PBD Podcast - American Author David Berlinski | PBD Podcast | EP 146
Episode Date: April 14, 2022Patrick Bet-David is joined by Author David Berlinski to discuss God, Regrets in old age, philosophy, religion much more... TOPICS How David Berlinski Formed His Thoughts Against Darwins Theory Of E...volution What David Berlinski Stands for The Problem with Taking A Position In The Middle David Berlinski Explains Who 'God' Is David Berlinski explains Pascal's Wager David Berlinski's Heaviest Thoughts At 80 Years Old David Berlinski explains how the holocaust affected his views on religion David Berlinski explains the purpose of a man The most common thing David Berlinski hears from people who read his work David Berlinski explains what we can learn from the 60's generation University professors today vs 1960 David Berlinski explains which institution we trust too much David Berlinski explains how evolution can coincide with religion Callers David Berlinski explains the role of religion throughout history Follow David here https://bit.ly/3NZhZno Check out David's work online: https://bit.ly/3jyNAOQ Buy David's latest book, Human Nature: https://amzn.to/37M5DP4 Buy David's hit book, The Devil's Delusion: https://bit.ly/3vjlYme Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get added to the distribution list Adam “Sos” Sosnick has lived a true rags to riches story. He hasn’t always been an authority on money. Connect with him on his weekly SOSCAST here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLw4s_zB_R7I0VW88nOW4PJkyREjT7rJic Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. To reach the Valuetainment team you can email: booking@valuetainment.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Are you out of your mind?
Here's the debate.
You're upset.
They're saying we believe you.
This is it.
No, I thought that.
F***.
F***.
F***.
F***.
F***.
F***.
All right, episode number 146 with the legendary David Berlinski.
If you don't know our guests today,
let me give them a proper introduction.
I give them a different one off camera.
I'm gonna give that as well.
Just so you know, I made that commitment.
You know, I'm gonna do it.
Okay, Senior Fellow of the Discovery Institute Center
for Science and Culture,
the Hub of Intelligent Design Movement.
I wanna say he got his PhDd in philosophy from uh... Princeton
and uh... was also was a fellow mathematics and molecular biology at columbia
university but he doesn't stop there he's not philosophy mathematics
english at stanford Rutgers uh... the city of new uh... university new york
uh... university of washington university of uh...
pujay sound sound Jose State University this University
Santa Clara University San Francisco San Francisco State University mathematics at University
de Paris and he flew in from Paris which the flight was uneventful and here's what I told you
of camera and I want to say to everybody as well. You come across as the man that you've debated
Hitchens you've you've shared a stage with some of the best debaters Hitchens being on the Athea side.
You went up there on the agnostic side.
You've gone against Darwinism.
You've gone against, I don't know, Sam Harris, you, you have a lot of different opinions, but you're sarcastic.
You have a sense of humor.
You know how to poke.
You know how to get under people's skins and you're very, very smart with that being said. David, thank you so much for traveling. Come in visit and go see your Florida.
You're so very welcome. It's a pleasure being here. Yes, and it's a pleasure
having you and I love that tie you got. Yeah, I'm well dressed as well. I mean, above
all sharp. I point you into actual life in terms
of the opportunity it affords me to display my wardrobe.
That's what it is. I like that. So you really only came to show off your clothes.
The only reason. The only reason. The only reason. That's just to a fashion show, right?
Tell me you imagine. So hey, why did you go on that guy's podcast? Listen, I wanted to show the
new time that we spent five minutes talking about his shoes before the podcast. There's no
reason to stop that conversation. You know what?
Forget about God.
Forget about evolution.
Forget about Darwinism.
I told him.
Let's turn this into a fashion show.
I told him.
Listen, you would be, what would you call yourself?
A confused Jew?
Why would you put yourself as a
person?
Yeah, I'll take that.
You know, Christian, what would you put yourself?
Confused Catholic.
Confused Catholic.
And then we have a, you know,
Ignatth stake over here.
And what would you consider yourself,
Tyler?
Confused you, I think.
You're not.
Tyler's not Jewish, whatsoever.
Everybody's talking about converting these.
But it is confused.
Regardless, I told, here's the expectation.
I don't like to start podcasts with a very high expectation
where we're gonna be disappointing ourselves.
Today we're gonna start off with a very low expectation.
The goal is by the time we are done, we know for a fact who got us. That's what the goal is. It's not very low expectation. The goal is by the time we are done,
we know for a fact who got us.
That's what the goal is.
It's not a high expectation.
And we got somebody I like to that can help us with that.
Obviously the weekend's been very eventful.
I was in, we have an honor podcast this week.
I was, Friday I went to Joe Rokin,
watched him perform in Jacksonville,
which was hilarious.
And I saw Tony.
Tony Hinchcliffe.
Oh my God. Oh, so I thought you just went to UFC you actually
I was with Joe stand up got me tickets and I want to watch them perform he I
Had no idea this guy was this funny Joe 12,000 people in normally is performing in the middle in the back a full on fight breaks out
20 people rumble. It's how everyone's looking at it. They're screaming.
Joe's like, what the hell is going on back there? They put the light in that section. And you
literally see like, you know, guys, punch in another guy. They all stop and sit down because
they didn't want to get arrested. Cops ran up there. It was awesome. The next day we went to the
fight. We had dinner two nights together with Joe and Tony and Hans and, you know, all the guys,
just a bunch of man's man freaking
awesome conversations.
A lot of good things coming soon.
The restaurant we went to is Cal Ford, steakhouse, the owner sent me a message saying I've been
watching your content for the longest time.
The most ridiculous steakhouse in Jacksonville, bone marrow, Fogra, Wagyu beef.
They brought everything that dessert was ridiculous.
We had a good time
I'll fill in on a major project that we may be launching Kirsten that's gonna be very funny
and it's gonna be for men stick around. We'll be announcing it probably next. I don't know maybe tomorrow if not definitely next week and
It's gonna be fun. But anyone from Rogan to the house that Brady builds. Oh, we rented out
Yeah, we rented out the entire Foxboro
Stadium and we brought two patriots.
One was Matt Light, who's hilarious.
He was the offensive line, the center for Brady.
He was telling store he won three Super Balls himself and he's in a New England Patriots
Hall of Fame.
And then we had a Rob Ninkovich, which is, he had signed back.
Linebacker.
Linebacker, Beast number 50.
Absolute, I want to Purdue.
Then, Tom's agent was their manager,
was financial, the guy who was managing his finances
for the last 17 years.
He was there.
We sat down and watched Man in the arena for two days.
It was a great session.
We had a great time.
But today is about you.
So, for some that don't know,
if you don't mind taking a minute and give your background
on how you got started, why mathematics, how you came to your conclusion with your philosophy,
try to do that in a shorter version and then we'll go into questions and different topics.
Sure.
As central aspects, born 1942, New York, Mid-Mid-Mid-Mid-Minhattan, and no matter how many different places I live,
I'll always be in New Yorker.
That's ineraticable.
I went through public schools in New York,
went to Bronx Science, then I went to Columbia,
and then I went to Princeton for a PhD.
After that, I went out to Stanford as an assistant professor,
and thereafter, I decided I had a higher calling than an academic life.
And so I did a lot of different things.
I worked for McKinsey for a year.
I worked for the city of New York.
God only knows how I got a job.
This is a senior budgetary analyst.
They gave me $2 billion and said, spend it carefully on the welfare of the city of $2 billion.
What year is it?
What year is it?
This was 1970 or 71.
That's a lot of money.
$2 billion?
Oh yeah.
I went so fast.
You had to know how I did.
I was perhaps the worst decision of the Lindsey administration to put that kind of money
in my hands.
I had no idea what to do with it except to spend it as rapidly as possible.
And then I bounced around in a lot of different academic positions, spent some time at Columbia,
taught for a while at Rutgers, moved out to California, lived in San Francisco, taught up in
down Silicon Valley and various colleges, switched from teaching philosophy and logic
to teaching mathematics.
I love teaching mathematics, especially the calculus sequence.
And then around 1992, I figured I'm
going to live just by writing.
And that's what pretty much I've been doing ever since.
99, I left the United States, moved to France.
And I've been in Paris for the last 25 years,
very happily in sconce, right next to Notre Dame.
So I'm the beneficiary of a lot of wisdom coming from the cathedral.
And if it's worth your while to answer your own questions,
I'm prepared to discuss the issue.
So why, why Paris? Why do you want to live there?
Why have you been there for 25 years?
Because the United States was a little too small
from me and my ex-wives.
LAUGHTER
How many ex-wives was that?
Sufficiently many.
Okay.
Sufficiently many.
Right.
That was the first question they asked me.
And you know, that's kind of an immigration parties
that when you want to settle in France,
the first question is, why are you coming to France?
And that was my response.
Pascal, is it as any sort of deep or more a me six one?
And they said, that's a perfect answer.
Come to the right place.
We understand.
We have a strong compole.
I'll also compole.
And I love France even more after that.
Why'd you stay there?
No one America's been having the problems.
It's been haven't lately.
You didn't want to come back here and start helping us off some of these provinces that
are staying in France.
No, no, no, no.
It sounds morally far too grand from me.
I stayed there because of the certain age.
How selfish of you, man.
We needed you the last two years, David.
I understand that, and I feel badly about it.
But you reach a certain age, you just
don't want to move around anymore.
I hardly like to leave my apartment.
Speaking of your ex-wives, Playboy, there's a little bio over here, and can I read a line for you and maybe
you set you up for the next question. This is about the you're a critic of the
theory of evolution and it says Berlinski's a senior fellow Discovery Institute
Center for Science and Culture which is a Seattle based think-tick as the hub of
the intelligent design movement and Berlinski shares the movement's disbelief in
the evidence for evolution but does not openly avow intelligent design movement, and Berlinski shares the movement's disbelief in the evidence for evolution,
but does not openly avow intelligent design
and describes his relationship with the idea as warm,
but distant, it's the same attitude that I display
publicly towards my ex-wise.
That publicly wasn't my word.
Okay.
Well, everything else was that accurate?
Yeah, sort of.
Okay. Would you unpack that for us?
Well, look, I have a world of admiration for the guys
that the discovery is too, because they've done a remarkable job
in bringing to the forefront of biological consciousness
some of the deep problems with Darwinian evolution,
some of the deep problems in biology itself,
it's not just the theory of evolution,
there's a great deal, it's mysterious,
not well understood, imponderable, not accessible
to theory yet.
And there's some terrifically smart people
who have essentially made the case that this is a theory,
which is in many ways, not in every way,
but in many ways, not what it's cracked up to be.
And I share that sentiment.
I wrote a piece, well, away before I joined the Discovery Institute, I wrote a piece for
commentary, which is a magazine out of New York making exactly the deniable Darwin it was
called.
And ever since I've been puttering like a small motorboat making related ancillary criticisms,
it's not the forefront of my attention right now.
I mean, you can only spend so much time criticizing
the Albany and Abolution.
But it's an important issue.
And I think those guys deserve a world of credit
for their critical stance because it hasn't been easy.
I mean, the entire biological establishment
is joined in a spasm of repugnance
when intelligent design is prominently mentioned.
Undeserved repugnance, but repugnance anyway.
The distance that you mentioned is my failure wholeheartedly to embrace the theory of intelligent design.
I can't get over there.
I can't get over there when the goal post is door-winning evolution. I can't get over there when the goal post is, do I need an evolution?
I can't get over there when the goal post is intelligent design.
That may be my limitation.
It may be just a streak of contrariness.
I don't know.
But I am not an advocate of intelligence.
I've never advocated intelligent design,
but I'm deeply sympathetic with it.
That's quite a different matter.
To be an advocate and to be sympathetic.
I'm sympathetic with a lot of things I don't advocate for.
If you could, I don't know if it's possible to do it
linearly, but if on one side of the equation
is the theory of evolution, right?
We came from...
Oh, what theory?
Okay, so evolution.
I don't want to debate scientists here,
but on one side of the linear side of things
is we came from monkeys or primates or salamanders
and fish, all that, and all that.
And then on the complete opposite side of the spectrum
is creationism.
I don't know if creationism is different
from intelligent design.
Or if you can just kind of paint a picture linearly
of where things are in the scientific world and maybe where you are in
this and that could kind of open up maybe a further conversation.
I rest inscrutably at the middle, affirming neither the left nor the right,
but choosing a studied indifference to both.
I think that there's a very legitimate case to be made for serious theological affirmations.
Not a case I'm prepared to make, but it's a serious case.
It's been a serious case for the last 5,000 years of recorded history.
Every culture develops a theology, and with the theology there's certain kind of mythology.
And with the mythology, very often, a labyrinth, philosophical labyrinth,
is after all the Catholic faith,
is not intellectually insignificant.
It's a huge body of doctrine and dogma.
Jewish religion has incredibly
exciting, deeply penetrating body of
Talmudic interpretation.
And I'm sure the same thing is true of Islam.
I know much less about Islam than I do about other religions, but I'm sure exactly the
same thing is true that the Quran has been the subject of intense meditation and speculation.
I find myself in the somewhat embarrassing position of being very sympathetic to all of those
theological aspirations, but in my own life being unable wholeheartedly to participate
in them. As I say in one of my books, I forgot where. I'm a secular Jew and I've lived my
life as a secular Jew. The Jewishness is inevitable.
I was born a Jew.
But the choice of secular, world, the choice of secular ambitions, that's not inevitable.
I mean, many people renounce a secular life.
But I am in the middle of a secular environment.
I wholeheartedly participate in all the moral debigations and the uncertainties of secular life.
I embrace secular life.
And I'm not about to renounce any of it.
At what point did you come to this conclusion?
Which conclusion?
The fact that you're neutral, you're staying in the middle.
I'm an agnostic, I'm sympathetic for those that, you know,
you believe there is a God in those on the other side evolution, you know, I
I this I'm kind of staying here at what point did you come to that conclusion?
It you know when I was at Princeton doing graduate work so very early yeah
1964
1960 I
Was room roommates with another very good philosopher Daniel Messinger was name. And we had never heard about Darwin's theory.
I mean, all through Columbia College,
all through a graduate education at Princeton,
theory of evolution simply didn't figure on
our particular intellectual rate.
And one day I said to Daniel, you know,
maybe we should read that book.
And so we both read the book,
Darwin's the origin of species.
And we both came away
and said, you know, this thing makes no sense.
This is just gibberish.
Which part of it?
We were only 22 at the time.
Please bear that in mind.
We had no right to say that.
But it is interesting, and I'm talking now from a psychological perspective of my own,
that I can very definitely point to that experience.
Two people reading the foundational text of
the theory of evolution, and both of us coming away saying, this just doesn't have the ring
of truth to it. Of course, it was completely unmotivated. We had no justification for saying
it. I'm reporting an intuitive experience because you asked me, can I give you a date, yeah, 1964. And Princeton. That's when I felt that, that particular double set
of anime versions.
And you never went through the process of,
like, you know how Martin Luther went through phase up,
you know, fighting and arguing his own argument
and going back and forth, you never said,
you know, maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I got to go do a little bit more digging to go the other side. So maybe you did. Did you
from 22 ever all of a sudden like lean a little bit more towards maybe there is a God. I
think there is a God. I'm just trying to see who God is. Is it Jesus? Is it this? Is it
that? Which one is, I don't know. I don God is. Is it Jesus? Is it this? Is it that?
Which one is, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I just read this three books here.
No, it's not.
And you know, I'm kind of, oh, my God, maybe these guys are making sense to me.
I'm listening to more of these guests.
Was it like a pendulum going back and forth?
Were you going through it?
Or you just stayed right in your lane?
Pendulum going back and forth.
I mean, I think the gravamon of your question is, did I suffer the experience of asking myself
with a certain amount of intensity?
Maybe I'm wrong.
No, I can't recall ever saying that to myself.
Why? Why?
Because I felt why that level of certainty.
No, it's not a level of certainty.
It's not a level of certainty.
It's not a level of uncertainty.
It's a level of indifference.
And I have to be as candid as it's possible to be.
Look at my age, these questions have a somber significance.
They lacked when I was 22.
22, I could say, it doesn't matter what I can do.
I can make up for it later.
Well, the shadows are getting longer and longer, obviously.
But I still find myself emotionally indifferent,
although attracted to, but emotionally indifferent
to an intense religious life.
Perhaps it's fear, perhaps it's just temperamental.
I don't know.
And there's a lot to be afraid of when you commit yourself
to a religious life, like judgment.
I'm certainly not eager to be judged.
Nobody is.
Now Pat, when you ask him that question,
I assume that's something that you had done on your own.
You've been pretty vocal about you are an atheist at one point,
and now you, I mean, you literally wear a cross.
You've kind of gone through this.
What's your, you know, what's your pendulum?
When Armond and I were going through, you know,
he's like, hey, I'm like, dude, I'm, I'm in,
I don't believe in God.
I'm an atheist.
The life I've lived, I don't believe in God. This is when you were, this is I'm 23
years old, like, scatter the army. It's like nothing's going
my way. I'm like, do just leave me alone. I'm, I'm not going to
go to this religion stuff. Some people need God. I don't need
God. And I would go to different Bible studies, and they were all
boring to me. Because they're all telling the same exact thing.
Then I went to a Bible study that was three mathematicians,
one of them was a professor teaching math in Pasadena.
The other one was a pastor who was all about math
and I related that because to me, math,
your, the great thing about math is you solve for X.
What's X?
And then you kind of work backwards
and you're getting to an answer, right?
And that kind of becomes the premise of your life.
Business is soft for X.
You want to raise $10 million.
You want to do this much top line revenue.
How many employees do you need?
What technology do you need?
How much do we need to raise today?
What do we need to do with this?
And then you kind of solve for that number.
You want to sell the business.
Everything is about soft for X.
And as engineering, as you know, exactly.
And as somebody that is at his level and with his level of humor because
you need that which you don't take yourself seriously that allows you to be able to entertain more
ideas if you take yourself way too seriously you're not going to get to the truth because you
protect your ego so his combination is the right ideal person to want to seek it because he's
not trying to be right he He's trying to figure out,
I don't know if you understand what I'm saying like that. He's not grounded in his beliefs.
No, like you're not willing to come. You're not some of these guys that are debating. They're not
debating for the truth. They're debating to prove you wrong and they're great debaters. Then there's
those that you listen to, you're like, damn, this guy is, I just believe this guy. I mean, he's,
I don't feel the ego,
I get the feeling with you.
So you're the kind of guy I like to listen to
because you come across as somebody that you, you know,
you don't have a, you're not trying to prove your argument.
So believe me, I'm 100% right.
This is what's gonna, that's not you.
That's not your problem.
That's why I said, did he ever go through the battle
of Pendulum, say, man, this guy made a great argument.
I read this book by this guy did it ever flip
But apparently it did not or is there something that we're missing that you something that you 100% wholeheartedly believe
If there's something that the audience can kind of grasp me like all right
This is what this guy stands for other than hey, I don't know what I don't know is there something that you
Totally affirm and stand by
religiously? Sure
What is that? I'm not gonna say
How would you mean you're not gonna say why should I confide the innermost secrets of my heart?
To that's why we have you on here. Did you serious with that? Everyone has something
Everyone has something locked away about which he has a certain emotional attitude,
but it's a very, very little interest to anyone else. Is there anything about which I'm certain?
The answer is sure. That's what I want to know. For example, I'm certain that mathematics
to the extent that it's demonstrable is true.
I think there are certain very sophisticated questions
you can ask about truth and proof in mathematics,
but those are not the questions that I'm asking.
I think the body of mathematical knowledge accumulated
early part of the 21st century is the richest body
of human knowledge ever accumulated,
followed very closely by the body of knowledge
and capsulated in theoretical physics.
I'm really certain those are achievements.
Much less certain about lots of other things.
Certain about the existence as every man
is certain about the existence of certain attitudes,
velities, commitments, which make no sense to anyone else.
But in answer to your original question,
my indifference had a lot to do with watching
the experience of my parents, a lot to do.
Both my parents grew up in Germany, Imperial Germany, and then
Weimar Germany. And they both always said they were children of the Weimar Republic.
They began music lessons at the age of six and both became professional musicians.
My father was a concert pianist in Central Europe. My mother was an excellent
pianist. And they both reported to me very early in my childhood their defiance
of Jewish orthodoxy, how they both told the rabbi, oh they just didn't believe in God, not the God
of the Jewish tradition in any rate. The God they preferred to embrace was the God of art,
especially music. They were heirs to the entire rich, complex tradition
of German musical experience.
And they enriched that tradition when they moved to France
and they learned about the French musical tradition.
And the question that always influenced me
and my childhood was watching this commitment
and asking myself, is this an adequate substitute
for a classical theological understanding of the universe?
Could some, and it's by no means restricted to my parents, I think everyone from that
milieu, intellectuals, writers, artists, musicians, attempted from 1910 to 1940 or so to find a substitute god, a substitute experience
which would have the same compelling moral and intellectual forces, a classic religious experience.
So at the end of my life, end of my parents' lives, it occurred to me, in my life as well, the last stages that that experiment was a failure,
that the garden which they had invested so much
emotional and artistic energy was not really a substitute at all.
And that was a sobering experience that I realized
in the end music failed them both.
It didn't provide what they really needed. And I think that's a
very common experience. When you turn to deep powerful currents and you try to
identify them, the way many contemporary intellectuals do when they talk about
humanism, for example, As substitutes for discarded tradition,
the discovery, I suspect, is almost inevitable
that the substitute is pretty much like a sugar substitute.
It may taste sweet, but at least a very bitter aftertaste.
You know, one of our users just gave me Super Chat
and he kind of said what I was going to ask you
But he gave scripture behind it, which is kind of interesting. I'd love to know what this user's name is by the way
Because I every time I say cold 12x12 if you can let us know who you are so I can call you by your first name
Or whatever name you'd like to be called. I want to give you that credit
He says taking a position in the middle is interesting the Bible mentions because you are lukewarm
And neither hot nor cold, I am going
to vomit you out of my mouth, middle is safe, hot or cold is risky. So the way I would say to someone
like you is, for someone, do you think the position you took at this stage of your life, you can
tell me, Pat, you have no closure, Thomas, screw you. I'm very happy where I'm at, and I'm totally okay with that.
Do you think you took a safe position from 22 till today, the last 58 years, or do you
think you could have gone a little bit deeper to really make the arguments stronger amongst
different denominations and evolution, or no, you're very satisfied with
the position you took.
Very satisfied.
I mean, surely.
You know what I'm asking?
Well, from a rhetorical point of view, I would never affirm.
I'm very satisfied that is too vulgar a position, even for me.
No, I'm not very satisfied.
I'm not satisfied at all, but at the same time,
I am not motivated.
I don't have that urgency of desire,
which would lead me to a full-fledged,
religious commitment urgency,
or I don't have that urgency or desire.
Is that what you said?
I don't have.
Urgency of desire. Of desire. You never had it, or you don't have that urgency or desire. Is that what you said? I don't.
Urgency of desire.
Of desire.
You never had it or you don't have it current.
I don't think I ever had it.
Look, mathematical talent is fairly rare.
I mean, you look at the bell curve, the really, really
talented people.
Yeah.
Or all the way off in the right.
Yep.
The number of people who are genuinely motivated by a religious instinct, I think, is about
as rare.
It's a fully-consuming commitment.
I don't disagree.
I don't disagree.
It's a fully-consuming commitment.
You cannot say, I'm leading a religious life and lead the life of a scoundrel.
It's very difficult.
I mean, you can lead the life of a scoundrel and expect's very difficult. I mean, you can lead the life of a scoundrel
and expect or at least hope for divine forgiveness, but it's not a particularly salutary combination.
I think in all the areas, talent and mathematics, talent and art, talent and music, talent
and religious experience, the number of people who are seriously committed
all the way off on the right-hand side of the bell curve.
If you go back to the 12th, 13th, and 14th century,
the number of people who embraced a true monastic life,
it's about the same as the number of people
who embraced that life in the 20th century,
small percentage of the population.
It's a great mistake to talk about the Christian Middle Ages as if virtually everyone was deeply
involved.
I mean, there was a rating ideology, that's for sure.
Well, you know what, it's like the way you said it made sense.
Like being seven feet tall and having zero interest in basketball, you're like, listen,
I'm not interested in basketball.
I want to do a complete different game.
I want to play tennis.
I don't want to play basketball.
I didn't mean to say I don't want to.
I certainly would acknowledge certain desires, certain wants, which are unfulfillable. For example, I would
dearly love to be a great, great mathematician, and scribed in all the history
books having produced a thunderously magnificent set of demonstrates. It's not
going to happen, no matter how much I want it to happen. I think in terms of
religious experience there is certainly some desire there for a
committed religious experience,
but it's not going to happen either, because I can't act on it. David, the basic question,
I just curious about how you answered this question, who has got? Somebody says, so David,
who has got, what do you say? Well, there are a lot of different answers. You can certainly waffle
your head off about a question like that. You can talk about a platyneus-like access to ever more refined layers of reality, a God
followed by success of superior gods, that sort of thing.
I think we're pretty limited.
We're limited to a particular tradition, which is the Judeo-Christian tradition.
That's where the resonance exists. We understand
that tradition best. I know there are Hindu traditions, completely different conception of God.
The Buddhist tradition has a different concept of God, but I can't talk to those because all
I know from those traditions, I know as a matter of scholarship, not intimacy. The Judeo-Christian God is outside time and
space, outside the physical universe. It's not one of those things we encounter within
the universe. It has certain attributes, certain powers, which we assign to it. This
is theology. It's not a matter of a physical science. We're not discovering this.
And there are two or at least three additional doctrines
associated with the question that you just asked.
One is the very old idea that within human beings,
there's a kind of image of God.
That is, there is a synchronous appreciation, God for human beings, human
beings for God, which is manifested in art by the assumption that a human being somehow
reflects the divine. The second assumption is that the surest path to intimacy with the deity lies within.
And that's certainly what the Buddha says as well.
That is, what is within gives you the surest,
most accessible way to reach the divinity.
And the third is a series of pronouncements about human nature
that are part of Western theology.
For example, the Christian doctrine of fallen human nature,
which suggests to get back to your question
that when we talk about God,
I'm talking about people in our position.
We talk about God, we're talking about
a theoretical entity, and it's just theoretical because we have no hands-on experience
with beyond experimental science, who
has an intense personal interest in moral judgment.
And that's an aspect which I think is severely neglected.
When we talk about God, we're not talking about someone who fulfills a certain role in explaining
how the universe came about.
Well, he created the whole thing.
Okay, we know that.
We know that.
That's a traditional assumption.
But a less traditional assumption, especially in the 21st century, it's not only a creating
God, it's not only a God with enormous powers,
embarrassingly large powers.
It's not only an infinite God, but it is a God, and this is the crucial point, it's a God
who has a peculiar interest in our moral nature, and who is prepared, for example, to judge
us.
That's part of the Judeo-Christian tradition, the judging aspect, and it has been the foundational
stone for virtually every system of Judeo-Christian morality since at least the fifth century BC.
Very much neglected, because the question is, why do open when you take that foundational
stone away, you just yank it away, and you eliminate the
idea of a universal system of judgment, judging human beings for their acts during their life.
What's the result?
What happens to society when you take that foundational stone away?
This has been a question that I think has been pertinent since at least
1820, 1830 when the great movement of secular liberation from Christian doctrine
began to accelerate and spread to every corner of every corner of Europe in the United States.
We're talking about a 200-year-old process. Secularism is not just the last 10 years.
It's a long complicated tradition.
And we are living in a secular society.
It's absolutely obvious.
We're not living in a society where people are consumed by the thought of judgment,
or that they're proposing in any way to put inhibitions or restraints on their desires, or to conform in any way to whatever the code of conduct
may have been enforced in the 18th, the 17th, and 16th century,
who are, in fact, proposing to make it up as they go along.
But, I'm afraid, we're all doing.
But when you remove that judgment, you
were making a point about what happens when you
remove that judgment, what happens?
Well, it's like asking what happens in a physical system, you withdraw the energy from it.
I mean, the physical system can look just the way it did before.
But there's nothing doing any work anymore.
Let's just say it's a piston with no external sauce of energy driving the piston. Well, I cannot say, look, it's perfectly obvious what happens.
But I can say if you want to know what happens,
there is a correlation between the rise of secularism
and the nature of society.
Look around.
Look around.
Are people restraining their behavior?
Are they inhibited a traditional series of of acotl cells being enforced throughout?
The answer seems to be no.
Secularism seems to allow a great many things that previously were forbidden.
Is that just come down to accountability?
Is judgment accountability?
I mean, something that Pat always talks about is accountability.
Like who's holding the politicians accountable?
Well, you know, the voters, but that's a whole another question.
But judgment at the end of the day comes down to accountability.
Are you going to be accountable for your actions good or bad?
Is that essentially the...
That's a good question.
I think it's very similar, but the question I was raising,
I mean, that Hobbs said, the fear of death is the source of law,
the fear of violent death is the source of conscience.
It's the source of conscience because violent death,
you meet death without any preparation,
any theological preparations.
And you're going to be judged instantaneously.
And it's a very pregnant remark by Hobbes.
But I think that accountability is another way of saying,
look, we're now living in a society where
the essential force behind judgment, the thing that made it live, that's been progressively
withdrawn.
There's no point in denying it, seems to me, no point in saying, well, we've recreated
a moral universe in every way comparable
to the moral universe that we have denied or derided.
Are you a gambler?
Are you a gambler, man?
No.
Do you like gambling on horses or like sports or anything?
You don't play cars, you don't play dice,
you don't play crabs, you don't play anything. No, really? You're missing out, man. No, I was the
reason why I was gonna ask you, but would you say, are you, are you the kind of
guy that when you were 25 years old at a bar, you saw a hot girl, did you overthink
it in your mind and say, you know, I don't know if I want to go talk to her
because what if she says, no, or were you kind of like, I'm just going to go talk to her, you took the risk and you spoke
to her. Neither. Neither. What did you just sat there? She came to you. That's right. We're not
part of that elite. So you had life easy. This, so even before Tinder, you were Tinder.
I'm not. So they were swiping you right. It was, it was what? You were Tinder. Do you know what
Tinder is? Believe me, they made it after you. Tinder is like a dating site in America that's a dating app.
Yeah, it's a dating app that guys use to swipe right to get this.
But going back, I don't think you needed it though,
but going back to you,
your personality is not at all risky.
Are you like the guy that, yeah, let's go jump off that cliff.
You're like, I don't wanna jump off that cliff.
Of course it's risky, it's just a question.
I see it. It's just a question.
I've been risky.
Which risks am I prepared to take?
Well, then he, no.
Well, no.
Okay, so then, because to me, marriage is risky.
Having kids is risky.
Going into business is risky.
Moving to Paris is risky.
Moving to different, life is risky.
Taking a position with faith is risky.
Deciding to do almost anything today is risky, right? Taking a position with faith is risky, deciding to do almost anything today is risky, right?
So look, I understand the position
of assuming formalismists, which means,
never like, hey, you guys, I understand your position.
I disagree with this, but I understand this position,
but I disagree with this, and I kind of stay here.
That's a safe, not risky position,
but you also don't create enemies. So you kind of stay in a place where enemies
are not being created, but...
Oh, you'd be surprised.
How are you making enemies?
So who are your enemies?
I don't see people dislike,
even when your debate with Hitchhands Hitchhands
was very respectful and it wasn't as typical.
He was more vicious towards his brother than he was to you.
You guys had a very nice debate.
We had an extremely pleasant debate,
but don't forget, he was terribly ill at the time.
I don't think he had the energy or the vigor really to
do a full court press.
I don't think so.
It was a one hour, it wasn't a three hour,
it was a one hour debate.
And it was kind of like not the point of the debate
to have a nice pleasant debate.
It depends whether you're dealing with a man at the brink of death or not.
A lot depends on that.
I mean, if he had been in-disposed with a headache, that would have been one thing, but he was
dying of cancer.
And that changed all the parameters, at least it did for me.
I was in absolutely no move to attack him.
Got it.
Pat, you're asking about risk for a risk.
Yeah, I want to go to that.
I want him to elaborate on that.
I want him to unpack the question of,
you come across as a guy that would be the risky guy.
You've taken bigger risks in your life.
At this phase of your life, at 80,
do you sit there and say,
well, like inside when you buy yourself nobody's around, you're sitting at a coffee shop in Paris, you're having your nice croissant
and the same waitress is coming to you and you're speaking to her and you're
reading the paper or whatever book you would be reading and you're saying, okay
David, we kind of got a risk and take one of them. What do we want to do? Is it
gonna be a Jew? Is it gonna be Christian? Is it gonna be LDS? Are we going Catholic?
Are we gonna go Muslim? Let's take it, let's pick one of them,
I got a 20% chance.
I'm gonna, you know, I'm gonna go behind
because behind welcomes all the religions.
You don't think about like...
It's a little like Pascal's wager, isn't it?
I mean, that's the question you really ask me.
Of course, yes.
When I accept Pascal's wager.
Where does Pascal's wager?
Pascal, 17th century, he had a wonderful theological argument
about commitment to God and belief in God.
He said, look, what do you lose? What do you lose? If you commit yourself to God and you live a God-fearing life,
and God exists, well, that's a terrific benefit. You've come out ahead of the game. And if he doesn't exist, what have you lost? He lost nothing. In
Game Theory, that's called a dominant strategy. No matter what, it's better to believe in God.
If you don't believe in God and he exists, you're in for an awfully hard time. And if you
don't believe in God and he doesn't exist, well, nothing changes.
So why is that a bad approach? I don't think it's a bad approach at all
I think it's an excellent approach from everyone I've talked to when I translate that argument into practical terms agree
Yes, I accept Pascal's wager. He was right and he was right. That doesn't mean that the argument
We're saying he's right, but you're not willing to accept Pascal's weight
Yeah, but that's a limitation of an argument.
You know, there are many arguments I can consider with the premises of true, the conclusion
follows logically, but it doesn't mean anything to me.
You'd be a very hard impossible person to put on the, but no, I try.
I hate to use this angle on what I'm saying.
I can see at 20 taking that position. I can see at 20 taking that position.
I can see at 30 taking that position.
It's like I look at my, when I, you're, you're,
my dad and you are the same age, except you are older than my dad
by nine weeks.
He's April 10th, your February 5th.
Both of you guys are in 1942.
He just had a birthday, both of you guys just turned 80.
You, like, you know, spending to speak with our guys
and we're talking about leadership and all this other stuff.
And each decade, I ask myself different questions.
And in that decade, that question was the most important question.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Like, when you're teens, you're asking, man, you know,
whatever the question may be in your teens,
you know.
One minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute,
be cool, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute,
one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, one minute, questions are constant, right? What's my purpose? Why am I here? What am I doing? What do you want me to do?
What's what am I supposed to do? How am I in the right position I'm at right now? Am I in the career?
Certain questions are going to be constant, right? But certain questions as you age, the weight gets
heavier and it gets more important to you at that age than it did a decade or two or three decades
ago. I think that's undoubtedly true. Well, what is the question that's the heav important to you at that age than it did a decade or two or three decades ago.
I think that's undoubtedly true.
Well, what is the question that's the heaviest for you at your age?
Because you just turned 80.
So I only can tell you what's the most heaviest question on my age.
But what is the heaviest question at your age being 80?
I don't know what it is to be 80.
I only know what it is to be 43.
The heaviest question.
The heaviest question by yourself.
You don't mean the questions that inevitably possess people my age
No for you digestion health
Okay, social security those aren't the questions you're talking about by the way, but by the way that's also good for me to know because
You know, I'm talking to a guy when I was in my 20s
I'm trying to figure out if I want to get married or not,
because I was actually contemplating
even ever getting married.
I enjoy my own company.
I don't know if I want to get married.
So I had to really make sense of does this marriage
think make sense for me?
Maybe it does for other people.
Maybe it doesn't for me.
It was a very difficult question.
So I'd go around asking people the questions.
And then finally, I came down to a point of,
no matter who you marry, there's a risk,
and it's a risk I'm willing to take. And here's how I can hedge my risk point of no matter who you marry, there's a risk and it's a risk I'm willing to take.
And here's how I can hedge my risk.
But no matter who I marry, there's going to be a risk, right?
And then one, I'm listening to this husband and wife when they're 60s, late 60s, and
then I'm listening to this husband and wife who just got married in their 20s.
And I'm listening to this guy that's early 20s single, then somebody that's divorced
in their 40s and they're all talking about marriage and relationship and eventually this
68-year-old husband and wife says you know when I was in my 20s 30s I thought it was all
about sex and let me tell you what happened then health happened then this happened then
health happened to me and I was you know of health happened to my wife first and I was
complaining to her
because my wife couldn't have sex with me for nine months. And in nine months later, the
moment we could have sex, then health happened to me. And I felt so embarrassed because I judged
her so much. And then you're like, Oh, interesting. So maybe one day you're going to go through some
of these things would help. So I learned as a man, as I'm aging, right? I'm trying to learn
from you. Set those questions aside.
What are some heavy questions that, you know,
get you thinking at this age?
You lived a pretty good life.
I can complain, certainly not.
All right, could complain, but I shan't.
I think the question,
the really heavy questions are sorrowful questions
at my age.
And one of the experiences of anyone who has lived the kind of life that I've lived is
the discovery that inexorably one has put a certain distance between what one is doing
in my case writing.
And the audience, one hope to see.
That is, the separation begins, the minute you publish something.
You attract certain readers.
You repel other readers.
That's a normal point of equilibrium.
The further you progress in any kind of literary life,
on the one hand, you may, if you're lucky, cement a reputation and
achieve a certain loyal readership. But inevitably, you discover that thrill of reaching an audience
is disappointed because you are inevitably writing for the past. That at age I can no no no no longer be a
fresh voice and therefore no longer attract new readers. That's exactly how it
should be. Why? Because if you're age you're saying people are going to be less
interested. They are less interested. Well that's not the case for Bernie Sanders
and nobody gave you two craps about him for decades and all of a sudden of the
past five, ten years he he's the, you know,
one of the biggest, lucky Bernie.
You think that's luck?
I don't know.
That's good.
I can't show.
And hard work.
But continue.
I'm curious.
Could be a combination of the both.
I think every writer has the same experience that a certain point, even Philip Roth.
At a certain point that vivid intense relationship
with an audience that every writer imagines
is out there palpitating, waiting, hanging
on your every word.
That disappears.
And I certainly feel that in my own case.
I'm not complaining.
I have readers.
That's not the point.
But in the larger sense, I've lost an audience.
And everything about me is suggestive of an
acronym that is a time before the present time.
And again, that's inevitable.
One can be in the present, completely in the present only at a certain age, the age of
discovery, say, from 15 to 30 or 15 to 35.
So when you talk about what are some of the deeper aspects
of being 80, early middle aged, as I remarked earlier,
that sorrowful discovery that, hey, look,
you are about to begin the process of outliving your time.
Nothing wrong with that, nothing wrong with that.
But it is not a joyous experience
that discovery. Neither should it be terribly sorrowful. It's sorrowful, but it shouldn't
be terribly sorrowful. They're compensations. You have kids? Sure. Hold your kids. My daughter
is, she was born in 68 and my son was born in 73. How did you raise your kids religiously?
religiously I'm asking in no way you
Didn't you said you're secular Jewish, but you didn't celebrate Hanukkah Rochishana. Nothing nothing garnished
And did they celebrate Christmas American holidays? Well, it's in escapeable
You celebrate Christmas right you take off but you said hey, by the way, we were Jewish, you don't really believe in Santa.
The fact that we were Jewish was imprinted on us vividly
by my parents, the Holocaust, by the events of history.
There's no escaping that, no desire to escape it either.
But in terms, again, of a religious life,
not even a suggestion.
And your kids knew your parents.
Oh yeah.
And your parents fled Germany right at the height of the Holocaust.
No, they fled to, fled Germany in 1932, but for France.
Okay.
Which is a big mistake.
So, right.
Well, this must have some bearing on your religious views and your parents' religions'
views.
You said that they prayed to the God of music.
I didn't say that.
Or they prayed. Or, you know, they believed in the God of music. I didn't say that. Or they prayed.
Or, you know, they believed in the God of, but I know a lot of, like I'm Jewish, I've had
family grandparents, aunts and uncles that died in the Holocaust.
And I always find that there's so many Jews that say I could never believe in God again,
like, they killed my entire family, killed everyone I know.
And there's some Jews that somehow become more religious.
And they cling to that.
What affected the Holocaust and everything
that you're from Germany in the 1940s,
your family was there.
What affected that have on your religion?
And then how did that trickle down to your kids?
Because your kids not having any religious basis,
there's gotta be something tying this all together.
No, you gotta pay more attention
to what I'm saying.
I didn't say my children have no religious basis.
They grew up as Jews, as I grew up.
They had no religious education, which is quite a different matter.
For example, they never went to temple.
Never went to temple.
They had no bar mitzvah.
No bar mitzvah.
I did.
They didn't.
You see the tradition undergoing a gradual dissolution, which I think is characteristic
of the Jewish experience, liberal Judaism.
My parents regarded the Holocaust as a confirmation of their Jewish identity.
My father always said the Nazis taught me I was a Jew.
And he was right.
But that doesn't mean he rediscovered a religious faith.
It meant he rediscovered the fact that he was a Jew.
My mother was a Jew.
The family was Jewish.
Culturally.
Far more than culturally.
Being Jewish is not a cultural phenomenon.
At least it's more than that.
It's a deep continuity of historical experience
and historical memory.
My grandfather perished now Schwitz.
My mother never got over that.
And nonetheless, my parents' effort,
I've been talking about my parents' effort,
to give me a religious education, didn't succeed.
I did have abormates, but I still remember my vile
and bombets for prayers.
But the sad truth of the matter is I found
it all excruciatingly boring and I still do.
I can attest to that.
I'm not about to spend a whole lot of time in a temple.
What are your kids now?
What are their faith now?
Are they practicing or they're similar to you?
We're all secular.
All secular.
Deeply secular. And we have all of the vices, but all secular, all secular, deeply secular.
And we have all of the vices, but all of the virtues
of a secular identity.
That is, we all, in some way, believe
that we're self-created, that the most important thing
in our lives collectively is the autonomy of personality,
that the personality exists in order to be satisfied, that our desires
have an intrinsic value that are quite independent of what other people believe.
I think both my children and I certainly appreciate the fact that to achieve certain things,
there's a great deal of discipline involved.
I'm not talking about hedonism. The desire to lead a life such
that you're having a good time all the time. I don't think anyone believes in that. I live in South
Beach. There might be some people that disagree with you. South Beach Florida, I guess. Yeah.
Yeah, but certainly there are people prepared to say it, but I know very few people, very few satisfied headness over the age of
30. The declaration that you live to have a good time all the time, it becomes very wearying after a
while. But secularism imposes some severe restraints on how you live. I mean, you cannot rely to an extent, to the extent that it was possible to
rely, say, on the 17th or early 18th century, on institutional authorities, that at every
step of the way, guide your footsteps. Secularism is the prospect of allowing human beings to
create themselves in new and each generation. There's no question about that.
And sometimes it's very difficult, sometimes it's painful, sometimes it's exhilarating.
But as far as I can see, we are all in the position of someone in a lifeboat,
wondering whether it would be more practical to sail the seas in an ocean liner.
Well, we don't have an ocean liner anymore.
We've got the lifeboat secularism, if you will. And that has to, that has to be enough.
We're always in the process of fiddling with a lifeboat, changing the orlox, wondering
whether we should be sitting in the front or in the back. But fundamentally, we don't have
access to an ocean liner that majestic ocean liner of faith that has pretty much disappeared.
Do you envy people of faith?
No.
And why is that?
What should I envy them for?
So what do you think comes after life?
I have no idea.
And no idea and not even something you've thought about, you decay, the body breaks down, it's gone.
Because some say, no, no, no, no,
I'm not committing myself to a view
that there is no possibility of experience after death.
I have no privilege to insight into that
and no one else does either.
Certainly the fact that every single society
in recorded history has had some form of intense speculation
about the afterlife is significant
because it's a deeply, a deeply essential part
of human nature to entertain those convictions.
But again, all I can say is, I'll know soon enough.
Please come back and visit us. I sure will you've got to give me your portable
What do you think what do you think is the
Do you have a son or or you said son 73 right 73? He's born 73. She's 68. Yeah, okay
So the son that's 73 he asks you that
What do you think is the purpose of a man?
And like, what is my purpose?
What am I supposed to do?
Like if you were, and I know you're going to say to each his own, everybody's different,
some it's being this, some it's being that.
What is my, you know, what purpose do I serve in this world?
What am I supposed to be seeking in life?
Why am I here? If I'm
your son and I ask you the question, what do you tell him? Well, I think I think
like many other questions that are being asked today, especially in social
media, the question is ceremonial and modern and substantive. I don't think I've
ever had a conversation in which my son would pose the question, what is my purpose as a man in life? You only have one son. If he were to pose that question,
I would say, hey, Dumbbell, look at your grandfather imitate that. In fact, I think I've said exactly
that. Your grandfather is a model of what a man should be. Why? Because unyieldingly tough, resourceful, highly intelligent, honorable, fought in the foreign
Legion, got my mother out of Germany, got my mother out of France, crossed the Pyrenees
on foot, made a new life in the United States, and was enormously proud of the fact that
he was one of the few Jews in 1940 to face the Germans with a submachine gun in his hands.
That's enough to be a member of the SPAC. Of course, salute at the highest level.
So that's, if my son were to ask the question, how do I be a man?
It's to imitate your grandfather.
David, so remember how I asked you the question, what are some of the heaviest questions at the sage, where you're at?
What are some things, some strong convictions you had in your 20s, 30s, 40s,
50s, 60, whatever, you'll pick it? That now it's kind of like, you know, yeah, it's not that important.
You know, I used to think XYZ was so important. It's really not that big of a deal.
That's a very good question. Except for the concluding part, I don't have many where I say it's
not that important, but I have many convictions I can remember.
From the 60s, I was slightly-
You were 60-
No, 1960s.
In the 1960s.
I got you.
You got to remember I was not a baby boom.
I was born on 42.
So I was three years older than the generation,
to which I was exposed in the classroom.
And I have to say my own defense,
I was very suspicious of the 1960s, although I
participated enthusiastically and I encouraged my students to rip up their draft
card while keeping mine, pristine condition. God forbid I should go to jail for
my convictions. And when I heard in 1964 the Rolling Stones painted black, which was a very popular song
of the early 1960s, I realized that the sexual revolution was imminent, was about to break
loose.
I mean, it didn't take a whole lot of perspicacity to realize that.
But I must say that all of those impulses, hedonistic impulses, which seem to make so much sense, destroy
everything, rebuild everything on a peaceful, sexually enlightened basis, the hell with the
family, the hell with commitments, the hell with patriotic concerns, simply develop your
own sensibility and live as gloriously as possible in the
satisfaction of any desire, no matter how vagrant, remote or degraded.
That was part of the 60s, and it came to catastrophe.
The 60s did not end well. We did incredible, incalculable damage to American
society in the 60s, And I watched it all happen.
I was far too j'esun, or even stupid,
to recognize it in front of me.
Even my objections to the Vietnam War were pure oil.
And I thought the Vietnam War was a catastrophe
because I was 1A.
I certainly wasn't about to go off to Vietnam
to see my own ass blown off.
That was out of the question.
My father did not approve of that attitude.
He did not approve of that attitude.
He didn't say anything, but you know, every son can feel a father's disapproval.
He thought there was something scandalous about not being unwilling to defend your country
by joining the military.
Looking back, I'm not really prepared to make a judgment.
This day, I don't think the Vietnam War has received the kind of scholarly attention
that it really does deserve.
It's too early.
I mean, the Vietnam War ended in 1973, 1974.
It's going to take 100 years before we really understand the war's,
Indo-Chinese wars of succession.
And don't forget, they began in 1945.
The French were chased out, then the Americans were chased out.
But I do think that 1962, 1963, and this remains an abiding conviction,
not quite an answer to your question, but perhaps illustrates the nature of the question
that no American president could have done anything other than
what Kennedy and Johnson did do.
I think that's true.
And that's a very curious point,
because it puts the entire structure
of the anti-war movement in a different perspective.
I have a lot more respect now than I did in the
60s for my father's attitude about honor demanding of willingness to serve.
A lot more respect. I got a lot of respect for your father's level of appreciation as a
patriot to what this country probably gave him and his family where he...
Oh for sure. You have no idea.
Oh, it's honorable to have that mindset, totally honorable.
But go back to the question.
I actually want you to put some energy into this one here
and think about it, because I want to learn from you.
What are some convictions you had early on?
And I get 60s as one of them.
That was great.
Give me another one.
What are some convictions you had?
Where now it's like, yeah, I don't know
why dwelled over that. It wasn't that big of a deal.
Seems to me to be honest that the questions over which I intensely dwelled were that
big of a deal. The nature of family life, the nature of marriage, the nature of commitment.
I don't think those would properly be said to be not that big of a deal. I think
there were very much a big deal. So whatever you spend a lot of time thinking about, ended
up being very important issues they spend a lot of time thinking about.
You mean very important issues to me or very important issues to you?
Well, to you I'm just trying along from you. Yeah.
Yeah. I think the fact that you dwell on certainty, I mean, obviously there's psychological
states where it's unwholesome and unhealthy morb morbidly, to be attached to certain ideas, just don't
go anywhere.
They spin.
But if a man says I've spent a lot of time thinking about that, a lot of time involved
in the emotional discontent these thoughts provide, that's a pretty good indication that
he thinks they're important, don't you think?
I do. I do.
I do.
David, when you're an audience, when you walk in the streets
and somebody identifies you or somebody sees you,
oh my god, I've read your books, I don't have your dis.
And you know, you help me that, that, that.
What is the most common thing you hear from people
who are fans of yours who have read your material,
who have followed your philosophies,
what did you inspire them to do?
Well, I think that the people who actually break the privacy barrier to come up to me, and there haven't been many, trust me.
Once or twice, I've been recognized in the streets, and that's about it.
But I'm talking about even in when you're giving speeches. I'm talking about you in a university
You're given a talk or you're you're at a debate and somebody comes up to you and says David you help me pop up
What do they tell you inspired them to do? I think the the the formal aspect is
I'm very grateful for being provocative and opening up certain questions that I wouldn't have thought about myself and
and That happens fairly often.
Thank you for asking those kinds of questions.
Thank you for being skeptical about that kind of position.
Thank you for being unskeptical about other kinds
of positions.
And that happens often.
The much more emotionally loaded complement, or remark is, thank you for being so provocative.
And you never know quite what is meant, whether they're thanking you for taking the
flag being a scapegoat, or genuinely thanking you for saying what in other contexts would
be unsaleable.
It's never clear.
You always run the risk, if you're a man in my position,
of coming perilously close to self-parity.
You always run that risk, just saying things for the effect.
Okay, so today, with what's going on, you said something, you said the secular movement,
you said 200 years ago, I would say probably Woodrow Wilson when they took Bible out of school
and people stopped having to go through some of the things.
So for me, it would be 117 years ago maybe, but let's just say you said 200 years ago,
fine.
The secular movement where man fears a higher power less.
It's like, whatever, yeah, I get it, it's totally fine.
I'm like, you know, we're no longer seeing, hey,
you know, the president get up and you know,
give us a prayer or you go to school and prayer
and you know, whether you believe or not,
the power of prayer is a way of telling a kid
that hey, there's somebody that's watching over you
where you're by yourself and you're fearing you don't have to commit suicide because you can pray and
speak to somebody.
You are not by yourself, somebody has your back.
If I just see the side effects of the direction we're going without a God, whether it's true
or not, because, you know, the way I look at it is I look at it.
If you start a country, let's just say you start a country today and the five of us
are going to start a country. Let's just say you start a country today And the five of us gonna start a country you're gonna be the president. I'm gonna be a general of a military
He's gonna be the one that's checking everyone's IDs to see what you know how good-looking they are whatever
And the guy's gonna do a different job Tyler's gonna do a different job
You know
Would I build my country on a foundation of a faith or without it. I think whether people believe in the faith or not to build it on a foundation of a faith
is going to have a higher chance of doing better than one not being built on a certain
set of values and principles.
Because if you don't then people are going to create their own set of values and principles.
So if we're not living by the same set of values and principles then I don't have to meet
your values and principles.
I don't care what you believe in. I don't believe in what you believe in. So I don't have to be same set of values and principles, and I don't have to meet your values and principles. I don't care what you believe in.
I don't believe in what you believe in.
So I don't have to be committed to your values and principles.
I can do whatever the hell I want to do.
I don't care if I earn your loyalty or your trust
or your relationship.
Then there's that confusion, right?
So for somebody like yourself,
because you know that whole saying,
you know, you said this on the last podcast,
you know, you know, strong leaders build, good times,
good leaders build, you know, weak leaders, strong leaders build good times, good leaders build, you
know, weak leaders, weak leaders build bad times, bad leaders build strong leaders, that
cold things going. Do you think your generation, now your fathers, do you think your generation
is a generation of strong leaders? My generation, no, exceptionally weak leaders. So, so
isn't, isn't, okay, so, so, and I, you said that,
so if that's the case and that's what you're saying,
what do you think is the responsibility of your generation
to share with maybe our generation,
so we don't continue that, you know, same, you know,
so we can learn something,
so say hey, you guys got a pay attention to XYZ,
let me take what's going on right now in the world,
specifically in America, I've been in Paris for 25 years now, but watching the guys from the outside, the American
used to, America used to do, but today's America's, you guys got to be careful with these five
things. You have zero interest in that. That's not a question you're going to get
to answer. You know that. No, I don't know that. Yeah, of course. I mean, how can I appear
on this show? Gamble a little bit. No, how can I appear as a profit? Do I have any, I don't know that. Yeah, of course. I mean, how can I appear a gamble a little bit? No, how can I appear as a
Profit do I have any how to profit? No, it's a prophetic task. No, but I'm talking look at no like for example, okay
say if he's dating a girl, okay
And he says pat he hasn't done it yet, but if he says pat
This is the first time I'm asking you for a double date,
because I want to get your opinion on it. He's never asked me, which means what? He's never
dated a girl. That's that serious, okay? He's never asked me. But the date comes when he asked me,
I want to go on a double date. I think this thing's getting a little bit serious. I want to get
your feedback on it, okay? So we go and I meet her and we walk away.
And he says, so what do you think?
And how to two and a half hour dinner with her.
So I really got a chance that she sat right in front of me
and he sat right in front of my wife.
So they're talking and I'm learning about her, right?
And what do you think?
And I say, you know, I would suggest,
pop up, I really like the energy
I think that's gonna be good, but, you know,
I take my time.
I would give some kind of counsel as a friend
to look at for my friend, my brother, right?
I would give some kind of a counsel to say,
here's, it's not necessarily prophetic,
but it's more counsel to say odds wise.
The odds are, son, here's what I would do
before you get married.
The odds are, if you wanna take care of, I've been a financial advisor for 20 plus years, right? I don't say what a client
is saying, guaranteed we're going to get you 12%. I can't say guaranteed you going to
heaven. Guaranteed America is going to be better. I'm asking you based on odds and your wisdom
in your life. What do you tell us? What can we be prepared for? Because we don't want
to get another bad tell. If you want to go out and introduce me to your girlfriend, I'll give you my honest
opinion.
If you want my wisdom, my inexpressible wisdom about the cause of American society and
a recommendation for what we collectively should be doing, I have to discourage you.
I don't have that.
I don't have that though. Are you playing safe, though, David? Why are you playing so safe? I don't have that. I don't have that though. Like, are you playing safe, though David,
why are you playing so safe?
I don't know why you're,
you know, you said something earlier,
you said, uh, you know,
the level of interest in people in me right now
is, you know, like versus what it used to be at this age.
I'm the opposite.
Like, I enjoy talking to people
when their age starts with an eight.
I don't know, I can't tell you how many people
I've interviewed. That's another respect, which were different. I don't know, I can't tell you how many people have interviewed.
That's another respect, which were different.
I don't.
Oh, I know you don't.
I'm telling you, well, your interest is different
than my interest is, but my interest is,
I wanna suck as much wisdom from you as possible
because that's the edge in life.
I pray for four things.
Courage, wisdom, tolerance, understanding,
but for me,
like I have a painting of my in the club room.
You know who's in the club room?
Everybody in the painting that I have,
I'm in it plus seven other people,
the seven other people that are in it,
none of them are here.
All right, let me ask you a question.
Yes, please.
Let me ask you a question.
Go for it.
What kind of answer would satisfy you?
Coming from my lips.
You don't have to be specific just in general.
I would tell you what kind of answer would satisfy me. The answer that is the most thought,
out answer, and as real as possible. I'm not looking for an answer that I want to hear. That's not
my style. I'm a leader. I'm not, I'm not soft. I'm strong. I'm looking for an answer for you to give
to say, here's where my generation screwed up. Okay. If I had it my way as much as I'm looking for an answer for you to give to say, here's where my generation screwed up.
Okay.
If I had it my way, as much as I'm somebody that's agnostic,
I do think faith plays a very important role by the,
or maybe it's not.
Maybe it's, we got soft because, you know,
we didn't pay attention to the XYZ and we shit up.
You know, I noticed America kind of went this direction.
They try to be too much like Europe and they shouldn't have.
America was a leader.
They try to be like, I don't know what it is.
But whatever's in your mind to say, here's what I would pass down to you.
Because you said, you said weak leaders, your generation.
I did not say it.
You said, you said your dad is the epitome of a leader where your son was born in 1973.
If you're going to be a man's man, look at your grandpa.
And I agree, that's a man's man, right?
But I'm asking you, what can we learn from what you've seen
so we don't screw this shit up?
Because I got four kids.
I got a 10, 8 and a 5 year old and a 9 month old.
You just saw the 5 year old in here.
My daughter was in a podcast running around.
I wanna learn from you.
Sincerely, I wanna learn from you.
So I don't screw it up myself.
All I can tell you is, I've been out of country for 25 years now.
My experience has all been centered in France coming back regarding the United States.
It seems to me on the one hand, a enormous amount of energy is present in the United States,
an enormous amount of exhilaration, an enormous amount of optimism, strangely enough.
And at the same time, I can see very clearly
they're all consuming social divisions,
cultural and social divisions.
All right, I see it.
Are you asking me for a diagnosis?
And the respect in which my generation made decisions
that led to this?
Well, sure, that's inevitably true.
The generation that came to power in the 1960s
witnessed a collapse of authority. That's unmistakably true, a collapse of political moral intellectual,
social, and sexual authority. And that has reverberated for the succeeding 50
years. There's no question about that. We're still living with decisions made in the
1960s, say the period between 1962 and 1971, 1972, when tendencies
acquired a certain fixity of direction. But that's not necessarily to say
anything about a generation screwing up because that inculpates a
generation in something they did deliberately. And I think the fundamental facts of the 1960s
is not that anyone did anything deliberately,
but they were all victims of a process of interior collapse.
Not the first time in the 20th century we've seen that.
I mean, you can go to France and say the 1930s
and see a very similar dynamic at work.
So no, I don't think it's a question that my generation,
or the baby boomer generation, screwed up,
but that at a certain period of time,
a great many contingencies occurred simultaneously.
The wars of Indochinese succession,
proceeding a pace no matter what the Americans did or thought
socially and culturally, the assassination of JFK, which no one expected, which disrupted
the political continuity of American life, the ascension to power of Lyndon Johnson,
who was a magnificent domestic politician, but very inexperienced
in foreign policy.
The progressive aging of a foreign policy establishment that successfully fought the
Second World War and navigated the Cold War with the Russians in the 1950s.
The fact that there was an enormous increase in young people aged 15 to 25 as the result
of the end of
the Second World War.
That's why they were called the baby boomer generation.
The fact that every time there's an enormous cohort, population cohort, a bulge in the population,
there's bound to be some sort of strife, fraternal strife, social strife.
Because every new generation needs to be disciplined and domesticated,
the larger the generation, the more difficult it is to enforce the authority of the previous
generations.
All these things came together in the 1960s.
Nobody intended that they came together.
They come together.
They did come together.
And we are living with the repercussions ever since.
In addition to all that, the 1960s was a continuation of an historical process that goes
back at least to the French Revolution, that is the increasing secularization of the
social order, the withdrawal of established institutions of religion, for example, the
Catholic Church in France,
with the Protestant clergy in the United States as well.
And you can trace it out step by step.
If you look at English poetry from 1820 to 1850,
you can see an arc, 1820.
You have someone like Lord Byron saying,
the Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold
and his coh, were gleaming
and purple and gold.
And the poem is about the destruction of the Assyrian army.
The poem ends.
The famine?
You tell me about the famine?
No, the destruction of the Sinocary.
Got it.
And the might of the Gentile on Smote by the sword hath withered like snow in the glance
of the Lord.
Now this is a flimsy poem.
It's not a great piece of poetry.
The date is 1822 and Byron could write in the expectation
that every one of his readers would understand
that he was participating in what was still a Christian society.
It may not have been a completely committed Christian society,
but the architecture was as plain as the architecture
of North Sudan. You go 30 years into the future. committed Christian society, but the architecture was as plain as the architecture of Notre-Dame.
You go 30 years into the future. It's not a long time. You have Matthew Arnold writing Dover Beach.
He says, Oh my beloved, let us be true to one another for the world which lies about us like a land of dreams. Hath neither really joy, nor light, nor life, nor
certitude, nor peace, nor health, from pain.
And we are on a darkling plane swept by confused alarms
of struggling flight, where ignorant armies clash
by night.
That's a completely different world view.
Byron could not have understood that.
He's talking about the melancholy long withdrawal of faith from the European continent.
Oh, 30 years, you see a change, a dramatic change in the diapasin of European life.
And you can continue that right through to T.S. Eliot, W.H. Auden, Phillip, Larkin.
you can continue that right through to T.S. Eliot, WHO, Auden, Philip, Larkin. The decline has been not necessarily linear, but it's been inexorable. So all these things play a role
in talking about, when I talk about the generation that came just after me, the baby boomer generation,
I don't think any lessons can be learned for what
are historical necessities.
What we see is a great many contingencies occurring at the same time, roughly the same 10-year
period, and then bang, a lot of different trajectories set as if they were canals, canals dividing
the sand.
That's very different.
I can talk to him, blue in the face
about the collapse of authority, which I witnessed myself
in a university setting.
I saw all the people I respected deeply, for example,
crumble in the face of student protests.
Just crumble.
I saw that at Columbia.
I saw that at Princeton.
I saw that at Stanford, less at Stanford,
but I saw it at Berkeley as well.
Berkeley, of course.
And you know, you have a pig ignorant people like Mario Savio and Berkeley getting up
on top of a car and denouncing a system which was in every respect, one of the glories
of American democracy, the California University system.
And the University officials, I was right there. I watched them saying,
yeah, yeah, you're right, you're right. Bow down low, scrape the ground with their nose, and all that I
could think of at the time and a few other people thinking the same thing. How dismal to see this great
tongue fall so low as to lick the dust. Do you think professors have more voice today or in the 70s, 80s, 90s?
They've had an unwholesome effect since the 50s.
That is the American professoriate, but I think also in England and France, it's true.
Well then let me ask a question in a different way.
So the whole thing with your generation where it's led to today. There's two things I think about.
Like I think about when I see an office,
or I see a CEO, or a business owner, or a leader,
I just spend two days with a bunch of patriots
and they're talking about Bill Belichick.
And I said, from the first time you played for the guy,
when he hadn't won a Super Bowl yet, this is Matt Light,
to him now, who he's won six Super Bowls super balls is known as one of the greatest coaches of all time
If not degrade is coach of all time
What change with them that his standards dropped did he get easier to work with?
What happened with them? You know what both and you know what everybody in that room said
They said one thing about Bill Bella chick is his standards never dropped right?
That's why he keeps winning because you have to constantly raise up to a standards,
but what the NFL did,
they used to be able to do two day trainings
and they changed it in 2011,
where you couldn't do it anymore.
And Bella checked used to train on Fridays.
No team trained on Fridays,
because you got a game on Sunday.
Why would you train on Fridays?
You had Fridays off, you had Tuesdays off.
These guys are like, no, this guy was constantly here. Rob talked about the fact that for
nicest, he says, I remember playing in college. I remember playing in high school. I remember
playing for Miami. I remember playing for New Orleans. I don't remember what happened
in nine years I was at Patriots because it went like this. He said, all I know is we want
two super balls, all the other places we didn't win. which means what? The standards would risen. So the question comes to you. Do you think there was an element of the lowering of standards gradually?
It's okay.
You don't think standards were dropped over the years?
I think standards were dropped, but I don't think that was the cause.
I think it was the effect.
What was the cause. I think it was the effect. What was the cause? The cause was, I think you have to appreciate how little
we really understand these great pivotal moments in history.
1961, 1962, 1963, every figure in authority
had reached a certain age, not the age of great flexibility,
but a certain age, and had a certain repository of wisdom,
they were confronted by an enormous group of young people, flaunting their sexuality,
their physical prowess.
They were confronted in Yates's terms of the young in one or another's arms, and it
undid them.
It unmaned them. It unmanned them.
They didn't know how to respond.
They were certainly prepared to face the Nazis all over again, ought to face the communists,
but to face their own children.
In the luxurian frivolity of sexual embrace was beyond them.
Nothing in their training had prepared them to deal with the rebellion by their own children.
And that's what took place in the 1960s, 1963 to 1971, 1972.
And it's still to a certain extent taking place right now.
I mean, after all, the overwhelming impression that the United of France, to any far-end eye, is that every
successive generation in its taste, to proclivity, desires, velities, ambition seems to be
more infantile than the generation it replaces.
Certainly, if you look at American music, American culture, American life, it seems intensely
infantile.
At least, from a certain perspective, that began in the 1960s, it began with the collapse of authority.
If you're asking me, why did these people allow their own authority to collapse?
There's no answer beyond the one I gave you that certain sites are not meant to be seen
by the elderly.
And unfortunately, you have a huge population of young people who happened to be affluent.
That's another fact. The first generation that didn't have to retire to a factory to
the field in order to feed themselves.
They had disposable, disposable income.
They could play at leisure.
The first generation that happened to be affluent displaying immemorial human urges simply
undid the figures in authority throughout American life and I saw it
I saw it with my own eyes. Last question I'm gonna ask and I'm gonna turn it over to you guys and we'll
go to callers. So the last question I'm gonna have with you on this topic is which institution do we
trust too much that we should have never given them that much power and trust? University's. Okay I
agree. OK.
Universities on the watch pack that, please.
And when did that happen when we trusted them way too much?
The degree to which the university has become a democratic
institution is a function of the decision
undertaken in the 1940s and 1950s to open it up to everyone.
Don't forget, before 1940, University of Education
was a very aristocratic education.
It was restricted to very few people.
It had protocols of admission.
Wealth was involved.
But also intellectual ability.
1940 and 1950, there was an enormous experiment
in the United States to broaden the franchise in effect.
What was neglected in this is that the professoriate,
since time immemorial, has been kind of a monastic order.
That is, the injunction placed on people who
want to do academic work is that, yes, if you're talented enough, you can
withdraw from society, you can live a quasi-manastic life, you won't be earning a great deal, but
you'll be doing the work that is necessary for you to do, and you'll be teaching the next
generation.
Again, as the franchise was enormously expanded, this changed. Becoming a professor became a very lovely racket.
I know, I did.
You had lots of money, lots of free time.
You had an endless panoply of attractive young people
in your audience.
You could do pretty much as you wanted for four months
of the year.
There was all sorts of additional sources of financing available.
Inter-tracted, enormous number of people
who had never had any experience beyond the academic world.
Look, I went from Bronx Science to Columbia College,
from Columbia College to Princeton, from Princeton to Stanford,
and never once did I do an honest day's worth of work
in anything
beyond an academic setting.
I had no idea what work outside the academic world was.
I discovered very soon, of course, that I was completely unqualified, untalented when it
came to work outside the academic world, but you have a whole generation who has not had
that experience, that discovery of the limitations of their academic competence.
And of course, the result inevitably is the growth of extremely arrogant, priestly class,
perfectly prepared to tell the rest of us how to live, what to do, and beyond the physical
sciences, beyond physics and chemistry, to a certain extent, biology biology, certainly mathematics, very much prone to crackpot theories,
very much prone to conspiracy theories, crackpot theories, ludicrous ideas about human nature,
undocumented, unreferenced assertions of vowels, I mean, that version, that make absolutely
no sense in retrospect.
But nonetheless swept through the academic world
one after the other.
You're not going to make too many friends and all our professors listening to this.
We'll see.
By the way, we just had a moment.
Yeah, exactly.
We just had a moment.
We just took a risk.
Yes.
It took an hour and 31 minutes for my guest today to take a risk.
There's a lot of professors out there.
Get the dice out of there. We're, we're Linsky when I run it,
I'm gonna do the dice.
We're gonna play roulette tonight.
Go ahead Adam.
You would ask that question at the beginning.
I'll tell you,
I ask you 50 questions that you could have taken
a little bit of a risk.
49 I wasn't saying, safe, safe, but go ahead.
Can I go a totally different direction
with this?
Go anywhere you wanna go,
because cars are waiting by the way.
This is a question that I think that you're qualified
to answer. I'd appreciate an answer. This is a question that I think that you're qualified to answer. I appreciate an answer.
This has to do with mathematics, religion,
evolution, the great American scholar,
philosopher that we talked about earlier by the name of Joe Rogan,
had a bit back in 2009.
He did a stand-up comedy, you know, Joe Rogan?
By name.
Okay. He says, sends his regards. 2009 he did a stand-up comedy, you know Joe Rogan? By name, okay.
He says, he sends his regards.
He had a bit, or a stand-up special called
Talking Monkeys in Space, where he's having a conversation,
right, you got the title,
he's having a conversation with a guy about his faith.
And the guy's like, I came from Jesus, bro,
like straight up, I'm from Jesus, I have faith, I came from Jesus.
And Joe goes, how do you know so much?
Aren't you like 30?
Like, how do you know so much?
Who do you know?
And Joe Rogan basically says, look, you know what I do?
I don't know everything, but there's,
I like to memorize shit that a lot of smart people
have come up with.
And I basically just kind of read what they've already kind of put together
And I just kind of regurgitate that and one of the things that they found is something called the human genome
You're familiar with this concept a human genome
So basically he says what they found in the human genome is that we us humans are 96%
chimpanzee 96% chimpanzee. This is his bit and he says and sort of jokingly now if I gave you a sandwich and
It was 96% shit and 4% ham. Are you willing to call that a ham sandwich and basically saying we're monkeys, bro
We're freaking monkeys flying through space and he basically saying that that's the evolution right there.
Your mathematician is Joe Rogan right here
and please refute him of his role.
There was so many vivid voices emerging just now.
I'm not quite sure who's saying what?
The doctrine that...
Are we, did we come from monkeys?
Are we 96% of your family?
In the user and evolutionary path
from our semi-enhancestors to you? Yeah, of course there is nobody doubts that
Not some people do do that. That's what I'm asking
Not here, okay, we're not about you're taking a stand and saying that we did come from apes
But that's uncontroversial
It is though. I feel no
So you're taking a stand and saying that we did come from apes. You're wrong. It's not controversial
Nobody when pressed will really deny.
Because you have to endow, come from apes
with a certain amount of content.
If you mean come from apes by a process of random variation
and natural selection, I'll say, wait a second.
I don't think that's quite accurate.
If you mean to say there's overwhelming evidence
that there are evolutionary transitions,
we can walk the human line back and actually see the patterns emerging from both the fossil
record and the paleontological record. Of course, of course that's true. There is no evidence
that it is anything other than that, which is perfectly compatible with the
doctrine of creation, by the way.
How's that?
Because it's incompatible.
Evolution and creationism, I thought that's at different ends of the spectrum.
It depends what you mean by evolution.
If you mean you can trace your answers to this back sooner or later, you will run into
something that looks markedly unlike you,
but in a certain way resembles you.
Sure, that's uncontroversially.
It can do it genetically.
You can do it in terms of the fossil record.
If you mean on the other hand that at a certain point something new emerged for which we
have very little understanding, that too can be argued.
For example, although there is a striking sequence similarity,
it's certainly not 98%, it's somewhere in the 80s.
And there are a lot of questions about how those sequences
are mapped one to the other.
Don't forget until very recently,
we did not have a complete human general.
But if you look at human beings, and you look at our presumptively nearest ancestors,
there's an unfathomably large distance between us.
Unfathomably large.
We are completely different.
We have properties not seen in the rest of the animal kingdom.
We have behaviors not seen in the rest of the animal kingdom. We have behaviors not seen in the rest of the animal kingdom.
We have a cognitive apparatus that's not seen in the rest of the animal kingdom.
So on the one hand, yes, I can go backwards progressively chasing ancestors and saying,
well, there's a line of derivation that makes perfect sense, no point in disguising that, but at the same time,
when we reach the stage of human beings, there's an explosion of very interesting and very isolated
properties. Both those things are true. Richard Dawkins wrote a book, and one of the more vivid
examples that I remember from this book, I think it was called the magic of reality.
Is that what it's called?
I think so.
He talks about that if you take a picture, like you talked about your grandfather or your
father, your grandfather, if you take a picture and you just keep going back and back and back
and back and back and back and you go thousands of pictures, you're going to run it to like
a great great great great great great great grandfather.
It looks like Croke magnum man and then if you go back back back back back
Thousand thousand thousand pictures pictures pictures pictures pictures pictures
You're gonna run into some sort of ape and then if you go back back back back back back back back to the frickin beginning
Picture picture picture you're gonna run to some sort of fish and this is what Richard Dawkins has to say
Have you ever debated Richard Dawkins do you debate his theory? Sure, it Oxford
Okay, is he wrong?
To the extent that you're you're offering a kind of a childish narrative. No, he's not wrong if you go back far and far enough
Let's take you as the test case to pursue your ancestry far and far further and further into the path sooner
or later, I'm liable to reach a fish.
So what?
Okay.
How do fish take pictures, though?
Did it?
It's kind of like they take out the camera.
Wait, we're all all, I'm just glad that I need to go all the way all the way back and
it was just these A and I.
These A and I can pictures.
I'm so in love.
Can't have so many Steve Jobs embedded like they were onto something.
But he is, he is a really interesting point.
We can talk about distance.
Let's make calls. Let's take callers in two minutes.
Go for it.
Go back to the fish.
That's a long way to go back.
Go back to the common ancestor.
But before the fish, that's even longer.
It seems to me I'm repeating a remark,
apocryphically attributed to Chomsky,
that the distance between us and our nearest claim
dancers is way greater than the distance
between the apes and the flowering plants.
That's a remarkable claim.
That's what we're talking about.
Instead of wondering whether the entirety of the human race could have sprung into existence
from someone's fevered brow, we should be asking, do we have a plausible explanation
for a large suite of unique properties that makes us human? That's a much more difficult
question to answer because as far as I know, 2021-2022, we don't. We don't. Okay, are we ready to take some colors, John?
The screen froze for the last 30 seconds.
John, do we know why it's frozen?
Because it keeps freezing.
It froze three times now.
Yeah, we're good now.
We have a Jordan on the line.
Hey, Pat, how's it going?
I got to salute you like a soldier,
and then I got to move on with this question real quick,
because you guys said I got to move fast
Is that okay with you go forward?
All right, so some years back I traveled thousands of miles with
Very well, let's just say I ended up in a Bible study group, okay? And
One of the Bible study group people were all like all my friends and idiot
He just doesn't get it that you need to be a religious
You'd be about Christ all this that in the third and I told him I said listen man
You got to find an indirect route
Potentially get your friend on board with even starting to think about this and
And then after that
And then after that, I was wondering what this guy, what might be an indirect path that this guy might have a religious situation.
And then the second question I had was, and sort of brought this out was, a lot of religious
experience happened when people are at their worst, whether they're in alcoholic, they
got nothing left to turn to, but maybe a religious scenario they're in a war they're getting shot up and just abroad
and out that question a little bit more you got situations like in the Soviet Union or
in France where they were like we're gonna get rid of religion right and these things never went away they're pretty universal and there was in there was a big
sorry
go ahead what's your question
did you hear my question no he has not yet he's still waiting for the question
okay number one i wonder what
up to ten to indirect path the christ might be a not christ and indirect
uh...
pat for it like instead of somebody coming to recruit you to a religion, maybe he's
a fond of smoking cigars or something, or I don't know. And the other question I had was,
are you perhaps into elevated of a position to where maybe you get down in the dirtyness of it,
and perhaps you have a religious moment? And generally speaking, that's my question. And also the third is with things like the Soviet Union
and France where you had situations
where they're trying to get rid of religion
and there was a counter push against that
and religion isn't gone.
And a lot of these are intellectual pursuits and such
for where they pushed this.
I was wondering what his opinion was on that
and does it lead to sort of a mindset
where you're just going along with the status quo
because I've run into certain conversations
with people where they don't wanna take a position
after they, you know,
after like, if you don't believe in God,
perhaps maybe you're, you know, and what's
the point in living kind of thing for some people?
And I've had some conversations with them where they're borderline nihilistic.
What's your thoughts on that?
Well, there are three and a half questions.
The first question about an indirect path.
Is a very interesting question, and of course every serious religion has talked about
that, or written about that.
The position of the Catholic Church, for example, is crystal clear, and it can be summed up
very simply.
If you behave as if you believed in God, faith will be given to you.
Which is an extremely sophisticated and subtle declaration.
Do I know that that's true?
No, I don't know that that's true,
but I think it might well be true.
Faith is given to those who act as if they had faith.
That's the first question I think which touches on questions
have been directness.
And I think it's a very penetrating question
because the direct approach very often proves fruitless.
You can't hammer a religious conviction into someone.
You can terrify them, pretending,
but that's not quite the same thing.
The second question, if I recall it correctly,
was the extent to which certain desperate experiences can easily provoke a man to at least the affirmation of religious
conviction.
That goes back to the question we were discussing an hour ago.
Call them extreme situations.
The trouble with extreme situations is if you push extremity to the limit, they can
do one
of two things. They can reinforce or create a sense of faith or they can destroy it completely.
I know many people who entered the concentration camps as Orthodox Jews and left despairing,
suicidal. By the same token, I know some people who found strength in their religious tradition when they emerge from the concentration camps.
So I don't think that's a very good piece of evidence. Certainly, we all know of the temptation in combat and the aphorism, which I think is quite true.
There are no atheists in the foxholes. That may well be true. I've never been in a foxhole. I can't speak with personal authority.
The third question is, can we say anything
intelligent, rational, reasonable about the experiences
of Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany with respect to the collapse
or undermining a religious convictions
as social institutions?
And yeah, I think we can.
I don't think anyone is ever going to count
Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin, Mao, Adolf Hitler
as among the religious leaders of mankind.
And there's a reason for that.
I think attempts to say that Nazism and Stalinism
were themselves negative, nihilistic religions.
Those are unsuccessful.
They weren't.
They were essentially contemptuous of religious experience,
atheistic to the core.
Stalin at the end of his life may have had some use for
priestly intervention.
He was a suspicious man.
But certainly they acted.
All of the totalitarian figures in the 20th century acted as if there were no
Possibility of ever being held to account for their crimes. I think that's the that's the issue John. Do we have any other colors?
Yes, we have Sienna on the phone Sienna. How are you?
Hi good evening. I'm good. How are you guys fantastic? What's on your mind? What's your question?
First I guess I just want to say thank you for that is all that you do one question mr. Balinsky
If the poorest man has the richest heart is he really poor?
I'm sorry. What was the first part of that? She said if the first man has the richest heart is his
poorest heart sorry the richest heart is his poor is heart sorry the poorest heart is it
say sorry
we can hear you by the way obvious very low that's why
oh if the poorest man has the richest heart is he really poor
oh yeah
no question about it
but is he rich in something beyond what the question is
addressed to?
It's always possible.
But I think that almost a universal experience of religious
life is that there is a level of deprivation which
makes concentration on anything beyond material sustenance
very difficult
So you can say if a man is poor he may nonetheless be rich in wisdom which
Certainly true
But he remains poor
Is the bad news I we got some bad news for you that man is still poor. I don't know if it's a man
Marien, he's still a poor man
But let's go to the next one John yeah. Yeah, we have Michael on the line.
Michael, how you doing?
How's it going Patrick, David?
Fantastic.
What's on your mind?
Awesome.
My question is for the man of the hour,
do you end as well as everybody else in there?
Do you all believe math was invented or created?
Well, is there a big distinction between being invented and
being created? I'm not sure. Usually it's posed as the
human beings create mathematics or did they discover a
mathematics? Is that the question?
It's just the question of, of do you think that humans
invented math or was math just always from the beginning of the universe? Was it always? It's just the question of, do you think that humans invented math? Or was math just always, from the beginning of the universe, was it always...
It's always a difficult question, because they're fairly interesting philosophical arguments,
but my commitment, would you say it's...
Obviously, this is not a human invention. It has no properties like a human invention.
So God created it. I didn't say that.
Oh, we were... I didn't say that. I didn't say it. And you know, I didn't say it.
His faith has increased, but your faith has increased in the last hour and four days.
No, it hasn't increased at all. It's the same robust level. It was when I entered the discussion.
But the point is, we have a very difficult problem talking about mathematics, because these
are objects that are obviously not physical. The number one is not a physical object, neither is the number seven.
And they don't seem to be in time,
in quite the way we want objects of contemplation to be in time.
It doesn't really make a whole lot of sense to say,
well, the number three came into existence in 1932.
It doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
You can say that.
They're philosophers who will say anything, but they do not elicit a whole lot of respect
by that kind of declaration.
Well, if it didn't come into existence at any particular time, does that mean that
there are a journal, in some sense?
Well, yeah.
I think it does.
Although I can't tell you what being a journal means since there's a conflict between the
view of a mathematician and the view of a physicist.
A physicist will say space and time arose, space and time arose with the creation of the
universe of the Big Bang.
Before the Big Bang, on one theory of cosmology, there was nothing.
And not even the laws of mathematics.
That's a view I find personally repugnant and intellectually
unaccommodating, but there it is.
Some people believe that.
But as far as the invention of mathematics
goes, I don't know of anyone who studied mathematics seriously.
Things this stuff was all made up.
Not a soul.
Good question, doc.
I have a question as well.
You talked about as being a secular Jew in terms of that over time, kind of the religion
erodes and it kind of goes downwards.
Do you think that the role of religion has what that has played in history has been an
overall good thing or a bad thing?
God, you guys are unbelievable.
These are incredibly difficult questions.
I just had occasion to write a long essay
about the British Empire.
Was the British Empire from 1600 to 1949
when it finally ended or 1960 when all the various colonies
gained independence?
Was it a force for good or a force for bad?
And you look at it, you study it seriously,
you study it historically, you come to the conclusion,
it's too soon to tell.
Well, you think it's any easier to make the claim
with respect to the Roman Empire,
say from the age of Augustus to the fifth century
when the Roman Empire and the West collapsed?
Historians are still enraged with one another
because one half of the historical community said, we'll say, the Roman Empire was repacious, it was cruel, it was monstrous,
overbearing. Dr. Johnson has a famous remark about the Roman Empire. These
people lived by stealing from strangers and when they ran out of strangers from
which to steal, they stole from one another. That was his view of the Romans.
On the other hand, we have to say, without the Roman Empire,
the entire glorious tradition of Western history
would have been aborted 2,000 years ago.
So it's a very difficult question to answer.
Has the role of religion, has religion
been a good thing overall?
Has it been a bad thing,
it's been an inescapable thing, it's been a necessary feature of our existence,
and we can certainly point to good things and bad things. Obviously so.
The good things and the bad things don't quite get to the essence
of the moral question we were talking about an hour and hour and a half
ago, whether without the structure of divine authority, a completely moral or acceptable
social life is possible, that's a question that we have yet to answer.
So I got, so since maybe our booker didn't manage expectation he should have said we only
asked tough questions but I got a question for you I think you may like and it's not going to be
complicated. Go ahead. Do you like ice cream? Yeah okay then. So you can't tell us all we do is ask
you tough questions. That's a very spiritual experience for some people when they have the right
kind of ice cream. John give us a last color before this man decides to increase his faith and become a Christian
pastor by the time we're done.
Watch David, move from France to Fort Lauderdale.
Build one the biggest churches here and thousands of people show up.
I go.
I go.
I go.
He would praise probably more likely to build in a church in South Florida with you.
Speaking of church.
Hang on, do we have a caller?
Do we have one last caller?
Yes, Cameron's on the line.
Cameron's back.
Cameron, how you doing?
Good.
One question.
Do secularists credit religion for promoting the golden rule?
Do unto others, as you would have others, do unto you?
Yeah. Yes. That's what you're talking about? Yes. Do unto others as you would have others do unto you?
Yes.
That's what you're talking about?
Yes.
Depends who you're listening to.
I think the golden rule is kind of a folk apothecum.
Every culture somehow discovers it.
Some assign it to a theological province, some assign it to good, common sense. It appears almost in every culture.
It doesn't appear from the beginning.
You go through the Greeks, for example,
and they had no use for the golden rule.
Do unto others, as you would have others,
do unto you?
Well, that's OK, except for the slaves,
except for women, except for a small social circle.
The Romans also had difficulty with these kind
of essentially Christian doctrines,
not until the third and fourth century
as Christianity achieved dominance in the Roman Empire,
where these sentiments taken for granted
as part of accumulated wisdom.
But yeah, every culture has encountered the golden rule.
That would be very skeptical about saying
it's uniquely a religious principle.
We got four more minutes if you got any questions or you're good.
Before I joined the church in Fort Lauderdale, I wanted to know if you had any definitive
strong opinions on Jesus Christ.
Is?
Yes.
Meaning, what are you willing and definitively able to say about the life of Jesus?
That one time you guys had sushi together.
Meaning he existed.
Check.
I think there's a lot of sort of...
What is he born from the Virgin Mary?
I don't know.
Was he resurrected too soon to tell?
What can you definitively say about Jesus?
You've just said it.
Okay. That's it. That's it
So I answered look how could you be asking a secular Jew for his personal opinion was a
Jesus was a Jew so you know, maybe there's a lineage if I go back and back and back and back to photographs
I could see a picture Jesus doubtful doubtful
So you don't think you do not think Jesus was the son of God based on math. No
No, I mean I look when I say I'm a secular Jew, I really mean to which I am not committed to Christian doctrine.
No, I'm not you don't have to be a believer. Of course, I don't believe in the Trinity either.
But so do you believe in Moses? Do you believe in Abraham?
There are figures from the Bible for which I think there's very good reason to suppose they existed in some
Some fashion or other certainly Moses is an historically att figure, no matter what Freud had to say about
it.
And Jesus is also a reasonably attested historical figure, but with a I believe, say, the trinity
or the doctrine of the concept in substantiation, or whether I believe in original sin, or whether
I believe in the mystery of faith,
or any of these questions,
or have a personal relationship with Jesus?
No.
Okay.
Well, before we wrap up the podcast,
I think we should all join hands and pray.
And bow, and maybe we just,
David, final words.
Give us final words here before we wrap up.
About what?
Whatever you want to talk about.
Tell us what, tell us us have these tough questions,
the challenging you faced, you know,
the last hour and 50 minutes,
have we solved any of the major questions
and problems in the world today?
Any of the major questions and problems
in the world today, well, you've certainly solved the problem
of how best I might occupy myself between four and six o the world today. Well, you've certainly solved the problem of how best
I might occupy myself between four and six o'clock today in very pleasant conversation. I think that should be enough for the rest of us. And you really, your main outcome was met. People now know
you have a very good style of how you dress. Absolutely. So that's been established, but it was great having you on.
I enjoyed you being a good sport and taking the questions
and a pushback back and forth.
It was fantastic.
I hope the audience enjoyed it just as much as we did.
Tomorrow we have Ethan Subley.
Yeah.
Actor remember the time.
From remember to Titans.
Okay, fantastic.
Looking for a good.
Mr. React. He lost like 80 pounds or something. Yeah. Not even 80 pounds more than 80 pounds. Actor remember the time remember to tighten's book. Okay fantastic looking for good. I can react
He lost like 80 pounds or something like not even 80 pounds more than 80 pounds like a hundred eighty pounds
Yeah, like he's jacked now. Yeah, he's jacked now. So we're we're excited about having a monster more jacked
In French means jacket like in shape. Yeah, that's
Custom
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