No. We can't see God, but we can see the gas chambers and crematoriums. Anyone who is reasonable will acknowledge that Hitler was a disturbed and very dangerous despot. How many millions died needlessly as a result of his actions? The answer is about 48 million people. You can look it up.
No, once again. Anyone who wants to argue that Hitler may have provided a moralistic society is either looking for an argument to prove some other point, or he is a neo-Nazi. Which are you? I am thinking, not the latter.
The position you are taking, for the sake of argument, is unreasonable. I can't believe that, on some plain, you think Hitler built a moralist society?
Unless I am thinking of some other lecture then, yes, he does address this.
It is interesting that you want to talk about his thesis but you don't want to listen to what he has to say. You are getting all your information 2nd hand. I revisited the lecture a second time. It is only one hour long and there is much you'd probably completely agree with. The last 45 minutes is the Q & A period.
He says the irony is that the Christian right understands far better the dilemma the world faces than do most liberal thinkers. Yes, he agrees with you on a great deal.
Do not equate Harris with Hitler. There is no similarity in their thinking. You, however, probably know that.
I am shaking my head at the way you twist things. He did not say believe. That was the word I chose. Let's change it up: Harris says “There are answers (but) whether we can get those answers or not,” he doesn’t know." In other words, he does not know at this time whether it is possible that science might some day give us answers to questions of morality. However, he thinks this is something science should explore.
People have all sorts of beliefs Dan: they think there are ghosts, they think Big Foot is real, they think the Loch Ness Monster exists, they think the British monarchy had a part in Diana's death, they think the Moon landing was faked, and so on. These are not creeds. The thing about the Creed, Dan, is that it is a formal religious statement pertaining to requirements of belief that are a necessary part of calling oneself a Christian. Atheists have no such formal statement of required beliefs. We have no Creed.
You need to examine Harris' hypothesis. Listen to it from the horses' mouth, so to speak.
"No. We can't see God, but we can see the gas chambers and crematoriums."
Gas chambers and crematoriums are not evil anymore than guns or drugs are evil. They are physical objects.
I think to make the above parallel work, we have to lay it out like this:
gas chambers are to evil
as
*blank* is to God.
What would the blank be? Could be lots of things, let's say 'stars'.
So, I think, to make the parallel work, we would say, "I can see gas chambers, so I know there's evil. I can see stars, so I know there's God." Someone might say there're other possible explanations for the stars... true, there're other possible explanations for the chambers as well.
"Anyone who is reasonable will acknowledge that Hitler was a disturbed and very dangerous despot."
How about a similar statement, 'Anyone who is reasonable will acknowledge that God exists'?
"How many millions died needlessly as a result of his actions?"
Whether it was needless or not depends on your moral framework, I think.
"Anyone who wants to argue that Hitler may have provided a moralistic society is either looking for an argument to prove some other point, or he is a neo-Nazi."
Well, I do enjoy a good rousing discussion... but really, at this point, I'm interested in trying to figure out how this works in your (or anyone else's) mind... you seem eager to look at things in the 'God' area, and say 'there's no evidence, case closed.' Yet you seem don't seem willing to use the same rigor when dealing with your other beliefs.
Imo, when an atheist and a Christian are talking, it's not 'unbeliever vs believer'... It's 'a believer in some things vs a believer in other things'. Though, many atheists don't like the idea of 'believer'... I'm not sure why...
"The position you are taking, for the sake of argument, is unreasonable."
I understand you view it as unreasonable, I think you say that because it conflicts with some part of your belief system. Really, at heart, don't you just plain believe in things that indicate Hitler was wrong?
"Unless I am thinking of some other lecture then, yes, he does address this."
Cool... and what does he say? does he say it's wrong to worship other gods?
"It is interesting that you want to talk about his thesis but you don't want to listen to what he has to say."
Harris is an interesting guy, don't get me wrong... I've listened to/watched other things of his... it's partly a matter of time, and how to spend it... in the end, he's not here, I can't discuss this one-on-one with him... the critical thing is what does Cycel understand Harris to be saying... that's why I asked for your summary.
"Yes, he agrees with you on a great deal."
Well, he is a smart guy...
"Do not equate Harris with Hitler. There is no similarity in their thinking."
They are equal in some respects... they both have ideas, values, morals...
"He did not say believe. That was the word I chose."
Exactly... and since you're the one that's here, I followed up on your word.
"In other words, he does not know at this time whether it is possible that science might some day give us answers to questions of morality. However, he thinks this is something science should explore."
I think science should try to explore everything... that's how we learn new stuff... should science explore the spirit energies around us? If not, why not?
"People have all sorts of beliefs Dan: they think there are ghosts, they think Big Foot is real... These are not creeds."
I agree... I usually use 'creed' to mean a belief that supports one's values, life-approach, worldview, etc...
"Atheists have no such formal statement of required beliefs. We have no Creed."
Of course, 'atheist' doesn't tell us what a person is, just what they are not... I said 'most atheists' (or did I say 'many'?)... In my experience, most atheists do hold beliefs that shape their worldview... they may say to themselves 'I believe that thus-and-so is right (or wrong).' If they were speaking Latin, that 'I believe' would be 'credo'...
"You need to examine Harris' hypothesis. Listen to it from the horses' mouth, so to speak. "
Is it something you understand well enough to put into your own words? that's what I'm interested in...