The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - Religious Belief and the Enlightenment with Ben Shapiro
Episode Date: July 21, 2019Jordan Peterson's recent discussion with special guest, Ben Shapiro. ...
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Welcome to season 2, episode 18 of the Jordan V. Peterson podcast.
I'm Michaela Peterson, Dad's daughter and collaborator, and reader of podcast ads.
Quick life update.
Mom is relatively stable at the moment.
The post-surgical complication we've been dealing with is still not solved,
but at least she feels okay right now, and honestly she looks a lot better than she did a couple
of weeks ago, so that's good. In the hospital room, we wrote a bunch of the messages we've received
from people, positive messages. Put them on paper and put them on the walls to make it more
cheerful in there. We got a lot of feedback from people who are testing out thinkspot the intellectual platform dad is a part of
Which you can sign up for at thinkspot.com all those messages are currently on mums wall
So things are stable theoretically for the next couple of weeks this week's episode is dad's discussion with Ben Shapiro
titled religious belief and the Enlightenment.
Dad will introduce Ben in this episode so I won't repeat his words.
Hope you enjoy.
When we return, Jordan Peterson and Ben Shapiro, religious belief and the Enlightenment.
And now, here's my dad with his special guest, Ben Shapiro.
I'm pleased today to be talking to Ben Shapiro.
Ben, I think, really doesn't need an introduction, at least not to most of you who will be
either watching or listening to this, given that he's now one of the most recognized
individuals on the American political journalism scene.
In any case, Ben's an American lawyer, writer, journalist, and political commentator.
He's written ten books, a latest of which is the right side of history.
A reason and moral purpose made the West great, which has become a number one New York Times
bestseller.
I think it's that number four right now.
I think Ben just mentioned to me
that he sold about 150,000 copies since it was released
and that was only a couple of weeks ago.
So that's going very well.
He became the youngest nationally syndicated column
in the US at age 17.
He's also one of the most recognized current commentators
on the new media, YouTube and podcasts.
Serves as editor-in-chief
for the Daily Wire, which he founded,
and is the host of the Ben Shapiro Show,
which runs daily on podcasted radio.
His man is to transform himself into a one-man media empire
and it's quite the accomplishment.
He's also an extraordinarily interesting person,
I think, to follow follow to watch in his interactions
with people publicly because he's an unbelievably sharp debater and one of the fastest, verbally
fastest people that I've ever met.
So it's good.
We're going to talk about his book today.
That's the right side of history, how reason and moral purpose made the West great.
And I can tell you, right right there there's four reasons for social
justice types to be irritated just at the, just at the, what would you call it the, the
daring of the title. So let's talk about it. Tell me about your book. Tell me where you
wrote it. The reason that I wrote the book is because in 2016, I kind of looked around
and for the record, I didn't vote for either of book is because in 2016, I kind of looked around and for the record,
I didn't vote for either of the presidential candidates
in 2016, either of them met my minimum standard
to be president based on the evidence.
And I looked at the sort of attitude
that a change in America used to be
that we'd have elections and they were really fraught.
People were angry, each other,
people were upset at each other,
but the rage seemed almost out of control
in the last election cycle in 2016. I was personally receiving enormous number of death threats for my positions on
politics. I was receiving enormous amount of hatred from the alt-right. I know that there
is some of the media, like the economist who have falsely labeled me alt-right, which is
hilarious to me since I've been their most outspoken critic for several years at this point.
And that year in 2016, I was their number one target according to the anti-definition league.
And well, maybe he's just one of those guys that's tricky enough to be part of the alt right
and also their enemy.
Right. You know, we Jews, man.
Yeah, yeah. You guys are a lot of sneaky years.
That's super nefarious. It's all about the patchments.
Yeah.
So it is.
And in any case, I was receiving all sorts of blowback for that.
At the same time, I was going on college campuses and being protested to the extent that
I was requiring hundreds of police officers to accompany me on at certain college campuses.
And I started to think there is something deeply wrong here. And it's not just that we
are disagreeing with each other. It's that there's a certain level of hatred and tribalism
that's building up an American politics that I hadn't really seen before.
There was a feeling like even back as late as 2009 that America was moving in the right
direction.
You know, post Obama's election, there was a feeling like, okay, well, we have the same
fundamental principles.
We're trying to perfect those principles.
We made disagree over the ramifications of those principles.
Some of us may want more government involvement in healthcare.
Some of us want less.
Some of us may want more government involvement in healthcare, some of us want less, some of us may want more regulations in markets,
some of us may want less to redistributionism or non- redistributionism.
The fundamental principles, things like free speech, things like the inherent value of
the individual, things like the idea that I'm supposed to generally respect your right
to your own labor.
These were all things that we sort of agreed on, and then we were trying to broaden that
out to encompass for the groups.
And as time moved on, it seemed like we were moving away from a lot of those fundamental
assumptions.
We started to see rises in the opioid epidemic and suicide rates.
You started to see a general level of unhappiness crop up that was reflected in the political
tribalism I was feeling, but it was reflected more generally in actual
lowered life expectancy in the United States for the first time in decades.
And I started to think there's an actual deeper problem wrong here than just we disagree
on politics.
There's something deeply wrong here.
We don't trust our institutions anymore by poll data.
Most of us don't know or trust all of our neighbors.
All of this stuff speaks to a dissolution of the social fabric.
So why is that happening?
What's, and this is nearly unjustifiable.
I mean, if you look at us just from a material prosperity
level, it's unjustifiable.
If you look at us from a political freedom level,
it's unjustifiable.
We are the freest, most prosperous people
in the history of the world.
And yet, we're totally pissed off at each other all the time.
And we're filling that hole with anger and with social mobbing on online
and with woke scolding.
And where's all this coming from?
And that led me to write the book,
which essentially argues that we've forgotten
the foundations of our civilization.
The principles we used to hold in common
have deep roots.
And when we forget those roots,
we tend to move away from the principles themselves.
And this is manifested in what I think is the great debate over Western civilization
right now.
One side, which says, Western civilization was rooted in good, eternal, immutable truths
that were not always perfectly realized, and that over time, we have moved toward greater
realization of.
And that's why the West is great.
That's why the West has provided material prosperity to the vast majority of the globe.
It's why 80% of people have been raised from abject poverty since 1980.
It's why you've seen this massive increase in the number of people who are living in decent
conditions.
It's also why you see a rise in democracy, a rise in political liberalism, small, small
kind of classical liberalism.
All of this is the result of the West, and so we ought to thank the West, and we ought
to look back to the roots and see what is there worth preserving.
And then there's not seems I would say to be a viewpoint that would have
broadly characterized both conservatives and classic liberals as far as I'm concerned. Right.
They'll reason that. That's that's right. And then there's the second point of view. And the
second point of view has cropped up and become very prominent in the West in the last
couple of decades, particularly since the 1960s.
And that perspective is that Western civilization is really just a mask for hierarchy.
That basically there's a bunch of power hierarchies and subjugate, not natural hierarchies,
forcible, oppressive hierarchies, white people against black people, rich people against
poor people, the powerful against the non-powerful, the one percent against the 99 percent.
And all of these institutions, things like the family, things like the things like free
speech itself, things like free markets.
These are actually just excuses for domination and subjugation.
They're not actual principles we hold to.
They're not important principles.
In fact, those principles have to be rooted out so that we can have a better humanity
bloom in the wake of all of this.
Now in my perspective, this takes for granted
all of the prosperity.
It seems to assume that the natural state of man
is prosperity and freedom,
when in fact the natural state of man
is misery and joy and life's damage.
Okay, so that's an interesting thing right there
that I've been thinking about quite a bit.
It's as if the radical left, I mean,
there's a denial on the radical left
of let's say biological differences the radical left of, let's say, biological differences between
men and women, right?
Everything's socioculturally constructed.
That seems to me to be rooted in an even deeper denial of biology and nature in a more
fundamental sense.
I mean, the left worships nature as something intrinsically positive.
You see that reflected in the more radical forms of environmentalism and some of the more
toxic anti-humanism that goes along with that, like the idea that we're a cancer on the
face of the planet or that the world would be better off if there weren't human beings
on it.
But what seems to not be part of that, which is quite surprising to me, is any recognition that although nature
is, let's call it, at least awe-inspiring, which also includes the positive, it's also
an unbelievably deadly force, and the truth of the matter is that the natural state of human
beings is privation and want right from birth, and blame what and what seems to happen so often on the radical left is that that's ignored entirely. It's as if the natural state of human beings is
plenty and delight delight in existence and that all of
the terrible things that happen to people in their lives are actually can be
laid at the feet of faulty social institutions.
It seems like it's a strange position given that the evidence that nature is trying to do
us in on a regular basis is overwhelming.
I don't know if the left is so positively inclined in a romantic manner towards the idea of nature, because
that strengthens their position that all of the pathology that characterizes the world
can be laid at the feet of institutions, and particularly capitalist institutions.
But it still seems to me to be, it's a strange phenomenon.
It's strange, and it's obviously ignorant,
but I think that there's something else
that really is going on here.
The Marxists of today are arguing, many of them
are arguing that what they're really wanting
is greater shared material prosperity.
I don't think that that's actually
what's capturing the minds of people right now.
I think what's actually capturing the minds of people
was the spiritual promise of Marxism.
The idea that Marx lays out,
even in the Communist manifesto,
when he is talking about the transformation of man,
I mean his initial argument is that markets warp people,
that people become meaner and cruder and ruder
and more terrible because of markets,
because they are self-interested in the markets,
emphasize self-interest as opposed to altruism, and therefore if you got rid of markets, then you could exist in greater peace
and prosperity and plenty because human beings themselves would transform.
So it's not that the system itself would create greater material prosperity.
It's that in the initial run, it probably would create more privation.
It's that in the long run, human beings would be transformed in their souls by all of this,
and then they would feel greater bonds to the people around them. That was the spiritual promise of Marxism.
I think that that's, I, that root what, what a lot of people in the West are resonating.
I'm hoping for, okay, so that's, that's a hope for something like, uh, well, it's almost
like a religious redemption. Yes. And it's just, it's a strange thing too. I mean,
I'm preparing for this debate that I'm going to have with Slavoj Žižek, and I've been
trying to think it through. And one of the things that's really struck me is that not only are the
solutions that Marxism offers error-ridden to say the least given the historical evidence,
and I just don't see how anybody can deny that, although people certainly do. But that the problem that the Marxist originally identified seems actually to be vanishing.
I mean, as you already pointed out, there's been an unparalleled increase in material prosperity
among not only among the rich, which you could complain about if you were concerned about
inequality, but among the poorest people in the world,
like we have absolute material privation based on UN standards by 50% between the year 2000 and 2012.
The cynics say that's because we set the standard for material privation to low, which is $1.90 a day.
But if you look at the curves that you can generate at levels of $3.80 a day or $7.60 a day,
you see exactly the same thing happening.
And you see rapid increases in economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa, like, you know, 7%
growth rates, which are more, or typically characteristics, say, of China or India.
And that's manifested in unbelievably positive statistical evidence, such as that
suggesting that now the child mortality rate in Africa is the same as it was in Europe
in 1952. And so the Marxist's original complaint was that, you know, the rich were going to
get richer and the poorer were going to get poorer, and that that could be laid at the
feet of capitalism, just like the fact and that that could be laid at the feet of capitalism,
just like the fact of hierarchy itself could be laid at the feet of capitalism.
And A, it's clear that capitalism, although it does produce hierarchical inequality,
just like every other system that we know of, it also produces wealth, and that wealth
is actually being very effectively distributed to the people, you know, perhaps not primarily
to the people who most need it, but to the people who most need it in ways that are truly
mattering. And so, to me, the entire structure of Marxism is anachronistic. The problem is
no longer appropriately formulated, and the solution tends to be deadly if counterproductive, if not deadly.
So it's maybe here, here's something I've been thinking about too, you can tell me what you think about this.
You know, some of it still has to do with the innate human emotional response to inequality.
You know, when you walk down the street and you see a ruined alcoholic schizophrenic
who's obviously suffering in 50 different dimensions, it's very difficult to feel positive
about the state of humanity in the world.
And it's very easy for a reflexive compassion to take over and say, well, wouldn't it be
something if we could just retool society so that none of that was necessary? It must be someone's fault. It must be something that we're not doing
right. And, you know, there's some truth in that because, of course, our systems could
be better than they are. And it seems to me to be that unreflexive compassion that drives
whatever residual attractiveness that Marxism still has, apart
also from the darker possibility, which is that it really does appeal to the jealousy
that's characteristic of people in the envy, and which it manifests itself as hatred for
hierarchy on the basis that some people are doing better than me.
Right.
I think there's also a failure on the part of advocates of the free market
to point out that free markets are good for what they are good for, meaning that the
two things that are important to recognize about free markets.
One, free markets are there to create a generalized level of cheaper goods and better product
at cheaper prices more widely available.
That's what markets do, and they do it brilliantly.
Well, that doesn't mean that markets are there to take care of the person who is unable to
work.
I mean, that's not something that markets are there to do.
It's something I talk about in the book, the need for a social fabric.
If you want a free market, you also have to have a social fabric that helps pick people
up.
Now, people on the left have said that government should be the airsatz social fabric.
The government should pick those people up, and in large scale cases, maybe that needs to be the case.
But usually it was religious communities
and informal social fabrics
that actually filled those gaps.
Beyond that, there is a second problem.
And that is, I hear a lot of populace
on both left and right.
Make the statement that we just need to make markets work
for us.
And all I can think when I hear that is,
you have fundamentally misunderstood what a market is.
So Marxism is a set of values,
and then a system of economics crafted
at top of the set of values.
The set of values, as you've said before,
is that equality should trump prosperity,
that equality should trump freedom,
that equality should trump everything.
So if equality trumps everything,
then the only way to make everyone equal
is to turn them into indistinguishable
widgets controlled from above until we create an economic system to do that.
There are principles that undergird free markets.
Free markets are not a human construction.
Free markets are a recognition that you are an individual human being in control of your
own labor.
That simple understanding means that you cannot support any other form of a market.
Now, you can support some form of redistributionism at the local level.
You can try and urge people to be more moral by giving to their fellow man,
but markets themselves are a recognition of a basic truth that Marxism rejects,
which is that freedom and individualism ought to trump and indeed need to
trump the need for equality.
So the freedom versus equality battle is very much alive in our time.
And because we have such freedom,
people tend toward equality.
I think when you have-
Right, equality, we should talk about
a little bit about equality too,
because there's two important modes of equality
that have to be segregated and discussed separately,
because people tend to confuse equality of
opportunity with equality of outcome.
Right.
And I think that it's perfectly reasonable to be a free market champion, let's say, or
at least an appreciator of the utility of free markets, and to be strongly in favor
of equality of opportunity, which means that you try to remove from the market system any impediments
to people manifesting those talents that would make them effective and competent players
in the productive market itself.
Absolutely.
On the basis of the fact that that's counterproductive for everyone, the individuals, but also for
everyone who could be benefiting from their talent.
Yeah, that's absolutely true.
And I think that's inherent in the idea of markets.
It's why when people use terms like crony capitalism, I always think there's no such thing.
There's corporate, there's corporate corporatism, which is a better description of it.
Crony capitalism is a self-refuting proposition.
Capitalism and free markets are based on exactly what you're talking about, because again,
the fundamental principle is I own my own labor, which means that if you impede
my ability to alienate that labor,
you are now interfering with my labor.
So free markets are predicated on an idea of equality
and rights and the idea of every human being made,
and this is why I say there's a Judeo-Christian heritage
to free markets, every human being made in the image of God,
which I think is the single most important sense
written in the history of humanity.
Right.
And when you abandon, we tend to think that these things naturally occur.
This is where you get into the enlightenment argument.
Enlightenment argument is that you can just reason your way to these things.
Well, you can reason your way to these things.
There are also a lot of other things you can reason your way to, including communism and
fascism.
The question is, what are your starting points?
What are the actual
fundamental assumptions that you make about human beings and the nature of the world
that you then apply reason to to arrive at something great? And this is why I'm not a fan of the
the Enlightenment view that just if we start tabularazo, we can come up with exactly the system that we've
built today. I don't think that that's either historically accurate or philosophically accurate,
because we see that human beings reach a wide variety
of conclusions based on different premises.
Well, it's also the case that it assumes that reason,
in fact, in some sense, can be complete,
including its ability to generate its own
comprehensive axioms, which can also be justified
on rational grounds.
And it's not obvious to me that that's the case.
I think that's why the founders of the Declaration of Independence were forced to say, we find
these truths to be self-evident.
You have to have a starting point.
And this is something that I do believe that people like Stephen Pinker, who I have a
great amount of admiration for, are making an error in their over-valuation
of the enlightenment and their devaluation
of the historical,
what the vast historical epochs
that produced the works of imagination,
that produced the axioms on which the enlightenment
could originally emerge.
And you and I seem to agree, I think very precisely
on especially that phrase that you just used.
I mean, I think there's two statements in the in Genesis
that are of equivalent importance actually.
One of them, maybe there's three.
One of them is that what God used to create
order out of potential in chaos
was something approximating a process
that was characterized by truth and courage.
And so there's an idea there,
which is why I think God continually repeats after he creates
day after day that the creation was good.
And so the idea is that if you face the potential of the world, which is I think something that
human beings do with their consciousness, I think that's what consciousness is for, if you face
the world with truth and courage, then what you generate out of that field of possibilities
is in fact good. Even though you may pay a price for the truth in the short term, it's an act of faith
even in some sense which reflects that axiomatic presupposition that there's nothing that's
going to improve the world more than forthright confrontation with the structure of reality
and an attempt to abide by the truth.
And then you have that second statement,
which is a miraculous statement, I believe.
It's hard to see it as anything else
that both men and women are made in the image of God.
We've already had God established as the creator
and the creator who creates in a certain ethical manner.
And then that power or ability or virtue or privilege or responsibility is transferred to human beings and it's transferred to men and women.
And I also find that actually quite stunning, you know, because there's no shortage of postmodern slash feminist criticism of the Judeo-Christian tradition, claiming that it's fundamentally oppressive
and patriarchal, and yet right at the beginning, you have this incredible statement which
seems to fly in the face of the anachronistic nature of the document stating that it's
not just men that are made in the image of God, it's men and women, and that's obvious
to me how that conclusion was reached so long ago.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And it's also important to note that historically speaking, if you look at surrounding documents,
documents from Mesopotamia, typically the actual language that was used, the image of
God language is actually not unique to the Bible.
That exists in other cultures, but it was always the king who was made in the image of God.
Right. So, as the people who are most powerful, who are made in the extension, that exists in other cultures, but it was always the king who was made in the image of God. Right.
So, as the people who are most powerful, who are made in the extension of that to all human
beings, is a unique moment in philosophical history.
And as you say, the idea that God has created an orderly universe, and that we have the capacity
to act out within that universe and to see God from behind so to speak, that we can't
necessarily see his face, but we can see sort of the general outline of what he is intending and then another verse from Genesis that I think is deeply important
It's from the Canaan Abel story the verse where God says to Cane Tim Shell that you have the ability to do better than this
Right.
Cane comes to him and he says you know, I'm widened to accept my sacrifice and God says well, it's in your control
You know go out and do something about it and And then of course, Kane rejects that.
And it's that story is so deep.
And I think it really is the story of what's happening right now.
Yeah.
God's reaction to Kane is that I rejected you because you could do better.
Right.
And that's actually a kind of compliment, even though, you know, if you're not offering up the
proper sacrifices and things aren't working out for you, it might not be the kind of compliment that you want to hear,
but it is a testament to the potential of the human spirit.
And so you're making the case in your book,
and this is what would you call an injunction,
an encouragement to the enlightenment types,
to look to their axioms,
and to think hard about how it could be that the idea of individual
democratic freedom, for example, and all of the wonderful explicit political ideas that
came out of the Enlightenment could have possibly emerged.
And I do agree that you have to have that initial conception of the individual as sovereign
and that that sovereignty has to be associated with something akin to recognition of divinity, at least in so far as what's regarded
as divine is regarded as the highest of all possible values. And it is absolutely surprising,
as you pointed out, that not only is the idea of the image of God extended to men and women, but that it is not
explicitly not the domain of kings who in fact might be
more at risk for
abandoning their
actions as
avatars of God, so to speak then those who are in privation, you know, you see that consistently in the Old Testament, where the kings are being taken to task constantly by prophets who do appear to speak more in the language of God, let's say.
And then you see it also in the New Testament with the insistence that the wealthy and powerful have impediments to proper ethical action that those who are less materially fortunate might not face.
Yeah, and that theme addict is present obviously in the Old Testament.
There's actually a passage where it's talking about the sacrifices, I believe it's in the book of Leviticus,
where it talks about bringing accidental sin sacrifices, and it talks about the common man.
It says, if you shall sin, then you bring the sacrifice.
And then it says with regard to the prince, the Nazi, it says with regard to the prince,
the Hebrew word is ca, shards, is when you will sin.
So the assumption is that if you have great power, the chances of your sinning are going
to be greater because you are going to conceive of yourself as higher than others.
And this is going to lead you down a pretty dark path.
The point with regard to the Enlightenment is that we actually have some counter evidence
of the Enlightenment being awesome all the way through
if it is predicated solely on reason
and not on a historic understanding of these principles.
And that is the French Enlightenment.
I mean, this was one of my key points
when I was looking at Pinker's book Enlightenment now.
But again, you and I agree on this.
I have great Enlightenment for Pinker.
I took a class with him when I was at Harvard Law School. He did a joint class
with Alan Dershwin. So it was kind of fun. But Pinker goes a 450 page book about the enlightenment
and he never mentions the French Revolution once. And I thought I don't know how that's historically
possible to do. The enlightenment was not just David Hume and Adam Smith and the American
founding fathers. The enlightenment also was
Rousseau and Voltaire and Robes Pierre and it was the German progressive enlightenment that had a
real dark side. And it's, human reason can lead you to a lot of different very bad places.
The, the metaphor that I like to use with regard to Western civilization is that Western
civilization is a suspension bridge. And then on one and it one, and it's over a river of, as you would say chaos,
and on the one end of the bridge, the big poll,
is these fundamental assumptions you have to make about the nature of the world
that I don't believe could be arrived at other than through some form of divine revelation.
This would be the Judeo-Christian tradition.
And those principles are things like we have free choice.
That's an assumption you have to make and is not implicit in scientific materialism.
The idea that history has a progressive nature that you can improve the world around you. Again,
that is not a, that is reliant on an assumption you have to make. The idea that human beings
are held to a morality that they themselves do not subjectively create out of emotional me.
And that is something that you have to make an assumption about. The idea of objective truth
itself is something you have to make an assumption about and that's an assumption that I think can be made most
specifically by the idea that there is a mind outside of us that creates that
objective truth and stands behind an ordered universe. All of those are assumptions
from Judeo-Christian values. Well, I just think there's evidence for much of this.
You know, one of the things that I've been discussing with my audiences is like,
you know, it depends obviously on what you're willing to take as evidence.
It isn't obvious to me at all that you can establish a functional relationship with yourself,
unless you hold yourself responsible for your actions and you regard yourself as a free agent in at least in some regards, like obviously we're not omniscient omnipresent
and omnipotent.
That's clearly the case.
We're subject to stringent limitations, and there are situations in which our actions
devolve into determinism.
That's obvious neurophysiologically.
It has to be the way the world works, is that once you execute a decision, there comes
to a point where that decision is manifested in something approximating a deterministic
manner.
I think the evidence for that is overwhelming, but that doesn't mean that when you're
looking out into the future and you're contemplating the many paths that you could take, that what
you do to make your decisions then is deterministic in a simple manner. I think if
that was the case, there'd be no need for consciousness at all. And then I look at how
people react to themselves is we hold ourselves responsible despite our own inclination for
the sins that we manifest, for the manners in which we wander off the path. People wake
up at 4 in the morning and they berate themselves for the actions they took
that they knew they shouldn't and the inaction that they manifested when they knew they should
have acted.
And if we were masters in our own house without that central moral compass, there would
be no reason at all for us to wake up and torture ourselves to death with our moral inequity. And then if you have a friend or a family member
and you insist upon treating them
as if they're a deterministic agent
with no effect on the future
and no responsibility for their choices,
it's actually impossible to have a relationship with them.
You can't even have a relationship
with a two or three year old
if you insist upon infantilizing them in that manner and not attributing to them the choice that enables
valid punishment, let's say, on the one hand. You've done something wrong and you need to
be held accountable for it, but also valid accomplishment on the other, which is that
you've done something that you didn't have to do that was voluntary, that's deserving
of approbation and reinforcement.
And we act that out.
And then the next level of evidence seems to be that if you found your polity on propositions
other than that, the sovereignty of the individual, and the responsibility of the individual.
The whole thing goes sideways so rapidly
that it's almost indescribable,
and it doesn't just go sideways,
it goes sideways and down.
And so I don't know exactly what to make of that
as a proof.
It's a strange sort of proof,
the proof being that while there doesn't seem to be
any reasonable way for human beings to organize their social interactions at any level of social organization without
accepting those initial, I would say, geochristian assumptions.
This is right.
And then this is where the main debate happens between me and Sam Harris, because Sam will
reason himself to those assumptions and away from those assumptions and to those assumptions
in a way, he'll from those assumptions and to those assumptions
in a way, he'll use those assumptions
in building other assumptions.
And I've said to him before,
I feel like you're using bricks from a house
that you just torn down.
So you can't really do that.
And this is why I say, on the one hand,
you have to have those Judeo-Christian assumptions.
And those, by the way,
undergird even the very concept of reason,
because the idea of reason is that you are using
a willful process of thought in order to convince someone else, predicated on the notion that the other person's
opinion is valuable and that you shouldn't just club them over the head and take their
stuff.
And the reason it has, the value of reason has implicit moral biases.
And those moral biases, you can't reason your way to.
As I said the sound, from an evolutionary biology perspective, there's no reason for reason
other than if you think that maybe you can convince
unless, especially in a world of non-mass communication, what is the reason for reason?
Right? In a world that pre-exists mass communication, what is the reason that you need reason
wouldn't force be more effective for most of human history? It was, it was significantly more effective
than reason. Certainly, it's certainly what the radicals on the left would argue even now.
I mean, then the idea of reason seems to be predicated, and that would go along with the idea
of free speech, which I think is also equally grounded in these underlying axioms, is that
each of us as sovereign individuals have a valid mode of existence about, and there's
something unique about that valid mode of existence, and it's
also something that can be communicated. And that part of the reason for rational discussion
is that the ability to share that unique and valuable element of private experience with
someone else is salutary, but it's also salutary in a manner that allows for the mutual spiritual transformation
of both of the people that are involved in the discussion.
And it seems to me that you can't, if you're pro-reason, you've already bought that argument.
Exactly.
This is exactly right.
And so faith and reason, to this extent, are not intentioned, faith under a girl's reason,
because you have to make us fundamental assumptions even to get to reason.
And this is why I think that one of the things that has happened, and it's really unfortunate,
I discuss it in the last chapters of the book, is that when you take away the assumptions
that under Gurd reason, reason itself collapses in.
It's not that the stains appear on top of the structure.
Once the structure falls, reason falls with it too.
And we return to our sort of tribal naturalistic roots that are quite dangerous. This is why I say that you need
Jerusalem on one end of the bridge. The other end of that suspension bridge is reason, meaning
that we can't be theocrafts. We can't look at fundamentalist religious texts and take them
as complete literal, as completely literal, and then hope to develop as a civilization
on the basis of that complete literalism.
So you have to look to which of these commandments,
for example, in the Torah, are directed toward
eternal human nature.
So I would suggest that commandments
that are directed toward reigning in certain appetites,
are directed toward God's understanding of human nature,
that certain injunctions with regards to how we behave
in the Ten Commandments, these are predicated on an understanding of human nature that certain injunctions with regards to how we behave in the Ten Commandments. These are predicated on an understanding of human nature that is truly profound and worthwhile
preserving. It's also worth noting that the story of Western civilization is the expansion
of these principles out from the tribal and toward a broader range of humanity. And that's why
the book is not just an argument, here's how I interpret the Bible, and here's why that's right,
it's an argument that historical development was necessary after the Bible. So it is not just an argument, here's how I interpret the Bible, and here's why that's right, it's an argument that historical development was necessary after the Bible.
So it is not just that the Bible solves all your problems,
it's that God understands even from a religious perspective
in Judaism, and I think in Christianity too,
that we are going to apply human reason to these texts.
That's from a religious perspective.
From a non-religious perspective,
the point I'm making is that you have to take
these fundamental assumptions, whether you like them
or not, that are religiously rooted, and then apply your
reason to develop from the fundamental assumptions that we have already stated.
And that tension is what allows the suspension bridge to continue to function.
That doesn't mean that it is always equally solid throughout time.
It isn't because the tension sometimes wavers, sometimes reason takes dominance, sometimes
Judeo-Christian values, or Jude Judeic biblical literalism takes dominance.
Bottom line is you collapse a reason you end up with theocracy, you collapse Judeo-Christian
values you end up with nihilism is sort of the basic argument.
Okay, okay, so one of the things that Sam is afraid of and there's some validity in
this fear.
And I think he tends to apply this more to the state
of Islamic fundamentalism.
But the same argument can be made
with the other religious traditions.
Evangelical Christianity, for example,
and maybe Orthodox Judaism, who knows
that the danger is that we'll take these revealed truths
which differ and that holding them as absolute revealed truths
will make us perocaled tribal, and the consequence of that will be all sorts of catastrophe and horror.
Right. And you know, one of the things I learned when I was studying the Old Testament,
and this was very interesting, a Jewish friend of mine, Norman Doige sort of clued me into this because one of the things he told me was that Christians
who emphasized the New Testament tend to parody the Old Testament God to a somewhat unfair degree,
casting him as much more tyrannical in some sense.
The God of Raab, yeah.
The God of Justice versus Mercy, yep.
Right, exactly, exactly. some sense. The God of wrath, the justice versus mercy. Exactly. Exactly. So I took that seriously, and especially when I was reading the Abrahamic
stories, and you see throughout the earliest writings, the idea that in some bizarre sense,
God can be bargained with. Right. And so you see that even in the Cain and Abel story,
because Cain actually faces God with his complaints and says, well, you know, here's how I look at the world and God
excoriates him because he believes that he's looking at the world
improperly and I think for good reason, but there is the implication that you could have a conversation with God and
hypothetically learn something and but then that transforms even more when you see the stories that follow.
So Abraham directly intercedes with God in favor of Sodom, right?
Because and he makes a pretty, what would you say, extreme case for redeeming Sodom, which seems to have degenerated into quite
the state of hell, trying to attice God into not being more destructive than necessary
if there's any goodness to be found, and he actually does that successfully.
And so that's very interesting.
So even though God is absolute in his judgment in some fundamental sense, there is this capacity
for dialogue, which seems to be an analogy to the idea that reason and revelation can
coexist and bolster each other in some sort of upward development.
Well, this is exactly right.
The idea of natural law, which the seeds are there in the Judeo-Value system, I think
natural laws more fully fleshed out in sort of Greek tealological sense.
When they talk about the idea that Aristotle played, when they talk about the idea that you
can look at the world around you and discover the purposes of the world around you simply
by using reason.
Well, in the Judeo-Exence, there's the idea that God abides by the moral code that he
himself created.
And you can ask him questions about it.
In fact, the very name Israel is in Hebrews, Yisra'el.
Yisra'el literally means struggle with God.
Yes.
Yes.
Well, that was the other thing I was going to bring up.
The direct thing I was going to bring up is that there is this, and that's a remarkable
story that it's it's it's it's Jacob. I always get Jacob and Joseph confused.
Right. Jacob. Yeah, it's Jacob.
Right. And there's a river before he meets his father. Exactly. Exactly.
On the other side of the river. So he hasn't crossed back to his homeland. Right.
He hasn't returned home after his hero's journey.
He sent his wife and his children and his belongings
ahead to try to make peace with the
brother that he's seriously betrayed. And he's had his adventures and maybe he's learned his lessons.
But then he's on the bank, the river, and he's visited by an angel who appears to be God, and he
wrestles with them all night. And he comes out damaged, right, which is an indication that this
is sort of like the Egyptian idea when Horus encounters Seth and has his eye
torn out, but there's some high probability of damage that if you encounter the divine even in some positive sense,
but he wrestles with them all night and then defeats God, apparently in some sense, and is allowed to move forward with his adventure and then is given this new name.
And the name really struck me when I started thinking about it because what it does imply, I think this is such a positive message. precisely with the Jewish claim of chosenness as a people because my reading of that particular text
seemed to imply that the chosen people are precisely those who do in fact wrestle with God,
and so that they take these ethical questions seriously. They're not accepting them without question and without thought,
because there's no wrestling there.
Right.
But the real morality comes in the struggle
between the revelation and the freedom for thought and choice.
I mean, I think it's a beautiful idea.
And one of the things that's fascinating about that
is if you read the rest of the book of Genesis,
every time in Genesis somebody's name is changed,
because there are several name changes,
right?
Abraham becomes Abraham, Sarai becomes Sarah.
There are several points at which there are angels who come and basically change the
name or God changes somebody's name.
That's their name going forward.
When Jacob is returned to Israel, he is not called Israel consistently from there to the
end of to his death.
The names are used at different times. Sometimes he's Israel and sometimes he's Jacob.
So the idea there is that sometimes he is the best version of himself, the version of
himself who struggles with morality, who struggles with God, who tries to come up with proper
solutions, and sometimes he's still the old Jacob, the old Jacob who ran away from ESA
and who served seven years unjustly under Laban and all the rest of
it.
So it's really fascinating.
One of my favorite Tom Yudic stories, this has been deeply embedded in Judeaic tradition
for a long time.
The idea of struggling with God and struggling with the dictates of morality because part
of Jewish tradition is, of course, the idea of the oral tradition, the idea that we were
given a written document on Sinai, but then there was an oral tradition that was also passed
along to Moses
that was the interpretation of the written tradition,
which in some ways may be a backfilled justification,
but I think that there's a fundamental truth to it.
There's a segment that I quote in the book from the Talmud,
that's a really amazing story
where it's part of these sort of apocryphal stories,
what they call the agadata in Talmudic parlance. There's a story where there's part of the sort of apocryphal stories, what they call the agadata in Tel Mutiparland.
There's a story where there's a rabbi who is in an argument with a bunch of other rabbis
about a particular point of halacha of Jewish law.
And this rabbi is arguing with these other rabbis.
And the other rabbi is vote one way and he votes the other way.
So he loses.
And the rabbi who loses says, listen, I know I'm right.
Not only do I know I'm right, if I'm right, let the walls of this, the walls of this synagogue
close in around us, the walls start to lean in.
And then the rabbi say, you know what,
that's not evidence that doesn't show that you're right.
It just shows that the walls are closing in.
He says, well, you know, if I'm right,
then let the river outside start to flow backwards.
So the river starts to flow backwards.
And the rabbi's inside says, still not evidence,
we're not gonna take that. He says, well, if I'm right,
let there be a bot call, let there be a voice of God, literally come down from heaven and
say that I'm right. And sure enough, a voice from heaven comes down and says that he's
right. And the other members of the parliament, the other members of the Sanhedrin, they
say to him, you know what, none of that counts because God gave us a rule. And the rule
is that we have a majority rule
in this body right here.
And so our interpretation is correct.
And yours is wrong and it doesn't matter what miracles you bring
to show that your side is right.
And the conclusion of the story is that God says,
one of the angels asked God about it and God says,
my children have defeated me.
And the idea is that God is happy about this.
God wants us to use our reason
to take those fundamental principles that he gave us and then develop those across time. That's
how you get development. I would also interrupt this to some degree from a psychological perspective,
you know, because and this this might be far fetched speculation, but I don't think that it precisely
is. I mean, I do believe that our cognitive structures,
our cognitive function, are embedded in narrative. And that seems to be a right hemisphere function.
And that the right hemisphere is the source of intuitive revelation. Now, whatever metaphysical
implications that have, that has, I have no idea. I also know that many religious experiences seem to be characterized by preferential
activity in the right hemisphere. So there's something very strange going on in the right hemisphere.
And then we have a left hemisphere that's argumentative and parliamentary and logical.
And obviously in order for us to make our way in the world, we have to have a continual dialogue between the intuitive axioms that are offered
to us spontaneously in our imagination by the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere, who does a
critical analysis and tries to lay that out in some logical and, let's say, logical and algorithmic
manner. But the left can collapse into a kind of unthinking tyranny as a consequence of that,
and the right without that corrective can, what would you say,
stray too far down imaginative paths and no longer be applicable to the
fundamental day-to-day problems of the world. So we need that balance.
And it is a strange thing that we have these two hemispheres, which implies that we need two
ways of looking at the world.
And I don't think that it's unreasonable to look at the
relationship between that and then necessity for something
like the revelation of intuition and the corrective power
of rationality.
But you can't dispense with the intuition.
It seems to do something like ground you in the world and to
provide you with your fundamental axioms.
And I think that's right. And by the way, that seems to me how an enormous amount of scientific discovery takes place is you people have a flash of intuition and then question of, I mean,
that's how you come up with the hypothesis, right? They often backfill too, you know, like
the scientific journal outlines how you came to your hypothesis through a process of rational deduction step-by-step,
right?
But that isn't what happens. What happens is you have a hunch of some sort. And often,
I've seen this especially with intuitive scientists, they have a hunch that actually sounds irrational
when they first put it forward. And sometimes it takes the months or even years
to backfill that intuition with the rationality that's necessary to communicate its integrity
to other scientists.
And so the narrative that's written in the scientific document is actually a kind of,
well, it's a kind of formal, I wouldn't call it a deception, it's a formalization, but
it's also predicated on the assumption that it's linear rational
thinking that leads to these intuitive hypotheses.
And sometimes that's the case, especially if it's incremental change, but those major
leaps forward are like the introduction of new alternative axioms.
And then they have to be tested by rationality.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right. alternative axioms, and then they have to be tested by rationality.
Yeah, I think that's exactly right. I think that's also the story of history that you have these intuitive leaps. And yeah, there's a history to those intuitive leaps. And you do have to have both.
You'd have to understand the history of those intuitive leaps, and you also have to understand
when an intuitive leap has actually taken place. I think you can make that argument about
revelation. I think, frankly, you can make that argument maybe about the enlightenment that
there's some intuitive leaps going on, but those intuitive leaps have a history and don't exist in the absence
of the backstory. So- Well, the intuitive leap and the enlightenment, at large part at least politically,
seemed to me to be the full articulation of the idea that the human being made in the image of God
being made in the image of God had intrinsic worth the transcended that which was being allowed under the feudal system. You see that first I would say in the transformation of Renaissance art
because what you see is the divine figures, for example, Mary and Christ, to take a single example, or to take two particular examples,
start to remove themselves from their iconic representation and become genuine individuals.
And so that's a bringing down of the divine to earth, but it's also an elevation of the individual,
right, is that these were real people, they were like us. And at the same time, you see this
spread of the idea that, well, each individual is sovereign and worthwhile. And at the same time, you see this spread of the idea
that, well, each individual is sovereign and worthwhile.
And I do think it's out of that
that comes eventually the powerful
anti-slavery movies, movements,
and the demand for universal suffrage.
Suffrage, yeah.
Suffrage, exactly.
This is exactly right.
And this is the part where I become rather perturbed when people suggest that the evils
of Western civilization are unique while the goods are universal.
This is the part of the argument I've never understood from people who are highly critical
of Western civilization.
They point out correctly that Western civilization has been responsible for an immense amount
of evil.
There's tremendous racism and damage in Western civilization. There responsible for an immense amount of evil. There's tremendous racism and
epidemic in Western civilization.
There's religious persecution, obviously.
There's genocide against my extended family.
I mean, this sort of stuff was part of Western civilization.
But here's what makes Western civilization different.
All of those things exist in virtually every other culture
throughout the vast span of time.
The good stuff is the part that we don't have
a really good explanation for. The good stuff is the part where we have to say, okay, what drove all the good stuff to
happen? Has it any happened for that matter? Correct. Damn, unlikely. Well, like one of the things I
can't understand, this is a real mystery to meet, man, and I can't explain it except,
and maybe this isn't intuitive idea, because I haven't laid it out as well as I might have.
But one of the things I cannot understand is how any countries escaped absolute corruption.
Because most of the countries in the world are absolutely corrupt.
The police are corrupt, the politicians are corrupt, the unions are corrupt, the corporations
are corrupt, the currency is corrupt, the day-to-day interactions between people are corrupt, and in the really
corrupt countries, the interactions between family members are corrupt.
So you get situations like, well, East Germany, which is a bit inachronistic now, where one
out of three people were government informers.
It's like, and corruption is easy, man.
It's the Hobbesian way of the world.
But then there's a handful of countries, and I would include Japan and South Korea among
those, that where corruption isn't the fundamental rule, where trust is the fundamental rule.
I can't see how that could have manifested itself except within the confines of a religious belief system that insisted above all on
the enactment of a higher moral ethic, right?
Something outside of politics, something outside of self-interest.
It's a weak argument because I still don't understand it.
I don't see how a country can make that transition from fundamental corruption to honesty.
It's an absolute miracle as far as I'm concerned.
And a number of countries have managed that, and they almost all are either Western countries
or highly westernized countries.
Yeah, I mean, I think that's exactly right.
And it's also, when you examine different places on Earth, what you see is that the social
fabric is going to decide the character of the country.
And this is why when people start saying, well, we should apply Nordic solutions in the
United States.
If I say, well, is our culture the same as the Nordic culture?
Because maybe that solution is not going to work.
I mean, the sort of one size fits all attempt in terms of political policy to just apply
things randomly everywhere and then assume they will go exactly the same, is obviously untrue, most famously,
in sort of the classical,
neo-conservative foreign policy conception
that you could plop democracy down in the middle
of the Gaza Strip, and suddenly,
suddenly everybody would be in favor of free markets
and peace with their neighbors.
And this sort of institutions tend to be successful
when people teach their kids the right things.
Well, that's also part of the reason that I made the argument constantly to Harris
and other atheists that I've talked to that they're Judeo-Christian, whether they know it or not.
And the reason for that is that all of their embodied actions presuppose that Judeo-Christian ethic. The only thing that isn't religious about them
is there articulated post-enlightenment rational representation of the world. And I do think you
see that in Harris quite frequently because he does believe in evil. He does believe in good.
He believes that the proper way of proceeding in the world is to move from evil towards good. He believes that the proper way of proceeding in the world is to move from evil towards
good. And I can't...
You know, I've had exactly the same conversation with Sam. And he...it's been a bizarre conversation.
Even on the notion of objective truth, so Sam, it's kind of weird. So you and Sam and I,
I would say that I'm as a religious person, more closely aligned with Sam's vision of what objective truth is than your sort of American pragmatist purse
version of what objective truth is.
And with that said, I don't know where Sam is getting his version, right?
I'm getting my version from the idea that God created an objective truth that the mind
of man can fair it out from time to time.
And Sam's version is what?
Like I just don't I don't understand how
evolutionary biology results in anything remotely approaching the idea that an objective truth is
possible. I see evolutionarily beneficial stuff happening, right? That if you come up with an idea
that makes your species more likely to predominate, then you hold by that, but that doesn't make it
objectively true. It makes it objectively useful, which is a different thing. I also don't see how it's a straightforward matter to get from reliance on evolutionary
biology, say, as your fundamental way of orienting yourself with regards to reality in the
world, and something like the primacy of rationality and the ability to extract out from that
rationality, something approximating a universal morality.
I can't see those these three things
fitting together at all.
This is right, and even Sam's moral standard,
which is generalized human flourishing,
there's a lot of play in those joints.
I mean, I've asked Sam several times,
I was using my Sunday special,
and I asked him to define human flourishing,
and I was pointing out to him that the vast majority
of human beings disagree on the very nature
of what that term constitutes.
If you talk to religious people about what human flourishing constitutes,
they're not going to tell you about all of the nice stuff they have in their house.
They're going to tell you about their ability to teach the religious precepts to their kids.
If you're talking about human flourishing on an evolutionary level,
then presumably that would assume us having more kids rather than fewer kids,
and in developed countries we have fewer kids rather than more kids.
So what exactly is the standard for human flourishing
other than sort of what Sam likes?
And that's what he, well, he seems,
I mean, I think part of the way that he circumvents
that problem is that is by pointing out
that it might be possible for us to agree on
what constitutes unnecessary human suffering
and to work for the opposite of that.
Like it makes it kind of say, we agree on cruelty, I think.
Well, but the funny thing is too, it's not-
I'm not sure we even agree on that as the truth.
Well, I'm not sure that we exactly agree on that either because it's not like there's
been any shortage of high cruelty, war or your culture is in the past.
I mean, that was certainly the case with Rome.
Right. Or cruelty on behalf of a greater good.
Right, you could easily make the case for cruelty
on behalf of human flourishing.
I mean, Hitler did.
It's an evil case, that's the whole point.
Right, that's the, that was the case of communism
that you break a few eggs to make an omelet.
That is the higher human flourishing
is the, is the interest of the majority.
Yes, it's not obvious, that's not rational.
I mean, one of the things I really liked about Sozhenitsyn's book,
The Goulog Archipelago, was that, you know, he makes this,
he makes an anti-anlightenment case in a very powerful manner
because he says, well, look, here's four or five axioms
or six or seven axioms, they're derived directly from Marxism.
And if you accept those and then you act rationally
as a consequence of your acceptance of those axioms.
And of course, the Marxists would claim
that those axioms were derived by rational means,
that all you get is something approximating
all hell breaking loose.
And so what seems to be the case is that
there is a necessary set of underlying axioms,
and I do believe they're coded properly in the Judeo-Christian ethic that if you then act
upon rationally, you get something approximating whatever progress we've managed to make.
Exactly.
And that promise is substantive.
Yep, totally agree.
And this is effectively the case that I'm making in the book.
I think the big difference we have right now in civilization is a difference that was first articulated, I think beautifully
by G.K. Chesterton in his sort of contrast between left and right, his analogy, and it's a beautiful
metaphor, is that you're walking through a forest and you come across a wall. It's just this old
archaic wall, old stone wall, you don't know why it's there. If you're on the left, your first
instinct is, I don't know why this wall is here,
probably actually tear this wall out,
because why is the wall here?
I don't know.
The person on the right, the kind of conservative
or traditional person, the traditionally minded person,
their first instinct is, I don't know why this wall is here.
I'm gonna go try and find out why the wall is here,
and then maybe I'll think about tearing it out.
And that's, and that's the case I'm making, I think, with regard to our civilization.
There are foundational things in our civilization that maybe it's possible to remove that particular
jangle block and everything stands, but I'm not going to pretend that just because I don't
understand the reason for this particular revelatory principle, that the revelatory principle
isn't important to an undergirding and therefore a reason and put there by people who are
just as smart as I was
There's certain arrogance to to people who are living now that they were much smarter than people who came before no
It's just that you're standing on those people's shoulders so you can see a little bit further
But the truth is that they were probably seven foot and you're probably a four footer. Yeah, well
It's definitely the case that my intellectual attitude changed quite substantially when I decided that I was going to
risk changed quite substantially when I decided that I was going to risk taking the religious
text that I was studying with some degree of seriousness.
And I came to that through social needs and then Jung, I would say fundamentally because
they made a strong case for things, let's say, they made a strong case that there were presuppositions encoded in those narratives in a dream-like
manner, the same way that Piaget did, that we couldn't do without, and that we should
be very careful in dispensing with them in that arrogant, rational manner.
So that you treat, you start by treating the text with a certain amount of reverence
and you with a certain amount of ignorance, right?
It's, there's something here that you don't understand and you should probably assume that
it's worthwhile because it's being kept rather than to lead to the proposition that you
and your ignorance can clearly see why it's unnecessary.
Yeah, and I think that the greatest impact, the saddest part of this is that the greatest impact
in terms of throwing away the stories of our heritage, basically, is that that impact is
generally not going to be felt in the urban centers with people who go to Sam's lectures
or listen to his podcast. Those people have a worldview that they have shaped
by listening to stuff like Sam's or Stephen Pinkers
or Richard Dawkins, and that worldview,
while I think it may not be fully coherent,
it coheres for them.
But the problem is that you apply that to people
whose main draw to morality is not going to come
from listening to these particular sources,
the people who get their social fabric from churches in the middle of the country in the
United States.
The people who have built a social fabric along with their neighbors because they have
a commonly oriented goal.
And then you take that away from them and you offer them go find your own purpose.
Good luck with that.
Yes, well, in North America, that's right.
They're not going to turn into fully fledged, humanistic, positively thinking enlightenment types merely as a consequence
of abandoning the religious superstitions.
Exactly.
I think that the enlightenment types, I think, are naive about.
It's easier to tear down then to build up is sort of the way that I've put it to see
on.
Yes.
You can tear apart my religious tradition and you can probably do so in an entertaining
way.
I mean, you do, obviously.
And then how are you going to build?
What exactly are you building?
Yeah.
And I can do the same thing to your world view, but then what am I building?
The question is going to be, what are the foundational?
That's it.
We're not standing.
We're not standing at the top.
We're not standing on the first floor of the building.
We are standing on the top floor of a building.
You can't go at the bottom floor with Jack Hammers
and then expect that the top story is just gonna stay there.
It's not how this works.
Yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's exactly it.
So, all right, all right, well, look,
I promise that I'd let you be at 115 and it's 125.
And so I don't wanna take up any more of your time.
I'm very pleased that your
book is doing well. I hope that it does accomplish what you set out to accomplish with it is to
make the case that it's much more appropriate for us in the modern world to continue to
to consider the enlightenment. First of all, in its faults, as well as its virtues.
It's a very important issue,
but also to continue to consider it as a continuation
of a process that started thousands of years before,
and that can't be just casually dismissed
on the presupposition that the enlightenment
was drawn out of the hat by a magician, you know, 400 years ago
with no developmental precursor. I think that's a...
You know, the other thing that's remarkable to me about that is that the people, so many of the people who are
Enlightenment types, like Pinker and Hitchens and Harris, are also evolutionary biologists.
And Jesus, thank you. No better, man. It's like...
Even people like friends to wall
You know who's been studying chimpanzee behavior has shown very clearly the
evolutionary origins of a rather profound
Proto-murality so even if you're not
Looking at this from the perspective of divine revelation whatever that might be and that's a great mystery
You know because I think often divine revelation
is the revelation of our true nature to ourselves.
And, you know, that might be metaphysically mediated,
God only knows.
But there's a lengthy developmental history
preceding the development of anything like
fundamental moral assumptions.
And the evolutionary biology seems to support that
presupposition
powerfully.
And so that's another contradiction in the Enlightenment viewpoint that I just don't
get.
It's like, well, as far as you're concerned as an evolutionary biologist, everything
has a history that should be marked off in the hundreds of millions or at least the
tens of millions of years.
And yet this radically important transformation in the manner in which human beings conducted
themselves, well, that was just something that emerged out of nothing, right? It's like
it's so funny because it's an ex-Nahalo. I don't think that's the proper way to pronounce it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's an ex-Nah hello argument. It's like, well, we were ignorant, feudalistic Christians
squabbling about each other in this superstitious morass
and all of a sudden, out of nowhere, in some sense,
came this brilliant new way of looking at the world.
And I don't see how that's in keeping
with that deeper view of history that's necessary if
you're an evolutionary biologist.
Yeah, I obviously agree totally with that.
And I find it kind of hilarious.
A lot of the presuppositions that are made are fundamentally it odds with a lot of the
other presuppositions that are that are that are that under the system of thought.
And you see, you know, I was talking to Pinker just recently, really, like two weeks ago.
And I broached this topic.
You know, he did agree, by the way, to have a three-way discussion with you and I.
Yeah, I mean, I'd totally be interested in that.
Good, so I've talked to the CA people, and we're going to try to set it up, because I think
that would be great, and we could see what we see with it.
We'll have an alt-right festival. That's it. That's right.
That's right. We can add some of the witnesses now. Everybody's all right. If you. Yeah.
I'm going to be attracting neo-naughtsies like Matt. I'll send. Right. Two Jews and two Jews in a self-help
in Canadian. That's exactly that's that's where we're at the forefront of that movement. That's
fish. It would be see because one of the things that struck me so interestingly about
Panker the last time I talked to him was as soon as I broached the argument that these
enlightenment ideas were founded in something that looked like a metaphysical religious
narrative, whatever its origins, all he did was point to all the negative examples of
what religious structures have
Managed and right that seems to be to be such an unfair argument because it's an avoidance argument again
That that's also stuff that
Non-religious structures have created like that's that's the question is not why bad stuff happens in religious society
The question is why good stuff at all that yes, that is the question, especially given that it's inappropriate to conflate religious structures with tribalism.
Correct.
You know, especially because you can look, I mean, you might want to blame human evil on the proclivity for us to gather together in groups under a religious hierarchy. But then you're stuck with the problem of chimpanzees
who do exactly the same thing
with the equivalent degree of brutality,
with no religious thinking whatsoever.
And so I think it's perfectly reasonable
to point out that religious thinking
can become a variant of tribalism,
but it's no more fair to blame human social conflict
on religion than it is to blame the existence of hierarchy
on capitalism.
The greatest tribalism that I'm seeing in today's world has not only nothing to do with religion
but is actively anti-religion.
The greatest tribalism that I'm seeing right now, whether you're talking about the intersection
of left that creates hierarchies of value based on your group membership or whether you're
talking about the white supremacist all right, which is militantly anti-Christian, and he's Christianity, and Judaism by extension
as a weakness.
That pure tribalism, white supremacy has nothing to do with overarching religious instincts.
In fact, it says that overarching religious instincts is quite bad.
One of the great anti-tribal forces in human history has been of religion. It's a point that Robert Putnam makes in Boeing alone. He for a presupposed
that diversity was our strength as the, as the nostram goes. And he then found that ethnic
diversity in a vacuum doesn't actually create strength. It creates the ethnic diversity.
What he said is the only two things you get with pure ethnic diversity are increased protest marches and increased television watching
But if you have a common perps if you have a common purpose a common reason for being together
Then ethnic diversity and experiential diversity is our strength and it's really great, right?
You go to a church and you see diverse group of people all of whom came from different places
And they all care for each other and they're all taken care of each other and they all have different stories to tell and enriching stories to tell.
That's how you build the society.
They're all striving to play the same axiomatic game.
Exactly.
You just predicated on these underlying revelatory truths.
The most important of which, as you pointed out, is the notion that human beings are made
in the image of God.
Which, you know, it's one of the things because I'm you know I tend never to take
a religious view if I could take a scientific view. I never take a metaphysical view if I could
take a reductionist view you know it's a form of mental hygiene in some sense but there are
statements there are biblical statements that are so unlikely that it's very difficult for me to account
for them reductionistically or even biologically, even though I've done my best to do so.
And that, well, the idea that you extract the best out of the chaos of potential with
truth, that's one, man, because that is one daring metaphysical statement.
And that requires a tremendous amount of courage to even attempt. And I do believe that it's true. I'm not sure it's not the most
true thing that's ever been written, but then a close contender would be the one that you
identified, which is, well, men and women are made in the image of God. It's like, who the hell
would have thought that up? But it's such a, it's so crazily irrational in a sense.
It flies in the face of everything that you see about human beings or virtually everything
that you see about them.
They're hierarchical arrangement, they're relative weakness, they're mortality, they're
flawed nature, they're sinful nature, you know, they're inumerable inadequacies.
And then to say, in spite of all that, so long ago, and at the beginning of this civilizing
tradition, that, well, yeah, despite all that self-evident pathology and radical individual
difference in power and ability, that each of us has a divine spark.
It's like, huh.
It is an amazing thought and it's an inspiring thought and I hope that at the end of the day
that's that's if we're going to take away one message from I think this conversation
and in general if we're going to take one message out to the world the idea that you're
made in the image of God and so is everybody else. If we build on that I think we can build
something.
Well that's that's an excellent place to end.
Well, thanks so much. I really appreciate it, Jordan.
It's really good to talk to you, Ben, and good luck with your book.
And I hope it has the effect that you're hoping for.
I hope that we can make a strong case, especially with the enlightenment types.
And even the atheists, to some degree, that...
I hope so too, because I think that in the end, we can all be on the same page,
but I think they're going to to recognize the the value of tradition just as we respect the value of reason
Right right awesome. Thank you. Okay, man. Hey well
If you found this conversation meaningful you might think about picking up dad's books
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