Ben Shapiro vs Alex O'Connor • Is religion good for society?

2023 ж. 30 Қар.
1 427 591 Рет қаралды

The Big Conversation is a unique video series from Unbelievable? the flagship apologetics and theology discussion show from Premierunbelievable.com In this bonus episode of The Big Conversation' formidable Daily Wire host and renowned political thinker Ben Shapiro goes head-to-head with Oxford graduate of philosophy and theology, now international public speaker and debater, Alex O’Connor. Hosted by Andy Kind, Shapiro and O'Connor debate Is religion good or bad for society? What is the concept of free will? Does it even exist? What about the idea of the self, and the foundations of morality in society, and do we all have to agree on them?
Ben Shapiro is a distinguished figure in the realm of political discussion, recognised for his bold opinions and remarkable debating skills. Ever-innovative in thought and influential in culture, Shapiro brings a fresh and compelling perspective to this philosophical conversation.
Atheist Alex O’Connor, the KZheadr formerly known as the Cosmic Sceptic, and host of the Within Reason podcast brings thoughtful philosophical rigour and insight to provoke deliberation on varying timeless faith-science-philosophy topics. Religion’s effects in the evolution of consciousness, Nihilism’s counter to the concept of free will and, ultimately, the basis of varying worldviews serve as crucial discussion points in this thought-provoking exchange.
• For bonus content, updates and more shows sign up at: www.thebigconversation.show
The Big Conversation is a video series from Premier Unbelievable? featuring world-class thinkers across the religious and non-religious community. Exploring science, faith, philosophy and what it means to be human. The Big Conversation is produced by Premier Unbelievable? in partnership with John Templeton Foundation.
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Пікірлер
  • Today's Survey: who's persuaded you? Let us know in the comments below 👇

    @PremierUnbelievable@PremierUnbelievable5 ай бұрын
    • Ben Shapiro, and not just because he’s hot

      @rachelbenshapiroflexingvid5693@rachelbenshapiroflexingvid56935 ай бұрын
    • The bot above me.

      @dmon728@dmon7285 ай бұрын
    • Alex

      @res_gestae@res_gestae5 ай бұрын
    • Ben

      @1Iljo1@1Iljo15 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely brilliant video, but Ben said something that nobody picked up on properly... about individual morality being inherently "dangerous" because and we need to believe that there is a higher power that will essentially punish us to act morally towards people outside of ourselves, but the only thing relevant in this instance is a higher CONSEQUENCE, not a higher power. For example, if you know not to do something because it has been established that if enough people do said thing, then bad things will follow... that's as effective as having a higher being to stop you... both boil down to consequence.

      @braddo7270@braddo72705 ай бұрын
  • Goddamn is anyone talking about the actual content of the debate and not just how respectful it was???

    @matthewdrummond5904@matthewdrummond59043 ай бұрын
    • There is not much to talk about it. Religion was a good instrument to keep a huge amount of uneducated people in line. You can't massacre everyone who is not following your orders (even tho it was tried) but you need something to control them. So why not doing this by creaing some immortal, almighty beeing, which is very conveneniently never showing up or inteferring. At some point Religion did more bad than good, even still to this day. So was it always bad? No. Is it bad nowadays? It can be, evidentlly.

      @shadowbanned3044@shadowbanned30443 ай бұрын
    • I noticed this a well. Its annoying.

      @wreck-creation@wreck-creation2 ай бұрын
    • @@wreck-creation Because the comments get deleted...

      @shadowbanned3044@shadowbanned30442 ай бұрын
    • People aren’t used to seeing two sane people talk to each other 😂

      @catalinaa766@catalinaa766Ай бұрын
    • I think debates are entertaining but pretending debates are even slightly about actually changing minds and evaluating pre-held beliefs and biases is to engage in wishful thinking and shows a failure on both sides to ask what would move me on my position. I have recently came across “street epistemology” and while its effect is more of a slow release, a kind of ear worm that continues to grow and expand I still can not recommend it enough to people more interested in the subject of discussion than just a discussion. Anthony magnibosco has done a lot of examples of this Socratic approach to examine peoples deeply held beliefs and the reasons they have become so convinced and whether these reasons are deserving of such confidence. I think you would very much enjoy not only the discourse but the “community”/comment section as well. Everyone has moved beyond this misnomer that people cant respectfully disagree and that it might even be possible to change positions through valid and sound arguments with the correct approach.

      @brandidonn7847@brandidonn7847Ай бұрын
  • Imagine what our country would look like if political debate were this honest and respectful

    @drsquash2003@drsquash20035 ай бұрын
    • I'm afraid the reason you cannot have such respectful and informative conversations in politics is because you have to be disrespectful to be a politician...

      @varunbhati1083@varunbhati10835 ай бұрын
    • What country are you referring to?

      @latinomarce9912@latinomarce99125 ай бұрын
    • @@latinomarce9912 I'm of course referring to my own country, which is India, but I think it can be true of any country... What country are you from BTW??

      @varunbhati1083@varunbhati10835 ай бұрын
    • I think the reasons are (1) politicians are usually debating with the goal of winning an election, so there’s too much on the line for them to be calm and rational, and (2) politicians are scum and (usually) idiots.

      @manualboyca@manualboyca5 ай бұрын
    • They are calm because not much is tied behind the results of this conversation. Politics has the real weight of change/action for a lot of people's lives behind each sentence. So the people talking politics will inevitably have to be more invested and pushy. You have to be a sociopath to be discussing important politics with the opposite party and not get a little passionate about it when your life depends on it.

      @minnkhant7845@minnkhant78455 ай бұрын
  • It’s dizzying that the conversation can be so deep and simultaneously so fast paced.

    @rduse4125@rduse412510 күн бұрын
    • Go get versed on the subject and see how it slows down.

      @ThePaganpat@ThePaganpat4 күн бұрын
  • Ben Shapiro repeatedly says that he can’t pretend to know the mind of god, yet he also repeatedly assumes that god has some progressive strategy to morality which explains away the clear endorsements and prescriptions for slavery. I wish Alex would have capitalized on this clear contradiction central to Ben’s claims. I know he asked Ben who was the moral relativist, but the central reason for Ben’s relativism is caused by 1. first claiming ignorance of God’s grand design and intention, and 2. then proposing and arguably attempting to defend God’s design and intention. We need a part 2.

    @bradlii@bradlii3 ай бұрын
    • Ben earlier said something about that being a feature of his argument 😂.

      @whatwecalllife7034@whatwecalllife70343 ай бұрын
    • Well said

      @JetpackBlues@JetpackBlues2 ай бұрын
    • Knowing the mind without knowing what was decreed are two different concepts. Say an omnipotent being thinks vs the omnipotent speaks. One is unknown while the other is. It also isn't about Judeo-christian religion specifically, it is about religion in general vs atheism for morality and/or society

      @asdfasgdfgsd107@asdfasgdfgsd107Ай бұрын
    • It seems to me that we are putting more than one concept into the same basket which leads us to the Judeo-Christian religion rabbit hole, in any case, I think it has to do with knowing the cause (mindset of God) and knowing what the scripture says (decreed), which ultimately will end up in Ben arguing that time/era is a factor along with the hermeneutic. Listening to Ben makes me feel that any intent of rationalizing religion (faith) falls apart due to the fact that God, by definition, it’s what transcends us in every aspect. This is why he never defends his faith nor feelings, obviously, but facts. Personally I don’t see any utility for religion-social topic debate Alex capitalizing the moralism relativity argument as Ben never argue to impose religion on anyone (and I think Alex thought of this beforehand and didn’t keep poking in) When Ben explained Alex to offer the kid the two philosophical arguments atheist and theism and let him grow and choose, Alex says and nods agreeing from its core and also realizing a little bit more deeply Ben’s values (Ben’s faith, if you will, which is the pre course of his moral ground, therefore his values) Alex notices that the bridge they are trying to build between them, for some reason, requires a God only knows (un ironically) how much more complex engineering.

      @BlueCoore@BlueCooreАй бұрын
    • Ben doesn’t deny all capacity to understand God. Obviously, he can learn about God from the Torah. That doesn’t mean that he will know everything about God, as the Torah doesn’t reveal everything about God. There’s no hypocrisy.

      @anthem4333@anthem4333Ай бұрын
  • Alex telling Ben Shapiro "Who is the moral relativist here?" when Ben was defending God's immorality was so good. Great job Alex. I am in complete awe

    @harshitgarg1432@harshitgarg14325 ай бұрын
    • Saw that bait from a mile away, and Ben walked right into it

      @Sui_Generis0@Sui_Generis05 ай бұрын
    • Except Ben wasn't really relativizing as he explained, and did clarify that he considered those acts as immoral. I don't hold a side in this debate but I fail to see how Alex won on that point.

      @schizophrenicenthusiast@schizophrenicenthusiast5 ай бұрын
    • @@schizophrenicenthusiast Because then Ben has to concede that a blatant immorality was permitted by God.

      @AkshatSharma-qx9wh@AkshatSharma-qx9wh5 ай бұрын
    • @@AkshatSharma-qx9wh That makes sense to me now. I hadn't made the connection that calling those acts immoral was the same as calling God immoral. Thanks.

      @schizophrenicenthusiast@schizophrenicenthusiast5 ай бұрын
    • Ben did a pretty good job tho dismantling it. Such tactics were effective against boomer-christians 20 years ago but atheists need to come up with better arguments against theists who did their homework.

      @5m5tj5wg@5m5tj5wg5 ай бұрын
  • This is the calmest I’ve seen Ben in a debate.

    @Pinkie-Red-Studios@Pinkie-Red-Studios5 ай бұрын
    • Cause he's not debating kids who have no experience in debate and no prep work. While he's got every conservative talking zpoint ready to go.

      @colingundel8779@colingundel87795 ай бұрын
    • Have to stay calm when dealing with Alex. He’s absolutely brutal when his opponent overreaches.

      @user-xi2xi7qd3s@user-xi2xi7qd3s5 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@jttj742That’s not what a going on at all. Stop. People are humbled to get to talk to others on the same level. Alex was very much on guard at the beginning to see what type of liar Ben was….and then Ben said something(something about understanding the mind of God)that completely disarmed him and made him realize he was talking to someone in his level and could have a actual conversation. Because generale thats all people really want. To be understand and have connection. And it’s a wonderful thing to find people that you can talk to on your level.

      @sauce8277@sauce82775 ай бұрын
    • ​​​@@colingundel8779College students are not kids. They are adults, and their age is not an excuse for their terrible reasoning ability. They are the next generation, soon they'll be in offices, positions of power. They BETTER have someone to initiate discussion and critical thinking.

      @tubsy.@tubsy.5 ай бұрын
    • When he isn't against a college student, he is cooked

      @Goatnime@Goatnime5 ай бұрын
  • This blew me away and made me think HARD about certain things. I've always had a particular abhorrence for religion and considered it the most destructive force in existence, but am NOT an atheist. Idk. I'm just... wow. Gobsmacked and the neurons are firing 😶

    @user-vc1hn8fu7x@user-vc1hn8fu7x6 күн бұрын
  • What an excellent conversation. The level of good faith engagement between the two speakers is so refreshing.

    @reyvan3806@reyvan38063 ай бұрын
    • OTher than religion, they prolly agree on a lot of things. Its good they get on as we need them to argue against the dumb masses

      @highjim7778@highjim77783 ай бұрын
    • ​@@highjim7778I *sincerely* doubt they agree on much. Which one is it that brought you here to watch?

      @rosalind1635@rosalind16353 ай бұрын
  • This is a prime example of how to discuss with someone you disagree with. Lovely conversation!

    @fernandomendezjr.1124@fernandomendezjr.11245 ай бұрын
    • Ben Shapiro seems to be very good at this. I can't stand his monologues or show, but he is great in conversation

      @williamfinucane@williamfinucane5 ай бұрын
    • Ben was leagues ahead

      @MetatronLux-pk6jo@MetatronLux-pk6jo5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MetatronLux-pk6joWould you like to elaborate?

      @andrewballard2783@andrewballard27835 ай бұрын
    • @@MetatronLux-pk6jothat was a strange statement he’s above what ?

      @heinz57channel39@heinz57channel395 ай бұрын
    • @@MetatronLux-pk6jo was he? I will say Ben has good debate skills, but I feel like Alex did as well. As far as content, I side more with Alex...

      @JNB0723@JNB07235 ай бұрын
  • "Who's the moral relativist now?" Great stuff Alex. Morality is objective until the book says something we don't like

    @eitanmagaliff9772@eitanmagaliff97725 ай бұрын
    • There is nothing great about any stuff of Alex. 1 he is wrong about almost everything he says and 2 he does not believe he has a free will or choice, then it can not be Alex who is to be credited for any great stuff, but who or whatever it is which predetermined Alex to be a self-delusional self-contradicting atheist.

      @Nihilism4U@Nihilism4U5 ай бұрын
    • @@Nihilism4Usays the bible basher! Haha

      @jasonantigua6825@jasonantigua68255 ай бұрын
    • @@jasonantigua6825 I have not bashed any bibles, but you sure as hell is doing a great job trying to avoid all the points I was making because you are defensive about your druggie friend Alex pretending to be a intellectual while he is bashing what few brain cells he has haha

      @Nihilism4U@Nihilism4U5 ай бұрын
    • @@jasonantigua6825 You are delusional dude 🙄😂

      @Nihilism4U@Nihilism4U5 ай бұрын
    • @@Nihilism4U 1. No, you just BELIEVE he is wrong, 2. Your conclusion is illogical. He can still be credited with it. Let me explain. I assume you believe in god and most gods don't view animals on the same level as humans (they don't have a soul etc.) which is also to some point true biologically (human brains are indeed the most developed compared to other species). Do you believe your dog has free will in a same way as you? You probably wouldn't. But you still give your dog a name, you care for the dog (at least if you're a good person but i'm an atheist and I don't believe in objective morality so I accept that you may view it differently). let's say your dog's name is Ruby. you buy Ruby a toy and it is Ruby's toy. and look, Ruby brought you a stick that you'd thrown! well, Ruby may not have free will but you would still talk about Ruby's actions like it's this dog's actions... because 1) language. it makes sesne linguistically but 2) more importantly - they ARE the dog's actions, 'cause the dog exists (I believe the world is real while there are philosophers who don't but I feel like me and Alex are on the same boat when it comes to free will). Alex also exists. his views and what he said in this debate are a consequence of millions of connnected events, decisions and outside influences but that doesn't make what he is not him and what he says not his. just like me writing this comment right now is a result of millions of influences and choices that started from my birth and led me to this moment. why am I writing what I am writing? why did I choose the dog analogy? what in your comment made me wanna reply even? why am I even replying to you while it's unproductive and you're probably not even going to reply? why did I even watch this video in particular? I clicked it in suggested section. but why? it had a catchy thumbnail? or because I don't like Ben shapiro ? but why was this video even suggested? because the algorithm operates based on videos I watched, liked and commented on previously. why did I watch all those videos? oh, i am interEsted in philosophy. but why am I ? and you can go like that indefinetely. the lack of free will doesn't mean you as you don't exist. it's just accepting that who you are is not entirely up to you. and while you may change, the extent of said change is also not entirely up to you. also, the difference between dogs and humans is humans have a mental capacity to recognize all this altough ignorance truly is blissful sometimes. me? the ultimate lack of purpose of my life is actually freeing. there is nothing expected of me and I choose that meaning for myself... kind of ;) more like all those pulls and pushes that made me me are choosing but still... i'm on Earth to enjoy the ride and make other people enjoy their rides more if i can

      @akwaMartyna@akwaMartyna5 ай бұрын
  • The fire of reason was burning brightly in the room that day. Such a stimulating and inspiring exchange.

    @supercal333@supercal3332 ай бұрын
  • I was deeply affected by this conversation, particularly where it ended. Both parties were excellent. Thank you

    @dprestons0318@dprestons0318Ай бұрын
  • Two guys who care about making each other's arguments better. This is so rare.

    @guardianbuilds9660@guardianbuilds96604 ай бұрын
  • Finally a good debate, where there is mutual respect and no one speaks above the other. They should always be like this.

    @ignazio6037@ignazio60374 ай бұрын
    • In a perfect world, moderation would enforce this, but it's nice seeing people who don't even need it.

      @bitcoinweasel9274@bitcoinweasel92744 ай бұрын
    • @@bitcoinweasel9274 In fact, I'm too much idealist.

      @ignazio6037@ignazio60374 ай бұрын
    • Respect is a strong word, I would say, courteous or considerit. They did politely acknowledge to each other that they would consider the other delusional. Rightfully so... Ben is talking with an imaginary ancestors imaginary friend for guidance in his life. The only way to reach someone who is that lost in their delusional beliefs is through calm, rational conversation. Would not want a fight to the death with them, as Alex pointed out.

      @Donetravlin@Donetravlin3 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠@@Donetravlincourteous and considerate describe respect. So they were respectful of one another. Calling each other delusional was qualified by each, in describing the ways one can be delusional. therefore to be delusional just means that they don’t agree on what is there. They believe the other is under a delusion. How can it be otherwise between someone of faith and the other of limited fact.

      @stephenl9463@stephenl94633 ай бұрын
    • @stephenl9463 being respectful and respecting or having respect for a position is two different things, especially in a situation where you do not respect their position, yet you will be respectful while you converse with them Ben doesn't have any grounds to consider Alex delusional & that is why Alex was phenomenal at being respectful which will increase the chances of getting through the self absorbed brainwashing & cult indoctrination Ben has puts himself through.

      @Donetravlin@Donetravlin3 ай бұрын
  • This is a top-notch conversation. Thank you to all involved.

    @meridianheights6255@meridianheights62553 ай бұрын
  • I don’t usually watch debates, but this was really good and interesting! I love seeing how far Alex has come

    @jiduerot@jiduerot2 ай бұрын
    • True he’s a legend

      @davidmontoya6672@davidmontoya66729 күн бұрын
  • This is ridiculous that this debate was so calm. This is in no way how a debate should be ran. They should be yelling at each other, calling each other names, mocking and not letting each other speak. Ridiculous!!!

    @SS-sg1vn@SS-sg1vn3 ай бұрын
    • I can’t believe this conversition was meaningful! Downright despicable 😠

      @Kooczsi@Kooczsi2 ай бұрын
    • That would be a Trump non-debate you want to watch!🤣🤣🤣

      @obbie1osias467@obbie1osias4672 ай бұрын
    • I think you need a snickers

      @jacobhamilton2473@jacobhamilton2473Ай бұрын
    • U will have it with Mohammed hijab

      @nahomefiseha2416@nahomefiseha2416Ай бұрын
    • It is not necessary, seemed that u watch it for not learning

      @nahomefiseha2416@nahomefiseha2416Ай бұрын
  • Nice to see Alex leveling up from not losing his cool while talking to Piers Morgan to not losing his cool while talking to Ben Shapiro.

    @mihaitha@mihaitha5 ай бұрын
    • Not really.. piers morgan is definitely more of a pain in the ass I dont find ben shapiro a pain at all.. hes very controlled and polite

      @Jay-pe4gx@Jay-pe4gx5 ай бұрын
    • @@Jay-pe4gx that may be so, but I for one hate with a passion the way he gish-gallops. I would not be able to keep cool when discussing with him, I'd constantly be like "yo yo, hold up, let's discuss this before you change the subject".

      @mihaitha@mihaitha5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah the alien robots who predetermined his cool, did a great job in determining that he should level up his mannerism, while still sounding like a total idiot 😆

      @Nihilism4U@Nihilism4U5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Nihilism4Uwhat

      @SeisoYabai@SeisoYabai5 ай бұрын
    • @@mihaitha I noticed that too it cringes me tf out ! like hey isn’t this an intellectual debate ? Not to mention he kept interrupting Alex here 😒

      @Makikiku@Makikiku5 ай бұрын
  • The way Alex explains topics and debates is beautiful. I have so much respect for Alex and what he does. Have watched him since he started CosmicSceptic.

    @kanivea@kanivea2 ай бұрын
  • Don’t usually watch this kind of stuff but this was very good. Watched til the end. Both are great speakers

    @kenrdavis2266@kenrdavis22663 ай бұрын
  • The way alex is always calm and sincere seems to be infectious. It seems most of his debates encourages his opponent to take an equal calm and sincere stance. With an exception to Peter H in his interview lol

    @datrout744@datrout7445 ай бұрын
    • Yeah. That was a shit show. I felt sorry for Alex. He really seemed to want a good conversation with him

      @LuciferArc1@LuciferArc15 ай бұрын
    • lol yeah, I also thought about that... I think the truth is that Hitchens is a way weaker debater with a much bigger ego, that's why he got so angry.

      @karion99@karion995 ай бұрын
    • ​@@karion99My take on that interview is that Hitchens felt "caught-out" ("if I knew you were going to talk about the Portuguese drug paradise, I would have..." and then had to default to the position that Alex had "brought [him] on false pretenses and behaved badly." Am glad Alex posted it, at any rate.

      @ksan1648@ksan16485 ай бұрын
    • Still, Alex lost the first point fairly decisively, and he knew it. Alex got too caught up in making the point on free will's existence, while Ben stayed focused on the actual topic, which is "Is religion good or bad for society" and was able to make the point "You can't build a functioning society off telling everyone they have no choices". Alex understood this, I think, which is why he interrupted the host at the end to ask "If what Ben says is true, who's believing the delusion." The issue is, Alex just walked straight into sociology spanning from Socrates to Luckmann. I wish Ben had known more about the sociology of societal formation, because it would have been good to test Alex's claim against Socrates's noble law and modern-day constructivism.

      @angusmcculloch6653@angusmcculloch66535 ай бұрын
    • @@angusmcculloch6653 the free will discussion is essential for whether religion is good for society. Its a shame the host made them move on before they could get into details. But ultimately alex still made his points while pointing out the flaws in bens argument. Im not sure ben really touched the topic of if religion is good for society, but his arguments in this discussion didnt seem as thought out as alexs.

      @datrout744@datrout7445 ай бұрын
  • The crossover no one knew was needed. It's such a High-quality debate. If only all debates were like this.

    @e23700@e237005 ай бұрын
    • The problem with this debate is that it never mentions anything about the miracle birth of Jesus Christ or what Jesus teaches and it was Jesus who said all these things shall be fulfilled. So, they still are going on today.

      @jasonmartin7711@jasonmartin77115 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jasonmartin7711Ben is a Jew. That's why they didn't talk about Jesus.

      @bernardobila4336@bernardobila43365 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jasonmartin7711Ben is a Jew and O Connor is an atheist. The discussion was never going to be about Jesus.

      @localman9063@localman90635 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jeremiah6540 That's just Ben being Ben, he can't help himself. It's his spiel, his stock-in-trade method of engaging in debates. He does it all the time.

      @Shankar-Bhaskar@Shankar-Bhaskar5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@bernardobila4336was is not about religion?

      @Tony-Injection@Tony-Injection5 ай бұрын
  • Rather than debating about who "won," take away that the real win is the ability to debate healthily among one another.

    @IMPCIVLIVSCAESARDIVVS@IMPCIVLIVSCAESARDIVVS3 ай бұрын
  • beautiful conversation til the end, thank both speakers!

    @ynzmadeleine@ynzmadeleine3 ай бұрын
    • Whats wrong with the end?

      @ThePaganpat@ThePaganpat4 күн бұрын
  • I massively appreciate the calm, intelligent, and respectful way that both Alex and Ben conducted this debate. After all of the polarisation we’ve seen in media recently, I’d almost forgotten how a civilised, intellectual debate actually looks like. Well done. I hope to see more of this in the future.

    @John-me1hz@John-me1hz5 ай бұрын
    • I'm not very scholarly but I do agree with your observations. Respect is the best way for good communication, no matter what the subject is. Peace to you from Florida USA

      @johnbrzykcy3076@johnbrzykcy30765 ай бұрын
    • The problem is, respectful intelligent discourse doesn't get as many views or attention as the inflammatory shouting and name calling. So the media will always prefer making and showing more of that content

      @shaneebahera8566@shaneebahera85665 ай бұрын
    • @@shaneebahera8566 330,000 views in 2days disagrees with you.

      @I.Reckon@I.Reckon5 ай бұрын
    • Remind me again, who made a career out of reducing debates to "roasting SJWs, thug life destroying feminists, drinking liberal's tears etc." ?? Oh yeah that was Ben shapiro. This person literally became famous FOR turning debates into mockeries. He literally sold branded merch mugs with "liberal tears" written on them. He helped deteriorate the state of internet debates. Reducing everything to "owning, destroying, wrecking" his college age opponents.

      @bigoltits1880@bigoltits18805 ай бұрын
    • @@I.Reckon Some of Ben's commentary on "wokeness" and other political stance get millions of views in days. If it bleed, it leads. Compare to an hour long debate, algorithm much prefer a 5-10 minute video as there's a higher likelihood that people will click and play the video.

      @jimkim2712@jimkim27125 ай бұрын
  • "Religion has not civilized man, man has civilized religion" - Robert Green Ingersoll

    @MaleINTP@MaleINTP5 ай бұрын
    • Love this

      @smears6039@smears60393 ай бұрын
    • It's been an evolutionary process on both sides of the coin. They've civilized each other.

      @zoranallen5205@zoranallen5205Ай бұрын
  • I love how happy Ben looks to be there, he can barely sit still for the excitement of having found a stimulating opponent.

    @user-ng3sl6gp4s@user-ng3sl6gp4s3 ай бұрын
    • Amen.

      @krishnapartha@krishnapartha3 ай бұрын
    • Thats squirming - he's not talking down to some rando college student and is debating someone who studied theology who will hold his feet to the fire, he's uncomfortable

      @jakebrooks3415@jakebrooks34153 ай бұрын
  • Very refreshing to find a debate of such quality and with over 1M views in 2 months. Maybe there is hope yet. I'll be watching Alex's career with great interest. Bright, brave and elegant.

    @omerbey4713@omerbey47133 ай бұрын
  • Boy, it's amazing to hear Ben pretty much completely walk back his justification of Biblical slavery since his discussion of it with Jordan Peterson. How his two positions on the subject are even remotely reconcilable is beyond me. And that is the beauty of having to sit across from someone who's not already on your side. We need more of this and not less.

    @nickbrasing8786@nickbrasing87865 ай бұрын
    • What was his position before?

      @JustinSwell@JustinSwell5 ай бұрын
    • Right, someone like Frank Turek or Paul Copan has better positions on Biblical slavery, concerning the OLD law, in the OLD testament, which is no longer a thing for Hebrews, and never was a thing for Christians.

      @Volmire1@Volmire15 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Volmire1maybe you missed the part where Jesus said to keep the old law. It's in the sermon on the mount.

      @youtubespag@youtubespag5 ай бұрын
    • @@youtubespag He actually didn't say to keep the old law forever. I'm pretty sure you're referring to "17 Do not think that I came to destroy the Law or the Prophets. I did not come to destroy but to fulfill (Gr. Plerosai). 18 For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled" Quite right, the fulfillment of something means its completion. Jesus was the perfect sacrifice, covering all sin, and fulfilling the law. "Romans 8:3-4: 3 For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh, God did by sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, on account of sin: He condemned sin in the flesh, 4 that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit. Romans 10:4 for Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes. 23 Now before faith came, we were held captive under the law, imprisoned until the coming faith would be revealed. 24 So then, the law was our guardian until Christ came, in order that we might be justified by faith. 25 But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a guardian, 26 for in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith." The law was fulfilled and we are not under it, nor were we, as Christians ever under the law.

      @Volmire1@Volmire15 ай бұрын
    • ​@@youtubespagUnfortunately, they also missed the most recent events of slavery in history where slave owners would read certain parts of the bible to their slaves in order to keep them as... well.. slaves.

      @jonathanpena5972@jonathanpena59725 ай бұрын
  • I did not expect ben to basically admit that free will might not exist but rather that its better to live as if it does. This was shocking to watch. Definitely a testament to just how good Alex is. Also a demonstration that ben is at least honest enough to acknowledge the truth of good arguments. Most pundits can’t manage that.

    @kylebization@kylebization5 ай бұрын
    • Ben and Alex shared the opinion that operating under the impression that free will exists benefits humans, regardless of whether its true or not. Ben furthered his point by stating that free will can only exist under theism, and Alex stated that free will developed as a delusion in the human mind, because it's beneficial for us to operate as if it exists.

      @kalu8652@kalu86525 ай бұрын
    • It’s of course possible I misunderstand what he’s saying, but at 21:16 Ben says a couple times some version of Its possible/plausible that free will doesn’t exist, but that society is better as a result of people believing free will exists. I’ve watched several of bens debates on free will, for example against sam Harris who has a similar view to Alex, but I’m pretty sure I’ve never heard ben concede this point. Maybe I missed it.

      @kylebization@kylebization5 ай бұрын
    • SHapiro mostly does not acknowledge others arguments if they go against his own views though. There is a reason why there are videoes of him teaching conservatives how to win arguments and tells them to not use facts and attack the person doing the arguments instead.

      @fredrikfjeld1575@fredrikfjeld15755 ай бұрын
    • I don't think he would be so honest on another platform. It is refreshing to see him, I never realized he was actually smart.

      @dakotacarpenter7702@dakotacarpenter77025 ай бұрын
    • ​@dakotacarpenter7702 he got escorted into moral relativism and he didn't even realize it until he did. You can see it on his face. Sure the guy is not an idiot but he ain't smert like Alex is smert.

      @Spektor211@Spektor2115 ай бұрын
  • Enjoyed every minute... thank you gentlemen !

    @Georgeth-kb6rg@Georgeth-kb6rg3 ай бұрын
  • I think it’s really cool how Ben can admit that he has to use an “Escape hatch” when Alex explains his argument for the non existence of free will. Both men are respectful of each others views and can admit when they don’t know. All debates should be like this.

    @Jack.Ashford@Jack.Ashford2 ай бұрын
  • Alex definitely caught Ben in a twist over the slavery issue. Good format and conduct and I would love to see them do this again soon.

    @w0ody16@w0ody165 ай бұрын
    • Indeed, I also give props to Ben getting Alex to admit there is no free will is nihilism and I think is the strongest pivot point for the argument

      @sergek767@sergek7675 ай бұрын
    • So what if there is no free will?

      @AsixA6@AsixA65 ай бұрын
    • ​@@sergek767considering that Alex was arguing that there is no free will that's not much of an accomplishment for Ben.

      @RevieCliche@RevieCliche5 ай бұрын
    • Ben: GOD CREATED THE EARTH IN 7 DAYS AND IS AN ALL POWERFUL BEING! Also Ben: GoD DiDnT WaNt To CaUsE SoCiAL DiScoHeSiOn By StoPpInG SlaVeRy

      @Matt-dl2iy@Matt-dl2iy5 ай бұрын
    • There you have it folks. Ben Shapiro considers God to be immoral.

      @marcus3173@marcus31735 ай бұрын
  • I wonder how many times Alex practiced saying, " Facts don't care about your feelings." In the mirror while preparing for this discussion.

    @adamoconnor8958@adamoconnor89585 ай бұрын
    • at least it was used perfectly in response to ben being ironic

      @77jaykb@77jaykb5 ай бұрын
    • @@77jaykb The practice paid off.

      @adamoconnor8958@adamoconnor89585 ай бұрын
    • Enough to nail it when the time came 😂

      @49perfectss@49perfectss5 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂

      @Baes_Theorem@Baes_Theorem5 ай бұрын
    • using a hypocrite's quote against himself.👌

      @sankalp2520@sankalp25205 ай бұрын
  • Awesome conversation. It's relieving to hear an intellectual conversation about such a divided topic, not derail into name calling and insults. The world needs more of this.

    @mrchakragaming3428@mrchakragaming342813 сағат бұрын
  • Commenting 4 months late, but just found this. Very entertaining, thank you all very much for this. : )

    @KageKitsune64@KageKitsune64Ай бұрын
  • Alex is truly one of the great atheist thinkers of our generation. Not only is he brilliant and well studied, but he's so emotionally collected. Just an absolute pleasure to watch.

    @coffeetalk924@coffeetalk9245 ай бұрын
    • But unfortunately, he has an incorrect and Catholic view of Scripture.

      @xpsm249@xpsm2495 ай бұрын
    • I'm a Christian believer and I agree with your observations about Alex. Peace to you from Florida USA

      @johnbrzykcy3076@johnbrzykcy30765 ай бұрын
    • @xpsm249 subjective. Christianity is overloaded with tens of thousands of denominations, sects, splinter groups, you name it. And they all disagree with one another on at least one doctrine or another. So you calling him "incorrect" doesn't mean much.

      @coffeetalk924@coffeetalk9245 ай бұрын
    • ​@@xpsm249according to 99% of other Christian, your view of Christianity is probably wrong as well.

      @piage84@piage845 ай бұрын
    • He is better than most, I'll agree. Still falls victim to the same issues of atheism, namely appeal to nhilism, and the failings of moral realitivism

      @MrGgabber@MrGgabber5 ай бұрын
  • This should be used as an example of how contestants in a debate should behave. Their clear mutual respect along with their well-defined positions makes this one of the most informative debates I've seen. Well done!

    @randomdude2540@randomdude25405 ай бұрын
    • MAGA don't listen to anything but slogans. How do we fix the problem if we can't even get 1 sentence deep? But yes, good debate.

      @b.w.1386@b.w.13865 ай бұрын
    • MAGA and BLM/Woke listen to reason equally, which is to say not at all. Both of them should be gone from political discussions, because it is just all feelings based.

      @anheuser-busch@anheuser-busch5 ай бұрын
    • @anheuser-busch MAGA and BLM are not the same in societal destructiveness. MAGA wants to save America as founded, while BLM wants its destruction. Comparing the two is indicative of a lack of understanding and shallow analysis of each.

      @paulray5647@paulray56475 ай бұрын
    • Fruit loops deserve nothing. Otherwise it legitimises absolute nutcases.

      @jpw5029@jpw50295 ай бұрын
    • @@anheuser-buschbro did you just equate a global protest movement - one of the biggest in human history, to random MAGA conspiracy theorists? And then equate that to “woke”? Do you have a definition of woke that isnt just “things i dont like”? This is mental illness.

      @Runthemjewels@Runthemjewels5 ай бұрын
  • Subbed-- well done Andy Kind! Excellent interviewer!

    @prioritea.merchant@prioritea.merchant17 күн бұрын
  • I really enjoyed this. Thanks.

    @nuggetoftruth-ericking7489@nuggetoftruth-ericking7489Ай бұрын
  • I actually didn't hate Shapiro as much as I though I would. He didnt convince me on anything but he gave food for thought and actually made some interesting points. I went into this debate thinking "Go Alex" but thank you to both participants for once again teaching me to value reason and logic for the beauty of logics sake over tribalism and cheerleading.

    @alinac5512@alinac55125 ай бұрын
    • Ben and as another example Peterson are both intelligent, there's no question. They just each have a few very questionable beliefs and their otherwise eloquent logic makes it easy for people to fall prey to these more extreme arguments.

      @alansmithee419@alansmithee4195 ай бұрын
    • i dislike Ben almost as much as another human can dislike another human, BUT i agree with you. i came into this with the foreknowledge that was going to hate everything Ben said, and was completely taken aback by some of his statements and his congeniality in this debate. was happy to be wrong. that said, i still do NOT like this man!

      @jeffwatson7345@jeffwatson73455 ай бұрын
    • @@jeffwatson7345 completely agree. I'm just happy this debate again broadened my horizons and gave me plenty of food for thought. And while Ben presented himself surprisingly admirable here unless he actually gets his mind changed by Alex on a couple of very key points of his philosophy... I don't see myself liking him anytime soon.

      @alinac5512@alinac55125 ай бұрын
    • You didn't hate him as much as you thought you would? What does this even mean? From what I take from it is that you have a preconceived view of Ben from your peers. Open your own eyes.

      @Jaaammmbbbooo@Jaaammmbbbooo5 ай бұрын
    • Ben is incredibly intelligent and full of interesting ideas outside his low-hanging-fruit political day job, nice to see others capable of recognising this and not just shutting his words out because he's said things you disagree with.

      @NoFeckingNamesLeft@NoFeckingNamesLeft5 ай бұрын
  • 26 minutes in, and I thoroughly enjoy this discussion. They seem to not be taking past each other but actually interfacing with eachother's commentary. Refreshing to witness.

    @Think_4_Yourself@Think_4_Yourself4 ай бұрын
    • This is what the world used to be like until recent years.

      @misimiki@misimiki3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@misimiki i dont know if thats true. My assumption would be that its always been this way in a similar capacity. Only now we have a much larger amount of access to those more ugly interactions

      @deanought3695@deanought36953 ай бұрын
    • @@deanought3695​​⁠overall, social media (and much of the internet in general) perpetuates echo chambers of people’s existing opinions and world view and promotes intolerance to accept or collaborate with opposing ideas imo. Definitely more prevalent nowadays in my observations. Would be an interesting debate topic on it’s own though

      @jmd489@jmd4892 ай бұрын
    • @@jmd489 yeah, I'd like to see that debate. I imagine that one side might make an argument for historical communities that act like echo chambers due to little information getting in. I'm speculating of course. It may be the case that echo chambers are more prevalent now. It's so hard for us to tell exactly how it used to be in the past. I personally get tired of 'the good ole day's sentiment'. I never buy it outright. People usually refer to their childhood, or a generation ago thinking that this or that used to be better. I find most claims too hard to quantify

      @deanought3695@deanought36952 ай бұрын
  • One of the better debates I’ve seen 💯

    @iankingcarter@iankingcarter3 ай бұрын
  • this is such an amazing conversation

    @Sebastian-kw3wm@Sebastian-kw3wm3 ай бұрын
  • Ben Shapiro always makes me check that I'm not listening to KZhead on double speed

    @timmanning5206@timmanning52065 ай бұрын
    • unfortunately a lot of people think he propensity to "speak quickly" is indicative of intelligence. Its actually just to aid his gish gallop where he throws out too many claims for you to debunk and as you spend minutes just trying to refute one wrong thing he said, it leaves the other 5 wrong things to linger in the minds of the listener.

      @LB-yg2br@LB-yg2br5 ай бұрын
    • @@LB-yg2br Oh, what a load of rubbish. Some people just talk faster than others. Get over it.

      @MLior311@MLior3115 ай бұрын
    • @@MLior311 Some people do speak more quickly than others, but I have watched Ben Shapiro and having studied formal logic I see how he engages in gish gallops. He throws out claims like "facts don't care about your feelings" but then goes on to argue his feelings with a few scanty facts and interlocutors are unable to untangle the web of fallacies that he knits. If he spoke more slowly, it would be easier to catch his BS. Maybe he doesn't do it on purpose, but he definitely does it. Sorry to you if you thought he was genuinely an intellectual with a 10 pound brain. Notice how much slower he is talking here vs his normal cadence of his cant.

      @LB-yg2br@LB-yg2br5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MLior311some people do, but Ben ABSOLUTELY uses gish-gallop tactics to sound like he's making a profound point, while saying very little of substance.

      @SNESpool@SNESpool5 ай бұрын
    • I did watch him on double speed🤣

      @tariq3erwa@tariq3erwa5 ай бұрын
  • This should've been 4 or 5 hours long. Really great content. Please have another round with these two. I'd pay money. Or like...compliments.

    @Nathanaelelliott@Nathanaelelliott5 ай бұрын
    • Watch it on 0.25x speed. You’re welcome.

      @DelBoy573@DelBoy5735 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DelBoy573lol

      @SoilKilonova@SoilKilonova5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DelBoy573 Ben starts to sound normal

      @matthewglenguir7204@matthewglenguir72045 ай бұрын
    • @@DelBoy573ha, well played

      @ryanw5569@ryanw55695 ай бұрын
    • Yoo simp!!

      @Ondolite@Ondolite5 ай бұрын
  • Man, the way Ben Explains and put things into perspective is very out of this world. Ben is truly a gifted speaker

    @paulrosales4008@paulrosales40083 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic conversation. Thanks for creating this. I will always support this kind of dialogue because it gives a platform to both sides of an important topic.

    @zangvids@zangvids3 ай бұрын
  • Ben really struggles during the conversation about slavery. Alex is spot on with his assessment that Ben's position is moral relativism here.

    @BeastmanWatchUrMouth@BeastmanWatchUrMouth5 ай бұрын
    • The thing is though, in a world where free will does not exist, and morality is simply subjective, what is it that makes slavery "wrong?"

      @albertbecerra@albertbecerra5 ай бұрын
    • @@albertbecerraI guess limiting someone else’s freedom is hurting them and as such it is wrong?

      @MrVonzine@MrVonzine5 ай бұрын
    • @@albertbecerra My moral belief that human suffering should be avoided whenever possible makes slavery wrong for me. But if you're implying that religion provides objective morality, I'd disagree. The morality that is provided by religious texts is just the subjective moral opinions of whoever wrote the text. Even if you believe in a god, any morality provided by a god is also just their opinion, meaning subjective.

      @henry306@henry3065 ай бұрын
    • @@MrVonzine but that is subjective. If one king or war lord or whatever, conquers one group or community or whatever the setting, logically it be smart to imprison the now conquered as they would look to regroup and retaliate, as it is common to for man to seek retribution. And it would be the same result vice versa.

      @albertbecerra@albertbecerra5 ай бұрын
    • @@henry306 religious morality isn't solely based on subjective opinions. Some argue it's grounded in a broader framework, suggesting a divine source or higher purpose. This perspective contends that religious morality provides an objective foundation, beyond individual viewpoints, offering a more universal basis for ethical principles.

      @albertbecerra@albertbecerra5 ай бұрын
  • This was great, not just a tiktok brained debate where "geniuses" are trying to DESTROY each other. Love both, and hope more actual debates like this happen.

    @manasesa.davila1828@manasesa.davila18285 ай бұрын
    • Tik tok debators are basically all hasan clones 💀

      @psyphile1330@psyphile13305 ай бұрын
    • That's because Ben Shapiro is in a room surrounded by people who follow him arguing against teenagers. We're just trying to like make the world a better place. I'm guarantee if Ben was talking to another adult who is clearly smarter than him with good faith, education and knowledge he would be doing exactly what you say trying to destroy him with rhetoric instead of warming reasonable argument.

      @TomisaLami@TomisaLami5 ай бұрын
    • @dannyraygun That's just not true, and I know it's not cause I watch him too throughout the years. He's had many hard conversations with great people, including the likes of Sam Harris, Niel deGrasse, etc. The format and aggression with babies who try to make him look like a bad guy vs actual hour long conversations and debates will always look different. He's been debating intellectuals long before Alex has, not taking away from Alex cause he did great and is growing more and more. With that being said, that's a horrible way of putting it.

      @manasesa.davila1828@manasesa.davila18285 ай бұрын
    • @@psyphile1330 pretty much.

      @manasesa.davila1828@manasesa.davila18285 ай бұрын
    • Alex was acting like "a genius" trying to "destroy" Ben though

      @greyngreyer5@greyngreyer55 ай бұрын
  • I have to agree that both points of view were nicely put.

    @benyaeger4388@benyaeger4388Ай бұрын
  • This is awesome, good faith interlocutors who really know their stuff, always a HUGE pleasure.

    @dallinex3038@dallinex30382 ай бұрын
  • Okay the delivery of the line "facts don't care about your feelings" by alex in response to the claim that a purposless life isn't a very good way to look at it by ben is awesome

    @gustavolamego9913@gustavolamego99135 ай бұрын
    • Can you rephrase that I don’t think I quite understand what you mean

      @israelgulley9104@israelgulley91045 ай бұрын
    • If this of course was in fact a fact to begin with lol

      @Joshcaldwell24@Joshcaldwell245 ай бұрын
    • @@Joshcaldwell24 Sure, but it does expose the contradiction on Ben's line of thought.

      @mateussantiagolage1005@mateussantiagolage10055 ай бұрын
    • For many, religion allows people to live a purposeful life. This is good for society and that is the topic of the debate. The truth of religion is not the topic.

      @japanbeta@japanbeta5 ай бұрын
    • @@japanbeta facts dont care about your feelings

      @gustavolamego9913@gustavolamego99135 ай бұрын
  • Props to Andy, he was mostly silent but he was always on hand to provide a laugh or two. Loved the guy

    @amaninathan8033@amaninathan80335 ай бұрын
    • But by his worldview he doesn't deserve any props, because he is only there because its biologically predetermined to be there. So he deserves no credit, afterall he is a machine born of evolution in his worldview. Do you not realize that if what he is saying is correct then he shouldn't be praised because everything he says is predetermined.

      @jasonthomas9319@jasonthomas93195 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jasonthomas9319shut up

      @testingsomething5280@testingsomething52805 ай бұрын
    • @@jasonthomas9319 you could say praise be to god for making him the way he did so that he would want to make this show. Guess theists have no free will because god made them the way he did and knows everything, so he knew what they would do and when. You can only choose to do what god knew you would do. Think about that.

      @DarthNafarious@DarthNafarious5 ай бұрын
    • Andy was fantastic!

      @FreethinkingMinistries@FreethinkingMinistries5 ай бұрын
    • in the opening he gave so much prattling and caveating as to be worrying, especially given how little time was allotted for this debate. Glad it did not continue.

      @codeyakexpeditionaires6854@codeyakexpeditionaires68545 ай бұрын
  • Dude's eyebrows are for real. Also, great conversation, enjoyed it thoroughly. Will rewatch in a while :).

    @jeaninevalentijn9764@jeaninevalentijn97642 ай бұрын
  • This was a fantastic talk. Thank you.

    @cleverestx@cleverestx24 күн бұрын
  • One of the greatest debates I’ve ever seen. The respect, the intelligence, the actually responding to what the other person said…. Beautiful

    @brendanbaker1459@brendanbaker14595 ай бұрын
    • Ben goat

      @MetatronLux-pk6jo@MetatronLux-pk6jo5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah just kind of proves the point that Ben just enjoys watching people suffer me know because like 99% of the time he's just misrepresenting concepts and other peoples arguments as a means to push the idea of hierarchies in unjustifiable decisions that ultimately lead to more problems in the world but here he demonstrates that he actually does have the ability to learn. And I guarantee tomorrow Ben's gonna be right back to the same old stuff and probably buy some wood to prove he's a man and burn some Barbie dolls or something.

      @TomisaLami@TomisaLami5 ай бұрын
    • Ben really isn’t very intelligent tbh. He’s a dishonest hack

      @markharrison6498@markharrison64985 ай бұрын
    • These religious debates just bore me now. To summarize ‘I believe in god but know I can’t prove he exists but you can’t prove he doesn’t so he must exist’. Knowing that it’s impossible to prove a negative. I ask you this if I said there’s a fairy living in my room, and you said I don’t believe you, who would the burden of proof lie with?

      @gibbolsc@gibbolsc5 ай бұрын
    • Read the title conversation again. The existence of god was not the main topic of conversation.@@gibbolsc

      @jaimemedina4294@jaimemedina42945 ай бұрын
  • I definitely think Alex was more convincing, but I was pleasantly surprised by how nice and smart Ben was. It's a massive difference from his political work which I honestly find deeply problematic. Anyways, keep these conversations going. They really do a great job in combating further polarisation.

    @bartkl@bartkl5 ай бұрын
    • Genocide advocacy and Apartheid defence is more than a little problematic

      @jamesgains8652@jamesgains86525 ай бұрын
    • Ben plays nice when he knows he cant win. Guy is a coward. This is the person who got famous for "pwning" college students over the lowest hanging fruit of political issues.

      @swagikuro@swagikuro5 ай бұрын
    • @@jamesgains8652genocide? And apartheid? Where?

      @CRJC777@CRJC7775 ай бұрын
    • i get you, hitler was the same.

      @afterglow5285@afterglow52855 ай бұрын
    • @@jamesgains8652 Well I did say *deeply* problematic. I agree with you.

      @bartkl@bartkl5 ай бұрын
  • Awesome conversation.

    @JR-mj8ph@JR-mj8ph3 ай бұрын
  • 44:34 That's what I'm enjoying too! It's VERY nice to get a better sense of what both of these people think and believe.

    @justseffstuff3308@justseffstuff33082 ай бұрын
  • I think this conversation was brilliant because it stepped away from the typical religious discussions which almost exclusively hinge on whether god does or does not exist. This highlights the functionality of religion in society irrespective of whether or not it is true, which is a very refreshing question to hear discussed.

    @gavinjohnston9749@gavinjohnston97495 ай бұрын
    • In that case, watch Hitchens & Fry on “Is religion a force for good?” debate.

      @immanny85@immanny855 ай бұрын
    • If it functions it must carry truth, it’s the principle that governs scientific research!

      @martanieradka4675@martanieradka46755 ай бұрын
    • @martanieradka4675 If that was true then the most effective politicians would be honest. There’s a study that shows that if you talk to a person whose views are fundamentally incompatible with yours, then usually both of you will leave the conversation with more extreme beliefs. However, if you pretend to hold the other persons beliefs and frame your arguments as doubts that you are having, then you are much more likely to convince them. Lies and manipulation can be functional.

      @featherton3381@featherton33815 ай бұрын
    • It's very weird to be from an Atheist majority country that is much more stable and safer than the US and the UK. Do you all know about us? 😂 Additionally, the anti-communist misinformation was horrible Ben, a lot of bs as usual. We were even safer and more stable during those times.

      @schrodingerskatze2162@schrodingerskatze21625 ай бұрын
    • I guess despite religion's unverifiable claims and inconsistencies, something that survived a millennium or two must surely have something positive to contribute.

      @jsguinomhay1097@jsguinomhay10975 ай бұрын
  • If only american politics could conduct themselves in such a respectful and genuine way. Truly a beautiful example of how most political and philosophical disagreements should be done.

    @Valketa@Valketa4 ай бұрын
    • American politicians appeal to american voters unfortunately and I don't think the majority of the population in any country is substantially different.

      @TheInfectous@TheInfectous4 ай бұрын
    • this sentence is making my brain melt

      @TheBiggestMoronYouKnow@TheBiggestMoronYouKnow3 ай бұрын
    • These two gentlemen are talking to intellingent people. Politicians talk to masses of people most of which are very mediocre.

      @ioncasu7495@ioncasu74953 ай бұрын
    • @@TheInfectoussome American politicians lie to Americans. To their face, on camera. For 50 years in a row.

      @jeffburman7832@jeffburman78323 ай бұрын
    • Define religion. The aims of religion? I.e. love your neighbor and love you enemies. Or the failures of religion? Pedophile rings in sovereign churches.

      @jeffburman7832@jeffburman78323 ай бұрын
  • Our two split personalities debating

    @davidmontoya6672@davidmontoya66729 күн бұрын
  • When Ben Shapiro said that his belief in God and free will was ultimately based on... faith, not logical understanding, the conversation practically ended.

    @gmpwxc484@gmpwxc4842 күн бұрын
  • Hearing Ben Shapiro use good faith arguments against an opponent that he respects is actually so refreshing.

    @jaydensydes3478@jaydensydes34785 ай бұрын
    • Demonstrates the toxicity and hatefulness of the modern right wing that the divisive, ‘destroying’ persona of Ben Shapiro is the one which got all his followers

      @ballisticfish1212@ballisticfish12125 ай бұрын
    • I mirror your sentiments.

      @lukeriely4468@lukeriely44685 ай бұрын
    • ben is good faith debater

      @aSSGoblin1488@aSSGoblin14885 ай бұрын
    • Ben is typically not a good faith debater. He will use every debate club trick in the book to delegitimise, denegrate and embarrass his opponents. No matter how low quality his argument is, no matter how bad faith it is, no matter what type of logical fallacy it uses. Ben's style is to command and conquer.

      @jaydensydes3478@jaydensydes34785 ай бұрын
    • @@jaydensydes3478 And his Daily Wire streams are used to feed stochastic terrorist narratives.

      @lukeriely4468@lukeriely44685 ай бұрын
  • Great to see two people who essentially “agree to disagree” debate. It’s nice to see these friendly, non-aggressive and respectful debates.

    @bryandelcid4065@bryandelcid40655 ай бұрын
    • Yes! It’s such a rare thing, unfortunately, because these guys are exceptions on different levels. IQ and experience with debate mainly, causing them to be able to take a higher perspective of thinking. Zero judgment from either side and either side sincerely listening to understand instead of listening to respond.

      @GinoNL@GinoNL4 ай бұрын
    • It is easy on something that can't be trivially proven either way as long as both sides are reasonable.

      @Uouttooo@Uouttooo4 ай бұрын
    • What a shame Shapiro has undoubtedly played his part contributing to the flame war that is discourse today. He behaved himself here because he realised doing what he normally does would result in a disaster.

      @somanytakennames@somanytakennames4 ай бұрын
    • this is such an American thing to say, like having a ORDINARY conversation is EXTRAORDINARY in your world, which is sad.

      @thomasdupont7186@thomasdupont71864 ай бұрын
    • ​@@GinoNL what? Ben Shapiro is constantly dogding the questions and does not engage at all with arguments from Alex

      @ivanpuklavec6494@ivanpuklavec64944 ай бұрын
  • I am a 31 year old philosopher and historian working on my Phd in philosophy. I say this with 100% sincerity. Hitchens would be so proud of the job you are doing Alex. I haven't been this much of a fan of a modern day atheist in over a decade. This is also the first time I am a fan of someone younger than me (as a public academic of sorts). Excellent job Alex. Absolutely fantastic.

    @bcbphilosophy@bcbphilosophy3 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately he offers nothing

      @henrymichaeldooley8483@henrymichaeldooley84833 ай бұрын
    • @@henrymichaeldooley8483 he has presented the first quality original arguments that I've heard in years. Especially his analogy of an exploding spaceship with your loved ones inside to demonstrate how non religious even those who claim to be religious truly are

      @bcbphilosophy@bcbphilosophy3 ай бұрын
  • This was fun❤❤❤

    @krrishyadav12@krrishyadav1216 сағат бұрын
  • The best comeback on this episode was, "Who's the moral relativist now?" Alex nailed it with just that one comment.

    @jaz_shl@jaz_shl5 ай бұрын
    • If some future civilization becomes totally vegan, and looks back to our civilization in disgust as animal eaters would the same comment be effective?

      @richardfranks5167@richardfranks51675 ай бұрын
    • I actually don't follow. The existence of absolute moral principles does not preclude the existence of changing moral standards. For example, rape is wrong, but our understanding of what is rape has definitely changed over time. Another classic example is that chastity is good, but our standards for modest dress vary based on society.

      @bellgrand@bellgrand5 ай бұрын
    • @@bellgrand That is just trying to downplay the paradox. You cant have this perfect being and his must follow book and then be like 'well, we gotta adapt some of the things it said because we know better now.' It is matter of how being perfect is a chain that bind god. If his word only said 'dont be a dick', and OUR understanding of what being dick is changed with time that is on us. But that isnt the issue, the problem is all the clearly wrong and outdated things preached by the bible. Is why people hate the 'well, but what it meant was-' / 'But during that time...' argument by theists. They try to gaslight people. It is f'ed now, and hopefully we can all OBJECTIVELY agree it was also f'ed up then.

      @barriakarl@barriakarl5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@richardfranks5167where is an all knowing god in that analogy?

      @xenormxdraws@xenormxdraws5 ай бұрын
    • @@barriakarl Except that's how it has worked for thousands of years? I mean, your entire argument is a strawman because you're saying that the Bible is wrong because Jews and Christians do not interpret the Bible in the manner you do. This is despite the fact that you seem clearly hostile to the Bible to begin with. Slavery is wrong. But you do in fact see regulations in the Bible as well as a tradition taking place over thousands of years, both inside the text of the Bible and outside of it, that led to its global abolition in the Modern era. The Jews stopped practicing slavery well before then, and even Christians banned the enslavement of other Christians in the Middle Ages. The same could not be said for any other world view.

      @bellgrand@bellgrand5 ай бұрын
  • 37:12 Alex’s refutation of the idea that Western civilisation is the product of Christianity (rather than of transcending Christianity) was spot on!

    @jd4121@jd41215 ай бұрын
    • Nearly everything he listed off was still pioneered and perpetuated by Christians and when it comes to the more recent social movements Jews are heavily involved there it’s worth looking into.

      @autisticphaglosophy7128@autisticphaglosophy71285 ай бұрын
    • @@autisticphaglosophy7128 That's not the point, Jew and Christians can definitely be scientists, but we are talking about this constant revisionism of Judeo-christian world view every time there is a new scientific discovery.

      @baishihua@baishihua5 ай бұрын
    • @@baishihua Most of the major contentions were between prior scientific or philosophical consensus that was challenged and when it comes to this matter the revisionism is actually from later Protestant and atheist critiques who made up propositions against the church which had then funded virtually all scientific endeavors. Atheist Tim O’Niel has written extensively about this topic debunking this popular Reddit tier myth I recommend his KZhead and site which actually uses primary academic sources.

      @autisticphaglosophy7128@autisticphaglosophy71285 ай бұрын
    • @@autisticphaglosophy7128 no shit, they lived in a time when the vast majority of people were Christian and not being Christian publicly would have lead to severe oppression.

      @hellboy6536@hellboy65365 ай бұрын
    • @@hellboy6536 That’s a worthless analysis and besides most of the well known ones specifically devoted much time to talk about their theology.

      @autisticphaglosophy7128@autisticphaglosophy71285 ай бұрын
  • Setting a good example for a debate.

    @llIIIIlllIIIllI@llIIIIlllIIIllI2 ай бұрын
  • Very wholesome content really enjoyed it wish it was longer 😊

    @chrzanik666@chrzanik666Ай бұрын
  • This is so amazing. Only problem with it is that it wasn't long enough, none of the topics were given the time they really deserve

    @Ricehigh85@Ricehigh855 ай бұрын
    • Agree

      @Asymmetrization@Asymmetrization5 ай бұрын
  • The way that they were able to immediately compartmentalize eachothers aeguments, think it out, and then provide a reponse is lightning fast! Some very high functioning minds here. So fun to have watched them interact!

    @Joelthinker@Joelthinker5 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic exchange. I enjoy these sort of discussions and love having them myself. I think we’ll continue to socially evolve to favor science and logical pursuance and spiritual practices will come along for the ride.

    @CYBRLFT@CYBRLFTАй бұрын
    • Science eventually gets rid of baggage.

      @ThePaganpat@ThePaganpat4 күн бұрын
    • @@ThePaganpat one of its great services to humanity.

      @CYBRLFT@CYBRLFT3 күн бұрын
  • I like that Alex is so relaxed and not aggressive because he is genuinely interested in all of this, he is not only interested in having power over someone in the conversation. I hope Alex doesn't get seduced by the power or the cheap wins of putting people down because this current path will lead to much greater wisdom, respect from others and longevity. It is not enough to just be right and that is something that other famous athiest have not understood. The most influential people are also role models.

    @danthelambboy@danthelambboy2 ай бұрын
    • Alex doesn't know what he believes deep down. This is pretty evident.

      @PoliticsReal@PoliticsReal2 ай бұрын
  • I don’t know why but I find it incredibly charming that Ben and to a lesser extent Alex were occasionally chuckling throughout the video. I love conversations that are so civil that both sides can joke *with* each other rather than agains them.

    @praiseit4805@praiseit48055 ай бұрын
    • I agree, the humanity is appealing.

      @DebNKY@DebNKY4 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely love debates on this level. High quality arguments exchanged in a civil manner. This channel is about to blow up. You're doing an amazing work!

    @LudvikKoutnyArt@LudvikKoutnyArt5 ай бұрын
    • I would have enjoyed to disassemble Bens opening my self, and i am not an atheist, i am agnostic. The relevance of a god in a belief system is totally overrated. Just a humble view over to China, the one civilisation that has outlasted so many others and is still very present on this planet, larger in numbers than the US and Europe combined, is not falling apart because of the lack of a monotheistic figure everyone can pray to. Whether one likes it or not, you can also put a photo of the great leader of the communist party onto your wall and be content with someone watching all your actions and provide judgement... And that is not even a joke, its true, but the irony though is still hilarious.

      @madrooky1398@madrooky13985 ай бұрын
    • Is this the atheist guy who beat mohammed Hijab in a debate so hijab proceeded to edit the video online and ban comments?

      @chizukinspiration613@chizukinspiration6135 ай бұрын
    • ​@@madrooky1398agno gang represent

      @WillyJunior@WillyJunior5 ай бұрын
    • @@madrooky1398that such a horrible comparison. China had an exchange of dynasties through history and they were locked out of the rest of the world for the most part and millions of their people were killed by their own leaders (Mao). The idea of “contentment” is internally validated not externally by a authoritarian human

      @Shiroyashasama@Shiroyashasama5 ай бұрын
    • ‘high quality’

      @peuppeuppeup@peuppeuppeup5 ай бұрын
  • Religion can comfort people who have lost everything but can destroy people who still have everything.

    @chaoticentity4532@chaoticentity453217 күн бұрын
    • How so? How can a person with everything be destroyed by religion?

      @ruiz306@ruiz30613 күн бұрын
    • ​@@ruiz306 Because reality is unpredictable. Some people who still have everything and believed in God from the start can ultimately meet their downfall such as death of loved ones, bankruptcy, loss of money and property, health issues, etc. They will lose hope if everything is lost. Religion is a comfortable lie that people are willing to listen.

      @3xrcodm@3xrcodm12 күн бұрын
    • @@3xrcodm that doesn’t make any sense. That’s not what he wrote. Read it again. And why is theology a lie to you? You have no proof which is the point of this debate dummy

      @ruiz306@ruiz30611 күн бұрын
    • @@3xrcodm he didn’t write if a person becomes bankrupt. Are you illiterate? He writes it destroy a person who STILL has everything.

      @ruiz306@ruiz30611 күн бұрын
    • @@ruiz306 What the fck... That is just an example based on my understanding 😐 Because there is a lot of examples of downfall in reality that may or may not happen to us. Like if people still have everything and they still believe in God, are they even prepared to have their faith tested at their lowest? Because people would be questioning at that point if God truly exist or not.

      @3xrcodm@3xrcodm11 күн бұрын
  • I don’t agree with everything Alex says, but his intelligence and ability to think on his feet is absolutely incredible

    @LosChongo@LosChongo5 ай бұрын
    • Why you disagree with Alex?

      @deshon3523@deshon35235 ай бұрын
    • @@deshon3523 i agree with 90% of his positions. He loses me on the vegan thing and a few other random points

      @LosChongo@LosChongo5 ай бұрын
    • i think it's impossible to agree 100% with a person, no matter what, because everyone is different.

      @holyinquisition8854@holyinquisition88545 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, his favorite color is probably like blue or orange or something, and I'm more of a green person.

      @Grimtheorist@Grimtheorist5 ай бұрын
    • @@holyinquisition8854I am a person. I 100% agree with myself.

      @SutsuMusic@SutsuMusic5 ай бұрын
  • Alex did amazing, he's 24 but yet it seems as he had decades of academic education on his back. The maturity displayed is also exceptional, a great inspiration for all gen z

    @Unnamed7964@Unnamed79645 ай бұрын
    • It is far easier to criticize a worldview than come up with one. Alex only has arguments against issues but he fails to say anything 'for' something because he knows how hard it is to hold that worldview.

      @yalineclaire1969@yalineclaire19695 ай бұрын
    • ​@@yalineclaire1969I don't think you've watched him enough.

      @ryomensukuna4526@ryomensukuna45265 ай бұрын
    • @@yalineclaire1969 maybe thats why religious weirdos are constantly criticising everything that falls outside their own incredibly narrow bigoted worldview they got out of a thousands year old book, rather than come up with their own as the rest of us have done lol

      @tfwnoyandere@tfwnoyandere5 ай бұрын
    • @@yalineclaire1969 it IS hard which is why most including Ben fail😒

      @firefly9838@firefly98385 ай бұрын
    • ​@@yalineclaire1969 Not believing in a god is a worldview in of itself though.

      @bratprica6383@bratprica63835 ай бұрын
  • PART TWO PLEASE

    @WesBurkeLEMG@WesBurkeLEMG18 күн бұрын
  • Incredible, respectful and insightful debate

    @user-od4lb8pr7q@user-od4lb8pr7q9 күн бұрын
  • My favorite part: "who's the moral relativist now?"

    @bendfocuspro@bendfocuspro5 ай бұрын
    • To this day, I'm yet to find compelling arguments that justify why the interpretation of scriptures should change over time. When on one side, religion argues that it has "divine", "objective" morality.

      @thegrunbeld6876@thegrunbeld68765 ай бұрын
    • @@thegrunbeld6876 It's not whether we should or shouldn't, it's that we can't help it. Our brains are constantly changing so as a result our perspectives and interpretations are changing too.

      @bike4aday@bike4aday5 ай бұрын
    • @@bike4adayYeah but that contradicts the claim that, as Muhammad said in his final moments, that the religion has reached it's final conclusion and it will apply to the next generations of muslims. The God even claim to safeguard the preservation of the qur'an that it will stay unaltered to the end of days so that Islamic practices will stay true to how Muhammad practice them regardless of culture, time and place.

      @thegrunbeld6876@thegrunbeld68765 ай бұрын
    • ⁠​⁠@@thegrunbeld6876 I'm actually yet to get to the moral relativist part yet, but i believe the reason there's no compelling argument on why scripture should change in interpretation, is simply because it shouldn't. on the contrary ive yet to see anyone try to make a point of it should be changing outside of progressive Christians, who i think we can all tell hold no real ground. if you believe in the bible it specifically says if someone were to add to the book of life, the plagues of revelations would be added to them and if they were to take away then their name would be taken out of the book of life. interpretation is taken in a strange context. the truth is always the truth and always will be. the ISSUE with those inside and outside of the church, is that everyone wants to adapt the word to the times which is nothing but wrong if you do believe the word. it's pretty straightforward on most matters, but everyone has their own desires to get what they want from it i suppose, which is a given. that's why i believe NOT believing because many humans don't know how to be true believers, isn't very valid. you're right to not believe in humans, but that is definitely no fault of God.

      @tydiaz3921@tydiaz39215 ай бұрын
    • @@thegrunbeld6876sorry for the long comment, but i will say the only thing that does "change" i suppose, is the law given from old to new testament, but i wouldn't chalk that up to interpretation ofc. outside of that, i feel that many true believers who can take themseleves and their religion outside of the equation, can agree on most if not all matters. granted the number of those people aren't big in comparison to the number of total people that are Christians in the world.

      @tydiaz3921@tydiaz39215 ай бұрын
  • Amazing debate. I wish everyone could just have calm debates like this.

    @richb2124@richb21245 ай бұрын
    • Why tf are u watching drybones the zionist then lol

      @CormanoWild@CormanoWild4 ай бұрын
    • Yes, this is good stuff.

      @DebNKY@DebNKY4 ай бұрын
  • I don't get how free will would lead to a better society. Beleiving in determinism, not free will, made my life better. I grew up on free will, and I struggled in school and most of my undergrad. Being told that I had to "choose" to sit down and read through an entire chapter wasn't leading me to sitting down and read. I would get distracted by all manner of things. As a result, I made middling grades. Then I learned about my own thought processes, especially the concept of ADHD. I learned how to plan my studies in that context, where I would plan multiple readings or projects, and train myself to turn to those other readings whenever I got bored with the other. In my later classes and in my advanced degree, I made all As. Understanding cause and effect, not pretending that my choices were unconnected from my own cognition, led to better outcomes. Perhaps it still appears like free will from our perspective--we can't be aware of all the factors that go into our decision--but that "uncaused decision-making" Ben purports led me to near disaster.

    @modernorpheus@modernorpheus3 ай бұрын
    • Being aware of your tendencies and mindfully manipulating your actions to fit your character better with the will to achieve different results by taking different actions is the least deterministic thing i can think of

      @user-rh6pi1qo4w@user-rh6pi1qo4w3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-rh6pi1qo4w The situation determined my actions. Ignorance of my tendencies determined my actions, and awareness of my tendencies determined my actions for the better. How is this not deterministic?

      @modernorpheus@modernorpheus3 ай бұрын
    • @@modernorpheus cause you make it sound as though you think you have the choice between ignorance or awerness and as though you or anyone can meaningfully choose between one or the other to manipulate your outcome, this is not determinism its a cope, "i cant choose my actions but i can choose my mindset which determines my actions" this distinction is meaningless there is only the one path were on so criticizing or judging any mindset doesnt make sense

      @user-rh6pi1qo4w@user-rh6pi1qo4w3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-rh6pi1qo4w You can't get away from the fact that "choices" arise because of the situation that creates them. Every factor, from environment to cognition to the actions of others, determines the choices you can make. Likewise, your choices have consequences, which lead to new situations that force other choices to be made. Both are causal relationships, i.e., deterministic relationships. Pretending that my choices were unrelated to my cognition only led me to failure. Understanding the concept of cause and effect, knowing my patterns of decision-making, led to better outcomes. Both were causal relationships, i.e., deterministic relationships. Sure, from the perspective as non-omniscient being, without full awareness of every factor leading to our actions, we will always perceive ourselves as making choices. That doesn't mean we are unaffected by reality.

      @modernorpheus@modernorpheus3 ай бұрын
    • @@user-rh6pi1qo4w I don't get how you can get away from cause and effect. There is a causal relationship between the situation and my choices, and there is a causal relationship between my choices and the consequences. We can use the word "choice" as much as we want, but use of that word doesn't indicate free will, because these choices are in the middle of causal chains.

      @modernorpheus@modernorpheusАй бұрын
  • This was a fantastic conversation to watch and analyze. I like both Alex and Ben, and I think they’re both fantastic verbal IQs. Tremendous talent on both ends! 💯

    @EDCPride@EDCPrideАй бұрын
  • Ben’s beliefs can really get in the way of his thinking. It was great to hear Alex use the “facts don’t care about your feelings” line to characterize Ben’s saying “we need to believe in free will” whether it in fact exists or not

    @PowMusic@PowMusic5 ай бұрын
    • I always find it illogical when religious people say in response to a question : The good thing with my religion is that there are many things you can't explain and just accept that. It is by definition being satisfied with never knowing or seeking the truth.

      @filiprochette7793@filiprochette77935 ай бұрын
    • @@filiprochette7793exactly, but with Ben it’s even more infuriating when he says it with the self righteous smug as if that’s an adequate argument.

      @skoolboi9901@skoolboi99015 ай бұрын
    • I've listened to a lot of Alex's philosophies. I'm an Atheist myself, however I'm one that believes in free will. His philosophies about free will have never resonated with me as being even possibly true. Maybe I'm just too low IQ to understand fully what his arguments are lol, but it honestly just does not add up

      @tomoates8568@tomoates85685 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@filiprochette7793But science does the same thing doesn’t it? For example, it is assumed that consciousness is physical/material (made up of atoms like everything else) but it can’t be measured or observed in any ”scientific way” in terms of being empirical. The scientific stance is essentially that it has to be physical, since all that can be scientifically proven to exist is observable (or deduced from physical things to necessarily exist). But, of course, scientists don’t say that consciousness doesn’t exist, just that it ”can’t be explained”.

      @SANK0@SANK05 ай бұрын
    • @@tomoates8568 I agree, but the I think that Ben's assertion that free will requires a god is a more egregious stretch.

      @disobedienttiger6240@disobedienttiger62405 ай бұрын
  • I've been wanting this for so long. I love how big Alex is getting and how respectful Ben is to people he finds intelligent. They should do a show together lol

    @shirinatron3585@shirinatron35855 ай бұрын
    • 😂 except Ben literally works for right wing propaganda companies with the same societal perspectives shared by David Duke. He is genuinely one of the worst figures when it comes to thinking objectively and self-critical thought. The fact that he genuinely has no respect for even those he percieves as less intelegent is evidence of him allowing his moral shortcomings to dictate his ability to reason. Hes by definition a bad faith actor and a political shill.

      @yungbusta@yungbusta5 ай бұрын
    • What im saying is, this is no "meeting of great minds" this is "political tool, good talker and thiest attempts to prove known fallacies and absurd ancient claims to be true by the hand of a well educated, well spoken, self critical atheist."

      @yungbusta@yungbusta5 ай бұрын
    • If only Ben could pull off "respectful" with no qualifiers.

      @adamchristensen8566@adamchristensen85665 ай бұрын
    • Alex will not sell his values and work with him

      @daseinz@daseinz5 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@adamchristensen8566No one does that, what are you on about. For instance if you are disrespectful to me, you're getting disrespect back, because being respectful is one of the qualifiers I require in order to be respectful. If you don't deserve respect, you're not getting it. Period.

      @fisharepeopletoo9653@fisharepeopletoo96535 ай бұрын
  • The counter claim to Alex's excluded middle argument against free will is a great on the spot rebuttle. I have been thinking about this argument from alex for a while and I haven't thought of that rebuttle yet Ben thinks of one right on the spot! Smart guy.

    @josephrichards7624@josephrichards76243 ай бұрын
  • great conversation

    @matthewp619@matthewp6193 ай бұрын
  • I havent watched it yet but i do think its quite funny that the comment section is full of people complimenting Alex by saying we was well spoken and had good arguments and people complimenting Ben for simply being able to act respectfully

    @saltoftheegg@saltoftheegg5 ай бұрын
    • Most people here are followers of Alex’s content and mostly know ben because of the clips of him ‘destroying’ college kids who aren’t as clever as they think they are. Nothing really unexpected in the comments, I do wonder how Ben’s fans will react to Alex once they find this, if they do.

      @andrespolanco3182@andrespolanco31825 ай бұрын
    • @@andrespolanco3182Which is funny, because Ben literally has an entire show dedicated to debating/interviewing people across the political isle, and none of them are college kids. These people haven't spent a single minute watching any of his content to know any better other than various agenda-driven out of context clips they find on social media. He's always been able to have civil conversations with people who disagree with him as long as the good faith is mutual.

      @visual_sanctum@visual_sanctum5 ай бұрын
    • @@visual_sanctum Precisely

      @andrespolanco3182@andrespolanco31825 ай бұрын
    • It's because Ben Shapiro is actually a sophist and when he's shown to obviously be when the most his fans can say any more is that he's good at it

      @preston21354@preston213545 ай бұрын
    • I used to binge Ben’s content daily until his war mongering didn’t sit well with me. Can safely say that out of what I’ve seen/listened to, this is a drastic improvement for Ben. :/

      @moonandstars1677@moonandstars16775 ай бұрын
  • I’m pleasantly surprised at the quality of this debate. This sort of honest discussion has been lacking for some time. Good work folks.

    @nunciomassara7534@nunciomassara75345 ай бұрын
    • It's Alex o'Co

      @ezra3776@ezra37765 ай бұрын
    • I feel like this is what you say when you dont want to acknowledge one side was absolutely destroyed lmfaooo

      @Runthemjewels@Runthemjewels5 ай бұрын
    • ​@Runthemjewels I'm not sure anyone of almost half a million viewers changed their mind and that one side even significantly nudged more people than the other in their direction. If that could be shown I think that would be the metric to see a clear "winner".

      @dustinavant2003@dustinavant20035 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Runthemjewelsyeah the guy I like totally destroyed the guy I don't like 😂

      @albertbecerra@albertbecerra5 ай бұрын
    • @@Runthemjewelsnobody was, really. The whole first segment came down to “who do you believe” and both of them acknowledged that that was the only reasonable end point of that discussion.

      @derekeastman7771@derekeastman77715 ай бұрын
  • This was really entertaining and quite enlightening Many of my views may now shift as a result of the cases put forward in this debate

    @wfcjosh@wfcjosh2 ай бұрын
    • How?

      @ThePaganpat@ThePaganpat4 күн бұрын
  • What an incredible interview. Not only are alex and ben very well mannered and respectful toward eachother, but their arguments are both very convincing and well thought out. It’s hard to say who comes out on top here, which i believe speaks well to the nature of the universe as the ultimate mystery.

    @maxwellsimon4538@maxwellsimon453814 күн бұрын
  • Alex is a national treasure. I hope he'll be a fixture for decades.

    @danielfitzgerald2561@danielfitzgerald25615 ай бұрын
    • *international

      @seankrake4776@seankrake47765 ай бұрын
    • Actually, I witnessed quite the opposite. Seeing an Athiest point to the fact the OLD TESTEMENT mentions slavery and other sad behaviors of sinful mankind, isn't an argument against God its an indictment of man's evil nature. Clearly, Ben won the day and I couldn't help thanking our American forefathers for welcoming Jewish People! Conversely, the worst thing Germany and much of Europe did was to chase out the Jewish people! Look at Science, Technology, and Law, without the Jewish people America wouldn't be the Super Power it is today!!

      @salmonkill7@salmonkill75 ай бұрын
    • lol he's an anachronism. he's a mild form of Dawkins. He's a modernist in a world wherein modernism is dying.

      @jbsweeney1077@jbsweeney10775 ай бұрын
    • @@jbsweeney1077 how is modernism dying? Also technically modernism is an art style, not a ideological viewpoint. I’d argue if anything that modern, socially progressive views have done nothing but increase in popularity, and more traditional conservatism has strengthened among its supporters, but it has lost many supporters particularly in younger generations.

      @seankrake4776@seankrake47765 ай бұрын
    • God willing.

      @tommycoopersmagiccarpetwea817@tommycoopersmagiccarpetwea8175 ай бұрын
  • Really solid debate. Interesting to see Ben Shapiro debate someone who’s actually intelligent. Also really nice how both were very respectful of each other (something rare to see today)

    @adne4336@adne43365 ай бұрын
    • “Respectful of each other” NOPE!! TRY AGAIN!! That’s just laughable. Sorry but “RESPECT” requires a conscious agent/freewill and choice, that is rationality itself? But as “Mr Sceptic” of the elite university of Oxford helpfully pointed out freewill and choice, that is “RESPECT” and “MORALITY” is nothing more substantive than a delusion under this strictly reductive materialism, atheism or philosophical naturalism. Sorry but it’s self refuting as its truth implies it’s falsity and it clearly undermines morality and rationality itself!! Let’s just think about it rationally for a second. Because the fact is that under this strictly reductive, casually closed, atheistic, nihilistic fan fiction “Mr Cosmic Sceptic” the conscious agent does not even exist??? Equally, “COSMIC SCEPTIC” never actually had over 70 million people “rationally” choose to view his arguments that freewill and choice doesn’t even exist because according to cosmic sceptics standard of “logic” conscious agents/freewill, that is RATIONALITY ITSELF does not even exist. Just hold that thought for second. Just keep holding that thought? Sorry you can’t hold that thought can you? Not even for a second because you apparently aren’t responsible and have no freewill or choice? According to this strictly reductive, causally closed, atheistic, nihilistic fan fiction…. “People who rape and murder children are not responsible or accountable for their actions as they are not a conscious agent??? that is they don’t have freewill or choice”??? Glad we cleared that one up!! And they mock other peoples beliefs!! Yeah not dogmatic at all and perfectly “safe” and “sane” and perfectly “moral” and makes perfect sense!! About as much “sense” as bothering to turn up at a debate you had no freewill and choice about!! Well i hope that all you APEISTS are enjoying the delusion because your sense of the “SELF” including your constant very ironic claims to the “MORAL” and “RATIONAL” high ground are now officially nothing more substantive than an ULTIMATELY DETERMINED, HOLLOW AND SOULLESS ILLUSION. That is nothing more substantive than determined brain chemicals, that is nothing more substantive than the science project of vinegar and baking soda accidentally bubbling over. The BRAINS ULTIMATELY HOLLOW AND SOULLESS USER ILLUSION OF SELF, that is nothing more substantive than SIRI ON STEROIDS!! Nothing more substantive than an ultimately MEANINGLESS, HOLLOW AND SOULLESS VIRTUAL MACHINE, a determined chemical and biological robot on steroids!! Just brain chemicals, an overgrown amoeba with illusions of grandeur, that is an ULTIMATELY DETERMINED, HOLLOW AND SOULLESS APE on steroids with the illusion of the “MORAL” and “RATIONAL” high ground LOL!! It beggars belief that anyone could subscribe to this total and utter b…sht!! It is clearly a blue haired, Oxford graduate, that is left wing elitist apologetic for paedophiles and child murderers!! Definition of APEISM… “HOLLOW AND ULTIMATELY SOULLESS APE MAGICALLY HAVE VALUE BECAUSE HOLLOW AND ULTIMATELY SOULLESS DETERMINED APE SAY ULTIMATELY MEANINGLESS, HOLLOW AND SOULLESS APE HAVE VALUE .” [Atheism/Nihilism]. Definition of Apeism/nihilism…. “ULTIMATELY HOLLOW AND SOULLESS VIRTUAL ASSISTANT SIRI HAVE MAGICAL VALUE BECAUSE ULTIMATELY HOLLOW AND SOULLESS VIRTUAL ASSISTANT SIRI SAY ULTIMATELY HOLLOW AND SOULLESS VIRTUAL ASSISTANT SIRI HAVE VALUE” [Apeism]. Am i close? Am I close or “a long way to go” LOL? I’d bet my sanity and my life that I am pretty spot on there with those definitions of APEISM!! Atheism/Nihilism in a nutshell. I rest my case!!

      @georgedoyle2487@georgedoyle24875 ай бұрын
    • “Respectfully” this is actually Mr “COSMIC SCEPTIC” hand picked from the elite university of Oxford’s “best” graduates. And basically his best argument was the self refuting claim that we can’t see into the minds of the plethora of self professed Judeo Christian scientists including the plethora of Judeo Christians who were actually the heroes of the civil rights movement such as Dr Martin Luther king JR who was actually an ordained Christian pastor who was assassinated for peaceful protest? Therefore they may have been atheists? We can’t see into the blind, mindless, ultimately meaningless determined motion of brain chemicals, that is we can’t see into the minds that don’t actually exist in the first place under this strictly reductive, causally closed atheist, nihilistic fan fiction because the conscious agent/freewill that is rationality itself does not even exist?? It’s illusory??? Yeah makes great sense!! And they mock other people’s beliefs!! We can’t see into the mind of the brilliant Rabbi Johnathan Sacks who worked tirelessly to prevent another genocide against Jews and prevent genocide against all races through intercultural dialogue!! Therefore he may have been an atheist. Equally, we can’t see into the mind of Anne Frank? Therefore religious expression is evil and dangerous??? We can’t see into peoples minds therefore atheism, that is therefore fatalism and epistemological nihilism is coherent and true??? This is an unbelievably weak argument and a red herring, an irrelevancy fallacy, and a total and utter non sequitur!! We can’t see in the minds of all the heroes of the civil rights movement such William Wilberforce and Rosa Parks who were also self professed Christians right? The numerous people who campaigned and died for human rights during Liberation Theology Ok? We can’t see directly into their minds right? So they may have been atheists??? Does that mean that self professed atheists everywhere who do good things could secretly have been Judeo Christians because we can’t see into their determined brain/mind either ? Using the same “logic” this means that all the self professed Christians from the crusades, the Spanish Inquisition, the witch hunts and all the Muslim terrorists could secretly have been atheists in disguise? That is a wolf in sheep’s clothing!! Therefore Judeo Christianity is True by default, that is therefore the fundamental nature of mind/consciousness/The One/Monotheism/Conscious agents/freewill, that is rationality itself is True by default!! Because we can’t see into everyone’s mind right? This is just laughable and is clearly an unbelievably weak argument. Is this actually the best that the elite from Oxford university can produce to deconstruct faith??? We can’t see into the mind of the plethora of Judeo Christian scientists and the plethora of monotheists who did good things for human rights and actually even formulated the scientific method itself, and even analytical philosophy making amazing break throughs in logic and mathematics. We can’t see into their minds therefore determinism/atheism rules? That is therefore fatalism and epistemological nihilism rules??? Everyone has a right to believe what they want and everyone including theists have a right to find it totally ridiculous, totally nihilistic, totally fatalistic and totally and utterly self refuting!!

      @georgedoyle2487@georgedoyle24875 ай бұрын
    • You must never watch Ben’s Sunday special because he’s had very in depth conversations with many intelligent scholars from Sam Harris, Neil deGrasse Tyson, or William Lane Craig. It’s really not too much different than this discussion

      @Jaryism@Jaryism5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Jaryismyou saying that these crackpots are no different to O'Connor? that's insane idea

      @zuz-ve4ro@zuz-ve4ro5 ай бұрын
    • @@Jaryism I have not seen any of those debates, but I’ll be sure to check them out

      @adne4336@adne43365 ай бұрын
  • Every once in a while I feel like I’m listening to this on an accelerated speed but it’s just how fast they talk. 😆

    @BalancedBlackwood@BalancedBlackwood3 ай бұрын
  • I wish i could sit down with people like this and just ask questions

    @Hoyeahplz@HoyeahplzАй бұрын
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