Dan Dennett: Responding to Pastor Rick Warren

2,027,557 views ・ 2007-01-16

TED


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00:27
It's wonderful to be back.
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I love this wonderful gathering.
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And you must be wondering, "What on earth?
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Have they put up the wrong slide?"
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No, no.
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Look at this magnificent beast,
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and ask the question: Who designed it?
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This is TED; this is Technology, Entertainment, Design,
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and there's a dairy cow.
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It's a quite wonderfully designed animal.
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And I was thinking, how do I introduce this?
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And I thought, well, maybe that old doggerel by Joyce Kilmer,
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you know: "Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make a tree."
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And you might say, "Well, God designed the cow."
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But, of course, God got a lot of help.
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This is the ancestor of cattle.
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This is the aurochs.
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And it was designed by natural selection,
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the process of natural selection, over many millions of years.
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And then it became domesticated, thousands of years ago.
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And human beings became its stewards,
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and, without even knowing what they were doing,
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they gradually redesigned it and redesigned it and redesigned it.
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And then more recently, they really began to do reverse engineering on this beast
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and figure out just what the parts were, how they worked
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and how they might be optimized -- how they might be made better.
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Now, why am I talking about cows?
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Because I want to say that much the same thing is true of religions.
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Religions are natural phenomena -- they're just as natural as cows.
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They have evolved over millennia.
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They have a biological base, just like the aurochs.
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They have become domesticated,
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and human beings have been redesigning their religions for thousands of years.
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This is TED, and I want to talk about design.
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Because what I've been doing for the last four years --
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really since the first time you saw me --
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some of you saw me at TED when I was talking about religion --
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and in the last four years,
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I've been working just about non-stop on this topic.
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And you might say it's about the reverse engineering of religions.
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Now that very idea, I think, strikes terror in many people,
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or anger, or anxiety of one sort or another.
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And that is the spell that I want to break.
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I want to say, no, religions are an important natural phenomenon.
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We should study them with the same intensity
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that we study all the other important natural phenomena,
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like global warming, as we heard so eloquently last night from Al Gore.
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Today's religions are brilliantly designed -- brilliantly designed.
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They are immensely powerful social institutions
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and many of their features can be traced back to earlier features
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that we can really make sense of by reverse engineering.
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And, as with the cow, there's a mixture of evolutionary design --
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designed by natural selection itself --
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and intelligent design --
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more or less intelligent design --
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and redesigned by human beings
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who are trying to redesign their religions.
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You don't do book talks at TED,
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but I'm going to have just one slide about my book,
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because there is one message in it
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which I think this group really needs to hear.
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And I would be very interested to get your responses to this.
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It's the one policy proposal that I make in the book,
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at this time, when I claim not to know enough about religion
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to know what other policy proposals to make.
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And it's one that echoes remarks that you've heard already today.
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Here's my proposal,
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I'm going to just take a couple of minutes to explain it:
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Education on world religions for all of our children --
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in primary school, in high school,
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in public schools, in private schools and in home schooling.
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So what I'm proposing is,
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just as we require reading, writing, arithmetic, American history,
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so we should have a curriculum on facts about all the religions of the world --
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about their history, about their creeds, about their texts,
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their music, their symbolisms, their prohibitions, their requirements.
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And this should be presented factually, straightforwardly,
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with no particular spin, to all of the children in the country.
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And as long as you teach them that,
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you can teach them anything else you like.
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That, I think, is maximal tolerance for religious freedom.
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As long as you inform your children about other religions,
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then you may -- and as early as you like and whatever you like --
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teach them whatever creed you want them to learn.
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But also let them know about other religions.
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Now, why do I say that?
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Because democracy depends on an informed citizenship.
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Informed consent is the very bedrock of our understanding of democracy.
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Misinformed consent is not worth it.
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It's like a coin flip; it doesn't count, really.
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Democracy depends on informed consent.
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This is the way we treat people as responsible adults.
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Now, children below the age of consent are a special case.
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Parents -- I'm going to use a word that Pastor Rick just used --
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parents are stewards of their children.
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They don't own them.
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You can't own your children.
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You have a responsibility to the world,
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to the state, to them, to take care of them right.
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You may teach them whatever creed you think is most important,
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but I say you have a responsibility to let them be informed
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about all the other creeds in the world, too.
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The reason I've taken this time is I've been fascinated to hear
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some of the reactions to this.
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One reviewer for a Roman Catholic newspaper called it "totalitarian."
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It strikes me as practically libertarian.
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Is it totalitarian to require reading, writing and arithmetic?
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I don't think so.
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All I'm saying is --
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and facts, facts only; no values, just facts --
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about all the world's religions.
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Another reviewer called it "hilarious."
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Well, I'm really bothered by the fact
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that anybody would think that was hilarious.
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It seems to me to be such a plausible,
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natural extension of the democratic principles we already have
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that I'm shocked to think anybody would find that just ridiculous.
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I know many religions
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are so anxious about preserving the purity of their faith among their children
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that they are intent on keeping their children ignorant of other faiths.
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I don't think that's defensible.
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But I'd really be pleased to get your answers on that --
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any reactions to that -- later.
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But now I'm going to move on.
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Back to the cow.
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This picture, which I pulled off the web --
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the fellow on the left is really an important part of this picture.
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That's the steward.
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Cows couldn't live without human stewards -- they're domesticated.
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They're a sort of ectosymbiont.
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They depend on us for their survival.
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And Pastor Rick was just talking about sheep.
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I'm going to talk about sheep, too.
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There's a lot of serendipitous convergence here.
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How clever it was of sheep to acquire shepherds!
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(Laughter)
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Think of what this got them.
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They could outsource all their problems:
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protection from predators, food-finding ...
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(Laughter)
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... health maintenance.
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(Laughter)
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The only cost in most flocks -- not even this -- a loss of free mating.
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What a deal!
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"How clever of sheep!" you might say.
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Except, of course, it wasn't the sheep's cleverness.
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We all know sheep are not exactly rocket scientists -- they're not very smart.
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It wasn't the cleverness of the sheep at all.
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They were clueless.
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But it was a very clever move.
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Whose clever move was it?
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It was the clever move of natural selection itself.
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Francis Crick, the co-discoverer of the structure of DNA
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with Jim Watson,
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once joked about what he called Orgel's Second Rule.
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Leslie Orgel is a molecular biologist, brilliant guy,
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and Orgel's Second Rule is:
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Evolution is cleverer than you are.
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Now, that is not Intelligent Design -- not from Francis Crick.
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Evolution is cleverer than you are.
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If you understand Orgel's Second Rule, then you understand
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why the Intelligent Design movement is basically a hoax.
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The designs discovered by the process of natural selection
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are brilliant, unbelievably brilliant.
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Again and again biologists are fascinated with the brilliance of what's discovered.
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But the process itself is without purpose,
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without foresight, without design.
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When I was here four years ago,
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I told the story about an ant climbing a blade of grass.
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And why the ant was doing it was because its brain had been infected
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with a lancet fluke that was needed to get into the belly of a sheep or a cow
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in order to reproduce.
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So it was sort of a spooky story.
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And I think some people may have misunderstood.
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Lancet flukes aren't smart.
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I submit that the intelligence of a lancet fluke is down there,
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somewhere between petunia and carrot.
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They're not really bright. They don't have to be.
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The lesson we learn from this is:
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you don't have to have a mind to be a beneficiary.
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The design is there in nature, but it's not in anybody's head.
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It doesn't have to be.
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That's the way evolution works.
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Question: Was domestication good for sheep?
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It was great for their genetic fitness.
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And here I want to remind you of a wonderful point
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that Paul MacCready made at TED three years ago.
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Here's what he said:
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"Ten thousand years ago, at the dawn of agriculture,
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human population, plus livestock and pets,
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was approximately a tenth of one percent of the terrestrial vertebrate landmass."
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That was just 10,000 years ago.
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Yesterday, in biological terms.
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What is it today? Does anybody remember what he told us?
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98 percent.
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That is what we have done on this planet.
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Now, I talked to Paul afterwards -- I wanted to check to find out
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how he'd calculated this, and get the sources and so forth --
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and he also gave me a paper that he had written on this.
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And there was a passage in it which he did not present here
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and I think it is so good, I'm going to read it to you:
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"Over billions of years on a unique sphere,
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chance has painted a thin covering of life:
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complex, improbable, wonderful and fragile.
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Suddenly, we humans -- a recently arrived species
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no longer subject to the checks and balances inherent in nature --
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have grown in population, technology and intelligence
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to a position of terrible power.
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We now wield the paintbrush."
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We heard about the atmosphere as a thin layer of varnish.
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Life itself is just a thin coat of paint on this planet.
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And we're the ones that hold the paintbrush.
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And how can we do that?
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The key to our domination of the planet is culture.
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And the key to culture is religion.
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Suppose Martian scientists came to Earth.
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They would be puzzled by many things.
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Anybody know what this is? I'll tell you what it is.
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This is a million people gathering on the banks of the Ganges in 2001,
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perhaps the largest single gathering of human beings ever,
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as seen from satellite photograph.
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Here's a big crowd.
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Here's another crowd in Mecca.
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Martians would be amazed by this.
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They'd want to know how it originated,
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what it was for and how it perpetuates itself.
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Actually, I'm going to pass over this.
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The ant isn't alone.
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There's all sorts of wonderful cases of species which -- in that case --
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A parasite gets into a mouse and needs to get into the belly of a cat.
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And it turns the mouse into Mighty Mouse, makes it fearless,
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so it runs out in the open, where it'll be eaten by a cat.
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True story.
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In other words, we have these hijackers --
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you've seen this slide before, from four years ago --
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a parasite that infects the brain and induces even suicidal behavior,
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on behalf of a cause other than one's own genetic fitness.
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Does that ever happen to us?
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Yes, it does -- quite wonderfully.
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The Arabic word "Islam" means "submission."
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It means "surrender of self-interest to the will of Allah."
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But I'm not just talking about Islam.
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I'm talking also about Christianity.
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This is a parchment music page that I found in a Paris bookstall
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50 years ago.
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And on it, it says, in Latin:
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"Semen est verbum Dei. Sator autem Christus."
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The word of God is the seed and the sower of the seed is Christ.
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Same idea. Well, not quite.
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But in fact, Christians, too ...
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glory in the fact that they have surrendered to God.
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I'll give you a few quotes.
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"The heart of worship is surrender.
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Surrendered people obey God's words, even if it doesn't make sense."
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Those words are by Rick Warren.
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Those are from "The Purpose Driven Life."
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And I want to turn now, briefly, to talk about that book, which I've read.
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You've all got a copy,
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and you've just heard the man.
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And what I want to do now is say a bit about this book
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from the design standpoint,
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because I think it's actually a brilliant book.
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First of all, the goal -- and you heard just now what the goal is --
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it's to bring purpose to the lives of millions, and he has succeeded.
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Is it a good goal? In itself, I'm sure we all agree, it is a wonderful goal.
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He's absolutely right.
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There are lots of people out there who don't have purpose in their life,
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and bringing purpose to their life is a wonderful goal.
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I give him an A+ on this.
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(Laughter)
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Is the goal achieved?
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Yes.
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Thirty million copies of this book.
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Al Gore, eat your heart out.
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(Laughter)
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Just exactly what Al is trying to do, Rick is doing.
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This is a fantastic achievement.
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And the means -- how does he do it?
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It's a brilliant redesign of traditional religious themes --
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updating them, quietly dropping obsolete features,
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putting new interpretations on other features.
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This is the evolution of religion that's been going on for thousands of years,
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and he's just the latest brilliant practitioner of it.
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I don't have to tell you this; you just heard the man.
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Excellent insights into human psychology, wise advice on every page.
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Moreover, he invites us to look under the hood.
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I really appreciated that.
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For instance, he has an appendix where he explains
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his choice of translations of different Bible verses.
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The book is clear, vivid, accessible, beautifully formatted.
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Just enough repetition.
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That's really important.
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Every time you read it or say it, you make another copy in your brain.
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Every time you read it or say it, you make another copy in your brain.
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(Laughter)
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With me, everybody --
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(Audience and Dan Dennett) Every time you read it or say it,
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you make another copy in your brain.
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Thank you.
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And now we come to my problem.
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Because I'm absolutely sincere in my appreciation
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of all that I said about this book.
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But I wish it were better.
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I have some problems with the book.
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And it would just be insincere of me not to address those problems.
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I wish he could do this with a revision,
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a Mark 2 version of his book.
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"The truth will set you free."
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That's what it says in the Bible,
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and it's something that I want to live by, too.
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My problem is, some of the bits in it I don't think are true.
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Now some of this is a difference of opinion.
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18:07
And that's not my main complaint, that's worth mentioning.
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Here's a passage -- it's very much what he said, anyway:
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"If there was no God we would all be accidents,
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the result of astronomical random chance in the Universe.
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You could stop reading this book because life would have no purpose
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18:22
or meaning or significance.
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There would be no right or wrong
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and no hope beyond your brief years on Earth."
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Now, I just do not believe that.
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By the way, I find -- Homer Groening's film presented a beautiful alternative
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to that very claim.
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Yes, there is meaning and a reason for right or wrong.
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We don't need a belief in God to be good or to have meaning in us.
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But that, as I said, is just a difference of opinion.
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That's not what I'm really worried about.
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How about this: "God designed this planet's environment
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just so we could live in it."
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I'm afraid that a lot of people take that sentiment to mean
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that we don't have to do the sorts of things
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that Al Gore is trying so hard to get us to do.
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I am not happy with that sentiment at all.
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And then I find this: "All the evidence available in the biological sciences
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supports the core proposition that the cosmos is a specially designed whole
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with life and mankind as its fundamental goal and purpose,
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19:23
a whole in which all facets of reality have their meaning
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and explanation in this central fact."
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Well, that's Michael Denton. He's a creationist.
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And here, I think, "Wait a minute." I read this again.
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I read it three or four times and I think,
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"Is he really endorsing Intelligent Design?
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Is he endorsing creationism here?"
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And you can't tell.
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So I'm sort of thinking, "Well, I don't know,
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I don't know if I want to get upset with this yet."
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But then I read on, and I read this: "First, Noah had never seen rain,
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because prior to the Flood, God irrigated the earth from the ground up."
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I wish that sentence weren't in there, because I think it is false.
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And I think that thinking this way about the history of the planet,
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after we've just been hearing about the history of the planet
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over millions of years,
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discourages people from scientific understanding.
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Now, Rick Warren uses scientific terms
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and scientific factoids and information in a very interesting way.
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Here's one: "God deliberately shaped and formed you to serve him
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in a way that makes your ministry unique.
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He carefully mixed the DNA cocktail that created you."
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I think that's false.
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Now, maybe we want to treat it as metaphorical.
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Here's another one: "For instance, your brain can store 100 trillion facts.
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20:47
Your mind can handle 15,000 decisions a second."
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20:50
Well, it would be interesting to find the interpretation
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20:53
where I would accept that.
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20:55
There might be some way of treating that as true.
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"Anthropologists have noted that worship is a universal urge,
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21:01
hardwired by God into the very fiber of our being --
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21:04
an inbuilt need to connect with God."
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21:08
Well, the sense of which I agree with him,
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except I think it has an evolutionary explanation.
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And what I find deeply troubling in this book
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is that he seems to be arguing that if you want to be moral,
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21:20
if you want to have meaning in your life,
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21:22
you have to be an Intelligent Designer,
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21:25
you have to deny the theory of evolution by natural selection.
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21:28
And I think, on the contrary,
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21:30
that it is very important to solving the world's problems
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that we take evolutionary biology seriously.
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Whose truth are we going to listen to?
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21:40
Well, this is from "The Purpose Driven Life":
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21:43
"The Bible must become the authoritative standard for my life:
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21:46
the compass I rely on for direction,
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21:48
the counsel I listen to for making wise decisions,
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21:51
and the benchmark I use for evaluating everything."
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21:54
Well maybe, OK, but what's going to follow from this?
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21:58
And here's one that does concern me.
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22:02
Remember I quoted him before with this line:
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22:04
"Surrendered people obey God's word, even if it doesn't make sense."
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22:10
And that's a problem.
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(Sighs)
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22:15
"Don't ever argue with the Devil.
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22:17
He's better at arguing than you are,
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22:19
having had thousands of years to practice."
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22:21
Now, Rick Warren didn't invent this clever move.
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It's an old move.
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22:27
It's a very clever adaptation of religions.
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It's a wild card for disarming any reasonable criticism.
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22:35
"You don't like my interpretation?
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You've got a reasonable objection to it?
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1952
22:39
Don't listen, don't listen!
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22:41
That's the Devil speaking."
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22:44
This discourages the sort of reasoning citizenship
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22:49
it seems to me that we want to have.
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22:52
I've got one more problem, then I'm through.
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22:55
And I'd really like to get a response if Rick is able to do it.
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23:00
"In the Great Commission, Jesus said,
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23:02
'Go to all people of all nations and make them my disciples.
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23:05
Baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit,
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23:08
and teach them to do everything I've told you.'"
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23:10
The Bible says Jesus is the only one who can save the world.
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23:14
We've seen many wonderful maps of the world in the last day or so.
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23:19
Here's one, not as beautiful as the others;
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23:21
it simply shows the religions of the world.
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23:25
Here's one that shows the sort of current breakdown of the different religions.
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23:32
Do we really want to commit ourselves
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23:36
to engulfing all the other religions,
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23:41
when their holy books are telling them,
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23:44
"Don't listen to the other side, that's just Satan talking!"?
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23:49
It seems to me that that's a very problematic ship
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23:55
to get on for the future.
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23:58
I found this sign as I was driving to Maine recently,
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24:03
in front of a church: "Good without God becomes zero."
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24:05
Sort of cute.
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24:07
A very clever little meme.
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24:11
I don't believe it and I think this idea, popular as it is --
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24:17
not in this guise, but in general --
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24:19
is itself one of the main problems that we face.
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24:22
If you are like me, you know many wonderful, committed, engaged
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24:29
atheists, agnostics, who are being very good without God.
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24:35
And you also know many religious people who hide behind their sanctity
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24:40
instead of doing good works.
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24:42
So, I wish we could drop this meme.
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24:46
I wish this meme would go extinct.
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1993
24:48
Thanks very much for your attention.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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