David Mitchell on Atheism

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2013
  • David Mitchell on Atheism
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  • @keirandcarlshow
    @keirandcarlshow Před 3 lety +2771

    Honestly watched the first minute and 20 seconds not thinking they would be sitting that close to each other.

    • @calebmcurby8580
      @calebmcurby8580 Před 3 lety +74

      Same 😂 Oh what has 2020 done to us?

    • @BigGov74
      @BigGov74 Před 3 lety +10

      where are their masks

    • @ethanh6370
      @ethanh6370 Před 3 lety +79

      Even outside of recent events, I would say they are oddly close, given that there is nothing else around them. It feels uncomfortable.

    • @samrust4366
      @samrust4366 Před 3 lety +26

      I saw your comment before I saw how close they were to each other, and I still was truly not at all prepared for just how close they are

    • @ximono
      @ximono Před 3 lety +12

      They _could_ hold hands

  • @caseyhamm8822
    @caseyhamm8822 Před 3 lety +2221

    “i’m not convinced there’s something, but i don’t want there to be nothing” is the most relatable thing i’ve ever heard

    • @caseyhamm8822
      @caseyhamm8822 Před 3 lety +52

      @Maurits there is no truth claim to make with matters like this. there is either belief or there isn’t. and personal preference IS our tool for determining our beliefs

    • @caseyhamm8822
      @caseyhamm8822 Před 3 lety +46

      @Maurits you can’t run tests to prove the existence of god or lack thereof. there is no way for humanity to determine fact around this. and whether or not god exists has no bearing on the world, but as david said, a huge effect on morality. and every person i’ve interacted with prior to you has maintained that it is an opinion thing because there is no unobstructed views of god, no perfect truths of religion. most people would say that constitutes as reason to just leave someone alone to their beliefs, not turn into a pedantic ass and wax pseudointellectual in the youtube comments

    • @dektarey4024
      @dektarey4024 Před 3 lety +12

      @Maurits "And if you believe that we should leave eachother alone because we can never determine with certainty whether God exists or not, I simply disagree with you, and I'm sure hundreds of years of theological debate and the vast amounts of scholars and literary works on this question would too."
      That simply sounds like someone who wants to argue and dislike something. Believe in it? Dont care. Dont believe in it? Dont care. Want to cause strive because you disagree with someone on the matter of god existing? Now i care because you're making a problem.
      Its a toxic behavior at its core and should not be encouraged. And yes, all these centuries of theological debate are meaningless and simply in the wrong. There is no reason to cause strive over this matter. Only false pride encourages someone to do so.

    • @aidensexton3343
      @aidensexton3343 Před 3 lety +12

      @@dektarey4024 I know this is probably a mistake joining in, but i’d say it isn’t always a matter of atheists causing a problem. While it’s fine for one to chose to believe in avid because it gets them through the day, my personal problem is when a certain god is used as a justification for anything. Any decisions are likely to be influenced by this belief, however, this still isn’t a significant problem until you start using god to justify any number of things, the largest modern one being homophobia, but notable past ones include burning of witches, the crusades, all the various killings/wars caused by divide between protestant and catholics, the catholics killing those who didn’t believe in catholic god. Now in the case of Agnostics, like David speaks about in the video, there is no problem, as they don’t commit to a specific god and system, but those who follow a specific god, and a specific system have an inbuilt flaw in their reasoning, which could influence any number of decisions. So while yes, belief god is not a problem in it self, I would say that belief can be used for false conclusion, and quite often is. while i don’t personally argue with strangers over the internet about gods existence(the present excluded), as it tends to be pointless, i think those that do are understandable, and should not be seen as arguing because they specifically want to argue, but because they have seen what religion has caused.
      I hope that this has helped you possibly get an idea of why i personally think we shouldn’t just leave each other alone. If you have any criticisms of my argument or don’t understand one of my points, please let me know, i don’t want this to descend into the normal pointless bickering of youtube comments. Also i recognize this was more of debate between agnostics and atheists, and as a general atheist, I have no problem with agnostics
      Added note: I did the classic comment thing of not watching the video fully, and i realize David directly went against what i just said, but just to put down his argument.
      One: He make an huge assumption that people look to kill each other and will use any reason to do so, which is not backed up by him, and i find to be a leap. I don’t want to come across pretentious by quoting philosophers, but i’d say that humans aren’t good or bad, but humans are simply the culmination of all of those who exist at any time. If all humans helped each other, then we would be good, even if 100 years before, we all lived in a state of constant fighting, stealing, and killing. We went from bad to good, however we are not inherently either. So this idea that humans just want to kill each other and will find any reason is a bit silly.
      Two: He says that many things have been used to justify murder, such as the political ideology. I’d say that this is not relevant, as simply because people kill each other over many things, doesn’t mean that those things are acceptable. I would say that while yes, people have killed over many things, i’d say the less reasons to fight, the less fighting that happens. Simply because people have killed over communism, doesn’t make killing over religion alright. While i would say that killing over anything is not acceptable, ill be honest in ambitions that that is an assumption. With that assumption, i’d say killing over politics is not acceptable either, and we should try and prevent that. without that assumption, i’d say that while there may be an argument that killing over a certain belief is acceptable, like in the example of communism, where by killing you think you are being about a better long term world, this killing is based on a belief which may or may not be true. If the belief(communism) is true, then the killing may be justified(i’d say it isn’t, but i want to avoid assumptions about morality) and if it isn’t true, then killing is not. And this must be applied to religion, where when we can totally conclude that religion is not true(or is unprovable through the means of reason), then killing over religion is not justified, and in turn, we must work to prevent the cause of said killings, religion.
      Three: I think i may have already addressed this before but i’ll restate it. He says that even without religion, killing will continue, presumably at the same rate(This is my interpretation, please correct me if you see it differently). I think this implies that in the hypothetical situation that in history, if there were no religion, the killings like the crusades would be replaced by something else, however no proof is given as to why. I’d say that if people had no reasons to kill there would be no killing, and as there are less reasons to kill, less killing takes place.
      So, yeah. Once again, any criticism are welcome. I decided to comment hear with the hope of two, equally happy endings(not that kind). Either i convince someone of my argument rationally using facts(or at least make them understand my point), or i am critiqued rationally, and in turn, my views are changed, causing me to become a better, more rational person. I simply hope this doesn’t sputter out into pointless bickering

    • @damienjoseph7540
      @damienjoseph7540 Před 3 lety +5

      @@aidensexton3343 JayZus you typed too much but I got through it and agree for the most part. DM is A smart man but he's wrong about this just because he wants to believe like millions of people holding on to childhood fairy tales. There's way too much badness from religious people even apart from killing and I don't wanna type a novel but just look at the USA puritan evangelical trumpets for a start and even if there was a gahd, then it's clearly a POS that's inflicted Untold murder, pain and misery on it's own creations. The flooding of millions of innocent women and children was bad enough but it was only getting started then. Obviously it's nonsense stories used to brainwash and control people

  • @ISLWYN2007
    @ISLWYN2007 Před 8 lety +1839

    He's married to Victoria Coren. Of course there's a god. :-)

    • @ilikethisnamebetter
      @ilikethisnamebetter Před 4 lety +38

      Since there's now less danger of me being married to that unfunny, annoying woman (albeit, there was very little chance anyway..), I might be tempted to share your opinion.

    • @paulallen579
      @paulallen579 Před 3 lety +183

      @@ilikethisnamebetter Yeah well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man.

    • @colmwhateveryoulike3240
      @colmwhateveryoulike3240 Před 3 lety

      Lmao

    • @bleachedbonez
      @bleachedbonez Před 3 lety +23

      Oh fuck how did I not realize that's where the Mitchell in her name comes from???

    • @banjopete
      @banjopete Před 3 lety +3

      @@paulallen579 ,DUDE,

  • @DerPinguim
    @DerPinguim Před 3 lety +310

    He outlined my exact thoughts in a way 10x more eloquent than I ever could

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety +7

      He's wrong though

    • @DerPinguim
      @DerPinguim Před 3 lety +10

      @@JB_inks That is a matter of personal opinion, when it comes to religion, there is a right and there are wrongs but we have no idea what those are, therefore, saying someone is wrong is disrespectful and hypocritical. We don't know if there is a god and, therefore, anyone is free to make their own opinions.

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety +6

      @@DerPinguim no, not at all. Why don't you ask me why he's wrong? It's not about personal opinions, he's factually wrong about the definitions of the words he's using. As a pedantic person I expected better of him.

    • @creeproot
      @creeproot Před 3 lety +2

      @@JB_inks what's wrong about it

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety +1

      @@creeproot he got the definitions of atheism and agnostic completely wrong.

  • @kurodashinkei
    @kurodashinkei Před 10 lety +1169

    This is one of the most level-headed discussions about religion I've seen anywhere on youtube. Respect.

    • @colinjava8447
      @colinjava8447 Před 3 lety +55

      No it's not, he doesn't understand the terms at all, I imagine he's substituting atheism for the claim there is no god, but atheism is just a lack of a belief in gods.
      Furthermore one can be agnostic and atheist, I am myself, one is about knowledge, and one about belief.
      And who's taking away the comfort?
      The religious don't have to listen to atheists, just like atheists don't have to listen to the crap religious people say.
      Religion may be comforting but it can also be a waste of your life, and typically the truth is usually the best thing.

    • @sagnikmondal4058
      @sagnikmondal4058 Před 3 lety +24

      @@colinjava8447 Astonishing how oblivious you are and that's from a non believer.

    • @colinjava8447
      @colinjava8447 Před 3 lety +22

      @@sagnikmondal4058 Oblivious to what

    • @Ben-Rogue
      @Ben-Rogue Před 3 lety +26

      @@sagnikmondal4058 Look up a "gnostic, agnostic" chart, you'll realise Colin is correct

    • @johncatson6658
      @johncatson6658 Před 3 lety +19

      @@Ben-Rogue He's right on the agnostic part sure, though I think it doesn't actually matter that much since everybody understood what kind of people David meant. He is also oblivious to how both atheists and theists can be extremely overbearing for some reason and try to destroy the other person's comfort completely.

  • @officeskivy
    @officeskivy Před 10 lety +734

    I like David Mitchell.

  • @joem4585
    @joem4585 Před 3 lety +687

    With David's appearance in this video, it's like a glimpse of an alternate universe where Ricky Gervais isn't a bell-end.

    • @swiggsoclock
      @swiggsoclock Před 3 lety +20

      And then the waveform collapses and we once again find ourselves in the wrong universe

    • @anokah
      @anokah Před 3 lety +66

      @ConManliness As much as I like him at times, and his work, he is a proper twat at times, and he's definitely in the category of comedians that mitchell is referring to

    • @damienjoseph7540
      @damienjoseph7540 Před 3 lety +14

      @@anokah anyone can be a twat sometimes but Gervais is right and David is talking nonsense here obviously. It's a few years ago so he might've copped himself on since

    • @benjaminlundback8394
      @benjaminlundback8394 Před 3 lety +3

      @@anokah how is he in that category?

    • @__-cd9ug
      @__-cd9ug Před 3 lety +43

      @@damienjoseph7540 not everything's about being right all the time, that's kind of the point.
      Religion these days is a thing people choose to believe in, not something that people myopically believe in.
      So yeah, organised religions are a pain, but the very faith that drives them also leads to great thing. It's not a binary matter where you can say 'religion good' or 'religion bad'. Nothing is that simple

  • @theTRUTHgroup
    @theTRUTHgroup Před 3 lety +304

    It's nice to see a popular celebrity being so intellectually honest for a change. Very cool!

    • @myopenmind527
      @myopenmind527 Před 3 lety +11

      Even if he’s not being intellectually correct?

    • @willchurch8376
      @willchurch8376 Před 2 lety +25

      @@myopenmind527 You might want to worry about being grammatically correct before you concern yourself with any facet of correctness in other people.

    • @snap-n-shoot
      @snap-n-shoot Před 2 lety +6

      Not being "honest" he is simply say he does not know....which is not an answer either. Of course there is no such thing as a God who seems to be able to do anything ...but does nothing. It also breaks all the law of Physics to suggest there is a magical being who does nothing all day and relies on their unfounded legendary status to be noticed.

    • @willchurch8376
      @willchurch8376 Před 2 lety +23

      @@snap-n-shoot ...no, it is pretty honest to admit you don't know something. I don't know how you can term that as anything other than honest, unless you suspect David of possessing actual concrete proof one way or the other about god.

    • @Codex7777
      @Codex7777 Před 2 lety +3

      @@willchurch8376 - He's not being entirely honest with himself though. Atheism and agnosticism address different things. They're not different points on the same scale and he's definitely intelligent and knowledgeable enough to know this. Theism and atheism are to do with belief, whilst agnosticism is to do with claims of knowledge. They are not mutually exclusive. Most atheists are agnostic atheists, as they don't believe in gods and goddesses but don't claim to know for certain. Most things can't be proved or disproved absolutely and this includes all gods and goddesses. Thus agnosticism is the only honest and self-aware position to take. The fact that almost anything is theoretically possible, is not proof and isn't the same as saying that everything is probable. That gods and goddesses can be neither proven nor disproven does not mean that the probability of their existence or non existence is equal and wanting something to be true has no bearing on whether it is, or not. With atheism, it's the matter of a simple question. Do you believe that any gods or goddesses exist? If you do, you're a theist. If you don't, you're an atheist. You either believe, or you don't. Claims of knowledge are completely irrelevant. It's to do with what you believe, not with what you know.

  • @CalumnMcAulay
    @CalumnMcAulay Před 6 lety +210

    I totally admire and respect what he's saying - he speaks my mind! :-)

    • @stephenreeds3672
      @stephenreeds3672 Před 3 lety +7

      I agree with him about "celebrity atheists" assuming that they have the right to lecture others about belief and denigrate them for holding them. I'm right you're wrong. And the argument that a lot of suffering was caused by religion shows a fundamental lack of understanding about humanity. I'm amazed that Dawkins can't see that. He's supposed to have a keen intelligence.

  • @AnarchyApple
    @AnarchyApple Před 3 lety +866

    David Mitchell is like Ricky Gervais with Emotional Intelligence.

    • @andyd6338
      @andyd6338 Před 3 lety +57

      I wouldn't say that Ricky has no emotional intelligence, he just chooses not to care.

    • @emilybarclay8831
      @emilybarclay8831 Před 3 lety +155

      @@andyd6338 which is pretty close to a lack of emotional intelligence. You can’t really choose to not to care if you actually do care

    • @steckelton717
      @steckelton717 Před 3 lety +34

      @@emilybarclay8831 I'd say choosing to ignore it is worse? If you don't have something, you are not as much as fault as going out of your way to ignore something you have available. He chooses to be a dick about it, which is why he just really sucks tbf

    • @emilybarclay8831
      @emilybarclay8831 Před 3 lety +9

      @@steckelton717 that’s definitely true, but I don’t think actually emotionally intelligent people actually get a _choice_ in caring. I myself have a very odd level of emotional intelligence. I just really struggle to relate to and deal with others emotions despite wanting to help people and don’t tend to feel emotions particularly strongly myself, but I’m very influenced by the emotions of those I care about. Like, a while ago I was at the funeral of a relative that frankly I barely knew and I really wasn’t anywhere near crying (obviously it was a very sad occasion and I understood that, I just personally wasn’t feeling much because I’d barely interacted with this relative) but when I saw my sister crying suddenly I was blubbering as well. I didn’t have a choice in the matter, I couldn’t have not cared if I tried. I think if you’re able to turn off your ‘caring’, either you didn’t actually care in the first place or you’ve had some significant trauma/reason to stop caring for your own well-being

    • @WillyoDee
      @WillyoDee Před 3 lety +23

      And actually funny and witty

  • @emosongsandreadalongs
    @emosongsandreadalongs Před 3 lety +255

    I thought I couldn't love David Mitchell more than I already did
    I was wrong

  • @Meggs23
    @Meggs23 Před 11 měsíci +15

    Only a comedian could perfectly articulate these very thoughts I've had in my head. Some find comfort in religion. I find comfort in comedy. Having one of my favorite comedians express my feelings about religion through comedy... well peak level achieved.

  • @ellaeadig263
    @ellaeadig263 Před 2 lety +28

    The most logical thing I've ever seen him say, and he's said a ton of logical things.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 2 lety +3

      What is logical about being too wet to make a solid decision

    • @dupersuper1938
      @dupersuper1938 Před 8 měsíci

      It's reasonable, but certainly not logical. He flat out says he's not an atheist because he "wants there to be something". That's very relatable, but reality doesn't care what you want, and the burden of proof is on those trying to convince people that there is some sort of god, not on those of us who dismiss the notion just as we do the existence of the Greek pantheon, leprechauns and ghosts.

    • @TH-ds2yx
      @TH-ds2yx Před 4 měsíci

      ​@gowdsake7103 What do you find difficult to understand about someone being on the fence about something that can neither be proven nor disproved? Let me guess, you're one of these pseudo-intellectual soyboys that claims to "fucking love science", but will claim with 100% conviction that God does not exist despite being unable to prove your point.

  • @hannah-ni2wd
    @hannah-ni2wd Před 6 lety +51

    this is exactly how i feel. he put it in words.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 2 lety

      Your a bit soppy and inconclusive then ?

  • @RedSiegfried
    @RedSiegfried Před 3 lety +20

    "suspicious of the disdain" ... well put.

  • @clevelandbrown5709
    @clevelandbrown5709 Před 7 lety +377

    Stop bickering about labels. I feel the same as David, I just don't know and i'm not really keen on ruining anyone else's day so long as they dont try to ruin mine.

    • @JRMiracleman
      @JRMiracleman Před 6 lety +7

      Well put

    • @ssh1487
      @ssh1487 Před 6 lety +6

      That's what agnosticism is, though? Uncertainty of whether or not there is a god. That's literally what the term agnostic refers to. It's a word that describes a religious view.

    • @JRMiracleman
      @JRMiracleman Před 6 lety +19

      Serious? You are equating the existence of God to the existence of square circles? I believe that would qualify as an Argument from analogy fallacy.

    • @majordendrocopos
      @majordendrocopos Před 5 lety +10

      Cleveland Brown Fair enough, but religious people tend to band together and push through social changes in line with their beliefs. If you don’t share their view then you might well have your day ruined by them. Evangelical Christians were instrumental in electing Donald Trump for example.

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +5

      I don't know how David feels, but he appears to be ignorant on what exactly those two letters address.

  • @michaelarrowood4315
    @michaelarrowood4315 Před 2 lety +17

    Excellent statement of what agnosticism is, and why it is most definitely not the same as atheism. I say that as someone who is proudly agnostic, of course. I love this take on the issue.

  • @babbisp1
    @babbisp1 Před 3 lety +14

    1:19
    "There was a time when I cared about politics, but it's just an excuse men use to kill one another."

    • @michellestevens4126
      @michellestevens4126 Před 2 lety

      Unfortunately he said "humans" not "men" when your version was correct.

  • @abrakadabra6584
    @abrakadabra6584 Před 5 lety +15

    People need to admit that they understand what is meant by these kinds of statements instead of trying to flex on everyone with their knowledge of semantics.
    "Doubt is healthy and rational, but faith and hope aren't inherently wrong or harmful."
    That is obviously the argument being made here regardless of how the words are technically defined.

    • @sparkzbarca
      @sparkzbarca Před 5 lety +8

      Yes faith is wrong and harmful. It's in fact harmful BECAUSE it's wrong, it's wrong because it isn't right, it isn't right because it isn't true and well meaning lies, white lies and all other forms of "good lies" are in fact not good. Being honest and truthful is simply far too important. Lies get in the way of the truth and the truth matters, it really matters and the sooner you know the actual truth, the sooner you can actually move forward.
      The argument for faith as a lie is an argument to live your life as a lie, it's literally "ignorance is bliss". Ignorance should never be aspired to.
      Religion isn't bad or good because of what it teaches to me as far as morality or ethics, it's bad, because it purports to be true and isn't. It lies every day endleslly to billions of people and the truth is too important to accept anything but the truth.

    • @fellinuxvi3541
      @fellinuxvi3541 Před 4 lety +2

      @@sparkzbarca This is the best explanation I've ever seen or heard. Lots of people don't get this, and I understand why, plenty of Atheists point out stuff they disagree with in the Bible and so it's assumed that the argument against religion is about the morality of the religious person, but it's really not, it's about truth and lie. There's simply no reason to believe in a God unless there is concrete evidence, that should be the end of it.

    • @ab8jeh
      @ab8jeh Před 4 lety

      @@fellinuxvi3541 I think this is too much. Is it really _lying_ to say we might be living in a simulation for example, just because we have no evidence for it? Being an agnostic atheist is not giving up, but rather acknowledging we don't know for sure and should continue to ask questions, rather like science.

    • @fellinuxvi3541
      @fellinuxvi3541 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ab8jeh It isn't, but those who believe in simulations don't usually demand faith. I gotta say, in these two months I've reconsidered a lot about faith, and I'm not as against it as I used to be, but I still consider it something rather sinister to ask of people, I wouldn't dare ask to be trusted with anything I cannot prove, but I guess since most modern religions don't teach a literal interpretation of their texts, it's less harmful to follow religion now than it was during, say, the inquisition or the middle ages.

    • @ab8jeh
      @ab8jeh Před 4 lety +1

      @@fellinuxvi3541 Indeed. Organised religion that indoctrinates the young at an early age is something quite different to coming up with an individual position over time after exploring the subject as fully as possible from many viewpoints. Whether the latter is truly possible is up for question, but we can strive for it I guess. Anyway, some questions cannot be answered, and definitely should not be the basis for organised religion!

  • @MrStn
    @MrStn Před 7 lety +57

    From my understanding these two terms answers two separate questions, "what do I know" and "what do I believe". In my case I don't know whether or not a God exists, so I'm agnostic in that sense. The lack of evidence for a God leads me to believe that there is no God (or simply a lack of belief in God, whatever you prefer), making me an atheist. I'm therefor an agnostic atheist.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před 3 lety +2

      More precisely: "What do I (think I) know?" You can never truly know whether you know something for real, only whether you consider it "knowing" or "believing". (Except for certain extremely undeniable pure-logical truths, such as the fact that you exist.)
      Also, you don't have to actively believe that there is no such thing as a god in order to be an atheist. So long as you don't believe that one or more gods exist, you're an atheist. There are even atheistic religions! That is, religions with no deity.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před 3 lety +4

      @Time Warp
      That is exactly what lack of evidence means: No evidence.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před 3 lety +3

      @Time Warp
      For the same reason you can't truly know that unicorns or fairies don't exist: There is no proof (note the terminology, I said "proof" and not "evidence" for a reason) that they _don't_ exist. You can come up with reasons and scenarios showing that they _could_ potentially exist without us finding any evidence of them, even though there is no evidence and thus no reason to believe that they do exist.
      In order to prove (or even show through evidence) that something _doesn't_ exist, you'd need to know its exact properties, and show that it cannot be found in the places where it would be if it existed, or show that its properties are contradicted by our knowledge of reality, or show how its properties are logically incoherent and therefore impossible.
      "God" is a nebulous concept that has many different interpretations, many different entities that fit the description and are alleged to exist (or have been made up for fictional stories), and that are not fully disproved by evidence or logic. The yawning abyss (figuratively) that exists where the evidence for these entities should be is enough reason to believe they don't exist, but it may not be enough to satisfy the conditions for claiming that you _know_ they don't exist - depending on your exact definition of the term "know".

    • @colmwhateveryoulike3240
      @colmwhateveryoulike3240 Před 3 lety

      That's how I thought of it when I was an agnostic atheist. Still seems the most useful definition.

    • @RKBock
      @RKBock Před 3 lety +1

      since god is impossible to disprove and, unless his face pops out of the sky and he starts presenting us evidence of his omniscience and omnipotence, so is his existence, any question of knowledge is equivalent to a question of believe.
      or in simpler terms: if you have no evidence, claiming "I know there is a god" and "I believe there is a god" is the same, since your claim of "knowledge" is solely based on your believe and not on evidence. therefore: atheism and agnosticism is the answer to the same question.

  • @arond94
    @arond94 Před 10 lety +309

    Sums up perfectly my stand on the matter. Also I'm glad someone as funny as Mitchell shares it!

    • @Arkatox
      @Arkatox Před 3 lety +8

      Honestly, I wasn’t expecting to be recommended a video that so perfectly and succinctly summarizes my views on existence.

    • @hatchingdraggon8073
      @hatchingdraggon8073 Před 2 lety +10

      @@Arkatox
      Atheism is not the assertion that there is no God, it is the lack of belief in a God. If you don't believe in a God, you are by definition, an atheist.

    • @Arkatox
      @Arkatox Před 2 lety +1

      @@hatchingdraggon8073 I've never heard that definition of atheism before.

    • @hatchingdraggon8073
      @hatchingdraggon8073 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Arkatox From the Oxford dictionary: "Disbelief or lack of belief in the existence of God or gods."
      "A" is a negative prefix. For example, when used in asexual, it means not sexual. When used in atheist, it means not a theist.
      No one can know that there is or isn't a God. The fact is, most agnostics are atheists, including Mr Mitchell.

    • @anotheruserism
      @anotheruserism Před 2 lety +4

      @@hatchingdraggon8073 I don't think you listened to what David Mitchell said.
      At the end of the day it is commonly accepted athiest means belief there are no gods while agnostic is we can not know for sure.

  • @user-bf8ud9vt5b
    @user-bf8ud9vt5b Před 2 lety +6

    Wow. My respect for David was high, but now it's gone to a new level.

  • @lyianx
    @lyianx Před 7 lety +20

    Taking away the comfort isn't the issue Atheism deals with. Its fighting against religious zealots trying to force their beliefs on to others, especially those that dont want it. If you are religious, and take comfort in it, and don't bother anyone about their beliefs, then more power to you. The moment you use your religion to bring harm to another, be it psychical, or psychological, you are removing the tolerance for you and your beliefs.
    That said, im sure there are Atheist Zealots out there as well. Not saying there is not or that they are always right. But i understand why they are bringing a loud voice, as that seem to be the only way to be heard over the loud voice that is religion. And im personally, kind of tired of Laws being based on outdated religious beliefs.

    • @morganstiefvater1693
      @morganstiefvater1693 Před 7 lety +13

      David seems to be referring to the atheists who will go to anyone who says they have a religious belief (even if they aren't trying to force it upon anyone in any way) and telling them that they're wrong for it. He's talking about the atheist zealots who attack people who are not zealots. And that is just trying to strip them of the comfort given to them by their God or whatever.

    • @marcforrester7738
      @marcforrester7738 Před 7 lety

      Right, the ones that don't exist in the real world outside of the rationalist subreddits, then.

    • @5alami5ami
      @5alami5ami Před 7 lety +3

      don't you realise atheists are zealots too... these days they seem more zealous than religious folk

    • @marcforrester7738
      @marcforrester7738 Před 7 lety +3

      Yes, I regularly see them handing out leaflets in the street, proselytising door to door and demonstrating loudly outside church services.

  • @taserrr
    @taserrr Před 2 lety +9

    To paraphrase Ricky Gervais:
    "Everybody is agnostic, it has nothing to do with belief. You either belief there is a god or you belief there isn't, nobody KNOWS if there is one. Agnosticism deals with knowledge, atheist and theism deal with belief, they're in a different category."

    • @noelpucarua2843
      @noelpucarua2843 Před 2 lety +1

      Is it your belief that agnosticism deals with knowledge? I tend to believe it deals with the question of knowledge. Also a different category.

    • @taserrr
      @taserrr Před 2 lety +2

      @@noelpucarua2843 It's not a matter of what i believe it deals with. "agnosticism, (from Greek agnōstos, “unknowable”), strictly speaking, the doctrine that humans cannot know of the existence of anything beyond the phenomena of their experience."
      That's what it means, which is very close to science and scientific truth.

    • @noelpucarua2843
      @noelpucarua2843 Před 2 lety +1

      @@taserrr Ah, so that's what you believe.
      Or is it just what you want me to believe?

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety

      I can prove that there is no greatest prime number. This is something I can know with absolute certainty beyond experience or phenomena.
      There are an infinity of those. The belief that one cannot know is provably false.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 2 lety

      Yes but that would involve having to listen to that dick !

  • @Liam2621
    @Liam2621 Před 9 lety +120

    I really warmed to david here.
    He came across as a really warm and intelligent person in this video, often he comes across as a bit rigid and stiff and dull but here he seems much better than that

    • @ParadoxapocalypSatan
      @ParadoxapocalypSatan Před 6 lety +5

      Warm and stupid more like.

    • @ParadoxapocalypSatan
      @ParadoxapocalypSatan Před 6 lety +2

      No because he made up his own mind about the definition of atheism.

    • @themiller3319
      @themiller3319 Před 6 lety +16

      ParadoxapocalypSatan He really didn't. The experiences he has with atheists are quite common. And what exactly is wrong about it?

    • @ParadoxapocalypSatan
      @ParadoxapocalypSatan Před 6 lety +3

      His personal experience does not determine the definition. Atheism is simply lack of belief, ergo he himself is an atheist.

    • @themiller3319
      @themiller3319 Před 6 lety +12

      You sound like feminists saying feminism is simply a belief in equality, ergo he's a feminist. Labels and identification are incredibly personal and nuanced things. If he chooses not to identify as an atheist, then that's his shtick. Trying to force your label onto him is just disrespectful and ignorant. He's not an atheist, deal with it.

  • @PNETriffid
    @PNETriffid Před 10 lety +35

    Father Christmas is a comforting thought, and I would like it to be true that a benevolent old man delivers Yuletide gifts to all the well-behaved children in the World.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety

      Does he have to break into people's homes and spy on their children though?

  • @yusurkassem4174
    @yusurkassem4174 Před 2 lety +17

    'Humans just like killing each other' lmao couldn't have said it better

  • @JustChadC
    @JustChadC Před 3 lety +63

    My respect for this man 📈📈📈

  • @robpegler6545
    @robpegler6545 Před 10 lety +162

    Half the problem is that people have different definitions of what they think "atheism" and "agnosticism" are, to the point where they become meaningless labels. The question shouldn't be "Are you an atheist or an agnostic?" It should be "Can you tell me what you believe?"

    • @ztrinx1
      @ztrinx1 Před 6 lety +16

      "The question shouldn't be "Are you an atheist or an agnostic?""
      Right, because that is a faulty question, since it assumes that the two labels are mutually exclusive, which they are not. Hence, the problem with different definitions.
      "It should be "Can you tell me what you believe?""
      Well, that is a bit silly and vague because you could say that about anything, i.e. words, labels, ideologies. We use words because they have meaning.

    • @J0ECRAWF15H
      @J0ECRAWF15H Před 6 lety +8

      ...There's nothing wrong with the terms Atheist and Agnostic. They don't mean similar, or even samey-sounding things, you're just an idiot. One is taking the philosophical stance that God is [probably] a load of shit. The other is _not_ behaving like an edgy 12 year old, and admitting there _are_ in fact limits to what one can be sure of. Take your pick.

    • @JustAnotherPerson4U
      @JustAnotherPerson4U Před 6 lety +1

      I always say I'm an agnostic atheist because I tend to swing between the two sides. I'm not utterly convinced there's really anything but on the other hand imagining there's nothing when I die is pretty depressing so like David said I WANT there to be some sort of wish granter when I die so I can go world hopping.
      I suppose my beliefs are pretty agnostic but they seem really atheist to me as well in how I approach them. Not to mention I hate saying I'm agnostic purely because some people interpret it to mean i believe in some form of god and Christians and that take delight in it. But that is far from the truth. I don't believe in it but I know that I want there to be some sort of God system upstairs (I'm more inclined to wish for a multiple gods system rather than just a one for all one). Believing is faith without fact. Wanting has no faith or fact it is just impulse.

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 Před 6 lety +2

      atheist should be renamed as anti religion because that's all those irritating people are. Aethiests tend to lack emotional intelligence

    • @Talisman09
      @Talisman09 Před 6 lety +1

      No it's because you don't realise what drives a lot of religious people. You automatically fantasise that you are more intelligent than them, but really you're weak and just want to feel superior, just like those religious people

  • @masuganut2082
    @masuganut2082 Před 4 lety +14

    I love him. He didn’t bash anyone or anything in this. He very eloquently and honestly spoke his mind
    Love David !!!

    • @leebennett1821
      @leebennett1821 Před 4 lety +2

      Religion should not be exempt from Criticism it is not harmless

    • @masuganut2082
      @masuganut2082 Před 4 lety +2

      Lee Bennett never said it should be exempt
      That’s not what my comment was about

    • @joshuawright4198
      @joshuawright4198 Před 3 lety +2

      @@leebennett1821 Thats not what he said he said that it's unlikely there's a god but there's no way to know there isn't so ultimately you can't prove your point so why hate the other said for their point because they can't prove it

    • @leebennett1821
      @leebennett1821 Před 3 lety

      @@joshuawright4198 The Trouble is what we Believe affects our actions you must acknowledge some Actions that are Done in accordance with Religious Belief are harmful for Example with holding Medical Aid from a Child Because of a Religious Belief

    • @joshuawright4198
      @joshuawright4198 Před 3 lety +1

      @@leebennett1821 yes and you can criticise that just not believing in a higher power

  • @kevinkgillette
    @kevinkgillette Před 11 dny +1

    Thank you, Davi Mitchell, for that beautifully sensible explanation of your views!

  • @woweixiaomiandui
    @woweixiaomiandui Před 6 lety +7

    Come on. People are arguing because they are defining the words differently. Mitchell also gave a definition of the words he used and by those definitions he is an agnostic. Which is quite close to the, in lack of a better word, classical definition of religious standpoints i.e. theist - believe there are one or more god's or higher power; agnostic - don't know or think we are incapable of knowing if there are o aren't; atheist - believe there aren't even one God.
    Gnosticism is a religious movement, not a method or standpoint.

    • @Andrew-yl7lm
      @Andrew-yl7lm Před rokem +1

      @T And Me most atheists I meet are waaaaay more zealous than most religious people I've met. Hence why it's basically seen as a religion by most folk mate. Like how smoking weed isn't a religion but when you meet those guys that have a marijuana leaf on their hat, shirt, lighter and wallet. It seems a bit religious and you realize that you just don't wanna be told "alcohol is a drug" by them anymore.

  • @Forestgravy90
    @Forestgravy90 Před 9 lety +41

    I am an atheist but I agree entirely with everything David Mitchell says here, and regarding the minority of atheists who want to take away that comfort and sense of community and purpose religion offers is wrong. I am an atheist, but I do not go on about it or seek to change anyone's views just because I think religion is stupid and incorrect because it isn't my place to. I just go around not believing in god and live my life, as we all should.

  • @LWT1331
    @LWT1331 Před 3 lety +10

    People often say Agnosticism is a cop out. I think it's the other way around in that atheists so firmly can't accept that we don't know anything. That's the real cop out to me.

    • @poppopN
      @poppopN Před 3 lety +5

      what do you mean,most atheists are agnostic?

    • @Omagadam1
      @Omagadam1 Před 3 lety +4

      Atheism and agnosticism aren't mutually exclusive.
      I'm an agnostic atheist. Regardless of what Mitchell claims, he is as well.

    • @Slackerhun
      @Slackerhun Před 3 lety +1

      I really don't like that people mistake Atheism for always being Gnostic (knowing there is no god). Most atheists I've seen and know about are Agnostic atheists. As in lacking belief in a god. Now if we're talking about a specific god that's a different topic.

  • @adamellis6785
    @adamellis6785 Před 2 lety +42

    “Religion. It's given people hope in a world torn apart by religion.”
    ― Jon Stewart

    • @Sir_Sethly
      @Sir_Sethly Před 2 lety

      When did he say that? I’d like to know the context of that quote.

    • @adamellis6785
      @adamellis6785 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Sir_Sethly I can't find the clip, but I think it was on an episode of The Daily Show. If I had to guess, I would say the context was most likely in reference to people committing violence in the name of their religious beliefs. Unfortunately, that doesn't really narrow it down much, does it?

    • @tsarnicholasii274
      @tsarnicholasii274 Před 2 lety +4

      @@adamellis6785 It’s a pretty idiotic claim, religion has caused division yes, but not nearly as much as atheists claim. 7 percent of the wars have been religious. Not to mention the violence and division caused by atheism and anti theism, which is a thing as hard as it is to believe.

    • @garybutler1975
      @garybutler1975 Před 2 lety +4

      @@tsarnicholasii274 I'd be very interested to see this comprehensive study of historical warfare that displays the percentage of wars that were started/based on religion...maybe the number you just pulled out of your ass is right, maybe its 7%..maybe its 90% the idea that anyone knows is laughable.

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tsarnicholasii274 7%? That is a lot of wars. How could they have been avoided?

  • @Higginz1991
    @Higginz1991 Před 3 lety +53

    Sums it up so succinctly. I was previously in the Hitchens school of thought when it came to religion but now I realize it's literally what gives so many the strength to face everyday struggles that would consume them otherwise.

    • @amosungar5248
      @amosungar5248 Před 3 lety +7

      Agnosticism is just much more logically sound than Atheism, because it addresses the issue of our inability to truly know. It has more intellectual integrity.

    • @chrism6315
      @chrism6315 Před 3 lety +16

      Hitchens always professed that he was happy for people to believe if they kept it to themselves, the problem was they rarely didn't, especially in america.
      Edit: to paraphrase old hitchens again. This opinion is also incredibly patronising. 'Oh, some people *need* religion to get by, I dont, but some people do'.
      Maybe if we empowered people with reality, rather than make believe they will deal with shit better.

    • @thomasandrewclifford
      @thomasandrewclifford Před 3 lety +4

      @@chrism6315 I've lived in a lot of religious countries and talked with a lot of religious people and they definitely kept their ideals to themselves unless I brought it up. The US is just more fundamentalist than most of us realize and treat it like it's the norm when really it's just a very noisy example.

    • @chrism6315
      @chrism6315 Před 3 lety +1

      @@thomasandrewclifford agreed, but also the US is the only (I think?) Secular nation in terms of government, yet all (if not, most) nationals are religious to their core, thats a problem.

    • @diaboloavocado
      @diaboloavocado Před 3 lety +8

      @@amosungar5248 someone claims God exists. I say "I don't believe you until you demonstrate your claim to be true. Do you think that that is an intellectually dishonest position?

  • @BlackSabbath86
    @BlackSabbath86 Před 10 lety +9

    You don't know what the two terms mean. Atheism isn't a claim, atheism is the rejection of a claim. Agnostic atheism is "I don't believe there is a god, but I don't know". And since there is, as per your admission, no evidence to suggest there IS a god, the default position is "I don't believe". Mitchell said he doesn't believe there is a god but he can't know for sure, therefore he is an agnostic atheist. What he WANTS to be true is immaterial and has no bearing on his atheism/agnosticism.

    • @horatioredgreenblue2130
      @horatioredgreenblue2130 Před 3 lety +1

      Atheism is a claim. It's a claim that there is no God. Absence of proof isn't proof of absence. Therefore atheism is a leap of faith.

    • @TheValeyard92
      @TheValeyard92 Před 3 lety

      Do you think this is his channel or that he reads this?

    • @garyconyers-davies5781
      @garyconyers-davies5781 Před 3 lety

      @@horatioredgreenblue2130 That is not true.
      Atheism is the rejection of a claim.
      As an agnostic atheist myself I don't believe in any of the gods that people currently claim are real, yet don't claim for certainty none of them are real.

  • @TracyLalonde
    @TracyLalonde Před 10 lety +90

    David Mitchell, I think I just fell in love with you even more.

    • @patrickbyrne5070
      @patrickbyrne5070 Před 2 lety

      He does seem to be a very nice man. I don’t want ‘seen’ to sound nocuous- I’ve just never met the man. It’d likely be a lovely conversation

  • @brendanwatroba8568
    @brendanwatroba8568 Před 3 lety +8

    As a wonderful song goes:
    "I believe there's nothing after life goes by/ I believe it's over when we die, die, die/ Others may be thankful their beliefs are strong/ but every night I'm praying that I'm wrong, wrong, wrong"

    • @Wisdomdigger101
      @Wisdomdigger101 Před 3 lety +1

      OFc there is afterlife
      You think people who murder, cheat , steal etc will get away without punishment?
      You are wrong :)

    • @brendanwatroba8568
      @brendanwatroba8568 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Wisdomdigger101 I very well may be wrong. It is just a silly song after all. While I, like so many others, find comfort in the idea of Divine Retribution for those who do wrong in the mortal world, im not sure my desire for that to be the case means it is necessarily true. Hence the "Every night I'm praying that I'm wrong, wrong, wrong"
      However, I am happy for your strong conviction :)

    • @lizardlegend42
      @lizardlegend42 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Wisdomdigger101 The problem with that is we have absolutely no evidence for such a thing. The real world isn't fair, a lot of shit happens to people who don't deserve it. Why is it so obvious that the afterlife, should it exist, is any different?
      Personally I always think our beliefs should be guided by the evidence we see. Unless we have evidence to show something exists, we should assume that it doesn't. Not exactly an extreme position I don't think. Nobody knows if there's an afterlife and there's no evidence to suggest it, much less any details of it.
      That's not to invalidate your beliefs of course, not at all. But just don't present them as clear as day absolute fact, when it is far, FAR from it. Just makes you come off as closed-minded.

    • @paredesmarcangeloc.621
      @paredesmarcangeloc.621 Před 3 lety +2

      what is the song, sorry I don't really know

    • @brendanwatroba8568
      @brendanwatroba8568 Před 3 lety +1

      @@paredesmarcangeloc.621 I would not expect you, or anyone, to. It is the chorus of a song called "After Life Goes By" by the Folk duo Lou & Peter Berryman. Peter Berryman is imo one of the most extrodinary lyricists in the world and everyone should witness his brilliance

  • @BrytonBand
    @BrytonBand Před 3 lety +65

    I remember when I identified as an atheist in my adolescence that I was really put off by the snobbishness of other atheists. Ironically, they were projecting evangelical attitudes with their beliefs. I'm aware not every atheist acts like this, but coinciding with the whole belief system that David just described, I truly felt like I didn’t belong.
    It wasn’t until at 20 I really started to think things through, especially the fact that my sense of instilled moralism was probably due to me surviving Stage IV cancer at four months old. So therefor, I comfortably identify as a theist. But I believe every religion has it’s pros and cons. We’re all trying to make things work in this brief existence we have on this planet.

    • @Capybarrrraaaa
      @Capybarrrraaaa Před 3 lety +6

      That's the thing though, you don't need religion for your spiritual and deistic life to flourish and provide comfort. When one takes that step from "I think there's a loving god" to "The Bible speaks for him", you've stepped into a realm of insanity, persecution and exploitation. Religion is the extra layer added to deism to extort people.

    • @robeldridge5668
      @robeldridge5668 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Capybarrrraaaa that's an interesting point. I believe, as a Christian, that "religion" is just a category used to define Christianity which makes it sound like a strict set of rules, but Christianity is actually about the relationship we have with God thanks to Jesus. The Bible, then, isn't a set of rules, but it's 1. Letting us know of God's love and 2. Setting out guidelines God has given to us for living this good relationship. People unfortunately then take these guidelines and bend them into rules which give them unjust power over others. So I'd slightly alter your point by saying the Bible doesn't lead to exploitation, but the way it's wrongly used does.

    • @Capybarrrraaaa
      @Capybarrrraaaa Před 3 lety +4

      @@robeldridge5668 The problem with that is that we know so little about the authors of the bible, we just cannot trust their opinion of what happened. Which makes every interpretation almost identically justified.
      Which drops people down to Christ-flavoured deism, but then that's not supported by reality, because the only thing pointing to the Christ-god is the Bible anyway.
      Which drops the point down to deism. God-belief is fine, but I really can't say that any religion layered on top is inaccurate to that god's will at best, and just plain exploitative at worst.

    • @gonufc
      @gonufc Před 3 lety +1

      @@robeldridge5668 I don't think that's entirely fair in that the whole premise (and claim) of The Bible- to have any validity or authority at all- rests upon it's Divinity. Therefore to be truly Divine it _Must_ be taken as written without "Diluting" a lot of the claims and demands it makes. Otherwise that would be- like in the past- Herecy.
      If we are to accept that it is not in fact Divine, and is purely a work of humanity then it holds no merit in the Physical sense- it is merely a collated compilation of associated mythological texts ( Which of course, in a small sense it is after Constantine's involvement at the first Nicea Council). In terms of LIterature it is absolutely a valuable asset of culture and writing but as a representation of the Physical realm (and more than that) it becomes no more valuable than Beowulf.
      I prefer to look at it as an Historical source. It is not a good source- we cannot identify (precisely) it's origin or even authorship nor the exact time frames involved (Did the original author witness these supposed events or not? We have estimates and supposition). It is after all a piece of Religious Propaganda- it's purpose is to proseletyse. If there were an equivalent text that was simply the adulation of a Monarch we wouldn't treat it as potential verbatim reality- we would assess it like any other text. That's my only issue with The Bible, Torah or Qu'ran- there seems to be a hesitancy to truly analyse them as a purely Historical Document/ Source. I mean the very premise of the Qu'ran is no more reliable than The Book of Mormon- a man makes a claim that something happened when no one else was there to see it (In that case, seeing Jibril appear before him in a desert cave and commanding him to learn to read and write to then start the Qu'ran). That is not a reliable Historical Source yet it's not commonplace to state that.
      I don't mind at all what people believe- only what effect their belief should have on others- if it's any at all then we have a very obvious issue.

    • @beastvader
      @beastvader Před 3 lety +1

      @@Capybarrrraaaa I have to disagree. It's easy for us to say we developed morals on our own without external influence but that's because Western society (and the world at large) has already been moulded by Christian and Muslim values and principles. Without religion, morality is no longer objective and instead becomes subjective. In other words, the terms right and wrong become meaningless because they turn into abstract terms that are completely open to interpretation. For example, in Nazi Germany, people genuinely felt it was 'right' to persecute and kill innocent Jews, even though we both know that it was a heinous crime against humanity. And we believe that because of the religious values that society's inherited throughout the ages, even though the attachment to religion has largely been lost.

  • @sparrowhawk81
    @sparrowhawk81 Před 8 lety +28

    atheism is an umbrella. If you are not convinced that there exist a deity or deities, then you lack the conviction that these things exist, you are therefore an atheist. If you're not sure or you think it might be possible, then ok fine maybe you are an agnostic atheist. If you are convinced there is NO god or any gods anywhere, you're a gnostic atheist. Either way...if you do not answer "yes" to the question "are you convinced of the existence of one or more deities?" then you are an atheist. Semantics aside, that is the unavoidable conclusion.

    • @huttj509
      @huttj509 Před 8 lety +8

      +Sparrowhawk Does G-d exist?
      Yes: Thiest
      No: Athiest
      I don't know: Agnostic

    • @huttj509
      @huttj509 Před 8 lety +1

      ***** Tradition and respect. It's a Jewish thing. Kinda loses a bit in the digital medium, but the premise is that G-d's name is to be treated with respect, so it's improper to write it on something that would be crumpled up, thrown away, or used to line a birdcage. There's ritual methods to dispose of worn prayerbooks or torahs respectfully. For similar reasons blessings used in recordings (songs, movies, for mass entertainment rather than education) are often subtly changed to alter the name used for G-d to a common similarly sounding standin (Adoshem), so that there's no possible concern about the recordings then being tossed in the trash. For that matter many (perhaps all, not sure) of the words for G-d used in prayer books do not translate phonetically to what's said (YHWH (well, the Hebrew equivalent) is very different, for example, but probably easily recognized to many laypeople. I've also seen YY (again, the Hebrew equivalent) used. I think there's a few more, but as a Jewish athiest it's been a while since I've been in services.)

    • @huttj509
      @huttj509 Před 8 lety

      ***** It depends on usage for me. Referring to belief in a god is different from referring to belief in G-d.
      I think it also relates to the usage of abbreviations and standin names. To use your example, it's like your dog's name isn't Dog, but you refer to him as Dog because his true name isn't appropriate outside of the Temple, and then it's used enough that referring to Dog people know what dog you mean, so then Dog takes on similar issues of respect and use.

    • @sparrowhawk81
      @sparrowhawk81 Před 8 lety +2

      +Myles Adams Are you going to actually acknowledge bad1dobby's response to your comment or just go on and on about names of gods?

    • @sparrowhawk81
      @sparrowhawk81 Před 8 lety +3

      +Myles Adams No.
      Do you believe in the existence of a god or gods?
      Yes, and it can be known and demonstrated: Gnostic theist
      Yes, but it's all faith and can't be proven: Agnostic theist
      ANYTHING BUT YES + I don't claim to know: Agnostic Atheist
      Anything but yes + I know for sure: Gnostic Atheist.

  • @DefaultPosition
    @DefaultPosition Před 10 lety +70

    Agnosticism answers a different question to theism and atheism.
    Agnosticism is about knowledge, theism and atheism are about belief.

    • @smhht
      @smhht Před 10 lety +12

      Indeed, and as such, both are tied. And both are NECESSARY.
      David is an agnostic atheist.

    • @kangaroo1888
      @kangaroo1888 Před 4 lety +1

      None belief please

    • @brandonsatterstrom7894
      @brandonsatterstrom7894 Před 4 lety +1

      @@smhht
      They are not necessarily tied together. Knowledge is a subset of belief (in that anything you claim to know, will also fall into the set of things you believe... but not everything you believe would fall into the set of things you claim to know). But beyond the simple fact that knowledge is a subset of belief, they are not necessarily tied together. Knowledge is necessarily tied to belief, but not the other way around... belief is not necessarily tied to knowledge

    • @smhht
      @smhht Před 4 lety

      @@brandonsatterstrom7894 Yikes, a 5 year old comment, really? Anyway, you're thinking/trying too hard, and don't need to explain this to someone who knows epistemology. The labels are tied. As in agnosticism/gnosticism and atheism/theism.

    • @brandonsatterstrom7894
      @brandonsatterstrom7894 Před 4 lety +2

      @@smhht
      Yes really... why would I care the age of a comment? Why would that matter?
      And no half-wit, as I just explained the labels are not tied.... thanks for that tho.

  • @asherujudo7383
    @asherujudo7383 Před 2 lety +32

    He's being serious at the end, but I still couldn't help laughing when he talked about how we all face the possibility of oblivion.

  • @dixie8418
    @dixie8418 Před 4 lety +3

    Could someone offer some advice on the locality of the full interview, that is the video itself on a medium and not the location where the interview took place, please.

    • @dixie8418
      @dixie8418 Před 4 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/KGO_kwiyLw4/video.html

  • @TheBaconWizard
    @TheBaconWizard Před 10 lety +88

    Atheism and theism deal with belief. Gnosticism or agnosticism deal with what you know.
    You can be an agnostic atheist or an agnostic theist, or a gnostic theist.. or...

    • @wadsmitter511
      @wadsmitter511 Před 4 lety +6

      This should be shouted at everyone in the real early morning

    • @potatoface6986
      @potatoface6986 Před 4 lety +3

      or...a twat

    • @Jake007123
      @Jake007123 Před 3 lety +8

      Wrong. If you don't have faith in at least one god, you are an atheist. The label atheism is the most simple and tiny one of any label. It doesn't demand anything else than not have a blind belief in an unproven hypothesis, which is why it's the rational stance.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před 3 lety +1

      @@potatoface6986
      Talking about yourself, I see.

    • @theuncalledfor
      @theuncalledfor Před 3 lety +6

      @@Jake007123
      Who are you responding to? What OP said does not disagree with your statement, yet you begin with "wrong". So either you misunderstood them, or you're responding to someone else.

  • @BrightRomeo
    @BrightRomeo Před 10 lety +67

    True man, huge respect for he's personal opinion.

    • @ajnode
      @ajnode Před 7 lety +2

      Judging by your profile pic (a red canceling circle around the masonic pyramid and all-seeing eye from the US $1 note), your perspectives are not valuable anyway...

    • @inkmaster5480
      @inkmaster5480 Před 5 lety +1

      ajnode Your claim is unfounded. Their channel icon is a crossed out circle over the all seeing eye because the all seeing eye is a Free Mason thing and there are a lot of ridiculous conspiracies surrounding the Free Masons.

    • @inkmaster5480
      @inkmaster5480 Před 5 lety

      jawa64ify Ever heard of a typo?

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety

      His personal opinion is ignorant, I respect him but not his illiterate position on the subject.

    • @aceofbass95
      @aceofbass95 Před 5 lety

      Nickolas Gaspar you keep using the word ignorant but you clearly don’t know how to use it in context

  • @yantivity956
    @yantivity956 Před 7 lety +188

    Oh god. Is there an option to just say I don't fucking know? I thought I was agnostic but apparently I'm not according to the comments

    • @earthbjornnahkaimurrao9542
      @earthbjornnahkaimurrao9542 Před 7 lety +42

      Do you believe in a God or believe in any Theism? if your answer isn't yes than you are atheist. If you "don't know" than you are atheist. Atheism is not a belief in something it is a lack of belief in something.

    • @yantivity956
      @yantivity956 Před 7 lety +2

      Earthbjorn Nahkaimurrao ok thanks

    • @michaelreqd
      @michaelreqd Před 7 lety +57

      he is wrong, you are agnostic by definition of the word

    • @SilverEye91
      @SilverEye91 Před 7 lety +28

      +Michaelreqd
      He isn't wrong, atheism is the lack of belief in the existence of one more more deities. And if he doesn't believe in that then he is an atheist by definition.
      Of course, if he doesn't know if there is a god or not then he is an agnostic too. Which is why there is the term "agnostic atheism".

    • @jodawgsup
      @jodawgsup Před 7 lety +10

      And by using the definition agnostic as michaelreqd did, he is also (probably) agnostic about invisible dragons, little midgets dancing around in your garden when you're not watching, and such sort of events.

  • @danstylus1
    @danstylus1 Před 2 lety +4

    People fear there being nothing because all we know is the continuity of our lives and we are hard wired to not want it to end. But in the case of nothing there's no fear or pain possible. Imo there's comfort in nothing.

    • @thecrackfox99
      @thecrackfox99 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes I agree. It seems far more comforting than what most people want the something to be - an eternity of never ending experience

  • @peanutismint
    @peanutismint Před 10 lety +25

    This is an interesting and valid viewpoint. Good man!

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +5

      He is wrong. He is confusing the Atheistic with the antitheistic position. He is also ignoring the differences between a knowledge claim (agnosticism) and belief claim.(atheism/theism).

    • @aceofbass95
      @aceofbass95 Před 5 lety +3

      Nickolas Gaspar Jesus fucking Christ. This is why atheists are equally as annoying as theists

  • @CheDonJohn
    @CheDonJohn Před 3 lety +54

    It's a common mistake in this debate that agnosticism is placed as some kind of middle position between theism and atheism, and it's a bit of a bugbear of mine. Gnosticism and Theism are two different planes/dimension entirely; an X axis and a Y axis, if you will. The former concerns claims to knowledge or knowing something, the latter concerns the worship or belief in a god or gods.
    Most atheists are agnostic atheists: they don't worship god yet don't claim to know there isn't a god (it's likely they arrive at atheism because they are agnostic). I'd say a lot of religious people are agnostic theists because faith, by definition, is believing in something regardless of whether you know it's true.
    I don't think I've ever met a gnostic atheist - rationally, they're incompatible positions. But I have certainly met gnostic theists; those claiming to know of the existence of god/gods.

    • @iwonakaplon3399
      @iwonakaplon3399 Před 3 lety +1

      You'd think that a gnostic atheist would be an impossible position to arrive at, but they somehow do exist.

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety +1

      @@iwonakaplon3399 you can dismiss a lot of gods as being fiction though

    • @iwonakaplon3399
      @iwonakaplon3399 Před 3 lety

      @@JB_inks not really. Why are you dismissing things you don't know about?

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety +2

      @@iwonakaplon3399 because some gods were undeniably made up. I point you towards the God of thunder, for example.

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety

      @@iwonakaplon3399 you literally just did what you falsely accused me of, by the way

  • @kasbakgaming
    @kasbakgaming Před rokem +2

    Personally, I've never pointed to the immoral acts committed in the name of religion to claim that they're a reason for religion to not exist, but I have pointed to them to point out that religion does not occupy this superior moral high ground that so many religious people claim it does. He's exactly right, people will use any ideology to commit atrocities against one another, including religion, which means it's just like all the rest. I do consider myself an atheist, but with enough agnosticism that I'm willing to shift if someone can present sufficient evidence. Unlike David, I don't have an inherent desire for there to be a supreme being, I find enough comfort just looking at the beauty of the natural order of things to not need that desire. If other people do find comfort in that belief though, as long as they're willing to keep the belief to themselves and not force its ideas on others or cause them harm, then have at it.

    • @gyros69420
      @gyros69420 Před 4 měsíci

      I agree completely with you. Unfortunately there have been many wars in the name of religion in the past and will be more in the future I am sure; the "holy land" is still claiming innocent lives as we speak. It is a tragedy.

  • @pzolsky
    @pzolsky Před 6 lety +3

    what i have learned here in this comments section is that confused people view the not confused as being confused

  • @prole1917
    @prole1917 Před 10 lety +260

    You can be an atheist and an agnostic. Atheism is a statement of belief and agnosticism is a statement of knowledge. An agnostic-atheist is someone who doesn't have the knowledge of whether god exists or not but personally does not believe one exists. This IS the most rational mindset because no one knows if there is a higher force and there is currently no evidence of one.

    • @CheDonJohn
      @CheDonJohn Před 10 lety +26

      Finally, someone else who understands this! Too many people think that agnosticism is some middle position between atheism and theism, whereas it is a different dimension entirely.

    • @MrAlliCator
      @MrAlliCator Před 10 lety +1

      Wouldn't an agnostic apatheist be more rational?

    • @MarvinRB3
      @MarvinRB3 Před 9 lety +8

      Your definition of terms is not particularly valid in this case since it is clearly an informal conversation; an interview not a scholastic debate or monologue. So, whilst agnosticism is probably better defined as an epistemological position, in common English usage it denotes a neutral viewpoint as to the existence of God. So, within the context that it was said, agnosticism is valid in of itself as an alternative to theism or atheism.
      Whilst it is amicable to strive for accuracy within the terms that people employ, it is important that we recognise context. Within a scholastic debate it is entirely correct that the definition of the terms employed be strictly adhered to. However, within a typical conversation, it is more important that we try to understand the intended meaning rather than becoming entangled in strict interpretations.
      So, in the context that it was said, I think it would be fair to say that David Mitchell employed the term 'agnostic' with the intended definition being something akin to:
      "A person or entity that believes the existence or non-existence of a God or Gods is unknowable within the realm of human knowledge. Furthermore, the person or entity expresses no opinion as to whether or not God(s) exist(s) and are either apathetic or otherwise incapable of drawing a conclusion as to the truth of either thesis."
      Lastly, I would point out that if one is agnostic, then whether or not one is a theist or atheist becomes a point of triviality since agnosticism requires that, regardless of which theistic position is assumed, it is intellectually indefensible and is purely a matter of arbitrary opinion without logical foundation.
      So, I regret, that I cannot agree with your sentiments for the reasons here mentioned.

    • @SgtLion
      @SgtLion Před 9 lety

      IMPERATOR If one's belief and knowledge are not one and the same, then I and any sane person should regard you as a fool.

    • @karensparkes1078
      @karensparkes1078 Před 9 lety +4

      IMPERATOR Actually, Atheism is the belief that there is no God and Agnosticism is neither believing there is a God nor believing there is no God. Therefore, you can't have both.

  • @heresfrankbetches921
    @heresfrankbetches921 Před 3 lety +35

    David is just a great person
    I agree with him on so many levels

  • @kierenmoore3236
    @kierenmoore3236 Před 2 lety +7

    David is more than smart enough to understand that agnosticism and atheism belong to separate categories of knowledge vs belief.

  • @wolfhardgorus3340
    @wolfhardgorus3340 Před 3 lety

    Does anyone have a link to the full interview?

  • @profeturulz8373
    @profeturulz8373 Před 10 lety +6

    Great analogy man.

  • @vadimzaytsev2660
    @vadimzaytsev2660 Před 10 lety +56

    I have only one firm religious belief: that there is a special hell reserved for CZcams experts. For all eternity the devil stabs them with a pitchfork while they argue that that is not, in fact, a trident.

    • @creativecredence850
      @creativecredence850 Před 3 lety +7

      Hmm, idk. If the pitchfork has 3 prongs then it's a trident. Seems like a rather obvious and inarguable thing.

    • @dektarey4024
      @dektarey4024 Před 3 lety +12

      @@creativecredence850 My pastry cutlery has three prongs. Are they tridents? If yes, is a trident cutlery? Does that make Neptune someone stoked for some cake?

    • @tombick9311
      @tombick9311 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dektarey4024 as a self proclaimed expert in three pronged appliances you are correct

    • @immajustuseafakename2159
      @immajustuseafakename2159 Před 3 lety +3

      If it is a 3 pronged spear with each prong straight, parallel and barbed then it is a trident, seems easy enough.

    • @thomasandrewclifford
      @thomasandrewclifford Před 3 lety +2

      You won the internet 7 years ago and somehow this comment has only become more true over time

  • @SlideRulePirate
    @SlideRulePirate Před 5 lety +8

    I have two legs but I reject the label 'Biped'.

    • @brucenator
      @brucenator Před 3 lety +2

      Precisely. He wants there to be an all-powerful, benevolent god, but he is not convinced that there is, but he rejects the label 'atheist.' I think David Mitchell is just conflicted between what he thinks he believes and what he 'wants' to believe. He was clearly indoctrinated and is having trouble divorcing himself from that belief system. But confusing belief with knowledge and labeling yourself an agnostic in the process is far from rational. He sounds like someone who can't decide what he believes, which is precisely what indoctrination does to a person. What is it that he thinks atheists are 'taking away' from him? That is completely irrational. No one is taking anything away from him. He is the one who is conflicted.

  • @blackhatfreak
    @blackhatfreak Před 4 lety +1

    I'm an atheist, but I do believe people should be able to worship whatever they like as long as it doesn't fuck over their fellow humans.

  • @verbalengine95
    @verbalengine95 Před 3 lety +66

    I was looking for a based substitute for Ricky Gervais, and I've now found it

    • @S4INTW4RRIOR
      @S4INTW4RRIOR Před 3 lety +15

      Based? Based on what?

    • @xander1226
      @xander1226 Před 3 lety +25

      @@S4INTW4RRIOR based on you having zero bitches

    • @S4INTW4RRIOR
      @S4INTW4RRIOR Před 3 lety +11

      @@xander1226 Oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooh

    • @thomasandrewclifford
      @thomasandrewclifford Před 3 lety +2

      @@S4INTW4RRIOR based is an internet term for being politically or socially intelligent

    • @aaronmolloy8019
      @aaronmolloy8019 Před 3 lety +4

      @@thomasandrewclifford and based? based on what is a meme. Looks like the teacher has become the student

  • @sniggleboots
    @sniggleboots Před 10 lety +4

    What interview or program was this on? I'd like to watch the entire thing. Thanks in advance!

  • @DrDoogoode
    @DrDoogoode Před 6 lety +8

    love that beard Dave. Keep it up! teh

  • @8Rincewind
    @8Rincewind Před 3 lety +3

    This has popped up in my recommendations again and I can see 2 incredibly long comments I left 5 years ago. Jesus Christ I was boring! Arguably I still am, but I can't believe I spent so long arguing against nobody over "The most logical starting point of religious beliefs". I also used so many words to argue quite basic points.

    • @Phlebas
      @Phlebas Před 3 lety

      This has also popped up in my recommendations multiple times. I'd be tempted to leave a long-winded comment, but I'm genuinely not sure if I already did so I won't.

  • @hblake5213
    @hblake5213 Před 3 lety +6

    The slight problem with him saying he's not an atheist he's an agnostic is that implies they're mutually exclusive

    • @rajanm5571
      @rajanm5571 Před 2 lety +3

      Even though the ideas pertaining to atheism are a part of agnosticism, I don't think its wrong for an agnostic person to say they're not an atheist as it just means that atheism is not their sole belief

  • @bainbonic
    @bainbonic Před 10 lety +66

    YES! SO MUCH YES! FINALLY, A PROMINENT AGNOSTIC! YEEEEAAAAAAH!!!

    • @therentboys7787
      @therentboys7787 Před 3 lety +3

      I feel like most people are agnostic but they’d prefer to just pick a side and they don’t really know that there’s a middle

    • @joshuahollowell9170
      @joshuahollowell9170 Před 3 lety +29

      @@therentboys7787 Agnostisism is a question of knowledge, athiesm is a question of belief. I can tell you with much certainty 99% of athiests do not deny there being a god, they deny EVIDENCE of their being a god. Saying "there is no evidence of a god, and thusly I do not believe in a god" is a perfectly rational response to a question on belief.
      Agnostics are defined as "a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God". That's about KNOWING, not believing. You can be an agnostic atheist, as you can be an agnostic theist, but claiming there is a middle ground is a bit deceptive.

    • @jellroberts9249
      @jellroberts9249 Před 3 lety +10

      @@joshuahollowell9170 Thank you! I love David Mitchell, but claiming that agnosticism is more logical than atheism just doesn't make sense. The two terms are not mutually exclusive and you explained it perfectly.

    • @trueaidooo
      @trueaidooo Před 3 lety +1

      @@joshuahollowell9170 fair but when most people think atheist vs agnostic, they just mean I believe there is no god vs I do not know

    • @patrickbyrne5070
      @patrickbyrne5070 Před 2 lety +1

      As soon as you get into different types of agnostic or atheist it’s becomes quite theist. Keep it simple. “I do not know, I probably can’t know”= agnostic. “I refuse to believe and do not want to believe”= atheist. “I believe in something, I’ve chosen a belief system” =theist. “I believe, I have a rigid structure of a belief system and I’ll bloody well tell you every opportunity I get maybe something worse “ =fundamentalist. I think ‘I don’t know but it’d be nice if I saw my mum again because I miss her’ or ‘this is a terrible life and I hope there’s something that will help me or something better at the end of all this’ are perfectly reasonable things to believe. Who are we to tell people they can’t. It’d be cruel and unkind. I can’t quite bring myself to believe in such a thing.. but then, I miss people I’ve lost. And if I was in a truly truly awful place .. I may well hope for something more “There’s no atheists in the foxholes” as the saying goes...

  • @mickbaxter9440
    @mickbaxter9440 Před 3 lety +2

    Clearly it may give some people comfort as they face the possibility of oblivion. But what about those who genuinely believe they are about to be tortured for all eternity? Their last days might not be so palatable.

    • @LeeStoneman
      @LeeStoneman Před 3 lety

      Have they heard the good news? They're not! Sadly, that still means death is just non-existence.

    • @samuellawrencesbookclub8250
      @samuellawrencesbookclub8250 Před rokem

      I can't speak for other faiths, but Christianity's whole shtick is about the redemption of the sinner. If a person believes that they are going to hell, they must also believe in a forgiving God before whom they can be redeemed. And it is in the aid of the dying who fear hell that priests, pastors, and ministers of all stripes visit the dying, at home and in hospitals, to help them on the way to redemption.

  • @chrism6315
    @chrism6315 Před 3 lety +2

    Taking away religion wouldn't stop mass killings or fascists, but it would tear down a lot of cover and mechanisms that those things hide behind.

    • @primary_magic1227
      @primary_magic1227 Před 3 lety +1

      This. I don't know why he's acting like that wouldn't Be a step forward.

  • @ecogazoo
    @ecogazoo Před 9 lety +48

    Freethinking sure can be dogmatic sometimes.

  • @keggerous
    @keggerous Před 8 lety +3

    I'm an atheist and an agnostic. They are not mutually exclusive.

  • @Unlocktube
    @Unlocktube Před rokem +2

    I get his point, I don't want to rip away anyone's comfort blanket if they aren't hurting anyone. But if you don't think there is a god you are an atheist by definition.

  • @ltotheop7512
    @ltotheop7512 Před 3 lety +1

    Where’s this from???

  • @MoXy33
    @MoXy33 Před 3 lety +4

    Hey, if god keeps you warm at night, keep him with you, just don't force it on others.

    • @chesterdonnelly1212
      @chesterdonnelly1212 Před 3 lety

      Unless you are a gnostic theist in which case you will spend your life trying to save souls.

  • @Artifying
    @Artifying Před 10 lety +15

    This is the reason I've remained religious, even as many of my friends have not. I want there to be something more and I genuinely believe that no matter what is true, I will be comforted by my own belief and will be happier because of that security.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 10 lety +18

      Wishful thinking? Nice.

    • @Artifying
      @Artifying Před 10 lety +5

      ***** Eh, why not? In the words of Blaise Pascal's famous wager
      1. "God is, or He is not"
      2. A Game is being played... where heads or tails will turn up.
      3. According to reason, you can defend neither of the propositions.
      4. You must wager. (It's not optional.)
      5. Let us weigh the gain and the loss in wagering that God is. Let us estimate these two chances. If you gain, you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing.
      6. Wager, then, without hesitation that He is. (...) There is here an infinity of an infinitely happy life to gain, a chance of gain against a finite number of chances of loss, and what you stake is finite. And so our proposition is of infinite force, when there is the finite to stake in a game where there are equal risks of gain and of loss, and the infinite to gain."

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 10 lety +20

      Artifying Pascals Wager is nonsense, famous nonsense but nonsense nevertheless. To apply it correctly you would need to apply it to all of the 10,000 plus gods which have been worshipped by mankind throughout history then factor in which of them have a "hell" and whether you have the correct version of the religion (30,000 denominations of Christianity).
      Then you would need to ask, if the biblical god actually existed, why you would want to spend time with a being which impregnated a 12 year old girl and killed multiple millions of children?
      You believe in Yahweh because it is one of the most recent gods and, I suspect, because you were brought up that way by your parents.

    • @jakobpbengtsson3608
      @jakobpbengtsson3608 Před 10 lety +4

      ***** And what is wrong with that? Is anyone harmed by it? If it's merely for comfort, the overall effect seems to be beneficial. We are wrong about a lot of things in life. It is not rational to assume there is some sort of God, but as long as we are not talking about a human authority using that belief to dictate the lives of others it does not really present a problem.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 10 lety +14

      Because beliefs inform actions and religion exerts a massive, malign influence on the world. And as for human authority it gives people, including the pope, their ability to dictate the lives of others.
      My sister died 13 years ago and it would have been "comforting" to think she was in heaven but at least accepting the fact that she is simply dead allows me to mourn her properly and move on. A comforting delusion is still a delusion and I would rather not be delusional.

  • @haunter4708
    @haunter4708 Před 2 lety +2

    If you are reading this and you’re Agnostic, do you come from a religious upbringing?
    It just occurred to me that most Agnostics probably started out religious as is the case with Mitchell. For me personally I probably was Agnostic for a period but it was like a stepping stone towards Atheism.

    • @zachhouston514
      @zachhouston514 Před rokem +1

      I was brought up as a Lutheran and stepped away when I was in my teens. I don't know if I'll ever fully step into Atheism because it's simply impossible to determine. Similar to how the big bang theory is impossible to 100% prove, there being a God is impossible to 100% disprove

  • @flashpeter625
    @flashpeter625 Před 8 lety +1

    A little recap for David Mitchell:
    1. gnostic theist/deist/whatever-of-that-sort - "I know god exists"
    2. agnostic theist/deist/whatever-of-that-sort - "I don't know if god exists, I believe he does"
    3. agnostic atheist - "I don't know if god exists, I don't believe he does"
    4. gnostic atheist - "I know god does not exist"
    The argument is this. Numbers 1 and 4 are simply wrong right away, because we objectively don't know if god exists. Number 2 is unjustified, because there is no evidence for existence god. Which leaves us at 3, the rational position.

    • @wolfgangouille
      @wolfgangouille Před 8 lety

      +flashpeter625 there are proofs however that believing in god and praying is at best useless to survive cancer.

  • @rontocknell3592
    @rontocknell3592 Před 4 lety +37

    Obviously, as an agnostic, David would see agnosticism as the most rational response to the world as we see it. If he didn't, then I would imagine he would convert to whatever he DID consider the most rational response. Not all atheists are out to destroy the beliefs of others. I'm an atheist but I would be mortified if someone abandoned their faith simply because I'm an atheist. Obviously that wouldn't happen even if I did try to change them. I know lots of religious people and I make no secret about my own atheism but I don't think anyone I know has ever ceased to take comfort from their faith simply because they know some bloke who happens to be an atheist.
    I will accept that many atheists seem to distain the comfort that others take from their faith and try to bring religious people around to their own way of thinking. But they don't succeed because a religious belief or lack thereof is an intangible concept that cannot be proven either way. People obviously do convert to other religions or lapse into atheism and, indeed, there are atheists who become religious. But it's always a conclusion arrived at after a degree of soul-searching rather than being convinced by someone who holds a different view.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 2 lety +9

      My worry is the damage that religion does to peoples thinking and how religion takes the responsibility for their own actions and gives it to a invisible friend

    • @gandalf8216
      @gandalf8216 Před 2 lety

      If you are a theist regarding something, you're an atheist to everything else. We're all atheists, it comes with the package

    • @ryclemo4942
      @ryclemo4942 Před rokem +2

      @@gowdsake7103 I guess a distinction has to be made between religious people that follow the teachings morally and are rational with their beliefs, willing to apply critical thinking to what they read and use their religion for good and other religious people that will treat it like a cult, or use it as an excuse for sexism which I have a particular annoyance at because it contradicts most of the other parts of the bible which talk about loving others, but they will choose to focus on a particular sentence and use that for hatred

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před rokem

      @@ryclemo4942 How can you even differentiate ! Religion at its heart is all about avoiding responsibility for your own actions, thats why the devil was invented
      As for the bible and morals hmmm It really isnt a moral book in many ways and most christians ignore the 613 commandments
      But the bible openly supports slavery, rape, homophobia, child abuse, misogamy and mass murder

    • @ryclemo4942
      @ryclemo4942 Před rokem

      @@gowdsake7103 I think once again the problem is not the idea that we should forgive others, but the idea that people can get away with stuff and then just repent it, which isn't at all how it should work but the problem is that people think that's how it works. I feel like there is also a split between people who take the bible too literally and others. The bible is full of contradictions and while it is written about God it's written by humans who are prone to getting stuff wrong and talking about what is accepted at the time (e.g. homophobia) which does not reflect today's beliefs or God's views, but some will say I'm speaking heresy and choose to hate on anyone who doesn't fit the Old Testaments' narrative.

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Před 3 lety +3

    Brilliant Video

  • @tomgallagher4949
    @tomgallagher4949 Před rokem +1

    Very clearly and relatably put that his childlike wishes drives his beliefs. I want - therefore it must be so!

  • @caxzrockz
    @caxzrockz Před 6 lety

    When was this?

  • @sparkyk24
    @sparkyk24 Před 10 lety +9

    He was so wonderful, that's exactly how I feel!

  • @mitzic
    @mitzic Před 10 lety +21

    In a 1953 essay, Bertrand Russell states:
    "An agnostic thinks it impossible to know the truth in matters such as God and the future life with which Christianity and other religions are concerned. Or, if not impossible, at least impossible at the present time."
    Of course David knows what an agnostic is. And the arrogance of some atheists in their insistence that agnosticism is somehow a less intelligent stance is unwarranted. And demeaning - to themselves as well as their targets.

    • @nemo9864
      @nemo9864 Před 4 lety +1

      I think the problem atheists have with agnostics is that they, in a way, concede to theists that their personal god might exist.

    • @ThreadBomb
      @ThreadBomb Před 3 lety +1

      Listen to what he actually says about his belief. His logical position is "I want there to be a god, so I can't be an atheist". Oh dear. That's not logical at all.

    • @williamkhairi4061
      @williamkhairi4061 Před 3 lety +1

      Thread Bomb whether or not god exists isn’t something one comes to with logic. It’s a choice. Otherwise, we wouldn’t have been arguing over it for millennia, else we would’ve come to a conclusion already. He doesn’t want life to be meaningless, but he’s not convinced it isn’t. Neither can anyone convince you using any sort of material evidence that God does not exist. It takes faith for both atheism and theism, the only true wisdom is that we have no fucking clue which is true

    • @alistairmorrish8613
      @alistairmorrish8613 Před 3 lety

      @@williamkhairi4061 Life is what you make it - it's not meaningless. No-one should think that. But it certainly shouldn't be regarded as part of some god's plan...lol. And atheism and theism isn't a choice. You don't decide what you believe. All religious people are brainwashed into their faiths. It becomes a matter of whether what you believe is supported by evidence and whether that matters or not? And the process of determining that, takes place through learning about the natural world.

    • @williamkhairi4061
      @williamkhairi4061 Před 3 lety

      Alistair Morrish when I say meaningless I mean that life is just an act of random chance as opposed to the theistic belief that God has a plan and created you for a specific purpose. You can live a fulfilling life without faith, I’m not arguing you can’t do that, but there’s a difference between being created for a reason and being created out of a fluke. I’m curious as to why you say that believing in atheism or theism isn’t a choice and then go on to only talk about the theistic side of that coin. If I raised my child as an atheist is that not also brainwashing? Where does one draw the line between child rearing and brainwashing? Besides faith, children seem to inherit the same political views as their parents, the same mannerisms, they tend to eat the same foods they grew up with, take on the same culture, etc. so arguing against religion (and by extension the existence of God) on the basis that it “brainwashed” you is absolutely ridiculous. You also make a sweeping generalization when you say that all religious people are brainwashed into their faith. Not only is it fallacious, it’s extremely arrogant. You imply that they’re not making an intelligent decision in choosing theism and somehow you’re different (and more intelligent) for choosing atheism. Quite honestly, neither side has any substantial evidence for me to make a logical choice, otherwise it would be simple. Atheists have just as much to prove when they claim God doesn’t exist. Because they can’t physically see an invisible, incomprehensible and infinite being, to them that’s proof it doesn’t exist. How ridiculous! like a fish in a fish bowl, we think that after exploring the entire bowl we can somehow make conclusions about what’s outside it. If you want to truly investigate the natural world, one can contemplate the existence of math and why it works. Science and mathematics are done with the underlying assumption that the universe has laws, and therefore one has to wonder about the lawgiver. We can go on and on until the end of time debating both sides (humanity has already done it for thousands of years) and never come to a conclusion. As you said, it comes down to whether or not your side is supported by evidence. I verily say unto you that neither side has any evidence. The natural world has just as much power to make someone into an atheist as it does to make someone into a theist, so why do we still bother debating?

  • @Kronoplayerkiller
    @Kronoplayerkiller Před 6 lety +1

    ill watch more later and good job

  • @rehanmemon3969
    @rehanmemon3969 Před 3 lety +1

    I like that sentiment. If you draw comfort from a belief without hurting anybody, I for one will never attempt to pry it from you just because I don't believe. Most empathetic atheists probably wouldn't

    • @davidwuhrer6704
      @davidwuhrer6704 Před 2 lety

      I have yet to have people at my door handing me pamphlets about how there probably is no god.
      I have reports about cars with atheistic stickers on them being routinely thrashed, while cars with religious stickers on them rarely are. Why is that?

  • @brokentillman4346
    @brokentillman4346 Před 5 lety +9

    it matters to me that i can play this for anyone who knows that he is the most pessimistic person, he has hope, he wants there to be a God, he finds comfort in the idea. david finds comfort. thats awsome.

    • @51monw
      @51monw Před 2 lety +1

      But believing in things because they make you feel better is a form of the "appeal to consequences" logical fallacy. So that religious beliefs give comfort to some people has no impact on their correctness. It might be an argument we shouldn't take away people's illusions, but I suspect many atheists conclude the world would be better if people had fewer illusionary beliefs, because religious beliefs common in our society are not without their negative outcomes too.

  • @MegaMech
    @MegaMech Před 3 lety +4

    Wow... That is very well worded.

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety

      Do you believe there's a God? If yes then you're a theist. If you're not sure then you're not a theist. You are a-theist.
      That doesn't mean you're saying there's definitely no God, because some atheists say that but most of us don't believe but don't make any claims.
      Agnosticism isn't some halfway point between believing and not believing. Theism deals with brief. Gnosticism deals with knowledge.
      I don't know if God exists or not so I'm agnostic on that position. I don't believe there's a God because I've not seen compelling evidence so I'm an agnostic atheist.

    • @MegaMech
      @MegaMech Před 3 lety

      @@JB_inks Nice circular reasoning.

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety

      @@MegaMech how is it circular reasoning?
      (Hint: you obviously don't know what circular reasoning is)

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 3 lety

      @@MegaMech did you understand that there's belief and knowledge?
      That's not circular reasoning, imbecile

    • @MegaMech
      @MegaMech Před 3 lety

      @@JB_inks You should probably comprehend the subject that you are discussing prior to making a fool of yourself via contradicting the typical use and definition of terms and that's before even considering the content of your dialogue which was also incorrect.

  • @viccigates3756
    @viccigates3756 Před rokem

    The fact that we are driven by hatreds, that see us running around killing each other, does more to prove the Bible's message that we are sinners, (souls controlled by a sinful nature) in need of salvation and rebirth, than to diminish it.

  • @rutgerholtzer3961
    @rutgerholtzer3961 Před 7 lety +1

    Wait after reading the comment section I'm confused.
    I've seen good points being made that the definition of an atheist is "someone who doesn't believe", not "someone who disbelieves".
    I myself am an disbeliever. I believe in the absence of any divine figures of any religion. So how should I be named?

    • @henryginn7490
      @henryginn7490 Před 3 lety +1

      Theism means belief in god/gods. The prefix "a" means without. Same for Agnosticism where gnostic means knowledge of god/gods. You can be an agnostic atheist, agnostic theist, gnostic atheist or a gnostic theist. You are an atheist but your position is a subset of atheism and strictly stronger. You might find the term antitheist fits your views, but you can definitely call yourself an atheist

  • @mikedenby6771
    @mikedenby6771 Před 3 lety +3

    That is a staggeringly good series of points, made in the most efficient way I've ever seen!

  • @5thRing
    @5thRing Před 7 lety +4

    One thing I think that is important to know is the distinction between "logical" and "rational". Agnosticism (technically a type of atheism) is more logical, as you are acknowledging the fact that you cannot prove one way or the other.
    "Rational" applies when you have decided to draw a conclusion (in spite of not having all the required data) and choosing to be satisfied with what is deemed most probable.
    So, I disagree that agnosticism is more rational.

    • @jedsithor
      @jedsithor Před 7 lety +2

      It's about probabilities. Technically, nothing can be proven. There is only likely and unlikely. Gravity can't be proven. If you let go of an object 99 times and 99 times, it falls, when you let go of the object the 100th time, the likelihood is that it will fall. However, there is a tiny, infinitesimal possibility that the object won't fall, that the object will float, thus showing that the theory of gravity is wrong. Because that remote possibility exists, is it reasonable to say that you don't know that the force of gravity exists? Of course not. The probability that gravity doesn't exist is so low, that while it's not exactly zero, for all intents and purposes, you may as well call it zero. It isn't rational to say you don't know if gravity exists.
      By the same token, the evidence for a natural explanation for existence is so high and possibility of the existence of a deity is so low that saying "I don't know" isn't a rational response based on the evidence. Like the possibility of gravity not existing, the likelihood that God does exist is so low that in scientific terms, it's pretty much as close to zero as you can get, at which point, the rational conclusion to draw is that gravity exists and God doesn't.
      Agnosticism is based on ignorance. I don't mean that to be insulting. I simply mean that the only way one can be agnostic is if they haven't looked at the evidence or lack thereof. There isn't a shred of evidence to support the God hypothesis. If there was, there would be no atheists. Also, once you say that God is beyond evidence then you are making a faith-based assertion, not a rational, scientific one.

    • @5thRing
      @5thRing Před 7 lety +1

      jedsithor The problem with that, as I see it, is that trying to draw a conclusion on the existence of God is getting ahead of oneself, when what God is has not been sufficiently established, even in theory.
      Ultimately, the people choosing to conclude the (non)existence of God are doing so about their own interpretation of it god, or someone else's interpretation, or worse yet, their interpretation of what someone else inadequately explained was their own interpretation.
      If, for instance, The Bible is our reference for relevant events, then it's either completely true, partially true, or completely false.
      As it does, on the whole, contain some historically accurate facts, it is not completely false.
      Even if, for the sake of argument it is completely true, that does not mean it can or should all be taken literally. The complete exclusion of symbolic writing, in my opinion, is an unreasonable assumption to make.
      And then there is the possibility of any given writer not fully understanding what they are seeing, and so relating it as best they know how.
      So what we're left with is a possibility that the thing being called god is real, but that any given person's idea of that thing's qualities is simply inaccurate.
      If someone is asked if God exists, and that person says no, then even if God does exist, that person could be entirely correct about what they are calling God not existing.
      People argue about whether or not God exists without it having been sufficiently established what said God actually is, because those people were not their to witness the actual goings-on said to be directly related to said God.
      That's why I think people who insist one way or the other are being foolish.
      The lack of information goes much deeper than most people care to consider.
      Gravity is not something a good comparison, because at least we can see something fall and say, yep, that's gravity.
      'God' in spite of the entire Bible, is still so inadequately defined that if it does exist then you could very well see evidence every day and not even realize it.
      Rationality is about probability. Logic, however is about knowns: the if/then's.
      Neither existence nor non-existence has been proven, therefore I do not know. That is simply a fact.
      If a person actually feels it's necessary to take the issue a step further into drawing a conclusion, then they move into the realm of rationalizing.
      Not everyone feels any need to take that step.

    • @jedsithor
      @jedsithor Před 7 lety

      Kirisu Guroundosu I'm not talking about the Biblical God. I'm not talking about any God. I'm talking about the basic concept of a supernatural being without associating that being with any religion. It's the first mistake theists make. They fail to establish a premise for the existence of a divine being and go straight to their own specific dogma, which is utter nonsense.
      We can talk about the Biblical God if you like. The first two books are proven nonsense. Genesis tells the story of the creation of the world and of early man. Science has already shown how the world was actually created and charted the evolution of life. Exodus tells the story of Moses leading his people to the promised land. Archeology has already shown that the Hebrews were never slaves in Egypt and their religion grew out of a polytheistic religion in Canaan.
      The Yahweh mythology doesn't begin in a paradise garden or with a burning bush. Yahweh was just one god among a pantheon of Canaanite gods and over time, took on more importance and was elevated to the chief deity and then the only deity. Yahweh's actual rise to prominence has no more substance than the story of Zeus or Ra or Odin. There's nothing special about the Abrahamic God.
      Therein lies the trouble with arguing for theism. Once you open it up to scrutiny and compare it with reality, it doesn't hold up. If you make the debate about that, then you've already lost. First you must establish whether any divine being can exist before you try to get into the idea of a specific deity.
      But even sticking with a basic, deistic idea of a divine being without attaching specific religions to it, saying you can't prove it one way or another, therefore you don't know, creates a false equivalency, as if the existence or non existence of God is 50-50. It's not. It's not even a 1% chance. The possibility is so low that it may as well be zero.
      The gravity analogy is actually a perfect one because as you said, you can measure the effects of gravity. The evidence of experimentation backs up the theory. Essentially, the universe behaves in the manner you would expect if gravity exists.
      Gravity has evidence to support its existence. God has none. All of the evidence points in the opposite direction, towards a completely natural explanation for existence.
      A theist will tell you that God is beyond the laws of nature, which is a convenient excuse but at least most theists will admit that their belief in a deity is held in spite of nature. They (well, not Creationists, who are idiots) acknowledge that the universe doesn't support their beliefs but believe anyway.
      So it all comes down to a very simple question: which is more likely? That the universe and everything in it came into existence through natural means, as demonstrated by the evidence or that in spite of all the evidence, there exists a divine being that created everything, a being that is beyond evidence, beyond the laws of nature, beyond reason and beyond logic? I submit that not only is the natural explanation more likely, the supernatural explanation is so unlikely, as in less than 0.00001% likely, that it's not even worth entertaining. It's more likely that gravity doesn't exists than that God does exist, which is the point I was making.

    • @5thRing
      @5thRing Před 7 lety

      jedsithor I use the Bible as a well known example to help illustrate the point that a person's idea of the deity is just an interpretation of what is in a book, an unknown amount of which may not be meant to be taken literally.
      If you take something literally that was spoken symbolically, then you can absolutely prove it wrong, even if the thing being spoken about was an actual event just being descsribed in a non-literal way.
      That any given "unlikely" or even "scientifically false" thing in the Bible is actually false requires an assumption on top of an assumption.
      A person's idea that, again just as an example, the Biblical god actually is a supernatural entity is an interpretation. So the perception/interpretation can be false while the falsely described God could be real, just simply falsely describe.
      Most dogma comes from the interpretation of text.
      "Proving" there is no supernatural entity that exists beyond the laws of nature does not prove that a given named god didn't/doesn't exist.
      Personally, as much as I appreciate science, I value logic more, so I don't hold KNOWN science up as trusted 100%. It's not like scientists have never been wrong or that we have reason to believe nothing new will ever be discovered that changes our whole view of what we know.
      You can't know all that isn't without first knowing all that is.
      It's only the limit of what we DO know that makes a supernatural entity a false idea.
      We make judgements based on the information we have, and it doesn't always mean we have all the the information, or that all of what we do have is 100% accurate. Even a bit of knowledge we view as 100% could actually be 85% depending on scale.
      Let's not turn "science" into god for the sake of proving there is no god. It is the arrogance of many scientists.
      They lose the humility of "as far as we know".

    • @jedsithor
      @jedsithor Před 7 lety +2

      Kirisu Guroundosu To quote an Irish comedian, science knows it doesn't know everything. If it did, it would stop.
      You're making a god of the gaps argument. There's lots that we don't know but not knowing doesn't give licence to insert a supernatural explanation. Not knowing doesn't mean there isn't a natural answer. It just means that there's more to find out. There will always be more to find out.
      But there's no reason to think that any of what we don't know about the universe has supernatural origins. The only time when suggesting a supernatural cause might be acceptable is if we come across a situation that can't be explained by natural means and thus far, that's never happened and as our knowledge grows, the places where a person could attempt to insert a supernatural explanation keep shrinking, which is why the gods of the gaps argument is illogical. The gaps will keep getting smaller.
      Arrogance is the furthest thing from a scientist's mind. No scientist claims to know everything. Unlike religion, which is arrogant and rejects scrutiny, science requires scrutiny. It is the basis of the scientific method. If evidence emerges that shows that a scientific theory is wrong, the scientists don't hold on to that theory, they adapt it based on the evidence or throw it out entirely if the facts don't support the theory at all. Science changes based on the evidence. Religion doesn't.
      Science isn't out to prove there is no God. God isn't even part of the equation. The purpose of science is simply to learn about the universe around us, That the discoveries science makes ends up showing that supernatural explanations aren't necessary is something that people will just have to deal with.
      Charles Darwin was a theist. As was Isaac Newton. The concepts of evolution and gravity weren't conceived by them as a means to dispute God. They simply wanted to understand how the world works.

  • @Freethinkingtheist77
    @Freethinkingtheist77 Před 2 lety

    That God does not exist, I cannot deny. That my whole being cries out for God I cannot forget. (Sartre)
    I'm actually a Christian, but I think this is a profound admission from Sartre and resonates with David Mitchell here.

    • @gowdsake7103
      @gowdsake7103 Před 2 lety

      My whole being calls out BS to the god claim sorry for that

  • @monsignorerasmus.6441
    @monsignorerasmus.6441 Před rokem +1

    I dont want to let go of my comfort in the face of oblivion.
    That's honest at least.

  • @annachris4158
    @annachris4158 Před 8 lety +17

    I love him for this, some important points made

    • @annachris4158
      @annachris4158 Před 8 lety +5

      +Scream Phoenix that atheism isn't necessarily the most rational response to the world as we see it

    • @johaneriksandberg
      @johaneriksandberg Před 8 lety +4

      +Anna Chris It is though, not only that it's the only rational response to the world as we see it, if it wasn't there would be proof of god's existance and we would have 1 single religion.

    • @nickolasgaspar9660
      @nickolasgaspar9660 Před 5 lety +2

      His points are based on ignorance. Knowledge is not required in order to reject a claim which is based on faith. Logic is though.
      He is confusing atheism with Antitheism, with agnosticism.....and ignores the Default Position on an existential claim, dictated by logic.

  • @HeatyFrog
    @HeatyFrog Před 3 lety +44

    Loving all the sweaty Hitchens and Dawkins fans getting angry in these comments because David Mitchell doesn't sing the tune they expected him to

    • @Hottiedonkey
      @Hottiedonkey Před 3 lety +7

      Sweaty? You’re a douche bag. Just make sense and no one will give you a hard time.

    • @marcdaniels9079
      @marcdaniels9079 Před 3 lety +10

      Not sweaty at all. He is fully entitled to his opinion no matter how ill informed and misguided it is. Very revealing when he says he was brought up that there was a God. He should probably spend some time talking to fellow comedian Stephen Fry to get a more informed understanding of religion.

    • @cabletie69
      @cabletie69 Před 3 lety +2

      Why don't you pray for them, that should help. Also keeps you busy.

    • @col.hertford9855
      @col.hertford9855 Před 3 lety +10

      He destroyed his own argument if you listen again. He says atheists aren’t rational purely because he wants to believe in a god and have a safety blanket. I’m sorry but the position presented here is irrational and he lies by pretending to have logic and misrepresents his position, which is the same as a theist. His position is based on faith maybe, hope more likely, not reasoned logic.

    • @Nomanspie
      @Nomanspie Před 3 lety +7

      @@col.hertford9855 you didn't listen to him.
      He said he doesn't have a position. He's an agnostic. He said he would like there to be a God but there isn't enough evidence for him to believe in a God. Which sounds like a very rational thought process to me.
      He doesn't know. Which should be the default position. Is there a God of some sort? I don't know and neither do you. To argue that there is or isn't, is to assume you have information that no one does.

  • @vonBelfry
    @vonBelfry Před 3 lety +1

    Truth be told, I'm agnostic but also kiiiinda against singular religions.
    The rationale I present is that... Well... The universe, to us, stretches far, far beyond our current understanding.
    I'm agnostic because I actually do believe there's a possibility that a god or godlike being exists, but I am anti-religious because any single religion claims to know the answers to all of the universe, when that sort of knowledge is completely out of our reach as it stands today.
    The primary flaw of religion is the fact that they're setting an answer in stone when there are literally infinite possibilities from what we can see.
    Do you know the wisest thing to do when you can't answer someone's question?
    You answer "I don't know." And you accept that.

  • @MBaileyuk
    @MBaileyuk Před 7 lety

    As Ricky Gervais explained really nicely, the problem is that you'd have to be Agnostic to most mythical ideas. You can never be 100% certain that something doesn't exist, but the liklihood is that it doesn't exist is so overwhelming that labelling yourself as an Agnostic is just willingness to submit to ignorance.

  • @GiantSandles
    @GiantSandles Před 10 lety +16

    I don't really think being an atheist and being an agnostic are mutually exclusive but other than that I agree.

    • @GiantSandles
      @GiantSandles Před 10 lety +14

      ***** No it's not. Some people are both but there's nothing in atheism that's intrinsically anti-theist.

    • @A-Duck
      @A-Duck Před 10 lety +1

      I agree, strictly speaking an agnostic does not believe in any deities existence, exactly like an atheist. Agnostic simply implies on top of that, a willingness to admit unforeseen possibilities. But neither really contradict each other in terms of definition, more in terms of inclination.

    • @CrankyLeopard
      @CrankyLeopard Před 10 lety +1

      GiantSandles By definition, you cannot be atheistic and agnostic. An athiest is someone that strictly does not believe in a god or gods, whilst being agnostic means your beliefs do not strictly swing one way or the other.

    • @GiantSandles
      @GiantSandles Před 10 lety +6

      Cranky Leopard Google 'agnostic atheism'.

    • @BigMikeMcBastard
      @BigMikeMcBastard Před 10 lety +1

      Cranky Leopard It is impossible to both believe and not believe in a god or gods. You're either an atheist or you're a theist. If you're not sure, you're an agnostic atheist. If you're sure there's a god, you're a gnostic theist.

  • @NeonPixels81
    @NeonPixels81 Před 2 lety +3

    He had me in the first half, not gonna lie

  • @DukeofBlasphemy
    @DukeofBlasphemy Před 7 lety +1

    as someone with the name 'dukeofblasphemy' i completely side with david and respect his very constructive opinion on the topic
    if only the comments here were nearly as intelligent

    • @oak1739
      @oak1739 Před 3 lety

      David is sadly getting emotionally manipulated by the idea of an eternal punishment for being an Atheist, and the social embarrassment from him supposedly being rational yet believing in God. This is why he says he's agnostic. Can you really imagine DAVID MITCHELL saying " I don't know flat earth exists or not, so I'm unsure"? The Flat Earth theory has less holes in it than all of the most popular religions of today.
      David is rational until he's scared of the consequences of being rational.

  • @seth4766
    @seth4766 Před 6 lety

    what is this taken from?