic god, yet he chooses the most "complex" god - the Christian one, that consists of three entities, rather than Jewish or Islamic gods, which are purer (simpler) in that respect. Obviously he's justifying his choice of god after he's chosen him for psychological reasons, because if he used pure logic, Trinity seems an awful choice in view of all the arguments based on simplicity and necessity. I was frustrated no one - not even Krauss - touched on that.

    • @KneightReinagel
      @KneightReinagel Před 9 lety +2

      I'll touch on it. The claim that God is love, and a relational being who loves us personally. One can only give what one has, God shares a fellowship of love as part of His intrinsic Triune being. Distinct, yet united as one. The Triune God is the only that fits all the facts ( not just questions presented in this debate )
      Also the Jewish God is the Trinitarian God as well (I don't know enough about Islam) But if you look a the Jewish names for God they're plural, and in the very beginning when making man God says "Let US make man in OUR image".

    • @Kenzuko1337
      @Kenzuko1337 Před 9 lety +1

      for the people who pin everything on quantum fysics and the one particle that can be at two places at once... should not have much difficulty the subject of a God, creator of quantum fysics, to be three at once...
      i'm just saying ...
      is it not wiser to see your own faults ? instead focusing on a theological debate... focus on the -> how the fuck did we come in existing? its a Godly piece of work isn't it? :P

    • @SixStringStrumming
      @SixStringStrumming Před 9 lety +4

      His choice of Christianity is based on the logic that it is reasonable to believe that Jesus's claim to be God was true based on evidence such as the reliable accounts of his resurrection. There are other reasons he would point to as more likely than the alternatives. Simplicity equates to elegance in some cases but should not be confused for logic. On a side note, if you find the concept of the trinity unusual why should one expect that a God so inconceivably powerful as to create the universe should also be simple and operate in ways that humans really understand?

    • @slayerjable
      @slayerjable Před 9 lety

      Lukas Jansen I think that has actually been observed. I will have to look that up

    • @jonassalan9017
      @jonassalan9017 Před 9 lety

      This fucking mediator............ I really think having so many questions in a debate is useless since the time would be very minimal and no room for an exchange of argument because there's too many questions to address. We can't see who's backed in a corner in the end, we can't see the end of the argument because the mediator will stop them and move on to the next question.

  • @ctriamimgons
    @ctriamimgons Před 9 lety

    I really, really wish that they could have pulled together a group panel debate while Christopher Hitchens was still alive and kicking. It would have been a blood bath to see the big debaters on the non-religious side debate some leading debaters from the major religions.
    On one side: Jewish(whomever), Christian (Craig), and Muslim(whomever) apologists.
    On the other side: Hitchens(polemist/debater), Harris(neuro-scientist), Krauss(physicist), and Dawkins(biologist).

  • @AtamMardes
    @AtamMardes Před rokem

    The big bang is the expansion of existing condensed matter, not the creation of matter from nothing. Nobody is certain if the changing cosmos is eternal or created. when you're uncertain you should be honest & admit it instead of concluding, out of arguments from ignorance, that an invisible being did just bc you desperately need a conclusion to end your discomfort with uncertainty.

  • @ignatei
    @ignatei Před 9 lety +38

    This was like the clash of Titans. I think Dr. Krauss provided very strong arguments, but Dr. Craig came out on top at the end.

    • @joelvis65
      @joelvis65 Před 9 lety +6

      ***** are you?

    • @elleyork451
      @elleyork451 Před 8 lety

      +Keymo Fetus So what you're saying is, content doesn't matter, only tone of voice?

    • @oldtimer5111
      @oldtimer5111 Před 8 lety +1

      Keymo, I find your points hit the nail on the head, I have listened to many of these type of debates and in nearly all I find the theists participants speak in either a very patronising or condescending manner, like you said I feel preached at instead of spoken to.

    • @MSTERWHITE
      @MSTERWHITE Před 7 lety

      ignatei: no it was like the Super Bowl champions (Krauss) playing 11 two year olds in diapers (Craig) in American football. Craig simply doesn't belong on the field against someone who knows science, math, (or any subject at all for that matter). Theology doesn't belong on the field against science. Theology will always lose.

    • @MSTERWHITE
      @MSTERWHITE Před 7 lety

      Keymo: Krauss teaches intelligent young adults at a major USA university. Craig brainwashes illiterate children whose parents have sent them to a Christian madrassa because those adults want to be sure their children are never exposed to 21st century knowledge. Krauss is an educator, Craig is a preacher. that is the difference

  • @kevinflynn7785
    @kevinflynn7785 Před 5 lety +18

    Krauss reminds me of the know it all I was at 13 before maturity taught me otherwise. It appears poor Krauss is a stunted adolescent.

    • @grains425
      @grains425 Před 4 lety +5

      He's a man that is not fooled by an idiot trying to prove unicorns exist. Grow up.

    • @dannielz6
      @dannielz6 Před 3 lety

      Lol try to get a Phd in Physics. Then come back and criticise Krauss.

    • @kynikoi_6867
      @kynikoi_6867 Před 3 lety

      Did you mature?

    • @trekkiejunk
      @trekkiejunk Před 3 lety +1

      As an atheist, but i totally get what you're saying and agree with you. That said, he has spent more than 40 years studying and learning about the very topics that someone like Craig comes in and wants to knock down simply because of his personal beliefs. I can understand why that might give someone an attitude.

  • @oceanceaser44
    @oceanceaser44 Před 9 lety

    The orb argument is a fallacy of composition. Just because the universe is composed of things, some of which similar to an orb in the dessert, that doesn't mean that the whole needs an explanation.

  • @HGALAXIES
    @HGALAXIES Před 6 měsíci

    Can someone else, ANYONE, host these discussions??? Was there a shortage of competent people in that area or at that time???

  • @JeffreyRamsey
    @JeffreyRamsey Před 10 lety +5

    Isn't science wonderful. I wish we knew more, but We have come a long ways since the dark ages. Primitive men in primitive times were making laws that are not morally good today. I thank mankind for changing them and watching out of each others better health, safety and for other animals is what's best for society now.

    • @panthamor
      @panthamor Před 10 lety +3

      Yes, that's good, but it is also a pity that so much work has to be done to convince others of what is already proven. Otherwise we could make even more progress.

    • @JeffreyRamsey
      @JeffreyRamsey Před 10 lety +2

      pseu·do·sci·ence: A theory, methodology, or practice that is considered to be without scientific foundation.
      Good Mental and physical health is the best feeling in the world. Not how many Hdtv you own. There is no evidence for God, until you or we find one, why do you believe? You don't believe in Bigfoot and Martians without evidence. Get out of here with that nonsense, a god is watching over us and cares if we're circumcised and who we have sex with and who we have masturbated to..

    • @Oners82
      @Oners82 Před 10 lety

      ***** Any chance you are paraphrasing or quoting fundamentalist Islamic diatribe?

    • @Oners82
      @Oners82 Před 10 lety

      ***** Copy and paste, copy and paste.....

  • @justsaying4488
    @justsaying4488 Před 10 lety +9

    Nothing worse than a bad moderator. She really annoyed me.

    • @rickmg2552
      @rickmg2552 Před 10 lety +2

      The moderator was a deer in the headlights! I don't think she knew half the words being used, and only wanted to find out if Christians prefer a different brand of tea than atheists, and what is your favorite color?

    • @TheEnfadel
      @TheEnfadel Před 10 lety +1

      She seemed pretty bias.

  • @stephenconnolly3018
    @stephenconnolly3018 Před 9 měsíci

    New research confirms that there is a negative relationship between religiosity and intelligence. The findings have been published in the scientific journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
    “Religiosity is a pervasive phenomenon. Its influence can be felt in all spheres of life. However, a sizeable portion of the population defines itself as atheist. Why do some people decide not to be religious? I thought it was an important and fascinating question,” said study author Miron Zuckerman of the University of Rochester.

  • @edgarvalderrama1143
    @edgarvalderrama1143 Před 3 měsíci

    I am becoming skeptical of (too much) skepticism.

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 Před 5 lety +7

    Lawrence "I say 'The point is' when I've been refuted" Krauss

    • @MrVincehalloran
      @MrVincehalloran Před 4 lety +1

      That's funny. He does say that a lot. But the point is, he does not assert anything that has been, or currently can be, refuted. He's a skeptic and a scientist. Bravo, I say.

  • @Grayswandiir
    @Grayswandiir Před 10 lety +63

    The fundamental difference between religious people and scientifically minded people is that: Religious people state a hypothesis and confirm it with no empirical evidence (that god exists). Scientifically minded/critically thinking people state a hypothesis and test it rigorously finding (or not finding) empirical evidence, if that evidence is not found then the hypothesis is struck down and not believed to be true. Now which one of these methods seems to make more rational sense to you?

    • @antiHUMANDesigns
      @antiHUMANDesigns Před 10 lety +15

      ***** Because doing the opposite causes unsuccessful results. If I just choose to believe that things can fly if I ask them to, I will fail to launch satellites into space. If I choose to believe I don't need to eat, I will starve to death.
      In some cases, you may choose to believe something that by chance happens to be true, it's just statistically less likely. Therefore, scientifically testing things will statistically increase your chance to be successful in your actions (by a lot).
      We use science simply because it has been proven to be effective.
      However, you ask the question in a very strange way. If you don't want to be effective, you can go ahead and believe whatever you want about things, no one is going to force you either way. (To some extent.)
      But really, I think you already know all of this. In my opinion, it's a stupid question.

    • @suesheification
      @suesheification Před 10 lety

      you're disproving your own point: ration is of no concern to faith based thinking and vice versa. Ration and faith are diametrically opposed, you cannot argue one from the other, as has been proved over centuries of two parties thinking they are each correct and the opposing side is wrong. They are irreconcilable the best we can do is agree to disagree. It's all a waste of time anyway.

    • @nnpietro
      @nnpietro Před 10 lety +3

      ***** 'Rape is Wrong' is a statement that actually can be supported by science. Facts and Values aren't necessarily separate entities. Rape is a term/concept that parallels our development of intelligence and conscious awareness. We once engaged in sexual intercourse without permission but it was not rape, it was evolution working to promote the survival of species. But now, intelligence/consciousness has allowed independence/individuality to become an important consideration in species interaction. The science is in the development of the complex cognitive structures in the human brain. The brain tells us that it does not want to be raped through things like screaming, "help me!" and "No!" to get away from an unpleasant and potentially fatal experience. Therefore, science does have a say about truths in that regard.

    • @antiHUMANDesigns
      @antiHUMANDesigns Před 10 lety

      ***** You need to be more careful and/or specific about your question.
      If you ask "why should we believe in science?", then you're asking a philosophical question, and should expect to recieve a philosophical answer. (That's because science deals with "how", not "why".)
      You can phrase it as a scientific question instead: "How did we end up believing in science?", or "How is science a good belief for us?", for example.
      These questions can be answered, scientifically.

    • @RevBobAldo
      @RevBobAldo Před 10 lety

      I must ask you,psychofmse, in what manner you have tested rigorously your hypothesis concerning "religious people"? Good grief dude, you are very unscientific!

  • @333homt
    @333homt Před 10 lety +1

    Lawrence is wonderful. I am better.

  • @valw9029
    @valw9029 Před 9 lety

    Before I was and after I'm not, there is now.

  • @MessianicJewJitsu
    @MessianicJewJitsu Před 3 lety +10

    44:49 Science limits, physics and metaphysics (beyond physics)
    25:10 Nothing is something
    32:07 Krauss sneaks in cosmology
    33:42 Leibniz's a.f.c.
    1:24:21 Krauss attitude
    52:20 subtle to vague
    54:48 popular slogan
    45:15 the three Leibniz's (equal to Benoit's three german suplexes)

  • @stevenstrnad3586
    @stevenstrnad3586 Před 8 lety +3

    It's comic to watch Krauss get ticked at Craig.

  • @SickMetalAddict
    @SickMetalAddict Před 10 lety

    Skip to around: 1:09:00
    If Dr Craig claims that he doesn't exempt god from the principle explained in premise one, that would make him a hypocrite and I don't mean to offend. If the universe's explanation to existence is god, then what is god's explanation of existence? Is another, greater god?

  • @Vic2point0
    @Vic2point0 Před 7 lety

    +Ian G There's no "switch-a-roo" going on at all. Craig presents a cumulative case, in which he starts with arguments to establish that there is *a* god, and then ends it with the resurrection argument which attempts to narrow the god established in the previous arguments down to the Christian god.

  • @KevinBurciaga
    @KevinBurciaga Před 10 lety +3

    Using four letter words and addressing your opponent by his first name. Very professional, Dr. Krauss.

    • @portantwas
      @portantwas Před 10 lety +8

      It could be because the talk in is Australia. We have an anti-snobbery tradition and call those in authority (say a student talking to a lecturer at university, a voter talking to the prime minister) by their first name (as a rule of thumb). My doctor told me to call her by her first name, and I told my contact at the bank to call me by my first name. We generally don't like formality.

    • @lipby
      @lipby Před 10 lety +2

      He may be impolitic, but of course Krauss is right.

  • @alexiogomes955
    @alexiogomes955 Před 8 lety +29

    Well you cant be mad at Krauss, at least he was consistent. The whole time he said...nothing, absolutely nothing. But then again according to his definition of nothing its a whole lot of something.

    • @brendankeane8159
      @brendankeane8159 Před 5 lety +1

      Lol

    • @boffeycn
      @boffeycn Před 5 lety +2

      You really are a silly child

    • @leonardu6094
      @leonardu6094 Před 4 lety +2

      @@boffeycn Not as silly as Krauss and his arguments

    • @boffeycn
      @boffeycn Před 4 lety +1

      @@leonardu6094 Only gullible, ignorant, American fundamentalist Christians who believe the bible is a science manual and Ham tells the truth say that, don't you.
      Presumably you are yet another one that doesn't actually know what the Big Bang theory states or why it is so named. Correct? Just like the OP.

    • @leonardu6094
      @leonardu6094 Před 4 lety

      wong what an emotional response. Not a whole lot of substance.
      I'm quite familiar with the big bang. You don't posses any more information on it than I, so get to your supposed point.

  • @stephen-he4iw
    @stephen-he4iw Před 24 dny

    It's impossible to have a conversation with Lawrence and it's infuriating to try and listen to.

  • @erich1940
    @erich1940 Před 9 lety

    This conversation would be beautiful if engaged as a philosophical conversation rather than a right or wrong debate - as they've moved to near the 116 mark