Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Pat Flynn on Exploring and Expanding Our Worldviews
Episode Date: December 28, 2022Whether you realize it or not, you’re operating according to a worldview. Your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors are all influenced by how you make sense of the world, and so, that worldview determi...nes your quality of life. If that concept sounds interesting, and if you enjoyed my previous philosophical conversations with my friend Pat Flynn, you’re going to enjoy this podcast. Pat is a repeat guest not only because I find our discussions entertaining, but I’ve gotten great feedback from listeners who like hearing about these deeper, philosophical topics we wade through. Plus, I believe examining these “big” questions can help us live a better life. Not only is Pat a fitness guru with an expertise in kettlebells, but he’s an author, philosopher, and host of multiple podcasters. Specifically, his Philosophy For the People podcast aims to breakdown difficult ideas and make them more accessible, so he’s the perfect guest to discuss these health-adjacent topics. In our discussion, we talk about . . . - What a worldview is and why it matters - The fallacy of Bulverism - Personal responsibility and how much can you change your worldview - The problem of evil and whether suffering is necessary - How to make sense of scenarios involving “dueling experts” - And a lot more . . . So, if you’ve never thought much about your worldview, want to learn more about what it is and why it matters, or if any of this just makes you curious, listen to this podcast! Timestamps: (0:00) - Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip (4:43) - What are your thoughts on worldviews and how that impacts our quality of life? (11:06) - How do you define a worldview? (12:34) - What’s the difference between polytheism and pantheism? (33:00) - Do you need to believe in an ultimate meaning to life to do the “right thing” and to be a “good person”? (46:59) - How much is someone’s worldview a reflection of who they are? (58:12) - What are your thoughts when something bad happens to someone? Do you think they did something to cause that? (1:02:22) - If something bad randomly happens to you, how do you interpret that? (1:03:38) - Is there anything else you would like to add? (1:05:33) - Do you have any resources for people who are new to all of this? Mentioned on the Show: Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: https://www.muscleforlife.show/vip Philosophy For the People podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/philosophy-for-the-people/id1639532152 The Pat Flynn Show: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-pat-flynn-show/id1253261458 Chronicles of Strength: https://www.chroniclesofstrength.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey there and welcome to a new episode of Muscle for Life. I am your host, Mike Matthews. Thank
you for joining me today for another philosophical meandering with my buddy, Pat Flynn, who has been
on the show several times to talk many different things related to philosophy and religion,
which are two abiding interests of his in addition to fitness. So in the fitness world,
Pat is known as a kettlebell
expert. He's a published author. He's written a couple of books on kettlebells. He produces a lot
of kettlebell content, has a lot of great kettlebell workouts. But in addition to that,
he spends a lot of his time reading and thinking about philosophy and religion. He has written
books and academic papers on these things. And as I also find these topics interesting,
I don't know
nearly as much about them as Pat does, but I like to learn about them. I have Pat on the show now
and then, and these episodes have always gotten good feedback. And so here we are with another one
where Pat and I talk about worldviews and how our worldviews shape our lives and how we are all influenced by worldviews,
whether we understand our worldviews or not, whether we can explicitly articulate them or not.
And so I think it's important to explore our worldviews and look at how we can expand them,
how we can augment them, how we can make them more accurate reflections of reality.
Because before we interact with reality, we interact with a model of it in our mind, so to speak,
that we use to make predictions about causes and effects.
For example, if I go and do this, then one of these three things should happen. These are the
most likely outcomes. And on the flip side, if I am experiencing an effect, maybe an effect that I
don't like, I have a problem that I want to get rid of, what are the most probable causes? What
are the things that are likely causing this effect? And what can I do about those things?
And if I take action A, what is likely to happen?
If I take action B, what is likely to happen?
And so on and so on.
And so our worldview forms a sort of bedrock for our reality.
And that reality dictates how we think.
It dictates how we behave.
It dictates our attitudes, it dictates what we
believe is true and not true. And so those are some of the things that Pat and I are going to
unpack, as the Twitterati like to say, in this episode. Before we sink our teeth into it,
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Mr. Flynn is back. It's been too long.
It is always a joy to be here and always a great sadness when I am not here, which, as you're right, it has been too long. Yep.
Then this is a special day. This is one of the better days of the year, maybe.
It's a special Tuesday, indeed. Yeah.
Well, what are we here to talk about? We're here to talk about worldviews.
And this is something that's interesting to me, at least
something that I've thought about. I can't say I've studied it rigorously like you have, but I
do find it an interesting topic, because of how high leverage it is, like if you look at it, maybe
through the lens of systems theory, and you have very high leverage aspects of systems, then you have much lower
leverage aspects. And up there is like rules, for example, the rules of the system, how does this
supposed to work? And on a personal level, worldview has to rank toward the top if we're
looking at just quality of life and how our worldview impacts our attitudes and how that impacts our
emotions, how that impacts our behaviors, how that impacts our habits that ultimately determine the
quality of our life, right? And there's a lot of emphasis these days on, say, habits, and I think
that's great. It's a very tactical place to start. And you can make
market improvements to your fitness, for example, just making little habitual,
little changes to your habitual actions. But I think it's also interesting to try to work at
the other end of the spectrum, which is some of this deeper stuff that expresses itself in many ways of our personality, our inclinations and so forth.
So I'm going to stop there and give it over to you.
Sure. Right on a little relevant background for the gentle listeners who are like, what the heck are these guys talking about? Right.
Yeah, I'm just I'm just trying to get morech, to use a word that you just shared with me.
Is this going to make me more hench? Yes or no? It can. It can. I'll make that argument as we
move along. Is hencher, hencher, is that, can we say that? I just like to say sufficiently hench.
Yes. How to become sufficiently hench. So for people who are somewhat familiar with me on your
podcast, they're probably mostly familiar with me in the kettlebell world of fitness content,
but my formal background is actually philosophy. That's not just where I received my education.
Fitness has always been a very side, a deep side interest in hobby. And I'm actually currently
finishing my second book this year that is related to philosophy and it's on, it's on worldview
comparison. And, um, from a philosophical perspective, a worldview is just sort of a
big picture of reality. Just think big picture, right? You can even think of it as like a philosophical theory of everything,
like, and this is the branch of philosophy that interests me most, because it just seems like the
most fundamental and the most important. We all have big questions that we ask just sort of very
naturally about life, you know, who are we? Where are we from? Where are we going? What's the meaning
of life? If there is a meaning of life? How are we to behave? How are we to act?
And I think the thing to impress right away is that all of us sort of have answers to these questions, even if we're not very confident in them, as in we sort of live our lives out
according to how we might answer those questions, right? We all sort of operate according to certain
value assumptions, certain priorities. So all of us live according to a worldview. The question is,
have you tried to work that worldview out? Have you tried to examine your assumptions? Have you
tried to scrutinize them? Have you tried to see if it's something that you should engage in
revising, right? To see if you have a sort of accurate big picture of everything. And that's
sort of what a lot of philosophers are up to, especially in the branch of philosophy that
interests me most, which is philosophy of religion. That's a sort of misleading title for that branch of philosophy,
because not everybody who engages in philosophy of religion is a religious person. You do have
religious people, but you also have atheists and agnostics. But it's a sort of branch of philosophy
that tries to do this sort of worldview construction or comparison, tries to really be
systematic in a philosophical approach
in terms of bringing all the other branches of philosophy together, of which there are many.
You know, there's metaphysics, which tries to understand the structure of being, logic,
the structure of thought, ethics, the structure of a human good life, if there is one, philosophical
anthropology, what is the structure of a human person, right? So philosophers think about a lot
of different things. But a good sort of worldview project should be one that hopefully can make the most sense of the most amount of data.
And the data being like the very common experiences of existence that we all have access to.
And by common experiences of existence, I mean stuff that you don't need like specialized training or equipment to access.
Could be very general for philosophers.
Like things like, hey, it seems like change occurs, right? What is change, right? Just thinking deeply about that.
That's a very common experience. That's something Aristotle thought a lot about.
And then trying to construct some sort of theory that can explain the most,
hopefully with the fewest commitments, right? And that's sort of a very scientific assumption.
Philosophers and scientists often operate in similar ways where you just try and come up
with a theory that you
think predicts or anticipates the data and hopefully isn't too complicated. And then you
try and compare that theory to other theories. And it's different than science because it's using
more than what the scientific project is restricted to. It's using more than just
empirical verification and stuff like that. But yeah, that's what philosophers are up to.
And these days, just consensus.
You know, that's all sciences now.
It's just consensus, you know.
Sure, consensus, right?
And now it doesn't exclude that stuff.
A lot of that stuff, you know, philosophers are always looking at,
hey, what is the scientific consensus
or what is the scientific research in certain areas?
But it won't necessarily restrict itself to that.
Now, some philosophers do, but that's a worldview. Some philosophers hold a worldview that would say,
we should only consider things that sort of come out of the scientific method, right? That is a
particular position that some philosophers hold. I think that's wrong. We've actually talked about
that before. I think it's too restrictive. So yeah, so the point being is, even if a lot of people haven't thought about this explicitly, it's sort of like philosophy in general. You know, philosophers like to say, especially when like philosophy is a tact of like, why is this important? Who cares, right? You philosophers are just weird people. We often like to point out that everybody's sort of engaged in philosophy, whether they admit it or not. It's not something you can avoid. It's only something you can avoid doing well. Same thing with this sort of worldview project. It really is just sort of, you know,
philosophy. And everybody's got a worldview. The worldview often sort of structures how we live
our lives. So it seems to be something we're sort of stuck with. And if we're stuck with it,
then it just seems right to me that we should try to do the best we can at getting the right worldview. And so what is a worldview? How do you define that term? I think the best thing
to do would just be give examples of different worldviews, right? So big pictures or big theories
of reality. Probably the widest divides, at least historically, would be something like a sort of,
say, naturalistic versus supernaturalistic
worldview, right? So going way, way, way back, as far back as you go into philosophy,
you have sort of worldviews that are, say, very much richer about the types of things that exist
and what's at fundamental reality and how that explains everything above it, say, theistic
worldviews, people who believe in God and stuff like that. And then you have sort of very much
thinner worldviews, right? That just want to say whatever else is sort of at fundamental reality. It's not
any sort of supreme being or personal entity, or it's not even anything with awareness or
consciousness. It's actually just some sort of principle of indifference. And you see this,
again, going way, way back to the ancient Adamus. But again, you see that in modern times with
modern forms of materialism and stuff like that, and reductionism, physicalism. So those would be
examples of worldviews. But then, of course, worldviews can become more particularized. So
you might have like these broad camps. Okay, here's a sort of maybe a theistic worldview or
an atheistic worldview. But even within the theistic worldview, you have many different
theories that particularize it. So maybe you're sort of a monotheist or a classical theist.
Maybe you're a pantheist or panentheist, right? Maybe you're even a polytheist. I haven't
encountered too many of them these days, but that's an option that's been out there.
What's the difference between polytheism and pantheism?
So pantheism, broadly speaking, is the notion that whatever else God is, God sort of just is
the universe, right? That we might all be parts
of God in a sense where traditional monotheism wants to hold that God is radically distinct or
transcendent of the universe. Universe is something created, not part of God, right?
Polytheism just means many gods in like a lowercase g sense like that, right? But even
within atheism, you have many different theories of atheism because what we're looking for is not
just, this is something that kind of confuses people on a popular level, because sometimes I'll talk to atheists and be like,
I don't have to prove anything to you because I just don't believe in God. I'm like, that's not
really what philosophers are up to, right? I don't really care about your psychological state. What I
care about is a theory that's meant to make sense of the world. So put something on the table in
terms of a theory, and then let's have a conversation. So when you talk to more sophisticated
atheists, they tend to have some sort of theory, right? A theory that is competitive with other
theories, and that is meant to sort of explain everything, right? If it's a worldview, it's meant
to try and make sense of all of human experience, from consciousness to rationality to morality,
and so on and so forth, right? So yeah, that's probably the best way to understand what a
worldview is, is just by giving examples of it. So you might have a sort of reductive materialism, right? Where again, whatever else the world is, it's going to be something that sort of reduces to levels of reality that are much lower and that are fundamentally sort of indifferent, right? And then that other realities sort of emerge or supervene or come out of those realities through various combinations of them and stuff
like that. It gets pretty technical, obviously, once you get into the weeds of it. But
does that help just kind of comparing and contrasting the different?
It includes things, though, outside of religion. I mean, a lot of people,
they might consider themselves agnostic, where they're open to the idea of a spiritual aspect
of existence, whether it's a monotheistic worldview or something
else. They're also open to the possibility of materialism, but it's not something they've
thought about much or studied much. It's obviously not. They have often, in my experience,
their lives are consumed with the stuff that our lives get consumed with, right?
That's a good point. I just want to make it known that there are,
I don't know how many,
but quite a number of people in philosophers, right?
Who would say, yeah, I think a theistic worldview is correct,
but they don't sign on to any religion.
They would just be called like broadly philosophical theists
or something like that, right?
So two questions.
One, do you start there because you think
that is the most fundamental
layer, so to speak, of a worldview? Or is it just something that you're obviously very interested in
personally, but there are other aspects, of course, to a worldview aside from just what are your
religious beliefs? Oh, yeah, totally. Well, I think if you have religious beliefs, this sort of worldview
project can certainly be either very helpful or harmful, right?
I'm somebody who, for background, I've changed my worldview a number of times.
I was sort of starting out in philosophy, very much a naturalistic, atheistic type of person.
And then as I got deeper and deeper into it, I came out on almost the completely opposite end of the spectrum.
But how? That's a good question, right?
So when I first started really getting interested in philosophy, it was political philosophy that interested me the most.
In an alternate universe, there's a communist Pat Flynn out there.
Yeah, in the multiverse, right? We could talk about, hey, there's worldviews that hold to a
multiverse, right? Who never found his way to theism,
and he just stuck with atheism and doesn't wear a blue hat, but has blue hair.
I don't know if I'd like to meet that person. Actually, I probably would
have a deep conversation with him. But anyway, so say you're in political philosophy and you're trying to
determine what you think is the right political philosophy. Well, all sorts of questions crop up
around that. Generally, people think about political philosophies and political theories
as trying to facilitate some good, right? Particularly the good of human life. I mean,
political philosophy has to do with the affairs of men, generally speaking, and it's aiming towards some good. So political philosophy immediately is operating
upon a foundation of something more basic, which is to say moral philosophy, right? So I would say
you can't really do good political philosophy unless you've sort of examined your moral
philosophy and ethical philosophy. And of course, moral and ethical philosophy, we're talking about
the good, we're talking about the good of something in particular. So first off, does it even make sense to talk about the good
of things that itself is something that's hotly debated, but suppose there is, then we're talking
about the good of the human person or human society. So now we're getting now to figure
out what the good is of that we kind of have to understand what the heck is that, right? And that
gets you into philosophical anthropology and all this other stuff, right? So you can see how everything's sort of connected and everything matters.
So what I realized is through the one branch philosophy that I was really interested in
at a younger age, I'm still interested in now, but I spend much less time on it now,
political philosophy.
If I wanted to get clear on my thinking on that, I had to study moral philosophy, right?
And philosophical anthropology.
But even ethical questions end up becoming sort of
metaphysical questions. Like we said, like, what, what does it mean to say that something is good?
And we have these sort of value judgments and value assessments. What makes sense of that?
Does anything ground that? Is there a particular worldview where this type of these type of
language and these assumptions and these intuitions make sense? If so, what is that worldview? What
are the range
of options there? And are there other worldviews that seem incompatible or in tension with these
assumptions and stuff like that? So my path was starting in one branch of philosophy,
fairly quickly realizing how deeply interconnected that is to other branches of philosophy,
and being driven to, I think, the most fundamental level, which is metaphysics and worldview comparison and design and stuff like that. And oftentimes, you often start with data
and allow that data to determine a theory. It can also be the case that your theory determines
your data as well, in important respects. We can get into that as we move along. But yeah,
I think I think this where I focus now is probably the most fundamental level. And to me, most interesting, that if you want to get clarity on everything else, you should spend at least a fair amount of time there.
And how might people, if we take that to kind of practical examples, how might people work their way toward that?
Like, for example, I'll throw something out there, maybe the concept of personal responsibility.
This is controversial and there seems to be two schools of thought there in the mainstream.
You have a lot of people who they very much support that idea.
And even someone like Jocko Willink has popularized through extreme ownership, right?
Like extreme personal responsibility.
And then you have another camp who would argue the exact opposite,
maybe something like that, for example, you know, these kind of like there are two types of people
in the world type of scenarios, you know what I mean? Yeah. So this is a good example. This is I
mean, this gets into a question of free will. Yeah. So I mean, again, if you're into the
responsibility thing, you're kind of operating according to an assumption, which I think is a
very basic assumption that humans have at least some degree of autonomy or freedom of the will, right? That
we have some ability to sort of contingently self-determine ourselves. We're not just a
matter of sort of history passing through us, right? And whether you think that that is a
plausible theory or assumption, obviously greatly depends on your worldview. And in fact, there's a
reason that most materialists are determinists, because they think that you just sort of have
these initial conditions and then you have these laws and whatever the mix of that is either
absolutely determined some particular outcome or fixes the probabilities of a particular outcome.
And on that worldview, it becomes very difficult to make sense of freedom of the will because
either there is no freedom of will, are completely determined, or things are sort of random, right in an objective probability
sense. But there's no sort of like, fundamental top down control that I as a human person would
seem to have over the sort of deeper physics, right. But it's important, that's not a conclusion
of science. That's not a conclusion of science. That's using some science in conjunction with a
particular theory of everything or theory of the world. So this is beyond a scientific debate, right? But there
are other worldviews, I would say, namely non-reductive worldviews, which want to say,
no, actually, substances are more fundamental. There's such a thing as a human substance
that there is a sort of top-down power that we have to contingently determine ourselves.
Most people who hold these theories would say there has to be some sort of immaterial aspect about us
that is not sort of reducible to physics, right?
And traditionally that has been considered
from going back to all the way to Aristotle
and contemporary philosophers, the intellect,
the human intellect in the space of reasons
and abstract thought.
Because the argument is if that's purely material,
then that lends itself to a deterministic worldview.
Yeah, it would seem like if we don't have that sort of immaterial aspect, we would slide into
a sort of determinism, right? So we can argue out those positions if we want. But the point,
the fundamental point is you can see how most people certainly live their lives as if they have
some degree. And I say some degree because nobody thinks we're completely autonomous. Obviously,
our environment and things influence us in certain respects. But we do think that we
have enough autonomy that we can have actual, not just moral responsibility, that we're responsible
for some things, but moral culpability, where we're actually like praise or blameworthy for
certain things, right? And this goes beyond not just fitness, but our entire criminal justice
system and all that, right? And again, this isn't to deny that there could be overriding circumstances where somebody's free will because of some type of disease or injury is is significantly impaired.
I don't know how many times it's weird. It's like a, you know, the NPC meme, the internet joke meme of if this is a simulation, some people are player characters with free will. Other people are the non player characters who just run. There's basically no consciousness there in, I joke, NPC kind of midwit argumentation, which is this point of you state a rule.
They state one exception to the rule.
And then it's like, checkmate, bitch.
Like, what do you mean?
Not all exes are like that.
And you're like, wait, wait.
Yeah.
What about that person with the giant brain tumor that couldn't help but do that thing?
Yeah.
Therefore, no rule.
Wait, you mean my general, my, my, my vast generalization isn't true literally in every case universally.
Oh my God. The thing that's annoying about that is this sort of the, the arrogance that these
people have is like, look, the smartest people throughout all of history have thought about
these matters. You think they didn't consider that one exception or all the exceptions, right?
You think this stuff hasn't been thought about? There's one thing that I've learned about philosophy. There's like no thought, however obscure, that hasn't been deeply thought about,
right? So just a little humility goes a long way in these types of conversations, right?
But yeah, if you think that there is a such thing as personal responsibility and say libertarian
freedom of the will, and that it makes sense to hold people in certain
circumstances, even if not all as culpable, then I would say you have reason to look for a worldview
that can make sense of that data, that can secure that data. Right.
At least isn't that doesn't contradict it. Right. I mean.
Right. Yeah. And, you know, you can always revise a theory by bringing in like adjunct hypotheses and stuff like that. But then we think that that makes the theory more complicated and less believable and stuff like that. So, I mean, this is part of the reason I gave up materialism as a worldview for I think that there's tons of things materialism cannot adequately explain. And many materialists don't even try to explain those things. They don't explain the data. They eliminate it. They'll say things like free will is an illusion or morality is an illusion. I think that's actually
the right way to go on that theory. But I think it's the wrong way to go in terms of the truth
of the matter, right? The truth of the matter is there's certain data that cannot even be
coherently denied. And if your theory is forcing you to eliminate that data, then you should say
to hell with the theory, not to hell with the data. Right. Not to go on a tangent, but you run into some of that if you look into the ongoing debate
about climate change and particularly our role in it, humanity's role in it. There's no debate
that I'm aware of among experts that climate is changing and that temperatures have been rising. The debate is about CO2's impact and particularly our impact.
And you find quite a few examples that I've looked into both sides of that argument a bit,
just try to understand it better. And some of it gets too technical. And I don't know if dueling
experts are throwing jargon back and forth, like how am I supposed to know which expert is right?
One thing we look at in terms of how do we even compare rival theories? Well, one is, one is, does it make accurate
predictions? We don't just mean about in the future, because sometimes you have theories of
history where it might predict something. And then later we discover some archaeological evidence of
that something. And we think that that actually count and same thing with, with physics, right?
So prediction doesn't necessarily mean something that happens in the future. It's like, really,
we're asking how likely would we expect to see this phenomena if
this theory is true versus some other some other theory or something but that's just one criteria
we also think about fit with background knowledge and criteria of simplicity is very big and in um
in philosophy like how simple is this theory and that that is an ironically complicated debate
anything dealing with simplicity and philosophy is, is, is horrendously complicated, right? Yeah. Obviously the more
patchwork kind of piecemeal it is, uh, the worse it is. I think that now you mentioned, you know,
experts in dueling experts and stuff like that. And that, that's an interesting thing that
philosophers think about, you know, this notion of like epistemic peers or rivals, especially for
laymen. Like if there's, you know, somebody who seems super well qualified and there's another person who seems super well qualified and they like
totally disagree, like, well, what are you to do? I mean, well, one thing you can do is just
try and roll up your sleeves and get into the debate and evaluate it yourself, but you can't
do that for everything. Obviously you can't, that's, that's, that's unrealistic. I think you
can, and maybe you should try to do it for the things that like really matter to you and are
important to you. Right. Um, or you could look at consensus. I don't think consensus is a bad thing unless you have
reasons to think that there might be some sort of what's called a bully consensus in the literature,
some consensus that is not formed through, say, independent, relatively unbiased research
programs and investigation, but might have forces that aren't so wholesome, right? Political forces,
social pressure, something like that. So, yeah. So, I mean, appeals to authority, people are
like, so a fallacy, it's not totally a fallacy. It might not be the strongest reason to believe
something. There's other things to consider. And if there's, there's questions, I think that a
consensus or an authority might be not reliable in a certain instance, you have to figure out
other ways to try and get to the bottom of it. And again, I'm extracting this from the whole climate
controversy and trying to make general principles of it, of how people should just learn to think
through issues. Cause there's, I mean, there's so many issues like this, like we can't be experts
in everything, right? And take pretty much, pretty much anything. you've got fairly significant disagreement, right? There's very few
disciplines. I mean, look in fitness. There's still an ongoing argument about energy balance,
like, and it'll probably never end. It probably will never end. History of philosophy. I mean,
if you go to Descartes, I mean, he recognized this. So Rene Descartes, part of what motivated
his project, I'll explain it really quickly, is he like he was actually really impressed with this sort of consensus and agreement that was found in like mathematics. Right. And he's like, I want to do that with everything else. Right. will deny even the truths of logic and two plus two equaling four and stuff like that. So you will find people that like that deny this stuff. Right.
So you've got all sorts of weird stuff. But but generally, Descartes was in a very pluralistic
society even for his time. Imagine what he would have thought about our time. So he's like,
I'm going to kind of start philosophy over. I'm going to doubt everything that can be doubted as
a method. And I'm going to kind of get down to this indubitable and incorrigible
thing that cannot be doubted. This is his famous cogito. I think therefore I am. And then I'm going
to use just like hard hitting deductive arguments to just build everything back up from the ground
up. And then there's going to be no more disagreement. That's a romanticized version
of it, of course. And, you know, he failed. He failed, obviously, quite early. But it's it's
romantic what he was wanting to do. But the point is, that's just a romantic notion that Descartes project is not
something that succeeded or even could succeed. And to get to the truth of things in different
matters is often very difficult. It's very complicated. Experts certainly can help. But
there's also reasons in certain circumstances and situations when you have dueling experts or unreliable or questionable authorities and stuff like that, which just
makes all, I don't have good answers to any of that.
It's just, just pointing out the complications of the world we live in.
Right.
It's tough.
I mean, sometimes you can find reasons to doubt people's motives or if you know, for example, just stupid example, but if somebody has been
caught lying brazenly about things multiple times, well, that's a reason to distrust them
in this case. I mean, I think too, who is that? He was in the UK, I believe he was an epidemiologist
in the UK. His modeling was the primary justification for the first for the lockdowns.
Remember, he was then caught having an affair, breaking his own rules that he was imposing
on all of the little people to go screw some woman.
And then he kind of runs away in disgrace.
And then they bring him back a year or two later when they figure people already forgot
about it.
Like, yeah.
So, I mean, like these things are interesting. I mean, you always want to be careful of like of fallacies. Right.
So first you want to show that somebody is wrong before you start to try and analyze them psychologically. Right.
Mine was just like, hey, if somebody puts up an economic model, some theory, it just would probably not be right to say, I don't believe anything you say because you cheated on your wife. Obviously, he could be having an affair and still have a good theory.
Well, it was more the hypocrisy. The affair is actually not even the point. It was the hypocrisy.
It was we all you all need to do this. This is so important. I don't need to do it. There's
something things like that are just red flags. That's all. That's all I'm saying.
But something, things like that are just red flags.
That's all I'm saying.
Well, yeah, yeah, right.
And I am familiar with that, with those, you know, predictive failures.
But the details elude me at this point.
More important, of course, is that we found out his modeling software was garbage and did not predict.
That's more important, I understand.
Coming at it from the other perspective, and then we can cycle back into the responsibility thing if we want, is if somebody does have a. Right. But that's coming after, after you've shown that it's crazy,
ludicrous, definitely false. Right. Otherwise you kind of get in this CS Lewis called it the fallacy of Bolverism trying to explain why somebody is wrong without first showing that
they are wrong. Right. And you see that fallacy committed all the time. Now, again, there are
rules. And when it comes to
informal versus formal fallacies in logic, they're a lot more subtle. This is the problem when
somebody just goes and takes one semester in logic, and then they go and start trying to call
out all these fallacies. If you've been in philosophy for a while, you'll realize it's a
lot more subtle than that to really try and pin somebody, especially on an informal fallacy,
because of all the context around on it. But yeah, you'll see that this is a fallacy that's often committed all the time. This fallacy of
bulwarkism where people will start trying to give some type of psychological reasons of why you're
wrong, completely ignoring whether you actually are wrong in the first place, right? Yeah, no,
I agree with that. But coming back to personal responsibility. So I offered that because to my mind, that is an element of a worldview, kind of of a higher order.
And there are so many things that happen downstream of that or can happen.
And what are your thoughts, though, about...
So one of the guys who works with me is...
He's a smart dude.
And he's been with me for a while and very hard worker.
He's just a good guy.
He's one of those guys.
He's just a good guy. He has one of those guys, just a good guy.
He has a family and he loves his family.
He takes care of his family and he's a hard worker
and blah, blah, blah.
We all have, nobody's perfect, but he is a good guy.
I don't think he would consider himself,
he'd probably say he's agnostic.
And his position on a lot of this stuff
is he hasn't really thought about it.
Do you really need to believe that there is an ultimate meaning to just do the right things to be a good guy?
I mean, oh, that's already assuming there are right things.
And it makes sense to say that you could be a good guy. Right.
So it's sort of already there in the background for him.
And I would say you need to bring that stuff out, man. Right. Yeah.
Now, in his case, though, why? How could he benefit from, for example, because he's
already he's already doing the good guy thing. Maybe he could do it better or. All right. You
open you open up the can of worms here. Right. I mean, to say that you're a good person. I mean,
there's a lot of ways to analyze that. So let's just say that it actually does make sense to say
that you're a good person or you live a good human life, right? So let's say we're moral
realists, meaning that there are true moral claims that can be made, right? That there are moral
facts in the world. Some worldviews tend towards a moral anti-realism or an error theory. And
they'll say that now sort of all of our moral beliefs are just delusions sort of programmed
into us through selection pressures and stuff like that. I think that view is totally
false and ultimately self-undermining, but it's not the view your buddy is operating on. It's not
the view you're operating on. It's not the view that the vast majority of people operating on.
And in fact, it's not even the view that most people who believe that view operating on. It's
almost impossible to live consistently with that. So there's always a sort of performative
contradiction going on there. So, I mean, think about it this way, right? So Aristotle, he's pretty well known, right? He's got his Nicomachean ethics and he thinks that to have
a good life, right? A sort of full human existence. And he uses the term happiness, but I think a
better translation might be excellence or flourishing because our modern notion of happiness
is kind of like very much tied with, am I feeling like I have enough serotonin today? And that's
totally not. Yeah. Did I, did I take my meds today? Right. That's totally not the way that Aristotle's thinking about it. Right. He's really
thinking that the whole of the good, a good life is, is really kind of like a symphony. First,
you can't really judge it until it's done, but a good life is going to sort of be marked by
certain virtues, right? Which are perfections of our powers. We have a good life to the,
to the extent that we sort of most fully actualize the powers that are relevant to the type of being that we
are. And of course, the most preeminent power is rationality, right? Okay, there's a lot to
unpack in that and people can can and should read the Nicomachean ethics. If you're interested in
ethical thinking and moral thinking, that's a there's there's no excuse not to read that. And
in fact, if you want some help with that, I'm currently doing a series on the Nicomachean Ethics with
my friend, Dr. Jim Madden on my philosophy for the People Channel. Actually, we're done with it.
We did Nicomachean Ethics. Now we're doing Aristotle's Politics, right? But there are
other people who disagree with that, right? There's other people who hold a sort of,
who don't necessarily think that Aristotle's view is entirely wrong. They just feel
that it's incomplete, right? In the sense that there's more than just this life. And ultimately,
what determines whether you have a good life or not is if you're conformable to the ultimate good,
which they would hold as God, right? And this is a traditional religious perspective, right?
So from a traditional religious perspective, how you sort of live this
life and whether you form yourself in a right way, usually this is thought about in terms of
natural law theory or virtue ethics, right? Will determine sort of what you will choose in the next
life as your sort of eternal perfected state, right? And ultimately, whether you have a good life, ultimately,
will be determined how it winds up in the next life, right? So there's no guarantee of what
you're kind of, of how you're thinking about the good life. Now, let me conditionalize it.
If that worldview is right, then there's a lot more to think about. And there's a lot of reason
why that matters, because there's a sort of eternality component of it, right?
I mean, if that were true, then it would be hard to come up with anything more important
than that, obviously.
Of course, right?
And that is a very traditional religious perspective, right?
And I think that perspective has actually a lot going for it, right?
And so, yeah, we should be thinking about this life in relation to what comes next.
And Aristotle's project, while useful in some sense, there's actually great debate,
even among Aristotelian scholars of whether he thought the human persisted after bodily death or not.
He did. He did seem to think that we had this immaterial power, but it's debated of whether he thought that that that persisted at death or not.
Right. Plato definitely did. But he's got a very different theory of the human person.
But Plato, same thing. Right. You don't even have to make it religious. Plato really
thought that the sort of ultimate meaning of life, that the good life would be to escape the cave and
to kind of conform yourself to the good, right? Eternally, right? So your question was how to,
I guess, motivate somebody like that or to think about why that's important.
Well, I just thought his perspective was interesting
in that he's doing these things.
He's naturally inclined.
He doesn't have to force himself to be a good guy.
He's just somebody who's always been
naturally inclined that way.
Yeah, but good according to what criteria and system?
That's the question.
Yeah, you might be pulling some cats down from trees
and paying your bills on time and not systematically being dishonest or cheating on your wife.
And don't get me wrong, all those are good things.
But does that mean you're living an overall good existence?
Because you might be failing in other more important things, for example, that are so significant that on the whole, you might not wind up living an overall good life.
Now, again, before people start freaking out and screeching about that, I'm conditionalizing. I'm saying,
if a certain worldview is true, those would be the implications, right? But then if other worldviews
are true, the whole notion of a good life is meaningless. It doesn't matter. There is no such
thing as a good life, right? So you might as well just, you know, kind of just be a rank hedonist
and just do whatever, do whatever pleasures you can get away with. Right. So the thing is he's already operating
and you were too, they had a sort of standard or criteria in mind. And maybe you've drawn that out.
Maybe you fleshed that out. Maybe, maybe you haven't, but it's there. Right. And what the
philosopher wants to do is like, what's, what's bring that out. Let's take a look at it. Let's
see if that's good. Let's see if that, that sense and that's a good criteria or not. Because a lot of people might could easily rationalize and think that they are meeting a criteria and that it's the right criteria, but it might not be. And to me, it's just minimally, it's like it's worth asking the question, right?
Some other, again, higher order elements of worldviews that you think are worth thinking about.
Again, I brought up personal responsibility just because at a practical level, what I've found is that generally speaking, people who they don't just pay lip service to personal responsibility. But to give an example, you have some people, something bad happens. Somebody does something to them that harms them.
If some people who refuse to even consider what they did
that might've contributed to that situation,
that might've instigated the harmful action,
it's blame the other person.
They are the victim.
They are committed to that mentality.
And then you have people who
instinctively go in the other direction where they, they're not saying that it was okay for
that person to do what they did, but they instinctively can acknowledge their role in
whatever happened. It's so obvious and easy to do in interpersonal relations. If random bad things happen to you, that would be
a more difficult scenario to kind of pick apart. But somebody does something bad to you in response
to maybe something you did to them, for example, you have those two types of people. And the people
in the latter camp, in my experience, generally do better in life. They just, the people who default to, again,
it can this point of like, what can I control and how did I contribute to unwanted circumstances?
Of course, then they're able to start figuring out how to improve those circumstances. So it's
just an example of something that I think is very practical. And I'm just curious if there
are some other examples of these higher order things that
like if you pick one, chances are your life is going to be more difficult. Yeah. And look, again,
it can be one of those things where there's a sort of perversity at play, right? Maybe somebody has a
sort of this deep victim mentality and maybe there's a narcissism there. So then they want to
go pick up the worldview that they think supports that rather than the worldview that's best supported by the data. Right. I think
it useful here is just like, let's compare examples, right? Let's take what people are
into stoicism right now. And I think stoicism has a lot of good stuff in it, especially just
read like Epictetus and Seneca for sure. Like there's a lot of good stuff there. Right. But
Aristotle criticized the Stoics because, you know, the Stoics are all like, it's not about what happens to you. It's just about how you respond to it.
Again, overly simplified, but that's kind of general thrust. And Aristotle's like,
actually, it's a little more complicated than that. A good life is, yes, how you respond to
things and the virtues you develop. But let's be honest, it helps to have a little bit of wealth
and some friends as well, right? And some luck. And Aristotle's all about that, right? He's such a realist. He's so
realistic, right? So yeah, determinism seems like you're not going to be able to make sense of the
responsibility thing. The stoicism also seems a little bit unrealistic, right? Some people just
really are. And like, I don't care. There's like how much grit you think you have, like some,
so many bad things could happen to you that you're just not going to have an overall good
existence, at least in this life.
Aristotle recognized that. So did Thomas Aquinas.
And that's part of what Aristotle thought was the importance of politics was to kind of secure the wider conditions.
This is even more explicit in Aquinas so that we can help the most number of people have a chance to have a really good life.
have a chance to have a really good life, right? That's sort of the aim of the political project is to secure those sort of circumstantial conditions to help the most number of people
have a really good life to, you know, contingently self-determine themselves in a way that actually
is really good. And maybe we can better their chances of like the really awful stuff,
random stuff happening to them. Right. I think that's the right worldview. Right. But I also
think it's a nuanced worldview enough where we can have a sincere empathy and want to help people who really actually are victims
because we don't want to deny that there are victims in the world, people who just suffer from
natural disasters or other moral evils that people commit, like they really are victims. Right.
But not everybody is a victim in every circumstance. That's clearly ridiculous. There are some things that we really could have willed to avoid and other bad situations that we get in because of
our failure to have willed better, right? To have willed better.
Absolutely. We had so many opportunities to do things to avert whatever happened,
and we took none of them.
Right. And you might even get yourself into such a bad state that, and this is going back to Aquinas that he thinks there's no way short
of like divine intervention. You're getting out of it. Same with Aristotle. Aristotle was really
pessimistic. He thought probably by the time you were 30, if you didn't have virtue, you're just,
you're, you're out of luck. Sorry. Right. But certainly for a lot of these thinkers,
they want to say you're still kind of culpable for that because there was a lot of chances before that, right, where you could have corrected ship. So
even if you can't correct ship now, like you're literally stuck in this sort of abyss of vice,
because you've so sort of twisted yourself in on yourself, right, your will so distorted.
And when we talk about virtues and vices, you have to realize that these are habits, right? A virtue
is a good habit, a habit that perfects or powers vices are very bad habits. And we know that certain vices can really be extremely constraining and even beyond that
addictions and stuff like that, right? So again, these thinkers thought about these exceptions,
like a people who get so messed up, either through a series of choices that they they could
have made differently or through things that happened to them, right?
But realizing that the world is sufficiently complicated,
that it's both not right to think that every bad thing that happens to every person
is their own fault
or that it's the fault of something
entirely outside of themselves.
The right position is a much more nuanced position,
I think, that takes all that into account.
That very often people are culpable
for the bad in their lives. Not always. It's an interesting concept. that takes all that into account that very often people are culpable for, you know,
the bad in their lives.
Not always.
It's an interesting concept.
I'm sure you have lots to say about that.
Generally speaking,
it's a smarter choice to live as if you are culpable for everything that
happens to you rather than,
rather than the opposite or leaning heavily in the other direction where your,
your attitude is most of what happens to me is not my fault and is everyone
else's fault and is uh the patriarchy's fault and it might not be true but what if you lived
as if it were true right yeah um no like certainly i agree like it just seems far better far healthier
and far more conducive to what i think a good life is to just assume that you actually have
control over a lot of the things that happen to
you, which I think is pretty obvious that we do, although not all of them, especially how we
respond to the things. Maybe we can't control everything that happens to us, but oftentimes
we can control how we respond and react to it, right? However, I would want to avoid the other
extreme of thinking that we have this sort of maximal autonomy, because I actually think that
humility itself is a virtue, right? So I think the right disposition is I'm going to do the best I can,
but still graciously accept help and realize when I need help from sources beyond myself,
right? Whatever, whatever that means. So that's, that's how I would position that,
right? Because otherwise you could, yeah, I guess, commit a sin against the virtue of humility,
if you want to put it that way. Hey there, if you are hearing this, you are still listening, which is awesome. Thank you. And if you
are enjoying this podcast, or if you just like my podcast in general, and you are getting at least
something out of it, would you mind sharing it with a friend or a loved one or a not so loved one even who might want to learn something new,
word of mouth helps really bigly in growing the show. So if you think of someone who might like
this episode or another one, please do tell them about it. So my next question is then,
how much do you think someone's worldview is really just a reflection of who they are?
You know, I get a little bit cynical sometimes about people's ability to really change fundamentally.
And I have to say, I can think of many more examples of people generally changing for the
worst, like whatever is dysfunctional, just becoming more prevalent in whatever's functional
shrinking over time. It's always,
we all have these things. It's easier to see it in others than it is ourselves, blah, blah, blah,
of course. But, you know, also I wonder sometimes how much we can really change our worldviews
based on who we are fundamentally, which doesn't seem to change much, no matter what we do. What are your thoughts on
that? Like how much are, I think of a person's politics and how much of that is really just a
reflection of who they are. Bring up another really controversial topic. Go ahead, Mike.
Oh, it's, I was just going to use communism. It's not that controversial. Not yet. Right. But I can think of people who are just
not very useful people. They're lazy. They explicitly do not like to work. They're not
particularly good at anything. They're just not doing well in life. Like they are not succeeding
in our society as it is. And they don't want to say that that's their fault, essentially. Like, yeah, I'm not up to making it. I can't hold down a good job. I can't really persist on any
through obstacles and blah, blah, blah. And so I like this political philosophy
that seems kind of tailored to me. I'm being oppressed by the evil small business owners.
And if we could just distribute all these resources equally,
I could tap into my inner child and create beautiful art. And it's so obvious that
this is just something that is, it's like a self-justification really for their failures.
Yeah. And of course, there's many political programs that are designed with
that sort of psychological manipulation in mind. Right. So that's not that's not surprising. All
I can say in general of like how like does does that happen? Do people kind of have a way of life
and maybe a sort of perverse mentality and then they go and look for whatever ideology
would secure them in that? Yeah, totally. But but can you change it?
I mean, all I can say is, yeah, I really think so, because I mean, at least I have. Right. But
I think it takes a real sort of interest and dedication. Like I tell people like nothing
else. Like what is your what is your fundamental aim in life? Is it just to watch Netflix and play
video games? You know, from a very young age, I just I just wanted to know what was true.
That was like a deep motivation for me. Now, if your fundamental aim is like, I've got to secure
a political ideology, then truth takes a secondary consideration, right? This sounds so trivial,
but I think it's important. You're so much more likely to hit a target you're actually aiming for.
If you're not aiming for the truth, what are the chances that you're actually going to hit it?
A lot less, right? And I would say if you you're trying to live a good life, and all the perennial philosophers I greatly admire would say
that, you know, what's sort of highest among us, our powers is our intellect, that truth really
does perfect us in some sort of deep metaphysical way, right? And we all again, operate this because
as weird as our culture has gotten, like both all disagreeing parties still want to say that they
have the truth, right? It's like, there's still this like deep, deep operative assumption that
truth is a good thing. It's something we should have. I would say that's, that's actually right,
right? Now what the truth is, is a more complicated topic and debate. But I say you have to kind of
like really make that your honest priority. Like, okay, I've got a lot of other commitments,
but truth has to take a front seat. And look, I've changed my views drastically. I was very much a political liberal when I was younger.
Then I became a pretty hardcore libertarian, like this close to like a narco capitalism,
my friend, like we're getting real flirty with Rothbard and those guys. Right. But as I went
deeper and deeper and I started to kind of like change things on bottom levels because I thought
they were true, my sort of more fundamental
paradigms, my four fundamental worldviews, those structural changes, they go upwards, right? And
they reconfigure what's above it, right? So then I ended up abandoning libertarianism.
And because obviously there's a point where it's either abandoned libertarianism or abandoned
what's beneath it. Because they've come into tension for various reasons, maybe ethical
reasons, stuff like that. Right. And those for metaphysical reasons. So you realize, OK, what I
had before brought me down here. I tried to fix what was down here or at least clarify what's
down here. Now, this is intention, which is up there. What do I care about most? Do I care about
this political philosophy program or do I care about the truth? Well, if I care about the truth,
I should be willing to abandon what I previously held up there. This is reasonable belief revision, right?
Now, look, I have biases like anybody else.
Nobody's perfectly Spock, right?
We've all got our influences.
But I think I can fairly say that that are things that I have done, that I've done the best that I can just to try and get things right.
And I've been willing to give up things that I was really invested in before, right? And I've been willing to give up things that I was really invested in before, right? I was really invested in libertarian philosophy, especially political philosophy, like the higher
level libertarian philosophy is like Nozick and stuff like that. I was really attracted to it.
I was in a lot of, a lot of my friends were libertarians, a lot of, a lot of groups and
communities and like, it's not easy to give something like that up, right? It's never easy
to give up something that's sort of become a part of your life.
But to me, the willingness to do that, I think is important if you're trying to live a really good life and get it at the true thing. So I think it can be done. I've seen many other people do it.
Maybe they haven't come to the same conclusions to me, but it seems like they've been honest in
their assessments and they've given up other things along the way. How many? Is it the majority
of people? I don't have good answers to that, but I think it can be done. But it has to be something assessments and they've given up other things along the way. How many is it? The majority of
people. I don't have good answers to that, but I think it can be done, but it has to be something
that, that people are again, explicit about what is most important to me in life. Do I want the
truth above other things? And to me, that's, that's it. And then it takes work, which you said
a lot, a lot, a lot of work, right? A lot, a lot of work. And it takes, I'm guessing there were a lot of uncomfortable
moments for you just in your, where you're, you're not only working at it, but as you,
as that tension builds internally, that's not necessarily a nice thing to experience.
No, it's nasty. That's why a lot of people avoid the philosophy. Philosophy will challenge you on
so many of your fundamental beliefs, man. And people don't like that. It's really uncomfortable. And even though I think I've gotten clarity on a lot
of important things in philosophy, I now have far more questions than I have ever had before.
And I'm far less sure about many of the sort of downstream beliefs, including political beliefs,
than I was when I was 18 or 25. Right. So that's
just that's just the name of the game. Another question regarding personal responsibility,
just just curious as to your thoughts. So you obviously have a theistic view, monotheistic view.
So what are your thoughts on, OK, something randomly bad happens to somebody you would, you would say
there is no obvious connection between, you know, the cause and the effect. But if, if there is
a God, and even if you could probably include other worldviews that would have some sort of
spiritual component and supreme creator,
doesn't have to necessarily be yours.
How do we know that that wasn't our fault
in some other way, in a spiritual sense,
or that it's part of some plan
or that it still might come back to our,
it was our, and when I say our fault,
I don't like actually blame.
I don't mean blame.
I just mean accountability.
We're just not aware of it.
Right.
So this is a great, this is, this is great because you're bringing up the problem of
evil, right?
And it seems like here's one of those general data points that we have to get done with.
There's a lot of suffering and evil in the world, right?
That's like one of those really general data points that whatever worldview you have, what
explains that, right? And here,
initially, it seems like there might be like a really good point in favor of views that are not,
let's say, classical theism. I'm not just talking about atheism of indifference, but
you might even think of like a dualism. There's a good God and a warring God or something like
that, right? It seems like, okay, maybe that will explain the data, right? I think it's important to
say that when it comes to classical theism, most of the philosophers I engage with and talk to, they don't think that it's explanatorily inadequate in any sense.
And I'm talking even of skeptical ones.
They think it's extremely explanatorily powerful.
classical theistic worldview makes a lot of sense of moral features of the world of consciousness of free will of physical fine-tuning of religious experience of near-death experience all that like
it explains data really really well it's hugely explanatory powerful the problem they think that
has is it predicts too much it predicts too much they think if look the foundation is perfect why
isn't the world perfect right and it seems like suffering evil is like a huge sort of predictive miss for the theory. Right. And I want to say, fair enough.
That's something the classical theist has to deal with. Now, there's a couple of ways to think about
it. You might think that, yeah, that's a sort of evidential weight against classical theism,
but all things considered, the scales totally tip in favor of it. So I'm going to go with that with
that worldview. And some people are willing to say that. I want to say actually a lot more.
I want to say that we should take a certain epistemic humility, that when it comes to the
sort of governance of the world and providence, there's a lot of reasons to think that God would
have a reason for the suffering and evil in the world, but also we wouldn't be able to see what
that reason is because we don't have the God- size idea of things. And there also might be structural reasons, right? So one thing
that I've always thought was interesting is there's notions of vagueness and arbitrariness and chance
in a lot of philosophy. So think of a growing economy, right? It might just be the case that
for any growing economy, some number of people just have to suffer for the growth for the overall
good, you know, as new
technologies emerge and old industries are replaced and stuff like that. So it's like, yeah, it seems
like for the overall good, some number of people have to suffer. But we think that this is
justifiable, especially if we can compensate those people in some way or whatever. But it doesn't
assign who has to suffer. It might just be the case that some number of people structurally have to suffer, but it's sort of arbitrary who does, right? You might want to
think that in the theistic picture, something like that might be the case with suffering and evil.
To facilitate certain overall goods, it might just be the case that there are certain conditions
where there has to be a certain degree of tolerance of suffering and evil, both natural evils and
moral evils, And it doesn't
even specify who has to suffer. However, you might also think, and I think that this is right,
that if people really do kind of are truly the most arbitrary recipients of that suffering,
that they should and must be compensated in some way. And for that, you might think that theism
entails an afterlife, right? That it would be incompatible or inconsistent
with a theistic worldview that takes that sort of approach, the structural response to the problem
of evil. I mean, the distribution of suffering is interesting, too. It's certainly not a normal
distribution. It's definitely, I mean, I haven't looked into this, but I'd put money that it's a
power distribution. Majority of suffering is done by a minority of people.
Just like how, you know, I mean,
this I have looked into this research in crime,
like a minority of criminals,
they commit a majority of the crime.
But, you know, suffering is by no means
like restricted to like third world countries.
I mean, first world countries suffer.
But anyways, my point being is that
this might give you reason to think
that a theistic worldview entails an afterlife. I think that's right. But you brought up other
theories. Well, maybe there's a sort of reincarnational aspect of it. So maybe it is
that what you get now is a sort of just dessert for how you behaved in a previous life. I think
there's issues with that in the sense that something had to sort of kick that off and whatever that first evil was, that wouldn't
have been justified, right? Because there was nothing previous to that, unless you want to
have a sort of infinite explanatory regress, which seems to me, explanatorily vicious, right? Of how
this ever got started. But moreover, just to keep going through these theories, because this is how
you do theory comparison, it seems like it would provide a perverse incentive to alleviate
suffering. You look at somebody suffering, and you would think, oh, well,
they're just getting what they deserve, even if it's like a little child starving. And I think
that that does not make sense of our moral intuitions. We think we actually have an
obligation to alleviate that suffering. I'm not sure those would be at odds, though,
because a recognition of responsibility isn't necessarily blame. It isn't saying,
though, because a recognition of responsibility isn't necessarily blame. It isn't saying,
oh, screw the little kid. That's his fault. I think you could, I mean, you could, you could,
just as you could have somebody do something harmful to themselves, they did it. There's no question. And then your inclination is to help them still, especially let's say it's your kid
and they're cutting themselves. Like you're not going to just berate them.
Right.
So this is the distinction between responsibility and culpability.
You know, somebody might be responsible for something.
Say I somebody falls on the bus because my leg was sticking out.
I'm responsible for that.
But I am.
It was a total accident.
Am I culpable for it?
Most people say probably not.
However, if I intentionally put my foot out there and tried to trip them, then we say I'm both responsible I culpable for it? Most people say probably not. However, if I intentionally put my
foot out there and tried to trip them, then we say I'm both responsible and culpable. I should be
punished or reprimanded or shouted out or something like that. So. Right. But if you take a starving
child, let's just say in in some scenario, they are responsible for that condition in some way.
Obviously, let's say this is from a previous life, whatever, right? Where they made free choices, which they're then now culpable for.
Is that the perspective? And so I'm saying is that there's a difference there of responsibility and
culpability, not that you're going to take that kid and say that you're now going to punish them
even even let's say you knew exactly like you were such a bad person for so long and you knew you
were so bad that this is you punishing yourself.
Let's just say. Right. Or you brought this on yourself in some way.
It doesn't necessarily mean that you're now going to punish them further.
You know, there's that responsibility versus. Right.
Maybe you might not punish them further, but maybe you don't feel a great obligation to alleviate their suffering either, which I think you should, which I think you should.
Right. Anyways, getting back to, I guess, the fundamental point, you might have theories that explain certain data points
equally well, too. And you might realize, okay, they're sort of at an explanatory tie here. So I
need to look somewhere else and find some other sort of tiebreakers of why I should prefer this
theory over another theory. And I would say in terms of reincarnation for deeper metaphysical and philosophical reasons,
I think when you study,
I'm a sort of Aristotelian, right?
I think the soul is the form of the body.
So like metaphysically,
I don't actually think reincarnation
makes a lot of sense.
Out of curiosity,
have you read Jeffrey Mishlove's essay on this?
I can tell you I have not
because I don't even recognize the name, but.
Okay. You might find it interesting. It's more about data points. It's for inductive reasoning,
it doesn't proceed deductively. It's maybe 50 or 60 pages long and gives a lot of,
I would say, empirical evidence. And this is not you per se, but I will say that I have come across a number of theists
over the years who intentionally do not look into it. It's very uncomfortable.
Look, you have to look at all the data. So like I'll say, there's some really good stuff.
Murphy was the kind of famous case a while ago. Anyway, it's been many years since the details
alluded to me. But no, granted, there's some cases that I think are really interesting, both in terms of where reincarnation
seems to be a good theory. But anyways, what I want to say is, yeah, there, there is that data
that needs to be made sense of and same with near death experiences and all that. And there's,
there's even more research on near death experience, which I find utterly fascinating.
It's been a number of years since I took a deep dive into it. But when I did, I realized, wow, this is really significant stuff.
Long story short on all that stuff is like, again, there's going to be some data that
determines a theory, but in other ways, your theory might also have to determine the data.
And that isn't always unreasonable, right? Because you might have a theory that you think is so well
supported by other data. And there might be this sort of anomaly or and we have this in science all the time that seems like it doesn't refute the theory, but it also doesn't fit really well with it.
So maybe I have to reinterpret this data in some way.
Or maybe I just don't know enough yet.
And yeah, right.
So, I mean, look, I mean, there's there's many of those out there for I mean, so so for example, the naturalist is going to just say it's hallucinations and stuff like that.
Now, I don't think that does give an adequate account because I think the data just isn't adequately explained by various hallucinations.
There's too much sort of veridical reports of stuff, right, in both near-death experiences and reincarnation.
For anybody who seriously, honestly looks into this stuff, as you've said, people who just say those, who throw those, like, the naturalistic ones out there, like,
it's clear to me they actually haven't been through the research, especially the peer-reviewed
research on near-death experience, right? Just a knee-jerk reaction. Yeah, it's a knee-jerk dismissal.
They're just like the people who dismiss evidence of conspiracy as conspiracy theory.
That's conspiracy theory.
So, yeah, so what's the traditional,
or it doesn't even have to be a tradition
because you could be a traditional theist,
monotheist, and still believe in reincarnation.
Many do.
But say you have other reasons
for thinking reincarnation is false.
You need to have some other way
to make sense of it.
Maybe it has to do with other spiritual entities
that exist and are messing with people.
Or some personal experience.
You could imagine if you had
some personal experience that was profound imagine if you had some personal experience
that was profound enough
where the only good explanation you could come up with was,
like, let's say something happens,
maybe you even do past life regression therapy, whatever,
and you remember explicit details of a previous lifetime.
You go and look it up and you're like, it's all right.
You find who you were, your name, where you have no, where did this come from? There can be things where you're like,
I'm not sure what else to think at this point. Yeah, of course, you know, maybe there's other
spiritual entities that could pass that information along and it's not veridical,
right? So you can see like how there are other theistic theories that could
accommodate that data. I'm just saying something like that would definitely, somebody like you,
it would shake you a little bit. You wouldn't just dismiss it like, oh, well, it was probably
just an angel who told me that and whatever. It's fine. Yeah, no, I would I would count that as an
initially inconvenient data point as initially like anomalous data point. And it's one I've
obviously thought about because I'm hinting at the ways I've thought about it. Right. So I do try to
be somebody who considers all the data that is
actually well evidenced, right? And say, how does this fit into a theory? Because if I want the
right theory, I should be able to accommodate all the data in some ways. And some data is going to
fit if it's a good theory. Hopefully a lot of data is going to fit really well. But again,
all theories have anomalies and things that might not seem to initially fit. That's okay. You never
just throw out a great theory because you have like a few anomalies here or there, right. That's okay. You never just throw out a great theory because you have like a few
anomalies here or there, right? That's not good method. That's commonly used to attack great
theories too. And, and it, it plays well with some people. Right. Yeah. So this is, this is like
good, hopefully like general reasoning for people. And, and I would say like, even initially it
didn't disturb me because when I first initially was researching these things, I didn't have the theory I have now.
Right. It was it was after I've gone through all this stuff that I thought this is the best theory to make sense of all that, if you write.
But your example is a good one in a sense that that's one that is certainly incompatible with the way I think about the human person and the soul and stuff now.
But I have other theoretical postulates that make sense of that,
it would just be interpreted in a way that you probably wouldn't like. There's other people who
believe in reincarnation wouldn't like, and there we're just at a stalemate, right? There's no way
to empirically break that stalemate. So you, then you need other, cause they both explain the data
equally at that point, right? Then you need other considerations to try and break that stalemate.
And that's just part of the game. That's part of the method, right? Now, the point is that what you might
want to do and try and come back at me is say, well, yours is ad hoc, right? You've brought
something in without independent motivation for doing so. And that's a sort of cost.
Now, it might be a cost worth assuming, be revised hypotheses and sometimes wire in new
components of them. And we don't think that that's totally legitimate.
But I would say, no, it's not.
The thing I'm postulating is sort of has already been there.
Right.
And now it's just it's it's it can serve to also do this this work as well.
Right.
So I'm trying to play devil's advocate with myself a little bit.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We could continue that further if I were to.
I wouldn't say challenges.
I'm not trying to challenge you.
But but questions.
No, the challenges are good.
So, I mean, people like back off. They don't realize objections are a philosopher's love language.
What do I have to lose, right? Well, maybe a lot in terms of my commitments, but like,
I've just told you, and if I'm not a hypocrite, that I want to believe true and not false things.
But what objections and challenges are meant to stress test a position or a worldview. Dang,
right. I better hope that I've looked at
those, right? Otherwise, I've just sort of engaged in a project of delusion, right? And I think and
I've tried to be honest and say, look, I think for a theistic worldview, the greatest challenge
is the problem of evil. That's the hardest one. I think there's good answers to it. And I think
fundamentally, that data point can not only sort of be neutralized between a traditional theistic theory and rival theories.
I think upon substantial analysis, it can actually point back to it, which is a very that'll be in my book that I'm working on, because the whole book is on worldview comparison where I actually go through different data.
And I say, what what big picture best predicts this data does so in the simplest way.
And evil and suffering is something I spend a significant amount of time on in my book. And I talk about things like that structural response I mentioned to you, but
many, many other considerations as well. Yeah. Yeah. The structural response is interesting,
but it's still it still raises the question of why not come up with an economic system that
doesn't require suffering or doesn't you know what I mean? Maybe it's not feasible. Maybe there's no
possible world where that could be done. Right. So we're know what I mean? Maybe it's not feasible. Maybe there's no possible world
where that could be done, right?
So we're gonna get there, right?
Yeah, uh-huh.
But if you have an omniscient, omnipotent,
omni-everything God, why couldn't,
of course he could have just come up with her.
He or, I mean, I don't even,
traditionally, is there a gender to God?
But regardless, why couldn't this supreme creator
have just done it differently?
Like, why not? Now, we have talked about this further, so, or previously, but.
Yeah, no, it's, it's where it's worth talking about again. So when we talk about, first off,
we need conceptual clarity on classical theism. We think that omnipotence is just the ability to
bring about all possibilities of being. So it doesn't mean God can do, he can't bring about
contradictions or something. He can bring about all things that are at least logically consistent,
not just internally, but also with his nature, right? We think that God is constrained isn't a good way, but we think that God's nature is such that it would be irrational for God to do certain that they're sort of impossible in this worldview, right? So silly example, we don't think, classical theists
wouldn't think that God would create just one world with a burning kitten in it for all eternity,
because it's just like fundamentally nonsense, right? So God's always going to sort of act
like we all do in accord with the type of being that we are. And that's no different with God
in the classical theistic picture than it is with human beings. That rationality, however, also isn't just about creation. It's about governance.
I talk about this in my book, right? And when God creates things, he creates things according
to certain natures or essences. There's a lot of deep metaphysical assumptions here.
One is essentialism. The things actually have an essence or a nature, a sort of determinant
whatness of what they are. We have a human nature, for example, right? And that God is going to kind of guide these things to their end according to the type of
thing that they are. And when you think deeply about what a human being is, we're not just
rational animals, but we're rational, social, dependent animals that rely on community and
other people for what we know. We're also fallible, right? We're not omniscient. We're not
omnipotent. We can make moral miscalculations,
and we do. So a wise God, I argue in the book, and the general one is going to guide us according to
the types of things we are. God could infuse a direct knowledge in us that makes us choose the
right thing all the time, but that's sort of discordant with human nature, right? Which is
itself is sort of discordant with a wise, not just creator, but governor. So what I do in the book is I examine
what would we expect from this hypothesis, right? But to understand what we would expect from the
hypothesis, we have to understand what the hypothesis is and what sort of expectations
flow from it. And I want to say, it's only at a superficial level that we think this data point
is really intention, certainly not contradiction. I think that there's no logical probability, There's just an evidential one, right? It's only on a superficial level that
it's intention. But once we get greater conceptual clarity on the human person, the structure of the
good and the nature of God, we can see that this type of world with a certain range of suffering
evil and certain limitations, and it is a very great range. I don't want to, uh, deny that, right. And that suffering evil is extremely, uh, real, uh, and significant,
but upon substantial analysis, I want to say, this is actually just the type of world we would
expect on a classical theistic worldview, including when, even when we include considerations of
omniscience and omnipotence and perfect goodness and all that. And if something randomly bad
happens to you, how do you interpret that?
Yeah, I think that there's randomness in creation.
That's part of God's, yeah.
And not that it was necessarily willed, but it just,
the pinball was bouncing around and it hit you.
God can will things with certain probabilities,
and he can control objective, actually, outcomes.
And even Aquinasinas medieval theologian
held that right that god can cause things necessarily contingently and by chance right
so yeah no i think that there is a sort of randomness element if you want in in creation
even from a theistic standpoint and there's actually good reasons of why it would be would
be done that way yeah i mean you can find that in nature at least the advantages of and then again
with the moral
considerations that have to be considered and to me i think that leads to some of the structural
considerations that we thought about and that if we think theism is right of a classical theistic
viewpoint we should also think that there that there is an astral life that follows from that
we have good reason apart from like near-death experience stuff and and other maybe more
empirical evidence or thoughts about the human person's soul, but just from the theistic hypothesis to think that this life is not all there is, if that makes sense.
Well, I think this is probably a good place to wrap it up.
We could keep going, but we've put in our time.
Is there anything else, though, that you had in the back of your mind that you thought we should mention before we wrap up?
that you had in the back of your mind that you thought we should mention before we wrap up?
I'll just reiterate again,
you've kind of, in good and interesting fashion,
as you do as a host, Mike,
kind of tried to probe me and examine me,
and I've shared my thoughts
and the way I think about things.
But the fundamental point I wanted to get out
for this episode was just sort of like
what a lot of philosophers are up to
with this worldview comparison
and why it's important.
And if nothing else, I hope maybe we've gotten people sort of intrigued in it. I think
it is important. I think, especially, you know, especially for society, right. To have, to have
people who are thinking deeply about political matters, which tie deeply into ethical matters,
which tie deeply into metaphysical matters. Like to me, it seems like that's a, that's something
we could, we could only stand to benefit from
if people took that more seriously.
So yeah, that's it.
Yep, yeah, I totally agree.
That's why I thought this would be an interesting interview.
It means something interesting to me,
but I think it's a good message
because as you said early on,
people are operating under a worldview
whether they realize it or not.
And the worst scenario is probably where they are not aware of much or any of their worldview.
And it has simply been programmed into them by the various channels that, you know, media and mostly mostly just media.
And for some people, it means that. And for some people,
for some people, that's literally Marvel movies. Half of their worldview was...
Yeah, avoid the mass media
programming. Get out of Plato's cave. Just read his Republic.
Instead of putting it on Netflix tonight, just get a copy of Plato's
Republic. Start there. Or start with a series.
If I can give a plug, I've got my Philosophy for the People channel. Jim and I have a 10-part series going through Plato's Republic, start there. Or start with a series. If I can give a plug, I've got my Philosophy for the People channel.
Jim and I have a 10-part series
going through Plato's Republic.
So we've gotten some good feedback about it.
Maybe people will dig that.
That's great.
Anything else, any other resources,
thinking with somebody who's new to a lot of this?
So yeah, if you're interested
in these philosophical conversations,
my podcast, Philosophy for the People,
I host it with my good friend, Jim Madden. He focuses a lot on philosophy of mind.
So, uh, has some really cool just thoughts and publications in that. If that interests you,
nature of consciousness, rationality, free will, that's kind of his wheelhouse. Uh, so we run
philosophy for the people and our goal is to just try and take difficult thought and make it, if not
easy, at least accessible. Um, so that's what we're up to. It's on iTunes and YouTube. And then on the fitness side, I'm still swinging kettlebells
and still writing and talking about that. That's on the Pat Flynn Show podcast.
Cool, cool. And something I'll throw out there is Will Durant's Story of Philosophy book is,
I think, a great resource for getting a good overview of,
I'm trying to think back,
I think it covers most of the most popular,
at least, schools of philosophy.
And I'm personally a fan of Will Durant's work.
I thought he was,
I mean, it was him and his wife actually did it together,
but they were brilliant and amazing communicators,
really impressive.
Yeah, if you're asking for good books,
I've got a ton of starter books.
First off, people are always big on the primary text,
and I think that's important,
but if we're being realistic,
if anybody's tried to dive straight into Aristotle's physics,
it's just gonna give you a headache in five minutes, right?
Plato's different.
Plato's more accessible, his dialogue's slow.
I think you can hop right to Plato.
I think with Aristotle,
it helps to get some secondary commentary
and stuff like that. But I'll give two books real quick, both by the same author. His name's Mortimer J. Adler. Really great, interesting thinker in his in his own right. He actually wrote a book called How to Read a Book.
Yeah, I was like, didn't I read a book from him about like how to read or literature or something?
something. It's brilliant. It's really a system of how do you engage with a book that's currently above you and go from a state of understanding less understanding more. That's not the book I'm
recommending, though, but he's well known for that book. The book, the books I'm recommending
from him are six great ideas, where he looks at the philosophical history of six great ideas,
truth, goodness, being justice, and I'm forgetting the other ones right now, which is embarrassing.
But anyway, six great ideas, philosophical ideas, it'll it'm forgetting the other ones right now, which is embarrassing, but anyway,
sixth grade ideas, philosophical ideas. It'll, it'll recur to me like two seconds after the podcast, but that's a fantastic, fantastic introduction to philosophical thought and
the history of philosophical thinking. The other one by him are 10 philosophical mistakes.
And that again is a nice survey of the history of philosophical thinking,
ranging over many different ideas, considering consciousness, free will, political philosophy, you name it, ethics.
And he tries to pinpoint where he thinks the train of philosophical thought went off the rails.
So he picks on a lot of different things like Locke and Descartes and Hume.
He's like, here's where they made a mistake, and this is why we have the absurd consequences we have today in these lines of
thought. So you'll get a nice sort of both overview of the history of philosophical thought, but also
a sort of diagnosis. And then he gives what he thinks is the corrective as well. So I would
highly recommend that book. Both of those. Awesome. A discussion about the Enlightenment
philosophy could be interesting for a future talk. Yeah, I've got a love-hate relationship.
I've spent a lot of time with, especially Descartes. I love Descartes, but I profoundly disagree with him. But I just, I just, I love reading him. I love the way he thinks. I think he's very wrong on a lot of things, but he's, he's hugely significant, right? Because he kind of set the agenda and introduced inadvertently a lot of skepticism into philosophy and epistemology that we're still kind of struggling with now. So
yeah, anytime. Awesome. Well, hey, I look forward to the next one. I usually run about a month ahead
when this one goes up. Let's talk about the next. Well, I hope you liked this episode. I hope you
found it helpful. And if you did subscribe to the show, because it makes sure that you don't miss
new episodes. And it also helps me because it
increases the rankings of the show a little bit, which of course then makes it a little bit more
easily found by other people who may like it just as much as you. And if you didn't like something
about this episode or about the show in general, or if you have ideas or suggestions or just
feedback to share, shoot me an email, mike at muscleforlife.com,
muscleforlife.com, and let me know what I could do better or just what your thoughts are about
maybe what you'd like to see me do in the future. I read everything myself. I'm always looking for
new ideas and constructive feedback. So thanks again for listening to this episode, and I hope
to hear from you soon.