Friday Night Live Chat 14 June 2024
Stefan leads an interactive philosophy session, discussing applying philosophical concepts to daily life and critiquing academia's focus on status over societal change. They explore knowledge complexities, objectivist epistemology, and the significance of logic and reason in ethical theories. Stefan advocates for evidence-based propositions and introduces Universally Preferable Behavior (UPB) as a moral standard rooted in rationality. He emphasizes adhering to objective standards for ethical interactions and encourages listener support, appreciating engaging discussions on philosophical concepts and ethics.
Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!
NOW AVAILABLE FOR SUBSCRIBERS: MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING' - AND THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI AND AUDIOBOOK!
Also get the Truth About the French Revolution, the interactive multi-lingual philosophy AI trained on thousands of hours of my material, private livestreams, premium call in shows, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!
See you soon!
https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2022
Stefan leads an interactive philosophy session, discussing applying philosophical concepts to daily life and critiquing academia's focus on status over societal change. They explore knowledge complexities, objectivist epistemology, and the significance of logic and reason in ethical theories. Stefan advocates for evidence-based propositions and introduces Universally Preferable Behavior (UPB) as a moral standard rooted in rationality. He emphasizes adhering to objective standards for ethical interactions and encourages listener support, appreciating engaging discussions on philosophical concepts and ethics.
Join the PREMIUM philosophy community on the web for free!
NOW AVAILABLE FOR SUBSCRIBERS: MY NEW BOOK 'PEACEFUL PARENTING' - AND THE INTERACTIVE PEACEFUL PARENTING AI AND AUDIOBOOK!
Also get the Truth About the French Revolution, the interactive multi-lingual philosophy AI trained on thousands of hours of my material, private livestreams, premium call in shows, the 22 Part History of Philosophers series and much more!
See you soon!
https://freedomain.locals.com/support/promo/UPB2022
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:00:00Yeah, hi everybody, welcome June 14th to 2024. Welcome to your
00:00:08Glorious
00:00:10philosophy evening it is
00:00:12Friday night live. We're doing a voice chat and
00:00:15I am super thrilled if anybody has any questions comments issues challenges problems, whatever you like
00:00:21I'm all ears. I certainly have topics as I am want to do but I am happy to hear from you
00:00:27So if you just want to unmute if you have any questions or comments help yourself to my brain
00:00:33Like a buffet of vaguely British noises. Hey Steph. Can you hear me? Yes, sir
00:00:37okay, I just want to thank you for all of the hard work that you do and
00:00:44All of the the dedication you've really
00:00:48Allowed me to to see you know what? I mean?
00:00:51You said you mentioned that time that Helen Keller
00:00:55Before she could new words or anything like that. It was just like electronic sensations or something, right and
00:01:02you have given me so much clarity and
00:01:06Understanding in the world and about other people that I just can't imagine what it would be like to exist
00:01:14Any other way, you know?
00:01:16so
00:01:17I I'm just thrilled to be able to speak to you
00:01:21This is you're like a celebrity to me
00:01:24All these years. I've been listening to you and you had those huge YouTube channel streams and you know
00:01:32Messages flooding in and now here we are
00:01:35Just just this small group I I'm just ecstatic for this so
00:01:44Well, I really appreciate your kind words, thank you so much what do you think was
00:01:49The most important
00:01:51aspect of philosophy for you, what was there some moment where you just like Kapow and
00:01:57Things sort of came together was it some particular topic or some sometimes it's just a side phrase that happens to sink the
00:02:04Pet so to speak. What was it for you?
00:02:07well, I I
00:02:09hope I can answer your question, but I'm going to say that
00:02:13it's the Colin shows and
00:02:16It's understanding how
00:02:19Abuse and all of the turmoil and you know
00:02:23how the the parents treated the child which then became an adult and then had children of their own and
00:02:30That has given me
00:02:33You know, my glasses on so to speak so I can actually see and
00:02:38really a thing that I
00:02:41just can't get away from is UPB and
00:02:45the non-aggression principle
00:02:50That is is what really
00:02:54You know really opened up my eyes with the you know, the the
00:02:58documentaries you did sunset in the Golden State, which I've watched a couple times over and
00:03:05Anytime I have guests over I tried to I tried to at least show them a couple minutes of it and try to get
00:03:10them exposed to it and
00:03:13centralized coercion
00:03:15Understanding the nature of the state for what it is. It's just it's illegitimate. It's just force
00:03:21So I hope I'm answering your question
00:03:26No, I appreciate that and when you first listen, I mean, it's funny
00:03:30I wish I could come in from the outside, you know
00:03:33like that's kind of what philosophy is is kind of coming into to life from the outside from sort of principles and
00:03:40I you know, one of the things is wild about this show and and I take some credit for this, of course
00:03:45But it has a lot to do with the honesty and generosity to listeners, but it's a wild thing
00:03:50Because normally there are physicists and there are engineers in the world and the two are usually quite separate
00:03:56So there's there's the heavy theorists and then there's the practical
00:04:00implementers
00:04:02now the one thing that is
00:04:04Is really unique about what we do here is that
00:04:09We go from the most abstract
00:04:12Theoreticals to the most practical implementations we go from absolute theory
00:04:19To robust practice, right?
00:04:21So Einstein comes up with the theory of relativity and then the Manhattan Project creates the bomb, right?
00:04:26Which is maybe not the best. Let's talk nuclear power. I love the topic of the city flattening bomb by the way, so
00:04:32Yeah
00:04:34so the fact that
00:04:37I've got
00:04:39these big abstractions
00:04:41UPB and RTR non-aggression principle, which is not mine, of course, but to take that and
00:04:48Apply it to actual practical
00:04:52problems in the world is
00:04:56Fairly unprecedented in philosophy and in fact certainly to the degree that we do it
00:05:01it is unprecedented that a
00:05:04Philosopher is not helping people with abstract definitions of virtue and pointing out contradictions in their thinking
00:05:13But is rather saying
00:05:15How does philosophy change your life?
00:05:18While remaining strict to abstract principles. How does philosophy change your life and the call-in shows?
00:05:24are absolutely unique in the history of
00:05:28Philosophy that there are now thousands of conversations where we take the most abstract principles and
00:05:35Apply them to actual life because you know
00:05:38a lot of philosophers are into abstract principles and there are these sort of I don't know Tom to Tony Robbins self-help guru kind of
00:05:46guys who
00:05:48Try to help people with their lives and so on
00:05:51But not the two together and that's I think
00:05:54Oh
00:05:55the wildest thing about
00:05:58What's happening in these kinds of conversations that we are going from the most?
00:06:03abstract topics of the most practical
00:06:06implementations
00:06:07Because philosophy can very easily be a distraction from life
00:06:11Because it feels very sort of disconnected in sometimes almost dissociated from life and when you sort of plow through
00:06:17people like a Schopenhauer or
00:06:19even Nietzsche to some degree it's like well, that's all well and good, but
00:06:24You know, what does this do for my life how does this help me make actual decisions and
00:06:31To have morality from the greatest abstractions to the most practical implementations is
00:06:37A wild it's almost like breaking the third wall or the fourth wall
00:06:42It's like breaking the fourth wall in theater where instead of you looking at a room of actors pretending
00:06:47There's no audience
00:06:47They kind of come out and talk to you in the in the audience and and yet that's usually improv and so on
00:06:54But this is sort of very structured. So I
00:06:56think that
00:06:58When I first and it's wild because I still remember this sort of from very very early on in the show
00:07:04that
00:07:05I've always loved chatting with people and
00:07:08So I wanted to talk philosophy with people and this is sort of way back in the day skype had this
00:07:12I guess kind of like now but it was sort of a meeting room
00:07:16Situation where
00:07:18You could all join a particular meeting room. This is back in I think 2006 and so on
00:07:24You could join a meeting room. You could mute and unmute people and I was like, hey, let's talk philosophy
00:07:30And I don't know why this happened
00:07:35It's it's a very interesting question as to why this happened, but I was like, hey, let's talk philosophy
00:07:44And people
00:07:47Opened up their lives to the ether like self-surgery with a hand grenade or something they just
00:07:54Opened up because and this is almost with the call-in shows
00:07:58There's no obviously as you know
00:08:00if you've if you've filled out the form or like there's nothing but if somebody said my call-in show is I want to discuss the
00:08:06technical technicalities of UPB
00:08:08I would be happy with that. I'd be thrilled with that but
00:08:13you
00:08:15With almost no exceptions I can say functionally all of
00:08:21Talking to a philosopher is
00:08:24the personal life or
00:08:27thousands and thousands of call-in show requests
00:08:32Over, you know 1819 years and it's all about personal life. That's unprecedented in the entire history of
00:08:40Philosophy, I mean you have shows where people talk about their personal lives, but it's usually from the perspective of a psychologist not a philosopher and
00:08:49Here, I don't know what happened
00:08:52it had something to do with an
00:08:55Instinctual understanding of my skills talents abilities and preferences that I didn't even
00:09:03Know about
00:09:04Because I'm like, hey, let's talk philosophy and it's like oh come the personal stories and
00:09:11The opening up of the lid of privacy and
00:09:16I
00:09:17Kind of fell into that groove and I think did a pretty good job
00:09:21From early on and it was like the audience knew me better than I knew myself because I'm like, hey
00:09:28Abstractions are the way to go. Let's talk philosophy. I mean none of my early articles were really about
00:09:35self-knowledge
00:09:37And
00:09:39history and childhood and and all of that
00:09:43but
00:09:44there was some sort of collective Borg brain thing that happened where people were like, I'm gonna talk to him about this and
00:09:52We started this just wild journey of converting
00:09:57abstractions to practical
00:09:59implementation that really has been going on and continues to go on and
00:10:03Philosophy is the all-discipline and life is an infinity of choices. So I don't think we're gonna run out of
00:10:10These issues anytime soon and that's fine with me. I mean, I know that they call in shows are
00:10:16Very unique and you know, I enjoy doing the politics and I thought it was very interesting and so on
00:10:21But when I sort of see these shows some of them are on the left
00:10:25most of them are on the right where people are just
00:10:27Talking about some, you know a little bit of gender politics and some politics as a whole and and all of that and it's like
00:10:33Yeah, I mean that's interesting, but it just seems to me more of a distraction than anything else
00:10:37so yeah, I mean obviously I want to thank everyone who was involved in in that and
00:10:43especially the early people who reached, you know deep into their hearts with both hands and poured them out of the Internet and
00:10:50Summoned a
00:10:52Particular precision and expertise in me that I would not have laid a lot of money was
00:10:57Coiled like a snake waiting to strike in my heart. So
00:11:01That I think is a really fascinating part of the show and something that the audience found
00:11:07in me before I did and
00:11:10So I really wanted to thank everyone but that was a wild conversation that started, you know close to
00:11:1620 years ago and
00:11:18Continues to this day. So I'm just I just can't think of anyone else that I would be want to be that
00:11:25I want to be talking to you other than you
00:11:28Right, like I don't want to talk to Jordan Peterson
00:11:32You know that guy's that guy's life is a disaster with those
00:11:36Was a barbiturates whatever he was on I forgot
00:11:40but
00:11:41You you give clarity because I can I can I can see it in my daily life
00:11:47Where I try to talk to people about things just just
00:11:52just basic details of reality at work and people
00:11:56You know, they get uncomfortable. You've mentioned that before they get they tense up
00:12:01There's a there's a pause before they answer and I can just really see
00:12:06What you answered my question that time about the Milgram experiments where everyone is terrified
00:12:13They're terrified of what others think of them what their family thinks of them with a manager
00:12:19co-workers, whatever and
00:12:23You know you kind of
00:12:27How shall I say I go into a higher orbit maybe electron orbit or something an atom and
00:12:33you know the
00:12:36The community of people in those groups just kind of keeps shrinking and shrinking
00:12:40So I think one of the last calls you you and others had mentioned pruning
00:12:45getting people out of your life who
00:12:48you know are
00:12:51not contributors to
00:12:53making your life better and that's something I've been doing over the last many years and
00:13:00My circle is very small now, but I do consider
00:13:04You to be in my circle and it's it's just really
00:13:08It's it's just really an honor to be speaking with you. I
00:13:14Appreciate that. Thank you. And as far as dr. Peterson goes
00:13:17I mean obviously very interesting fellow a very highly highly brilliant brilliant intelligent fellow and so on not a philosopher
00:13:24But a psychologist which is a kind of different
00:13:26different thing
00:13:28But yeah, it was pretty wild
00:13:32It was pretty wild
00:13:34I mean the story is that Jordan Peterson's daughter ended up didn't she have a child with a Stalinist or something like that and
00:13:41That's some pretty wild stuff. And yeah, he did get addicted
00:13:44I think to barbiturates and the idea that he didn't know they were addictive
00:13:49I don't find particularly credible but a man of course is not defined by a mistake
00:13:53You know, was it a mistake to take this his wife? Of course was ill and I understand that
00:13:58But I wouldn't want to define him as
00:14:02You know foundationally flawed because he of an addiction that he got into when he was doing some very high-flying and very stressful
00:14:12Activities so I wouldn't write him off as far as all that goes and I think I've gotten some very useful things out of him
00:14:17But you know a guy has worked with the UN and he doesn't really understand the nature of the state
00:14:22Which again wouldn't be his job necessarily. He's a psychologist not a philosopher or you know
00:14:28political
00:14:29theorist and so on but yeah some useful and interesting stuff, but
00:14:33Not not the kind of principles that we need to really really save things and you know
00:14:38He doesn't talk about some of the more controversial things that I've talked about that
00:14:41He knows for sure are important and certainly part of his professional training and so on. So
00:14:46certainly some
00:14:48limitations and I
00:14:50Don't know. I mean I got it. Yeah, I don't people's marriages are very tough to judge
00:14:55so I wouldn't go very far down that road, but I have to tell you that if if if I wanted to decorate half of
00:15:04My wife and I's house with a bunch of totalitarian images from Stalinist
00:15:10Russia, okay. I think she'd say I know exactly what she would say. Well
00:15:17That's more of a cry for help than anything else. And I think that's
00:15:22That's pretty rough, I think that's pretty rough. So yeah, I mean
00:15:26I
00:15:27Try to take the good out of what I can get from people and certainly nobody has to be perfect and Lord knows
00:15:32I'm not perfect, but
00:15:34It does seem that there are some
00:15:36Limitations that would would have me go a certain distance but not others with people like that if makes any sense. So
00:15:45So
00:15:46Yeah, I mean Jordan Peterson does know all about the IQ issues and so on and he's just said he's not really gonna
00:15:52Talk about it, which is fine. But then you know, don't talk about topics while obscuring topics, right?
00:15:58If I decide not to talk about something I don't talk about it as opposed to talking about it without talking about it, which seems
00:16:04you know because he's very much about honesty and so on and
00:16:08So yeah, I think there are obviously some
00:16:11some limitations well, of course having you know, I have great admiration for his wits and his debating skills and his
00:16:18His his mind is is ferociously fast, but yeah, he seems like a not particularly happy fellow and
00:16:27You know with with maybe but the great intellect comes the great burdens
00:16:30But I don't think I'm burdened to too small an intellect and I think it is quite important to find ways to be happy
00:16:36in life, so I
00:16:38Think there are some limitations there for sure and that's true with I mean a lot of public figures
00:16:42You find some good stuff and you
00:16:45Find the good that you can and you discard some of the stuff with with some skepticism. So
00:16:51So, yeah, I'm immensely proud at the way in which this community has gone from theory to practice right so if you look at
00:17:00something like Plato's
00:17:02descriptions of how Socrates was talking Socrates
00:17:07Comes across a fellow
00:17:09Who's leading a prosecution against his own father for the death of a servant
00:17:17And
00:17:18This turns into an abstract
00:17:21debate about justice and doesn't really return much to the practical questions of how to live and
00:17:30These extreme cases and I understand like extreme cases test the rule I know in law right edge cases make for bad law
00:17:39and very very few of us are going to
00:17:41Try to decide we're gonna have to try to decide whether we turn our father in for causing someone's death, right?
00:17:47That's a very very minor very minor
00:17:52Number of people very small number of people and so he's like wow, you've really got to understand justice if you're prosecuting your own father
00:18:01And then it just goes from the abstract conceptions of justice and it very much is an edge case and
00:18:09of course the
00:18:10philosophers who've avoided childhood
00:18:13Which is something I've been talking about from the very I think my second or third show was about childhood
00:18:17Maybe that's why people were talking about it with their with the call-ins and so on
00:18:22but philosophers who've avoided
00:18:24childhood are
00:18:26almost universally covering up for and siding with
00:18:30abusers and
00:18:35That is
00:18:36to their everlasting shame and
00:18:39I'm sure that there have been philosophers in the past
00:18:42who
00:18:43Maybe talked a little bit more about childhood or maybe talked more directly about childhood, but it seems they've just been
00:18:49Scrubbed and erased from history in a sense as I has been attempted with me sort of scrubbed and erased from the world as a whole
00:18:58And
00:19:00So it could be that there are philosophers who've done or tried to do what I've done
00:19:06But we don't hear about them and they won't get taught in
00:19:10University so to me the the study of philosophy is a way of taking the smart
00:19:18universal thinkers who are interested in morality and
00:19:22Giving them an off-ramp to actually change society called academia
00:19:28And I think it's really a shameful business as a whole
00:19:32Because we really really need those interested in morality and universality and who are good
00:19:37reasoners and debaters to be engaged within society at the most foundational moral level and
00:19:43so I think it's the
00:19:47Philosophy to academia utility to the people to
00:19:51parasitical irrelevance
00:19:52That's the whole purpose of it seems to me modern education these days in the realm of ethics is to continually lure people away
00:20:00but the breadcrumbs of dollars and fame and
00:20:02Lack of consequences to lead people away from actually change. Oh, are you someone who could actually change the world for the better?
00:20:08No, no, no, don't don't don't do that. That's scary and dangerous. But here we've got this lovely job for you
00:20:14I remember dr. Walter Block writing about writing in ecstasies about this some years ago
00:20:19Oh, you've only got to work maybe 10 hours a week. Maybe 15 hours a week will pay you
00:20:24200 grand and
00:20:27You get a nice little office and you get sabbaticals. Yeah. Oh, how about how does four months off in the summer sound and
00:20:34prestige and and all of this and you know, Lord knows I've met enough academics in my life to realize just
00:20:41you know, there's a movie called Shadowlands and
00:20:48One professor played by Anthony Hopkins talks to another professor and says doesn't this all just feel completely pointless and useless
00:20:55the other professor looks kind of guilty and shameful and it's like
00:20:58Yes, of course, of course
00:21:01and that is
00:21:03the whole thing and so for me
00:21:08Being able to stay with the value and utility of philosophy
00:21:13too smart wise curious and concerned people like yourself has been the greatest gift and
00:21:20it is a
00:21:22Great a great honor and you know, it's it's a it's a unique and unprecedented view
00:21:28Into the depths of human nature right these I mean these call-in shows
00:21:31I don't mean to pressure anyone but they'll be studied for hundreds of years. Maybe thousands of years in
00:21:38terms of this is a
00:21:41principled examination of
00:21:44a
00:21:45highly chaotic
00:21:47But principled place called the unconscious called history called memory called the collision between society and
00:21:54Virtue honesty and the censorship required to move through society. It's an absolutely fascinating
00:22:04View that does not exist in any other place or shape or
00:22:11Genre or milieu, it's absolutely unprecedented. We have thousands of call-in shows
00:22:18That
00:22:20show the collision between
00:22:24the
00:22:25uncertainty of principles and
00:22:28The chaotic principles of the unconscious the yearning for truth and its collision with social prejudices. I mean, it's just absolutely
00:22:36Wild and does this is an absolute treasure trove for all of humanity
00:22:43going forward for all time and
00:22:45And you know Freud wrote in quite a bit of detail about his
00:22:52patients and he was a doctor of the course and a cocaine dealer and cocaine pusher and
00:22:58Of course, this is not therapy and I'm certainly no psychologist
00:23:02but it is a pretty unique look at how philosophy can dive deep into the psyche and
00:23:09Pull the chaos apart to find all of the beautiful principles
00:23:13Attacked and suppressed by society as a whole. It's just an amazing amazing thing. So I do thank everyone for
00:23:19allowing this to exist and
00:23:22To be available to the world forever. I mean I take it enormously enormously seriously
00:23:30All right, so I'm happy to hear more if anybody else has any other questions comments or if you want to continue I'm
00:23:35Certainly happy to listen
00:23:38Maybe I'll give somebody else a chance for a moment
00:23:41If not
00:23:43I'll ask something else
00:23:53I'm sorry to ask such a silly question. But is there all preferable subject matters?
00:24:01I'm sorry. I'm joining a little late. What are the preferable subject matters you're covering here?
00:24:08Whatever you like it's your call. Oh, man
00:24:18No, sorry, I thought you had a subject matter I might
00:24:21Racking my mind because I have so many things that
00:24:25Cross it over like every day and now that I'm on the spot, like I have a great opportunity
00:24:30Trying to figure out. Um, okay, you know what?
00:24:33I
00:24:35Had a discussion recently
00:24:38epistemology and free will and
00:24:43Is a little stumped on what what would you say it means?
00:24:51Should I maybe I should elaborate I
00:24:54Come from the objectivist camp when it comes to epistemology, but somebody said that we're contextualists
00:25:00Contextualists
00:25:02Rather than fact of and I thought that was really interesting and it caused a serious dilemma for me
00:25:07I was basically told that or basically the objectivist would hold that if we
00:25:13Say we know something is true, but we find out later that it was false
00:25:19We have to hold that we knew it was
00:25:21We did have knowledge of both truth and falsehood falsehood in both instances when we were originally wrong
00:25:28And when we learned that we were correct
00:25:31But I disagree with that. I don't I don't like that idea
00:25:35because if you say you knew that was true in the first place and it
00:25:41Obviously, you know, he came out to be false and you have a contradiction. You didn't actually know it
00:25:44I guess the objectivist bite the bullet and say they didn't know it. I
00:25:49Don't know if that's very clear, but I have I guess what I'm expressing is I have a dilemma with that and I to my understanding
00:25:58That is not factive is what I was told
00:26:01Have you heard that term in reference? What does what does factive mean? That's a word. I'm not particularly familiar
00:26:08It was new to me too, essentially
00:26:10in this in a fact of epistemology, it would be that like we
00:26:16do act like we do have certainty of the truth and that like
00:26:21Your clear knowledge claim is dependent on the fact that actually maps on to reality
00:26:27So like to give an example, you know
00:26:30We would probably say yeah, I actually do know that there's no teapot orbiting Mars, right?
00:26:35Because well, I have no evidence to suggest such a thing but in the scenario where no, but you couldn't you couldn't say that
00:26:42Sorry, but you couldn't say you have certain knowledge that there's no teapot orbiting March Mars
00:26:46Okay, because it's something that could exist it's it's potentially true and if something is potentially true you can't discount it
00:26:54Unless you've scoured right? Like if you if you had some amazing scouring
00:26:59X-ray robot that could circle all of Mars and make sure that there was no teapot then you could say that
00:27:05But you and I can't say there's no teapot circling Mars
00:27:10What would you
00:27:12What would you
00:27:14We can say we can say we can say there's no square circle circling Mars for sure
00:27:20Because that's a contradictory but teapot. It's not a self-contradictory entity and could there be a teapot circling Mars?
00:27:26Yes, would I would I bet a lot of money that there is I would not right but you know that there could be I mean
00:27:32It could be some space alien that would have a cup holder that got jettisoned in some long ago flight
00:27:37I mean who knows right whatever whatever could be the case
00:27:41but it is not
00:27:43Impossible and therefore it is possible. That's almost tautological, right?
00:27:47Like it's not impossible and therefore it's possible and therefore we can't say it's impossible
00:27:52so
00:27:55I totally get that. Um, would you define like knowledge differently than the objective is to
00:28:02Well
00:28:06Well, it's been a while since I've read an introduction to objectivist epistemology, but knowledge is
00:28:16A tricky it's a tricky word, right? Because if if I have knowledge of a dream that I had last night
00:28:21I can't prove it, right?
00:28:23But that doesn't invalidate my knowledge, right? So if I dreamed about a teacup orbiting Mars last night, I
00:28:30Can't prove that
00:28:31But that doesn't invalidate my knowledge if that makes sense
00:28:35Like you you could go to a therapist if you wanted you could make up a dream every day
00:28:38If the therapist is really keen on analyzing your dreams and the therapist would have to trust you, right?
00:28:43And and if you were to say to the therapist did your client have that dream last night?
00:28:49About the polar bear and the therapist would check his notes right and would say oh, yeah
00:28:54Yeah, we just we discussed our my patients dream about the polar bear, right and
00:29:00Then you would say well
00:29:01What's the proof you have that your patient did in fact dream about a polar bear and say what's right here in my notes?
00:29:07It's like yes, but that's what the that's what the patient told you
00:29:10But you don't have proof that that's what the patient actually dreamt about does that mean so you wouldn't know for sure
00:29:15You just have to trust
00:29:16you'd have to trust the honesty of the patient and you'd also have to trust the
00:29:20Incentives that it would be rather a huge waste of time and money to go to a therapist and talk about dreams
00:29:24you never had because that would be
00:29:27That would be like, yeah
00:29:28I mean, I guess you could get a hypochondriac who would go to a doctor and complain about aches and pains that didn't really exist
00:29:33But for to make up dreams to a therapist would be a huge waste of time
00:29:37So we have to say that the probability that the patient is lying about the dream would be pretty low
00:29:43But we wouldn't so we would that would be not knowledge that it would not be impossible
00:29:47It certainly is possible to dream about a polar bear and we certainly would say that
00:29:53incentives would
00:29:56cause
00:29:57The patient to tell the truth or the client to tell the truth about the dream about the polar bear
00:30:02but we wouldn't have certain knowledge we would have to act on that as
00:30:07A
00:30:08true beyond a reasonable doubt
00:30:11right, I mean
00:30:12So true beyond a reasonable doubt. So if if I were to say
00:30:17You know if if somebody was a therapist
00:30:19and it was in the notes that the patient had a dream about
00:30:22reported having a dream about a polar bear and you spent lots of time talking about it and it turns out that
00:30:27you know it had
00:30:30It had real relevance to his life
00:30:32He'd just seen a polar bear and you know his mother his grandmother had big white snowy hair like whatever like they all
00:30:38Sort of fit together
00:30:39Then that would be proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Would it be absolutely certain knowledge?
00:30:44No
00:30:45It would not be absolutely
00:30:47certain knowledge
00:30:49but it would be proof beyond a reasonable doubt and we would need to
00:30:52Anticipate that right in the same way. Is it possible?
00:30:56That someone you hate
00:30:59Recognized you in a restaurant told the chef and the chef put some poison in your food. Yeah, I mean it's possible
00:31:05It's possible. You can't you can't say a hundred percent. It's impossible
00:31:09But we go to restaurants and we eat, you know, we eat the food, right?
00:31:13So there's a probability knowledge
00:31:16Which we operate on?
00:31:18Uh all the time, right? I mean, we don't know for certain we're going to get a job
00:31:21But we still apply for the job
00:31:23We don't know for certain if the girl we're going to ask out is going to go out with us
00:31:25but we ask her out anyway, so it's sort of probabilistic knowledge sort of weighing the
00:31:30Odds and we're very well designed
00:31:32For that right animals are very well designed
00:31:35to weigh the odds, right so
00:31:37Lions creep creep close enough to the zebras that they can take the zebras down
00:31:41But they're never certain that they will zebras could run they could take a hoof to the face so animals are very good at
00:31:47Figuring out probabilities and so and so are we?
00:31:51And so I I would not bet a single thin dime on there being a teacup ordering orbiting mars
00:31:57and you could of course argue
00:32:00that
00:32:02There's no way
00:32:04That a teacup could be or could be orbiting mars because again it
00:32:09Not again, but for the first time it depends on your definition of a teacup if there's something that looks like a teacup
00:32:17But is actually a toilet for the they just
00:32:20Space aliens happen to have toilets that look like teacups, right?
00:32:23Is it a teacup or a toilet?
00:32:25You know, you've probably seen there's this meme
00:32:28about some
00:32:30ancient
00:32:31Two ancient men talking about some incomprehensible
00:32:34dice mechanism or whatever and it's like
00:32:36This is a great game we should write it down and they'll be like no they'll you know
00:32:41If they find this in 5 000 years, they'll totally be able to figure out what it is
00:32:44And then archaeologists saying like we have no idea what they're doing, right?
00:32:48So is it a teacup or a toilet?
00:32:50Well for the alien it would be a toilet, but maybe it looks like a teacup to us
00:32:54So then if you say well the teacup
00:32:56is designed for the purposes of
00:32:59Uh drinking tea and therefore it has to be earthbound because tea is on earth
00:33:03If it's some other alien plant that they brew it's not tea because it's an alien plant which would have a different categorization and so on
00:33:10so you could say
00:33:12that
00:33:14A teacup like no, no, no alien. Sorry. No, no human spaceship has ever gone past
00:33:21Mars
00:33:23With a teacup because the only things that have gone past mars have been probes which have no people on them
00:33:27And therefore there are no teacups and even if there was a teacup on it
00:33:30It wouldn't have been jettisoned because there's no avenue by which a teacup even if it was stored in the
00:33:35Probe would get out of the so then you'd say okay. There's no teacup
00:33:39Around mars there may be something that looks like a teacup
00:33:41There may be something that is even used as a cup to brew some alien plant to drink
00:33:46But that's not a teacup because tea is an earth thing, right?
00:33:50So then we would say if that's our definition. Yeah, there's no I would be I'd be very comfortable saying there is no teacup orbiting
00:33:57Mars because teacup is a human invention and there's no human invention that has been put around
00:34:02Mars now you could say ah, yes, but you know a hundred thousand years ago
00:34:06There was an a civilization that that uh has been lost to all of us that had advanced technology and so on
00:34:12It's like yeah, but there's no there's no evidence that there was such an advanced civilization
00:34:16and
00:34:17There certainly would be evidence if you think about our civilization
00:34:21A hundred thousand years from now, there'd be tons of evidence that we were here and what we did and so on
00:34:25So, uh, yeah, so so knowledge. Yeah, certainly knowledge is
00:34:30when
00:34:32The concepts in your mind accord with the facts of reality
00:34:37And some of those facts of reality are directly observable, right?
00:34:42Is there
00:34:44a planetoid orbiting
00:34:47The earth called the moon. Yes, we see it every night
00:34:51And is it orbiting yes because the math checks out and and you know, we we go around the sun the sun goes around the
00:34:57Galaxy and so on right? So yes, we can directly observe that if it's
00:35:02Did it is my knowledge?
00:35:05that my patient
00:35:08Dreamed of a polar bear if i'm a therapist, right?
00:35:11Well, no
00:35:13because I can't prove that but
00:35:16I do have notes where my patient
00:35:18Said he dreamt of a polar bear
00:35:20So my knowledge is not that my patient dreamt of a polar bear
00:35:23We just use that as a shorthand
00:35:25My knowledge is that my patient told me he dreamed of a polar bear
00:35:29And we got amazing insights and it really helped him and moved his life forward and he ended up asking out the girl
00:35:33He thought might have a chilly heart because he understood the nature of the polar bear and his dream
00:35:37All these sort of number of things, right?
00:35:39So we use our shorthand
00:35:42for things all the time
00:35:44All the time
00:35:46And you know do I know for a simple fact that you are not a very cunning ai
00:35:53Well, it seems unlikely. Um, because we're actually having a conversation that would be beyond the realm of an ai to handle
00:35:59May I interject or ask some questions?
00:36:02Uh, yeah, go for it. So
00:36:04I like using
00:36:06The definition of knowledge that you just proposed and um, does that sound coming from you?
00:36:12Yeah, somebody's got if you're not if you're like running water and stuff, can't you just do me a solid be basically polite and just mute
00:36:22All right, i'm, sorry go ahead
00:36:24I'm, sorry. Can you hear me?
00:36:26My apologies. I got a phone call. Let me
00:36:29Tune those things out, uh, or make them not come in. All right. Um, so
00:36:33Sorry, uh, james. Can you sorry james? Is there any way you can find out who's got the squeaking and taps and
00:36:38That kind of work, sorry
00:36:40Okay, so thank you. Oh, yeah, I like uh, I like the definition of knowledge you gave. Um, that like the
00:36:49I guess concepts in our mind accord with reality. I believe that is what like the person I was talking to described as fact of
00:36:55Um, whereas I guess an objectivist epistemology. Okay, but sorry, why do why do we need I?
00:37:01You know, there's that old emerson quote beware of any enterprise that requires the purchase of new clothes
00:37:06Enterprise that requires the purchase of new clothes. Well also beware of any argument that requires the invention of new words
00:37:13Yeah, so why do we need factive?
00:37:17It seems like it seems like a specialized term when we already have knowledge accurate facts are true because um
00:37:24in this context he was
00:37:28Waiting on against objectivist epistemology, which like I said, they have the dilemma
00:37:33I view it as a dilemma that they have to bite the bullet. Sorry. No, no, no. No, sorry. Sorry to be annoying
00:37:39But if you're opposing an argument, I don't still don't see why you need to invent a new word. Uh
00:37:45I don't know. I maybe I won't defend that point in particular. I don't know. Um
00:37:50No, I just I just if the word just means knowledge. I don't know why you need the word
00:37:54I'm not accusing you of this. I know you didn't invent the word but it seems kind of pretentious. Yeah, I mean
00:37:59To to invent a new word when you're opposing an argument if the argument is false then
00:38:03Just I suppose it would be because there are different
00:38:06beliefs about epistemology, right and they're just
00:38:09contending, uh
00:38:11You should maybe there's an argument for classifying them with a particular word
00:38:16Like like he said that
00:38:18That that's not no, that's not that's not answering the objection though. The objection is why do you need a new word?
00:38:24And
00:38:25It may and like if you don't know that's fine, right if you don't know why we need a new word
00:38:29maybe there's some
00:38:30It just it seems odd that you would need to learn a new word
00:38:34in order to
00:38:36Make an argument
00:38:38and and I my my my spider sense doth tingle about that like that just seems like
00:38:44kind of
00:38:45Kind of cheaty perhaps. Um, you know, if I if I want to talk about morals and I invent the word ethic ish
00:38:51I don't think I'm I don't think I'm clarifying too much
00:38:55But so maybe we can just cast that word aside and use whatever synonym. Yeah, that's fine. Um,
00:39:01so
00:39:04In objectivist epistemology, they would say that possible means you have evidence
00:39:10uh for that particular thing and these people I was talking with, uh
00:39:16said that they they make a distinction between
00:39:19Physically possible
00:39:21Logically possible and I think they even had other ones too. And maybe that would get your spidey senses tingling too
00:39:28But um, I mean first off I should ask have you heard people make these distinctions they say well, I mean it's physically possible that uh,
00:39:35The team up's orbiting Mars. Therefore it might be the case or um, I even had someone say something really insane to me
00:39:41they said that it's um
00:39:44Not physically possible for a blue for a ball to be blue all over while also not being blue all over but that is logically
00:39:50possible and that I just I don't even
00:39:53I can't even comprehend why they were doing this. They were I guess they were arguing against sorry
00:39:57Do they mean so well, hang on but not blue could include shiny oily
00:40:01like if it did they mean not in the category or is it possible for a
00:40:05ball to be both
00:40:07Blue and red without the cheat called purple, right?
00:40:10Is it possible for a ball to be blue and red at the same time?
00:40:14Well, that would be a contradiction that would be to say that the same object has
00:40:18Two completely different wavelengths and that would not be the yeah, so I I agree so they would their
00:40:23view
00:40:25Is that this is not physically possible, but that somehow it's logically possible and they were trying to contend against
00:40:32Classical laws of logic they were using. Um, I forget the term you're probably familiar with it. Uh, uh
00:40:38But they essentially believe in true contradictions, um, which was a very weird thing to grasp. Um
00:40:48Yeah, no, I I've heard of this sorry, I mean I'm I know that this is a prejudicial term but
00:40:52I've heard of this kind of nonsense. It is nonsense. Yeah, you know, I've disproven logic
00:40:56I've you know, it's like no you can't disprove logic because you'd have to use logic to disprove logic
00:41:02and
00:41:03Logic doesn't break down like physics into quantum physics where there's all this weird shit going on like logic is logic
00:41:09and so
00:41:11The idea that you can break it into subatomic particles where things contradict each other
00:41:16In the way that you know matter seems to freak out down at the quantum level
00:41:20That's not logic logic of principles. Then it's not matter
00:41:23yeah, and
00:41:25even if we accept the the quantum physics argument that
00:41:29Matter behaves in freaky ways down at the very bottom of its essence
00:41:32It doesn't do so at any level that approaches sense perception, which is what we build logic from we build logic from sense perception
00:41:39and so
00:41:40yeah, the idea that
00:41:43You can have both three
00:41:45and
00:41:47Four coconuts at the same time
00:41:50Um that you that a pile of coconuts can be both three coconuts and four coconuts
00:41:55Maximum at the same time or that coconuts can be both
00:41:59plus three and minus three and they can be
00:42:02Fruits and vegetables and mammals and clouds at the same time. I mean, this is madness
00:42:07I would say you love you might love him, but I think you absolutely hate it, but it's funny
00:42:11Uh, I asked them for a demonstration of a true contradiction
00:42:15I've had a few conversations with these guys. They always surprise me. So they gave me um
00:42:20A quote unquote true contradiction. They said this sentence is false
00:42:25Yeah
00:42:27What does that mean they said that the sentence is false
00:42:31That
00:42:32It's also true. Sorry, bro. I mean you're trying to sorry you're trying to have a discussion with me
00:42:38Are you on a speakerphone wandering around somewhere? I'm trying to like you keep coming and going audio wise
00:42:43We're trying to have an important. I'm sorry. I'm not sure what your mic situation. You hear me well right now
00:42:47I'm, not sure why that's uh happening. I'm using airpods. Maybe I should
00:42:51Switch to speaker
00:42:54No, that's fine, uh, maybe it's just bad bad signal, sorry, I just thought maybe you were wandering around
00:43:00Speakerphone or something. Okay, but i'll step inside so as to not uh,
00:43:04Any wind maybe that's possibly
00:43:07Mudding it up. My apologies. Yeah, i'm just i'm hanging on your every word. Okay, okay
00:43:11I'm step i'm stepping inside i'll reiterate what I said shortly, uh, or briefly
00:43:17No, I think I understood. So the statement is
00:43:20This sentence is false. Yeah. Yes
00:43:23I
00:43:25But that's not a logical thought I mean it doesn't really that's not an argument
00:43:30I I hardly understand what the point is being made there. Um
00:43:35Like I asked what would make it so that the sentence is false
00:43:40But the sentence needs to have a subject a sentence itself cannot be true or false on the same thing you can't evaluate
00:43:46Yeah, you can't evaluate
00:43:49It's like saying is this person guilty it's like of what according to what standard are you what kind of guilt are you talking about criminal
00:43:55Civil moral conscience, right? Like you can't evaluate a statement with such little information
00:44:02So if somebody says this sentence is false
00:44:06Well falsehood does not refer to a sentence
00:44:10falsehood
00:44:12Refers to an assertion of truth that can be proven and this this sentence is false is not
00:44:21the proposition
00:44:23Of a truth statement that can be evaluated. So it is a meaningless sentence
00:44:28Yes, uh, I heard
00:44:30Uh harry vinswinger basically come to the same conclusion that like the fact that it's self-referential
00:44:36Doesn't denote anything. Uh, there's there's no truth or falseness to it
00:44:41it's just he said it's equivalent to just
00:44:44Making sounds with your mouth
00:44:49Yeah, so for something to be true it has to reference something other than itself
00:44:55And the sentence doesn't reference
00:44:57anything other than itself
00:45:00And so how can we evaluate whether something is true or false when it makes no true or false?
00:45:05Claim that is outside its own syntax
00:45:08Yes
00:45:09Now if you say
00:45:11It is true that the world is banana shaped. Okay
00:45:14well now we can evaluate that because you're making a truth statement that is verifiable independent of the
00:45:20syntax of the sentence
00:45:23But this this sentence is false
00:45:25A sentence cannot be true or false
00:45:28great
00:45:30It's like saying this
00:45:31This leaf is guilty
00:45:34Like a nonsense sentence a sentence itself cannot be true or false
00:45:40Qua it being a sentence it can be true or false when it makes a claim
00:45:45About a verifiable external truth of falsehood, right?
00:45:49So if you say if you point at a tree and say this is a tree
00:45:53well
00:45:54Now you can evaluate it because the sentence is pointing at something that is not just the sentence
00:45:59But if you say this sentence is false
00:46:02You are not making a true or a false
00:46:07Claim you are simply making a self-referential statement
00:46:10That is missing the criteria or standard by which you would even be able to evaluate whether something is true or false
00:46:15Which is reference to something outside itself that can be independently verified
00:46:19Either through reason or evidence or both. So yeah, it is a meaningless
00:46:25Statement and it's just one of these it's one of these sort of tragic sophistricks to make people think oh
00:46:31Oh, okay. I guess there is no such thing as reason right? It's just really it's kind of demonic. Yeah, absolutely. Um,
00:46:38You know if you're if you're smart enough to come up with that kind of
00:46:41trap
00:46:43Then you should be using your powers for good not you
00:46:45Of course, I know it's not your trap
00:46:47But yeah, you should be using your powers to educate rather than yeah, I agree
00:46:50I mean I ask like how does this apply to the real world because um, I guess this is
00:46:56This is the analytic synthetic dichotomy that like you can have statements that are not connected to reality and
00:47:02i'm, not super like
00:47:04under I don't know the like
00:47:06Like the um fine details about the analytic synthetic dichotomy, but to my understanding this is what they were doing
00:47:12um
00:47:14Okay, well, let me let me give you another statement right um klingons are prone to heart disease
00:47:22Yeah, that would be um
00:47:24Nothing because there's no such thing as a klingon
00:47:28Right, so there's no external test for a self-referential statement. Yes, that's uh,
00:47:37Uh orcs in dungeons and dragons now you could say now if you say orcs have an armor class of 12
00:47:44Well orcs don't exist in armor class as a made-up concept
00:47:46So now but so that's one thing if you were to say though in dungeons and dragons orcs have an armor class of 12
00:47:52Okay, well you can go and look it up
00:47:54And find out whether that's true or not. So if you're if you're trying to reference orcs as real
00:47:59Your statement is meaningless
00:48:02But if you're trying to reference orcs as a fictional
00:48:05Entity in dungeons and dragons that have particular statistics then sure
00:48:09Then then you can look that up and you can verify that
00:48:13Yes, um, I don't want to take up the floor too much in case anybody's interested. But uh,
00:48:18No, no, no go are you kidding me? I love epistemology. Awesome. Yeah, this is this is a thrill. Okay
00:48:23Um, so the knowledge thing
00:48:25as I said before like the objectivists have to bite the bullet that they knew
00:48:30for certain this
00:48:32X was true
00:48:34Because there was no evidence to the contrary essentially, but if they find out that they were wrong
00:48:39Well, then they now know that that wasn't the case
00:48:42But they would have to say that they knew it beforehand and knew it afterwards which
00:48:47Again, that's a contradiction and I don't know how that could
00:48:50No, but uh, sorry to interrupt
00:48:52So I know I know what the objectivists are fighting tooth and nail for here and I I sort of respect the goal
00:48:57But I don't respect the solution
00:49:00so
00:49:01Okay, so so the way that it works is something like this
00:49:05Well, you know scientists once were convinced that the world was flat and it turned out they were wrong
00:49:11Scientists were once convinced that there was such a thing as ether and it turns out they were wrong
00:49:16scientists once believed the world was 6 000 years old and it turns out scientists once believed the earth was right and this is um,
00:49:23Memorably put forward believe it or not in a sitcom called friends
00:49:29Where ross is a paleontologist
00:49:33And his friend phoebe is like a kind of hippie dippy masseuse
00:49:37Flaky is a crumbling pie
00:49:42And
00:49:46Phoebe says
00:49:48You know what? I'm just wondering if I can play this
00:49:51Maybe it's better for me to play it. I think I can
00:49:54Find this and play it. Give me just a moment because it really is while you do that
00:49:59Fascinating my uh, my friend who was in the call with me and another he was another objectivist
00:50:04He was another objectivist knows a bit more about epistemology than actually quite a bit more than me. Um,
00:50:09he basically
00:50:11Said that
00:50:12If we let go of this standard, we have to default to basically cartesian down
00:50:17And I think that's what you're saying, right? Like, all right. Hang on. Hang on. Here we go. I think we think we're there
00:50:27Okay, phoebe this is it in this briefcase I carry actual scientific facts a
00:50:33Briefcase of facts if you will
00:50:37Some of these fossils are over 200
00:50:40Million years old. Okay. Look before you even start i'm not denying evolution
00:50:45Okay, i'm just saying that it's one of the possibilities. It's the only possibility
00:50:51Okay, can you guys hear that all right
00:50:54Okay. So yeah ross is saying because he's a biologist paleontologist or whatever the heck he is
00:51:00So he's very pro science and very pro
00:51:02Evolution right and phoebe's saying no, I don't buy it right and he's like it's not for you to buy
00:51:07So hang on i'll play a bit more
00:51:11Okay now wasn't there a time when the brightest minds in the world believed that the earth was flat
00:51:17And up until like what 50 years ago?
00:51:19You all thought the atom was the smallest thing until you'd split it open and this like whole mess of crap came out
00:51:25Now
00:51:27Are you telling me that you are so unbelievably arrogant that you can't admit that there's a teeny tiny possibility
00:51:36That you could be wrong about this
00:51:44There might be
00:51:47A teeny
00:51:50Tiny
00:51:53Possibility
00:51:56Can't believe you cave right so she this is funny right because then she's like I can't believe you caved hang on
00:52:05What you just abandoned your whole belief system
00:52:10I mean before I I didn't agree with you, but at least I respected you
00:52:15Tell me how how how are you going to go into work tomorrow?
00:52:18How are you going to face the other science guys how how are you going to face yourself
00:52:27So he basically just gets up and and folds away, right
00:52:31So y'all y'all heard that right
00:52:34Now that was a great moment in in a you know, semi-entertaining sitcom. It was a great moment. And so what?
00:52:42What the objectivists are trying to do is to overcome
00:52:47Cartesian doubt and cartesian doubt is hey, man, you could be wrong about everything
00:52:51You you might you might be a brain in a tank. It could be a matrix like you can't be right about anything
00:52:58and from that
00:53:01You can make anyone doubt anything
00:53:04And yet to doubt everything
00:53:06Is to be insane
00:53:08So this is a brain. This is a brain worm. This is a a mind infection
00:53:14Designed to cripple you with anxiety and doubt
00:53:18Right. So she's saying oh, hey, man scientists have been wrong in the past
00:53:23So you could be wrong now people have been wrong in the past who were absolutely certain now the fact that you're absolutely certain
00:53:31When other people who were also absolutely certain turned out to be completely wrong how
00:53:38How can it be
00:53:41That you can be so certain when everybody who's been certain in the past has also often been proven to be wrong
00:53:48Now that is an absolute attack upon your brain
00:53:52On your sanity on your mental health. It is an absolute assault
00:53:57that
00:54:02Leverages our capacity for truth and uses it against us to drive us mad. I'm not i'm not kidding about any of this stuff
00:54:08It is absolutely toxic
00:54:11And of course the fact is it comes from a woman
00:54:13Towards a male is also not
00:54:17Right. So so no, I mean this is so if you're weak
00:54:22If you're weak all you can do is inflict doubt
00:54:27Right, that's all
00:54:30Like if the cavalry is coming and doing all of these
00:54:33These these things and and you know, you've got this like really violent indigenous population in say south america, right the cavalry or the
00:54:40Conquistadors and so on the coming like you can't fight them. You're weak
00:54:45But what you can do is you can instill doubt
00:54:51Those who are physically weak fight the strong with the infraction of doubt
00:54:56With the infraction of doubt
00:55:00If that makes sense now, this is not an argument this is simply an identification of the power mechanics at play so we'll get
00:55:07to the
00:55:08argument
00:55:10But that's what happens and you know
00:55:12The west is being brought down by the poison of doubt by post-modernism relativism subjectivism and so on right?
00:55:17The people who were conquered by the west couldn't fight back
00:55:21and therefore
00:55:24They have to infect with doubt and that's really what
00:55:30the uh
00:55:31government school system is for now is to
00:55:34inflict doubt
00:55:37Right. Oh, are you proud of your culture? Well slavery and and imperialism and like it's it's oh you well
00:55:45we're going to portray the natives as noble kind and wonderful and you all just infected them with syphilis because you're animals like
00:55:51so it's just
00:55:52doubt
00:55:55And so
00:55:57If you say i'm certain right and this is what ross is going to do is he's going to
00:56:04Say to phoebe here's the evolutionary markers. Here's the facts is the arguments and so on right?
00:56:11Now she
00:56:13Doesn't want to get to the facts
00:56:15Because she's female and of course i'm not characterizing all women like this
00:56:19But it tends to be an argument from physically weaker people who can't impose their will and therefore have to crack other people's will
00:56:26With caustic doubt with toxic doubt, right?
00:56:30So ross comes in and he's gone here. So here's all the evidence
00:56:34Here are all the facts, right?
00:56:40And she doesn't want to look at the facts what she does is she launches an emotional attack
00:56:47Right
00:56:50She says are you so unbelievably arrogant? Well, I don't want to be arrogant
00:56:56Right. Are you so unbelievably arrogant?
00:57:00That you're so certain
00:57:02That you're right
00:57:07That
00:57:09You're going to say 100 when scientists have been wrong in the past so she has an emotional attack
00:57:15and avoids
00:57:16Reviewing the facts
00:57:18Because she's flaky and she's weak-minded
00:57:22And so she launches an attack
00:57:25On
00:57:27Certainty based upon emotions that anybody who's certain is arrogant and mean and bad
00:57:39Now that is a fascinating attack and so
00:57:42What do the objectivists do well the objectivists say something like
00:57:48How do I respond to the argument that people have been certain in the past i'm certain now people have been certain in the past
00:57:54Have been uh have been have turned out to be wrong
00:57:59And therefore my certainty could also turn out to be wrong
00:58:02Well, they say well, even if I turn out to be wrong, i'm still absolutely certain
00:58:06And now that is not
00:58:09That is not valid
00:58:11Agreed right that is not
00:58:15That is not a valid argument
00:58:17Because it's it's you never want to give the premise away
00:58:21Right
00:58:22You never want to give the premise away
00:58:24To the other person so the premise is
00:58:27Scientists have been wrong
00:58:29Because they've been absolutely certain
00:58:34And wrong it's like well the degree to which they're absolutely certain is the degree to which they're not scientists
00:58:41Right, so scientists would say
00:58:45Well, of course the flat the flat earth has been disproven since
00:58:48ancient times right since since the egyptians put the
00:58:52Two different sticks in the ground and were actually ever able to measure the circumference circumference of the world based upon the different shadows
00:58:57In different places of the sticks on the curvature of the earth. So that's been you know
00:59:03cast aside for a long time
00:59:05And then her second example is and you know, didn't you weren't scientists absolutely certain that the smallest
00:59:13Uh aspect of matter was the atom until you opened it up and all this other goop she says came spilling out
00:59:19And I would argue or answer no
00:59:23A scientist who says i'm absolutely certain that the atom is the smallest
00:59:30Chunk of matter is false because he doesn't know that
00:59:35So certainty in the absence of evidence is in fact arrogance
00:59:41Certainty in the absence of evidence is in fact arrogance
00:59:45and so a scientist who says
00:59:48Well, i'm absolutely certain the smallest chunk of matter is an atom
00:59:53Is a bad scientist because he's making claims about
00:59:57The almost infinite regression of smaller bits within matter saying that he knows that this is the end point when he doesn't
01:00:03So yes people should not
01:00:05Say things are absolutely true without evidence and a scientist should know that most of all now what he can say
01:00:11Is the atom like prior to the quarks and and quantum physics and so on?
01:00:15He can say the atom is the smallest piece of matter we found
01:00:18It's the smallest piece of matter we know of
01:00:22Okay, well that's that's a true statement it is in fact now but if you say there's nothing smaller you can't prove that
01:00:28You don't know that you don't have the instrumentation and of course
01:00:32science still doesn't have its physics still doesn't have its unified field theory that ties together gravitation and
01:00:38Radiation and weak and strong atomic forces and gravity lets us have that right?
01:00:42So there's a lot still to learn in the realm of physics
01:00:45May I throw an example?
01:00:49What if do you think it's valid for
01:00:52uh scientists or anybody to say
01:00:54Well, we know for certain that uh matter cannot be created or destroyed
01:01:04Ah, that's an interesting question
01:01:09I think
01:01:11it is
01:01:12fair to say
01:01:13That matter cannot be created or destroyed
01:01:16Only converted back and forth to energy you can say that because if matter were destroyed
01:01:24the
01:01:26Material would have to go somewhere, right?
01:01:29Right. So, you know, everybody knows you you blow up a ship. You just get lots of little bits of ship, right?
01:01:33The ship is still there. It's just disassembled right? Like you drop the lego. You still have all the lego pieces
01:01:37They're just no longer assembled, right?
01:01:40So for matter to be destroyed
01:01:43would mean that
01:01:44it
01:01:46left
01:01:47no
01:01:48This material plane so to speak in which case it would be well, where did it go?
01:01:52The standard could be that it just no longer exists
01:01:58Uh, well then the question is where did it go
01:02:05Um
01:02:06if I was trying to take like the position that like of uncertainty here i'd say something like
01:02:11Oh, it just ceased to exist. It doesn't go anywhere because it it can't if it doesn't exist now
01:02:17This is crazy, well, no, but it has to go somewhere. No. No it something has to go somewhere
01:02:23something can't just cease to exist
01:02:27And there's no evidence in in any science or theory or or practical evidence. There's no evidence
01:02:33That something just ceases to exist now
01:02:37Maybe you could say it goes to another dimension, right?
01:02:41It winks out of our dimension and rematerializes in some other dimension
01:02:46But that would be the equivalent of saying it ceases to exist because there'd be no evidence for it in another dimension
01:02:51So saying it winks into another dimension is saying that it still exists just somewhere else
01:02:57so
01:02:58The question would be how could something that exists?
01:03:03simply
01:03:04Cease to exist. Where would it go? Like where would the atoms go?
01:03:07Where would the quarks go? Where would the electrons and where would it go? It's there
01:03:13So where would it go?
01:03:14How could it just
01:03:16cease to exist and there's so all theory all practice and just basic common sense tells us that this is not
01:03:23Not the case. It has to be somewhere
01:03:27I agree
01:03:30Because that is to say that that which is
01:03:32Can cease to be is
01:03:34In what method in what method?
01:03:36Right without like just simply winking out of out of existence on what standard?
01:03:41Yeah, I can't even like pretend to take that argument very far actually
01:03:47Well, and as somebody points out as meanwhile, even if you annihilate matter with antimatter you get radiation as a product sure
01:03:52I mean, so then it's converted into energy, right?
01:03:55antimatter, so
01:03:57I would
01:03:59if somebody were to say
01:04:01Can you be absolutely certain that matter can neither be created nor destroyed but simply converted?
01:04:06From matter to energy and or and back again
01:04:10I would say I am certain of that
01:04:12For both practical and theoretical reasons now if someone were to say, ah, yes, but
01:04:20Scientists have been certain about things in the past
01:04:23My argument would be to the degree to which they are scientists
01:04:30All claims of certainty about things which prove to be false are invalid claims
01:04:36Invalid claims
01:04:39So if some guy calling himself a scientist
01:04:43A couple of thousand years ago says the earth is flat and I know for certain and i'm 100 certain then he's not a scientist
01:04:51If somebody said the atom
01:04:54Is beyond any shadow of a doubt the very smallest component?
01:04:59of matter that could possibly exist then he would not be a scientist he would be
01:05:03Acting as a mystic he would be acting as somebody who's superstitious who is taking something on faith
01:05:08I don't even know that the quarks or whatever bits are going on beneath the atom. I don't even know that they're the smallest
01:05:14Bits of that. I don't know
01:05:15Right. I mean and any scientist who says he knows for sure I think is not following science if like, um
01:05:23And again at any point in time is that somebody else wants to talk or you want to take other questions
01:05:28No, no. No, so this is good stuff
01:05:30I'm just trying to think of these like absurd scenarios. Like what if uh, someone was to posit to you they said, uh
01:05:38And you you've seen like, uh, the the men in black movies, right
01:05:43Remember I think it's like the end of the second one where like they close the lockers and like that and it's just like all these
01:05:50Universes one thing's bigger than the other and then so on. Um
01:05:55Uh, I don't know if i'm drawing the scenario, right? Um
01:05:59What if somebody posited to you that like earth or our entire universe is just like a speck of dust and
01:06:04On top of that there's another speck of dust and it's uh, another set of universes and so on
01:06:09um
01:06:11would
01:06:12Yeah, like spider-man across the multiverse, right?
01:06:15Yeah, I get that no and every every stoner i've ever talked to has had the thought at one time or another
01:06:21It's like hey, man
01:06:22You ever notice that the atom kind of looks like the solar system like what if you're just an atom in someone's couch, man
01:06:27you know, it's like
01:06:29Like, you know, every everybody's gonna had
01:06:32that thought
01:06:33And of course the argument against that
01:06:37Would be that ant atoms are not infinitely regressive. In other words atoms are not made up of atoms
01:06:43Like that would be a contradiction in terms
01:06:46I I would agree like a house is made up of bricks
01:06:48But a house can't be made up of a house because the house is the house
01:06:52I'm, you know, i'm made up of cells. I am not made up of myself because that's tautology
01:06:58That's saying I I am I am rather than I am made of
01:07:02a sentence is made up
01:07:03of phonemes and
01:07:05Words and and morphemes and so on but a sentence is not made up of a sentence, right? I mean, that's that's tautology. Let's
01:07:13So atoms cannot be made up of atoms. Um, I I
01:07:17Because atoms are a category of existence to do with scale
01:07:21And atoms cannot be made up with atoms and therefore we cannot be an atom in a couch somewhere because
01:07:28Atoms can't be made up of atoms. Yeah, uh, let's say I formulated it in a way that didn't require an infinite regression
01:07:34maybe I just said
01:07:36Uh, we're it is a finite universe, but we just happen to be an atom in a couch
01:07:44It is a finite universe, but we just had well then the language would be incorrect since at since atoms
01:07:51Cannot make up atoms. We cannot be a couch because that is to say that
01:07:57you know, obviously the uh, there's the solar system is untold hundreds of trillions of zillions of whatever of atoms and
01:08:05Therefore you would be saying that the atom in the couch is made up of untold trillions of atoms
01:08:10Which would be a contradiction in terms because then you couldn't refer to them as atoms, right?
01:08:14Like I can't say each brick is a house and you put enough of them together. You get a house
01:08:21Like each brick is a component of a house and you get enough bricks together
01:08:24You get a house, but the brick is not a house, right?
01:08:27Because then you're saying that the house is made up of tens of thousands of houses
01:08:32Well, then you've got a category error, right?
01:08:38If I switch the terminology would that make it any better what if I just said we're
01:08:44our
01:08:45What we experience is um
01:08:48I
01:08:50Don't know insert word x right instead of calling an atom. We're just this like tiny piece of existence on some couch
01:08:58um
01:09:00I don't know how else I could possibly formulate that
01:09:03Well, no, so so then I mean that's fine. People can say whatever they want and then I would say
01:09:09that the statement needs to be
01:09:12Provable or falsifiable in order to be evaluated
01:09:17So, how would we know that we are atoms in a couch
01:09:25And and if the person has no standard
01:09:28by which
01:09:30the proposition
01:09:31Can be proven or disproven
01:09:35Then it is bullshit stoner speak
01:09:39That's actually okay. Yeah
01:09:41Um, so what what do you take? Where do you what do you take the conversation when they say? Well
01:09:46of course, I can't like prove it but I mean it's possible right like
01:09:49No out of this. This is where we have to draw this like fine
01:09:52Well, no, no possible no possible
01:09:54So possible implies proof I agree if something can never be proven it is not in the realm of true or false. It is just
01:10:02dead-eyed stoner speak
01:10:06It it cannot be evaluated as to truth or falsehood
01:10:10So it's sort of like is it possible that the last dream that augustus caesar had before he was murdered
01:10:17Was of a seahorse
01:10:20Right
01:10:22Well, I suppose it's possible
01:10:24Can it ever be proven?
01:10:27No
01:10:29It can never be proven. So
01:10:32It is not something that a sane person spends time evaluating you see a sane person
01:10:38And now of course another so a sane person would not spend time
01:10:42Thinking about that which could never be proven in the realm of truth. Now if you were to write a story about
01:10:49Caesar and it was really important. They had a dream about a seahorse. You could make it up or whatever, but
01:10:53But would if somebody said man, i'm really obsessed about the idea
01:10:57Of did caesar dream of a seahorse before he was murdered?
01:11:01You'd say you know, there's lots of important things to talk about and think about in the world
01:11:06This is not one of them, right
01:11:10So to reference the teapot again, uh around mars
01:11:16When you say the word possible
01:11:18I don't know if you recall
01:11:21I mentioned earlier that these
01:11:23People I was uh mentioning to you. They use the word possible in different fashions
01:11:28um and an objectivist epistemology, I think already said this I don't remember but
01:11:32Uh possible means that there is evidence to suggest
01:11:36That this may be the case
01:11:38When you say the word possible, do you have the same understanding or a different one?
01:11:44Well, I did kind of modify the argument, uh as I sort of thought about it more so the first is
01:11:49Is it a contradiction in terms for there to be a teapot orbiting mars?
01:11:55No, it's not a contradiction in terms, right
01:11:58Is it a contradiction in terms?
01:12:00For a human being
01:12:02To be living comfortably unaided
01:12:05orbiting mars
01:12:07That is a contradiction
01:12:08right because there's no air and
01:12:11There's no air pressure and right your lungs would explode and like you die, you know in 10 seconds, right or less
01:12:17Does that make sense? So that's a contradiction in terms. So if somebody if somebody were to say to me
01:12:22Is uh, it's possible that there's a human being
01:12:25in his underpants
01:12:27Living comfortably floating around mars I would say no, that's not possible
01:12:33Like completely impossible because by the nature of human beings you could not survive
01:12:41We are we okay with that one right now with regards to the teapot thing
01:12:45If we and I said it depends how you define teapot
01:12:47So you could have something that looks like a teapot that is actually a toilet for space aliens
01:12:51Well, then that's not a teapot. That's just something that looks like a teapot, but it's in fact a toilet, right?
01:12:56And uh that there are no human teapots orbiting mars
01:13:00Because human beings have not left the earth and then you'd say well, but some prior civilization a million years ago
01:13:06Or maybe they left it
01:13:08Okay, but then there wasn't tea back then so it wouldn't be a teapot like almost like by definition a teapot is something
01:13:13Fairly contemporaneous using tea that is in our current ecosystem or whatever, right? So I would say yeah, there's no teapot. So
01:13:23I mean i'm going to modify it a little bit
01:13:26Let's let's say yeah
01:13:28We find out tomorrow that um, some people who were in space
01:13:34Threw a teapot out there because they wanted to
01:13:37For us to debate this hypothetical they do
01:13:41No, no, sorry, but people in space where uh, some people maybe who just like, uh,
01:13:45maybe we find out when the moon landing happened that uh
01:13:49They threw a teapot out into the space
01:13:51No
01:13:53No, but they can't because you couldn't throw a teapot hard enough to escape the gravity of the moon that's true
01:14:01Maybe we find out they launched the teapot through some sort of mechanism
01:14:08um
01:14:09and and maybe in order to
01:14:11I I like how you're narrowing these things down because this is all really important
01:14:15Maybe the the modification here is uh, the teapot is orbiting the moon per se
01:14:19Maybe we'll say that so they launched it at the moon with some mechanism. Um, not so far enough from the moon
01:14:27uh to
01:14:29Directly see it hit. I don't this is tricky. This is really tricky
01:14:33We just find out that as they were leaving the moon, they launched it with some mechanism towards them
01:14:39From there they never cared to see it again, right?
01:14:41um
01:14:42and now we're having the debate and
01:14:45I say yeah, look, it's possible. It's possible. Do you take that?
01:14:53Sorry, would I take that as possible?
01:14:57Yeah, yeah, I would I would certainly take that as more possible than orbiting mars yes, okay. Yeah. Yeah. Um,
01:15:06Although they wouldn't have any actual mechanism for doing that. No, you know what i'm going back to impossible
01:15:10They can't throw it high enough to have it orbit the moon
01:15:13And the uh, the spaceship doesn't have windows that open for obvious reasons, right?
01:15:19So there's no way for them to get the teacup around the moon
01:15:27Okay, so you're firm on no in fact is not a teapot orbiting morse
01:15:35Right
01:15:37Now what I would do then then just if we're having this debate
01:15:40I would use the argument from rank freaking cowardice. Not not to you, but to somebody making this argument, right?
01:15:47So then I would say to that person. What do you think is the worst bigotry that exists in the world?
01:15:53Right, and they would say I don't know virulent racism anti-sem like
01:15:57Homophobia like transphobic like they would say some like what is the worst form of bigotry that you can picture right?
01:16:03right
01:16:07And then I would say
01:16:10Well, isn't it true according to your logic that
01:16:17That bigotry might be good not bad if anything is possible, right?
01:16:24I happen to think bigotries are very bad
01:16:27But isn't it if you think it's possible for a teacup to be orbiting mars? Is it not also possible?
01:16:35That
01:16:37The most virulent bigotry you can think of is actually good
01:16:40right
01:16:43Now what would they say yeah, they would uh, they would repeat that
01:16:49And and also then I would say is it not true that people have had
01:16:55Very strong morals in the past that have turned out to be completely wrong
01:17:03People thought slavery was justified
01:17:06people thought women
01:17:07Were inferior and should not be allowed to own property and vote like there have been endless bigotries throughout history that people thought
01:17:15Were perfectly valid and true that turned out to be false, right?
01:17:21Are you so unbelievably arrogant
01:17:24That although there have been all these bigotries in the past that turned out to be false all the
01:17:29Anti-bigotries all the bigotries against bigotries in the present are absolutely true
01:17:33Like let's let's put some meat on these bones, right? Let's let's make it something practical now if let's say they said, uh,
01:17:40some prejudice, uh, it could be that that prejudice is false, right?
01:17:45Okay, then I would say so
01:17:47Let's go find some people and argue that
01:17:53This is uh, this is good. I like that now would they would they do that?
01:17:58Um, I don't know that they would know how to react to that actual
01:18:02No, they would know exactly how to react to that. What would they do?
01:18:06Um
01:18:08I don't think they would want to go and argue it. I think they would just like asserts that they're correct
01:18:14Right, so then I would say so then don't talk to me about uncertainties
01:18:17Uncertainties because you're absolutely certain about i've employed a similar method when debating, uh,
01:18:23Somebody uh on this because they they'll assure well, they may not know anything, but neither do you and it's like well, I mean
01:18:30How do you know that right? How do you know that you don't know anything and they have to default to an infinite regression?
01:18:37Well, then then if they if they can't be certain of anything then anybody who is certain is their enemy so they need to go
01:18:43to I don't know
01:18:46Some big rally for for some place and then they have to say that the people holding them back
01:18:50Some place and then they have to say that the people holding that rally are wrong. Yeah
01:18:55And they have to go and make a speech against the most deeply held beliefs of the people running that rally
01:18:59Will they do that? They won't they can you?
01:19:02They can even assert that they're they're having like different statements than you right like you could
01:19:08Just tell them like well, actually you're agreeing with me. You don't know that you're disagreeing with me
01:19:12You don't know that the words coming out of your mouth are even the word. No, no
01:19:14I mean I I I get that but I get that sort of intellectual trickery and I I agree with it
01:19:20But i'm just like okay. So if you can't be certain of anything then anybody who's certain of anything
01:19:27Yeah
01:19:28Should you know, I think
01:19:29right, so so tell me where you've
01:19:32taken your belief system
01:19:35and rather than
01:19:37Bullshitting about
01:19:38Fucking teacups and mars like have you gone to some big rally, right?
01:19:44Where people are chanting about like we oppose this bigotry and we oppose that bigotry and have you stood up there and said
01:19:50Y'all are wrong
01:19:52You can't be certain of this
01:19:55Well, you haven't done any of that right you just muck about
01:20:00With teacups and mars bullshit, so you don't believe any of this, you know
01:20:05It's just it's it's uh, you're you're a virus of doubt
01:20:09This is nothing you actually believe I will say unfortunately for those who
01:20:14Really take these conversations to that level about like uncertainty. I would imagine that if they care enough to do that. They probably
01:20:23um would hold the position that morality is subjective, um, and that's
01:20:28I okay fine. So, okay. So morality is subjective
01:20:32So I need to see where you've gone
01:20:35To people who say racism is bad or some phobia is bad and said you're wrong
01:20:41Yeah
01:20:43You're wrong to say that this is objective because that's their argument, right? There's no such thing as objective morality. Therefore
01:20:49You must have countless times gone to people who are pretty aggressive about their moral statements and told them that they're wrong
01:20:56But they never have
01:20:58Because they don't believe any of this crap
01:21:01yeah, I mean like
01:21:03There'd be
01:21:04um
01:21:06I mean, you know, sorry to interrupt, you know what happens when these people get pulled over by the cops
01:21:12What do they say oh, yes, sir. Oh, i'm so sorry sir. Oh, yes, I apologize
01:21:17Oh, I didn't mean to they don't sit there and say hey man speed is relative
01:21:23You don't even know if you exist
01:21:26We could be an atom in a couch and couches can't speed
01:21:30So get lost fascist, you know what I mean? Like they don't say any of that. Yeah. Yeah, I mean
01:21:36It's only it's only doubtful questioning intelligent curious people. It's never people with any actual power
01:21:49Yeah, that's that's uh you
01:21:52You got it there. So I mean hey if you really believe this stuff, why are you talking to me?
01:22:00Um
01:22:04Right, why aren't you up there with the megaphone at this local rally against x y and z
01:22:09And telling them that they're all wrong to be certain
01:22:12Oh because they might beat your ass. Oh suddenly we're back to objective
01:22:16Yeah facts, right?
01:22:18Oh and like obviously you'd see the contradiction too, right if somebody did assault them and they defended themselves
01:22:23I mean it presupposes that they ought defend themselves, right that they think that they ought
01:22:28uh defend themselves
01:22:30No, because I mean they they could they could fight club style let themselves get beaten up and you know, whatever, right?
01:22:35I mean they could I mean that that to me wouldn't be
01:22:38any particular
01:22:39objective test
01:22:41But it's like hey, man
01:22:43If all certainty is wrong
01:22:45You know the number of ideologues who are absolutely certain
01:22:49And act very brutally
01:22:52Because they're so certain
01:22:54And you're screwing around with me and teacups
01:22:57When there are actual tyrants out there oppressing their entire populations based upon the certainty of their political perspectives
01:23:03Why aren't you dealing with them? Oh, that's right because they're big and scary and can inflict negative consequences
01:23:09I just had a thought I mean
01:23:12I I want to reference that statement. I just may um
01:23:15If someone who holds these beliefs, right if they're to defend themselves
01:23:20Like I said, they're presupposing that they ought defend themselves which can be evaluated, right? Um
01:23:26If they didn't think it was objectively the case and it may not actually be objectively the case right like maybe someone's actually
01:23:32um, not assaulting you maybe
01:23:35No, but you know, it's not it's not a moral. Absolutely. No. No. Yeah, I was gonna switch this up
01:23:38I was gonna say I guess to give two examples, right if um
01:23:42There may be a justified reason where somebody hits you because maybe you hit them back, right?
01:23:45but in the case of self-defense the
01:23:48Sorry, sorry. Hang on. Hang on
01:23:50There's a justified reason why someone hits you because you hit them back. Did I say back? I'm sorry
01:23:55My yeah, you said back. Yeah
01:23:57Uh, no problem. That's fine. I just want to make sure I understand
01:24:02I'm not i'm not gonna pick on little slips here and there lord knows. I mean, yeah, so
01:24:05That would be like a justified situation
01:24:07But in the situation where they're being assaulted and they defend themselves
01:24:10The fact that they defend themselves in that moment presupposes that they at least believe they ought to do it and
01:24:17Could you not make the argument again? This is just being formulated
01:24:20No, not that they ought to do it that they have the right to do it
01:24:23Well, do you not do not hold that? Uh, anything you do presupposes that you
01:24:28Think you ought to do it
01:24:31No, I don't think so
01:24:33Oh, so the other person ought not initiate violence against you, but you are not
01:24:39Obligated to defend yourself
01:24:44Because that is to say that the initiation of violence and the response to violence
01:24:49Are under the same moral category of compulsion like you are you are compelled to not initiate force
01:24:54But you can't be compelled to defend yourself because if you're compelled to defend yourself
01:24:58It means violence must be used against you
01:25:01Because violence is being used against you because if you don't defend yourself then violence is being used against you twice
01:25:06Which means double the violence that can't be a good outcome, right?
01:25:09Because you'd have to be violently aggressed against for not defending yourself because it's an obligation
01:25:13To do it. Yeah, let me
01:25:16I want to make sure there's a I have a good understanding of this
01:25:19Let's say take it out of this violent situation. Do you think that?
01:25:24Me having this conversation with you right now. I because i'm doing it. There's the presupposition that I believe I ought to it
01:25:34Well, no, no, but what is different from a compulsion
01:25:39From from that which can be compelled
01:25:42so
01:25:43I mean you wanted to do it
01:25:45But clearly if you were to hang up like in the middle of this conversation
01:25:49I would have no violent recourse. Of course, you haven't violated the non-aggression principle, right might be a little annoying
01:25:55Might be a little rude. Yeah, but it wouldn't be a violation of the non-aggression principle. So you want to do it
01:26:02Now, I think that we ought to you know
01:26:04Respect each other and and try to reach a reasonable accommodation and not lie and not misrepresent
01:26:09There's a sort of standards of behavior sort of aesthetically preferable actions. We should tell the truth and all of that
01:26:15But these are not compelled
01:26:20So for instance, uh if a man is being
01:26:23assaulted
01:26:25He can use violence
01:26:27to defend himself, but he is not
01:26:30He cannot be compelled to use violence to defend himself. It is not
01:26:34an absolute requirement that he use violence because
01:26:39It's his choice and for many people they don't fight back when a guy sticks a gun in their ribs. They just hand over their wallet
01:26:49I I wouldn't compel something they don't have to
01:26:54They have the right to but they don't have to
01:26:57Like a woman who's being sexually assaulted. She has the right
01:27:00to blow the guy's head off
01:27:04But she doesn't I wouldn't throw her in jail if she didn't it's not an absolute obligation
01:27:08I'd throw the guy in jail for sexually assaulting the woman, but I wouldn't if the woman chose
01:27:13Not to defend herself for whatever reason
01:27:17I would not
01:27:19Consider that a violation of
01:27:22An absolute ought it's you know, you have the right to but that doesn't mean you have to like if somebody uh steals a garden gnome
01:27:29from my front yard
01:27:31Am I absolutely obligated to use force to get it back? No, I can just shrug it off and say, ah, you know, whatever
01:27:37I didn't like that garden gnome that much anyway, or it doesn't matter to me or whatever, right?
01:27:41So you don't have to enforce your rights, but you certainly have
01:27:44Just to be clear. I'm I want to make sure i'm being understood
01:27:48So i'm saying any action you take I could be eating a banana. I'm presupposing that I at least think I ought to it
01:27:56You would disagree with that
01:27:58Now ought but to know so ought is is is a tricky word, right?
01:28:03So you prefer to
01:28:05What does it mean ought this ought implies obligation if somebody lends you money you ought to pay it back?
01:28:12If you
01:28:13Want to eat a banana if you're eating a banana clearly you want to but what does it mean to say you ought to?
01:28:18That's an obligation. That's a requirement
01:28:20If you borrow a library book you ought to bring it back
01:28:25Right, if you put a dent in someone's car you ought to pay for it to get repaired
01:28:32But if you're just eating a banana because you like bananas, where's the ought that there is a different category here, right maybe
01:28:38Maybe the word okay the way I was thinking of the word
01:28:42Is like synonymous with the word should but maybe that's
01:28:48Okay, so should you now let's let's talk about the word should
01:28:54Let's say that you okay. Let's go to the banana thing. So let's say you have an illness the potassium treats
01:29:01You have a pad potassium deficiency
01:29:03now if you want to
01:29:06Get more potassium you ought to eat a banana. Does that make sense?
01:29:17Are you with me there? Yes. Sorry. Somebody was trying to call me and I had to forward them. I I heard that though
01:29:24Okay, so
01:29:25You ought to eat a banana if you're low on potassium and want to solve it, right?
01:29:30One of the ways to do that is to eat bananas, right?
01:29:32Banana is a potassium rich or something like that, right? Whatever the case is, right?
01:29:36So you ought to if you have a particular goal if you just like the taste of bananas. What does that mean?
01:29:41You ought to do that which
01:29:44Gives you pleasure. Well, the pleasure is enough, right?
01:29:46You don't need an obligation to let's say you hate bananas
01:29:49And that's why you're potassium deficient and your doctor says just eat some bananas. Oh, I don't like them
01:29:53Well, you know, whatever
01:29:55Maybe take a potassium supplement, but the easiest way to get them is through bananas
01:29:58Then he's like, oh you hold your nose and you eat your banana, right?
01:30:01So then you ought to do it. But if you just like really like bananas, but where does the odd come in?
01:30:07Or it has something to do with a resistance, right?
01:30:11It's an obligation that's supposed to overcome a resistance, right? Yeah, okay
01:30:16If I say if I say, you know, when you're having really great sex, you ought to have an orgasm
01:30:21What would that even mean if you want to have an orgasm as part of the great sex thing, right? So
01:30:26So I don't know about the ought but what has something to do with reluctance and overcoming?
01:30:31A desire not to like if somebody lends you money
01:30:34In some ways it's more pleasurable to keep the money and not give it back, right?
01:30:38Do you?
01:30:39So you ought to because you don't in particular want to as a pleasure-based organism, right?
01:30:45Yeah, I okay. Do you
01:30:49Hmm do you believe that there are any presuppositions in human action anything we do?
01:30:58Sorry, what do you mean presuppositions there's a new term for us. Um
01:31:04That's but I like the cunning way you're inserting new terms
01:31:08That's very very cool because we went from should to ought to presuppositions. Yeah, so
01:31:15I'm trying to think of how I would
01:31:18Describe this. I I mean
01:31:25Are there any positive obligations
01:31:29No, no i'm saying that like I I
01:31:34A presupposition would mean that um, there is a belief held and um, that is uh
01:31:42In relation to the action i'm committing
01:31:45So
01:31:48Sorry if that's a little too abstract for me, I don't quite follow
01:31:50yeah, so like
01:31:52if
01:31:54I drink water and eat healthy and I maybe go to the gym
01:31:59um
01:32:00I I would argue that i'm
01:32:02Presupposing or that I I hold the belief
01:32:05um, and which is reflected in my actions that
01:32:08I want to be physically fit
01:32:12uh and healthy
01:32:15Does that make sense
01:32:19Yeah, so this is the if then right
01:32:23Right, are you obligated
01:32:26To eat less food is no you can eat less food
01:32:29You cannot eat less food if you want to lose weight, then you need to eat less food
01:32:33Right to take like if we take all the variables out, right? So if you want to lose weight, then you need to eat
01:32:40Less food, right?
01:32:42Yes, yes
01:32:45Okay, if you use language you have to accept that language has the capacity for meaning
01:32:51Because you can't say you can't make an argument that language has no meaning because you're using language to convey
01:32:56With meaning that language has no capacity to convey meaning which is a contradiction
01:33:00Yes
01:33:01So if you want to debate you have to accept that language has the capacity for meaning
01:33:06And I would call that a presupposition. I mean like even if I wasn't debating right? Let's say I was just
01:33:11Saying hi to you or something right anything I utter well, it's no it's it's an it's an it's a um
01:33:18It's a self-proving proposition
01:33:21Or to deny it would be
01:33:22Self-contradictory, right? So if I say
01:33:26Human beings have no capacity to hear language
01:33:30That would be a self-detonating statement because i'm using your ears to tell you that your ears never work
01:33:36So my argument can be discarded does that make sense? Yes, it does. I have an example i'd like to present to you as well
01:33:43Um, but somebody has their hand raised. Okay, we're we're I feel like i'm not being allowed to build an argument here
01:33:48But okay because I mean there's a lot that comes out of what I just said
01:33:51But if you want to give me another thing, that's fine
01:33:53That's fine
01:34:03I don't mean to interrupt you but go ahead
01:34:06I well i'm
01:34:08I'm trying to process mentally. What is the best path of conversation now?
01:34:12Because maybe it is best the way you're you're no i'm making an argument and you're telling me you agree else
01:34:18I'm trying i'm like a like a halfway through making an argument and you're like, let's do something else and i'm like
01:34:23I'm, sorry, you're right
01:34:25I'm, sorry if you want to
01:34:27continue that um
01:34:30Okay, so a number of things are embedded in the act of conversation, right?
01:34:35So clearly there has to be a self and an other right?
01:34:39You can't say to someone you don't exist
01:34:43Because if you don't believe the other person exists then you wouldn't talk to them, right?
01:34:47So
01:34:49You have to accept a self and another you have to accept an independent consciousness you have to accept an objective reality
01:34:56Between you two you have to accept the validity of the senses you have to accept
01:35:00That language is better than violence
01:35:03Because you're using your words not your fists. You have to accept that language has meaning right? There is an enormous amount
01:35:11That you have to accept as absolute fact
01:35:17to
01:35:19Engage in a conversation
01:35:23Do we do we accept yeah
01:35:26So none of these things that I said and there's more but none of these things can be denied
01:35:31Agreed. Yeah
01:35:32By simply the very act of having a conversation. Does that there's some are we okay on that, right?
01:35:38Okay now
01:35:41In a conversation where you are debating
01:35:45You also have to accept that truth
01:35:48and accuracy
01:35:50Are infinitely preferable to lies
01:35:53inaccuracy and falsehood
01:35:56So if you and I are debating whether the earth is round or flat
01:36:01Implicit in that debate is that having a true
01:36:07Belief about the shape of the world
01:36:10Is infinitely better not just a little better. It's not like 10 better
01:36:14Because the earth being a sphere
01:36:18Is true the earth being flat is false and it's not 10% more true
01:36:24It's infinitely more true
01:36:27Because what is true is infinitely preferable
01:36:30To what is false and so by that I don't mean we say well one out of ten times
01:36:34We'll just let the false thing be be the best
01:36:36It's always infinitely better. It's not a little better
01:36:40So when you have a debate and you correct someone you are saying
01:36:44That truth is infinitely preferable to error
01:36:49And that the means by which truth is ascertained is reason and evidence
01:36:55Because that's what we've been doing, right? We've been using reason analogies evidence facts science, whatever right to to establish our positions, right?
01:37:01so all of the above things about other people existing and
01:37:06Language having meaning and sound existing and the sense organs are valid and so on, right?
01:37:11Right because if I said to you if we were having a big disagreement and I said no no you agreed with me and you said
01:37:15No, I didn't and I said no, that's what I heard
01:37:17You'd say well you heard wrong, right?
01:37:18So you have to accept that language has meaning and the senses operate and are valid right now
01:37:25When you have a debate with someone you are saying
01:37:30Truth is infinitely preferable to falsehood
01:37:36And the means by which truth is established is reason and evidence
01:37:40Because you're not just shooting the guy
01:37:44And you're not saying well
01:37:47Okay, i'll i'll give you this one about the earth being flat but you give me the next one
01:37:52About the sun being bigger than the moon, right? No, you say like it's got to be accurate. It's got to be true
01:37:59And you also are saying that reason and evidence are objective and empirical and you have to say that because
01:38:07You're using language to convey reason using the evidence of the senses which requires an objective medium called reality the air and sound waves and
01:38:15the cochlear
01:38:17Hairs or whatever's going on in the bowels of your ear or something like that, right?
01:38:21So all of these things are implicit. So the ought is
01:38:27Implicit in the very nature of debate, which is why you can't use upb to overthrow upb
01:38:32This is sort of a short short approach to the upb
01:38:37I to be clear. I don't disagree with anything
01:38:40You just said I the only thing is um a lot of those things that like where i'm like if then you said
01:38:45I would have called those
01:38:47presuppositions do you
01:38:49Is there?
01:38:53Do you how do I put this you just
01:38:55Well, you could say conditional statements. You could say presuppositions, but yeah if then
01:39:00But the if then is implicit in the conversation. Yeah, and and uh
01:39:05I would carry this through to like actions, too
01:39:09um
01:39:11I like I said, it could be that I was eating a banana, but maybe I presuppose that I
01:39:16Should eat it. Otherwise, I wouldn't have ate it
01:39:20No, but then we're back to should should has an obligate obligatory
01:39:24Attitude to it. Okay. Okay. Okay
01:39:27Right. You should eat your vegetables, right? But if your kid loves candy, you wouldn't say
01:39:32You should eat your candy right because the kid wants to eat the candy, right? Yeah, so
01:39:45Can I present you another example
01:39:49Sure, um, so there is a uh
01:39:56Way of grounding the nep that i'm not going to go over in its entirety
01:39:59I'm not going to go over in its entirety. There's just like some things that uh
01:40:03Are tied to this exact conversation then I I really like this grounding of the nap. Um, but uh
01:40:10In this argument we we highlight that um, like the
01:40:15Law of the jungle. Um, you're familiar with that phrase or term, right?
01:40:20Okay. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean you could say this is a date you read in tooth and claw
01:40:24Yeah, they're like the sterner right belief that
01:40:27Might makes right
01:40:29okay, so
01:40:30we argue that it's a contradictory position because
01:40:34When the sterner right takes it they're pre when they try to take something from you
01:40:39Uh, they presuppose that they should be the one to control it
01:40:43and um
01:40:46No, I don't know that they do I don't know that that's the might make right argument
01:40:50I think the might makes right argument is I can and I want to therefore i'm going to that should
01:40:56Is a word used by weak people who can't defend their property
01:41:00In the hopes of paralyzing the strong people who want to take it with guilt or shame or like this sort of will to power
01:41:05Argument from nichi, right?
01:41:07So the strong people say hey, man, i'm the viking and you're like the twig armed irish farmer
01:41:13I'm just going to take your shit and I don't have to justify it other than I can and i'm going to
01:41:18But there's no there's no ought I just can't
01:41:21Hmm
01:41:24And you know you resist me if you want and you know, whoever wins wins but uh,
01:41:28yeah, i'm not going to pretend that there is any ought it's just
01:41:32You know, did you say to the lion you ought not to eat the zebra?
01:41:36It's like well if i'm hungry i'm gonna eat the zebra
01:41:38If you want to stop me, you can try and stop me, but that's what's going to happen
01:41:42This is interesting. Um
01:41:44I
01:41:47I will
01:41:49You know, this is the old argument from the ancient general, right? I think it was a roman guy
01:41:53He said stop quoting words to men with swords
01:41:59I i'm going to call upon your memory
01:42:01This is going to be if you can't remember this. It's totally okay. Do you remember a long time ago when uh,
01:42:09david gordon tried
01:42:10Issue, uh giving a rebuttal to upv. I think he did it twice actually if i'm not mistaken
01:42:16Oh, it's terrible. It was really really. Yeah
01:42:19Yeah, that was like embarrassing. He's not really good on ethics. Uh,
01:42:23but um
01:42:25Oh on so many levels. Yeah. Okay, and one of his rebuttals he
01:42:30Referenced something you had said about when a thief takes something
01:42:35There's like a contradiction
01:42:37Um because they're like rejecting property rights by while also trying to affirm them. Do you recall something like that?
01:42:45Oh, I remembered that argument precisely so the argument very briefly is that
01:42:50one of the contradictions involved in stealing something is
01:42:53A thief would not bother stealing
01:42:55something if he knew
01:42:57That another thief was going to steal it from him right away
01:43:01Like why would you borrow?
01:43:02Why would you bother borrowing like spending two weeks to borrow into a bank vault to steal a couple of bars of gold?
01:43:07If you knew for certain that some well-armed mafia gang was going to steal the gold
01:43:13When you came out of the vault, right?
01:43:15Like you wouldn't bother so the thief wishes to both deny and affirm property rights because he wants to take other people's property
01:43:22While retaining control over that property himself, so he wants property rights for himself because he'll be very upset if people steal from him
01:43:28So he both is denying and affirming property rights in the act of stealing now
01:43:33This doesn't mean he's not going to steal but it does mean that there's a logical contradiction in his approach to owner
01:43:38so
01:43:39Yes, i'm fully in agreement with that. Now the thing i'm giving you I would say it's like identical
01:43:46um
01:43:48I guess the issue would be in that like the the presupposition thing. Um,
01:43:53Because this argument about the law of the jungle
01:43:56I'll just read to you a few sentences here is that if there's a dispute between like two individuals, right?
01:44:02Over who should be the one to control property then both those individuals
01:44:06Must presuppose this to be the case that one is asserting that
01:44:10Even though the other can actually control it
01:44:14It should be or it's the case that the one, uh, we'll call people a and b, right?
01:44:19Uh a is saying that even though b could obtain control it
01:44:24A should control it and similarly on the other end b is asserting that even though a might be able to obtain control
01:44:32That he should be the one to control it
01:44:35Is this is this not parallel to what you're saying?
01:44:40No, I don't think there's a contradiction there, right so if
01:44:44Two people both see a chunk of gold. Actually. No, no, go ahead. That wasn't the full argument but uh,
01:44:51That's that's okay. No, it's not innately self-contradictory
01:44:54So let's say you and I are in a stream in alaska
01:44:58And we both see a chunk of gold at the same time and we both reach for it and grapple for it, right?
01:45:04Well, we both believe that we and what a lot of kids always say I saw it first, right
01:45:08Or or sometimes people men in bars. I saw her first or whatever, right?
01:45:12so
01:45:13You and I are both wrestling over this piece of gold, right?
01:45:15Now I think that I should own it you think that you should own it
01:45:19But there's no cont we're not we're not
01:45:22self-contradicting
01:45:23property rights well
01:45:26But if I if if you if you have the gold you found it and it's yours
01:45:30And then I steal it from you then i'm saying
01:45:34You should not have control over your own property
01:45:39But I should retain control over your property that i've stolen
01:45:43So i'm saying that you should not have control over property
01:45:47But I should have control over property. Well, we're both human beings. So we have I have opposite
01:45:52rules
01:45:54for the same class of species
01:45:57Right, which is like saying mammals should be both warm-blooded and cold-blooded at the same time
01:46:00It's like well, you're gonna have to pick a lane there buddy because you know, you can't have both
01:46:05and so if you're gonna say
01:46:07Property rights should be violated for you
01:46:11But property rights should be respected for me
01:46:14That's a contradiction
01:46:15So if I steal the chunk of gold from you and it's legitimately yours
01:46:19I steal the chunk of gold from you and then I wake up the next morning and someone's stolen it from me
01:46:22I'd be outraged
01:46:25Especially if I went through considerable risk and danger to steal the chunk of gold i'd be outraged
01:46:31because
01:46:32I'm saying i'm saying that I want to keep what i've taken from you. Oh
01:46:36That I want to violate your property rights while maintaining my own control of property the property i've stolen
01:46:43So that's a contradiction, right?
01:46:45Property rights should be both violated and affirmed is a contradiction. I agree and this is
01:46:50That argument goes I guess again, like like I said, I think it's very similar to what you're saying
01:46:55it goes a little further and says
01:46:57Part of the contradiction that's occurring is when when they defend that property from somebody else, right? They're
01:47:03Affirming and uh also denying property rights, but also there's the issue that they're conflating possession and ownership
01:47:11um
01:47:12Which are necessarily two distinct things
01:47:15um
01:47:17But anytime while they're controlling the property which
01:47:21um
01:47:22They're defending right? They're both we would I would argue that they're both presupposing a distinction between ownership and possession
01:47:30Yes, they contradict. Well, the thief would the thief would say the thief would say I want to keep what I stole
01:47:35In fact, i'm only stealing it because I want to keep it, right?
01:47:41So you think of a drug addict who steals
01:47:44Something to pay for his drug addiction. Well, what does he do? He takes I don't know a cell phone
01:47:49He steals a cell phone and then he takes it to a fence and sells it, right?
01:47:56Right, so he he knows that he stole it
01:47:59He might lie about it, but no, no, he knows that he stole it
01:48:02But he's and and the thief sorry the fence the guy he's selling the cell phone to also knows he stole it
01:48:08Now he may lie about it, but I mean they know right because he's coming to him not some legitimate place, right?
01:48:13So yeah
01:48:15Both the thief and the drug addict know
01:48:18That the drug addict does not have the right
01:48:21to dispose of the cell phone
01:48:24So they all know that the property right is invalid
01:48:27And they're fine
01:48:29but the fence if he
01:48:31The fence if he
01:48:33Buys the cell phone for a hundred dollars from the drug addict and then somebody steals a hundred dollars from him the fence
01:48:39He'd be outraged right because he he wants to keep that contradiction. So again, just to be clear
01:48:45Yeah, you want to deny and affirm property rights deny it for your victim and affirm it for yourself. Okay. Well, that's just a contradiction
01:48:50It's not going to stop you from stealing but it is a logical contradiction. Yes. Okay. I mean
01:48:56I'm
01:48:57Fully in line with all of this. Um, they they believe that I stole from you. How dare someone steal from me?
01:49:03Yes, they they assert they have a right to your property
01:49:07uh, but then also try to deny the existence of
01:49:11Rights, uh when they when they defend it, um, which is insane and it's a contradiction. Okay. This is this is great. This is
01:49:19um
01:49:21This is great. I
01:49:23Will mention this I um
01:49:26Not to be a pester to you I I really
01:49:29No, it's not a pest this philosophy man. Okay
01:49:32Because i'm going to mention something I mentioned to you before and I would really love if you're you know
01:49:37Interested in this, uh that you you know can send me a follow-up or something
01:49:41But I sent you a friend's paper on his grounding in the n-8p and he ties it all the way down to epistemology
01:49:48um
01:49:48And the the mixed law or not the mixed law
01:49:51Mixed law, i'm sorry the uh law of the jungle arguments that we kind of just went over is featured in that paper and it's uh,
01:49:58It's an argument. Uh, what did they call it again? Like arguments are given to him. Uh e contrario
01:50:04So basically he finds the contradictions in the other
01:50:07uh theories of law like law of the jungle mixed law and then you know, he evaluates those and
01:50:14Proves that they they contradict themselves. Well, so yeah the thief the thief prefers
01:50:19That his victim not defend his property, right?
01:50:23So the thief prefers that his victim not defend his property, but then the thief wants to defend his own property
01:50:30So the thief will you know steal from you while you're sleeping so that you can't defend yourself or attack him or protect your property
01:50:36but then
01:50:37The thief will use aggression to defend his own
01:50:41What he's stolen, right? So the thief wants
01:50:44There to be no defense of property and then the thief wants to enact violent defense of property, right?
01:50:51yes, this
01:50:53pretty much tears down both like
01:50:55Law of the jungle and mixed law though mixed law can be a little more complicated to find these uh contradictions in but it still
01:51:03Necessarily arrives at it, but upb uh, and and upb bypasses all of this
01:51:07I mean, I think these are interesting arguments and I think they're worth worth making but upb bypasses all of this and upb simply says
01:51:14That stealing can never be universally preferable behavior. It's impossible
01:51:18Not only is it impossible. No, not only is it impossible to enact in that everyone can't be stealing from everyone else all the time
01:51:25Right, it can't be you know, but it's logically impossible. It doesn't even need to be empirically impossible, which it is, but it's logically impossible
01:51:33because if we say
01:51:35that theft
01:51:36Stealing is universally preferable behavior
01:51:40Stealing is the good stealing is moral
01:51:44Then we have a logical contradiction
01:51:46which is that
01:51:48stealing
01:51:49Is the unwanted removal of property?
01:51:52But if stealing is universally preferable behavior
01:51:55Then everyone must want to steal and be stolen from at the same time, which is all time
01:52:02but
01:52:03If you want to be stolen from it's not theft
01:52:06If you want to have your property removed from you
01:52:09It's not theft like I don't hire some
01:52:12Junk place to come and get rid of the junk in my basement
01:52:15And then call up the cops and say they stole from me and then they say, you know, here's the contract
01:52:19He paid us to take this stuff away
01:52:20No, he's the cop would say look you can't you can't accuse someone of stealing from me when you paid them to take the stuff
01:52:25away or at least
01:52:27Gabe wrote a contract or signed a contract saying they could take the stuff, right?
01:52:31I mean if I leave a couch on on my front yard saying take me I can't take the stuff
01:52:35Saying take me I can't then film someone taking it and go to the cops and say he stole, right?
01:52:41so
01:52:42UPB
01:52:44Utterly wrecks destroys invalidates
01:52:48and
01:52:50Removes the possibility that stealing can be universally preferable behavior because if stealing is universally preferable behavior
01:52:56There's no such thing as stealing and therefore you have a contradiction
01:52:59You're saying that which does not exist must be universally preferable. Well, that's crazy
01:53:04Like that that's that's that would be madness right and so and it does the same thing for rape
01:53:11Right rape can never be universally preferable behavior
01:53:14because rape is
01:53:16Desperately unwanted sexual contact, but if we say everyone should
01:53:20Rape and be raped at the same time. Then if you accept that then you want to be raped in which case it's not rape
01:53:27If you want the sexual contact it's not rape and murder assault, right
01:53:31So UPB bypasses all of this stuff and says
01:53:35Can the proposed action be universalized?
01:53:38If the proposed action cannot be universalized
01:53:41Then it cannot be moral. It cannot be universally preferable behavior. Now
01:53:45What about respect for property rights? What about not stealing? Can that be universalized? Yes
01:53:51There is no logical or empirical contradiction
01:53:54For the respect for property rights everyone can
01:53:58not steal
01:53:59Now there are still people who will steal so but that's fine
01:54:03so that I mean that this is a this is a
01:54:07Logical construct for morality which accepts free will which means that some people will act against morality
01:54:13But the most dangerous predator is not a thief but false moral theories
01:54:18Because it's the false moral theories
01:54:21that has
01:54:22People steal half your property through the power of the state and run up massive debts for your children
01:54:26It's the false moral theories that are the real predators. I don't care that much about individual thieves. So it's dealing with
01:54:34The big issue the big issues of where the gen where the real theft occurs
01:54:39In the world. So yeah, UPB just bypasses all of this and says
01:54:44Okay. Um
01:54:46So you're saying that theft is universally preferable behavior. Well, let's play that out. It's impossible
01:54:52It's asymmetrical right for someone to steal
01:54:55The other person must desperately not want to have that property taken
01:54:59And so it's asymmetrical in other words one person can enact
01:55:03Stealing but the other person has to oppose it
01:55:05But it can't be universal if one person is pro it and the other one is very much anti it then it's asymmetrical
01:55:10Therefore, it can't be universal. So anyway, that's that's the elegance of you
01:55:14do you remember in your
01:55:15debate with um fashionality rules
01:55:18um one of his final criticisms he was
01:55:22issuing to you and i'm
01:55:23Starting to believe this might not
01:55:25Really even matter when it comes to ethics. Uh, he's one of his final criticisms in that debate is
01:55:30Well, you haven't arrived at an art statement
01:55:33um
01:55:35And if I recall correctly your response is like it's embedded in the argument, but I think what he wanted was for you to formulate some sort of
01:55:43I don't know if it'd be a syllogism or even just lady. No, but he he was formulating the odd argument
01:55:49He was so he's saying your argument fails because you haven't
01:55:54Established an art argument. So he's saying that you ought to establish an art argument, which means he's accepting. I agree
01:56:01I agree
01:56:02And he's criticizing me for failing to manifest the ought
01:56:06so he's manifesting the ought saying I haven't proven the ought and it's like
01:56:11But you can't contradict me without reference to an yes. Yes
01:56:15If he were to say steph i'm just personally
01:56:18It meant your argument makes me very emotional and that's why it's false
01:56:22well, nobody would accept that as a valid argument it might be emotionally honest probably would be but
01:56:26Old our good buddy stephen woodward if but if he says steph your argument objectively fails because you haven't established an ought
01:56:34It's like well, you just said objectively fails, which means there's an it my my statement ought to create an ought
01:56:40But you've already established the ought by criticizing my state my argument
01:56:44So yeah, you you can't correct someone without reference. So I agree like I don't even believe in the is our gap
01:56:50I think it's rather silly. Um
01:56:54Well, no, it's true in that oughts don't exist
01:56:57in nature
01:56:58Oughts don't exist at the atomic level. I mean I get that oughts don't exist
01:57:04So what? Yeah
01:57:06Concepts don't exist in the world. That doesn't mean they're not valid. It doesn't mean they're not a brave
01:57:11and
01:57:12if you
01:57:14Are debating you are accepting oughts?
01:57:18So then right I mean because and the problem with most debates and i'm not including you and I this is a great conversation
01:57:24But the problem with most debates is the level of fraud involved is staggering
01:57:29Because if someone said to me ahead of time listen, man
01:57:33It doesn't matter what you say
01:57:35I'm, just going to deny everything you say
01:57:37Like i'm i'm going to pretend to be rational, but i'm not going to be rational, right?
01:57:42Now I remember in the debate with rationality rules
01:57:46Stephen fully accepted that rape theft assault and murder can never be universally preferable behavior
01:57:53He fully accepted that
01:57:54So then we're done
01:57:56Okay, then he's accepted that rape now. He'll he'll go back and say but there's no such thing as universally preferable behavior
01:58:02It's like okay
01:58:03So then you're saying it's universally preferable behavior to say things that are true
01:58:06And if you're going to say that it's universally preferable behavior
01:58:10To say
01:58:11That things are true
01:58:13But there's no such thing as universally preferable behavior. You've just contradicted yourself
01:58:16You said that something is valid universally preferable behavior and also invalid
01:58:20At the same time and that's just not valid. It's just not that's not true. It's self-contradictory statements can't be valid
01:58:26so
01:58:27I guess
01:58:30I think this answers my question, but uh, I do want to get a clear answer when it comes to
01:58:36um
01:58:40Talking about ethics and saying
01:58:42um
01:58:44I don't know if it's yeah if we're talking about ethics
01:58:47we don't need to arrive at an odd statement essentially as long as you can find contradictions in the
01:58:53um
01:58:54The opposing theory I suppose right like you don't think you need to say so
01:58:58Sorry, we don't we don't need to arrive at an odd statement. What is that? Well, that's an odd statement
01:59:04You just made an odd statement saying we don't need to arrive at an odd statement, it's not necessary. Okay, so
01:59:09It's not required which means you don't have to it's not a requirement
01:59:13So it ought not be a requirement like you you can't get away from all agree if you're debating if you're conversing
01:59:18like I said, I don't really
01:59:20The is our gap to me isn't too important. I I get what you're saying though
01:59:24like you obviously there's no embedded in a tree or something, but um, I guess
01:59:29To
01:59:31Propose upb you don't need to say you ought follow upb. It's just a matter of fact that because you're already
01:59:40Engaging in the conversation you're saying it's it's embedded there it is
01:59:44It's the thought already is already there. I believe that's the way you've said it in the past
01:59:47I think it's kind of what you were just saying now, right?
01:59:50No, no
01:59:52All i'm saying is that rape theft assault and murder can never be upb
01:59:57and it's
01:59:59I think I need to chew on the thing because I was just about to repeat myself
02:00:02But like I think I need to chew on what you just said
02:00:05No, no, so suddenly you're saying oh steph. Are you saying that you ought to follow upb?
02:00:10Yeah
02:00:11Yeah, I guess I was what I was asking you. Do you need to arrive at that to I guess have a valid theory of ethics?
02:00:19Do I need to arrive at what uh a statement saying you ought to follow upb
02:00:25Okay
02:00:27Well upb is valid
02:00:33Now if you say
02:00:36I'm interested
02:00:37In truth facts reason evidence and morality then you have to accept upb now accepting upb
02:00:42Of course means that you should follow upb. Of course, right?
02:00:45You can't say I fully accept the scientific method as the only means to truth and I want to really want to get to the truth
02:00:51And then of course you're obligated to follow the scientific method, right if you say
02:00:55I want the truth. The scientific method is the only way to ascertain the truth
02:00:58So i'm not going to follow the scientific method. That would be a contradiction, right?
02:01:04Yeah, yeah it does
02:01:07Right mathematics is the only way to get numerical accuracy. I desperately want numerical accuracy then therefore you have to follow
02:01:14Mathematics, right that's embedded in the preferences. Does that make sense? Yes. Yes it does
02:01:20Okay, so if you say
02:01:23I want to follow reason evidence and truth
02:01:27Then upb is rational
02:01:29It's evidence based in that societies that violate upb do very badly
02:01:34right, I mean
02:01:36The free market affirms upb in property rights and does much better
02:01:41Than a communist or socialist or fascist society that violate upb in terms of well both life
02:01:47Liberty property and so on right if you look at most of human history most of human history has been massive
02:01:52violations of upb
02:01:54in terms of slavery and the subjugation of women and
02:01:57the draft and and and so on right so
02:01:59if you look at when society has respected upb more which is
02:02:04small government and and free markets and so on then
02:02:10Society does much better
02:02:12I mean, so there's empirical evidence as well. If you look at the things that are successful in society
02:02:17They tend to be those where upb is respected the most
02:02:21So things that fail are the things the governments do because it's a violation of upb
02:02:25Things that succeed tend to be more in the free market, which is where upb is more respected. So there's reason
02:02:33And evidence
02:02:35And it is true
02:02:36That rape theft assault and murder can never be universally preferable behavior now
02:02:40You can reject universally preferable behavior, but then I don't want to hear a word out of your mouth about debating anyone
02:02:46Because the moment you debate someone
02:02:48You're saying there's a universal standard called truth and you you should follow it and you're not doing it that
02:02:54So the moment you debate someone you're accepting upb
02:02:57Then the only question is okay
02:02:59Since you already accept upb by having a conversation with me
02:03:03The only question is what behaviors are upb and it turns out respect for persons and property
02:03:09Are the only behaviors that follow upb?
02:03:13So, I mean, do you have to follow upb? No
02:03:16It's a choice because we have free will
02:03:18I mean you have to follow gravity. That's not a choice, right? Yeah
02:03:22Right. You can open your eyes if they're functional you can't open your eyes and not see you can close your eyes
02:03:27Open them and you can't open them and not see
02:03:29So you have a choice to not follow upb for sure
02:03:32You have a choice to reject upb as of course a lot of people have done
02:03:36But you're wrong
02:03:37And you've given up the right to say that you're interested in truth rationality objectivity and morality
02:03:43Because you are both affirming upb and denying upb
02:03:48Right, so you're saying that uh, upb is false and therefore we should reject it
02:03:53Okay, so it's universally preferable behavior to reject things that are false
02:03:56So then you can't say there's no such thing as universally preferable behavior
02:03:59So I would not command people to follow upb. I would just say it's an inevitable result
02:04:04Like you can't you can't order people at gunpoint to follow the scientific method, right?
02:04:08I mean, it's not a violation of upb to be a mystic
02:04:11You can lie to yourself you can falsify things you as long as it's not like outright fraud or something like that
02:04:17You can bullshit yourself all you want. So i'm going to force you. Oh, you have to follow upb
02:04:22But it is true
02:04:25And you can't get ethics without it. You can't get ethics from gods. You can't get ethics from governments
02:04:29You can't get ethics from your ancestors. You can't get ethics from chicken entrails or witch doctors. You can only get ethics from upb
02:04:38So if you want to be ethical
02:04:41You have to follow upb
02:04:42Now people can say well, I don't want to it's like well, then okay, you don't
02:04:46then then
02:04:48Don't debate anyone don't otherwise you're a bottomless hypocrite because then you're saying there is upb
02:04:52But I just don't want to follow this one. It would be
02:04:55Or the ones that are actually valid. It would be contradictory, right?
02:04:57I mean the moment like to to give I guess more of a concrete if you had a moral particularist
02:05:03Who was rejecting upb you would say he's just simply living in contradiction because every action
02:05:10I'm, so I so I want to use the word presuppose, but um
02:05:14How do I formulate this every time he engages in debate?
02:05:17um
02:05:20Or
02:05:22Maybe even just thinks to himself about the truth, right? He's
02:05:25Adhering to upb
02:05:27Well, I don't yeah. Yeah thinking is unverifiable. So I can only I can only verify empirically what people
02:05:35Uh, I can only verify I can only verify what people actually do because anyone can say anything about what they think right
02:05:39It's not not objective of it. Gotcha
02:05:41But so long as they even ever make an argument about something
02:05:44Or try to correct somebody if they correct me then they're saying if they correct me they're saying there's a universal standard
02:05:50To determine truth from falsehood and you're falling short and it's infinitely preferable that you be correct not false
02:05:57Right and honestly, this is not I hate to say this is not complicated because it sounds like it's tricky in our minds
02:06:02I get that but
02:06:05We we you're in you're in kindergarten and you say two and two make five what does the teacher say
02:06:12Sorry, you said two and two makes five I didn't hear you too well
02:06:15Yeah, if you if you're a kid, right, you're five or six years old
02:06:18You're in kindergarten and you confidently say that two and two make five and they correct you and say
02:06:23Yeah, they say you're you're wrong like you're making a statement about reality
02:06:30Which is false and i'm here to correct you
02:06:32And it's not personal it's not like i'm offended by you saying that or
02:06:36You know a genie in a dream told me that you're wrong. It's like no you you it's a fact that you're wrong
02:06:41So we we have universally preferable behavior
02:06:45From the very beginning of our lives and we accept it
02:06:48At all times, right? I mean somebody like david gordon says there's no such thing as universally preferable behavior
02:06:55While making arguments in well-formed sentences, right?
02:07:00Which to rebut points that I make
02:07:03Right. I mean it's like it's like saying to somebody
02:07:05There's no such thing as self-ownership
02:07:08and then
02:07:10Making an argument which is yours to oppose an argument they made which is theirs
02:07:14Well, that's self-ownership owning yourself and owning the effects of your action
02:07:19So, I mean
02:07:20so this one of the big things that I brought to philosophy is forget about the content look at the form of the argument first
02:07:25And that will answer most of your questions like most most philosophical
02:07:31Arguments can be resolved by looking at the form of the argument rather than the content everyone wants to rush to the content of the argument
02:07:38No, I do exist. No, there is such a thing as objective reality
02:07:41No, the senses are valid and it's like no, but you don't have to do any of that
02:07:46because the simple act
02:07:48Of using the senses means you have to accept that the senses are valid
02:07:52Mm-hmm
02:07:53Right the simple act of having a debate having a debate requires using the senses because we can't vulcan mind meld link, right?
02:08:00so having
02:08:02A debate having an argument requires about six
02:08:06thousand implicit
02:08:08facts to be accepted
02:08:11Senses are valid language has meaning you and I exist
02:08:13There's an objective medium between us reason is better than violence rationality and evidence
02:08:18Determines truth from falsehood truth is is a value that is infinitely greater than falsehood
02:08:22Like all of these things are absolutely completely and totally accepted in order to have even a conversation let alone a debate
02:08:29So it's all solved
02:08:31But everybody wants to rush
02:08:33Into you know, it's like if somebody sends you a mr. Sarky before because if I send you a letter
02:08:41That says my argument is letters never get delivered
02:08:45Right, what would you say would you saw arguing would you write me back? No, I think that letters do get delivered and I said
02:08:51No, I really don't think that they do and here's my like, what would you say?
02:08:54You wouldn't look at the you wouldn't look at the letters on the letter. You'd look at the envelope, right?
02:09:01You wouldn't look at the content
02:09:03of the letter
02:09:05You would look at the form of the letter
02:09:08And you'd say well Steph come on
02:09:10And you'd say well Steph come on
02:09:13You can't send me a letter saying that letters never get delivered because if you genuinely believe that
02:09:19You wouldn't send me a letter because it would never get delivered
02:09:21So the fact that you sent me a letter means, you know that letters get delivered
02:09:26So let's not like the argument is in the letterhead it's it's on the stamp it's on the envelope not in the content
02:09:32Does that make sense? Yeah
02:09:35Absolutely
02:09:41You know, I always
02:09:43Always tell myself there's still something I need to learn about upv but um
02:09:49And then I go and investigate it and i'm like maybe I do understand it well enough and this is this is one of those moments
02:09:54Um, although i've had a bit cleared up for me for sure. No, tell me tell me what what doesn't make sense
02:09:59I'm now and and the reason the reason is not because upv is complicated. It's because we've all been lied to so much
02:10:06but sorry, I mean
02:10:08I think I get it now, but what I was confused about for the longest time is that like if we were to
02:10:13give an ethical theory that uh
02:10:17We should
02:10:18if I guess if you're proposing an argument or
02:10:21Whether it be just casually or so logistically. I thought you'd have to end it with like therefore you ought
02:10:27Um, you know in this case you therefore you ought adhere to upv
02:10:32but um
02:10:35But I
02:10:36I believe after this conversation i'm i'm of the belief. That's uh
02:10:40You don't need to arrive to that statement
02:10:43No, it's the question is not do you the question isn't ought you follow upv the question is
02:10:50Do you accept upv by correcting me do you accept upv?
02:10:58By having a conversation with me do you accept upv?
02:11:02By debating with me according to objective standards one of which is that truth is infinitely preferable to error
02:11:08Truth is upv. So you can't argue
02:11:11Against upv by saying we should accept that which is true because that's upv
02:11:17And I believe
02:11:19So in in terms of the it's not it's not
02:11:23Ought you to follow upv it's have you already accepted upv by having a debate with me?
02:11:29Right, so if if you and I are having this debate in fluent japanese
02:11:35Right, would you say to me steph? You ought to learn japanese
02:11:40Uh, if we're having it in the japanese that we said
02:11:44Oh, yeah, you and I were debating back pure pure japanese native speaking 100
02:11:49We're having a big rigorous back and forth and pure japanese. Would you ever?