Sam Harris: On Secular Fundamentalism

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
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Komentáře • 300

  • @DoctorFastest
    @DoctorFastest Před 12 lety +13

    "There's no proposition you have to accept on the basis of insufficient evidence in order to not believe in Poseidon."
    Brilliant. Really sums up why the term 'atheist fundamentalism' is so silly.

  • @vamshik
    @vamshik Před 2 lety +2

    This man always exceeds expectations, he has a very deep knowledge in neuroscience and religion.

  • @qaplatlhinganmaH
    @qaplatlhinganmaH Před 14 lety +2

    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away."

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able 3-D image: "The VP8 Image Analyzer was produced by Pete Schumacher of Interpretations Systems Incorporated and was delivered by him to John Jackson and Eric Jumper in Colorado Springs in 1976. It showed the Shroud image has properties that, when processed through this analog computer, yield a 3-dimensional image. Rather than being like a photographic negative, the shroud image unexpectedly has the property of decoding into a 3-dimensional image of the man..."

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able the special part is that the image on the shroud is only 1/100th the width of a human hair, existing only on the outermost top layer of the fibers. Any other biological organism in decomposition releases various chemicals that seep through the fibers. The same with paint etc. Meaning that the image was formed from a biological organism, in a way currently unobserved by any other biological organism.

  • @losghost
    @losghost Před 13 lety +1

    I am a die hard atheist and large fan of hitchens, tyson, dawkins, and harris but if the intent is to get the message to the faithful, they are really going to need to work on dumbing down the message. Most of the devout people I know would be glassy eyed and lost within the first 30 seconds of this message. Yes, I'm saying that blindly faithful people tend to be less intelligent.

  • @1kdtaylor
    @1kdtaylor Před 15 lety

    I agree with what you state in the first paragraph. The soundness of mathematics remains unproven.
    As to the second paragraph, I do not see how using science to prove mathematics does anything other than argue in a circle. Any time science appears to prove mathematics, the purported "proof" is founded upon mathematics itself.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able The standard is called deduction, and it is part of the scientific method: Induction and deduction. Often times, as with particle physics, the deductive route is taken. The singularity, the event that caused the big bang, which is by definition supernatural, outside our understanding, observation, laws etc, is hypothesized to have happened not by induction, because we can not observe it, measure it etc, but via deduction.

  • @Sizifus
    @Sizifus Před 13 lety +3

    For people like him I'm proud I'm a human being :)

  • @BigG99
    @BigG99 Před 15 lety

    the problem is that a lady in the states was able to slow down light with simple cold temperatures..... light then may in fact be altered based on its environment.

  • @harsharnkaur2075
    @harsharnkaur2075 Před 5 lety +1

    the dogma that secular fundamentalists have accepted is that science is perfect and reasonable. That science or statistics are objective and pure. IIt implies that statistics come in a vacuum and cannot be contaminated by framing or ideology which is absolutely false. Secular fundamentalism upholds "science" and statistics as above criticism and ridicules anyone who disagrees! This is why it is a dogma.

    • @youwaisef
      @youwaisef Před 4 lety +1

      Accepting that science is perfect is not possible if one were to understand what science is. It is the only way you can minimize error in a way that is removed from the personal or subjective understanding of findings and discoveries. Science does not give perfect answers because it is a process that develops and keeps on correcting itself over time. That means it is impossible, literally, for science to be perfect. If someone says science is perfect, then they do not understand what science is. If someone deems science to be 100% true no matter the methodology for example or that there could never be another answer, then they are really being dogmatic. I think there might be some people who are like that. They could be very dogmatic, and that is very dangerous. However, the first thing to do in order to clarify whether a person in question is dogmatic is to confirm as best we could if they really were dogmatic. Otherwise, it would be a witch hunt based on a feeling of panic.

  • @1kdtaylor
    @1kdtaylor Před 15 lety

    Some unprovable tenets of Positivism include:
    1.) The soundness of mathematics (science PRESUPPOSES the soundness of mathematics, so that using science to prove the soundness of mathematics is to exercise circular reasoning).
    2.) Metaphysical realities (e.g. that other personalities exist outside of oneself).
    3.) Objective moral truths (e.g. rape is unethical).
    4.) Aesthetic truths (e.g. the "golden ratio")
    5.) The soundness of science (e.g. we ASSUME that the speed of light is constant).

  • @1kdtaylor
    @1kdtaylor Před 15 lety

    I agree. Which is why I took care to say that I am not necessarily defending any of the 5 tenets I have listed. I merely call attention to them as unprovable tenets held as self-evident truths by Positivists. I am sure you know that very few Positivists, if any, would be willing to throw Einstein's theory of special relativity out the window.

  • @BjornPalmen
    @BjornPalmen Před 14 lety

    Chuicgupachichi wrote:
    "I said, Everyone "WHO IS REASONABLE" agrees."
    What you actually said was:
    "Everyone who is reasonable agrees that man is limited in his powers & abilities."
    But what you should have said is:
    Everyone who is limited agrees that man is limited in his powers & abilities.

  • @Chuichupachichi
    @Chuichupachichi Před 13 lety

    Also, making it even more significant, is the historical fact that those who were the rulers of the dominant, "great civilizations", Babylon, Egypt, Greece & Rome, also revered the same Pagan gods that today's global rulers revere. That pantheon of Pagan gods which was commonly shared by the great civilizations, was not fabricated from mans imagination. The Pagan gods are the Anunnaki & the events regarding them are accounted for within the Sumerian record
    The world's "shadow" rulers control

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able forensics: "In 2001, Pierluigi Baima Bollone, a professor of forensic medicine in Turin, stated that the forensic examination of the wounds and bloodstains on the Shroud indicate that the image was that of the dead body of a man who was whipped, wounded around the head by a pointed instrument and nailed at the extremities before dying..."

  • @GenghisVern
    @GenghisVern Před 12 lety +1

    I would disagree here, not regarding atheism but in regard to the phrase "secular fundamentalism"... There certainly are these people in the area of politics. They're the "Paulbots", the "Anarcho-capitalists", these "voluntaryists" and "objectivists" who claim to be moral fundamentalists but don't tie their beliefs to a deity. They are just as difficult to reason with as religious fundamentalists.

  • @Aurelius27x
    @Aurelius27x Před 13 lety

    @yusufulhas I didn't say they didn't adopt monotheism later on... I'm saying their polytheism existed first and foremost and was quite the trend in ancient religion. I'm noting how this is further proof of the mythos surrounding deities as metaphor, not literal gods/goddesses.

  • @HiAdrian
    @HiAdrian Před 15 lety

    Usually when there's talk of slowing light down, this refers to the overall speed within a medium, but not the individual photons. So C stays constant, but experiences delays like a train stopping at very station on the way.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Im going take a break for the holiday weekend, so I'll get back to your points monday. Its been a fun discussion so far. Happy holidays

  • @mutabrev
    @mutabrev Před 14 lety

    The reason we don't worship Baal today for instance, is because Elijah cut his prophets up into little pieces after YHVH demonstrated his power in front of their eyes. Have a look on google earth in central Syria for whats left of the temples of Baal.

  • @Ghaiyst
    @Ghaiyst Před 12 lety +5

    Ben Stiller

    • @hrh4961
      @hrh4961 Před 4 lety

      His distant cousin, really: Zen Stiller.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @xcellken1 the shroud was mentioned before the 14th century, in the gospels mark, matt, luke and john, dating back from 60-90 AD. also mentioned in madessa 4th century, called the mandillion cloth etc...

  • @DataSe7en
    @DataSe7en Před 13 lety

    I can't decide who i like to hear speak/debate more...Dawkins or Harris.
    Harris delivers with a thorough well thought out argument, often with a great use of analogies. Harris is always respectful, even to ignorance.
    Dawkins strength comes from his understanding of science, and his ability to translate that information to the average listener. Dawkins doesnt pull punches when evidence is flat out ignored.
    Tough choice..... if ne1 reads this you should respond with who you like.

  • @OGREMIKE03
    @OGREMIKE03 Před 13 lety +1

    @DataSe7en I must say that you wrapped them both up as well as one can do in a few sentences. That being said, I don't think either is more valuable to our community then the other. Im not trying to ride the fence here, but I like them equally. I love Harris' ability to be respectful while demolishing religious dogma through logic that anyone can comprehend. But I tend to agree w/ Dawkins that the time for respect toward religion has passed. It affects laws, wars and people's right to happiness.

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 15 lety

    "The speed of light isn't constant; light can be slowed in the right environment as was done in an experiment a few years ago. Did you mean the maximum speed of light can't be broken?"
    The speed of light varies depending on what substance it is travelling through, that is the basis of refraction. Want to lower the speed of light, use a dense glass instead of air or a vacuum.
    Modern physics however does maintain that the speed of light in a vacuum is constant and is the fastest possible speed.

  • @Mncdk
    @Mncdk Před 13 lety +1

    I had always considered tarot cards to be pure BS, which was all about scamming people, but I had never considered the (maybe accidentally) values of being confronted with generalities to force self reflection.
    I love Sam Harris. He always makes me think. :)

  • @GodTheHypothesis
    @GodTheHypothesis Před 14 lety

    @marchingscout14
    Absolutely. Although if you rely on faith, you should not expect other people to respect your beliefs or not criticise them. Nor should you expect society to priveledge your particular faith in any significant way.

  • @qaplatlhinganmaH
    @qaplatlhinganmaH Před 15 lety

    Faith, n. Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able like i said before, skepticism is necessary to push the debate. It was the early skeptics that formulated the STURP team to get to the bottom of the shroud issue. And thankfully in doing so, they highlighted all of the unique qualities and information about the burial cloth. We will get nowhere if there is nobody to challenge things. That is why i enjoy the debates

  • @1kdtaylor
    @1kdtaylor Před 15 lety

    Of course, I am not necessarily defending any of the 5 tenets I have above listed. I merely call attention to them as unprovable tenets held as self-evident truths by Positivists.
    These 5 precepts (and others) are a part of what we may call the Atheist's Creed. And as The Atheist's Bible states, "science is a belief system, as much as any other . . . [and] believers in science can be as dogmatic and faithful to their beliefs as some religions and religious believers are to theirs." (p. 41)

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able If the shroud is 2000 years old, that would be the final piece, to come to the reasonable conclusion that the Shroud is Jesus. Then, we see the details of the Shroud to be in perfect sync with all four Gospel accounts of the Passion. This would provide tremendous support for the accuracy of the Gospels. Then, we know the Shroud defies traditional science, and the gospel accounts infer that traditional science was in fact defied at the very moment in time that the Shroud represents.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Textile accounts: "The weaving pattern, 3:1 twill, is consistent with first-century Syrian design, according to the appraisal of Gilbert Raes of the Ghent Institute of Textile Technology in Belgium. Flury-Lemberg stated, "The linen cloth of the Shroud of Turin does not display any weaving or sewing techniques which would speak against its origin as a high-quality product of the textile workers of the first century."

  • @BigG99
    @BigG99 Před 15 lety

    oh ok.. well with that i agree.. the question is, when it comes to reading the speed of light in space, like from a star or such in order to understand distance and time, is it possible that our messurments coule be wrong.. some conditions in space are quite extreme such as temperature and may indeed alter the speed of light.. perhaps.. its a theory that some scientists ar exploring.

  • @justgivemethetruth
    @justgivemethetruth Před 13 lety

    I think the understanding is almost less of a problem than absorbing that information and understanding really - what the hell we are as "beings". We all have so many foolish notions that have snuck into our brains by religion, or school even, or movies. It's amazing how no human society has really ever saved itself from serious collapse, and the way we are handling the environment and climate change we are still behaving on the macro level like an ant hill, we are not using our brains at all.

  • @Chuichupachichi
    @Chuichupachichi Před 13 lety

    Cards are cards... but Pagan gods are something different from cards. The Pagan gods may be in disrepute with Sam Harris. However, we know from Bohemian Grove & from other things that they're not in disrepute with the powerful rulers of the world. They being the rulers of the world, makes their view of Pagan gods much more significant than is Sam Harris' view of the Pagan gods.

  • @Xonatron
    @Xonatron Před 15 lety +1

    "they are both without data"... very accurate.

  • @SankofaNYC
    @SankofaNYC Před 15 lety +1

    *DING DING DING!!!!* You Win Sir!!
    EXACTLY!! Great Post..

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @powereddrive You missed the point, that doesnt make the post pointless. Even if we are working with the same evidence...some know how to scrutinize evidence and draw appropriate conclusions better than others.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 we are inmpressed by the studies themselves and the strength of those studies by design, sample size, reliabability, reproducibility and so forth.
    1. whats your educational background that would let me know how I should approach the topic with you. (are you a chemist? a doctor? etc)
    2. What sources do you use for your research? Peer reviewed? not?
    3. On what basis do you (meemingly prematurely) conclude the shroud is somehow authentic? How does it proove christianity, if at all?

  • @HiAdrian
    @HiAdrian Před 15 lety

    I was trying to say that the speed of light remains a workable constant, despite such experiments as the one you mentioned.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able You are correct that deduction does not always indicate an empirical proof. But it creates a strong argument: A house is burglarized, but there are no signs of forced entry anywhere on the house. A detective then argues that someone had a key. This doesn't prove it was done with a key, but it currently is the best theory. And if further investigation shows less and less evidence for forced entry, then the key theory is strengthened, not proven. This is where the shroud is at imo.

  • @sikwee
    @sikwee Před 15 lety

    kissmeamerica is right we should support this bloke.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @Dragon0007 very cool of you for the heads up tho =)

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @xcellken1 the burial cloth the women find in the empty tomb, stated in all four gospels, is the shroud. It would not say "Turin" because Turin Italy did not exist in the first century, the mandillion cloth is the name given to the shroud in madessa,

  • @1kdtaylor
    @1kdtaylor Před 15 lety

    On the matter of the speed of light, Einstein's special theory of relativity absolutely insists that the speed of light is constant (specifically, in a vacuum). As the American Museum of Natural History summarizes it: "Einstein's crucial breakthrough about the nature of light, made in 1905, can be summed up in a deceptively simple statement: The speed of light is constant."

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 14 lety

    @OctoBox They're not useless, chemistry and biology in particular are subjects of huge economic importance. Astronomy, well that's the study of everything outside of the Earth's atmosphere, which is pretty much everything. Ensuring that people know a little something about the universe ought to be one of the goals of education, not only because it's interesting but also because it helps us understand our planet in context.
    You wouldn't happen to be into multi-level marketing would you?

  • @StillLateToTheParty
    @StillLateToTheParty Před 14 lety +1

    Hey, Haris! Don't talk down on Zeus!!
    HE'S REAL, buddy!!

  • @bobby666x
    @bobby666x Před 12 lety

    In so many ways, the argument can be reduced to this: One believes in God as fact, so they purpose, "Okay, prove me wrong." The other says, "Well I think the burden of proof lies with the believer." My stance is, "I don't think I need God or religion to be, or not be there for me to live my life as I do. I tolerate religion (to a degree), but I don't really fit the definition of atheist or even agnostic. I've accepted, "no answer," as the scientific conclusion.

  • @Chuichupachichi
    @Chuichupachichi Před 14 lety

    Everyone who is reasonable agrees that man is limited in his powers & abilities. By extension, everyone who is reasonable agrees that any thing created by man is also limited in its powers & abilities
    Although its a fantastic tool, science is nevertheless, limited in its applicability. Precisely as one should expect being its a product of limited man
    However, the materialist, naturalist subscribes to the view that the entire extent of reality or the whole of existence is determined by the

  • @Chuichupachichi
    @Chuichupachichi Před 13 lety

    all major sources of information, i.e. the schools from 1st grade to PhD & the major media corporations which are part of the corporate oligarchy. In addition, they are the authors of many of the political ideologies that are major components of the US & western civilization's culture. The fact is that throughout history & at present, the significant, relevant struggles between the prominent opposing forces & the power of ruling, have been between the Pagans with their religious system & the

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able My argument is that the Shroud can be proven to be the burial cloth of Jesus (not a resurrection), because this can be measured. Ray Rogers believed in the end of his life that the Shroud was the burial cloth of the historic man named Jesus, but he thought that a natural explanation would be found. So far, every opportunity to explain the image by means of a natural explanation has failed. This does not prove that something unnatural happened, but it opens the door to that hypothesis

  • @gtaivpcvids
    @gtaivpcvids Před 15 lety

    You make my point for me. It is this aspect of science that is it's greatest strength! I'm surprised to hear you offer it as a drawback... The shifting you refer to is the constantly updated understanding of everything, a model of reality as we currently know it. This is an ongoing process that has always been and is now being severely hampered by powerful interests who believe as you seem to.
    Circular arguments won't earn your Yahweh a phd, either. |D

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety +1

    @jns124able Dropping the ball concerns the carbon dating. The carbon dating does not deal with the mechanism for image formation. Concerning the C-14 dating, science dropped the ball. From chemist Ray Rogers: "If they had looked at the ultra-violet pictures we had taken of the Shroud, they would have known that that was the worst place to cut for sampling." Anyway you spin it, that's a big fkn wiff. Forget my conclusions, read only the PEER REVIEWED articles on the Shroud. As I have.

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 14 lety

    @OctoBox Today's pragmatic, useful engineers are using yesterday's whimsical pure science. Quantum mech may seem to have no applicability in "real life" except that it's the key to understanding chemistry at a fundamental level, how electricity flows through computer chips etc. Relativity seems a bit out there with all of its talk of time dilation and the like, but GPS actually needs that stuff to work.
    Your "pragmatic" vs "junk" distinction doesn't exist in "reality".

  • @fatgirl
    @fatgirl Před 13 lety

    I'm not saying this too be critical of Sam Harris, but I think he could have saved a lot of time by simply pointing out that religion has value primarily in its parables, and little value elsewhere.

  • @Tarantulus666
    @Tarantulus666 Před 14 lety

    @TravisMorien it is a tenet of rationality that the burden of proof is upon the claimant. if you claim something exists it is up to you to prove it, not up to the skeptic to disprove it.

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 15 lety

    Atheists are quite open to the possibility that some day there could be some evidence that God exists.
    But the problem is, there is no evidence for God. Nothing that stands up to any kind of mild scepticism that is (i.e. only things which are impressive only to faithful people who are willing to think a pattern on a piece of cheese toast is really Jesus...).
    But you have it completely around the wrong way. It isn't up to the atheist to disprove god, it is up to the believer to prove God.

  • @BjornPalmen
    @BjornPalmen Před 14 lety

    @BigG99 Lenses work because light travels slower in glass.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Divinity can not be falsified because that is subjective, depending on interpretations based on religion. What may be seen as divine by some, may be seen as evil by another etc. However, a singularity, a circumvention of natural law in a tomb in Jerusalem can be falsified. So far it has not. And a singularity just because it is confounding, does not mean it can't be applied. After all the scientific community is confounded by the Shroud itself.

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 14 lety

    @OctoBox "Show me ONE innovation created by a thoeretical physicist "
    Do you mean can I name one theoretical physicist who has invented a practical device you're likely to have heard of? Well the word "theoretical" kinda rules out that he *personally* would have made the device, but you already named one notable field yourself... nuclear physics was once entirely theoretical, Einstein wasn't an experimentalist, in fact he worked out relativity by imagining travelling on a light beam.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able I explained my scientific perspective: the shroud is likely the burial cloth of Jesus, the mechanism of image formation in unknown, more study should be conducted. This is the conclusion of many scientists with no "vested" interest. The argument for divinity is one of deduction, the only way you can predict something that you can not observe. This is common is physics. Do you think there is evidence for higher dimensions? Do you know how many scientists believe they exist?

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able you are correct. You have been very open minded and willing to objectively look into the science behind this issue. You have been the only one. I have a gmail account full of insults, and I guess I did displace some of my irritation your way. And the problem with proving something divine, is that is not possible to empirically prove this. Because this would be outside of our current laws. Just like the event, the singularity that caused the big bang, can't be measured.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able The rigidly skeptical perspective is good up to point. But skepticism does not explain anything in and of itself. It is not enough to just be critical, if there is no alternative explanation proposed. I see a lot of very smug skeptics who are good at giving the definition of a skeptic, but I rarely does anyone have an alternative hypothesis or theory to present about the shroud. Because every attempt has already been refuted. Thinking outside the box is not the skeptics strength.

  • @raspberrymuffin
    @raspberrymuffin Před 12 lety

    @fuck192ass
    The argument is technically secularism is the belief of separation of church & state but also freedom of religion and nothing more. The secularism that you speak of is a new (& not the original) definition of secularism, which is where my mix-up came from. So I'll admit that. We were thinking of two different definitions. Technically, secularism means freedom of religion, but also freedom to it. However, a new "secularism" is growing, which is anti-theism, what you meant.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 religious divinity CANNOT be falsified. When evidence contrary to religious doctrine emeges, religion falls back on an alternative interpretation of holy books. You are right about xtians interpreting an abrogation of natural law as evidence of jesus. I suppose magnetism would have fallen under this category a few decades back..point is, even the appearance of supernatural (as magnetism had) may be, with time and effort, explained by natural processes.

  • @HardestManInTarot
    @HardestManInTarot Před 5 lety

    Described the Tarot better than I could.

  • @marchingscout14
    @marchingscout14 Před 14 lety

    @TravisMorien do you not convince yourself there isn't a God though? But the believer is a believer because he believes right? Belief comes from faith and if you don't have any of it or simply refuse to even consider the existence of God, you aren't one. So ultimately, it isn't up to the believer to prove God, it's up to the believer to have faith and believe.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able yes, you are a very intelligent critical thinker, and the only person who actually read any of the papers. That says a lot.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able From a strictly scientific perspective I can only say this: The Shroud is likely the burial cloth of the historical Jesus, and the mechanism for image formation is unknown, and more study should be conducted. From a Christian perspective I can say this: The Shroud image concerns a man who is divine, and therefore scientific study will never be able to fully understand the Shroud. And as science falsifies theory after theory, there the one perspective reinforces the other.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @xcellken1 no the STURP team who published piles of peer reviewed papers on the subject. Peer reviewed science is the distinction here. If you understand what that is, then you will understand why the shroud of turin is different from big foot and ufos.

  • @Aurelius27x
    @Aurelius27x Před 13 lety

    @yusufulhas The funny thing is there is not one of the precursors to these religions that didnt first adopt a polytheistic view. There was no such thing as monotheism in the truly ancient cultures. Not even the jews.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able The singularity at the moment of the creation space/time would be outside natural law, because our laws of physics that govern everything within the confines of space/time had not been established yet. The singularity is recognized by science. Check out Frank Tipler's Omega point theory, he is published in several peer reviewed journals. He explains the physics behind these concepts, Christianity, the shroud etc. He also aggravates a lot of people.

  • @rayabe
    @rayabe Před 14 lety

    ben stiller is right. or is he erik menendez?

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 14 lety +1

    @bsimpson505 I'm getting this mental image of that scene from Life of Brian, only this time it's Dawkins at a podium...
    Dawkins: "There's not one of us who would not gladly accept the God Hypothesis were we presented with sufficient evidence."
    Then a faint voice from the back: "Uh, well one!"
    Dawkins (looks up into audience): "Oh yeah, there's one. But otherwise we're solid!"

  • @BigG99
    @BigG99 Před 15 lety

    And what point are you trying to make with this? im respectfully asking.

  • @GnosticAtheist
    @GnosticAtheist Před 14 lety

    Well, thats what religion tries to do, at differing levels. That is, insert a "theory of everything" by inserting non-empirical magic into the equation.
    I think I will stick to "I don't think so" and "I don't care if all you got is because" when in dialog with religion.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @powereddrive since always. as per usual, when one of you guys doesnt understand whats being explained you assume the person is wrong...science is a process for explaining and understanding the universe. Newton, explains the mechanisms of physics...those mechanisms werent invented by him...he explained mechanisms and relationships that were already there. INDIVIDUALS develop explanatory models, but the nice thing about SCIENCE it that the scientific process is not up to the individual.

  • @raspberrymuffin
    @raspberrymuffin Před 12 lety

    @fuck192ass
    Harris is talking about how people try to make secularism itself a form of fundamentalism. If someone tries to destroy religion, that doesn't make secularism fundamentalist, the hate for religion is its own separate fundamentalism. My comment is to say one is fundamentalist if they are secular is an oxymoron, because secularism is a lack of belief. You're right that attempting to destroy religion is fundamentalist, but that's a different argument from what Harris (& I) are saying.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able That's correct. To include a supernatural event as an option or suspect, we have to show that something can exist outside of our natural laws. The singularity is that example. Something that science recognizes, but exists or existed, outside natural law. In my hypothesis, a singularity is added to the suspect list along with all the other natural explanations. Then the deductive process begins with falsification of explanatory theories.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    this is starting to become less mysterious to me. I am seeing a pattern of usage of scientific terminology and the way in which you apply it and express yourself. You seem to become a bit confused with semantics. I say confused because the alternative is a deliberate misuse of semantics. By "terrible standard" the word standard isnt being used the way you are using it when you describe deduction. In any event, the main issue id have is with your application of "deduction".

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @xcellken1 there is no way to verify any alleged true cross. however, there are ways to test the shroud of turin for methods of forgery. No method of forgery exists. The shroud of turin has not been explained by traditional science. You need to understand why the shroud of turin is the most studied artifact in human history, and why science cannot explain it. to understand this, you need to do the research. you seem to have a media related perception of the shroud, follow the science instead

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Only four dimensions are observable, (three space, one time) if that is what you mean. Any of the higher seven dimensions that M-theory predicts are not. And the supernatural is recognized by science, that is the singularity, the moment before the creation of space/time. All supernatural means is outside natural law or observation etc.
    As far as the gospels go, I'm not a biblical scholar, but I understand the historical method, and how it applies to the gospels.

  • @MrMattias87
    @MrMattias87 Před rokem

    Well I agree with him so far, except the idea of the tarot isn't really magic. It's another system of intuitive reading.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Those papers do show nothig of Jesus. Those papers are concerning only the C-14 dating. There are papers that deal with other topics, like the wounds of the man on the Shroud compared to gospel accounts. Limestone samples: "Using a high-resolution microprobe, Levi-Setti and Kolbeck compared the spectra of samples taken from the Shroud with samples of limestone from ancient Jerusalem tombs. The chemical signatures of the Shroud samples and the tomb limestone were found identical..."

  • @marchingscout14
    @marchingscout14 Před 14 lety

    @TravisMorien do you not frequently convince yourself there isn't a God though? But the believer is a believer because he believes right? Belief comes from faith and if you don't have any of it or simply refuse to even consider the existence of God, you obviously aren't one. So ultimately, it isn't up to the believer to prove God, it's up to the believer to have faith and believe.

  • @marchingscout14
    @marchingscout14 Před 14 lety

    @Tarantulus666 it is up to you to believe what you do and because of faith, you should not and do not have to prove it to someone else

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Most Christians do not know much about the Shroud. You know more now than most Christians. Their faith does not rely on a cloth, so its not really a vested interest. Most Christians could care less. My point was originally, based on what sam harris said in the video, putting Zues, Posieden spaghetti monsters and Jesus in the same category. My point is they are very different, there is argument for Jesus, a theory can be submitted based on evidence, historical and archeological

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 incidentally, I m enjoying the discussion! Although I think Im right, I enjoy that we can articulate point-counterpoints reasonably well. =D

  • @Rockwells420
    @Rockwells420 Před 11 lety

    We have to remember that these beliefs start at child birth. That's a discussion we should have. Maybe this should wait until a child's old enough to decide for themselves.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 yes thats the image. this means little...other than it is an image

  • @rebornstillborn
    @rebornstillborn Před 11 lety

    I agree with you, but my understanding of what Harris said was that there is no such attitude connected to secularism/atheism in and of itself. Like you have illustrated however it is quite possible for people who are secularists/atheists to form absolute moral values based on some notion or other and take these to a fundamentalist degree!

  • @raspberrymuffin
    @raspberrymuffin Před 12 lety

    @fuck192ass
    Secularism means religion stays personal only & out of politics (which in my opinion is best, as religion does not belong in law). Some people are going past that, but that isn't just secularism, that is anti-theism. Secularism, though changing, was originally meant to be neutral to religion, just like how our founding fathers wanted America. But Harris is referring to "secular fundamentalism" as in how people try to turn lack of belief into fundamentalism, which is impossible.

  • @kaoscstr
    @kaoscstr Před 12 lety

    I am atheist, and I agree with your comment

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 In your examples of 10 murder suspects and particle physics...the deduction assumes or otherwise knows that the deduced option is plausible. (ie you KNEW the killer was in the room) You do not have this luxury in the real world example of your shroud. It is the equivalent of having 10 suspects in the room but not knowing IF one of them actually is the killer. You may want to believe that one is, but you cant know and this is the discussion we are having re: your shroud.

  • @tsantini13
    @tsantini13 Před 13 lety

    @jns124able Not magic. I would not use the term magic concerning the Shroud, the same way I would not use the term magic to describe the phenomenon of dark energy. I understand that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, I would argue the Shroud of Turin is an extraordinary phenomenon. What this implies relies on the interpretation of the observer. And I do think that a tremendous amount of skepticism has been applied to the Shroud, but they lack peer review.

  • @jns124able
    @jns124able Před 13 lety

    @tsantini13 well, as I said earlier...I think trying to draw parallels between a singularity and the shroud's divine origins is extremely dubious to the point that it is completely invalid. A lack of an explanation for any one of the millions of things that science hasnt explained thus far does not preclude magical thinking as valid. You are misusing science in this way. Ive said this before, but I dont think you would agree.

  • @TravisMorien
    @TravisMorien Před 15 lety

    Actually astronomers have a pretty good idea of how star and planetary systems form. You'll need to find another gap to fill with your God of the Gaps.

  • @DLFfitness1
    @DLFfitness1 Před 2 lety

    Magical thinking is belief in magic. It’s claiming to have abilities, and knowledge that no one has.

  • @Chuichupachichi
    @Chuichupachichi Před 14 lety

    @BjornPalmen
    {Btw "everyone agrees that" is a typical claim for really weak theories}
    Straw Men are typical within extremely weak Evolutionist arguments
    I said, Everyone "WHO IS REASONABLE" agrees. That would of course, exclude evolutionists
    Never in the history of mankind, have things like "4 legged whales", "Tyrannosaurus Chicken" & "Ancestral Bacterial Forebearers" ever been considered "reasonable"