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Atheist Debates - Liar, Lunatic or Lord?

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Matt Dillahunty

Matt Dillahunty

Күн бұрын

Part of the Atheist Debates Patreon project: / atheistdebates
C.S. Lewis popularized the trilemma of "liar, lunatic or lord" and Josh McDowell, and others, ran with that in order to firm up a foundation that may seek to exclude other options.
Links:
infidels.org/li...

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@gremlinn7
@gremlinn7 8 жыл бұрын
I'm taking "L" option #5, myself: lycanthrope.
@FourthDerivative
@FourthDerivative Жыл бұрын
"I am the way, the truth... and the wolf. AWOOOOOOO!"
@kaitownsend8282
@kaitownsend8282 Ай бұрын
CHECKMATE THEISTS!!!!
@MistyGothis
@MistyGothis 8 жыл бұрын
I actually fell for the Liar, Lunatic or Lord dilemma myself, thought I didn't realize it at the time. I met a guru, who seemed to have genuine insight and some good ideas. So when without quite saying it explicitly, he made it clear he viewed himself as a living Buddha, I trusted him. But, it turns out someone can have genuine insight, some good ideas, charisma, and be a narcissistic nut ball. Human beings are complicated.
@geezzerboy
@geezzerboy 2 жыл бұрын
Power corrupts, did you give him power?
@ejkalegal3145
@ejkalegal3145 2 жыл бұрын
You sound gullible.....
@ianbuick8946
@ianbuick8946 Жыл бұрын
Strictly speaking, what do detectives and a psychologists have to say account of Jesus, would they conclude the individual is mentally illed and/or a pathological liar?
@michaelaugust4313
@michaelaugust4313 3 ай бұрын
But Jesus was not human. You believing in a person does not mean that what you experienced the same thing.
@combatives
@combatives 8 жыл бұрын
Really great explanation, I agree that the "well has been poisoned" by Josh McDowell and C.S. Lewis...they knew there was another option available they just did all they could to avoid it due to their own bias towards their own religious beliefs. I am so posting this on my FB wall. Great job Matt!
@janisir4529
@janisir4529 8 жыл бұрын
"Who am I to question god?" I'm someone who exists, unlike god.
@thisis4573
@thisis4573 4 жыл бұрын
How can you be sure you exist?
@waxberry4
@waxberry4 4 жыл бұрын
@@thisis4573 Read Descartes' Meditation I
@Jake007123
@Jake007123 4 жыл бұрын
@@thisis4573 Cogito Ergo Sum.
@Gwaithmir
@Gwaithmir 4 жыл бұрын
Who am I to question God? I'm a rational person who has listened to an exhaustive litany of God claims and found none which pass rational scrutiny. I am a rational person who has read six versions of the Bible and found none of them any more credible than a supermarket tabloid.
@the_polish_prince8966
@the_polish_prince8966 3 жыл бұрын
@@Gwaithmir Just to throw this out there: I know the Bible is the main work being focused on here but it is by far not the only account of God claims.
@JohnCashin
@JohnCashin 8 жыл бұрын
If the Old Testament is anything to go by, lunatic just about sums up this God, so it's hardly a surprise that his son would have a few mental issues too Lol
@BlackEpyon
@BlackEpyon 8 жыл бұрын
+John Cashin How about celestial despot?
@camron5788
@camron5788 8 жыл бұрын
+BlackEpyon the wholly imagined gods of man's imagination.
@BlackEpyon
@BlackEpyon 8 жыл бұрын
Cam Ron Isn't funny how God always seems to be the "perfect" version of you? Ya know, if triangles had gods, they would each have three sides, just as Thracian gods have blond hair and blue eyes?
@camron5788
@camron5788 8 жыл бұрын
BlackEpyon yah, bronze age jewish desert folk... imagined a suffering jew martyr, dying at the hands of the romans occupying the land. Men become legend, legend becomes myth, myth becomes religion. There isn't any Paul Bunyan but damned if people 2000 years ago were told a story about him they'd damned well had liked it enough to repeat it. Pass the story down 100 years by mouth and he'd end up a god who someone's great great grandfather had seen personally. All praise big paul and the divine blue oxen. Don't get me started on the johnny appleseed creation story.
@BlackEpyon
@BlackEpyon 8 жыл бұрын
Cam Ron It's an example of how if you tell a lie often enough, you start to believe it.
@YOSUP315
@YOSUP315 8 жыл бұрын
Josh McDowell is completely butchering the argument. C.S. Lewis' original trilemma was a response to a hypothetical non-believer who's committed to believing Jesus was a great moral teacher. But the trilemma doesn't work at all against skeptical atheists who openly criticize the teachings attributed to the Jesus character, or doubt whether there was such a historical figure.
@YOSUP315
@YOSUP315 Жыл бұрын
@@subaru4920 wasn't sure what to reply, since I've now come to faith in Christ.
@FourthDerivative
@FourthDerivative Жыл бұрын
@@YOSUP315 Sorry to hear that.
@YOSUP315
@YOSUP315 Жыл бұрын
@@FourthDerivative Don't be. It's awesome relying on Christ and knowing there's profound purpose behind our existence.
@matthewsteele5229
@matthewsteele5229 Жыл бұрын
@@YOSUP315 we all need our crutches, don’t we
@YOSUP315
@YOSUP315 Жыл бұрын
@@matthewsteele5229 illicit substances, weird sexual stuff, video games, etc. Those I'd call crutches. Faith in the right one in this life is more like a prosthetic leg.
@gdobie1west988
@gdobie1west988 4 жыл бұрын
Matt is such a pleasure to listen to, and makes so much sense. Thanks Matt
@Robert.Deeeee
@Robert.Deeeee 8 жыл бұрын
But WL Craig says that the empty tomb is a fact. lol
@Robert.Deeeee
@Robert.Deeeee 8 жыл бұрын
Kiro 6 people often say Craig is stupid, I disagree. I just wish he didn't waste his talent desperately trying to defend the indefensible(the Bible)
@ahouyearno
@ahouyearno 8 жыл бұрын
+Kiro 6 Craig isn't stupid. He has a master from Leuven university, the most prestigious university in Belgium and one of the best universities worldwide. Stupid people don't earn masters in Leuven. He also knows the flaws in his arguments because he's skilled enough to obfuscate them. That makes him dishonest, deluded and/or deprived.
@ThePharphis
@ThePharphis 8 жыл бұрын
+ahouyearno Exactly. and, I think it's dishonesty, considering he aims to convince rather than aims to reach the truth. He puts personal revelation above all else and has arguments merely to trick people. My favorite example of an argument that he doesn't defend honestly at all is the moral argument. He'll never demonstrate the existence of "objective moral values" and he always merely attacks moral relativism instead. It's an emotional appeal, basically.
@ahouyearno
@ahouyearno 8 жыл бұрын
ThePharphis All the while ignoring that his gods have drowned all people, including children. Drowning is torture so WLC's god has tortured every innocent child on earth for his own amusement. He's at least dishonest. For example his response to Carrier's Christ Myth theories is that this research is 100 years outdated ... blatantly ignoring that Carrier is alive and well, publishing conclusions today.
@draevonmay7704
@draevonmay7704 8 жыл бұрын
+Robbie “H.B” Desiato I'm sure at some point in history, a tomb has been empty. The trick is to prove a dead Jesus was in it before it became empty XD. On a serious note, though, I completely agree with you about WLC. The first time I heard him, I thought 'wow, an actually intelligent Christian apologist. How shameful to have to be so dishonest and deceitful, to make people believe the shit you say.' I imagine he could have done something a bit more meaningful with his life (albeit with less fame and money). I have a simultaneous respect, and complete feelings of disgust, towards him.
@joavim
@joavim 8 жыл бұрын
There is a fourth L that CS Lewis conveniently forgot to mention: Legend. Jesus Christ might even have been a real person, but his life, miracles, etc. were either exaggerated or downright fabricated by a wide range of people over time.
@rationalmartian
@rationalmartian 8 жыл бұрын
+joavim Personally I see it as either ridiculously amateurish or remis, OR more likely intentional dishonesty to leave that fourth frankly rather obvious option out. How on earth does Legend not occur to someone supposedly seriously thinking about and hashing this subject out. It kind of beggars belief. But it really wouldn't be the first or last example of sheer dishonesty would it. Apologetics apparently is very much built on a foundation of dishonesty.
@SansDeity
@SansDeity 8 жыл бұрын
did you just not watch the video?
@joavim
@joavim 8 жыл бұрын
+Matt Dillahunty Yeah I plead guilty. I posted my comment before watching the video. I thought I'd gotten away with it until you got to the last freaking word in the video!
@GinEric84
@GinEric84 8 жыл бұрын
+joavim The court of KZfaq accepts your guilty plea on a charge of "commenting before viewing", this time you will be let of with a warning however it will be noted on your permanent record. Thank you, that is all
@samdon3693
@samdon3693 4 жыл бұрын
I want to say one thing,even if God exist , athiest aren't ready to accept God and even if HE doesn't exist thiest aren't going to give up on HIM. So lets wait and see what happens after death,if Christianity is true believers will escape, if athiesm is true ,everything is finished. The existence of God cannot be explained through our worldly wisdom,it is different category. You have seen only American Christianity, you just go and visit some nations , where people are raising the dead in the name of Christ . Yes faith is blind, but it is a component of love . Eventhough there are many people YHWH chosen Abraham because he had faith. So faith is not delusional it comes from complete humbleness to God .
@thinkaboutit4813
@thinkaboutit4813 8 жыл бұрын
Finally! Welcome back Matt.
@Tareltonlives
@Tareltonlives 8 жыл бұрын
Not to mention that being wrong about something, or lying about something, doesn't make someone evil or worthless, or ALWAYS lying or ALWAYS crazy.
@taowaycamino4891
@taowaycamino4891 8 жыл бұрын
+Tareltonlives That is not necessarily true. In the context of God or the perfect, the contrast between the two is clearly apparent. One is perfect and the other one is not. So in that context once a sinner ALWAYS a sinner unless repentance and forgiveness be in place.
@Tareltonlives
@Tareltonlives 8 жыл бұрын
But that's starting from the assumption of Jesus is perfect, which assuming the Lord identity, which is exactly what CS Lewis does
@taowaycamino4891
@taowaycamino4891 8 жыл бұрын
+Tareltonlives Yes, and according to the Bible that is the best solution to reach.
@Tareltonlives
@Tareltonlives 8 жыл бұрын
LOL Ah, circular logic
@taowaycamino4891
@taowaycamino4891 8 жыл бұрын
+Tareltonlives Are you saying that I can use any historical document EXCEPT the bible to prove anything the Bible says?
@EdGloss
@EdGloss 8 жыл бұрын
Maybe it's because I wasn't raised as a Christian but when I first heard the liar, lunatic, lord concept I honestly thought it was a joke. I think the question is so absurd as to not even require a response. It's also an irrelevant question because it can't accurately be answered based on the available evidence. When I began my graduate studies in history, the very first book assigned was E.H. Carr's What Is History? which explains, as the title suggests, how we know what is history. The entire purpose of the first course was to train us on how to evaluate sources and historical evidence and based on the methods historians use I'm utterly baffled at how a single one can conclude that Jesus existed. The evidence just isn't there and if it was anyone else, this wouldn't even be a question.
@rationalmartian
@rationalmartian 8 жыл бұрын
+Ed Gloss It never struck me as being remotely reasonable. I was shocked when I first started hearing it, and didn't at all take it seriously. It's hard to imagine anyone being able to, let alone finding it compelling or even merely convincing. And I find no reasonable evidence to suppose the Jesus character referred to in the bible ever existed. I'm tending to go with the mythicists more and more these days. The secular biblical scholars who suppose he did exist, such as Ehrman seem to be ridiculously thin on facts and actual evidence to support a real person did exist. I'm looking forward to the upcoming Bart Ehrman and Bob Price debate this year. Lets see if Bart has anything of substance historically to bring to bear. But I would imagine if he did, he already would have done so.
@YaroKasear
@YaroKasear 8 жыл бұрын
+Ed Gloss I am not sure why Dillahunty is encouraging discussing the options of the argument when all a skeptic needs to do reasonably is just dismiss it on the grounds that Jesus hasn't been demonstrated to exist. Dillahunty's approach here seems to be giving too much credibility to historical Jesus claims that have yet to be confirmed by actual scientific means.
@SansDeity
@SansDeity 8 жыл бұрын
+Yaro Kasear everyone doesn't understand what you understand....and you don't seem to understand that your position isn't likely to convince believers that they're wrong.
@YaroKasear
@YaroKasear 8 жыл бұрын
I see.
@Cheesesteakfreak
@Cheesesteakfreak 8 жыл бұрын
Word
@joearnold6881
@joearnold6881 8 жыл бұрын
I just finished watching Steve Shives' 'An Atheist Reads' series covering that book, Evidence that demands a Verdict. What a godawful book, but an awesome series. I recommend Shives' channel generally and his chapter by chapter coverage of apologetics books in particular.
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
+Joe Arnold it is illogical to claim who is God w/o knowing him. observe reality and what Bible says God is, u will know the same God of the nature matches the God of the Bible
@billschlafly4107
@billschlafly4107 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA No. Each person who believes in God believes something different. How can that be? Everyone who believes would agree if they actually knew God. And don't come back with "but they aren't real Christians" because therein lies the beauty of the true Scottsman fallacy.
@Bill_Garthright
@Bill_Garthright 8 жыл бұрын
+Joe Arnold You're right. That's a great series. In fact, I watched most of them twice. My problem with actually reading Christian apologetics myself is that I typically want to stop the author after the first page or so and say, "Wait a minute! That's not right." Unfortunately, I can't do that, so the author continues to base his argument on a complete fallacy (in my opinion, at least). Steve Shives points out those things. It's great.
@KCKatheist
@KCKatheist 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA Nonsense. The buybull refers to a dome over the earth and a sun that orbits the earth and physically rises and sets, amongst other unmitigated bullshit. Observations of *reality* reveal a *natural world* utterly absent of that blood-thirsty gawwd you claim to "know".
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
Ted Soto people who follow God and forget about themselves have the same point of view by God, but those who commit self idolatry tend to keep what they want,
@krumplethemal8831
@krumplethemal8831 8 жыл бұрын
If jesus knew he was god why would he plead with god just before the crucifixion? "Why have you forsaken me?" Why would he ask god this if he knew he had to die to save humanity and that he was god?
@RonSafreed
@RonSafreed 8 жыл бұрын
Because JC stripped Himself of what He was in eternity of His immortality/divinity & glorification down to mortal flesh & blood human! It was His humanity aspect of being mortal at the time that had human emotions, that is why He acted that way, however His will to die on the cross was stronger than the emotions He had of dying as a mortal human! The power & motivation behind His will to die on the cross was "LOVE"!!!!! Why did God love mankind that much? Because mankind is in the "DIRECT" image of God! In the physical aspect of both man & God our dna is 100% the same This dude satan & the angels are in a simular likeness but not a direct image like man is-FYI
@RonSafreed
@RonSafreed 8 жыл бұрын
Urth-ling in the 47 years I have been a Christian, I have never killed anyone! Neither have I known of any other Christian that has killed an"non-Christian" of any kind! Recently I had an atheist man tell me that Christians put guns to people's heads & force them to become Christian! Again in 47 years I have never did this, nor do I know of another Christian in 47 years that said he/she took a gun & used it or a knife at someone's throat & made them convert! Since you say we are instructed???? Jesus Christ during His life never killed or hurt anyone! True Christian conversion is up to each individual to do it "wilfully"themselves! Forseing a conversion is not true Christianity-FYI!!!!!
@bungalobill7941
@bungalobill7941 7 жыл бұрын
Three separate persons in the Trinity, all equal with God. You cannot be equal with God without being God. And he was quoting Psalm 22, a Messianic passage. Psalm 22 properly understood is the Messiah speaking and also being spoken about.
@stervenityvirgo1911
@stervenityvirgo1911 6 жыл бұрын
Mr Afrika173 religious people are retarded man they WANT a afterlife so just in case it is real they will do anything to believe. it's pretty pathetic
@ambassador_in_training
@ambassador_in_training 6 жыл бұрын
Narga Narga I respectfully disagree with your statement that religious people would do anything to believe in afterlife. There are moments in my life where I wish God didn't exist and seek to act as if it were true. Why? Because I don't want to be accountable for my actions and thoughts both in secret and public. I want to act immorally and not have to answer to anyone ever. Just look at some of these quotes from atheists and check your motives: Professor Richard Lewontin, a geneticist (and self-proclaimed Marxist), is certainly one of the world’s leaders in evolutionary biology. He wrote this very revealing comment (the italics were in the original). It illustrates the implicit philosophical bias against Genesis creation-regardless of whether or not the facts support it. ‘Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural. We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door." Reference: Richard Lewontin, Billions and billions of demons (review of The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark by Carl Sagan, 1997), The New York Review, p. 31, 9 January 1997. Or “I hope there is no God!” Thomas Nagel Author of "Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly False" , Professor of Philosophy at New York University. “I speak from experience, being strongly subject to this fear myself: I want atheism to be true and am made uneasy by the fact that some of the most intelligent and well-informed people I know are religious believers. It isn’t just that I don’t believe in God and, naturally, hope that I’m right in my belief. It’s that I hope there is no God! I don’t want there to be a God; I don’t want the universe to be like that. My guess is that this cosmic authority problem is not a rare condition and that it is responsible for much of the scientism and reductionism of our time. One of the tendencies it supports is the ludicrous overuse of evolutionary biology to explain everything about human life, including everything about the human mind …. This is a somewhat ridiculous situation …. [I]t is just as irrational to be influenced in one’s beliefs by the hope that God does not exist as by the hope that God does exist.” 1 Reference: Nagel, Thomas, The Last Word, pp. 130-131, Oxford University Press, 1997. Dr Nagel (1937- ) is Professor of Philosophy and Law at New York University.
@allgoodoutdoorsllc2020
@allgoodoutdoorsllc2020 4 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your politeness, your the kindest and most respectful atheist conversation I've ever watched. Thanks for the food for thought.
@demomanchaos
@demomanchaos 8 жыл бұрын
43Alley did an excellent video covering the same topic called " The Evolution of Jesus in the Bible" which covers how the stories of Jesus grew more and more mythological as time passed.
@Cthulhu013
@Cthulhu013 8 жыл бұрын
I still can't believe you don't have more than a hundred thousands subscribers. Lots of people are missing out.
@insanisstultitia3119
@insanisstultitia3119 4 жыл бұрын
Know this that all the Greats in human history where under appreciated in their own time.
@hjgguffhuDr
@hjgguffhuDr 4 жыл бұрын
JESUS666 as LUCIFER666 satan man of sin son of perdition=RESSURECTED in las vegas. The blasphemy of JESUS Christ
@Dark_Force_Of_Wishes
@Dark_Force_Of_Wishes 3 жыл бұрын
He Deserves ZERO Subscribers For He Is A FOOL
@morgrulz
@morgrulz 3 жыл бұрын
well he has 144k subscribers now :)
@the_polish_prince8966
@the_polish_prince8966 3 жыл бұрын
@@Dark_Force_Of_Wishes Whosoever says to another “thou fool” is in danger of hellfire. (Matthew 5:22)
@djhalling
@djhalling 8 жыл бұрын
At least some of the people who knew Jesus best thought he was a lunatic, according to the Bible. "And when his friends heard of it, they went out to lay hold on him: for they said, He is beside himself" - Mark 3:21.
@andrewfisherman3811
@andrewfisherman3811 Жыл бұрын
My brother-in-law gave me a copy of McDowell's book about 15 years ago. I dutifully read the introduction, gave him it back and told him what I thought about it. He hasn't spoken to me from that day to this.
@jdnlaw1974
@jdnlaw1974 4 жыл бұрын
I’ve really enjoyed the nicer, kinder, more patient Matt these past several years now. Great presentation.
@joehinojosa8314
@joehinojosa8314 4 жыл бұрын
You're Right. Matt seems mellow fellow,LAYYYed Back.
@roderictaylor
@roderictaylor 3 жыл бұрын
Leaving aside the historical questions, the main problem I see with the Liar Lunatic or Lord argument is if one is going to be intellectually honest, one cannot limit it to Jesus or to any other historical figure. If one is going to be intellectually honest, one must offer it as a general principle. In this case the principle seems to be, if you encounter someone who seems to be honest and who doesn’t seem to be crazy, if that person tells you they are God, you must believe them, because it is so far-fetched an honest sane person would say they are God unless they actually were God. Put this way, I doubt most Christians would want to adhere to this principle. I doubt most Christians would believe you should accept someone as God in the flesh merely because they say they are, and they appear to be an honest sane person. Normally, we would be less likely to accept a claim from an individual that is outlandish. But a feature of this argument is it proposes we should accept the claim the individual is God because it is outlandish, because it is so unlikely an honest sane person would say something so extreme, unless the statement were true. There is something obviously wrong here. Just to say, this is not theoretical. I fell for the Lord or Lunatic argument myself. I met a spiritual teacher who seemed to me to be honest, who seemed to me to have great insight, who I learned a great deal from at first, and who exuded confidence. I trusted him, and when he implicitly claimed to be a perfectly enlightened being that comes along less than once in a generation, who was bringing a spiritual revolution to the world, I believed him. I gave him a decade of my life, before I realized my mistake. Was this fellow a liar? I don’t believe so. I believe he was sincere. Was he a lunatic? Here I think C.S. Lewis is using a loaded word. If we imagine a “lunatic” as being an individual who would fit in an asylum, babbling wide eyed about being Napoleon or whatever, no, he definitely wasn’t that. I believe he appeared to be as sane as Jesus is described. He functioned in day to day life as a normal person. He said some good things, and I learned things from him. Friends I took to see him didn’t see anything wrong. He was a deeply damaged needy narcissistic individual with an outlandish self-image and a crippling need to support it, but that wasn’t something you’d necessarily know without becoming closely personally involved with him over a significant period of time. I have no idea if Jesus said the things the bible says he said, and I have no idea if he claimed to be God incarnate. But if he did, if he told people that to love God was to love him, well that sounds like a narcissist to me. If you’re interested in my former teacher, there’s a documentary on him called “How I Created a Cult,” available via either Amazon Prime or Apple Tv. It requires an additional trial subscription to BBC Select.
@scotte4765
@scotte4765 2 жыл бұрын
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, in equal proportion. Honest and sane people may seem uncommon at times, but they are still common enough to not qualify as extraordinary evidence sufficient for a God claim. It sounds like the spiritual teacher you knew got around this by never actually stating his God claim simply and explicitly such that you would immediately recognize the improbability of it. Instead, you both agreed (perhaps unconsciously) to be the inspiring mentor and eager protege that the other one wanted to find, without thinking too critically about it until much later (at least in your case). This seeing only what you want to see is one of religion's defining traits. And I'm not being disparaging here. I was an evangelical Christian for over ten years and went through much the same thing, in a broadly similar way.
@guthrie_the_wizard
@guthrie_the_wizard 4 жыл бұрын
Love that Bart Ehrman books are in the background too. Ehrman shows quite convincingly that there are numerous significant conflicts in the Bible and this lends itself completely to the “fourth L.” Can’t believe that some (many even many) people take the three options as some form of fully sound logic....
@billkeon880
@billkeon880 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome breakdown. All these in the series are great. Should do a shorter version of you and Tracy discussing martyrs, I think episode 623 or thereabouts. I rewatch that one a couple times a year.
@kirtleyburggraf8786
@kirtleyburggraf8786 6 жыл бұрын
One of your best, Matt. You're getting so good, mate.
@jollytemplar3670
@jollytemplar3670 4 жыл бұрын
There’s also a 5th L: lemon. Jesus was clearly a lemon. \[🍋]/
@kobayashiMaroo
@kobayashiMaroo 3 жыл бұрын
Lemon or Lennon?
@jollytemplar3670
@jollytemplar3670 3 жыл бұрын
@@kobayashiMaroo Why not both
@kobayashiMaroo
@kobayashiMaroo 3 жыл бұрын
@@jollytemplar3670 I'm just a delicious guy . . . and bigger than Jesus ;)
@the_polish_prince8966
@the_polish_prince8966 3 жыл бұрын
Every Villain Is Lemons
@pauldhoff
@pauldhoff 8 жыл бұрын
Nothing like stacking the deck with just the answers you want. Paul
@Riplee86
@Riplee86 8 жыл бұрын
+pauldhoff Yes, religion does tend to do that a lot. Disregards all evidence that disagrees with their holy scriptures and focuses only on the bits that vaguely agree with them.
@robotaholic
@robotaholic 8 жыл бұрын
THis deserves 5 stars. Such a great video. Thanks, Matt.
@hjgguffhuDr
@hjgguffhuDr 4 жыл бұрын
JESUS666 as LUCIFER666 satan man of sin son of perdition=RESSURECTED in las vegas. The blasphemy of JESUS Christ Jesus has keys to death & hades hes satan king of hell
@Privatex112
@Privatex112 8 жыл бұрын
great video Matt! so concise and well worded- I really enjoyed it and was glued to my phone the whole time-
@yinYangMountain
@yinYangMountain 8 жыл бұрын
Matt, 1. Liar, Lunatic or Lord? [If based upon the Greek Scriptures.] • Yes, liar. Because some of the things are factually inaccurate. So in toto, at least lies by omission and/or purposeful deception. • Yes lunatic. Because some of the things attributed are immoral, if not entirely insane! • Not Lord. Because his character (simply ask your local Rabbi) is in conflict with the Tora. 2. Liar, Lunatic or Lord? [If based upon not knowing what actually happened, who wrote or witnessed what, or if he was actually real.] • Does not matter until we know. Any amount of speculation proves noting. It would not even make it to a trial by jury. yinYangMountain
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
+yinYangMountain show a lie. lunatic? u deny him and u claim he is the one who is a lunatic? how can u know what is moral if u deny moral giver?
@yinYangMountain
@yinYangMountain 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA Objective Morality & The Moral Argument Against God THEIST MORALITY God is considered, by His very nature, good. [I.e., 1. God’s nature is the grounding for morals and duties. 2. God also exists in a timeless state.] COUNTER ARGUMENT It is logically impossible that this type of God [as defined above] can be the grounding or source for objective morality: 1. Now because God is in a timeless state, his nature has always been fixed this way; so, 2. God could have never existed in a state where this was not the case; and, 3. God could never change his nature going forward-due to the nature of timelessness. • So, it is by pure happenstance that God ended up with this nature-as there are no factors that could have contributed to this state. In short, it is due strictly to the reality that He finds himself in; and that is the definition of random. Now whether you believe other realities are real, possible, or hypothetical, we can use them to understand why this morality cannot be objective. If this real or hypothetical other reality has a God in the same circumstance, there is no non-random reason that this God would have the same type of moral nature. Therefore we can conclude that even with this grounding argument, that God’s nature is subject to the happenstance reality that he finds himself in. This then leads us to the final conclusion: that this God’s grounded morality is subjective and impossible to be objective. - arbitrary: based on random choice or personal whim, rather than any reason or system. - random: made, done, happening, or chosen without method or conscious decision. - happenstance: a circumstance especially that is due to chance. - subjective: based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions. - - - - - Ref. A.F. Ytinamuh’s KZfaq channel for further explanation regarding the concepts of time and change.
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
yinYangMountain God is not under morality and u cant put him in the same level as humans, he can redo everything he did and does. morality is what God says so not what u think is right or wrong, he determined for example u can kill animals not humans.
@yinYangMountain
@yinYangMountain 8 жыл бұрын
“God is not under morality and u cant put him in the same level as humans, he can redo everything he did and does. morality is what God says so not what u think is right or wrong, he determined for example u can kill animals not humans.” - So basically an otherwise evil god can be self-defined as moral because what it says is moral is moral? The God of Eth: BACKGROUND INTRODUCTION Most people who believe in God take their belief to be pretty reasonable. “Perhaps God’s existence can’t be conclusively proved”, they’ll say, “but it’s a fairly sensible thing to believe-far more sensible than, say, belief in fairies or Santa Claus.” But are they right? Christians, Muslims, and Jews believe that God is both all-powerful and all-good. Indeed, God is often characterized as an infinitely loving father. Yet most of the popular arguments for the existence of God allow us to deduce little if anything about his moral character. Take the argument from design, for example. Even if we can show that the universe does show signs of design, what’s the evidence that this creator is all-good? There is also a well-known argument that, even if the universe was created by an all-powerful being, that being is not all-good. The argument is called the Problem of Evil, and runs roughly as follows: If God is both all-powerful and all-good, why is there so much suffering in the world? Why does God inflict earthquakes, floods, famines and the Black Death upon us? Why was he busy inflicting acute suffering on the animal kingdom for millions of years before we even made an appearance (including the literally unimaginable suffering caused by the several mass extinctions that have repeatedly wiped the majority of species from the face of the earth)? Why does he give children cancer? Why does he make life so grindingly miserable for so many? Why does he arrange for millions of us to end our lives horrendously scarred-in many cases both physically and psychologically crippled-by the world he created for us? This hardly sounds like the behavior of a supremely compassionate and all-loving father-figure, does it? Surely there’s overwhelming evidence that the universe is not under the control of a limitlessly powerful and benevolent character? Many find this argument compelling. But of course there are plenty who believe the problem of evil can be dealt with. How? Religious thinkers have, over the centuries, developed a number of ingenious solutions. Here are four examples: 1. The free will solution: God gave us free will. We are not helpless automata, but free agents capable of make our own choices and acting on them. As a result of God having given us free will, we sometimes choose to do wrong. We start, wars, steal, and so on. So some suffering results from our possessing free will. However, it is still better that we have free will. Free will is a very great good that more than compensates for the suffering it can bring. 2. The “character-building” solution: We know that a bad experience can sometimes make us stronger. We can learn, be enriched, through suffering. For example, people who have suffered a terrible disease sometimes say they gained greatly from it. Similarly, by causing us pain and suffering, God allows us to grow and develop both morally and spiritually. It is only through our experiencing this suffering that we can ultimately become the noble souls God wants us to be. 3. Some goods require evils: Theists often point out that God inevitably had to include quite a bit of suffering in his creation in order that certain important goods could exist. Take, for example, charity and sympathy. Charity is a great virtue. Yet you can only be charitable if there exist others who are needy. Similarly, you can only sympathize with someone whom you perceive to be suffering. Charity and sympathy are so-called “second order” goods that require “first order” evils like neediness and suffering (or at least the appearance of such evils) to exist. It’s argued that these second order goods outweigh the first order evils, which is why God allows the evils to occur. 4. Play the mystery card: Some theists point out that God works in mysterious ways. It’s arrogant of us to suppose that we can understand the mind of an infinitely powerful and wise being. The evil God inflicts upon us is, actually, all for the best. It’s just that we, being mere humans, can’t see how. Many believe these and other similar moves largely take the sting out of the problem of evil. Some think they deal with the problem altogether. I find them utterly inadequate. The following dialogue is my attempt to convey why. THOUGHT EXPERIMENT - DEBATE Welcome to Eth, a modestly-proportioned planet on the far side of our Galaxy. Here, beneath the great marble spires of Eth’s finest university, the debate of the age is taking place. Arrayed on either side of the University’s Great Chamber are Eth’s finest scholars and thinkers. They are here to decide the most controversial and emotive issue dividing the inhabitants of Eth does Evil God exist? To the right of the Great Chamber are arrayed the believers. To the left sit the Atheists. The public galleries are near to bursting with those waiting to hear the proceedings. At the end of the debate, the audience will vote. THEIST (the bird-like Professor of Origin) and ATHEIST (the portly Arch-logos-Inquisitor) lead the debate. ATHEIST: Here, on Eth, many of us believe in Evil God, do we not? THEIST: Certainly. ATHEIST: So what is Evil God like? THEIST: Well, Evil God is all-powerful, of course. Evil God can do anything. He created the entire universe, including every last one of us. Evil God’s awesome power knows no bounds! A whisper of approval ripples across the believers on the right side of the Great Chamber. ATHEIST: Let’s agree about that, then. Evil God, if he exists, is omnipotent. But here on Eth, those who believe in Evil God also attribute another property to him, don’t they? THEIST: Yes. As you know, we also believe that Evil God is all-evil. ATHEIST: Can you explain what you mean by that? THEIST: Not only does Evil God’s power know no bounds, neither does he depravity. His cruelty is infinite. His malice without end. THEIST casts a cool look across the right side of the chamber. ATHEIST: I see. All powerful. And, all-evil. Now Professor THEIST, do you think that you could briefly explain why you think it’s reasonable to believe in such a being? What grounds can you provide to justify belief in this evil God? THE UNIVERSE MUST HAVE COME FROM SOMEWHERE THEIST: Well, I don’t say I can conclusively prove beyond doubt that Evil God exists. But it seems to me that there are at least two rather good reasons for believing in Evil God. First, it seems obvious to me, as it does to many, that the universe must have come from somewhere. Don’t you agree? ATHEIST: Of course. The scientists assembled here will tell you that there is a perfectly good scientific explanation for the existence of the universe-the Big Expansion. About 13.8 billion years ago an unimaginably violent expansion occurred in which all matter and energy came into existence, and in which space and even time itself began. THEIST: We’re all familiar with the Big Expansion theory, Professor ATHEIST. But of course, the Big Expansion really only postpones the mystery of why there is anything at all, doesn’t it? For now we need to explain why there was a Big Expansion. Why did the Big Expansion happen? Science can’t explain that, can it? There’s a real mystery here, isn’t there? ATHEIST: Hmm. Perhaps. THEIST: The only satisfactory explanation we have for why the universe came into existence in the first place is that Evil God created it. So there’s my first reason to believe in Evil God. ATHEIST frowns: He’s clearly not buying THEIST’s argument. But he encourages THEIST to continue. EVIDENCE OF DESIGN ATHEIST: And your second reason? THEIST: Take a look around you, at the wonders of the universe; life; conscious beings like ourselves. Do you suppose that all this appeared just by chance? Surely not. The universe shows clear signs of design. And where there’s design, there’s a designer! ATHEIST: But science can explain life. What about the theory of natural selection? That explains how over millions of years life-forms evolved and developed. It explains how complex life-forms can gradually evolve from even the simplest of bacteria. Science can perfectly well explain life without introducing your supernatural designer. THEIST: Natural selection can’t explain everything. For example, it can’t explain why the universe was set up to allow natural selection to take place in the first place, can it? ATHEIST: Hmm. Well, no, it can’t explain that. THEIST: Did you know that, if the laws governing the universe had been only very slightly different, the universe would not have survived more than a second or two? Either that or it would have quickly dissipated into a thin sterile soup incapable of producing life. For life to emerge and evolve, you need very specific conditions. The universe must be set up in an extremely precise fashion. And of course we know that it was set up in just this way, don’t we! ATHEIST: I guess so. THEIST: Now that it should just happen to be set up in just this way by chance is too much to swallow. That would be a fluke of cosmic proportions. It’s much more sensible, surely, to suppose that someone deliberately designed the universe this way, so as to produce life, and ultimately ourselves. That someone is what we call Evil God! Another warm ripple of approval arose from the right side of the Great Chamber. The assembled academics felt that, so far at least, THEIST was getting the better of the argument. But ATHEIST was perplexed. ATHEIST: Very well, let’s suppose the universe does show clear signs of having been designed by an intelligent being. THEIST: Ah. A convert! ATHEIST: Not at all. I’m supposing this only for the sake of argument. You still haven’t given me much reason to suppose that this designer is all-evil, have you? THEIST: But Evil God is, by definition, all-evil. ATHEIST: But why define Evil God that way? Why not suppose, instead, that Evil God is neither good nor evil? Or why not suppose he is all-good? THEIST thinks ATHEIST has gone too far. THEIST: What a bizarre suggestion. It’s obvious our creator is very clearly evil! Take a look around you! Witness the horrendous suffering he inflicts upon us: the floods; the earthquakes; cancer. The vile, rotting stench of Evil God’s creation is overwhelming! THE PROBLEM OF GOOD ATHEIST: Yes, our creator may do some evil. But it’s not clear he’s all-evil, is it? It’s certainly not obvious that his wickedness is infinite, that his malice and cruelty know no bounds. You’re deliberately ignoring a famous argument against the existence of Evil God-The Problem of Good. THEIST: I’m familiar with The Problem of Good-we theologians of Eth have been debating it for centuries. But it’s not fatal to the belief in Evil God. ATHEIST: Really? Let’s see. The Problem of Good, as you know, is essentially very simple. If the universe was designed by an all-powerful, all-evil God, then why is there so much good in the world? THEIST: That’s the supposed problem, yes. ATHEIST: Why, for example, does Evil God allow at least some people to live out happy, contented and fulfilled lives? Why doesn’t he torture them instead? If Evil God is all-powerful, he certainly could torture them, couldn’t he? THEIST: Well, yes, he could. ATHEIST: In fact, he could make their lives utterly miserable. And we know that, as he is also supremely evil, he must want them suffering. Yet he gives some people every care and attention. Why? It makes no sense, does it? THEIST: Perhaps not at first sight, no. ATHEIST: Here’s another example. Why does Evil God allow us to do good deeds, to help our fellow Ethians? He even allows us to lay down our lives for each other. These selfless actions improve the quality of our lives to no end. So why does Evil God allow them? Why doesn’t he force us to be nasty and do evil, just like him? THEIST: I grant you that Evil God’s allowing so much noble and selfless behavior might seem like very good evidence that he is not all-evil. But appearances are deceptive. ATHEIST: Also, if Evil God is absolutely evil, why did he put so much beauty in the world for us to enjoy? Why did he create such sublime sunsets? THEIST: Good question. ATHEIST: And why does Evil God give us children, which bring us immeasurable happiness? You see? There are countless ways in which our lives are enriched by Evil God’s creation. THEIST: But there’s also evil! ATHEIST: True, there’s evil in the world. But there’s an awful lot of good. Far too much good, in fact, for anyone reasonably to conclude that the universe was created by an all-evil God. Belief in a supremely wicked creator is palpably absurd. There is much quiet nodding to the left of the Great Chamber. ATHEIST’s argument has struck a chord with the unbelievers. But THEIST thinks ATHEIST’s argument is far from conclusive. THEIST: Look, I admit that the amount of good in the world might seem to undermine belief in an all-powerful, all-evil God. But actually, we believers can explain why a supremely evil God would allow all these good things to happen. ATHEIST: By all means, try. THE FREE-WILL SOLUTION THEIST: Surely you are familiar with the free-will defense? ATHEIST: Perhaps you would care to explain it. THEIST: Very well: Evil God’s malevolence is without end. True, he let’s us do good. He allows us to act selflessly for the betterment of others, for example. But there’s a reason for that. ATHEIST: What reason? THEIST: Evil God gave us free will. ATHEIST: Free will? THEIST: Yes. Evil God could have made us mere automata that always did the wrong thing. But he didn’t do that. He gave us the freedom to choose how we act. ATHEIST: Why? THEIST: By giving us free-will, Evil God actually increased the amount of suffering there is in the world. He made the world far more terrible than it would otherwise have been! ATHEIST: How? THEIST: Think about it. Yes, Evil God could have tortured us for all eternity with a red hot poker. But he would have got very bored very quickly. How much more fun for him to mess with our minds-to induce more complex, psychological forms of suffering. ATHEIST: Psychological suffering? THEIST: Yes. Take temptation. By giving us free-will, Evil God can be sure we will agonize endlessly about what we should do. For free-will brings with it the exquisite torture of temptation. And then, when we succumb to temptation, we feel guilty. Knowing that, being free, we could have done otherwise, we feel awful about what we have done. We end up torturing ourselves. The exquisitely evil irony of it all! ATHEIST: Hmm. THEIST: By giving us free-will Evil God allowed for far deeper and more complex forms of suffering than would otherwise be possible. Special, psychological forms of suffering. ATHEIST: But what about the good people sometimes do? THEIST: It’s true that people do sometimes choose to act selflessly and nobly, and that this can produce good. But this good is far outweighed by the additional suffering free-will brings. Just take a look at the world, for goodness sake! It’s a world full of people who not only behave despicably, but also agonize endlessly about what they have done! THE PROBLEM OF NATURAL GOODS ATHEIST: But this is ridiculous! THEIST: Why? ATHEIST: Well, for a start, this only explains the good that we bring about by acting freely. It doesn’t explain the existence of naturally occurring goods. THEIST: Such as? ATHEIST: Well, what about the glories of nature: sublime sunsets, stunning landscapes, the splendor of the heavens? We’re not responsible for these things, are we? THEIST: No. Evil God is. ATHEIST: But why would an all-evil God create something that gives us pleasure? Also, why does he give us beautiful children to love? And why does he choose to give some people extraordinary good fortune-health, wealth, and happiness in abundance? Surely the existence of these things provides us with overwhelming evidence that, even if the universe has a creator, he’s not all bad? THE CHARACTER-DESTROYING SOLUTION THEIST: You’re mistaken, ATHEIST. Such things are exactly what we should expect if Evil God is supremely evil. ATHEIST: But why? THEIST: Some natural beauty is certainly to be expected. If everything was uniformly ugly, we wouldn’t be tormented by the ugliness half as much as if it were laced with some beauty. To truly appreciate the ghastliness of the environment most of us inhabit-a urine stained, concrete and asphalt wasteland peppered with advertising hoardings, drug addicts and dog dirt-we need to be reminded every now and then that things could have been different. Evil God put some natural beauty into the world to make our appreciation of the ugliness and dreariness of day-to-day life all the more acute. ATHEIST: Hmm. But why would a supremely wicked evil God give us beautiful children to love? THEIST: Because he knows we’ll spend our entire lives worrying about them. Only a parent can know the depth of torture a child brings. ATHEIST: Why does he give us healthy young bodies? THEIST: Well, after 20 or 25 years they slowly and inevitably slide into decay, disease and decrepitude until we end up hopelessly ugly, incontinent and smelling of urine. Then we die, having lived out a short and ultimately meaningless existence. You see, by giving us something, and then snatching it away, our evil creator can make us suffer even more than if we had never had it. ATHEIST: But then why does Evil God allow some people to live out such contented lives? THEIST: Of course an evil God is going to bestow upon a few people lavish lifestyles, good health, and immense success. Their happiness is designed to make the suffering of the rest of us even more acute! We’ll be wracked by feelings of envy, jealousy, and failure! Who can be content while they have so much more? ATHEIST: Oh, honestly! THEIST: Don’t you see? The world clearly was designed to produce life, to produce conscious beings like ourselves. Why? So that it’s designer can torture us. The world is designed to physically and psychologically crush us, so that we are ultimately overwhelmed by life’s futility and bow out in despair. ATHEIST is becoming frustrated. Every time he comes up with another piece of evidence that the universe wasn’t designed by a supremely evil deity, THEIST turns out to have yet another ingenious explanation up his sleeve. And yet, thinks ATHEIST, the evidence against the existence of an utterly evil God is overwhelming. SOME GOODS REQUIRE EVILS ATHEIST: This is ridiculous. You have an answer for everything! THEIST: Yes, I do have an answer to all your arguments. So far, you’ve given me not the slightest reason to suppose that the world was not created by a supremely evil being. But if you’re unhappy with my answers, let me try a rather different approach. There are some evils that require goods in order to exist, aren’t there? ATHEIST: Such as? THEIST: Take the evil of jealousy. Jealousy requires there be something to be being jealous of. Evil God gave good things to some people so that others would feel jealous. Or take lying. Lying requires that people often tell the truth-otherwise there would be no point in lying because no one would believe you. The evil of dishonesty requires that there be a certain amount of honesty. ATHEIST: And you think these evils outweigh the goods they depend on? THEIST: Exactly. Evil God allows some good things into his creation. It’s the price he has to pay for these greater evils. PLAY THE MYSTERY CARD ATHEIST: These tricky replies of yours are patently absurd. You can’t seriously maintain that the world you see around you-a world full of natural beauty and laughing children-is really the handiwork of an infinitely evil God? THEIST: I do maintain that, yes. True, I may not be able to account for every last drop of good in the world. But remember that we are dealing here with the mind of Evil God. Who are you to suppose you can understand the mind of an infinitely intelligent and knowledgeable being? Isn’t it arrogant of you to suppose that you can figure out Evil God’s master plan? ATHEIST: I’m arrogant? There’s some subtle nodding from the believers on the right. THEIST: Yes. Arrogant. Evil God works in mysterious ways. Ultimately, everything really is all for the worst. It’s just that, being mere humans, we can’t always figure out how. ATHEIST: Oh, really. This is… THEIST: I think it’s arrogant of you to suppose otherwise-to suppose that you must be able to figure it all out. THE VERDICT At the end of the debate, the audience vote. After the deliberation, a spokesperson steps forward with their verdict. THE VERDICT: It seems to us that THEIST has made a powerful case for supposing the world was created by Evil God. In addition, THEIST has provided a compelling defense of belief in this evil being. He has successfully explained why even an evil God would allow a great deal of good. And so the motion is carried-we are persuaded that Evil God exists. AFTER THOUGHTS Are you persuaded by THEIST’s defense of belief in a supremely evil God? Of course not. His explanations are clearly feeble. Surely, despite THEIST’s convoluted maneuverings, belief in a supremely evil God remains palpably absurd. But of course, THEIST’s defense merely flips round the standard explanations that theists offer in defense of belief in a good God. His attempts to explain what good there is in the world mirror the theist’s attempts to explain the evil. If THEIST’s explanations are deeply inadequate, why aren’t the theist’s explanations? That’s the question the theist needs to answer. Of course, theists consider belief in an all-evil God to be downright silly. And rightly so: there’s clearly far too much good in the world. But then here is my challenge to theists. If they consider belief in an evil God downright ridiculous, why on Earth do they suppose that the good God hypothesis is, at the very least, not unreasonable? The onus is surely on them to come up with much better arguments for specifically an all good God. This is a challenge to agnostics too. If they think agnosticism about an evil God is ridiculous (and I am betting they do), why on Earth do they suppose agnosticism is the rational position to take with respect to the good God hypothesis? Surely, even if the universe does have a designer/creator, isn’t it patently obvious that this being is neither all-evil, nor all-good? -Stephen Law (Philosopher / Philosophy Professor)
@Yal_Rathol
@Yal_Rathol 8 жыл бұрын
so c s. Lewis admitted that if jesus were human, then the stuff he said would be so absurd as to lock him away for insanity? but it's ok because he's all powerful? that kind of logic scares me. "yeah, what he says is utterly insane, but because he could atomize me with a look, everything he says is good and right!"
@RonSafreed
@RonSafreed 8 жыл бұрын
What about that dude satan & his cohorts? You atheist mainly do everything to point out "God is really bad" ? This satan who is rebelling against God is definately evil, so in an indirect way you atheist say "both God & satan are both against us humans? We Christians discern the difference between the goodness of God & the evil & darkness of satan!!!!! Quit changing God from good to "He is really evil & ignoring the evil of satan !!!!!!
@Yal_Rathol
@Yal_Rathol 8 жыл бұрын
RonSafreed no, i don't "mainly do everything to point out god is really bad". i mainly do everything so i don't die at less than a quarter of my natural lifespan. but besides that, you understand i don't think satan is real either? allow me to present this argument in a different context. there's a theory that mario of super mario bros. fame is actually evil. let's put your argument to the test using him. "We Marioans discern the difference between the goodness of Mario & the evil & darkness of Bowser!!!!! Quit changing Mario from good to "He is really evil & ignoring the evil of Bowser!!!!!!" now let me ask you this. why is that any more or less absurd than what you said? because it's your text exactly, just with the subjects altered. now, what my actual point was is this. if you can openly admit that you believe every word that someone says no matter how insane it is because they have power over you, then you are openly admitting to being in a highly abusive relationship. what do we do with people in highly abusive relationships? we take them out of it. C.S. Lewis admitted to being in an abusive relationship, and instead of taking him out of it, _you applaud his abuser._ i don't need to try and make your god look bad, you do it all by yourself.
@Yal_Rathol
@Yal_Rathol 8 жыл бұрын
RonSafreed right, it calls humans gods. your point? and if you wanna talk beauty, how's this? every atom in your body is older than everything you've ever seen in the sky. you don't need a soul to be immortal, you're already immortal. your pieces will survive and be remade over and over until the universe breathes its last. your particles have been heated and cooled, reforged into new forms by the nuclear hellfire of stars. and none of that requires me to believe in a magic elf in the sky. now, let's assume you're correct, that the ancient roman records prove jesus existed (without looking into the research and general agreement of the historical communities, i can't prove you right or wrong, but we'll assume.) how does that prove god existed? all it proves is "a person existed, he founded a religion". L. Ron Hubbard also existed, does that mean scientology is correct? and as for hope, i don't need a security blanket to give me hope because i'm not a child. i don't need someone to praise my every action to make me feel good about myself, because i'm not a child.
@RonSafreed
@RonSafreed 8 жыл бұрын
Yal an event has been happening in the muslim world going back to the seventies & it is that there are those who have been converting to Christianity because of Jesus Christ coming to them in dreams & visions! Several years ago a friend of mine invited me to hear such a former muslim arab who was then a Christian evangelist & testified of dreams of JC coming to him!
@Yal_Rathol
@Yal_Rathol 8 жыл бұрын
RonSafreed and yet, christianity is shrinking by the month. atheism and islam are the fastest growing groups on earth, and christianity is dying out, slowly. by 2050, i'd say there'll probably be 60% of the christians currently alive left, simply due to many converting away or dying of old age (baby boomers are on the cusp of death as we speak, and they're the largest group while also being heavily christian). and besides that, i can say "i saw a dream of the buddha, who came to me and taught me the ways of nirvana! buddhism is the only true path, glory be to the buddha, first of priests and highest of men!" does that make it true?
@aesthetewithoutacause3981
@aesthetewithoutacause3981 5 жыл бұрын
This was useful, and it seems to be the main argument Christians I know use for Jesus' divinity. I've always found it absurd but didn't know quite how to voice it, so this helped.
@munstrumridcully
@munstrumridcully 8 жыл бұрын
Christians often grant the bible a special privlege over any other historical claims of divinity and miracles. The same kind of writings that they use to support their own theology are usually rejected out of hand when it comes to other theologies, live or dead. IMO, its special pleading.
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
+munstrumridcully because Bible is divine, it has the answers for origin, meaning, morality, and destiny.
@munstrumridcully
@munstrumridcully 8 жыл бұрын
THIS IS BRAVA in your opinion. Every religion says this about their holy books and/or teachings. Your comment kinda makes my point, you give special weight to Biblical claims than say, claims of the Qur'an, which also claims to be of divine origin, and claims to have all the answers for origin, meaning, morality and destiny.
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
munstrumridcully what holy book? Bible is the only one that talks about origin, meaning, morality, and destiny, the others are obvious traceable traditions gur'an is bible old testament with some modification and intention to create new religion
@Bill_Garthright
@Bill_Garthright 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA "it has the answers for origin, meaning, morality, and destiny." But are they the RIGHT answers? A three-year old can give you answers about lots of things, if you don't care whether or not those answers are true. (Note that, when it comes to "origin" - to just pick out one of those - the Bible is demonstrably untrue.) Do you care if your beliefs are true or not? If so, how do you determine that? What's your mechanism for separating delusion and wishful-thinking from reality? Or don't you care about the truth of your beliefs?
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
Bill Garthright so far no one can refute Bible, but science, nature, human experience.. validate it
@WolfestoneManor
@WolfestoneManor 8 жыл бұрын
Steve Shives also did a great An Atheist Reads on that doorstop of a book.
@Katalyzt
@Katalyzt 8 жыл бұрын
Legend sounds reasonable... Although, if the [money changer] account were true; then a man constructing a weapon and violently using it against humans and animals(John 2:13-16) in an large area(The Court of the Gentiles) which is no smaller than 2 full sized professional football fields does sound like a lunatic to me. ;O) Katalyzt
@agnosticatheist7529
@agnosticatheist7529 8 жыл бұрын
Right, been saying this for years now. The trilemma of "liar, lunatic or lord" is a "false trilemma". Many Christians always forget the 'Legend' option.
@Domzdream
@Domzdream 8 жыл бұрын
I fuckin' love your vids. Love em!
@JWFas
@JWFas 8 жыл бұрын
Jesus is Lorde. Ya ya ya...
@manmadegod100
@manmadegod100 8 жыл бұрын
Liar, lunatic, lord, legend, lucifer. So many options.
@Corn_Pone_Flicks
@Corn_Pone_Flicks 8 жыл бұрын
+manmadegod100 I say LARP. The whole thing was a transcription of a live roleplaying game that just got way out of hand.
@Ironysandwich
@Ironysandwich 8 жыл бұрын
+manmadegod100 My personal pick is Life of Brian. Yeah, minus the comedy, I think that's pretty much what happened. The area at that time had more messiahs than a discount kennel has fleas, and some random shmuck, smucks, or amalgomated story about shmucks ended up sticking as "the messiah" for pretty much no reason at all.
@draevonmay7704
@draevonmay7704 8 жыл бұрын
+Ironysandwich Thanks a lot. Now Ill have LoB stuck in my head all day. Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah! Cast off the shoe! Follow the gourd! Al-ways look on the briiiight side of life life *catchy whistling*
@hairbear31d
@hairbear31d 8 жыл бұрын
+manmadegod100 Lucifer the TV show is really good.
@draevonmay7704
@draevonmay7704 8 жыл бұрын
+1misanthropist So is the second rule XD
@UnlimitedLives1960
@UnlimitedLives1960 8 жыл бұрын
damn, being able to do these in such large takes without mucking up is pretty impressive
@ThePharphis
@ThePharphis 8 жыл бұрын
Well considering afaik resurrection is impossible, then even given this trilemma and presuming his existence then lord would have to be the least likely answer. At least the other two are plausible
@MarkParigger
@MarkParigger 8 жыл бұрын
While I do agree with your arguments and conclusions, Matt, there's one aspect of the full argument of C. S. Lewis that gets a bit overlooked, I think. You talked about how we can't exclude the possibility that Jesus was either a lunatic or a liar and I think that's certainly true, but Lewis does kinda concede that, too. His argument is more that you can't both call Jesus a liar/lunatic and a great moral teacher at the same time. And this is quite disingenuous really on a different level than giving the impression that there are only those three options presented. What Lewis does is prey on the general acceptance that the morality in the New Testament is indeed good and then goes on to attach his flawed conclusion to this. Still, let's concede that Jesus was indeed a great moral teacher as the argument is directed at those that do actually make that concession. It does not follow then that he can't be a liar, a con-man or simply deluded or that either of those invalidates the actual teachings. Lies are more effective sprinkled with truth. Delusions don't necessarily make you morally incompetent. You did touch this problem when you mentioned well-meaning-but-deluded religious leaders but I think it's worth pointing out this additional flaw in the argument. Yes, you can call him a liar/lunatic and a great moral teacher at the same time, although I probably wouldn't (although he certainly was influential, so that makes him sort of 'great').
@pvpast9243
@pvpast9243 8 жыл бұрын
Interesting talk Matt, but 147 views and 289 likes... What the?!?
@madeofwax92
@madeofwax92 8 жыл бұрын
it doesn't update in real time. I'm not sure how it actually works, but it happens all the time
@pvpast9243
@pvpast9243 8 жыл бұрын
Ty seemed weird
@sxrxrnrvigil
@sxrxrnrvigil 8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making these videos!
@Yorker1998
@Yorker1998 8 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! Very well spoken. Looks like I have to catch up on other Matt Dillahunty videos now.
@hiwayM9
@hiwayM9 8 жыл бұрын
Well... hole in the ground; deep subject. Unless you fill it up with narrow options. Thank you Matt- a fresh cup of coffee and some quiet time with one of your vids are a song to soothe the savage breast of this skeptic.
@burunduchokbobo6773
@burunduchokbobo6773 7 жыл бұрын
could be all three.
@KyleAButler
@KyleAButler 8 жыл бұрын
When I first heard lord, liar or lunatic I thought it was an argument against the idea of god. I thought the point was that liar or lunatic are both more likely than lord.
@surpriseraisin5892
@surpriseraisin5892 8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the well spoken piece on this topic
@NegotiableHemingway
@NegotiableHemingway 8 жыл бұрын
Outstanding work Matt.
@gaborap1043
@gaborap1043 8 жыл бұрын
That closing... that was a powerful way to drive the point home.
@capcrunch7838
@capcrunch7838 5 жыл бұрын
Extra biblical accounts of Jesus would be Tacitus who referred too Jesus execution by pilot and also too early Christian's in Rome. In ad 116.
@neillezemplas5594
@neillezemplas5594 8 жыл бұрын
Excellent as always sir
@Jamie-Russell-CME
@Jamie-Russell-CME 4 жыл бұрын
Oh Matt! "You're no Daisy. You're no Daisy at all!" "You were just too high strung!" He coulda' been a 'Lunger'! Duh, Now listen he'e. I am yuh Hyuckleberry!". -Tombstone. (Val Kilmer)
@Steveman27
@Steveman27 2 жыл бұрын
The Liar, Luniatic, or Lord thing goes on the idea that a lord can't lie or be a lunatic, but they could. A lord could be a liar.
@jmm1233
@jmm1233 8 жыл бұрын
Legends are everywhere Western Storytellers and writers call it the hero christ cycle , All cultures have their Legends
@qhsperson
@qhsperson 8 жыл бұрын
+jmm1233 Yeah, and we're not having ANY of 'em.
@jmm1233
@jmm1233 8 жыл бұрын
Disney does get a bit tiresome after awhile
@qhsperson
@qhsperson 8 жыл бұрын
+jmm1233 Things were never the same after Walt died.
@sweetsweatyfeet
@sweetsweatyfeet 8 жыл бұрын
The LLL argument squarely belongs in the category of "fallacy of the false alternative". This fallacy occurs when we fail to consider all the relevant possibilities.
@brianmchugh7679
@brianmchugh7679 8 жыл бұрын
The greatest evidence for no God is when you are under General Anaesthetic (been under twice). Death will just be like that forever... you just don't wake up again. Heck, that was also exactly like all history was for me before I became alive. Life is just a ride. :)
@drmodestoesq
@drmodestoesq 8 жыл бұрын
And the best part is that the alliterative concatenation is intact. Indeed, it has been improved.
@jonerickson2358
@jonerickson2358 2 жыл бұрын
NICE JOB, MATT! AS USUAL, YOU HIT THE NAIL ON THE HEAD!!!
@werelemur1138
@werelemur1138 8 жыл бұрын
I had the exact same boxed set growing up! (But I never quite forgave Lewis for what he did to Susan.)
@gregcampwriter
@gregcampwriter 5 жыл бұрын
Lewis was much better as a literary scholar, and his fiction can be very good--Till We Have Faces, for example. But he sounds like someone in love with the sound of his own voice when he talks about religion.
@GeoSam
@GeoSam 8 жыл бұрын
Hooray!!! Thanks Matt.
@bozhidarbalkas5547
@bozhidarbalkas5547 8 жыл бұрын
Don't pray to the three gods for me, honesty, world peace; equal justice, knowledge, education, health care, police protection for all; for the gods might become even meaner and angrier than they already are!
@ahouyearno
@ahouyearno 8 жыл бұрын
The best thing about "Legend" is that it goes so well with the childish alliterations that christian apologists are so fond of. The word "Legend" will stick in their head as an option along Liar, Lunatic or Lord. It's a simple, one word response that can't be unheard. Usually, answering a single apologist lie can take a long time but the (quat)trilemma can be answered with a magic bullet. This word contains everything: it's not a trilemma, the bible isn't considered a source by non-christians and Jesus might not even be a real person. Legend is the more simple and probable than Lord. No matter how religious you are, something will connect. All packed into a single word.
@lindal.7242
@lindal.7242 2 жыл бұрын
I would agree with the assessment of Jesus as a mercenary or perhaps a lunatic, if he wasn't also purported to perform miracles many of which were healings. This extraordinary aspect of him, is the main reason he was written about in the first place and why C.S. Lewis dismisses those other 2 charges.
@Ashamanic
@Ashamanic 7 жыл бұрын
The LLL argument assumes Christianity is true on so many levels. Not only does it unquestioningly assume that everything the Bible says is true was correctly remembered, translated, written, copied and interpreted, but the idea that anyone who says "I am God" must be evil requires the whole idea to be true. From an atheist standpoint, while morally questionable, it certainly doesn't put someone at the level of a demon from the deepest pits of hell.
@JrrrNikolaus
@JrrrNikolaus 5 жыл бұрын
Legend seems very apt, I find the possibility of him existing similar to King Arthur, even if he did exist he certainly was not what he eventually came to be known as.
@DavidMiller-dt8mx
@DavidMiller-dt8mx 8 жыл бұрын
Clearly a legend. All other possibilities require more evidence. (Any would be a good start.)
@FormerHumanX
@FormerHumanX 5 жыл бұрын
What would happen to CS Lewis if he were faced with two or three people making the same claim to be lord? Does he consider Person A to be dishonest, Person B seems a little unhinged, so by default Person C gets to be god? How absurd.
@jdsartre9520
@jdsartre9520 2 жыл бұрын
ah wow. This c.s. lewis quote was shared with the mormon faithful by leader Jeffry r. holland, who then added to it by saying he feels the exact same way about Joseph Smith. quite powerful to me at the time.
@billkeon880
@billkeon880 8 жыл бұрын
Even if you grant jesus existed, then the strong evidence in deconstructing the gospels from Bart Ehrman's published works (which is conceded by among many biblical scholars) was that he was a failed apocalyptic preacher who preached the end of the world was coming in the lifetime of the people in 33 CE. He was wrong. Many lay theists and fundies would argue that you should interpret the texts differently, but that's how the scholars analyze it, not just me. In that case he was a lunatic/deranged/charismatic cult leader just like modern day doomsday cult leaders or faith healers. There were David Koresh's, Benny Hinn's, Joseph Smith's around then too, but the people living then didn't have any literacy or science to help them be skeptical of these deluded preachers. It's just that the stories survived after him (just like Joseph Smith's story). And after that, it's all LEDGEND. CS Lewis gave short shrift to Liar and Lunatic options and jumped easily and quickly into lord - seems to me. And disregarded other options.
@thebaconized4733
@thebaconized4733 8 жыл бұрын
In summary, it is a false trilema. It assumes that everything in the bible is true, and ignores the possibility of legendary embellishment. That many aspects of Jesus's life appear to be embellished and exaggerated is accepted by the majority of NT scholars. So yes, Jesus was a normal human being with a charismatic personality, but aspects about his life were embellished to promote a fresh ideology, including the claim that he considered himself "God". It is widely accepted that Jesus believed himself to be the future king of the Jews. After his death, this was reinterpreted as a kingdom in heaven, and his followers continued to believe that he was alive in this supposed heavenly kingdom. Carrying the torch if you will. Last and foremost, stories about his resurrection are known to be embellished.
@blackmichael75
@blackmichael75 8 жыл бұрын
If you've got a new religion, that you want recruits for, that gives you a perfect incentive for lying, or at least for deceiving yourself, and thus others. It might not necessarily be malicious; you might be convinced in your own head that what you are saying is true. That's where the confirmation bias comes in.
@kimbanton4398
@kimbanton4398 2 жыл бұрын
There is a 4th *L* and it stands for *Legend*
@humbertojimmy
@humbertojimmy 8 жыл бұрын
Almost everything can be "supported" if one's willing to ONLY look at what agrees with the claim, and the longer and taller the tale the bigger the chances of that happening. If i just made up a story, any nonsense out of my mind for wich you had no clue about its veracity, i could then "prove" it to you if you allowed the contrary evidence to not enter the equation. And the more information i mixed into the story, the bigger chances i had that at least something matched reality. The location of the story could match a real place, something within my plot could actually match an event that really took place, etc. That wouldn't be any different from Spider-man's comics getting "New York" right, but, as vague as such "evidence" is, it would still make the equation tend to the positive side if no counter-evidence was allowed to enter the equation as well. And that's what christiany does. A book that big only by amazing odds wouldn't have something in it that matched reality. Places are real and some events actually seem to have been real as well. But that isn't any different from Spider-man's comics. The problem is that christians refuse to weight the bits that do not match (and, oh boy, are there plenty). They hold on to any vague little thing that remotely agrees with the Bible and discard all the nonsense that could (and should) be used as reasons NOT to believe it. So, the reason we are even here now, discussing wether or not Jesus was God, is simply because the counter evidence for the Bible has been discarded time and time again. We shouldn't let apologists talk beyond the very first argument for wich they have no answer, they should stay stuck with it until they showed real proof. Then we wouldn't be here, discussing Jesus's divinity, we would still be waiting for the answer they couldn't give us and enjoying a long deserved rest from their preaching. It's because we give them too many breaks that they can keep pushing their religion on us, making the world dumber along. They do it because we are too permissive as far the demand for proof goes.
@ktlam195512
@ktlam195512 8 жыл бұрын
Excellent lecture! Keep up the good work! :)
@thomasmarthinussen8978
@thomasmarthinussen8978 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not super stoked about Matt in the Atheist Experience. Don't get me wrong, he's a fine host but tend to get into arguments and fights with the callers waaaay to often. Sometimes it's the callers fault, sometimes....well, it's Matts fault. That's just the way it goes, I guess that's why It's delightful to watch/ listen to Matt doing these educational videos. Informative, easy going, absolutely great! I'm an agnostic, by the way and the topic of God is a most interesting and important one.
@MrKenRury
@MrKenRury 7 жыл бұрын
From a Jewish perspective answer "D" could be that he is the "shaliach", the one sent by G-d who comes in the name of G-d (name in Hebraic thinking referring to authority, character, and power), who says what G-d tells him to say, and does what G-d tells him to do. To fit in option "D," he doesn't have to be G-d and he isn't a raving lunatic. He is a tzaddik, righteous one of G-d. He is who a person must attach oneself to for elevation of state as we can't attain perfection without the tzaddik. This is a Jewish, rabbinic concept not a Greek gentile one.
@MrVooLe
@MrVooLe 6 жыл бұрын
When I was young I believed that Jesus existed as a person and lived the life as described to me by other people, minus the miracles. I was convinced that the man must have been a lunatic in order to go so far as to "sacrifice" himself to "god". Of course, a bit later I realized that it is not real at all, and that the whole thing is made up.
@adraste2043
@adraste2043 3 жыл бұрын
With all respect, you'r totaly missing the contexte,lewis argument IS againt people who think Jésus is a great teacher, its right at the begining of the argument...very dishonest
@Pifacedude
@Pifacedude 8 жыл бұрын
Loving your content Matt. By any chance do you have a link to the meme that your wife posted that caused the mini conflict between you and Dusty? I was surprised that you didn't present it when you went on the Drunken Peasants
@SansDeity
@SansDeity 8 жыл бұрын
+Pifacedude Seriously? That has nothing to do with this...and I pointed out that the meme wasn't relevant...and we discussed it...and I think Dusty has posted it. Done with that conversation.
@Pifacedude
@Pifacedude 8 жыл бұрын
I think I found it can I have confirmation that it is this one? twitter.com/TheDPWiki/status/686416800972693505
@Corn_Pone_Flicks
@Corn_Pone_Flicks 8 жыл бұрын
I've known plenty of people who lied and a number of people who believed really crazy shit. Never met a deity...why the hell would anyone think that was the most reasonable option?
@xjoseywales
@xjoseywales 8 жыл бұрын
I used to think this was one of the stronger arguments for Christianity until I started learning about the history of Mormonism. I recommend people check out "Naked Mormonism", or John Larsen's "Mormon Expression" podcasts as a good sources. Mormonism seems pretty silly to many Christians but imagine if Joseph Smith lived 2,000 years ago, instead of in mostly literate early 19th century North America. Mormon apologetics would be much easier if the church was left to ignore Joseph Smith's early life (like Jesus) and if they could have redacted the Book of Mormon for 300 years like Christianity did with the New Testament. As it is we know too much about Joseph Smith and Early Mormon history to take it seriously. I suspect the same would be true if Jesus was born in 1805 as well.
@Dryltd
@Dryltd 8 жыл бұрын
I was raised Jewish and the Rabbi always wondered why they ignored prophet as an option. The conclusion was that it didn't start with the letter L.
@dukejaywalker5858
@dukejaywalker5858 8 жыл бұрын
+66Snuffleupagus Muslims do think he was a prophet, don't they?
@Dryltd
@Dryltd 8 жыл бұрын
From what I have read yes. But I was just picking at this being a Christian focused argument.
@nuoiptertermer4484
@nuoiptertermer4484 8 жыл бұрын
There is another option. That he did say that but was misunderstood. He could have been being metaphorical when he said he was the son of God. By son of God he could have meant one with the universe.
@MrSomnus2001
@MrSomnus2001 8 жыл бұрын
I just think the Trilemma is a ridiculous formulation, and the reason has nothing to do with what options are excluded. The argument Lewis makes is that you can't say Jesus was a great-but-human moral teacher because he claimed (or implied) himself to be God. Which, if untrue, means that everything he says is suspect because he's either insane or a liar (a "very demon of hell," as I think Lewis phrased it). What Lewis is doing is denying that we have the ability to evaluate the moral teachings themselves, separately from the existential ones. If somebody tells us "Do unto others as you'd have done to you," and "I am a potato," those are separate statements that we are fully able to evaluate, and only one of them has a moral dimension. Someone can be *both* entirely delusional about who and what they are, *and* able to articulate valuable moral lessons. Such a person could, indeed, be *both* a great moral teacher *and* a lunatic. The Trilemma is just bad thinking, so far as I can tell.
@Phi1618033
@Phi1618033 8 жыл бұрын
Bart Ehrman has a book coming out soon on how he thinks the Jesus legend may have developed between the time the historical Jesus lived and the Jesus of the gospels was written down. Ehrman seems to think that it was a combination of the errors of oral transmission and the willful desire of the disciples to believe that Jesus was more than just a man. In other words, less like a lie and more like an error, and less like lunacy and more like delusion.
@elainegoad9777
@elainegoad9777 3 жыл бұрын
Great presentation ! Thank you Matt.
@photobobo
@photobobo 8 жыл бұрын
I propose another possibility: entertainment. Perhaps the gospels were written for amusement. If you are a storyteller, are you not constantly looking for new material with which to astound your audience?
@trevorlunn8442
@trevorlunn8442 8 жыл бұрын
Being extremely generous to apologists [whose necessary existence is, to me, the best evidence their god has no more reality than an abstract mental concept] another option might be Liminal as a noun not an adjective. As in 'barely perceptible'.
@eliazruis4761
@eliazruis4761 4 жыл бұрын
Jesus was a lawyer. So he’s technically a legendary, lying, lunatic. No way in hell he was anything close to Lord. Unless Lord means without evidence.
@star3catcherSEQUEL
@star3catcherSEQUEL 8 жыл бұрын
Legends are often developed through millenia-long games of telephone, where everyone subconsciously exaggerates or changes the story a little bit until it becomes practically unrecognizable. That's a major possibility that C.S. Lewis ignores: That the story as he knows it isn't even an accurate picture of the man whose state he's arguing for.
@gordontubbs
@gordontubbs 5 жыл бұрын
"Maybe it's because I wasn't raised as a Secular Humanist, but when I first heard the liar, lunatic, lord concept I honestly thought it wasn't a joke. I think C.S. Lewis was serious, and so it does require a response. It's a relevant question because it can be accurately answered based on the available evidence. When I began my graduate studies in history, the very first book assigned was The Philosophy of History by G.W.F. Hegel, which explains, as the title suggests, that history is within the domain of philosophy. The entire purpose of the first course was to train us to abandon our biases and preconceived notions on how we do modern journalism and history, and to not impose these methods onto the past, for such a move would be anachronistic. I'm utterly baffled at how anyone can conclude that Jesus of Nazareth never existed. The evidence is there, and if it was anyone else, we'd say they existed too. In fact, historians have concluded that many people existed with even less evidence than we have for Jesus."
@jeffhough7460
@jeffhough7460 3 жыл бұрын
I don't understand how you don't have more subs
@DRayL_
@DRayL_ 6 жыл бұрын
And the fact that so much of the 'gospel stories' seem exactly like you'd expect out of a play.
@LCCB
@LCCB 8 жыл бұрын
Quite an interesting collection of books in the background
@MegaKootz
@MegaKootz 8 жыл бұрын
Hey matt, In my recent talks with theists I have been making the argument that "Morality is a result of altruism and not a product of religion." As theists seem to have been focusing largely on the "where does morality come from?" argument. I have had a decent level of success taking this route, as it is extremely easy to prove that altruism existed for much longer than religion. I have even gained some concession from thiests along the way. I was hoping to get your opinion on that, as I highly value the opinions of yourself, tracie, jen, and the entire cast of The Atheist Experience.
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
+MegaKootz morality is a set of laws given by a see all being for humans to live by or it is ideology, it is u say i say, and u cant know why Hitler was wrong because it is just your opinion specially know atheists claim we are animals but they eat animals, did hitler kill humans or animals? morality is not just laws in the Bible but it is obvious implemented in humans consciousness. nothing is older than religion, altruism? do u care about the well-beings of animals and plants u eat? where do u think u know we can eat animals? bible
@billschlafly4107
@billschlafly4107 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA Your premise that morality is a set of laws implies that morals are objective. If you agree that morals are objective please demonstrate it. Demonstrate it without making assertions without evidence.
@KCKatheist
@KCKatheist 8 жыл бұрын
+THIS IS BRAVA How then did all of those ancient civilizations who never encountered the buybull develop functional legal systems? Or know what to eat for dinner?
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
Ted Soto what is subjective is ideology, morality can only be objective,
@helenohenzo2778
@helenohenzo2778 8 жыл бұрын
Kaycee K no one has a choice when it comes to morality, it was implemented on us, but people can ignore it and create ideology
@thoughtfuldevil6069
@thoughtfuldevil6069 3 жыл бұрын
Mere Christianity is a great book to give people if you don't want them to be Christians anymore.
@WTFBrandon
@WTFBrandon 2 жыл бұрын
There is a fourth L they forgot to add to this! Legion! That's all this is!
@malchir4036
@malchir4036 8 жыл бұрын
If you want to set up a deductive argument, you make it all-inclusive, not just 'I think these are possible and it has to be one of these'-opinion. The fact that Lewis didn't makes him an amateur.
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