Happy Sunday, hope you all enjoyed yesterdays short video cause I really taken my time in this one! But these questions give a lot of good fuel for conversation so I hope you enjoy.
The evidence of evolution actually supports creation. when you view the evidence from the correct and proper perspective. God created every creature according to its kind according to the bible and the evidence of evolution has revealed that evolution is contained within an animal's kind. You don't see evolution from one kind of animal to another kind of animal. You see evolution of species within a kind of animal taking place to form new species of that kind of animal, but those species never evolve into another kind of animal outside of the animal that it descended from.
@@donaldyanson8144 says: *Doubt is an uncomfortable, position . certainty is a ridiculous one* Certainty is NOT ridiculous, but it can only be truly verified by God because God knows all things.
Hmm... they say that no-one will know when their apocalypse will happen... maybe they just keep making so many doomsday predictions that they're forcing their god to push the date back? 🤔 😂
@@Isaac-hm6ih Paul warned people that marriage was a questionable idea because time was "short". Sorry, Paul, but you just dropped the ball on this one.
And they keep dancing around this passage. Ofc it means something else to them because it didn't happen, lol. Luke 21:32 - The New International Version (NIV) 32 “Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.
i love how every question from this guy admonishes to "be honest with yourself", "dig deep", "answer sincerely", etc. this is psychological projection; he is fully aware of the mental gymnastics and willful cognitive dissonance he himself holds in order to maintain his viewpoints, so he expects that of others and asks the listener to forgo them. congrats.
I actually think that's more to do with the particulars of the Christian worldview. Because he thinks that unbelievers are "of the darkness" he can't see atheists as honest interlocutors or thinkers
true, any religion lives in large part by focusing on othering vilainizing the outsider... fearing hating and fighting the outsider, and assuming they fear hate and fight you... they are the enemy you are good they are bad... its very ego stroking.@@JCW7100
I love how some apologists try their damnedest to sound respectful and kind, but they just can't help injecting venom into their interactions with atheists. The phrase "be honest with yourself" implies we ordinarily are not. There's a good reason for this. It's really the only tool they have to justify their belief. Preservation of the saints is a lie and God a liar if sincere believers can deconvert. There's not one single apologist who can accept this.
I would say the same about atheists that think that we evolved from dust without any kind of intelligent intervention. Sometimes atheists mock believers for believing God created Adam from dust. But many of you believe the same but without the intervention of an intelligent being. Do you understand the point?
It always baffles me that atheists are expected to answer & have knowledge about so many different subjects. Physics, biology, cosmology, chemistry, astronomy, zoology, natural science, anatomy, physiology, botany, etc. And theists? “The Bible says……” I started my journey questioning things that didn’t make sense in the Bible. I was kicked out of Sunday School because I asked “too many questions” and was viewed as a trouble maker. The problem of evil was a huge one for me as a kid. I didn’t understand how a god that loved us so much, allowed children to suffer through and eventually die from, cancer. You put so much work into your videos! Thank you so much!!
I’ve noticed this. Many apologists can imagine ways that Christianity can account for everything (often while arguing that the Christian God is NOT accountable for tons of things.) Atheists are apparently NOT allowed to imagine explanations. Atheists are commonly expected to demonstrate explanations for everything using only their own currently verifiable knowledge. Atheists are held to a standard where “I don’t know” is spun as an admission that any imagined explanation, no matter how likely false, is more likely true than no explanation. Technically, an atheist can explain everything with “I think it’s magic… I just don’t think it’s god magic” if the atheist doesn’t care about having an understanding of how reality works. Those types of apologists seem to think that a disregard for reality is something people should aspire to in order to be on equal footing as them.
Well, you know, they can "account for" SO many things 😇 I've always hated that phrase! Sure you can account for all kinds of things, IF you don't have to test to see if it is true! I used to read this preacher's books when I was a teen (and gullible). His name was Kenneth Hagin. Good lord, what he could "account for!" He had been to the third heaven, the second heaven and a lot more! He could describe IN DETAIL what Jesus was wearing and his various thoughts on all kinds of stuff (political for example). Oh yeah, Kenneth Hagin had an answer for ALL that, but can Braxton "account for" the same? Should I then listen to pastor Hagin since he could account for more? Following that logic, I should choose the most brazen liar to listen to .. It makes no sense!
Right? Especially when it comes to the creation of the universe, how does one go from "we don't know for sure how something happened billions of years ago when we weren't even a thing" to "god did it"?
If all information about Christianity was wiped off the face of the earth, people would make up another religious belief system to take its place. If all information we have on science was wiped off the face of the earth, people would make observations and do experiments and we would eventually get all the same knowledge back.
I've wanted to try this as a thought experiment of sorts, exploiting the way Christianity (and Islam) say there will be no future revelation because it's all finished: Suppose the Earth is about to be destroyed by a big asteroid, and the only way humanity can possibly survive is by putting a bunch of frozen embryos in artificial wombs on a starship and slinging it on a hundred thousand year journey to a distant Earthlike planet. Because of the sensitivity of the ship's systems, the computers aboard have to be incredibly simple and cannot store large amounts of unnecessary data, so all human knowledge and culture outside of a handful of technical diagrams cannot be sent along. When the humans arrive on the new world and are birthed there, they will be starting from effectively zero. No preexisting human languages, no preexisting human cultures, minimal scientific knowledge, and of course, no preexisting human religions. These people will continue humanity, but all that humanity previously was must be lost in the process. Now... what exactly does God do in this case? He promised that Jesus/Mohammed/etc. were the fulfillment of his scriptures (which no longer exist and would be unreadable if they did), the culmination of his message (which none of the humans now existing have heard), after which there will be no other, and if God is truly perfectly honest and faithful, he'll have to keep that word even though the vestiges of the humanity he made that promise to don't exist anymore. Or he could send them new revelation, a new prophet or savior, someone to convey his message again. Which will it be? The problem here is that there's no good answer. If God knew humanity would die out except for the starship humans, he was clearly wrong when he said there would be no future revelation, or he is bound by his word to not send his message to them, dooming them by no fault of their own (or at least offering them none of the guidance on the right path that their predecessors got). But if the theist jumps at the chance to say God could just offer new revelation to these new humans, congratulations, you've now falsified all religions which say God can't or won't do that -- such as most Christian and Islamic sects (though not all). The only other alternative is to claim that God would NEVER allow this to happen, even though it is logically possible and entirely plausible, which is ridiculous.
"If all information... was wiped off" ---- Your argument is generally understood as a validation of universal experience and objective truth, not an argument against religious faith.
@@MindShift-Brandon "If all information... was wiped off" ---- That argument is generally understood as a validation of universal experience and objective truth, not an argument against religious faith.
Blindly filling a gap with mythology is not a better explanation for the unknown than just saying "I don't know." That's beautiful. I don't think many religionists comprehend that "I don't know" is, in fact, a valid answer.
At least admitting “I don’t know is an honest response that encourages thinking and investigating. Claiming “I dunno, god did it!” is neither an explanation nor an answer at all. They just appeal to a mystery by appealing to an even bigger mystery.
"I don't know" ---- We are not responsible for what cannot be known, but only for that that which is evident and undeniable. Willful ignorance is not a valid answer.
It's a logical fallacy that religious people constantly fall victim to...it's known as the "argument from ignorance". Basically "This is true because we/you/I haven't proven it false".
Having an answer isn't always superior to being honest and saying "I don't know." Accepting ignorance is a noble thing. No one's philosophy is complete, and it takes great intelligence and hardwork to go any distance philosophically. Great job stepping up to the plate Brandon.
"What does your worldview account for better than mine?" Whenever I hear those kinds of questions I just picture two Ancient Greeks (AG) having the same discussion. AG1: "You don't believe in the Olympian Pantheon? You're an atheist? How do you account for lightning? How it strikes only some people, how only some survive. How it causes fire and yet is light? My ideology of them being the weapons of the Gods accounts for this. Does yours?" AG2: "I mean, I have no idea what lightning is. But I'm pretty sure you don't have any idea either ..." AG1: "See! You don't even have an answer. You just don't want to accept 'the truth.'"
@@MindShift-Brandon Let's just all say it out loud: If he even exists, we don't understand the mind of god. We don't understand the mind of god. We don't understand the mind of god.
Not like it'd matter if we did understand his mind, cause we can at least understand what basic morals are, and that said entity obviously doesn't seem to be following them, assuming he actually has the power to do anything about suffering and such.@@sarahrobertson634
This man is a Bible scholar. The way he fires off passages, stories, common interpretations, etc., indicates he's not stumbling around with this stuff as an amateur. I'm 68, and I had the "Word of God" "imprinted on my heart", starting as soon as I was able to memorize 3-word sentences. I attended church every time the doors were open, participated in competitive quiz contests for 6 years, went on to college, minored in in Religion, studied Greek (disaster), also attended a theological school in Manchester, UK. My studies were more focused on the Wesleyan traditions. Then, I encouraged my oldest son to pursue a "calling" of youth ministry. He went to Moody Bible College in Chicago for 5 years. They preach calvinism and I don't know what else. After that, he knew "everything " and we learned not to question anything about interpretation of scripture. He did youth ministry for one year and chose a different career. Our other son won a sports scholarship to a church-affiliated college. He didn't care for chapel and slept through it. He graduated as an atheist. He went off to teach English in Asia and stayed for 13 years. He came back and exhibits characteristics of Christ and buddhism, but definitely says he is atheist, doesn't see the problem of no afterlife. He denies being a buddhist, but he is very self- disciplined, careful with his words, and is very committed to his mom and pops. Not married, in early 40s. He doesn't judge people (except issues of guns and how Americans overeat) but he gives to the poor very discreetly. He doesn't care for a lot talking but we do crosswords and Soduku together. He lives a more careful life than his brother, who is a great guy but definitely on the wrong side of political issues and not seeing things clearly at times. I started stepping away about 10 tears ago, and in these last 10 years watched some in my family join the Qanon cult as well as the MAGA cult. I internalized that, reviewed my indoctrination and decided maybe I had been in a cult. I came out to family during the pandemic. I feel great, but my family is very disappointed. I found Kristie Burke first and now am also watching Brandon. I know every story he's talking about, the evangelizing words and responses, the questions he struggled with, so I feel a kindred spirit. We quit going to church about 10 yrs ago in this new community, so I didn't have church people questioning me. Thanks, Brandon!
I unindoctrinated(😂 not a word) myself 2 yrs ago. I am 61, so lived all of those decades believing lies. Glad to hear that you as well turned against the lies and indoctrination. Have a great life. ✌
My story has the same results but from a different perspective. I was the son who became an atheist in the years after grad school. Mine was a long slow deliberate journey away from my childhood indoctrination in conservative Christianity. I discussed with many and thought through all the various reasons folks gave for thinking God existed. So I've yet to see/hear some 'new' argument for God that I haven't already dealt with. Oddly, I never lost my conservative worldview or life style, relishing self discipline, caring for others and being a good neighbor/friend/fellow worker. After decades of living as an atheist...I can't see why the big fuss over God's existence or believing in God. Either God exists or God doesn't exist. It seems given the hundreds of God-versions embraced by folks around the world and throughout history, it is obvious whoever/whatever God is isn't know by people. I can think God exists one day and think God doesn't exist the next day depending on my mood. It's as important to my life as how I think about intelligent life in other galaxies. Sometimes I think it must exist, sometimes I'm not sure. But neither thought guides my daily life or my decisions.
I appreciate you saying "once someone deconverts they suddenly become pro everything they were once against isn't true." That was 100% my experience. I formed liberal views about other religions, homosexuality, and other things long before my deconversion. I actively reformed my religious viewpoints to squeeze in my liberal views. That's ultimately what started my deconversion as I got older because I couldn't reconcile how easy it was to reshape religious interpretation to make it fit with my liberal viewpoints with other people who were doing the same thing in order to uphold their ideas of bigotry, misogyny, or racism.
Family friends at church learned I became an atheist. I was in a different city and working, so I didn't see them for at least a couple years. When I was with family and meeting with them at the church fellowship hall, they had a kind of hesitant body language that implied they were thinking, "Um ... we still good?" Like the fact I became an Atheist changed who I WAS as a person in their minds. I showed them that I'm still the SAME person, and the awkwardness went away, but the very fact they believed I had completely changed hit differently when experiencing it personally. I was raised in the church, so I used to believe that Atheists aren't good people cuz "cAn'T bE gOOd wiThOuT GOD!" So if I were in their shoes, I'd most likely react the same way. Indoctrination is one helluva drug!
Well done for answering the ten questions. What I find fascinating is that most Christians are very quick to dismiss all the other religions without ever reading their holy books and apologetics. How hypocritical of them! They also often conflate theism with the Christian God when theism applies to all the gods of all the religions.
100% agree. The hypocritical position of continual re-defining of god, as our science knowledge has increased, is just dismissed. The logical argument is that not everything theists accord to god are true. Therefore, it's probable that religion will become obsolete as we disprove more and more of those mysteries assigned to god. The answer is not to move the goalposts and double down.
@@FergusScotchman Religion is not the answer. Jesus Christ - the Living word is the answer. Jesus Christ did not teach us to follow (trust) religion, he teaches us to follow (trust) him.
@@paulgemme6056 How do you know what Jesus wanted? Because of the conflicting accounts written decades after he died? Or was the deification of christ a creation of Paul? Tell me what kind of accent does Jesus have, if he speaks to you? You can't explain Jesus' evidence by referring to the bible.Show me proof of his ongoing presence.
@@FergusScotchman When one is saved by Grace through faith and born again, born of the Spirit (Holy Spirit), born from above they trust God's Word because the Holy Spirit reveals truth to our spirit/souls. It's called divine intervention, when we repent and let the Holy Spirit renew our minds and cleanse us of all the lies that the enemy (Satan) gets man to believe. You know, like the lie that there is no Almighty God/Jesus Christ who is the creator of all things. It started with the light. "Let there be light" and there was light. No religion needed just pure supernatural power. The most wonderful power on earth and in heaven TO THOSE WHO KNOW HIM (Spirit to spirit). To those who don't know him, well let's just say that's why we tell others the truth (gospel) so they may believe and be saved, no religion need. Just faith, faith plus nothing.
My answer for #9: Why should I need to read scholarly works from other people in order to help my belief in God? Is he incapable of showing himself to me on his own? This was actually one of the things that caused me to no longer believe: I realized that what I believed was just what had been told to me by other people.
No reason to read such literature unless you feel an emptiness in your life that you feel needs to be alleviated. Most people do not turn to religion until they feel defeated, humble, or empty. And that eventually happens to everyone at some point.
@dionberger1293 is that why there are so many different religions, and so many different denominations in THE SAME religion that claim to be revealed by God? Explain this. Judaism/Christianity were not the first religions in the world. Where was God before that?
@@exaucemayunga22 see God reveals himself to mankind and the first humans were Adam and Eve he created them he goes on to reveal himself to the population and humans would write their experiences like Moses and David and the prophets
Question 8 : those things didn't influence my atheism at all. I was raised in an atheistic household, which didn't care about the existence of God at all nor ever discussed it in any way. I didn't even know that I was an atheist until I reached Middle School and learned that other people believed in God. By that point I had already had a pretty good idea of what I thought was morally right and wrong, and my ensuing study of Religion only served to verify the correctness of my parents excluding that from my moral upbringing. In other words, at least in my opinion, if you are taught simply to treat others with kindness whenever it is possible and to care for yourself as you would care for others as my parents taught me, any study of the Old or new testament morality will stand in stark contrast to that basic moral principle.
Question 8 is a softer variation of the much used accusation that “You’re only an atheist because you like to sin”. I hold the position that if I do something wrong to another person, than that would be something that will stick to me forever. I can hope for a future where this person will forgive me, but if that person doesn’t I will have to live with that, and that can hurt. All the more reasons to be kind to other people. But then this Christian comes to me and says that Jesus can take away that pain; He can forgive me. That feels wrong to me. Unfair to this other person. But it might be a tempting proposition to some.
This is basically a copy/paste of my own experience. In addition I decided to try to determine why people believe in a god or the bible etc so I read their book. It in no way changed my mind and basically confirmed that the so-called god is basically a man-made construct in that everything god dictated was basically what the leaders of the time wanted.
There's the rub, and it's so fucking patronizing. Like it's a condition that formed in me. I don't think I ever believed in a god, let alone the Catholic one my family surrounded me with. I was just labeled as such by my family.
The Bible says that God created something like a law in our hearts so it is obvious that you are going to have morality but not in everything that God requires of us.
Question 3 is what im dealing with right now. My family thinks my lack of belief is because i want to sin. So many things i used to consider immoral or wrong and even things i used to think were ok instantly changed when i lost my faith. The reason was that as a Christian i never believed those to be right or wrong in my own mind. I simply agreed it was so because i looked at the bible as the final authority. For example, i never thought homosexuality was ever immoral or wrong in my eyes. I saw no issues with it. But because i believed the bible i had to admit that it was somehow immortal and that i was just flawed in my own understanding. But with once the log was out of my eyes so many things instantly changed. I knew i needed to think for myself.
The answer to the arguments of your family members is simple: If I wanted to sin, I would have never left christianity. An atheist has to do good stuff to be a good person and even if he does, when he still dies assuming there is no heaven, no more joy, no afterlife. A christian can commit any sin he wants, than just ask for forgiveness, believe in Jesus and he will be granted eternal life in the best place imaginable.
If this helps, let me say that in fact, if a person wants to sin, being a Christian is the best way to do it. Christianity uses a "sacrificial crutch" (i.e. Jesus) to remove a person's responsibility for their own actions. How? By BELIEVING that through Jesus's "sacrifice" all your sins are "forgiven." It's a pretty convenient copout, eh? I have seen too many believers broken by a religion allegedly based on love and forgiveness. Don't let them break you, dear one. You have shown that your heart is good. We ALL make mistakes, but that doesn't make us "wanton sinners;" just seekers of good from outside the confines of religious dogma. Peace.
It is not true A Christian can sin then ask forgiveness then live happily forever in heaven.Genuine forgiveness implies genuine repentance. @@neverstopschweiking
I remember me and some others talking to my friend about religion and homosexuality. We asked him if he thought gay people were going to hell and he said yeah. So then we asked, “So you think being gay is wrong” and he said, “Well, I don’t really think it’s wrong, but the Bible says they’re going to hell so it’s not up to me to decide.” And I’m like dude how do you not see a problem with that
We used to get a lot of street preachers on my college campus and I was approached a few times. Little did they suspect that they were about to deal with someone who had nearly two decades of church, Good News Club and Sunday school teaching behind her, and had been a Bible-verse memorizing BEAST during that time. Nothing flusters them so much as a new and dedicated unbeliever who has superior knowledge of their "holy" book and isn't afraid to use those powers against them. For me, it was pretty funny, for people without that background it's, as you say, incredibly manipulative.
It's very nice if a religious believer has training in STEM. It's actually frustrating to talk to a theist who doesn't understand basic science. But the onus is on the religious believer to tell me how he squares the scientific fact of evolution with the supernatural creation story in Genesis@@theboombody
Your answers were spot on even though I personally felt most of the questions were condescending in nature and exactly meant to be “gotcha” questions. I would love to see this guy agree to a one on one interaction with you. Another great video!
I find him condescending but I can see him being a nice guy outside his script but then again this is what he does for a paycheck. And Brandon and Mike convo would be awesome I wouldnt miss that one I get tired of the Hovinds,Hams and WLC of the world
@@thedude0000 I mean, you can toggle the like off and on a few times? XD But yeah, no. If there'd be only one, or maybe two such phrases or questions, I could go with "dude just lacks complete self-reflection and has no idea how what he says can be interpreted." But not with _that_ much of it.
The silver lining of these Christian arguments is they really help me appreciate humanity’s craving to KNOW. For some they must have an answer, like a made up answer is better than not being sure. I like that we are so curious, but it can trap you as well
I think this is one of the most important problems the people of the world face. It infects (poisons) everything. The desperation to “KNOW” is the reason the world is so full of misinformation. It was the reason for superstition and now it’s the reason social media, politics, etc. is so toxic. People just can’t say “I don’t know”. It’s such a weakness.
Excellent point !! I think the other human behavior christianity "helps with" is empathy and death. If people feel bad for the struggles and pain of another, it is "god's will". If they fear death, they can just believe there is a heaven. Basically, religion is a crutch for the hard of thinking.
@@paulgemme6056 That wasn't even the guys real name. If folks can't get the name Yeshua ben Youssef right, how do they even dare to claim any truth whatsoever ??
As an Atheist, I can admit that we don't even know how much *we don't know.* But I can also assure people that it's *not going to be religion that gives us the answers.*
@bibletrivialistsandstatsthere’s nothing proving anything supernatural, all you have is an “idk how this happened” and claiming it to be “supernatural”.
@bibletrivialistsandstatsI agree but the lack of any physical proof of a god doesn’t exist. Personally I have experienced things of the supernatural that I can’t explain but know the experience was real. I never attributed it to god or the devil. I have my own theories but the truth is I don’t know. I don’t dismiss the possibility of there being a god(s). But I seriously doubt it would be the god in the Bible. You and I are better off admitting that we both don’t know the truth but we are free to think and explore our own ideas without any animosity towards each other
@bibletrivialistsandstats But in that situation, what would be the benefit of abandoning the scientific method of searching for more answers to try to understand the supernatural as we do natural and instead just rely on a particular mythos? Moreover, why that particular mythos instead of any of the thousands others to have existed and still exist?
Seems like an interesting paradox. You don’t even know what you don’t know but you are sure religion will not provide the answers. Seems like you know something after all. Strange that you can be so sure about one particular area. Irrational really.
If one is never born again, born of the Spirit (Holy Spirit), born from above they are spiritually blind. When they lead/teach others who are blind (no spiritual life) they will both fall off the cliff.
I lost my dad a year and half ago, and one of the things I miss most about him is being able to have these kinds of discussions. Literally nobody I know IRL seems capable of having these kinds of discussions. I’m so glad I found this channel💖💖💖
I think one of the most amazing things is how apologists have changed or moved the goal post just from our better understanding of scriptures. As more scholars make it clear that the bible is not inerrant and there is now greater scrutiny of the scriptures themselves, Christians have been forced to go on the defensive and/or just ignore/deny what the scriptures themselves say. It is astonishing how little believers know about the scriptures and what it says and how, and what context.
Of course they shift the goal posts. Themselves. Dodge ball , ie, apologetics is virtually impossible otherwise. The best ones even have their own shoe contract- Adidas. The brand with the three stripes. The father the son and the Holy Joker.
"It is astonishing how little believers know about the scriptures" I actually had a conversation with a coworker earlier this year about faith and randomly found out that he's religious, goes to church etc. but doesn't even know that the Bible isn't a single book. The thought of the gospels being 4 different literary creations never even crossed his mind until then, at around 60yo. That is how an average believer evaluates their faith to keep believing forever. They just trust priests or whomever as the ppl with expertise like we do with advanced scientific concepts. Sounds reasonable, yet always boggles my mind. It's like not learning to add numbers because mathematicians got this
@@gilesbbb well, yeah that does seem necessary, but my point is that it's likely insufficient. I mean, why couldn't Loki also "cover a lot of topics" just the same?
@@irrelevant_noob I guess I just think a deceptive but entirely convincing loki is unlikely enough for me to accept the evidence of a coherent presentation.
Luke 24:27-48 CEV Jesus then explained everything written about himself in the Scriptures, beginning with the Law of Moses and the Books of the Prophets. He did...I guess it just didn't convince you
Excellent, very concise, precise reasoning and analysys, way above what the questioner deserved. I struggle to find patience for religious people who demand from me what they won't provide themselves. They sit on a high horse to question without first asking themselves those same questions looking for honest answers, makes it very hard for me not to be arrogant condescending with them. I guess I need to be a better person
Hey thanks for that very much! Im sure as i see this more, the jadedness will creep in. But, for now, im excited just to help anyone who might be watching to not bother with Braxton on his glib questions.
For "off the cuff," this was incredibly articulate and coherent. In other words, you spoke very well. You have obviously thought these issues through in detail prior to hearing the questions. I really wish Braxton Hunter and you could discuss these in a real time chat. I don't wish this because I view it as some type of competition where you would supposedly "destroy" him. I wish it because I would like to see some of his responses to your answers, of which I'm certain he'd have some pretty coherent replies, and your replies to his replies. I like it that Braxton tries to avoid "gotchas" and doesn't dwell on silly semantic games as much as many apologists do. Again, great job.
As an atheist, I really appreciate your honesty. The thing that really impresses me is how articulate you are in conveying your respective points. Today, you've earned a new subscriber, mate! Cheers!
Question 9 : I've deconverted before internet (and atheists on youtube), before getting any better idea or even knowing the issues revolving around LGBTQ+, and so on... I've mainly deconverted because of few incoherences in the source material and religion in general, and by getting deeper scientific knowledge too, that pushed the god of the gaps I was clinging to for a while to a narrower and narrower spot.
I told myself I was only gonna watch the first fifteen minutes, go game for a couple hours, and then come back and finish this when I was a bit more focused & not distracted by wanting to game. 45 minutes later, I have finished the video. Just great work, dude. I always love hearing your perspective. I’d love to interview you on my channel, if you’re interested. I just had Paulogia, Dr. Kipp Davis, & Dr. Josh Bowen on recently, as well as Dr. Greg Stevenson from the Christian theology side. I value your mind and your measured approach so much! Keep it up, dude.
@@MindShift-Brandon, of course, man. I’ll send it over now. I think just hearing your responses would improve my life in some way, so I think it could be beneficial content for others!
I'm amazed at how closely our thinking on these matters track with each other. You are more eloquent in explaining them though, so I enjoy how you present, and I love the content.
14:34 interesting point comparing "sех workers" with the military. "Do not kill" is a Bible commandment especially according to the New Testament where the victim is expected to put up another cheek and pray instead of trying to fight back.
hey i love you. it's been almost 15 years since I left my parents' Southern Baptist indoctrination/church but in the past 3 years I've finally begun doing work to heal instead of suppressing with addictions and substances. damn it's been rough but you and so many other creators' videos and content have helped me more than you'll ever know! 🥰
"Doesn't this issue destabilize you?" No😂 I'm perfectly fine with not having an answer to that, I'll honestly be surprised if we ever come to know a sure answer, how are we even supposed to know?😂
@@MindShift-Brandon The great mystery of life is fine with me. And not in the way that religious types refer to mystery, selectively asserting that "God works in mysterious ways" when someone points out a contradiction in Christian doctrine.
33:31 In my personal journey, moral quandaries never served as the impetus for my disbelief in God. My initial doubts emerged during my teenage years when I had yet to fully comprehend the intricate nature of morality and its effects on the world. My transition away from faith was predominantly driven by logical reasoning. The omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient attributes associated with God were always a source of confusion for me as a Christian. The concept of a being possessing these traits coexisting with our observed reality seemed irreconcilable. Upon becoming an atheist, I embarked on a journey to deepen my understanding and articulate my atheism more effectively. This process led me to explore various philosophical issues surrounding the concept of God. However, it's crucial to clarify that these philosophical considerations were not the catalyst for my deconversion. They served more as a framework for elucidating my atheistic stance, rather than the underlying reason for my transition.
The thing most people are saying when they say they "hope their kids don't save themselves for marriage," isn't that they want their kids to be promiscuous. They're saying they want their kids to understand their sexuality and know they're compatible with their partner before they make what's supposed to be a lifelong commitment.
I fully expected to get struck by lightning the first time I had sex, or at the very least be drastically changed as a person. Instead I had a pleasurable time with someone I cared about deeply, I was no different afterwards than I'd been before, and it became a lot easier to see that I'd been fed epic amounts of BS for the first 20 years of my life.
Great video, I very much appreciate your thoughtful responses. At the same time, I don’t consider Hunter to be an intellectually honest interlocutor. He has straight up admitted to not being amenable to changing his mind - that it would only happen if his brain became “diseased” to the point of (apparently) a catastrophic injury to his frontal lobe. This is not a person who can engage in critical analysis of his own worldview. And if he cannot, he certainly should not be asking the rest of us to do so.
Well done! every question is answered with such clarity and understanding on the issues. By the end when you tell us you are an extensive reader on the subjects of Philosophy and Theology and go on about the number of books you`re red recently on both sides, all I can say to that is it shows Brandon it shows!
The stabilization question is a self-own that is very common with the religious: religion, noun: 1. disbelief in "I don't know" as a claim, 2. disbelief in empathy as a source for morality. I'm a child atheist and mostly do to being comfortable with saying, "I don't know". Religious people are religious because they can't admit they don't know something and feel comfortable. Admitting "I don't know" destabilizes the religious. The question was pure projection.
For someone who didn't want glib answers, some of his questions were sorta glib. 😂 And I love how he removed "experimental reproducibility" from that one question. Blatantly stacking the deck. 😂 I think atheist/theist debate can kinda be a catch 22. The apologist cannot recognize any validity for the reasons why a nonbeliever is a nonbeliever. To do so would crack the edifice of the religion by admitting that there does exist some grounds for nonbelief. So I'm not sure whether the two parties can ever actually meet. 🤔
I think there is a place where both sides can meet: commitment to what is true first and foremost. We both don't want to believe in something false, so we come together to find out what is true. The biggest obstacle to this is that faith and religious belief, while it can put on the guise of truth, it often is about what feels good, or what gives you the most comfort in the face of existential dread of death and meaninglessness.
We don’t have to meet. Eventually enough people will stop following the superstitions of their ancestors and the ancients will simply disappear into history where they belong. That is, if they don’t get us all killed first.
@@ThatReadingGuy28 I don't think 'commitment to what is true' is common ground. I've seen videos ot theists recommending atheist fathers to teach religion to their kids, and people saying that they better believe, because they cannot stand (or think they cannot stand) a world without god and/or eternal life. To be fair, not committing to what is true can be also a problem with some atheists too. It's just less common.
I wanted to tell you I think that you're a genius, Brandon. (And you may be, of course.) But really, your answers here do not require GENIUS thinking! Just really, really good reasoning! Thanks, man, for your content.
Reacting to this Braxton Hunter video is a UA-cam atheist rite of passage. Our little boy is all grown up! Next comes the invite to be on Piers Morgan’s show. Wait…no, that’s later. Interviewing Dr Bart Ehrman is next. I love Dr Ehrman and look forward to that segment.
i love how theists would say (including me a few years ago) "you think everything came from nothing? what caused the big bang" but when you ask them where god came from "oh no that is different, see he is beyond space and time" talk about special pleading
Indeed, AFAIK all arguments for God special plead in some way, shape or form. But why do those same arguments that lead some to shift from or never become a believer in some sort of intelligent higher power lead others to believe and to believe more strongly as years pass. I point to me and my older brother. He and i both grew up in the same household with the same parents and went to the same church. Yet, as he grew, he became convinced God called him to the mission field and he completely immersed his life in things 'Jesus.' It grew stronger as his life progressed...or at least it seemed to. He was fervent...served on the mission field for over 40 years, retired and stayed active in the same church he grew up in and never stopped witnessing/testifying/pressing his views as best he could. I, on the other hand, began drifting away in my late teens and through my twenties, I went from a believer like him to a full one atheist and i never looked back. NONE of the arguments/lines of reasoning/historical 'facts' or anything Christian draws me toward it. The more I learn of it, the more it repulses me. Why? I wonder about that as much now in my 70s as when I was drifting away in my 20s. What do you think 'pushed' you over the edge? I could point to several things but one big epiphany was that I realized in college that even the most astute religious leader, apologist, Biblical scholar knew NO MORE about what was true or why than I did. As soon as the dawned on me, the path led inexorably away and no arguments/cajoling/threats of punishment or promises of reward make any difference. I can easily see where those who think some are 'elected' or predestined to believe and others aren't get their views...it does seem that way because I don't see myself as smarter or more aware than those who maintain their beliefs. I just see things differently.
You nailed this so well, I am impressed and inspired and ....long pause, just amazing. Finally! I been looking for logic and reason like this for ages and unable to articulate things myself so well, as you have, without so much emotional trauma reaction to things because of my Christian experience.
There is so much useful information in your videos that entire series of books. You have a gift and have worked on it. I really appreciate sharing what you have learned and applying them to these responses. Your answer to #10 is heartfelt and honest.
An important note on your response to question 3. Wanting your children to 'not wait for marriage' before having sex is VERY different from saying you want your kids to be 'promiscuous'. It is about not waiting them to enter into a binding (difficult to dissolve) legal contract, before knowing if they are sexually compatible with that other person. While, knowing what it is you like in that way will likely require at least a small amount of experimentation, that could be done with same individual you marry or oneself. So, there is nothing about "not wanting your kids to wait until marriage before having sex" that requires ever having more a single partner through your entire life.
Oh man. That is really kind! I just found out it was 2 years old. Im so late to this game, ha. I am excited to go see how others approached it. Again thanks for the nice encouragement.
I appreciate your videos not because I can relate to your deconstruction but rather I appreciate your message to fellow Christians. You provide a softer landing for their questioning mind. A safe corner to escape their walled 30:05 existence. Christians can be so scary to those of us that are not Christians
I do not consider myself an atheist but I can't thank you enough for presenting your thoughts in such a logical and thorough manner. I have questioned many of the issues you have discussed before like prayer, why does God not reveal himself, satan, etc. I also appreciate how you thoughtfully analyze what Christian apologists say in defense of their position, without judgment, jumping to conclusions, badmouthing, etc. It gives me comfort to think though these issues with your style of logic and analysis. Unfortunately, my committed Christian friends would chastise me for even considering an atheist position at all. They would blame my doubt and inquiries on satan, of course. But there is one thing a good Christian friend told me one day. If the Bible is the "real" God's inerrant revelation of himself to humanity, then God would care less about doubt, inquiries, investigation, and reconsideration of what the Bible purports to reveal to us about the real God.
I loved this video! Thank you for your work in articulating carefully what your experience has been and all the work it takes to share it. It helps me see that I'm not alone
Another fantastic show Brandon, both incontinent, and even more in the polite, honest and sincere way you present it. I would love for you to possibly take on some of the religious attributes of the daily wire with Ben Shapiro. His daily show has become very common place to be religious at some point every day. Thanks again for your show.
Thanks for this kind support! Yes id love to speak on the daily wire. So many others just killing it already though like GMC and RationalitnRules. But I’m sure ill get to it. Thanks again!
Fantastic answers - especially shooting from the hip! Love your sincerity coupled with genuine empathy for the other side and humility that you could be wrong. I have been actively struggling with all this for over 40 years - since Bible College - studying some nearly every day. I may be totally wrong about everything - but I cannot yet be convinced that I should worship anything as evil & self contradictory as the character described as God in the Bible. Like you I may crumble on fear faced with this God if it’s all true - but I cannot imagine living in heaven knowing most everyone else is suffering forever in hell.
As usual, a great video! I find your point-of-view fascinating and enlightening. I hope your channel continues to grow by Leaps and Bounds! Keep up the great work
Question #5 [20:00 - 20:57] _This is something I acknowledged a while back, and that is,_ *"we don't know",* _and while we can try to rationalize all we want, our intuitions have been wrong too many times to heavily lean either way (assuming that binary is even a useful one)._ _I certainly understand wanting to know the origin, especially when arguing whether or not we are "supposed" to do something or if we are just here due to the "qualities" of reality, and ultimately don't amount to more than any other part of reality. I also understand struggling with the idea of "death", an end to our conscious experience, and not being able to experience or interact further with the world in a way we've become accustomed to. In fact, I have lived a relatively careful life, partly out of fear of dying, and partly to the fear of my quality of life being permanently (or even with just a challenging recovery) reduced._ _Braxton mentions being "desperate" in his question, and while I can understand the act of making up answers against answers people already have agreed with can seem "desperate", the discounting Braxton does about his religion being incorrect does him a disservice, and does not come without a cost to our experience. Desperation cannot be discounted as a factor, but recognizing how many humans before us have attempted to answer these questions, and make us better/smarter, knowing we may one day all die one day, is likely part of the reason why. Also, in regards to the idea of eternity/immortality that many believe is achievable in some way, we can never accept the "truth" until we have real answers, and until then, we will continue to wonder._ *If you read this far, thanks for reading!*
"atheist preaching is best" Well more logical and truthful but I bet it does not hold the excitement of a "snake handling" service. However I will never no personally == I hope..
About no.5:- The notion that the universe came into existence unaided, and developed unguided is one I find incredibly exciting - and a bit hilarious. The idea that it's all about humans, that we're the pinnacle of 'creation' is patently absurd to me. But billions of years of natural processes turning a dust cloud into a life-bearing planet, supporting a species of self-aware primates who are doing their best to turn it back into a dust cloud; that make sense, and it also fits the evidence better than any creation myth I've heard. And why would any god create such a bunch of screw-ups?
Great point! It's pretty arrogant to believe that an extra-dimensional being, with human faults, created the universe and waited almost 4 BILLION years till the vast universe was just right for god to finally seed Earth with humans or near-humans in the last 200K years, which represents 0.006% of the lifespan of the universe. This was all done on only our planet, which is practically a negligible amount of the universe. Pardon me if I'm skeptical. :)
Growing up catholic I was taught that a lot of things were sins that I knew weren’t, starting with simple bodily functions and desires. That along with disconcert of what I was taught from the bible and doctrine and reality led me to leave religion. Doing into theology and science at university helped me understand how man made religions are and how false they are. Your answers were great, I’ve heard a few of these from other people and they are different with some common themes.
38:04 - Yep, that's so well known by now that it's already starting to get taken up by dictionaries (let alone wikipedia) as "Hitchens' Razor" (in pretty obvious reference to Occam's Razor).
20:56 The question, while intriguing, does not necessarily hold profound implications for our daily lives. The origins of the universe typically bear little significance on the day-to-day existence of most individuals. The discussion of cosmic genesis primarily arises within ontological debates, but in the broader context, it tends not to be a salient topic. When it comes to seemingly unanswerable questions from an atheistic perspective, they can often mirror uncertainties within the Christian worldview as well. For instance, Christianity, despite its rich narrative, does not definitively explain the mechanics of how the universe was created. It focuses more on attributing creation to an entity - God. Consequently, the process by which the universe came into existence remains an open question within both the Christian and atheistic worldviews.
As someone who has always LOVED books and was also SUPER religious as a kid, I always wondered why books that were written by people, not claiming Divine Inspiration, were easier to read and understand than the Bible that was written by men claiming Divine Inspiration.....
I love the channel and this was a great video. I just wanted to point out around @12:25 mark it sounded like you said "Gnosticism" instead of "Agnosticism," but I rewound it and confirmed you used "Agnosticism." However, hearing it made me think you'd do a pretty good video about the Gnostic branch of early Christianity, and how it explains the actions of the Abrahamic God much better than the Christian God of the bible. Also, let us know when you've opened up a Patreon account (or provide the details to your current one). I'd be happy to chip in to help you produce more great videos.
Too kind! I have yet to dive into the patreon or channel memberships. I was thinking maybe when i get to 5k. And yes i plan to cover all the gnostic texts at the end of secular bible study, one by one. Thanks again!
4:25 - 4:30. This reminds me of there being some examples where people have tried to use science to come to conclusions that are different from past conclusions that science lead them to.
These sorts of questions always prove to be less than tough to answer sincerely which actually proves the underlying work behind formulating them couldn't have been that hard either, thus revealing the intellectual capacity of the one posing them.
I am 74 years old and attended to a rural Southern Chruch when there was racial unrest in the South 1950's and 1960;s). When I was about 6 years old (about that age) I head a church leader pray that we'd never have to go to Church with "ni g er s" That laid in my mind for years among other things. SO morality does play a part. But honestly I think it was just the lack of evidence and the rejection of science that drove me away and allowed me to break the chains.
For many they realise that the morality of the bible and throughout christianity to the present day are unethical and downright depraved. And when you realise that, you cannot in all decency and civility, subscribe to such an immoral and unethical worldview.
Question 2 [10:58 - 11:31] : _Understanding the "not convinced" point simply requires one to acknowledge that you cannot, without a doubt, confirm something doesn't exist. Having debated, or seen debates, one should know that your opponent can always add criteria you haven't met, or cannot currently meet, thus always placing you in a position to admit you could do more to increase your certainty, and you could be wrong, so by taking the unconvinced position, we not only leave room for more information, we don't also replace our lack of conviction with a strong placeholder such as the "God of the Gaps" as to not look ignorant._ _I think by now, apologist know/understand this, but gain nothing by acknowledging it if they wish to argue. Same goes for arguing with people who say morals/goals are subjective; we dispute it, but the point remains that ultimately, it's up to every individual to determine their morals/goals, it just so happens that we have had a lot of time, and a lot of individuals already think about it, and we can see the pros and cons of many different positions, and we can accuratrly predict the outcome of each._ *If you made it this far, thanks for reading!*
The argument that makes the most sense to me is one that C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien made, Lewis especially influenced by Owen Barfield, that mythology appeals to us in ways that history or science never can. It's the nature of a great story to make me wish that it were true. That's not proof; it's an acknowledgement that Apollo and Frith and Iluvatar ought to be real.
Question #8 [32:53 - 33:30] _I think my first exposure to atheism was a movie or a comedy special - I saw Dogma pretty young (not sure if that was the first one). I think I assumed certain things I had heard were true (from the bible), and after I began reading it, and being surprised there wasn't more detail in the book (I thought people were summarizing stories, not that what I heard were the full stories). I then quickly found myself watching debates, and "atheist" youtubers (you probably know the type), and started asking questions. I found that many authorities in my life (I didn't go to church) either had no answers, or told me they couldn't discuss it (teachers in my public school)._ _The moral and history issues certainly followed quickly, and I began learning all the philosophy terms as they came up often. And, as cringe as it was/is, debating people online really helped me shape my beliefs, testing them and asking new or re-worded questions that helped confirm or expand certain held beliefs._ _I agree with Braxton that what should matter is "the truth" and not "what we prefer", but obviously when somebody has a worldview that accounts for everything using methods that are unverifiable, and somebody else has a worldview that functions but still has gaps, I tend to think one is being more honest that the other, ie not caring what they prefer._
23:10 - Yep. Here’s a question I like to ask: How do you know that “God” is God? God is all-knowing, but without being all-knowing yourself, how do you recognize that something is all-knowing? God is good, but what standard of good do you use to differentiate what you think is God, from a super powerful mischief-maker? Also relevant to this question : 41:30 - it’s impossible to know if the Christian god is real. But if there existed a super competent , wise, and kind being who was acting to create good in the word, I’d happily devote my life to that person.
@@Mar-dk3mp Are you okay? What's the matter? Why are you so upset? Is a christian supposed to act the way you are doing? Whatever happened to "turn the other cheek"? Would your parents approve if they knew you were behaving like this?
16:48 - There is a _bit_ of a difference between "saving yourself before marriage" and "being sexually promiscuous before marriage". Marriages are _in part_ about sex, so sexual compatibility is rather important, so finding out _beforehand_ whether one's likes and preferences and everything match up to at least _some_ degree is a pretty good idea, I'd say 😉 (hell, there also are pheromones and how "well" one reacts to those of another person - there literally are people who "can't smell each other" in the sense that the pheromones aren't attractive to them, or even repulsive - and during sex, some of those pheromones might be "encountered" the first time)
I’ve never been caught in an existential crisis because I’m not sure how the universe started, or even if it did start. How does this impact my life? It doesn’t.
I have a side question, as others in the comments have already raised appreciation of your content - it's awesome by the way :) You've mentioned you're reading 100-150 books a year. In the worst case scenario, that's almost 1 book per 4 days. What would you recommend to a person (namely, me) who is a snail-speed reader, but would like to read more and retain more information? My reading speed is probably average, but if I don't slow down, I may not even remember the last chapter I've read. A book that someone would say is something for an evening read, I will probably read for one or two weeks. BTW, that's also why I've struggled during my seminary and why I'm happy I won't have to attend my third year due to the recent deconversion, as third year reading material would just kill me. I'd be happy to read those, but not when contained in semester scopes. I'd be happy to hear from an avid reader and such an insightful person as you. Maybe you've already covered that topic on your other channel, so a video response would also be appreciated!
Really appreciate the kind words. Reading is for something that gets better with time and with intentional practice. I did quite a few courses on reading speed and comprehension back in my early 20's and it really helped significantly. You can find these online with a simple google search. Also, journaling is The superpower. That will help massively with retention. Even if you dont end up journaling that specific time, thinking you will already changes how you look at the info as you think about what you would want to capture etc. Lastly audiobooks are your friend. it makes up about 30% of my "reading" i can play it on 1.5 speed i do it during running, walking, or cycling. Theres a lot of great research about how forward movement helps with info retain.
@@MindShift-Brandon thank you! I'm saving that in my "Importants" folder :) I've definitely never heard of forward movement research before, gotta check it out!
@@bartosz.holubowiczpick something of interest first. Whether it's highbrow, classical, non fiction, trashy romances, pulp fiction, SF, just grab it and read, or put on an audio book of it. I listen to several narrators of fiction on my drive to and from work, short stories and often follow the links as many are series written in reddit or royal road. The more you do it the more you do it. Don't warry that you didn't retain it the first time. If you enjoyed it read it again. I have several books I reread every couple of years. Then branch out and go down some rabbit holes as you realise that other things now interest you. Don't be afraid to not get it all the first time through. If you enjoyed it, read it again and see what you missed. Never let anyone tell you there's things you shouldn't read, or ways to do it. You do you. Just suck it all down.
Your explanations are so succinct and clear. I agree with everything you've shared, but you've given me better language to explain it. You have a great talent, and we thank you for sharing it!
You answered these questions exceptionally well friend. Seriously, it was like an adult explaining something to a child. No disrespect intended. I was a former believer.
Happy Sunday, hope you all enjoyed yesterdays short video cause I really taken my time in this one! But these questions give a lot of good fuel for conversation so I hope you enjoy.
The evidence of evolution actually supports creation. when you view the evidence from the correct and proper perspective.
God created every creature according to its kind according to the bible and the evidence of evolution has revealed that evolution is contained within an animal's kind.
You don't see evolution from one kind of animal to another kind of animal.
You see evolution of species within a kind of animal taking place to form new species of that kind of animal, but those species never evolve into another kind of animal outside of the animal that it descended from.
Doubt is an uncomfortable, position . certainty is a ridiculous one
@@danielblair4413what do you mean by kind?
@@donaldyanson8144 says: *Doubt is an uncomfortable, position . certainty is a ridiculous one*
Certainty is NOT ridiculous, but it can only be truly verified by God because God knows all things.
@@Mar-dk3mparen't you religious people supposed to love your neighbour or something like that😂
Christianity can't even explain why we're alive right now. Paul thought that the end of the world was due *any day now* almost two thousand years ago.
Hmm... they say that no-one will know when their apocalypse will happen... maybe they just keep making so many doomsday predictions that they're forcing their god to push the date back? 🤔 😂
@@Isaac-hm6ihYeah, kinda difficult to return like a thief in the night when you’re believed to be returning at any moment.
This is an excellent point. So did Jesus himself.
@@Isaac-hm6ih Paul warned people that marriage was a questionable idea because time was "short". Sorry, Paul, but you just dropped the ball on this one.
And they keep dancing around this passage. Ofc it means something else to them because it didn't happen, lol.
Luke 21:32 - The New International Version (NIV)
32 “Truly I tell you, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.
i love how every question from this guy admonishes to "be honest with yourself", "dig deep", "answer sincerely", etc. this is psychological projection; he is fully aware of the mental gymnastics and willful cognitive dissonance he himself holds in order to maintain his viewpoints, so he expects that of others and asks the listener to forgo them. congrats.
Yes. Its just downright ridiculous
I actually think that's more to do with the particulars of the Christian worldview. Because he thinks that unbelievers are "of the darkness" he can't see atheists as honest interlocutors or thinkers
true, any religion lives in large part by focusing on othering vilainizing the outsider... fearing hating and fighting the outsider, and assuming they fear hate and fight you... they are the enemy you are good they are bad... its very ego stroking.@@JCW7100
I love how some apologists try their damnedest to sound respectful and kind, but they just can't help injecting venom into their interactions with atheists. The phrase "be honest with yourself" implies we ordinarily are not.
There's a good reason for this. It's really the only tool they have to justify their belief. Preservation of the saints is a lie and God a liar if sincere believers can deconvert. There's not one single apologist who can accept this.
I would say the same about atheists that think that we evolved from dust without any kind of intelligent intervention. Sometimes atheists mock believers for believing God created Adam from dust. But many of you believe the same but without the intervention of an intelligent being. Do you understand the point?
It always baffles me that atheists are expected to answer & have knowledge about so many different subjects. Physics, biology, cosmology, chemistry, astronomy, zoology, natural science, anatomy, physiology, botany, etc. And theists? “The Bible says……” I started my journey questioning things that didn’t make sense in the Bible. I was kicked out of Sunday School because I asked “too many questions” and was viewed as a trouble maker. The problem of evil was a huge one for me as a kid. I didn’t understand how a god that loved us so much, allowed children to suffer through and eventually die from, cancer. You put so much work into your videos! Thank you so much!!
I’ve noticed this. Many apologists can imagine ways that Christianity can account for everything (often while arguing that the Christian God is NOT accountable for tons of things.)
Atheists are apparently NOT allowed to imagine explanations. Atheists are commonly expected to demonstrate explanations for everything using only their own currently verifiable knowledge.
Atheists are held to a standard where “I don’t know” is spun as an admission that any imagined explanation, no matter how likely false, is more likely true than no explanation.
Technically, an atheist can explain everything with “I think it’s magic… I just don’t think it’s god magic” if the atheist doesn’t care about having an understanding of how reality works. Those types of apologists seem to think that a disregard for reality is something people should aspire to in order to be on equal footing as them.
Excellent point!! Would be so convenient to have a one stop shop for all answers for everything like the theist thinks they have.
Well, you know, they can "account for" SO many things 😇
I've always hated that phrase! Sure you can account for all kinds of things, IF you don't have to test to see if it is true!
I used to read this preacher's books when I was a teen (and gullible). His name was Kenneth Hagin. Good lord, what he could "account for!" He had been to the third heaven, the second heaven and a lot more! He could describe IN DETAIL what Jesus was wearing and his various thoughts on all kinds of stuff (political for example). Oh yeah, Kenneth Hagin had an answer for ALL that, but can Braxton "account for" the same?
Should I then listen to pastor Hagin since he could account for more?
Following that logic, I should choose the most brazen liar to listen to .. It makes no sense!
It is amazing how the definition of Atheist gets expanded by theists. I guess they need it to be more than "I'm not convinced."
Right? Especially when it comes to the creation of the universe, how does one go from "we don't know for sure how something happened billions of years ago when we weren't even a thing" to "god did it"?
If all information about Christianity was wiped off the face of the earth, people would make up another religious belief system to take its place.
If all information we have on science was wiped off the face of the earth, people would make observations and do experiments and we would eventually get all the same knowledge back.
Yes. This is one of my favorite ways to visualize just how empty it all is for the believers side.
@@MindShift-Brandon 💯 Agreed.
I've wanted to try this as a thought experiment of sorts, exploiting the way Christianity (and Islam) say there will be no future revelation because it's all finished:
Suppose the Earth is about to be destroyed by a big asteroid, and the only way humanity can possibly survive is by putting a bunch of frozen embryos in artificial wombs on a starship and slinging it on a hundred thousand year journey to a distant Earthlike planet. Because of the sensitivity of the ship's systems, the computers aboard have to be incredibly simple and cannot store large amounts of unnecessary data, so all human knowledge and culture outside of a handful of technical diagrams cannot be sent along. When the humans arrive on the new world and are birthed there, they will be starting from effectively zero. No preexisting human languages, no preexisting human cultures, minimal scientific knowledge, and of course, no preexisting human religions. These people will continue humanity, but all that humanity previously was must be lost in the process.
Now... what exactly does God do in this case? He promised that Jesus/Mohammed/etc. were the fulfillment of his scriptures (which no longer exist and would be unreadable if they did), the culmination of his message (which none of the humans now existing have heard), after which there will be no other, and if God is truly perfectly honest and faithful, he'll have to keep that word even though the vestiges of the humanity he made that promise to don't exist anymore. Or he could send them new revelation, a new prophet or savior, someone to convey his message again. Which will it be?
The problem here is that there's no good answer. If God knew humanity would die out except for the starship humans, he was clearly wrong when he said there would be no future revelation, or he is bound by his word to not send his message to them, dooming them by no fault of their own (or at least offering them none of the guidance on the right path that their predecessors got). But if the theist jumps at the chance to say God could just offer new revelation to these new humans, congratulations, you've now falsified all religions which say God can't or won't do that -- such as most Christian and Islamic sects (though not all). The only other alternative is to claim that God would NEVER allow this to happen, even though it is logically possible and entirely plausible, which is ridiculous.
"If all information... was wiped off" ---- Your argument is generally understood as a validation of universal experience and objective truth, not an argument against religious faith.
@@MindShift-Brandon "If all information... was wiped off" ---- That argument is generally understood as a validation of universal experience and objective truth, not an argument against religious faith.
Blindly filling a gap with mythology is not a better explanation for the unknown than just saying "I don't know."
That's beautiful. I don't think many religionists comprehend that "I don't know" is, in fact, a valid answer.
Thank you! Yes. Its as valid as it gets sometimes.
At least admitting “I don’t know is an honest response that encourages thinking and investigating.
Claiming “I dunno, god did it!” is neither an explanation nor an answer at all. They just appeal to a mystery by appealing to an even bigger mystery.
"I don't know" ----
We are not responsible for what cannot be known, but only for that that which is evident and undeniable. Willful ignorance is not a valid answer.
It's a logical fallacy that religious people constantly fall victim to...it's known as the "argument from ignorance". Basically "This is true because we/you/I haven't proven it false".
*History and theology* are like *oil and water.*
Having an answer isn't always superior to being honest and saying "I don't know." Accepting ignorance is a noble thing. No one's philosophy is complete, and it takes great intelligence and hardwork to go any distance philosophically. Great job stepping up to the plate Brandon.
Thank you very much. Yes i am so tired of the theist, who makes believe, judging the atheist for not knowing.
THIS. A million times this.
Good comment 👍👍
How dare you! You need to be one hundred percent certain about everything all of the time, including what everyone else thinks!
/S
@sparki9085 😂😂😂 That's how many relligouse people operate. So many theists have an answer for all.
It's just the god of the gaps
"What does your worldview account for better than mine?"
Whenever I hear those kinds of questions I just picture two Ancient Greeks (AG) having the same discussion.
AG1: "You don't believe in the Olympian Pantheon? You're an atheist? How do you account for lightning? How it strikes only some people, how only some survive. How it causes fire and yet is light? My ideology of them being the weapons of the Gods accounts for this. Does yours?"
AG2: "I mean, I have no idea what lightning is. But I'm pretty sure you don't have any idea either ..."
AG1: "See! You don't even have an answer. You just don't want to accept 'the truth.'"
I love love this answer. Might steal this for a video if you dont mind sometime.
Exactly.
Great quote from your incredible video:
“Blindly filling a knowledge gap with mythology is NOT better than merely saying I don’t know!”
Thank you. Thats very kind
@@MindShift-Brandon Let's just all say it out loud: If he even exists, we don't understand the mind of god. We don't understand the mind of god. We don't understand the mind of god.
Not like it'd matter if we did understand his mind, cause we can at least understand what basic morals are, and that said entity obviously doesn't seem to be following them, assuming he actually has the power to do anything about suffering and such.@@sarahrobertson634
This man is a Bible scholar. The way he fires off passages, stories, common interpretations, etc., indicates he's not stumbling around with this stuff as an amateur. I'm 68, and I had the "Word of God" "imprinted on my heart", starting as soon as I was able to memorize 3-word sentences. I attended church every time the doors were open, participated in competitive quiz contests for 6 years, went on to college, minored in in Religion, studied Greek (disaster), also attended a theological school in Manchester, UK. My studies were more focused on the Wesleyan traditions. Then, I encouraged my oldest son to pursue a "calling" of youth ministry. He went to Moody Bible College in Chicago for 5 years. They preach calvinism and I don't know what else. After that, he knew "everything " and we learned not to question anything about interpretation of scripture. He did youth ministry for one year and chose a different career.
Our other son won a sports scholarship to a church-affiliated college. He didn't care for chapel and slept through it. He graduated as an atheist. He went off to teach English in Asia and stayed for 13 years. He came back and exhibits characteristics of Christ and buddhism, but definitely says he is atheist, doesn't see the problem of no afterlife. He denies being a buddhist, but he is very self- disciplined, careful with his words, and is very committed to his mom and pops. Not married, in early 40s. He doesn't judge people (except issues of guns and how Americans overeat) but he gives to the poor very discreetly. He doesn't care for a lot talking but we do crosswords and Soduku together. He lives a more careful life than his brother, who is a great guy but definitely on the wrong side of political issues and not seeing things clearly at times. I started stepping away about 10 tears ago, and in these last 10 years watched some in my family join the Qanon cult as well as the MAGA cult. I internalized that, reviewed my indoctrination and decided maybe I had been in a cult.
I came out to family during the pandemic. I feel great, but my family is very disappointed. I found Kristie Burke first and now am also watching Brandon. I know every story he's talking about, the evangelizing words and responses, the questions he struggled with, so I feel a kindred spirit. We quit going to church about 10 yrs ago in this new community, so I didn't have church people questioning me. Thanks, Brandon!
I unindoctrinated(😂 not a word) myself 2 yrs ago. I am 61, so lived all of those decades believing lies. Glad to hear that you as well turned against the lies and indoctrination. Have a great life. ✌
My story has the same results but from a different perspective. I was the son who became an atheist in the years after grad school. Mine was a long slow deliberate journey away from my childhood indoctrination in conservative Christianity. I discussed with many and thought through all the various reasons folks gave for thinking God existed. So I've yet to see/hear some 'new' argument for God that I haven't already dealt with.
Oddly, I never lost my conservative worldview or life style, relishing self discipline, caring for others and being a good neighbor/friend/fellow worker. After decades of living as an atheist...I can't see why the big fuss over God's existence or believing in God. Either God exists or God doesn't exist. It seems given the hundreds of God-versions embraced by folks around the world and throughout history, it is obvious whoever/whatever God is isn't know by people. I can think God exists one day and think God doesn't exist the next day depending on my mood. It's as important to my life as how I think about intelligent life in other galaxies. Sometimes I think it must exist, sometimes I'm not sure. But neither thought guides my daily life or my decisions.
I appreciate you saying "once someone deconverts they suddenly become pro everything they were once against isn't true." That was 100% my experience. I formed liberal views about other religions, homosexuality, and other things long before my deconversion. I actively reformed my religious viewpoints to squeeze in my liberal views. That's ultimately what started my deconversion as I got older because I couldn't reconcile how easy it was to reshape religious interpretation to make it fit with my liberal viewpoints with other people who were doing the same thing in order to uphold their ideas of bigotry, misogyny, or racism.
Well put! Glad to help normalize
@coleford4258 Great comment. The malleability of what the scriptures try to convey is a wonder to behold.
Family friends at church learned I became an atheist. I was in a different city and working, so I didn't see them for at least a couple years. When I was with family and meeting with them at the church fellowship hall, they had a kind of hesitant body language that implied they were thinking, "Um ... we still good?"
Like the fact I became an Atheist changed who I WAS as a person in their minds. I showed them that I'm still the SAME person, and the awkwardness went away, but the very fact they believed I had completely changed hit differently when experiencing it personally.
I was raised in the church, so I used to believe that Atheists aren't good people cuz "cAn'T bE gOOd wiThOuT GOD!" So if I were in their shoes, I'd most likely react the same way. Indoctrination is one helluva drug!
the bible is the ultimate rorschach ink blot-- you can see anything you want in it and no one can tell you you're wrong.
Well done for answering the ten questions. What I find fascinating is that most Christians are very quick to dismiss all the other religions without ever reading their holy books and apologetics. How hypocritical of them! They also often conflate theism with the Christian God when theism applies to all the gods of all the religions.
Exactly, how does Christianity account for the variety and diversity of religion? Demons? Angels? Jesus running around in a wig?
"I feel like we can take an entire video..."
Oh yes, we can, and we can watch an entire video on it too. This is some good stuff.
“God is a placeholder for this intangible aspect of something that we think we might need to explain things we don’t know”. That’s a great quote!
Hey thanks!
100% agree. The hypocritical position of continual re-defining of god, as our science knowledge has increased, is just dismissed. The logical argument is that not everything theists accord to god are true. Therefore, it's probable that religion will become obsolete as we disprove more and more of those mysteries assigned to god. The answer is not to move the goalposts and double down.
@@FergusScotchman Religion is not the answer. Jesus Christ - the Living word is the answer. Jesus Christ did not teach us to follow (trust) religion, he teaches us to follow (trust) him.
@@paulgemme6056 How do you know what Jesus wanted? Because of the conflicting accounts written decades after he died? Or was the deification of christ a creation of Paul?
Tell me what kind of accent does Jesus have, if he speaks to you? You can't explain Jesus' evidence by referring to the bible.Show me proof of his ongoing presence.
@@FergusScotchman When one is saved by Grace through faith and born again, born of the Spirit (Holy Spirit), born from above they trust God's Word because the Holy Spirit reveals truth to our spirit/souls. It's called divine intervention, when we repent and let the Holy Spirit renew our minds and cleanse us of all the lies that the enemy (Satan) gets man to believe. You know, like the lie that there is no Almighty God/Jesus Christ who is the creator of all things. It started with the light. "Let there be light" and there was light. No religion needed just pure supernatural power. The most wonderful power on earth and in heaven TO THOSE WHO KNOW HIM (Spirit to spirit). To those who don't know him, well let's just say that's why we tell others the truth (gospel) so they may believe and be saved, no religion need. Just faith, faith plus nothing.
My answer for #9:
Why should I need to read scholarly works from other people in order to help my belief in God? Is he incapable of showing himself to me on his own?
This was actually one of the things that caused me to no longer believe: I realized that what I believed was just what had been told to me by other people.
No reason to read such literature unless you feel an emptiness in your life that you feel needs to be alleviated. Most people do not turn to religion until they feel defeated, humble, or empty. And that eventually happens to everyone at some point.
I feel sorry for you man God has revealed himself to humans ever since the beginning of time
@dionberger1293 is that why there are so many different religions, and so many different denominations in THE SAME religion that claim to be revealed by God? Explain this.
Judaism/Christianity were not the first religions in the world. Where was God before that?
@@exaucemayunga22 see God reveals himself to mankind and the first humans were Adam and Eve he created them he goes on to reveal himself to the population and humans would write their experiences like Moses and David and the prophets
@@dallas_cowboys21 you did not answer any of my questions.
And you believe that the earth was created 6000 years ago, right?
Question 8 : those things didn't influence my atheism at all. I was raised in an atheistic household, which didn't care about the existence of God at all nor ever discussed it in any way. I didn't even know that I was an atheist until I reached Middle School and learned that other people believed in God. By that point I had already had a pretty good idea of what I thought was morally right and wrong, and my ensuing study of Religion only served to verify the correctness of my parents excluding that from my moral upbringing. In other words, at least in my opinion, if you are taught simply to treat others with kindness whenever it is possible and to care for yourself as you would care for others as my parents taught me, any study of the Old or new testament morality will stand in stark contrast to that basic moral principle.
Question 8 is a softer variation of the much used accusation that “You’re only an atheist because you like to sin”. I hold the position that if I do something wrong to another person, than that would be something that will stick to me forever. I can hope for a future where this person will forgive me, but if that person doesn’t I will have to live with that, and that can hurt. All the more reasons to be kind to other people. But then this Christian comes to me and says that Jesus can take away that pain; He can forgive me. That feels wrong to me. Unfair to this other person. But it might be a tempting proposition to some.
This is basically a copy/paste of my own experience. In addition I decided to try to determine why people believe in a god or the bible etc so I read their book. It in no way changed my mind and basically confirmed that the so-called god is basically a man-made construct in that everything god dictated was basically what the leaders of the time wanted.
There's the rub, and it's so fucking patronizing. Like it's a condition that formed in me. I don't think I ever believed in a god, let alone the Catholic one my family surrounded me with. I was just labeled as such by my family.
The Bible says that God created something like a law in our hearts so it is obvious that you are going to have morality but not in everything that God requires of us.
@@darkwind1812so he provided just a portion of the moral code that we are expected to understand?
Question 3 is what im dealing with right now. My family thinks my lack of belief is because i want to sin. So many things i used to consider immoral or wrong and even things i used to think were ok instantly changed when i lost my faith. The reason was that as a Christian i never believed those to be right or wrong in my own mind. I simply agreed it was so because i looked at the bible as the final authority. For example, i never thought homosexuality was ever immoral or wrong in my eyes. I saw no issues with it. But because i believed the bible i had to admit that it was somehow immortal and that i was just flawed in my own understanding. But with once the log was out of my eyes so many things instantly changed. I knew i needed to think for myself.
The answer to the arguments of your family members is simple: If I wanted to sin, I would have never left christianity. An atheist has to do good stuff to be a good person and even if he does, when he still dies assuming there is no heaven, no more joy, no afterlife. A christian can commit any sin he wants, than just ask for forgiveness, believe in Jesus and he will be granted eternal life in the best place imaginable.
If this helps, let me say that in fact, if a person wants to sin, being a Christian is the best way to do it. Christianity uses a "sacrificial crutch" (i.e. Jesus) to remove a person's responsibility for their own actions. How? By BELIEVING that through Jesus's "sacrifice" all your sins are "forgiven." It's a pretty convenient copout, eh?
I have seen too many believers broken by a religion allegedly based on love and forgiveness. Don't let them break you, dear one. You have shown that your heart is good. We ALL make mistakes, but that doesn't make us "wanton sinners;" just seekers of good from outside the confines of religious dogma. Peace.
It is not true A Christian can sin then ask forgiveness then live happily forever in heaven.Genuine forgiveness implies genuine repentance. @@neverstopschweiking
I remember me and some others talking to my friend about religion and homosexuality. We asked him if he thought gay people were going to hell and he said yeah. So then we asked, “So you think being gay is wrong” and he said, “Well, I don’t really think it’s wrong, but the Bible says they’re going to hell so it’s not up to me to decide.” And I’m like dude how do you not see a problem with that
We used to get a lot of street preachers on my college campus and I was approached a few times. Little did they suspect that they were about to deal with someone who had nearly two decades of church, Good News Club and Sunday school teaching behind her, and had been a Bible-verse memorizing BEAST during that time. Nothing flusters them so much as a new and dedicated unbeliever who has superior knowledge of their "holy" book and isn't afraid to use those powers against them. For me, it was pretty funny, for people without that background it's, as you say, incredibly manipulative.
Kind of like when non-believers think ALL believers have no training in any kind of STEM field.
It's very nice if a religious believer has training in STEM. It's actually frustrating to talk to a theist who doesn't understand basic science. But the onus is on the religious believer to tell me how he squares the scientific fact of evolution with the supernatural creation story in Genesis@@theboombody
Good thing the Bible already self prepares its believers by telling to beware of the non believers who know the Word 🤣😂👍🏻
Your answers were spot on even though I personally felt most of the questions were condescending in nature and exactly meant to be “gotcha” questions. I would love to see this guy agree to a one on one interaction with you. Another great video!
Thank you very much!
Braxton isn't genuine. He won't agree to it - he barely even replies to comments answering the questions he asked.
I find him condescending but I can see him being a nice guy outside his script but then again this is what he does for a paycheck. And Brandon and Mike convo would be awesome I wouldnt miss that one I get tired of the Hovinds,Hams and WLC of the world
@@cy-one _Braxton isn't genuine_ *Wish I could like your comment more than once!!*
@@thedude0000 I mean, you can toggle the like off and on a few times? XD
But yeah, no. If there'd be only one, or maybe two such phrases or questions, I could go with "dude just lacks complete self-reflection and has no idea how what he says can be interpreted." But not with _that_ much of it.
The silver lining of these Christian arguments is they really help me appreciate humanity’s craving to KNOW. For some they must have an answer, like a made up answer is better than not being sure. I like that we are so curious, but it can trap you as well
Indeed
I think this is one of the most important problems the people of the world face. It infects (poisons) everything. The desperation to “KNOW” is the reason the world is so full of misinformation. It was the reason for superstition and now it’s the reason social media, politics, etc. is so toxic. People just can’t say “I don’t know”. It’s such a weakness.
Excellent point !! I think the other human behavior christianity "helps with" is empathy and death. If people feel bad for the struggles and pain of another, it is "god's will". If they fear death, they can just believe there is a heaven.
Basically, religion is a crutch for the hard of thinking.
When one finds/meets the truth (Jesus Christ), it is the ultimate joy to share the truth with others.
@@paulgemme6056 That wasn't even the guys real name. If folks can't get the name Yeshua ben Youssef right, how do they even dare to claim any truth whatsoever ??
As an Atheist, I can admit that we don't even know how much *we don't know.*
But I can also assure people that it's *not going to be religion that gives us the answers.*
Couldn’t agree more!
@bibletrivialistsandstatsthere’s nothing proving anything supernatural, all you have is an “idk how this happened” and claiming it to be “supernatural”.
@bibletrivialistsandstatsI agree but the lack of any physical proof of a god doesn’t exist. Personally I have experienced things of the supernatural that I can’t explain but know the experience was real. I never attributed it to god or the devil. I have my own theories but the truth is I don’t know. I don’t dismiss the possibility of there being a god(s). But I seriously doubt it would be the god in the Bible. You and I are better off admitting that we both don’t know the truth but we are free to think and explore our own ideas without any animosity towards each other
@bibletrivialistsandstats But in that situation, what would be the benefit of abandoning the scientific method of searching for more answers to try to understand the supernatural as we do natural and instead just rely on a particular mythos? Moreover, why that particular mythos instead of any of the thousands others to have existed and still exist?
Seems like an interesting paradox. You don’t even know what you don’t know but you are sure religion will not provide the answers. Seems like you know something after all. Strange that you can be so sure about one particular area. Irrational really.
Your responses to Braxton's 10 convoluted, and frankly, baseless questions, helped me (personally speaking) more than you might think.
Thank you.
If one is never born again, born of the Spirit (Holy Spirit), born from above they are spiritually blind. When they lead/teach others who are blind (no spiritual life) they will both fall off the cliff.
I lost my dad a year and half ago, and one of the things I miss most about him is being able to have these kinds of discussions. Literally nobody I know IRL seems capable of having these kinds of discussions. I’m so glad I found this channel💖💖💖
So sorry to hear of that loss. Thanks for being here though and hope it helps!
I think one of the most amazing things is how apologists have changed or moved the goal post just from our better understanding of scriptures. As more scholars make it clear that the bible is not inerrant and there is now greater scrutiny of the scriptures themselves, Christians have been forced to go on the defensive and/or just ignore/deny what the scriptures themselves say. It is astonishing how little believers know about the scriptures and what it says and how, and what context.
Yes they have moved on to faith and personal experience. Two things that cant be scrutinized as much.
Of course they shift the goal posts. Themselves. Dodge ball , ie, apologetics is virtually impossible otherwise. The best ones even have their own shoe contract- Adidas. The brand with the three stripes. The father the son and the Holy Joker.
@@chriswest8389 Big Daddy, Junior and Spooky.
"It is astonishing how little believers know about the scriptures"
I actually had a conversation with a coworker earlier this year about faith and randomly found out that he's religious, goes to church etc. but doesn't even know that the Bible isn't a single book. The thought of the gospels being 4 different literary creations never even crossed his mind until then, at around 60yo. That is how an average believer evaluates their faith to keep believing forever. They just trust priests or whomever as the ppl with expertise like we do with advanced scientific concepts. Sounds reasonable, yet always boggles my mind. It's like not learning to add numbers because mathematicians got this
I came up with the same conclusion independently. That is what you call science. :)
Somewhere around 26:30; when you're all over the reasons to live for this life I said out loud "i love this guy". That was beautiful.
Ha! Thats lovely. Thanks so such for being here!
23:00 "Blindly filling a gap with mythology is not a better explanation for the unknown than just saying 'it's unknown'". Brilliant!
Thanks so much for being here!
Very well said. I find your talking points to be extremely eloquent and the fact you didn’t script this completely blows my mind.
Thats very kind. Thank you. Ive been wrestling with it all for 30 years. Its nice to have a place to try and utilize some of what i have learned.
Jesus showing up and explaining the bible is also my go to answer to the "what evidence would convince you?" question.
How would you distinguish that from Loki approaching you and _pretending_ to be Jesus explaining the bible?
@irrelevant_noob I'm basically thinking taking a coherence qpproach to truth. Which means it need to cover a lot of topics.
@@gilesbbb well, yeah that does seem necessary, but my point is that it's likely insufficient. I mean, why couldn't Loki also "cover a lot of topics" just the same?
@@irrelevant_noob I guess I just think a deceptive but entirely convincing loki is unlikely enough for me to accept the evidence of a coherent presentation.
Luke 24:27-48 CEV
Jesus then explained everything written about himself in the Scriptures, beginning with the Law of Moses and the Books of the Prophets.
He did...I guess it just didn't convince you
Excellent, very concise, precise reasoning and analysys, way above what the questioner deserved. I struggle to find patience for religious people who demand from me what they won't provide themselves. They sit on a high horse to question without first asking themselves those same questions looking for honest answers, makes it very hard for me not to be arrogant condescending with them. I guess I need to be a better person
Hey thanks for that very much! Im sure as i see this more, the jadedness will creep in. But, for now, im excited just to help anyone who might be watching to not bother with Braxton on his glib questions.
For "off the cuff," this was incredibly articulate and coherent. In other words, you spoke very well. You have obviously thought these issues through in detail prior to hearing the questions. I really wish Braxton Hunter and you could discuss these in a real time chat. I don't wish this because I view it as some type of competition where you would supposedly "destroy" him. I wish it because I would like to see some of his responses to your answers, of which I'm certain he'd have some pretty coherent replies, and your replies to his replies. I like it that Braxton tries to avoid "gotchas" and doesn't dwell on silly semantic games as much as many apologists do. Again, great job.
Thank you for that kindness. Yes i want that too and also not for the "debate" of it, just like, what really would you say back here.
I’m
As an atheist, I really appreciate your honesty. The thing that really impresses me is how articulate you are in conveying your respective points. Today, you've earned a new subscriber, mate!
Cheers!
Question 9 : I've deconverted before internet (and atheists on youtube), before getting any better idea or even knowing the issues revolving around LGBTQ+, and so on... I've mainly deconverted because of few incoherences in the source material and religion in general, and by getting deeper scientific knowledge too, that pushed the god of the gaps I was clinging to for a while to a narrower and narrower spot.
I told myself I was only gonna watch the first fifteen minutes, go game for a couple hours, and then come back and finish this when I was a bit more focused & not distracted by wanting to game.
45 minutes later, I have finished the video. Just great work, dude. I always love hearing your perspective. I’d love to interview you on my channel, if you’re interested. I just had Paulogia, Dr. Kipp Davis, & Dr. Josh Bowen on recently, as well as Dr. Greg Stevenson from the Christian theology side. I value your mind and your measured approach so much!
Keep it up, dude.
Just way too kind. I appreciate that very much. Im always down. My email is in the description.
@@MindShift-Brandon, of course, man. I’ll send it over now. I think just hearing your responses would improve my life in some way, so I think it could be beneficial content for others!
I'm amazed at how closely our thinking on these matters track with each other. You are more eloquent in explaining them though, so I enjoy how you present, and I love the content.
Thank you very much. Appreciate you being here.
14:34 interesting point comparing "sех workers" with the military. "Do not kill" is a Bible commandment especially according to the New Testament where the victim is expected to put up another cheek and pray instead of trying to fight back.
Great video! I needed this. Deconversion is a long hard road 🫤
It is indeed. Glad if this helped! I have a playlist called deconversion help, if youd like to take a look. Thanks for being here!
Hope its going well! Wishing the best for you!
Right! It is lonely because we don't have a church to join.
@@MindShift-Brandon Perfect 👍 I will definitely check that out! Thanks 😊
hey i love you. it's been almost 15 years since I left my parents' Southern Baptist indoctrination/church but in the past 3 years I've finally begun doing work to heal instead of suppressing with addictions and substances. damn it's been rough but you and so many other creators' videos and content have helped me more than you'll ever know! 🥰
I am really, really glad to hear that what i am doing matters and is helping. Thanks for the kind comment!
Wherever you go there you are. Healing follows. Have a good journey.
"Doesn't this issue destabilize you?"
No😂
I'm perfectly fine with not having an answer to that, I'll honestly be surprised if we ever come to know a sure answer, how are we even supposed to know?😂
its telling that believers would be so bothered by unknowns.
@@MindShift-Brandon Their black and white thinking extends to most areas of life.
@@AtheimsisanEmptyCultyou realize that if the alternative are people like you loneliness is a blessing, right?
@@MindShift-BrandonLack of humility.
@@MindShift-Brandon The great mystery of life is fine with me. And not in the way that religious types refer to mystery, selectively asserting that "God works in mysterious ways" when someone points out a contradiction in Christian doctrine.
You are so smart and so well spoken. Thank you for your channel.
Thats very kind. Appreciate you being here!
33:31 In my personal journey, moral quandaries never served as the impetus for my disbelief in God. My initial doubts emerged during my teenage years when I had yet to fully comprehend the intricate nature of morality and its effects on the world.
My transition away from faith was predominantly driven by logical reasoning. The omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient attributes associated with God were always a source of confusion for me as a Christian. The concept of a being possessing these traits coexisting with our observed reality seemed irreconcilable.
Upon becoming an atheist, I embarked on a journey to deepen my understanding and articulate my atheism more effectively. This process led me to explore various philosophical issues surrounding the concept of God. However, it's crucial to clarify that these philosophical considerations were not the catalyst for my deconversion. They served more as a framework for elucidating my atheistic stance, rather than the underlying reason for my transition.
The thing most people are saying when they say they "hope their kids don't save themselves for marriage," isn't that they want their kids to be promiscuous. They're saying they want their kids to understand their sexuality and know they're compatible with their partner before they make what's supposed to be a lifelong commitment.
Well, in a few decades they probably won't participate in sex very much. Are they just supposed to break up then?
@@theboombody If that state of affairs is a mutual decision, why should they? If not, maybe they should.
I fully expected to get struck by lightning the first time I had sex, or at the very least be drastically changed as a person. Instead I had a pleasurable time with someone I cared about deeply, I was no different afterwards than I'd been before, and it became a lot easier to see that I'd been fed epic amounts of BS for the first 20 years of my life.
Great response video! You effectively communicate perspectives I've often longed to say out loud in my religious community.
Glad to help voice it! thank you
Great video, I very much appreciate your thoughtful responses. At the same time, I don’t consider Hunter to be an intellectually honest interlocutor. He has straight up admitted to not being amenable to changing his mind - that it would only happen if his brain became “diseased” to the point of (apparently) a catastrophic injury to his frontal lobe. This is not a person who can engage in critical analysis of his own worldview. And if he cannot, he certainly should not be asking the rest of us to do so.
thats a great point. Its fine to have your own stubborn opinion, but yes, you lose some rights to question others etc. Thank you for watching!
Well done! every question is answered with such clarity and understanding on the issues. By the end when you tell us you are an extensive reader on the subjects of Philosophy and Theology and go on about the number of books you`re red recently on both sides, all I can say to that is it shows Brandon it shows!
Oh man, thanks so much. Your comments are always so kind and encouraging! Appreciate you watching this one.
Well said. I’m ok with saying I don’t know.
Thank you for the generous comment
The stabilization question is a self-own that is very common with the religious:
religion, noun: 1. disbelief in "I don't know" as a claim, 2. disbelief in empathy as a source for morality.
I'm a child atheist and mostly do to being comfortable with saying, "I don't know". Religious people are religious because they can't admit they don't know something and feel comfortable. Admitting "I don't know" destabilizes the religious. The question was pure projection.
Projection indeed! I could feel through the screen how much the very thought destabilized him.
For someone who didn't want glib answers, some of his questions were sorta glib. 😂 And I love how he removed "experimental reproducibility" from that one question. Blatantly stacking the deck. 😂 I think atheist/theist debate can kinda be a catch 22. The apologist cannot recognize any validity for the reasons why a nonbeliever is a nonbeliever. To do so would crack the edifice of the religion by admitting that there does exist some grounds for nonbelief. So I'm not sure whether the two parties can ever actually meet. 🤔
Yes it did seem a but pointless lol as i went on. And ha. Glib questions for sure.
I think there is a place where both sides can meet: commitment to what is true first and foremost. We both don't want to believe in something false, so we come together to find out what is true. The biggest obstacle to this is that faith and religious belief, while it can put on the guise of truth, it often is about what feels good, or what gives you the most comfort in the face of existential dread of death and meaninglessness.
We don’t have to meet. Eventually enough people will stop following the superstitions of their ancestors and the ancients will simply disappear into history where they belong.
That is, if they don’t get us all killed first.
@@ThatReadingGuy28 "commitment to what is true" This is not possible for a christian. They simply cannot conceive of any truth but their own.
@@ThatReadingGuy28 I don't think 'commitment to what is true' is common ground. I've seen videos ot theists recommending atheist fathers to teach religion to their kids, and people saying that they better believe, because they cannot stand (or think they cannot stand) a world without god and/or eternal life.
To be fair, not committing to what is true can be also a problem with some atheists too. It's just less common.
I wanted to tell you I think that you're a genius, Brandon. (And you may be, of course.) But really, your answers here do not require GENIUS thinking! Just really, really good reasoning! Thanks, man, for your content.
Ha! There you go again. Way tooo mind. But i am down for good reasoning so glad you think so!
I'm so glad I subscribed to this channel. Such a classy, articulate, and likable gentleman...
Hey. Thanks so much. I really appreciate that.
You speak about complex topics the way I wish I could. I truly enjoy watching your channel. Thank you for posting.
Appreciate that. Thanks so much!
Reacting to this Braxton Hunter video is a UA-cam atheist rite of passage. Our little boy is all grown up! Next comes the invite to be on Piers Morgan’s show. Wait…no, that’s later. Interviewing Dr Bart Ehrman is next. I love Dr Ehrman and look forward to that segment.
ha! thats great. Poor Alex on Piers couldn't get a word in. Piers is the worst about that!
I just came across you, really digging your take & content.
Merci.
Oh thats wonderful to hear. Thanks for watching!
Brilliant. Braxton needs to have you on asap!
Ha, thank you. I'd love that.
It won’t happen
i love how theists would say (including me a few years ago) "you think everything came from nothing? what caused the big bang" but when you ask them where god came from "oh no that is different, see he is beyond space and time" talk about special pleading
Indeed, AFAIK all arguments for God special plead in some way, shape or form. But why do those same arguments that lead some to shift from or never become a believer in some sort of intelligent higher power lead others to believe and to believe more strongly as years pass. I point to me and my older brother. He and i both grew up in the same household with the same parents and went to the same church. Yet, as he grew, he became convinced God called him to the mission field and he completely immersed his life in things 'Jesus.' It grew stronger as his life progressed...or at least it seemed to. He was fervent...served on the mission field for over 40 years, retired and stayed active in the same church he grew up in and never stopped witnessing/testifying/pressing his views as best he could. I, on the other hand, began drifting away in my late teens and through my twenties, I went from a believer like him to a full one atheist and i never looked back. NONE of the arguments/lines of reasoning/historical 'facts' or anything Christian draws me toward it. The more I learn of it, the more it repulses me.
Why?
I wonder about that as much now in my 70s as when I was drifting away in my 20s. What do you think 'pushed' you over the edge? I could point to several things but one big epiphany was that I realized in college that even the most astute religious leader, apologist, Biblical scholar knew NO MORE about what was true or why than I did. As soon as the dawned on me, the path led inexorably away and no arguments/cajoling/threats of punishment or promises of reward make any difference. I can easily see where those who think some are 'elected' or predestined to believe and others aren't get their views...it does seem that way because I don't see myself as smarter or more aware than those who maintain their beliefs. I just see things differently.
You nailed this so well, I am impressed and inspired and ....long pause, just amazing. Finally! I been looking for logic and reason like this for ages and unable to articulate things myself so well, as you have, without so much emotional trauma reaction to things because of my Christian experience.
There is so much useful information in your videos that entire series of books. You have a gift and have worked on it. I really appreciate sharing what you have learned and applying them to these responses. Your answer to #10 is heartfelt and honest.
that is very kind and really encouraging! Thank you very much for this comment.
Your sagacious argumentation is like a tasty beverage for my brain
Ha. Love that! Thanks
An important note on your response to question 3. Wanting your children to 'not wait for marriage' before having sex is VERY different from saying you want your kids to be 'promiscuous'. It is about not waiting them to enter into a binding (difficult to dissolve) legal contract, before knowing if they are sexually compatible with that other person. While, knowing what it is you like in that way will likely require at least a small amount of experimentation, that could be done with same individual you marry or oneself. So, there is nothing about "not wanting your kids to wait until marriage before having sex" that requires ever having more a single partner through your entire life.
I have said it before and I say it again you are on a whole different level sir. Brilliant!!!
Man, so glad to not disappoint!
Great video! Enjoyed your excellent responses and your professional and clear delivery. Liked and subscribed :)
Welcome aboard! And thank you so much for that kind generosity. Hope you like it here!
Wonderful video. This channel is going places.
Thank you very much.
Good video.
Faith is the most dangerous concept ever invented by humans.
Education
Critical thinking
Empathy
I'll agree on those 3 all day.
Many have responded to this video of Braxton's.
Yours Sir, is THE best.
(and it's not even close)
Oh man. That is really kind! I just found out it was 2 years old. Im so late to this game, ha. I am excited to go see how others approached it. Again thanks for the nice encouragement.
It feels so good to see that I am not alone in my contentions. I'm grateful for this channel.
Got you! And thank you
I appreciate your videos not because I can relate to your deconstruction but rather I appreciate your message to fellow Christians. You provide a softer landing for their questioning mind. A safe corner to escape their walled 30:05 existence. Christians can be so scary to those of us that are not Christians
Thats very kind to say. Thank you.
Thank you for yet another excellent video!
glad you liked it, thanks for being here.
"These aren't meant to be "gotcha" questions".
Proceeds to ask 10 "gotcha questions".
I do not consider myself an atheist but I can't thank you enough for presenting your thoughts in such a logical and thorough manner. I have questioned many of the issues you have discussed before like prayer, why does God not reveal himself, satan, etc. I also appreciate how you thoughtfully analyze what Christian apologists say in defense of their position, without judgment, jumping to conclusions, badmouthing, etc. It gives me comfort to think though these issues with your style of logic and analysis. Unfortunately, my committed Christian friends would chastise me for even considering an atheist position at all. They would blame my doubt and inquiries on satan, of course. But there is one thing a good Christian friend told me one day. If the Bible is the "real" God's inerrant revelation of himself to humanity, then God would care less about doubt, inquiries, investigation, and reconsideration of what the Bible purports to reveal to us about the real God.
I loved this video! Thank you for your work in articulating carefully what your experience has been and all the work it takes to share it. It helps me see that I'm not alone
So glad to help normalize. Thanks for the generosity!
I discovered your channel today and can't stop watching! You are brilliant!
Oh thats so kind! Thanks very much for that and for being here!
Another fantastic show Brandon, both incontinent, and even more in the polite, honest and sincere way you present it. I would love for you to possibly take on some of the religious attributes of the daily wire with Ben Shapiro. His daily show has become very common place to be religious at some point every day. Thanks again for your show.
Lol “incontinent”. Autocomplete strikes again.
@@pansepot1490 yep ;-! And harder yet for me because I’m legally blind
Thanks for this kind support! Yes id love to speak on the daily wire. So many others just killing it already though like GMC and RationalitnRules. But I’m sure ill get to it. Thanks again!
Fantastic answers - especially shooting from the hip! Love your sincerity coupled with genuine empathy for the other side and humility that you could be wrong. I have been actively struggling with all this for over 40 years - since Bible College - studying some nearly every day. I may be totally wrong about everything - but I cannot yet be convinced that I should worship anything as evil & self contradictory as the character described as God in the Bible. Like you I may crumble on fear faced with this God if it’s all true - but I cannot imagine living in heaven knowing most everyone else is suffering forever in hell.
Thank you very much. That’s encouraging to hear. Really appreciate your adding in here.
As usual, a great video! I find your point-of-view fascinating and enlightening. I hope your channel continues to grow by Leaps and Bounds! Keep up the great work
Thank you so much, looking forward to reading each of your answers. Thank you for taking the time to share!
Question #5 [20:00 - 20:57] _This is something I acknowledged a while back, and that is,_ *"we don't know",* _and while we can try to rationalize all we want, our intuitions have been wrong too many times to heavily lean either way (assuming that binary is even a useful one)._
_I certainly understand wanting to know the origin, especially when arguing whether or not we are "supposed" to do something or if we are just here due to the "qualities" of reality, and ultimately don't amount to more than any other part of reality. I also understand struggling with the idea of "death", an end to our conscious experience, and not being able to experience or interact further with the world in a way we've become accustomed to. In fact, I have lived a relatively careful life, partly out of fear of dying, and partly to the fear of my quality of life being permanently (or even with just a challenging recovery) reduced._
_Braxton mentions being "desperate" in his question, and while I can understand the act of making up answers against answers people already have agreed with can seem "desperate", the discounting Braxton does about his religion being incorrect does him a disservice, and does not come without a cost to our experience. Desperation cannot be discounted as a factor, but recognizing how many humans before us have attempted to answer these questions, and make us better/smarter, knowing we may one day all die one day, is likely part of the reason why. Also, in regards to the idea of eternity/immortality that many believe is achievable in some way, we can never accept the "truth" until we have real answers, and until then, we will continue to wonder._
*If you read this far, thanks for reading!*
Great job. Your honesty is a welcome tonic.
That is very encouraging to hear. Thank you!
Excellent work, atheist preaching at its best.
Appreciate that!
"atheist preaching is best"
Well more logical and truthful but I bet it does not hold the excitement of a "snake handling" service. However I will never no personally == I hope..
About no.5:- The notion that the universe came into existence unaided, and developed unguided is one I find incredibly exciting - and a bit hilarious. The idea that it's all about humans, that we're the pinnacle of 'creation' is patently absurd to me. But billions of years of natural processes turning a dust cloud into a life-bearing planet, supporting a species of self-aware primates who are doing their best to turn it back into a dust cloud; that make sense, and it also fits the evidence better than any creation myth I've heard. And why would any god create such a bunch of screw-ups?
Ha. For sure. Love that!
It is exciting, amazing, incredible, awesome, wonderful. "Goddidit" is just soooo damn boring!
It is the worst question and really poorly worded. Common apologist tactic, offer bad options and pretend they’re the only options.
Great point! It's pretty arrogant to believe that an extra-dimensional being, with human faults, created the universe and waited almost 4 BILLION years till the vast universe was just right for god to finally seed Earth with humans or near-humans in the last 200K years, which represents 0.006% of the lifespan of the universe. This was all done on only our planet, which is practically a negligible amount of the universe. Pardon me if I'm skeptical. :)
Growing up catholic I was taught that a lot of things were sins that I knew weren’t, starting with simple bodily functions and desires. That along with disconcert of what I was taught from the bible and doctrine and reality led me to leave religion. Doing into theology and science at university helped me understand how man made religions are and how false they are. Your answers were great, I’ve heard a few of these from other people and they are different with some common themes.
38:04 - Yep, that's so well known by now that it's already starting to get taken up by dictionaries (let alone wikipedia) as "Hitchens' Razor" (in pretty obvious reference to Occam's Razor).
Very thoughtful and honest answers, well done. First time I've seen your content and new subscriber
Appreciate that! Welcome to the channel!
20:56 The question, while intriguing, does not necessarily hold profound implications for our daily lives. The origins of the universe typically bear little significance on the day-to-day existence of most individuals. The discussion of cosmic genesis primarily arises within ontological debates, but in the broader context, it tends not to be a salient topic.
When it comes to seemingly unanswerable questions from an atheistic perspective, they can often mirror uncertainties within the Christian worldview as well. For instance, Christianity, despite its rich narrative, does not definitively explain the mechanics of how the universe was created. It focuses more on attributing creation to an entity - God. Consequently, the process by which the universe came into existence remains an open question within both the Christian and atheistic worldviews.
As someone who has always LOVED books and was also SUPER religious as a kid, I always wondered why books that were written by people, not claiming Divine Inspiration, were easier to read and understand than the Bible that was written by men claiming Divine Inspiration.....
If God is a Lovecraftian horror, does that solve your problem?
And, like, raise a whole bunch more?
I love the channel and this was a great video. I just wanted to point out around @12:25 mark it sounded like you said "Gnosticism" instead of "Agnosticism," but I rewound it and confirmed you used "Agnosticism." However, hearing it made me think you'd do a pretty good video about the Gnostic branch of early Christianity, and how it explains the actions of the Abrahamic God much better than the Christian God of the bible.
Also, let us know when you've opened up a Patreon account (or provide the details to your current one). I'd be happy to chip in to help you produce more great videos.
Too kind! I have yet to dive into the patreon or channel memberships. I was thinking maybe when i get to 5k. And yes i plan to cover all the gnostic texts at the end of secular bible study, one by one. Thanks again!
4:25 - 4:30. This reminds me of there being some examples where people have tried to use science to come to conclusions that are different from past conclusions that science lead them to.
Absolutely amazing the way Brandon responds!
This was a fantastic video! I loved your thoughts on the problem of evil from an atheistic perspective, and the source of a non-religious moral code.
Thanks, Chas!
These sorts of questions always prove to be less than tough to answer sincerely which actually proves the underlying work behind formulating them couldn't have been that hard either, thus revealing the intellectual capacity of the one posing them.
It is also a problem with this guy asking the questions not having good sound material to work with as a foundation.
For number 3, a decent amount of people start changing their beliefs on morality and/or ethics before they depart from a religion.
Yup. Absolutely
I am 74 years old and attended to a rural Southern Chruch when there was racial unrest in the South 1950's and 1960;s). When I was about 6 years old (about that age) I head a church leader pray that we'd never have to go to Church with "ni g er s"
That laid in my mind for years among other things. SO morality does play a part.
But honestly I think it was just the lack of evidence and the rejection of science that drove me away and allowed me to break the chains.
For many they realise that the morality of the bible and throughout christianity to the present day are unethical and downright depraved. And when you realise that, you cannot in all decency and civility, subscribe to such an immoral and unethical worldview.
Question 2 [10:58 - 11:31] : _Understanding the "not convinced" point simply requires one to acknowledge that you cannot, without a doubt, confirm something doesn't exist. Having debated, or seen debates, one should know that your opponent can always add criteria you haven't met, or cannot currently meet, thus always placing you in a position to admit you could do more to increase your certainty, and you could be wrong, so by taking the unconvinced position, we not only leave room for more information, we don't also replace our lack of conviction with a strong placeholder such as the "God of the Gaps" as to not look ignorant._
_I think by now, apologist know/understand this, but gain nothing by acknowledging it if they wish to argue. Same goes for arguing with people who say morals/goals are subjective; we dispute it, but the point remains that ultimately, it's up to every individual to determine their morals/goals, it just so happens that we have had a lot of time, and a lot of individuals already think about it, and we can see the pros and cons of many different positions, and we can accuratrly predict the outcome of each._
*If you made it this far, thanks for reading!*
Thank you. Just thank you. Clear, concise and correct. We are on the same page.
Appreciate that. Nice to find kindred minds.
"Having a better answer" doesn't mean having a true and verifiable answer.
Love your logical brain.
Love your generous comments
The argument that makes the most sense to me is one that C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien made, Lewis especially influenced by Owen Barfield, that mythology appeals to us in ways that history or science never can.
It's the nature of a great story to make me wish that it were true. That's not proof; it's an acknowledgement that Apollo and Frith and Iluvatar ought to be real.
ohh love this.
Question #8 [32:53 - 33:30] _I think my first exposure to atheism was a movie or a comedy special - I saw Dogma pretty young (not sure if that was the first one). I think I assumed certain things I had heard were true (from the bible), and after I began reading it, and being surprised there wasn't more detail in the book (I thought people were summarizing stories, not that what I heard were the full stories). I then quickly found myself watching debates, and "atheist" youtubers (you probably know the type), and started asking questions. I found that many authorities in my life (I didn't go to church) either had no answers, or told me they couldn't discuss it (teachers in my public school)._
_The moral and history issues certainly followed quickly, and I began learning all the philosophy terms as they came up often. And, as cringe as it was/is, debating people online really helped me shape my beliefs, testing them and asking new or re-worded questions that helped confirm or expand certain held beliefs._
_I agree with Braxton that what should matter is "the truth" and not "what we prefer", but obviously when somebody has a worldview that accounts for everything using methods that are unverifiable, and somebody else has a worldview that functions but still has gaps, I tend to think one is being more honest that the other, ie not caring what they prefer._
23:10 - Yep. Here’s a question I like to ask:
How do you know that “God” is God?
God is all-knowing, but without being all-knowing yourself, how do you recognize that something is all-knowing?
God is good, but what standard of good do you use to differentiate what you think is God, from a super powerful mischief-maker?
Also relevant to this question : 41:30 - it’s impossible to know if the Christian god is real. But if there existed a super competent , wise, and kind being who was acting to create good in the word, I’d happily devote my life to that person.
@@Mar-dk3mp Are you okay? What's the matter? Why are you so upset?
Is a christian supposed to act the way you are doing? Whatever happened to "turn the other cheek"?
Would your parents approve if they knew you were behaving like this?
I like that, thanks for sharing!
16:48 - There is a _bit_ of a difference between "saving yourself before marriage" and "being sexually promiscuous before marriage". Marriages are _in part_ about sex, so sexual compatibility is rather important, so finding out _beforehand_ whether one's likes and preferences and everything match up to at least _some_ degree is a pretty good idea, I'd say 😉
(hell, there also are pheromones and how "well" one reacts to those of another person - there literally are people who "can't smell each other" in the sense that the pheromones aren't attractive to them, or even repulsive - and during sex, some of those pheromones might be "encountered" the first time)
I’ve never been caught in an existential crisis because I’m not sure how the universe started, or even if it did start.
How does this impact my life? It doesn’t.
I have a side question, as others in the comments have already raised appreciation of your content - it's awesome by the way :)
You've mentioned you're reading 100-150 books a year. In the worst case scenario, that's almost 1 book per 4 days. What would you recommend to a person (namely, me) who is a snail-speed reader, but would like to read more and retain more information? My reading speed is probably average, but if I don't slow down, I may not even remember the last chapter I've read. A book that someone would say is something for an evening read, I will probably read for one or two weeks.
BTW, that's also why I've struggled during my seminary and why I'm happy I won't have to attend my third year due to the recent deconversion, as third year reading material would just kill me. I'd be happy to read those, but not when contained in semester scopes.
I'd be happy to hear from an avid reader and such an insightful person as you. Maybe you've already covered that topic on your other channel, so a video response would also be appreciated!
Really appreciate the kind words. Reading is for something that gets better with time and with intentional practice. I did quite a few courses on reading speed and comprehension back in my early 20's and it really helped significantly. You can find these online with a simple google search. Also, journaling is The superpower. That will help massively with retention. Even if you dont end up journaling that specific time, thinking you will already changes how you look at the info as you think about what you would want to capture etc. Lastly audiobooks are your friend. it makes up about 30% of my "reading" i can play it on 1.5 speed i do it during running, walking, or cycling. Theres a lot of great research about how forward movement helps with info retain.
@@MindShift-Brandon thank you! I'm saving that in my "Importants" folder :) I've definitely never heard of forward movement research before, gotta check it out!
@@bartosz.holubowiczpick something of interest first. Whether it's highbrow, classical, non fiction, trashy romances, pulp fiction, SF, just grab it and read, or put on an audio book of it. I listen to several narrators of fiction on my drive to and from work, short stories and often follow the links as many are series written in reddit or royal road. The more you do it the more you do it. Don't warry that you didn't retain it the first time. If you enjoyed it read it again. I have several books I reread every couple of years. Then branch out and go down some rabbit holes as you realise that other things now interest you.
Don't be afraid to not get it all the first time through. If you enjoyed it, read it again and see what you missed.
Never let anyone tell you there's things you shouldn't read, or ways to do it. You do you. Just suck it all down.
Your explanations are so succinct and clear. I agree with everything you've shared, but you've given me better language to explain it. You have a great talent, and we thank you for sharing it!
You answered these questions exceptionally well friend. Seriously, it was like an adult explaining something to a child. No disrespect intended. I was a former believer.
Thanks, Jeff. Thats very encouraging