The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 438. Aboutness, Secular vs. Religious Ethics, & Plato’s Aviary | Dr. Daniel Dennett
Episode Date: April 8, 2024Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with writer, philosopher, and cognitive scientist Dr. Daniel Dennett. They discuss the concepts of aboutness, intention, and the highest good as they relate to the rel...igious and secular worlds, the establishment of trust and ethics outside of transcendent presupposition, and the loss of academic freedom at the misapprehension of postmodernism. Dr. Daniel Dennett is an American philosopher, writer, and cognitive scientist. He has published dozens of books, such as “Consciousness Explained" (1992), “Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life” (1996), and “Breaking the Spell: Religion as Natural Phenomena” (2007). - Links - 2024 tour details can be found here https://jordanbpeterson.com/events Peterson Academy https://petersonacademy.com/ For Dr. Daniel Dennett: On X https://twitter.com/danieldennett?lang=en The Problem with Counterfeit People (Article on AI, the Atlantic) https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2023/05/problem-counterfeit-people/674075/ Consciousness Explained (Book) https://www.amazon.com/Consciousness-Explained-Daniel-C-Dennett/dp/0316180661 I’ve Been Thinking (Book) https://www.amazon.com/Ive-Been-Thinking-Daniel-Dennett/dp/0393868052 Breaking the Spell: Religion as Natural Phenomena (Book) https://www.amazon.com/Breaking-Spell-Religion-Natural-Phenomenon/dp/0143038338
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Hello everybody. I had the opportunity today to talk to the philosopher Daniel Dennett,
who along with Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins is probably perhaps best known
to the world as one of the four horsemen
of the atheist movement that was being so influential
over the last 20 years.
And as many of you know, I've had many discussions
with Sam Harris and a couple of discussions
with Richard Dawkins, another one hypothetically forthcoming.
And it occurred to me a couple of weeks ago
that I hadn't spoken with Dr. Daniel Dennett.
And I felt that that would be enlightening and necessary, and so today we talked about his understanding of the relationship between science and morality,
the relationship between morality and the secular, and the relationship between morality, the secular and the religious.
And we exchanged our views about how those different systems
of apprehension and conception might be interrelated,
and talked about the difficulties
in both discussing and reconciling
the scientific and religious views.
Dr. Dennett's viewpoint is that the religious viewpoint has been superseded fundamentally,
that it might have been a necessary precondition for civilized development,
but that it's been superseded.
And we got a long ways in that discussion, not to the end and for obvious reasons, but
welcome to the exchange.
So Dr. Danett, and I will call you Dan, I'm very interested in talking to you about your
ideas about religious belief and practice.
And you may know that I've talked to some of the people
who you've been intellectually associated with.
I've had two discussions with Richard Dawkins
and I think we're planning a third
if the information I'm getting is correct.
And I've spoken with Sam Harris a number of times.
And I think we share a lot of interests, you and I,
and one of them is a very deep interest, I would say.
And I was reviewing your book today, Breaking the Spell, and that's really the domain that I wanted
to discuss, although I'm perfectly happy to branch out from that in anywhere that our
conversation takes us. And I want to try out some ideas on you,
and I want to see what you have to say about them.
I'm going to start with a definition,
if you don't mind, from your book,
so that we have some sense that we're talking
about the same thing.
I think I'll try two definitions,
because there's two domains I think that we could dig into
that would be very useful.
So like you, I'm interested in,
what I believe I'm interested in,
the scientific analysis of religious belief.
I don't think that we-
Well, I am too.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah, and so that's where I'd like to,
that's what I'd like to investigate.
So I'm gonna start out with a couple of definitions
from your books, and then we can dig into that. So the first one is that you described the religious
domain as a vowed belief in a supernatural agent or agents whose approval is to be sought. And that was a definition that I took from breaking the spell.
I'm wondering if, and then I'm going to add something to that,
and then I'll get you to comment about whether you think
those definitions still suffice,
or maybe how they've changed in your thinking,
or anything you'd like to add to them.
So the other thing that I'm curious about here is,
you talked about aboutness,
and you said the aboutness of a pencil,
of the pencil marks.
The aboutness of the pencil marks
composing a shopping list
is derived from the intentions of the person
whose list it is.
And I'm interested in that,
the relationship between intentionality.
And the reason I want to bring that
into the discussion of religion is because
I think there's a link between the ideas
that I've been developing and the ideas of intentionality
that at least in part typify your thought.
And I don't see the relationship precisely
between those ideas of intentionality
and this definition of the religious enterprise that you described.
And so that's the first thing I'd like to get clarified.
So my understanding of perception is that aim defines perception.
And that seems to me to be akin to your, it's akin in some ways to your conception of intentionality and aboutness.
Does that seem at least vaguely plausible?
Yes, more or less. When I speak about intentionality, I mean it in the philosopher's
sense derived from Rentano. It's the aboutness is a good synonym for intentionality,
and it doesn't necessarily have anything to do with one's intentions.
If I'm startled by a loud noise, my startle is about that loud noise, but there's no intention
involved in the sense of, what do you intend, sir? I may have some intentions immediately,
like I am gonna run or I'm gonna duck,
but intention in the, like the legal sense of,
did you do that on purpose, is a distinct notion.
Okay, so can maybe you can clarify what it means,
that means in relationship to aboutness then.
That's obviously, I'm not familiar with the distinction that you're drawing, or sufficiently
familiar.
What's the relationship between the concepts of intention and aboutness? Latin, Intendere Arcum In, is to point an arrow at.
And Brentano and others said,
this is the key to thought.
It's directed at something.
It has an intentional object.
The intentional object is whatever the thought is about. And the curious thing
about thoughts is that they can be about Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny, and in that case,
they're about something that doesn't exist. But that creates logical problems, but we can set those logical problems aside
and just deal with the fact that we have to explain how information that's in our brains
can be about things in the world, and also about things that don't even exist. Okay, so that, okay, okay, so that helps.
And the Latin that you referred to is also very helpful.
So I'm gonna throw something in from left field, let's say.
So the word sin, the word sin,
there's a three language,
there's three language point of derivation
for the word sin.
They're all from archery.
To sin means to miss the target.
So Greek is hamartia.
I don't remember what the Hebrew is.
Chet, I think, but I can't remember.
It doesn't matter.
It means to miss the target.
And it is an archery term.
And so you could think of sin in that regard as malintention or miss intention or merely failure to miss the target.
And so, there's a, and then you talked about intentionality with regard to thought being directed at something. And so the way I've been conceptualizing
the religious enterprise isn't so much in relationship
to the definition that you offered with regard to
avowed belief in a supernatural agent or agents
whose approval is to be sought,
although I'd like to get into that
because it's dead relevant.
Let me run something by you. So, when we aim our attention at something, we're aiming our
attention within a hierarchy of aim. And the religious enterprise looks to me to be the
enterprise that specifies the highest aim or the most foundational of aims. And I think that our instinct that there's such a thing as depth, say depth in literary
analysis, for example, or depth of significance in relationship to concepts, is a function
of the fact that there's a hierarchy of intention.
And I think that as you move toward the foundation
or up to the apex, depending on which metaphor frame
you use, you start to enter into the realm of what's deep
and that the realm of what's deep is what signifies
the religious.
I mean, this is like a technical definition.
And so imagine that your intentions,
any given intention depends on another intention and that depends
on another intention, but as you stack the intentions up and analyze them, you go down
into the depths to see what the foundational intentions are.
The religious is the realm of the foundations of intention.
There's a good way of thinking about it.
So that's a different definition, obviously, than the supernatural agent definition.
And so I'm wondering, well, first of all, if that explanation makes any sense to you,
because it's pretty brief, and also what your reactions to that are.
Well, my reaction to it is that the term that I would use for what you're talking about is the sumum bonum, the highest good.
And that is not necessarily a religious idea.
I have my sense of what's the most important thing, what are the most important things, and I'm not religious.
But I'd like to say deep, I share the hierarchy of ends that you describe.
I don't think of my endorsement and allegiance to that ethic as a religious ethic,
but there it is and I am happy to say
there are some things that are more important than others.
Okay, okay.
Well, that's why I wanted,
that's actually why I wanted to start with definition, right?
Because there's no sense having a discussion
about what something means
unless we can agree what territory we're wandering over.
Okay, so now we seem to have established, okay,
so we seem to have established some agreement
that there's a hierarchy of conceptualization,
or you said even more specifically, a hierarchy of good,
and you referred to the summum bonum,
and you said you have a hierarchy of good,
and you believe that there's something, hypothetically, something at the apex or at the foundation.
So, okay, so let's see.
It's definitely the case that there are medieval conceptions of the Judeo-Christian God as the summum bonum.
And there are insistences in the biblical corpus that in the final analysis, God is ineffable,
even though he's conceptualized in those stories
as a spirit with whom communication is possible,
but his fundamental nature disappears into the ineffable.
That's what the theologians claim when they're pushed.
And so, okay, so let's see if we can figure that out.
So I don't think that the conception of God
as the sum of all that's good
is an accurate conceptualization.
It seems to me it's more like
whatever God is conceptualized to be
is that which all good things share in common, right?
I know that makes the concept of God something
like the central element in a web of ideas
that surround the concept of the good as such, right?
It's not exactly a sum.
And it's important to be precise
when discussing things like this.
Now you said you have a conception of the highest good,
and so can I ask you what that is?
Well, it's not readily definable,
but there's, I think that human beings
are the measure of what's good.
And over the eons, we have gradually discovered
and invented and contrived standards
of what we think good is.
And that's as much for, you know, a good wheel
or a good ax or a good airplane or a good person.
And all sorts of different, you know, there's even, I suppose, good machine guns, good at
being a machine gun.
But the moral good is a particular human realm.
I think animals don't really have morality. They have something
that makes morality possible, but they don't have morality. But we human beings have evolved
systems of morality, and they implicitly fix. They don't define in the geometrical sense what the highest good is, but they outline
it.
They point to it, and it's a moving target.
What we think of as good today is quite different from what was thought good back in Old Testament days.
Nobody today would want to live with Old Testament morality.
We've come a long way from that.
Thank goodness. Thank goodness. Goodness has evolved.
Okay, okay.
So it was interesting, you know,
when you listed out things that could be good,
the things that came to mind first for you were,
some of them were tool-like, a good wheel, a good ax,
even a good machine gun.
And I like that.
I like that.
And I think we have
some commonality of conception there too, because there's a pragmatic definition of good. It's
something like something that's good fits its purpose. And well, that would be in a hierarchy
as well. So that purpose would have to be good as well, right? There's a functional element to that.
And so, okay. And so the way that I've been conceptualizing
perception and I think this is a neurophysiologically informed conceptualization is that once we
establish our aim, the world arrays itself around us into something like pathways and
tools and obstacles. That's associated, that concept I derived in part
from J.J. Gibson's conceptualization of perception.
Yeah, exactly, affordances.
Right, exactly, okay.
So, and so what do you think of Gibson's ideas?
I think most of them are excellent.
I've been writing about affordances for some time.
And what I think Gibson was weak on is he
didn't talk about how affordances are actually tracked in the brain. He sort of threw up
his hands about that and said, the information is in the light.
Well, yeah, but how does the information in the light get into our heads and do what it
does?
That's the part that he was weak on, but we're making great progress on that today in the
neurosciences.
Yeah, okay.
Okay.
So, let me elaborate a little bit on the Gibsonian model.
And I've been thinking about it for a long time.
And I've specifically thought about some elaborations on it recently.
He talked a lot about affordances, essentially tools and obstacles.
Okay, so I'm going to lay out a schema and you tell me what you think about this.
And I'm hoping that it matches the underlying neurophysiology.
I believe that it does.
So imagine that we establish a name.
This would be with every act of perception.
We establish a name and then what we see in the world,
our perceptual systems are navigation tools.
And once we establish a name or a destination,
we see a pathway to the destination.
We see tools that we could use to afford us movement
towards the destination.
We see obstacles that could get in the way.
So far, that's pretty Gibsonian.
We see markers of progress.
We see markers of failure.
We see allies and foes, that would be more on
the human scale, and we see agents of transformation.
And the agents of transformation would shift our aims.
Because as you said, what's good changes to some degree situationally, like it partakes
in a hierarchy of good, But it switches situationally.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Okay.
And so I like the expansion because a human being
doesn't really fit the tool category,
but then we can perceive human beings who are useful
and on our side, so to speak.
And we can perceive human beings that are,
who operate in a manner that's intent, exactly.
So allies and foes seems to be a nice way
of conceptualizing that.
Okay, so then I think you can,
I spend a lot of time on assessing
the neuropsychology of emotion.
I was particularly influenced by Jeffrey Gray's work,
and also by Jak Panksepp, right? I know their work
quite well. Well, so that fits quite nicely in the Gibsonian model as far as I'm concerned because
it looks to me like the tools and obstacles, for example, the Gibsonian affordances, well,
tools produce, the apprehension of a tool produces positive emotion. The apprehension of an obstacle produces negative emotion.
And it's the same with allies and foes.
It's the same with markers forward and markers of progress and markers of failure.
So the emotions become calibration systems that mark deviation from the pathway forward.
And I talked to Carl Friston, here's something cool. I talked to Carl Friston about this. that mark deviation from the pathway forward.
Now I talked to Carl Friston, here's something cool.
I talked to Carl Friston about this.
So I wrote a paper with some of my students
about 10 years ago where we tried to relate anxiety
to entropy computation.
So anxiety seems to mark the multiplication of pathways
to a destination.
So if you're, right, right.
So it's an, marks an increase of entropy.
And Friston worked on a model like that,
but he added a dimension that I hadn't conceptualized.
He said that the reason that dopamine marks positive affect
is because positive affect marks a decrease in entropy as you move forward to a destination.
So you can actually conceptualize both emotional systems from an entropy perspective.
I think this is fine, not obvious, but on the right tracks all the way along. In my work, I've come to the view that
all control is done by emotions in the brain. There's no operating system. The brain is a
computer, but it doesn't have a rigid operating system the way a digital
computer does.
All control is done by resting control in a war or a battle, a conflict between different
emotional states that arise in our brains.
And that's why life is difficult,
is because easy things are things that are emotionally closer to hand,
and they lure us away from the better answers.
This is whether you're doing science or making a moral decision or trying to solve a math
problem.
Self-control is the arena of consciousness, and emotional valence is what does all the
pushing and pulling.
Okay, okay. So let me ask you about that, and that'll bring us back to the religious question to some degree.
So you characterize the landscape of consciousness.
Correct me if I get any of my summaries of your ideas wrong, because I don't want to do that.
As a battleground between emotions, and so I would say, do you mean a battleground between emotions
or do you mean a battleground between emotions and motivations?
Well, motivation is emotion too.
Okay, okay, fine. So we're going to put those in the same bin.
I mean, sort of conceptualizing the difference.
To me, it seems practically useful to conceptualize motivations as systems that set aims and emotions
as systems that track movement towards aims.
Because there's a bit of a difference.
It seems to me there's a bit.
Well, you know, it's not a perfect separation.
But they interact.
They interact all the way.
I know.
I know.
And some emotions seem to set aims, like anger, for example, does.
Yeah.
So, okay. Okay, but that's fine.
So, are you familiar with Merchea Eliade's work, by the way, the Historian of Religion?
No.
Well, I know of it, but I'm not familiar with it.
Okay, okay.
Well, he's stunningly brilliant, by the way, and to the degree that you're interested in
the scientific analysis of religion, I can't think of a better source.
He's amazingly brilliant. And much of what he says works in alliance with the things
we've been talking about. So let me give you an example. And this also has to do with the
issue of self-control. So Iliad has pointed to a theme that's developed in mythology in
many, many different cultures. And it's the war of the gods in heaven.
And there are accounts in many, many theogones,
stories of the rise of gods,
of a battle between primal forces
that results in the emergence of a dominant player.
Now, you can imagine anthropologically that that
might be a consequence of something like this. So you imagine that as a culture amalgamates,
the gods of the local tribes come together at the same time, and there's a conceptual
war. And as the culture integrates those concepts war at the same time, sometimes in the form of actual physical battles,
and there's an amalgamation of conceptualization that parallels the amalgamation of tribal units.
And out of that often emerges something approximating a monotheism.
And I think that parallels cultural integration, but I also think it parallels cortical maturation.
I think there's an impetus towards unification
that is equivalent to the battle between emotions
and motivational systems, and they're not their suppression.
That's a Freudian model,
but their integration towards a higher end.
That sounds roughly right.
Yes, I think that's what maturation is all about.
That's how we become self-controlled.
That's how we become autonomous is by learning how to control our emotions.
But it's not as if there's a homunculus in there who's in charge, it's that the emotions themselves negotiate a resolution.
Yes, yes, a resolution.
And you can only do one thing at a time.
Yeah.
And so, what emerges from all of that noisy struggle in the brain is a more or less unified, more or less self-controlled, more or less reliable agent.
That's what free will is.
Okay, okay, great. We're having a hard time finding something to disagree about here.
So, I think we'll get to that, but so far, okay.
So let me tell you a story.
Let me tell you a story.
You tell me what you think about this.
So the Egyptians in their cosmology,
they put something at the apex.
Okay, what they put at the apex was the God Horus.
And Horus was represented by an open eye. You know the famous Egyptian eye. Everyone
knows that symbol, right? And Horus was also a falcon. And the reason Horus was a falcon
is because raptors have superb vision. So the Egyptians hypothesized in their mythology,
I think this was an emergent hypothesis,
that the agent that should rule supreme
over the war of states, right?
This would be the agent that unifies,
was equivalent to the aware eye, right?
So they put attention at the apex,
and it's actually voluntary attention.
It's even more specific than that.
It's voluntary attention to the, what would you say?
It's something like, it's voluntary attention to error.
That might be a good way of conceptualizing it, right?
And so, okay, okay, okay.
And so, all right.
So let's turn to your original definition,
because there's something definite there
that I'd like to delve into.
So I suggested that the way that I've been conceptualizing
the religious enterprise was an analysis
of what should be put at the uniting apex there.
That'll tie that in with what we're talking about.
You objected to the religious enterprise in your book
that the sticking point for you was the idea
that there was a supernatural agent
whose approval needed to be sought or bargained for.
Okay, so in the Old Testament corpus,
there's an insistence that the relationship that we have with what's highest is to be conceptualized as a relationship.
Right, and so that's starting to wander onto the territory that you're describing.
So I've been very curious about why it's conceptualized as a relationship.
So let me, let me lay that out for you and you tell me what you think about that.
So for example, one way of conceptualizing the God of the Old Testament is that,
is He's the force that manifests itself as calling.
So for example, when Moses is attracted by the burning bush, the burning bush is a very good example of this.
So Moses is a shepherd at the point in the story
where the burning bush makes itself manifest.
And the burning bush is a symbol,
it's like a symbol of the dynamism of life.
That's a good way of thinking about it
because a tree is a good symbol of life.
And a burning tree is a tree
that's in the process of transformation.
And so it's like a vision of hyper-metabolism.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
But it's also a combination of being and becoming.
And so it's the manifestation of being and becoming.
That's very abstract.
In any case, what happens to Moses is that
he's wandering around and he's by Mount Sinai
and something attracts his attention.
And he wanders off the beaten path to investigate that.
And as he investigates it, he goes into it more deeply.
He eventually takes off his shoes,
which is a symbol of his willingness to,
what would you say, depart from his current journey.
It's a good way of thinking about it.
You wear shoes that are appropriate for a journey
and shoes mark identity and to remove your shoes
is to sacrifice your current identity for that pursuit.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
And as he goes deeper into it,
eventually the voice of being and becoming itself
speaks to him and that's what marks his transition
to a leader.
Now, so God in that story is represented
as that which calls to us.
And there's an autonomy about that.
See, this is also what the psychoanalysts figured out
is that there are spirits, so to speak,
operating within us that aren't under our voluntary control,
that have the capacity, for example, to grip our attention.
And you said, for example, when we respond with a startle response,
there's no conscious intentionality in that. We're gripped by something.
And the grip of attentional interest that's manifest in calling is represented in the Old Testament
as a manifestation of the Divine. And so, I'm wondering what you think about that
and about that notion of autonomy in interest in calling.
I think it's like a manifestation of the unifying Spirit.
That might be another way of thinking about it. Well, it strikes me as a very clear example of the excess, I'll use a philosophical word
and then explain it, hypothesization of a perfectly real phenomenon.
People are always wanting to make a thing, an object, out of a pattern that they see.
The pattern is real.
You've described it just fine.
But it's not an extra thing.
It's just the pattern that's there in the way people control themselves and learn to
control themselves. This is the leitmotif of my whole career.
People think that there's this,
what I call the Cartesian theater,
the place in the head where this movie happens.
There's no such place.
There is no Cartesian theater. There's no such place. There is no Cartesian theater.
There's perception, but perception doesn't consist in re-perceiving something which is
displayed in your brain.
That's an extra thing that doesn't exist.
And this autonomous God from the Old Testament is another extra thing.
It's not needed, it doesn't explain anything, but it's a very human foible to postulate
such a thing.
Right.
It's like the age…
So, would you also include that criticism in the realm of the
hyperactive agency detector, something like that? Is that is that an idea?
Okay, fine. So I understand your objection. Okay. So, okay. So, okay. So now let me ask you this. So
you said earlier that the good is something that transmutes, let's say, and recedes. And
The good is something that transmutes, let's say, and recedes. And, right, it, okay.
That does what?
Transmutes and recedes the good. It moves around.
It's a moving car.
Oh yeah, yeah, good. Yeah.
Okay, okay, okay. So, let me ask you what you think about this.
It's like a summum bonum explanation for the relationship between the concept of God and that concept.
So imagine that something calls to you
in the manner we just described.
I'm not gonna hypothesize a God
in the way that you objected to.
Okay, but you know in your life
that there's a sequence of things that call to you.
Okay, so now imagine that there's a commonality
behind that sequence, that all those things that call to you. Okay, so now imagine that there's a commonality behind that sequence,
that all those things that call to you
are pointing you in a direction.
Like the direction I would suggest
that they're pointing you in
is the direction that unifies that emotional
and motivational conflict.
You see what I, okay, okay, okay.
So that seems to be an okay explanation as well.
Because this is actually how the God of the Old Testament is characterized, right?
Is that He is the commonality of callings.
And there's another element too that emerges, because it's important.
You could think about calling as the manifestation of the positive emotions
that pull us forward.
That's a reasonable way of thinking about it.
But the God in the Old Testament
is also characterized as conscience, right?
And conscience also has that kind of autonomy, right?
Because you call yourself out on your misbehavior
and it's something that in some sense is inescapable.
Okay, so the dynamism between calling and conscience
is one of the most profound ways
that the God of the Old Testament is characterized
in the biblical corpus.
And it looks to me like it's an attempt to characterize
the orienting function of what attracts your attention
and what also keeps you on the pathway,
is something like that.
So is there any of that that you would object to?
Like the, I...
No, no, I think you're making a fairly easy topic
more difficult than it has to be,
but it's an interesting way of doing it, and
I am happy to grant you that interpretation of…it's a way of reading the Old Testament
where it makes a little more sense than if it was taken literally.
Yeah.
All right.
So, I'm going to go with this from the same issue,
from a slightly different perspective,
because I want to zero in on this issue of relationship,
because I think that's the most fundamental stumbling block
that would be useful for us to discuss.
And I think it's the strangest element
of the religious endeavor.
We've established a certain amount of common ground
in relationship to the idea of a hierarchy of value
or a hierarchy of good.
So I'm just gonna leave that sit for a minute,
but I wanna investigate the relationship issue
because it is key to, as you point out in your book,
it is key to what people generally understand,
at least as part of the religious enterprise.
And it's also the insistence that's probably
most susceptible to the objections that you've put forth,
for example, with regards to the hyperactive agency detector.
And so I've been very curious about why the relationship
with what's good is conceptualized so often
as a relationship, right, as an actual relationship.
Okay, so let me walk through something
and you tell me what you think about this.
So I've been conceptualizing thought as secularized prayer.
And the reason I'm doing that, I suppose to some degree,
is anthropological, because I think that prayer
preceded thought developmentally.
I think that's what the historical evidence would suggest.
We haven't been thinking rationally for very long.
It's perhaps several thousand years.
We've been thinking religiously for much longer than that.
And I'm not trying to establish a qualitative primacy here.
I'm trying to count for the facts.
So I'm gonna outline what I think we do when we think.
And I'd like you to tell me
what you think about the outline.
Okay.
So, okay.
Well, so the first thing I would say is that
thoughts orient us in a manner
that's akin to our perceptions and our emotions.
So they're of the same enterprise.
We use thoughts to move us towards our goals
and then to transform our goals.
Yeah, yeah.
It's the abstract.
Okay, okay, good.
So, and then I would say that thoughts make themselves
manifest in relationship to our aim, right? Just like our perceptions do. Okay, good, so, and then I would say that thoughts make themselves manifest
in relationship to our aim, right?
Just like our perceptions do.
And so there, our thoughts are defined
at least in part by our aim.
So this is what I think I do when I think.
So the first thing I do when I think
is admit that I don't know something.
So I come to the process in humility
and I admit I have a problem.
It's like, here's something I don't understand.
It could be something I'm curious about.
It could be something that's bothering me,
but I have a problem.
And I also admit that I have the problem
and I presume that there's an answer.
And I presume that if I get the answer that would be good.
And then I would say, I do something that you could describe. I allow myself to receive a thought.
It's something like that.
Now I could say, I think, or I could say,
I think something up, but I don't really like
that formulation because I don't think,
I don't think it's a good description
of actually what happens.
What happens is that I posit a problem and answers appear to me.
That's good.
I'm happy with that.
It reminds me of Plato in the Theotetus where he says, knowledge is like the birds in a giant aviary, and you've got
all these birds.
The trick is, can you get them to come when you call?
And so, you've got all this knowledge that you've acquired, and the hard part is getting it
to come when it's needed.
And how often do we smite our forehead and say, oh, I knew that all along, why didn't
I think of it?
That's when we find that there was something we knew that didn't get used by us at the
appropriate moment.
And the best way to make the new thoughts occur to you is to be in a discussion like
we're in right now.
It's to get another mind to help you, and we stimulate each other's minds and dredge up new corners
of the other person's minds, which may have interesting ways of putting things that we
hadn't quite thought of before. Then, oh, that's a good way of putting it. Yeah, I get that.
Descartes' big error was in being solitary, trusting to his own mind and trying to get
his clear and distinct ideas ever clearer and more distinct.
And the only way he could trust them, he thought, is if he posited a benevolent, all-knowing
God.
We don't need that.
What we need is each other.
So, okay, so let me riff on that for a minute.
So, there's a gospel insistence that where two or more are gathered in the name of the Logos,
that Spirit makes itself manifest. That's a good way of thinking about it.
And so, imagine that what we're trying to do in this conversation,
and what we hopefully are doing to some degree,
is to stumble forward somewhat less blindly
toward the truth.
Okay, so that's dependent on our aim.
And if our aim is at the truth,
then the spirit that makes that journey possible,
that's how the religious,
that would be the religious formulation.
The spirit that makes that journey possible will make itself manifest in the space defined
by our interaction.
It would seem to me that would be a good definition of science, too.
I would agree with that.
We can leave the religion right out of it and say it is the organization of science where trust is assumed but tested, where people of different
opinions come together and sort things out constructively, and that's the best test of
all of truth.
You said, for example, that they come together in trust.
Yes.
So that I would say that so that there's a precondition for the scientific inquiry to
occur even at the level of dialogue.
Yes.
And the precondition is that we can trust.
What are we trusting, do you think?
Are we trusting? What are we? The good... In that situation, what is is that we can trust. What are we trusting, do you think? Are we trusting?
What are we, are we?
In that situation, what is it that allows for trust?
It's the goodwill that we normally assume
in a civilized world.
When you and I walk down the street,
we assume that the people that we see all around us, most of whom are total strangers, we assume that they don't mean us any harm.
R. Okay.
B. I like the way Paul Seabright has put this in his book, The Company of Strangers.
If you put a whole lot of unrelated chimpanzees in a large room together, they would be terrified.
They would be screaming and they would be unable to sit there calmly.
And I sometimes point this out when I'm in a large auditorium
and there's hundreds of people, none of them related. I said, is anybody here scared to
death? No, no, no, we're not. We trust each other. That human trust is the key to civilization and to science, and it's under attack right now with artificial
intelligence and misrepresentation and the technologies of misrepresentation, which are eroding trust in a very serious way.
Okay, so I used the same example, by the way, when I'm talking to large audiences and the
chimpanzee example as well.
And so you said that the trust that makes even a scientific conversation possible is the trust in mutual goodwill.
Right? Okay, so, all right, so I want to relate that idea of goodwill back to something that we
talked about earlier. So I think that if the battle between emotional and motivational systems
occurs optimally, it produces a unity of spirit
that makes that trust possible.
That's what you do when you socialize a child.
Like children are really socialized
between the age of two and four, right?
They're pretty egocentric and temporally bounded
at the age of two.
They kind of want whatever their motivational system wants
right now and to hell with the consequences.
That's the definition of a two-year-old.
And there's some wonderful things about that.
And then as they mature and as their cortex matures,
those systems integrate.
And if that integration takes place,
then you have the presence of a overarching structure
that enables that trust to be made manifest.
A child will learn to take turns, for example.
That's why I say that free will is an achievement, not a metaphysical endowment.
You have to become, you have to develop free will, and the reason why we don't hold children responsible for misdeeds
is they haven't developed the self-control.
They haven't developed the sort of trustworthy, reliable autonomy that we demand of each other.
The price we pay in self-control is the best bargain on the planet.
It means that we can walk around without fearing for our lives all the time.
Right, right, right.
Okay, okay.
Well, so, all right, so let me make a leap here, because I'm increasingly inclined to
believe that the divide between atheism and science is an illusion.
And I know that's a huge leap, and I'll backfill it.
But the notion of the logos that emerges as the biblical corpus proceeds is, as far as I can tell,
it's identical to what you just described.
So the notion is that peaceful harmony and unity emerges
when people aim up so they're of goodwill.
The emphasis on hospitality in the Old Testament,
for example, is a reflection of that.
Hospitality as the basis of society.
It was a sacred requirement to be hospitable.
People unify themselves in their upward aim
and then they participate in truthful dialogue.
That's dialogos.
That's the exchange of redemptive information.
And that's the foundation.
Okay, that's the spirit that in principle
emerges in the biblical corpus
as that which is to be put in the highest place.
Now, let me tell you why there's, if you wouldn't mind,
I'll explain why that's conceptualized as relationship.
Okay.
So imagine, okay, so imagine that I'm,
maybe I have a problem with someone, right?
And so my relationship with them is choppy
and it's degenerating into mistrust.
And you already pointed out,
we know what happens when the default presumption
between people deteriorates into mistrust.
That's not good.
Okay, so now I see this mistrust emerging
and I think, well, I would like to rectify that.
And so then I can go, let's say, meditate on that.
How would I have to reshape my perceptions and my actions,
my patterns of attention, so that a pathway to harmony
and trust could be reestablished with this person?
You could imagine asking yourself that.
That's a particular kind of aim.
And as a consequence, I'm likely, not necessarily,
but I'm likely to get a revelation
of some pathway forward.
Does that seem reasonable?
Revelation?
Well, I don't know how else to describe it.
It might occur to you.
An idea related...
An idea might occur to you.
Yes.
I think those...
I'm not trying to force this,
but I think those are the same concepts.
Because a revelation is something that reveals itself.
Now I know the problem is it begs the source,
but I'm not too concerned about that at the moment.
But that, so here's an idea.
The thought that will make itself manifest to you
is dependent on the aim of your request.
Hmm, yeah, independently.
I mean, indirectly, yes.
Okay, okay, fine. Okay, so, what I see happening time and time again in the biblical stories,
and I've looked at them in great detail, is that God is conceptualized as that which you can call upon,
that which will respond if you're aiming upward
in something approximating love
and you're motivated by the truth.
That's a definition.
Like it's not an insistence about some extra human agent,
not precisely.
It's a definition of how to progress forward appropriately.
And this is why the stories that are sequenced
in the biblical corpus are, what would you say?
They're attempts to characterize that spirit,
like the spirit that should be called upon
to set things right.
And it's the reason it's conceptualized as a relationship,
this gets to the point precisely is because
it is something that you can call upon
that will reveal itself.
And you do that as if it's in a relationship.
Like it's not much, now you pointed to Descartes error,
so to speak, you said that he kind of got lost
in his solipsism and that he needed other people
to correct his thinking.
That's fine with me because I think that we can call upon each other to keep us moving
forward on the appropriate path, but we also do that in internal dialogue, right?
And that the question is, what is it that you're calling upon when you have the pathway
forward to a new destination revealed.
That's what's characterized as God in the Old and New Testaments.
Well, it seems to me we've improved on that.
And we call it secular science, including philosophy, including what universities are supposed to do and so forth.
We are assuming goodwill and trust, and we are letting ideas in that are welcome as long as they are presented in a
spirit of, I don't get to lay down the law, here's my idea, and if somebody in the group has an idea that the others don't accept,
then the responsibility to get the others to accept that falls really on the person
whose idea it is.
And anybody who says, well, my religion says that this just has to be this way, and there's no argument about
it.
We say, well, I guess you're disqualified.
I'm sorry, you're disabled.
You can't participate in this discussion if you can't put your own ideas, us, then you'll have to sit this one out because this is a dialogue among equals.
Okay, so here's the concern I have about that. You pointed out that that scientific enterprise
pointed out that that scientific enterprise is dependent upon the two things,
the assumption of goodwill and trust,
but also the presence of goodwill and trust, right?
Those are really separate things,
because you could have that and I could distrust you anyways,
or I could trust you and that wouldn't be there.
But for the scientific endeavor to proceed,
your proclamation is that that goodwill and trust
have to be there and they have to be assumed.
Is that correct?
Well, yes, but it's also true that…
Right, I got that.
I got that.
Yes, absolutely.
It has to be there.
Yeah. Interesting scientific question.
Egos reign and there's battles and there's name calling and there's caricature and it's
rough and tumble at that cutting edge is the solid heft of the acts, all the agreed upon things, all the things that they're not disagreeing about.
And that's what gives the scientific enterprise its power.
Let me add a couple of things to that scientific conceptualization, and you tell me if they're necessary and if you're agreeable to them.
Okay, so one would be the assumption that there is an intelligible order.
The assumption that that intelligible order is intelligible to us.
The assumption that attempts to map that intelligible order are beneficial rather than harmful.
This is fine.
That's a working assumption.
I think those working assumptions are religious by definition because they're outside the
purview of science.
They're the ground upon which, the ground that has to be established
before the scientific enterprise can function.
And I'm not trying to catch you here, by the way.
This is a definitional move.
It's like, because it sounds to me like you're making the presumption,
and I think it's an accurate presumption,
that there are preconditions that must be met
before the scientific enterprise can proceed in its proper manner.
And my question is, those presumptions aren't within the purview of science.
No, no, they are.
They're outside the purview.
No, I mean, they're working assumptions.
What if they're preconditions?
The reason they are within science is because science has a track record.
You drive a car.
Oh, okay.
You drive a car.
We're talking using very high-tech equipment right now.
So far, the evidence that there's order and that we've got a grip on it could not be better. We can measure things to the microsecond and to the micrometer,
and we can plot eclipses centuries in advance. That is part of science, and it's part of the structure of science.
And that's where our working assumption that there's order is it's not religious, it's scientific.
Okay, okay, okay. Well, then, fair enough, fair enough.
You're, you, it's,
science has a reputation and the reputation that it has is well founded and the reputation is as an enterprise
that can reveal order and to do that in a manner
that's reliable and productive.
Okay, no problem.
I think that's a separate issue in some regard
from some of the other axiomatic assumptions
that we listed out.
It's like an addition to it. It's like, right, because we talked about the necessity of goodwill.
We talked about the necessity of assuming goodwill. We talked about the idea of the
intelligibility of the order. You said we can also rely on science because its claims to have
investigated that order reliably have been validated repeatedly, right?
So it has a brand and a ref.
Okay, so let's look for an exception for a minute,
just out of curiosity.
So I was testifying before Congress yesterday,
about, or two days ago,
about something that you alluded to, right?
The breakdown of trust, for example,
in an increasingly technological world.
Now, you know the Chinese scientists, the engineers,
they produced a system in China they call
Skynet after the Terminator series, right?
And Skynet is made out of 700 million closed circuit TV cameras,
which monitor everything the Chinese do.
And when the engineers who designed this system
were pressed on their use of the name Skynet,
because Skynet became a system
that went to war against humanity,
they said, oh, we're producing the good Skynet,
which is of course what the original engineers presumed
in the movie series.
And so it's surreially insane and extraordinarily dangerous.
Now, how do you,
but you see that there's a danger
in that technology run amuck.
Absolutely.
Now, well, why is, how do, if we're careful,
how do we segregate the perversion
of the scientific enterprise,
which is still using much of the same technology
and approach.
Like it seems to me that in China,
it's devoted towards evil ends
and that that's an ever present problem.
Well, that's an ever present and ever lurking problem.
And so is the science that the Chinese are engaging in
that has this element of the extension of control lurking problem. And so is the science that the Chinese are engaging in
that has this element of the extension of control
and surveillance, can we, is that a false science?
Or like, how do we, how do we conceptualize
within the scientific realm, the deviation from,
from the ideal that the Chinese are pursuing
and that now threatens us, let's say.
Well, many, many years ago,
Norbert Wiener put it very well.
He said, don't make the mistake,
I can't quote him exactly, but he said,
when you make a tool, you also make a weapon.
And how you use it.
Don't think that your defensive weapons
won't be turned against you as offense.
16 years is the lag, right?
I think that was from Wiener too.
He said, any weapon you make will be used by your enemies
within one generation. It's something like that.
Something like that. So...
Yeah. And every tool is a weapon.
Yeah. That's true. And that's why we need government and law, law and order in addition to...
In addition to, I mean, science depends on it. Science depends on freedom and order.
And that's why the science that occurs in the free world is way ahead of the science
that occurs in dictatorships.
Right.
Okay.
So those are part of the preconditions for the scientific endeavor that we discussed
earlier.
Okay.
Now, I believe it was in your book you described Stephen Jay Gould's two magisteria notion,
right?
That there were independent magisteria. And in your book, you weren't particularly convinced
by that argument, that's a good way of thinking about it.
I thought it was blunt.
Now let me ask you, okay, great, okay.
So that's very blunt.
Okay, so let me reframe what you just said,
including that realm of conceptualization that's in contention
between you and Gould.
Okay, so what I heard you say, tell me if I've got it wrong, is that the scientific
enterprise nests inside another enterprise.
That enterprise is associated with freedom and order, a kind of order. Civilization.
And regulated by laws.
Okay, okay.
And that system itself is predicated on a system of fundamental assumptions.
So let's say in the United States, for example, the entire body of laws that allows for the
order that makes scientific freedom possible is at least in part grounded on our conceptualizations,
let's say of inalienable human rights.
Yes, and that nobody is above the law.
So that's a stacking.
Okay, so what that implies
is that the scientific enterprise itself
is nested inside another enterprise.
See, that's the conception.
I think this is where Gould went wrong.
You know, okay, well, so then we could say in terms of his magisteria argument, it's not
that they're side-by-side systems in separate domains. It's that the scientific enterprise
is nested inside a moral enterprise by necessity and goes astray if it's not nested inside
that enterprise.
The moral enterprise, yes. Where Gould went wrong was in thinking that religion was the authority on the moral side.
It's not.
Okay, so let's delve into…
How could a Harvard professor in the same university where John Rawls and Robert Nozick
and other philosophers have been doing magnificent work in ethics.
How could he forget about secular treatments of morality?
That's the question.
All right, so now we have a model of the scientific enterprise proceeding in the West and proceeding
appropriately and positively because it's nested in a,
you said nested in civilization.
And we have civilization itself predicated on a set of fundamental principles.
Yes.
Well, yeah, fundamental, but evolving.
We don't want to be foundationalists
in the philosophical sense.
We don't want to be rigid found. Hey, I've got something to ask you about
with relationship to that.
So you tell me what you think about this.
So there was a paper published in 2022 in the fall.
I think it's a revolutionary paper.
I think it should win a Nobel Prize. It stunned me.
So, mutations are essentially random for all sorts of reasons. They're random in part because
the effect of cosmic radiation is random and obviously random.
Random in one sense, but not in another.
Random in one sense, but not in another.
Okay, well, I'll let you clarify that. I'll just walk through the paper
and then I'll let you clarify that if you would.
I don't remember, I'll put it in the discussion notes.
I can't remember the citation at hand.
So you know that DNA has the capacity to repair itself.
It does that quite often.
It error checks and repairs itself.
No, there's a hierarchy of repair
so that the more foundational genetic elements,
if mutated, repair with 100% accuracy.
So there's a hierarchy.
So the genetic code allows for experimentation
at the fringe and preservation of the core.
And so this is the reason I'm bringing this up
because it's the answer to the issue
that you just brought up with regard to
foundational principles and dynamism.
That there's a core set of principles
around which an area of dynamism and exploration
is not only to be allowed
but to be encouraged.
But the foundational elements, there are foundational elements, you know the dictum, extraordinary
claims require extraordinary evidence.
There are foundational theories in science that you don't overthrow without a plethora
of evidence because so many other ideas depend on them.
So, okay, so the foundational elements,
see, this is why I introduced the definition
of the religious that I started the conversation with
is that because my sense is that
the proper religious enterprise is the inquiry, not only into the
foundational elements, let's say that underlie the civilization within which science is nested,
but that also govern the relationship between that foundation and the transformations of
the foundation that are necessary.
I'll give you an example from Egyptian theology.
Remember we talked about Horus earlier? Yep.
Okay, so the Egyptians actually had two male gods, fundamental male gods. Well, there was three,
if you count the evil god, and I'll mention him briefly. So their god of foundations was Osiris.
Now, Osiris had some fundamental flaws. Osiris was a great hero in his youth
when he established Egypt, but as he aged,
he became rigid and totalitarian and willfully blind.
And because of that, that made him susceptible
to overthrow by his evil brother.
That's Seth, by the way.
And the word Seth becomes the word Satan
through the Coptic Christians
as that idea develops.
So the idea is that there's a spirit of the state,
let's say, of civilization for that matter,
which can rigidify and become blind.
And when that happens, it's susceptible to overthrow
by chaotic and malevolent forces.
Okay, what happens under those circumstances
is that everything descends into chaos.
The Egyptians represented that as the rise of Isis,
the goddess Isis.
She's the goddess of chaos and all hell breaks loose.
She gives birth to this other god, Horus.
Horus is the god of attention.
Horus, who's the god of attention, fights with Seth,
who's the evil god who overthrows the corrupt state.
And he loses an eye in the battle.
He goes down into the underworld.
He gets the eye back.
He defeats Seth.
He banishes him.
He gets the eye back.
He goes down to Osiris.
He gives Osiris his eye, and now Osiris can see.
And then they both re-emerge and govern the proper state.
And so what the Egyptians conceptualized
was that the proper sovereign was the proper balance
between foundational tradition and dynamic vision.
And that's what they incorporated as their core,
the core spirit of the Pharaoh.
Yeah, that's the right way of thinking about it.
And so that's how they balance the conflict
between foundational principles and the dynamism
that keeps them operative and updated
as things change and shift around.
And okay, so here's the thought.
So we talked about the scientific enterprise
nested in a moral enterprise,
predicated on a system of principles.
So those principles themselves
have a foundational element, right?
And the farther down you go into that go into the depths of that hierarchy, the closer you come to
what the evolved religious enterprise is aiming to specify.
The evolved religious enterprise sounds to me like science.
Okay, so I want to return to the model that we were fleshing out a bit, and because there's
something I don't understand about our exchange of ideas at the moment.
So I want to recapitulate what we've talked about in the last 10 minutes or so.
So we were talking about the way that the scientific enterprise can go astray, and we seem to agree that it has gone astray, for example, in totalitarian China.
And there's examples of that occurring in the past, obviously.
The scientific enterprise went badly astray under the Nazis and certainly under the Soviets.
And I said, how do we ensure that it doesn't go astray?
And you said, well, it has to be nested inside a civilizational structure, right?
And there's a certain conception of man and his relationship to other men and women within
that underlying structure.
Now what I would like you to do, if you would, is to clarify whether you see the scientific
enterprise as nested inside that broader enterprise. is to clarify whether you see the scientific enterprise
as nested inside that broader enterprise.
Like what's the relationship?
Because this was the Stephen Jay Gould question, right?
He talked about two independent magisteria.
We're looking at a model where one,
the scientific enterprise is stacked
on top of something else.
And I'm wondering if you think
that's a more appropriate conceptualization.
I just want to get that clear.
Well, where Gould went wrong is in thinking
that the second magisteria was religious
as opposed to secular.
Ethics is, one might say, half of philosophy, and almost all of it is non-religious.
It's secular.
Okay, but is it scientific?
All the advances in ethics that we've seen in the last, let's say, 5,000 years have been
fought by the religions, but have gradually been won over by the secular
ethicists.
Okay, okay. So I'm clear about this. So now let me recapitulate then and see if I've got
the way you're conceptualizing this right. So you have the scientific enterprise,
and if it's properly oriented, it's nested in a broader moral enterprise,
but your claim
is that the moral enterprise itself is secular.
Is it secular?
Yes.
That is, the advances are secular.
And the history of the evolution of ethics in the last 10,000 years has been a history
of the secularization of ethics, away from
New Testament ethics, which was terrible, and it's still evolving. And we have issues today. We have issues about vegetarianism and about… We've given up
cannibalism and slavery. Thank you. That's good. But there's still no agreement on a lot of
fundamental issues and ethics. but those agreements have nothing
to do with religion.
Okay, okay. So I've got it. So your model is the scientific enterprise nested in a broader
moral enterprise, but you believe the core element of that insofar as it's valuable is
secular. Okay, so all right, so then is it,
what are the means of validation
of the secular ethical enterprise?
Now they can't be scientific if science is
on top of that structure,
because then those two things just collapse into each other.
So by what principles do the secular ethicists
validate their claims, if they're
not validated scientifically?
Well, there's science and then there's—but I have to explain this carefully—politics.
Science is about what is. Politics is about what we should do. Now these are both rational exercises.
And what we should do, normative, normative inquiry about what the norms should be, and
it includes logic, game theory, probability theory.
Let's stop right there.
There's more to it than that, but there are normative disciplines, and some of it is very abstract, like mathematics, mathematical game theory,
and mathematical logic, and arithmetic, and geometry.
There's a right and a wrong way of doing these things, which we've learned, not thanks
to religion, thanks to our mutual understanding of what works.
The reason we trust't count on it.
To count our cattle and to count our money and to count the miles from here to there, We have this uncontroversial base of achievement from civilization, which has encouraged us inquiry, rationally, and by and large religion has not had any role in that, or if it has,
it's been a negative role.
It has been to maintain outdated standards of morality. On occasion it has helped wonderfully. The black church was a
wonderful force in civil rights in the 20th century, but only by fighting the
white church. The white church dug in its heels and it's digging in its heels now.
And that's lamentable.
What we need is secular ethics and secular politics. Religion was a wonderful, taming force. It's what I call a nurse crop. Do you know what
a nurse crop is? I think I mentioned this in Breaking the Spell. My neighbor, an old farmer,
when I planted my hay fields when I had a farm, he said,
you want to plant oats as a nurse crop first before the Timothy, the hay comes up.
He says it'll protect the young Timothy. You can harvest it if you want or you can just let it go. But it's a temporary scaffold which protects the tender
shoots of the…that's a nurse crop. So, I think of religion as a nurse crop for science.
We needed religion to have the sort of stability of civilizations for several thousand years.
But now we don't need religion anymore as a nurse crop because we've got secular systems,
law and order, and the understanding of secular ethics.
So we no longer need religious ethics because it's outlived its usefulness and in fact it's become more
harm than good.
Okay, okay.
So, let me ask you a couple of questions about that.
The first would be, what do you think it was within the terms of your formulation about
the religious enterprise that allowed it to play its role as a precondition or as a nurse crop, as in your metaphor.
What was it doing that was useful and correct?
I can explain that with an old joke, a Maine joke.
I'm sitting in Maine and had a farm in Maine for many years. One little Maine
town had a sign that said, speed radar controlled. And a newcomer said, well, that must be pretty
expensive. And the old timer said, no, no, it's just a few boards and some white
paint and a little bit of black paint. It's just a sign. It's the idea that somebody's
watching you. It's the idea that God is watching you. That'll be shorthand for the role that religion played.
It was big brother in the sky watching you.
And that was a great idea.
It was a brilliant way of, and I think it was at H.L. Mencken who said that your conscience
is the idea that somebody may be watching you.
Very powerful idea.
Given the absence of evidence for its validity,
let's say from the secular or scientific perspective,
what accounts for its viability
as a stabilizing and civilizing factor?
And this goes back, this is a very complex problem, right, because we already at the
beginning of our talk defined the truth of something at least to some degree in relationship
to its utility.
I don't want to wander too far down that path because I know it's full of pitfalls, but
how do you, what do you see that as?
Do you see that as a necessary fiction?
On my view of religion,
we started out with polytheisms,
and this is every community had its own,
its goblins and fairies and nymphs
and other supernatural agents with various talents and
histories.
What were they good for?
Nothing. offshoots of human susceptibility, human fears, human curiosity that generated.
This was the hyperactive agent detection devices.
These were the spawn of those.
And when they became domesticated, they were feral initially. They were synanthropic beings,
synanthropic memes. They survived because they could. They were just superstitions.
But then they got harnessed by civilization. And rulers used them very effectively.
and rulers used them very effectively. And many of the ideas of religion were clearly very useful
to ruling classes, to kings, to despots, to maintain law and order. And the idea that…
Another one in the same family with somebody who's watching you all the time was, don't blame me, it's the big guy who makes the rules.
We see it today when the used car salesman says, well, I can't make you this offer, I
have to go talk to the boss. There are all sorts of wonderful
devices, tools, thinking tools that religion has evolved, which kept the
anxiety about God watching everything you do alive for thousands of years. God is not watching what you do, because there is no God that watches,
but we can still behave without that myth. Okay, okay, so let me ask you about that.
So my mind goes in a couple of directions.
The God who's watching in the Old Testament is watching for very specific reasons.
So for example, in the story of Noah, God is watching and dispenses catastrophe when things deviate to too great a degree.
Now, I mean, that happens all the time.
Yes, a horrific story.
But it's also something that happens all the time in human society, right?
As people deviate and get destroyed.
And that's it. I'm not making a theological case for that, by the way.
I mean, we saw that happen multiple times in the 20th century,
where societies degenerated into like a power-mad licentiousness and were essentially obliterated in consequence,
which indicates that they've deviated from the central,
from some...
When things go wrong, they go really wrong. Right, and they go wrong because they've deviated from some... When things go wrong, they go really wrong.
Right, and they go wrong because they've deviated
from some appropriate pathway forward.
Well, there can't be wrong without the notion
of deviation, right?
Because if there's something that's wrong,
there's something that's right.
Yeah, sure.
Okay, okay.
So that means that the fictional God,
so to speak of the Old Testament,
watches, just doesn't watch,
but also watches to see when things are going wrong.
And in the story of Noah,
God is the voice that calls to the wise to prepare
when things are going catastrophically wrong.
Right, and that's a good definition.
And so, okay, so let me ask you about that.
What do you think of the state of the secular morality at the moment that permeates the
universities? That permeates the universities right now? Yeah. It's got some real problems.
Okay. How would you characterize those problems? Because academic freedom is
not what it should be right now in the academy. And we have
curtailments of openness, abridgments of academic freedom that should not be allowed.
And what's your understanding? See, my sense at the moment is that the secular project
within the universities has gone badly wrong.
Is that, did you?
Oh, I don't think so.
Well, okay, that's what I'm trying to get clear.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't think the religious academy is doing any better.
That is, I don't think religious universities, Bob Jones University or other religious institutions
have a better record. I think on the contrary, we're better off with the
turmoil in the secular universities. But it is turmoil, and some significant revisions
have to be put in place, and it's going to take some very careful work to accomplish that,
but it's got to happen.
Okay, so given that the universities were the central playing ground, let's say, for
the progress, the maintenance and progress of secularized morality, I think that's a
reasonable way of thinking about it, what do you think has occurred to put them, to
make them go astray? And astray from what? You mentioned freedom, academic freedom, and
we could expound upon that, but like what do you think's gone wrong? Well, I think several things have gone wrong.
One of them is H.L. Mencken has a saying, I love to quote,
he says, for every complex problem,
there's a simple solution,
which is clear, persuasive, and wrong.
Yeah, definitely.
And problems are hard.
It's complicated, as one says.
And several of the things that have gone on, one of them was postmodernism. Postmodernism was…there were some good ideas in its foundation, but
then they got taken up by people who didn't understand them and who overused them and
who went wild and said all sorts of stupid things.
And the scourge was postmodernism.
I have an article called Postmodernism and Truth,
where I really blame postmodernism
for some very bad things.
But that opened the door for the identity politics
that we see today and the virtue signaling that we see today. ideas that are running off the rails,
and we have to point that out
and calmly restore academic freedom
and a real respect for truth.
We could modify the Mencken proposition slightly
because I don't think he was pessimistic enough.
So there's two things that the simple, elegant solutions
offer, right?
First of all, they're simple and wrong,
but they also offer the holder of those ideas
an unearned sense of their moral superiority.
And so they're attractive in two dimensions, right?
So the idea that power rules everything,
which is a postmodern idea, it's wrong and it's simple,
but it also allows the holders of the idea
to identify with the oppressed
and to proclaim their moral virtue.
And that's an almost unbeatable combination, right?
You don't have to do any work on the cognitive side,
because you've got all your explanations in one cliche. And you don't have to do any work on the cognitive side, because you've got all your explanations in one cliché. And you don't have to do any work on the moral
front because as long as you're allied with the right side, everything is right between
you and God, so to speak. And so that's an incredibly attractive combination for people
who are inclined to take the easy way out.
And it's poisonous.
Yes.
All right, sir, look.
I agree.
We've come to the end of our 90 minutes
and I don't wanna wear you to a frazzle.
And I still wanna talk to you for another half an hour
on the daily wire side.
And I'd like to thank you very much
for allowing me to pick your brains
in relationship to your conceptualization of,
well, let's say the relationship between the scientific and the moral and the scientific and the religious.
I'd like to talk to you for another three hours because there's many other things I'd be happy to discuss,
but I don't want to impose too much on your time and I want to leave this.
So far, so good.
Yeah, yeah, okay.
Well, let's leave it at that for now.
It's possible if you're inclined that I'd like to continue this conversation at a different
date because I'd like you to, I'd like to think about the ideas that we exchanged and
I'd like to figure out how we could continue the discussion.
There's still some things I'd like to get to, but they'd take a long time to unpack.
And that might be good for another conversation
if you'd be amenable to it.
So for everybody watching and listening,
I'm gonna continue talking to Dr. Dinnett
on the daily wire side, as you all know,
and I'm gonna walk him through
some autobiographical recollections
because I'm very interested,
and I'm very interested in finding out
how people's
interests make themselves manifest across time. And so that's what we'll delve into on the daily
wire side. And so maybe you could just close. What are you working on now?
I'm working on the dangers of AI, the dangers of large language models, and how they are
of large language models and how they are the most dangerous weapon yet. Are you writing a book about that?
More dangerous than nuclear weapons.
Are you writing a book about that?
Not a book.
I'm writing, I wrote an article for the Atlantic called The Problem of Counterfeit People.
Right. Right.
Counterfeit money is dangerous. It's been against the law and should be.
Counterfeit people are much more dangerous and they are now possible. But we can put in place the technology, and I'm working with people in AI who know how
to do this.
We can put in place the technology to make it at least very difficult and very costly
in terms of prison sentences for those who get caught using counterfeit people.
And we should institute this immediately because, as Jeff Hinton has said, these things can
reproduce and we are about to create a new horde, a new epidemic, a pandemic of counterfeit people, which are going to
destroy trust.
They can destroy civilization.
You know, I just spent two days in DC, interestingly enough, talking to the people I was meeting
with, senators and congressmen, really about the dangers of counterfeit people.
So, obviously we share a concern in that regard.
It's a very great danger.
And I've been working on it almost full-time.
Aha, aha.
And retired, but busier than ever.
Well, I'll keep that in mind, because we got some, we got interesting discussions going in DC
and we're trying to alert people to the danger
of exactly the sorts of things that you're describing.
And so I didn't know that that was an interest of yours.
Anyways, let's wrap this up.
Oh yeah.
I'd like to thank the film crew here in DC
for making this possible for the Daily Wire people
for facilitating the conversation,
for you taking the time and effort necessary to have this conversation, and everybody who's
watching for their time and attention. And you can join us on the Daily Wire Plus side for the
continuance of this conversation. Thank you very much, sir. It's been very good to talk to you and
to meet you. Well, I've enjoyed it. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.