Dan Dennett: Responding to Pastor Rick Warren

2,045,721 views ・ 2007-01-16

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:27
It's wonderful to be back.
0
27023
2619
00:29
I love this wonderful gathering.
1
29666
2702
00:32
And you must be wondering, "What on earth?
2
32392
2197
00:34
Have they put up the wrong slide?"
3
34613
1652
00:36
No, no.
4
36289
1158
00:38
Look at this magnificent beast,
5
38426
4212
00:42
and ask the question: Who designed it?
6
42662
3504
00:48
This is TED; this is Technology, Entertainment, Design,
7
48152
3910
00:52
and there's a dairy cow.
8
52086
1739
00:53
It's a quite wonderfully designed animal.
9
53849
3361
00:58
And I was thinking, how do I introduce this?
10
58104
2198
01:00
And I thought, well, maybe that old doggerel by Joyce Kilmer,
11
60326
4650
01:05
you know: "Poems are made by fools like me, but only God can make a tree."
12
65000
4980
01:10
And you might say, "Well, God designed the cow."
13
70004
2664
01:12
But, of course, God got a lot of help.
14
72692
2103
01:16
This is the ancestor of cattle.
15
76525
2309
01:18
This is the aurochs.
16
78858
1174
01:21
And it was designed by natural selection,
17
81739
2021
01:23
the process of natural selection, over many millions of years.
18
83784
3427
01:27
And then it became domesticated, thousands of years ago.
19
87719
3944
01:32
And human beings became its stewards,
20
92274
4649
01:36
and, without even knowing what they were doing,
21
96947
2230
01:39
they gradually redesigned it and redesigned it and redesigned it.
22
99201
4296
01:43
And then more recently, they really began to do reverse engineering on this beast
23
103521
6238
01:49
and figure out just what the parts were, how they worked
24
109783
2771
01:52
and how they might be optimized -- how they might be made better.
25
112578
3422
01:57
Now, why am I talking about cows?
26
117220
2476
02:01
Because I want to say that much the same thing is true of religions.
27
121181
4000
02:06
Religions are natural phenomena -- they're just as natural as cows.
28
126489
4199
02:11
They have evolved over millennia.
29
131862
3592
02:16
They have a biological base, just like the aurochs.
30
136438
3711
02:20
They have become domesticated,
31
140798
2068
02:22
and human beings have been redesigning their religions for thousands of years.
32
142890
5327
02:29
This is TED, and I want to talk about design.
33
149138
3838
02:33
Because what I've been doing for the last four years --
34
153000
2913
02:35
really since the first time you saw me --
35
155937
2020
02:37
some of you saw me at TED when I was talking about religion --
36
157981
3003
02:41
and in the last four years,
37
161008
1493
02:42
I've been working just about non-stop on this topic.
38
162525
3023
02:45
And you might say it's about the reverse engineering of religions.
39
165961
4518
02:51
Now that very idea, I think, strikes terror in many people,
40
171590
5563
02:57
or anger, or anxiety of one sort or another.
41
177177
4600
03:02
And that is the spell that I want to break.
42
182743
2427
03:05
I want to say, no, religions are an important natural phenomenon.
43
185194
3715
03:08
We should study them with the same intensity
44
188933
3248
03:12
that we study all the other important natural phenomena,
45
192205
3167
03:15
like global warming, as we heard so eloquently last night from Al Gore.
46
195396
3580
03:20
Today's religions are brilliantly designed -- brilliantly designed.
47
200128
3848
03:24
They are immensely powerful social institutions
48
204620
4333
03:28
and many of their features can be traced back to earlier features
49
208977
5280
03:34
that we can really make sense of by reverse engineering.
50
214281
3259
03:39
And, as with the cow, there's a mixture of evolutionary design --
51
219333
5372
03:44
designed by natural selection itself --
52
224729
1969
03:46
and intelligent design --
53
226722
3107
03:49
more or less intelligent design --
54
229853
1814
03:51
and redesigned by human beings
55
231691
1698
03:53
who are trying to redesign their religions.
56
233413
2880
03:57
You don't do book talks at TED,
57
237564
3580
04:01
but I'm going to have just one slide about my book,
58
241168
4124
04:05
because there is one message in it
59
245316
2673
04:08
which I think this group really needs to hear.
60
248013
2164
04:10
And I would be very interested to get your responses to this.
61
250201
3532
04:15
It's the one policy proposal that I make in the book,
62
255050
4645
04:19
at this time, when I claim not to know enough about religion
63
259719
3363
04:23
to know what other policy proposals to make.
64
263106
2619
04:25
And it's one that echoes remarks that you've heard already today.
65
265749
4548
04:30
Here's my proposal,
66
270321
1159
04:31
I'm going to just take a couple of minutes to explain it:
67
271504
2930
04:34
Education on world religions for all of our children --
68
274458
5544
04:40
in primary school, in high school,
69
280026
2143
04:42
in public schools, in private schools and in home schooling.
70
282193
3265
04:46
So what I'm proposing is,
71
286521
1658
04:48
just as we require reading, writing, arithmetic, American history,
72
288203
5860
04:54
so we should have a curriculum on facts about all the religions of the world --
73
294087
7000
05:01
about their history, about their creeds, about their texts,
74
301111
4865
05:06
their music, their symbolisms, their prohibitions, their requirements.
75
306000
4661
05:11
And this should be presented factually, straightforwardly,
76
311994
4819
05:16
with no particular spin, to all of the children in the country.
77
316837
5464
05:23
And as long as you teach them that,
78
323507
3293
05:26
you can teach them anything else you like.
79
326824
2152
05:29
That, I think, is maximal tolerance for religious freedom.
80
329713
3992
05:34
As long as you inform your children about other religions,
81
334363
4613
05:39
then you may -- and as early as you like and whatever you like --
82
339000
3146
05:42
teach them whatever creed you want them to learn.
83
342170
3199
05:45
But also let them know about other religions.
84
345956
2636
05:48
Now, why do I say that?
85
348616
2384
05:52
Because democracy depends on an informed citizenship.
86
352365
5806
05:59
Informed consent is the very bedrock of our understanding of democracy.
87
359250
5750
06:06
Misinformed consent is not worth it.
88
366930
3046
06:10
It's like a coin flip; it doesn't count, really.
89
370000
3223
06:13
Democracy depends on informed consent.
90
373247
2729
06:16
This is the way we treat people as responsible adults.
91
376000
5333
06:21
Now, children below the age of consent are a special case.
92
381812
6738
06:30
Parents -- I'm going to use a word that Pastor Rick just used --
93
390608
5591
06:36
parents are stewards of their children.
94
396223
2142
06:39
They don't own them.
95
399159
1325
06:41
You can't own your children.
96
401286
1902
06:43
You have a responsibility to the world,
97
403212
3683
06:46
to the state, to them, to take care of them right.
98
406919
3741
06:52
You may teach them whatever creed you think is most important,
99
412843
6047
06:58
but I say you have a responsibility to let them be informed
100
418914
4826
07:03
about all the other creeds in the world, too.
101
423764
2532
07:07
The reason I've taken this time is I've been fascinated to hear
102
427000
4468
07:11
some of the reactions to this.
103
431492
1508
07:14
One reviewer for a Roman Catholic newspaper called it "totalitarian."
104
434663
5116
07:21
It strikes me as practically libertarian.
105
441849
3151
07:26
Is it totalitarian to require reading, writing and arithmetic?
106
446071
3023
07:29
I don't think so.
107
449118
1159
07:30
All I'm saying is --
108
450301
1979
07:32
and facts, facts only; no values, just facts --
109
452304
5924
07:38
about all the world's religions.
110
458252
1748
07:41
Another reviewer called it "hilarious."
111
461683
1923
07:44
Well, I'm really bothered by the fact
112
464900
3657
07:48
that anybody would think that was hilarious.
113
468581
2619
07:51
It seems to me to be such a plausible,
114
471224
3981
07:55
natural extension of the democratic principles we already have
115
475229
4396
07:59
that I'm shocked to think anybody would find that just ridiculous.
116
479649
5020
08:05
I know many religions
117
485002
3517
08:08
are so anxious about preserving the purity of their faith among their children
118
488543
6637
08:15
that they are intent on keeping their children ignorant of other faiths.
119
495204
5488
08:22
I don't think that's defensible.
120
502145
1849
08:25
But I'd really be pleased to get your answers on that --
121
505184
2634
08:27
any reactions to that -- later.
122
507842
1527
08:29
But now I'm going to move on.
123
509393
1465
08:31
Back to the cow.
124
511540
1436
08:33
This picture, which I pulled off the web --
125
513000
3364
08:36
the fellow on the left is really an important part of this picture.
126
516388
3305
08:39
That's the steward.
127
519717
1259
08:41
Cows couldn't live without human stewards -- they're domesticated.
128
521305
5509
08:46
They're a sort of ectosymbiont.
129
526838
2738
08:50
They depend on us for their survival.
130
530132
4642
08:55
And Pastor Rick was just talking about sheep.
131
535380
3343
08:58
I'm going to talk about sheep, too.
132
538747
1699
09:00
There's a lot of serendipitous convergence here.
133
540470
2983
09:04
How clever it was of sheep to acquire shepherds!
134
544007
3909
09:07
(Laughter)
135
547940
2333
09:10
Think of what this got them.
136
550297
1785
09:12
They could outsource all their problems:
137
552438
2538
09:15
protection from predators, food-finding ...
138
555000
2611
09:17
(Laughter)
139
557635
1007
09:18
... health maintenance.
140
558666
1335
09:20
(Laughter)
141
560025
1893
09:22
The only cost in most flocks -- not even this -- a loss of free mating.
142
562712
4788
09:29
What a deal!
143
569665
1166
09:31
"How clever of sheep!" you might say.
144
571673
1876
09:33
Except, of course, it wasn't the sheep's cleverness.
145
573573
2501
09:36
We all know sheep are not exactly rocket scientists -- they're not very smart.
146
576098
4389
09:41
It wasn't the cleverness of the sheep at all.
147
581427
2123
09:43
They were clueless.
148
583574
1402
09:46
But it was a very clever move.
149
586201
1934
09:48
Whose clever move was it?
150
588159
1323
09:49
It was the clever move of natural selection itself.
151
589506
3470
09:53
Francis Crick, the co-discoverer of the structure of DNA
152
593818
5783
09:59
with Jim Watson,
153
599625
1763
10:01
once joked about what he called Orgel's Second Rule.
154
601412
2817
10:04
Leslie Orgel is a molecular biologist, brilliant guy,
155
604578
5251
10:09
and Orgel's Second Rule is:
156
609853
1370
10:11
Evolution is cleverer than you are.
157
611247
1777
10:14
Now, that is not Intelligent Design -- not from Francis Crick.
158
614960
5403
10:21
Evolution is cleverer than you are.
159
621479
1691
10:23
If you understand Orgel's Second Rule, then you understand
160
623194
3134
10:26
why the Intelligent Design movement is basically a hoax.
161
626352
4903
10:33
The designs discovered by the process of natural selection
162
633216
4414
10:37
are brilliant, unbelievably brilliant.
163
637654
2380
10:40
Again and again biologists are fascinated with the brilliance of what's discovered.
164
640058
4918
10:45
But the process itself is without purpose,
165
645283
3165
10:48
without foresight, without design.
166
648472
2175
10:51
When I was here four years ago,
167
651358
1531
10:52
I told the story about an ant climbing a blade of grass.
168
652913
2921
10:55
And why the ant was doing it was because its brain had been infected
169
655858
3866
10:59
with a lancet fluke that was needed to get into the belly of a sheep or a cow
170
659748
5172
11:04
in order to reproduce.
171
664944
2374
11:07
So it was sort of a spooky story.
172
667342
1634
11:09
And I think some people may have misunderstood.
173
669000
2746
11:11
Lancet flukes aren't smart.
174
671770
1604
11:13
I submit that the intelligence of a lancet fluke is down there,
175
673874
4234
11:18
somewhere between petunia and carrot.
176
678132
2180
11:20
They're not really bright. They don't have to be.
177
680336
2302
11:22
The lesson we learn from this is:
178
682662
1587
11:24
you don't have to have a mind to be a beneficiary.
179
684273
2703
11:27
The design is there in nature, but it's not in anybody's head.
180
687797
4492
11:32
It doesn't have to be.
181
692750
1226
11:34
That's the way evolution works.
182
694000
1683
11:36
Question: Was domestication good for sheep?
183
696635
2127
11:39
It was great for their genetic fitness.
184
699223
2047
11:41
And here I want to remind you of a wonderful point
185
701294
2682
11:44
that Paul MacCready made at TED three years ago.
186
704000
2976
11:47
Here's what he said:
187
707997
1158
11:50
"Ten thousand years ago, at the dawn of agriculture,
188
710012
2631
11:52
human population, plus livestock and pets,
189
712667
2412
11:55
was approximately a tenth of one percent of the terrestrial vertebrate landmass."
190
715103
5107
12:00
That was just 10,000 years ago.
191
720519
1858
12:03
Yesterday, in biological terms.
192
723234
2044
12:05
What is it today? Does anybody remember what he told us?
193
725708
2776
12:09
98 percent.
194
729167
2043
12:11
That is what we have done on this planet.
195
731639
2793
12:14
Now, I talked to Paul afterwards -- I wanted to check to find out
196
734456
3069
12:17
how he'd calculated this, and get the sources and so forth --
197
737549
2873
12:20
and he also gave me a paper that he had written on this.
198
740446
2699
12:23
And there was a passage in it which he did not present here
199
743169
2822
12:26
and I think it is so good, I'm going to read it to you:
200
746015
2595
12:28
"Over billions of years on a unique sphere,
201
748634
3140
12:31
chance has painted a thin covering of life:
202
751798
2841
12:34
complex, improbable, wonderful and fragile.
203
754663
3363
12:38
Suddenly, we humans -- a recently arrived species
204
758050
2926
12:41
no longer subject to the checks and balances inherent in nature --
205
761000
3448
12:44
have grown in population, technology and intelligence
206
764472
2818
12:47
to a position of terrible power.
207
767314
1943
12:49
We now wield the paintbrush."
208
769281
1871
12:52
We heard about the atmosphere as a thin layer of varnish.
209
772358
3389
12:55
Life itself is just a thin coat of paint on this planet.
210
775771
3205
12:59
And we're the ones that hold the paintbrush.
211
779830
2080
13:02
And how can we do that?
212
782576
1261
13:04
The key to our domination of the planet is culture.
213
784179
3194
13:08
And the key to culture is religion.
214
788557
2028
13:11
Suppose Martian scientists came to Earth.
215
791990
2230
13:14
They would be puzzled by many things.
216
794958
2042
13:18
Anybody know what this is? I'll tell you what it is.
217
798683
2714
13:22
This is a million people gathering on the banks of the Ganges in 2001,
218
802562
5293
13:27
perhaps the largest single gathering of human beings ever,
219
807879
3462
13:31
as seen from satellite photograph.
220
811365
1801
13:33
Here's a big crowd.
221
813597
1152
13:34
Here's another crowd in Mecca.
222
814773
1800
13:37
Martians would be amazed by this.
223
817153
2808
13:39
They'd want to know how it originated,
224
819985
1822
13:41
what it was for and how it perpetuates itself.
225
821831
2587
13:45
Actually, I'm going to pass over this.
226
825061
2325
13:48
The ant isn't alone.
227
828156
1255
13:49
There's all sorts of wonderful cases of species which -- in that case --
228
829435
5349
13:56
A parasite gets into a mouse and needs to get into the belly of a cat.
229
836617
3706
14:00
And it turns the mouse into Mighty Mouse, makes it fearless,
230
840347
2861
14:03
so it runs out in the open, where it'll be eaten by a cat.
231
843232
2783
14:06
True story.
232
846039
1667
14:07
In other words, we have these hijackers --
233
847730
2012
14:09
you've seen this slide before, from four years ago --
234
849766
2484
14:12
a parasite that infects the brain and induces even suicidal behavior,
235
852274
3886
14:16
on behalf of a cause other than one's own genetic fitness.
236
856184
3239
14:20
Does that ever happen to us?
237
860314
1621
14:22
Yes, it does -- quite wonderfully.
238
862562
2762
14:27
The Arabic word "Islam" means "submission."
239
867102
2007
14:29
It means "surrender of self-interest to the will of Allah."
240
869133
3016
14:32
But I'm not just talking about Islam.
241
872617
1783
14:34
I'm talking also about Christianity.
242
874424
2149
14:36
This is a parchment music page that I found in a Paris bookstall
243
876597
3338
14:39
50 years ago.
244
879959
1268
14:41
And on it, it says, in Latin:
245
881251
1749
14:44
"Semen est verbum Dei. Sator autem Christus."
246
884528
2960
14:47
The word of God is the seed and the sower of the seed is Christ.
247
887512
3464
14:51
Same idea. Well, not quite.
248
891418
1845
14:53
But in fact, Christians, too ...
249
893621
4652
14:58
glory in the fact that they have surrendered to God.
250
898297
3635
15:01
I'll give you a few quotes.
251
901956
1348
15:03
"The heart of worship is surrender.
252
903328
1834
15:06
Surrendered people obey God's words, even if it doesn't make sense."
253
906173
3994
15:11
Those words are by Rick Warren.
254
911182
2184
15:13
Those are from "The Purpose Driven Life."
255
913802
2476
15:16
And I want to turn now, briefly, to talk about that book, which I've read.
256
916898
3626
15:20
You've all got a copy,
257
920548
1343
15:21
and you've just heard the man.
258
921915
2192
15:24
And what I want to do now is say a bit about this book
259
924131
3707
15:27
from the design standpoint,
260
927862
1435
15:29
because I think it's actually a brilliant book.
261
929321
2294
15:33
First of all, the goal -- and you heard just now what the goal is --
262
933369
3215
15:36
it's to bring purpose to the lives of millions, and he has succeeded.
263
936608
3311
15:39
Is it a good goal? In itself, I'm sure we all agree, it is a wonderful goal.
264
939943
3772
15:43
He's absolutely right.
265
943739
1151
15:44
There are lots of people out there who don't have purpose in their life,
266
944914
3808
15:48
and bringing purpose to their life is a wonderful goal.
267
948746
2810
15:51
I give him an A+ on this.
268
951580
1592
15:53
(Laughter)
269
953196
1824
15:55
Is the goal achieved?
270
955044
1603
15:58
Yes.
271
958822
1154
16:01
Thirty million copies of this book.
272
961266
2734
16:05
Al Gore, eat your heart out.
273
965519
1457
16:07
(Laughter)
274
967000
3657
16:10
Just exactly what Al is trying to do, Rick is doing.
275
970681
3621
16:14
This is a fantastic achievement.
276
974326
2941
16:18
And the means -- how does he do it?
277
978028
3115
16:22
It's a brilliant redesign of traditional religious themes --
278
982000
2976
16:25
updating them, quietly dropping obsolete features,
279
985000
3301
16:28
putting new interpretations on other features.
280
988325
2158
16:30
This is the evolution of religion that's been going on for thousands of years,
281
990507
3691
16:34
and he's just the latest brilliant practitioner of it.
282
994222
2793
16:38
I don't have to tell you this; you just heard the man.
283
998833
2556
16:41
Excellent insights into human psychology, wise advice on every page.
284
1001413
4563
16:47
Moreover, he invites us to look under the hood.
285
1007079
3328
16:50
I really appreciated that.
286
1010431
1349
16:51
For instance, he has an appendix where he explains
287
1011804
2444
16:54
his choice of translations of different Bible verses.
288
1014272
3060
16:57
The book is clear, vivid, accessible, beautifully formatted.
289
1017999
5001
17:04
Just enough repetition.
290
1024323
1653
17:06
That's really important.
291
1026528
1286
17:08
Every time you read it or say it, you make another copy in your brain.
292
1028568
3692
17:13
Every time you read it or say it, you make another copy in your brain.
293
1033871
3745
17:17
(Laughter)
294
1037640
1008
17:18
With me, everybody --
295
1038672
1244
17:19
(Audience and Dan Dennett) Every time you read it or say it,
296
1039940
2976
17:22
you make another copy in your brain.
297
1042940
2301
17:25
Thank you.
298
1045265
1161
17:26
And now we come to my problem.
299
1046450
2293
17:28
Because I'm absolutely sincere in my appreciation
300
1048767
3209
17:32
of all that I said about this book.
301
1052000
1976
17:34
But I wish it were better.
302
1054560
1658
17:36
I have some problems with the book.
303
1056242
1936
17:38
And it would just be insincere of me not to address those problems.
304
1058202
3779
17:42
I wish he could do this with a revision,
305
1062346
3763
17:46
a Mark 2 version of his book.
306
1066133
2431
17:50
"The truth will set you free."
307
1070600
1516
17:52
That's what it says in the Bible,
308
1072536
1907
17:54
and it's something that I want to live by, too.
309
1074467
2508
17:57
My problem is, some of the bits in it I don't think are true.
310
1077418
4663
18:02
Now some of this is a difference of opinion.
311
1082748
2711
18:07
And that's not my main complaint, that's worth mentioning.
312
1087173
2865
18:10
Here's a passage -- it's very much what he said, anyway:
313
1090062
3189
18:13
"If there was no God we would all be accidents,
314
1093275
2499
18:15
the result of astronomical random chance in the Universe.
315
1095798
3111
18:18
You could stop reading this book because life would have no purpose
316
1098933
3378
18:22
or meaning or significance.
317
1102335
1484
18:23
There would be no right or wrong
318
1103843
1582
18:25
and no hope beyond your brief years on Earth."
319
1105449
2146
18:27
Now, I just do not believe that.
320
1107619
1909
18:29
By the way, I find -- Homer Groening's film presented a beautiful alternative
321
1109552
6180
18:35
to that very claim.
322
1115756
1341
18:37
Yes, there is meaning and a reason for right or wrong.
323
1117861
3405
18:41
We don't need a belief in God to be good or to have meaning in us.
324
1121290
6234
18:47
But that, as I said, is just a difference of opinion.
325
1127548
4261
18:51
That's not what I'm really worried about.
326
1131833
2143
18:54
How about this: "God designed this planet's environment
327
1134650
2929
18:57
just so we could live in it."
328
1137603
1507
19:00
I'm afraid that a lot of people take that sentiment to mean
329
1140213
4442
19:04
that we don't have to do the sorts of things
330
1144679
2620
19:07
that Al Gore is trying so hard to get us to do.
331
1147323
2388
19:09
I am not happy with that sentiment at all.
332
1149735
2241
19:12
And then I find this: "All the evidence available in the biological sciences
333
1152000
4572
19:16
supports the core proposition that the cosmos is a specially designed whole
334
1156596
3684
19:20
with life and mankind as its fundamental goal and purpose,
335
1160304
3279
19:23
a whole in which all facets of reality have their meaning
336
1163607
2684
19:26
and explanation in this central fact."
337
1166315
2017
19:28
Well, that's Michael Denton. He's a creationist.
338
1168356
2259
19:31
And here, I think, "Wait a minute." I read this again.
339
1171833
3143
19:35
I read it three or four times and I think,
340
1175000
2039
19:37
"Is he really endorsing Intelligent Design?
341
1177063
2544
19:39
Is he endorsing creationism here?"
342
1179631
1987
19:41
And you can't tell.
343
1181642
1235
19:42
So I'm sort of thinking, "Well, I don't know,
344
1182901
2105
19:45
I don't know if I want to get upset with this yet."
345
1185030
2397
19:47
But then I read on, and I read this: "First, Noah had never seen rain,
346
1187451
4084
19:51
because prior to the Flood, God irrigated the earth from the ground up."
347
1191559
3857
19:56
I wish that sentence weren't in there, because I think it is false.
348
1196614
4362
20:01
And I think that thinking this way about the history of the planet,
349
1201537
3167
20:04
after we've just been hearing about the history of the planet
350
1204728
3723
20:08
over millions of years,
351
1208475
3132
20:11
discourages people from scientific understanding.
352
1211631
3187
20:14
Now, Rick Warren uses scientific terms
353
1214842
6545
20:21
and scientific factoids and information in a very interesting way.
354
1221411
4106
20:25
Here's one: "God deliberately shaped and formed you to serve him
355
1225541
3364
20:28
in a way that makes your ministry unique.
356
1228929
2045
20:30
He carefully mixed the DNA cocktail that created you."
357
1230998
3643
20:37
I think that's false.
358
1237808
2168
20:40
Now, maybe we want to treat it as metaphorical.
359
1240000
2698
20:43
Here's another one: "For instance, your brain can store 100 trillion facts.
360
1243618
3579
20:47
Your mind can handle 15,000 decisions a second."
361
1247221
3045
20:50
Well, it would be interesting to find the interpretation
362
1250964
2674
20:53
where I would accept that.
363
1253662
1381
20:55
There might be some way of treating that as true.
364
1255067
2666
20:58
"Anthropologists have noted that worship is a universal urge,
365
1258511
3308
21:01
hardwired by God into the very fiber of our being --
366
1261843
2655
21:04
an inbuilt need to connect with God."
367
1264522
2889
21:08
Well, the sense of which I agree with him,
368
1268392
2168
21:10
except I think it has an evolutionary explanation.
369
1270584
2380
21:12
And what I find deeply troubling in this book
370
1272988
3821
21:16
is that he seems to be arguing that if you want to be moral,
371
1276833
3753
21:20
if you want to have meaning in your life,
372
1280610
2169
21:22
you have to be an Intelligent Designer,
373
1282803
2467
21:25
you have to deny the theory of evolution by natural selection.
374
1285294
3521
21:28
And I think, on the contrary,
375
1288839
1479
21:30
that it is very important to solving the world's problems
376
1290342
2941
21:33
that we take evolutionary biology seriously.
377
1293307
2860
21:37
Whose truth are we going to listen to?
378
1297427
1911
21:40
Well, this is from "The Purpose Driven Life":
379
1300649
2552
21:43
"The Bible must become the authoritative standard for my life:
380
1303225
3293
21:46
the compass I rely on for direction,
381
1306542
1739
21:48
the counsel I listen to for making wise decisions,
382
1308305
2817
21:51
and the benchmark I use for evaluating everything."
383
1311146
2407
21:54
Well maybe, OK, but what's going to follow from this?
384
1314458
4387
21:58
And here's one that does concern me.
385
1318869
2142
22:02
Remember I quoted him before with this line:
386
1322463
2353
22:04
"Surrendered people obey God's word, even if it doesn't make sense."
387
1324840
3797
22:10
And that's a problem.
388
1330335
2804
22:14
(Sighs)
389
1334843
1000
22:15
"Don't ever argue with the Devil.
390
1335867
1644
22:17
He's better at arguing than you are,
391
1337535
1731
22:19
having had thousands of years to practice."
392
1339290
2386
22:21
Now, Rick Warren didn't invent this clever move.
393
1341700
4227
22:25
It's an old move.
394
1345951
1190
22:27
It's a very clever adaptation of religions.
395
1347649
2551
22:30
It's a wild card for disarming any reasonable criticism.
396
1350224
3596
22:35
"You don't like my interpretation?
397
1355546
1722
22:37
You've got a reasonable objection to it?
398
1357292
1952
22:39
Don't listen, don't listen!
399
1359268
1496
22:41
That's the Devil speaking."
400
1361321
1679
22:44
This discourages the sort of reasoning citizenship
401
1364185
5601
22:49
it seems to me that we want to have.
402
1369810
2052
22:52
I've got one more problem, then I'm through.
403
1372668
2308
22:55
And I'd really like to get a response if Rick is able to do it.
404
1375298
4307
23:00
"In the Great Commission, Jesus said,
405
1380593
1779
23:02
'Go to all people of all nations and make them my disciples.
406
1382396
2862
23:05
Baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit,
407
1385282
3215
23:08
and teach them to do everything I've told you.'"
408
1388521
2267
23:10
The Bible says Jesus is the only one who can save the world.
409
1390812
3316
23:14
We've seen many wonderful maps of the world in the last day or so.
410
1394930
4046
23:19
Here's one, not as beautiful as the others;
411
1399297
2326
23:21
it simply shows the religions of the world.
412
1401647
2329
23:25
Here's one that shows the sort of current breakdown of the different religions.
413
1405066
3910
23:32
Do we really want to commit ourselves
414
1412099
4510
23:36
to engulfing all the other religions,
415
1416633
4920
23:41
when their holy books are telling them,
416
1421577
3366
23:44
"Don't listen to the other side, that's just Satan talking!"?
417
1424967
4459
23:49
It seems to me that that's a very problematic ship
418
1429450
6337
23:55
to get on for the future.
419
1435811
2165
23:58
I found this sign as I was driving to Maine recently,
420
1438750
4226
24:03
in front of a church: "Good without God becomes zero."
421
1443000
2667
24:05
Sort of cute.
422
1445691
1173
24:07
A very clever little meme.
423
1447205
2049
24:11
I don't believe it and I think this idea, popular as it is --
424
1451589
5604
24:17
not in this guise, but in general --
425
1457217
2091
24:19
is itself one of the main problems that we face.
426
1459332
3253
24:22
If you are like me, you know many wonderful, committed, engaged
427
1462609
6671
24:29
atheists, agnostics, who are being very good without God.
428
1469304
5672
24:35
And you also know many religious people who hide behind their sanctity
429
1475000
5705
24:40
instead of doing good works.
430
1480729
1769
24:42
So, I wish we could drop this meme.
431
1482959
3595
24:46
I wish this meme would go extinct.
432
1486578
1993
24:48
Thanks very much for your attention.
433
1488595
1747
24:50
(Applause)
434
1490366
2534
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7