Pints With Aquinas - Trent Horn Vs Matt Dillahunty: Is belief in the Resurrection reasonable?
Episode Date: April 20, 2021Trent Horn will debate Matt Dillahunty on whether It is reasonable to believe in the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ. Then we'll be taking questions from patrons and super chatters. Learn more abo...ut Matt Dillahunty here: https://www.axp.show/ Learn more about Trent Horn here: https://www.trenthorn.com/ FREE E-book "You Can Understand Aquinas": https://pintswithaquinas.com/understanding-thomas SPONSORS Hallow: https://hallow.com/mattfradd STRIVE: https://www.strive21.com/ Catholic Chemistry: https://www.catholicchemistry.com/?utm_source=mattfradd&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=mattfradd1q&utm_content=quotebanner GIVING Patreon or Directly: https://pintswithaquinas.com/support/ This show (and all the plans we have in store) wouldn't be possible without you. I can't thank those of you who support me enough. Seriously! Thanks for essentially being a co-producer co-producer of the show. LINKS Website: https://pintswithaquinas.com/ Merch: teespring.com/stores/matt-fradd FREE 21 Day Detox From Porn Course: https://www.strive21.com/ SOCIAL Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattfradd Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattfradd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattfradd Gab: https://gab.com/mattfradd
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Well, hello, hello, hello, and welcome to Pints with Aquinas.
My name is Matt Fradd, and today we have Matt Dillahunty and Trent Horn,
who will be debating whether or not the resurrection is reasonable.
We plan on taking 15-minute opening statements.
We'll do cross-examination, eight minutes each,
and then the two debaters will go back and forth for a little
while. We'll do some Q&A from super chatters and patrons, and then closing statements of five
minutes. If this is the first time you're here, welcome to Pints with Aquinas. Do us a favor,
click that thumbs up button, and if you like the show, be sure to share it on social media.
Hello, Trent, and hello, Matt. Are you with me?
I'm here. Can you hear me?
Yes. Good. Terrific.
And Matt, I apologize. There was a bit of a confusion about the debate format before. We can just go with the format as it was and just do opening statements and then
jump into a 30-minute discussion is fine.
Okay. Sounds good.
All right. This is great.
It's great to have you here.
I don't want to bog down the beginning of this debate with big bios, so links in the description below to Matt and Trent Horne's website.
Trent, you'll be arguing the affirmative that the resurrection is reasonable,
so you'll be going first, and I'll set the alarm here for 15 minutes.
Does that sound good?
Yes, that should be fine.
I hope so, or else, bloody hell.
All right, whenever you're ready, begin, take your time,
and I'll just click start whenever.
All right.
Well, I'd like to thank Matt for hosting this debate.
I'm grateful for the other Matt for participating in it.
Tonight, I'm going to defend the statement that it's reasonable to believe Jesus of Nazareth rose from the dead.
Matt has the burden of defending the negative, that it's not reasonable to believe Jesus rose from the dead.
In order for each of us to defend our positions, we each have to present a standard for what makes a belief reasonable,
especially belief in unusual,
unrepeatable events. However, being reasonable is not the same as being convincing. You could fail to be convinced by a belief, but still think that the belief is reasonable. For example, Matt
is not convinced of Alex O'Connor's ethical veganism, but I doubt Matt would say Alex is
unreasonable for being an ethical vegan. Likewise, Matt's personal doubts about
the resurrection are irrelevant to whether belief in the resurrection is reasonable.
Instead, Matt has to defend an objective standard for what makes beliefs reasonable or unreasonable.
So let me offer three tests to see if belief in an unusual event is reasonable. Number one,
does the belief contradict well-established facts about the subject in question?
If it does, then the belief is unreasonable.
For example, the claim that everyone buried in Arlington National Cemetery physically rose from the dead would be unreasonable because it contradicts the facts about those bodies still being in the ground.
But claiming Jesus rose from the dead doesn't contradict any similar fact about Jesus remaining in his tomb.
contradict any similar fact about Jesus remaining in his tomb. Now, you might say the science of biology shows dead people stay dead and so the resurrection
contradicts this fact. But this isn't a fact about Jesus, it's a fact about human
beings in general. Atheists like Matt are often skeptical of universal statements
like everything that begins to exist has a cause, so why not be skeptical of
statements like human beings never come back from the dead when we
are presented with a reasonable counterexample. Moreover, the claim that Jesus miraculously rose
from the dead requires that dead people stay dead. That's because a miracle is a supernatural
intervention that serves as a sign of God's revelation. And just as an orange life vest is
a sign of a survivor in the ocean, because it's so unlike the surrounding blue water, the resurrection can only be a sign from God or a miracle if it was so unlike our usual experience of people dying and remaining dead.
But does this mean we have to accept every miracle claim that doesn't contradict a fact about the subject in question?
No.
Here's test number two.
Is there a lack of evidence we would expect if the event did
occur? If there is, then it's unreasonable to believe the event occurred. For example, it's
unreasonable to believe Jesus appeared to every person in ancient Rome after his crucifixion
because ancient historians would have written about that. But suppose Jesus really did rise
from the dead and appeared to Peter, the 12 disciples, James, Paul, 500 others,
as recorded in 1 Corinthians 15. What kind of evidence would we expect to emerge after these
events? The people to whom Jesus appeared would tell other people about what happened.
Some people would believe these disciples and some wouldn't. This process of oral communication would
result in the establishment of communities of believers, or churches. The tiny minority of
believers who were literate might write about the resurrection, and non-Christian historians who are aware of this
group might reference their beliefs but not accept them. And that is exactly what happened with early
Christianity. Now, I'm not saying this proves the resurrection happened. I'm only saying that if
Jesus rose from the dead as the New Testament describes, then there is no absence of expected
evidence that
makes this particular resurrection belief unreasonable. But an unusual belief could
still be unreasonable even if it passes these two tests, which brings us to the final test.
Is the evidence for the unusual event just as easily accounted for by a usual explanation?
If it is, then it is unreasonable to believe in the unusual event.
The claim that the Muslim prophet Muhammad received poetic recitations from an angel
doesn't necessarily contradict anything about Muhammad,
and if an angel only dictated the story in medieval Arabic conventions,
we'd expect the Quran to sound as it does.
But test number three says there are usual explanations that account for these historical facts.
This includes fraud or even mistakenly attributing one's subconscious thoughts to the voice of God or an angel. Therefore, it's not
reasonable to believe in the central miracle of Islam, but the central miracle of Christianity
is literally a different story. Before I explain why, I must note that in previous debates,
Matt has said there is a difference between claims and evidence. He said there is no evidence for the
resurrection, only claims about things that happened to Jesus and his apostles. But most historical evidences,
nearly all of them, are just claims that something happened, including unusual things.
If I told Matt I rode an elephant across the Swiss Alps, he might want extraordinary evidence
for such an extraordinary claim. But the only evidence for the Carthaginian general Hannibal crossing the Alps with war elephants
in the third century BC,
is just a claim made by a Roman historian
decades after it happened.
Yet no major historian doubts this took place,
even though historians don't even agree on basic facts
like what route Hannibal took.
So given this proper understanding of historical evidence,
what is the evidence for the resurrection?
The most important evidence would be claims that Jesus appeared in a
bodily form to groups of his disciples after death. So how could we explain
these claims? Well here are four possibilities. One, the claims never
happened and were invented by later Christians as a legendary development.
The problem with this explanation is that we have Paul's writings and he had
contact with the disciples and even makes this claim about himself.
We also have accounts from Luke, who shows himself to be a very reliable historian, and he both documents these appearances and Peter's testimony about the resurrection in Acts 2.
Finally, if the disciples never claimed Jesus rose from the dead, then we have no explanation for how church communities based on this belief arose so quickly when other messianic
movements fell apart after the death of their leaders. This is why scholars universally agree
that an authentic experience motivated the disciples to make these claims. The agnostic
New Testament scholar Paula Fredrickson says, I know in their own terms what they saw was the
raised Jesus. That's what they say, and then all the historical evidence we have afterwards attests to their conviction that that's what they saw. I wasn't there. I
don't know what they saw, but I do know that as a historian that they must have seen something.
Similarly, the atheistic historian Richard Carrier says, I think it more probable that Peter and
James, and certainly Paul, maybe several others, saw something that inspired
their faith. I think it most likely that others had these visions earlier than Paul, and that
Paul's letters give more or less a correct version of his own experiences, such as his persecution of
the early believers. The disciples, maybe they just made the resurrection claims, they made the claims,
but they were lying. But this doesn't really explain the involvement of outsiders like Paul and James who had no reason to lie,
or the evidence of the disciples' sincerity and their willingness to be persecuted.
Three, maybe the disciples sincerely believed they saw the risen Jesus, but they were mistaken.
They had some kind of grief-induced hallucination.
But this doesn't explain any other facts related to Jesus' death.
One, we should be skeptical of the disciples being grief-stricken.
It's equally likely they were angry they wasted years of their life following another failed Messiah.
Moreover, Paul and James were not grief-stricken over Jesus' death because they weren't believers when he was crucified.
Two, since ancient Jews believed the resurrection wouldn't take place until the end of the world,
it follows that even if they had grief-induced hallucinations, the disciples would have thought they saw Jesus' soul in heaven,
not his glorified body on earth. Moreover, given their fierce monotheism, we would expect them to
hallucinate Jesus as a man exalted in heaven, and not as the creator himself, unless Jesus told them
he used divine power to raise himself from the dead. Three, Paul tells us Jesus appeared to groups of people,
and the closest thing we have to group hallucinations or mass hysteria usually involve
people psychosomatically experiencing a similar illness, not individuals claiming to all see the
same thing that doesn't exist, especially something that didn't conform to their previous expectations.
Four, the New Testament authors repeatedly make it clear when someone has a dream, a vision, or they think they've seen a ghost or a spirit.
The resurrection appearances in the New Testament all point toward groups of people seeing an embodied, recently deceased individual that would not be the subject of an hallucination.
Five, since the resurrection was preached in Jerusalem, within a few weeks of the crucifixion, the disciples or enemies of the faith could have checked Jesus'
tomb to see if they were hallucinating. And the evidence suggests they visited the tomb and found
it empty since the first recorded visitors were women whose testimony was not trusted
in the ancient world. The fact whose inclusion makes sense is simply being a recollection of
what actually happened. This shows that appeals to hallucinations do not easily account for this
case because it involves outsiders, appearances to groups, evidence and sincerity, and a general lack of an expectation
for the hallucination in question.
Therefore, given that belief in the resurrection doesn't contradict a known fact about Jesus,
it doesn't lack evidence it should have if it did happen, and no other usual explanation
just as easily accounts for the evidence, it follows that it's reasonable to believe
Jesus rose from the dead. Now, you could stop there and just say Jesus rose, but you don't
know how he did, and the resolution for the debate would hold. But we should be skeptical of natural
explanations for the claims that Jesus rose from the dead. If natural causes are behind them,
we would expect these causes to produce many
similar resurrection claims. But the resurrection is very unique. The world-renowned atheist Antony
Flew once said, the evidence for the resurrection is better than for claimed miracles in any other
religion. It's outstandingly different in quality and quantity. However, if supernatural explanations
are allowed, then couldn't we propose them for almost anything and destroy their explanatory power? Well first, if that were true, atheists who say
the universe exists without a cause would commit the same fallacy because
having no cause could explain anything we don't understand. Second, we can rule
out many unusual explanations like God or aliens as unreasonable because they
are ad hoc. There's no reason to appeal to them
aside from explanatory power. For example, in 1872, the Mary Celeste was found adrift at sea
in relatively decent condition with ample supplies on board. The 10 passengers and crew
vanished, and historians still don't know why they all got in a lifeboat and left a seaworthy vessel.
You could say that God told them to leave as a test of faith and took them up to heaven or aliens abducted them, but there's no evidence that
remotely points in that direction. Now, if the ship's log said something about heavenly voices
or a ship in the sky, you might have a reason for an extraterrestrial or supernatural explanation,
but it didn't. However, the resurrection is different because we have reasons to believe
God was involved based on the nature of the disciples' testimony. That means if you're a non-Christian
who believe God exists, which is half of religiously unaffiliated Americans, you could
consider the resurrection within your own current worldview. And what if you don't believe God
exists, and so it seems like there's nothing to cause Jesus to rise from the dead? Well,
the resurrection can make you rethink that idea. but I might also argue an argument for the existence of God.
This one's called the argument from change.
I like it.
It goes like this.
Change occurs when a potential X becomes an actual Y.
We see change all the time.
It can be like growth or movement, but no potential X can become an actual Y on its own any more than water can freeze itself or a train car can propel
itself. Instead, something like a freezer or a locomotive has to actualize the potential
for change. But then these actualizers only change because other things actualize them.
So could an infinite series explain why we have change at all? Well, no. Just as an infinitely
long train of boxcars would sit motionless without a locomotive, an infinite number of
things that must be actualized by something else would be changeless unless there was a cause of the series
that's just pure actuality. So just as a locomotive pulls without being pulled, this uncaused cause
for the series would actualize everything without being actualized by anything else. It'd be pure
actuality. And since the universe contains a mixture of potential and actual, it can't be that uncaused cause. If there's a cause of the universe that's purely actual,
what would it be like? Well, if it has no potential, it can't change, because change
is potential going to actual. If it's changeless, it would have to be immaterial and timeless,
because material temporal objects always change. The cause couldn't be limited in power, knowledge,
or existence because these imply potentials and doesn't have any potential. The cause would be
omnipotent, omniscient, have necessary existence because it had no potential for non-existence.
It would also be all good because evil is a lack of goodness and this cause lacks nothing,
has no potentiality. Also the cause would
be personal and not a mere force because the only immaterial things that exist
are minds and abstract entities like numbers, but abstract entities can't
cause anything, they're causally a feat. So this means the ultimate cause of the
universe, causally impotent I should say, must be something that's similar to a
mind that exists in an unlimited way. And so for a lot of people, that's what they mean by the word God.
Finally, as the debate continues, don't forget about Matt's burden of proof.
He has to show it's unreasonable to believe Jesus rose from the dead.
So keep asking this question as you hear his opening statement.
Matt says belief in the resurrection is unreasonable because fill in the blank.
So as the debate
continues, I think you'll see that Matt reason his reasons that fill in the blank are flawed
because they either lead us to one rejecting many facts of history we already know to be reasonable
and two, they make arbitrary judgments about reality based on Matt's assumptions about the
world instead of keeping an open mind about how the world works.
So instead of that particular epistemology or way of not,
that term will show up a lot, epistemology,
that just means the study of knowing.
Like, how do we know about the world?
How do we figure out what's really going on, okay?
So I have a way of figuring out what's going on
when it comes to unusual events.
I gave a three-pronged test for it.
And I hope Matt proposes a way of figuring out
how to discern unusual events and claims of unusual events. And as I said, he'll try to
show that this unusual event, the resurrection, is unreasonable because fill in the blank.
Why does he think it's unreasonable? And then you'll see those reasons either lead to rejecting
other reasonable beliefs or they end up being arbitrary. Instead, I
would argue that you should accept the standard that I've offered, and then
seriously consider the truth and meaning behind Jesus Christ having risen from
the dead, and consequently demonstrating the truth of the Christian faith.
All right, thanks Trent. Matt, whenever you want to start, I'll click the 15
minute timer. No rush. All Matt, whenever you want to start, I'll click the 15-minute timer. No rush.
All right. Thank you.
All right. So first of all, thanks for having me here. I appreciate it. It's nice to meet
Trent virtually for the first time and to hang out with the Aquinas crew and fans.
Thanks, everybody, for showing up to this, especially because I didn't do too much to
promote it as I had weird technical issues this week. So let's get started. First of all, it is
not my intent ever to offend people, but the nature of these discussions about topics that are at the
heart of people's deeply held beliefs often offend. I once believed many of the things that many of
you believe. I believed many of the things that Trent believed, including a belief in the bodily resurrection.
It's difficult to state something like that without someone interpreting it as, oh, now
he thinks he's better than us.
I don't necessarily think I'm better than any of you as people, but I do believe that
my position is more rational.
And if that bothers you, I'd ask you to consider whether you think your position is more rational.
Because if your answer is yes, then we're in the same boat and we can argue it out. And if your answer is no, then you need to consider why
you are willingly, knowingly holding a view that you consider less rational than the alternative.
So how do we go about telling if it's reasonable to believe a claim? And then it's worth noting
this is separate from whether or not the claim is in fact true. The claim could be false, and yet you could
still have a reasonable belief in it. For once upon a time, it was reasonable to believe that
the sun went around the earth, because that's what we saw when we looked up in the sky.
It would have been absurd to think that the earth was spinning at an unbelievable rate,
and one of the reasons why I would call it unbelievable. And yet that was the truth. So what's reasonable to believe and what's true are separate, but we're stuck because we may
not actually ever have access to the truth. So all we can hope for is what's reasonable.
So how do you tell what's reasonable? Well, there's many answers to that and they are all
problematic because at the end of the day, each individual is going to be responsible for
determining what's reasonable to them. And the rest of society is going to be responsible for determining what's reasonable
to them, and the rest of society is going to say, ah, you're unreasonable, or you're incredibly
reasonable. And so we try to work together. This is one of the reasons why we have scientific
methods that remove as much of the bias and subjectivity as possible, even though we can't
completely remove it. I'd argue in simplest terms, a claim is reasonable if the claim is consistent with what we know to be true and possible within reality.
It simply does no good to argue that it's reasonable because it's internally consistent, because that's true for many sci-fi fantasy stories, or at least some of the best ones.
So what does the physical evidence about the resurrection tell us?
Well, as far as I'm aware, there is no physical evidence.
There's only a story and testimonials. Testimonials about, you know, hey, so-and-so saw this or this
is what happens. If Christianity is true, then the resurrection of Jesus must be the single most
important fact in history. And for that fact, we have nothing but hearsay. Now, that hearsay wouldn't
be admissible in a court, and certainly the standard, I would think, for adopting the
foundation of a religion is true, to the extent that one is willing to conform one's life to it,
should at least rise to the level of surviving courtroom evidentiary standards. One might wonder,
as I do, if this event actually happened,
and there's a good and wise God behind it, why did he leave us with such a paucity of anecdotal
evidence and place this event in such a temporal situation as to make it unverifiable and
unfalsifiable? Because I'd argue that an untestable claim of a matter of fact such as
this event occurred no matter what the event is can never be reasonably believed unless that
matter of fact is wholly mundane and when the risk of being wrong is minimized so if somebody
would say george washington had a dog named piggy the risk of accepting that claim being wrong is fairly trivial. We don't
have any way to verify it as far as I can tell. And it's probably also not falsifiable because
we don't have a time machine. We don't have the ability to exhaustively explore every aspect of
it. But the risk of being wrong is trivial. Oops, I thought George Washington had a dog named Piggy.
Turns out I wasn't right. I guess that's
not a big deal. Unless maybe you're on a quiz show in front of millions of people and then you suffer
terrible embarrassment and a harm to your reputation. And then all of a sudden, believing
something like that is a problem. It's important for people to recognize that there's a difference
between verification and falsification. Verification is the notice, the notice,
the notice.
Verification is the concept
that we should produce the thing.
If we were to say all intelligent beings
are on planet Earth,
verification,
you could run around,
hey, there's an intelligent being on Earth
and there's one on Earth
and there's one on Earth
and there's one on Earth.
But verifying it exhaustively
could be completely impractical
because you would have to search every planet
at all times in order to determine that in fact all intelligent beings are in fact on planet earth
but falsification is a separate issue falsification is whether or not it is
theoretically able to be shown to be false and so while we may never be able to verify that all
intelligent beings are in fact on planet earth we could at least in theory falsify it.
Because if we produced an intelligent being that wasn't on Earth, that would falsify the claim.
Now, that would show that the claim is wrong.
But if we have a claim that is unverifiable, unfalsifiable, it is essentially untestable.
foundation is that if you have an untestable claim, it had better be mundane, trivial, and consistent with the facts of reality before you should ever risk believing that it's in fact
the case. Well, we can't really believe or we can't argue that it's rational to believe something
that we can't test at all. And so we do the best we can when it comes to history. And so when we
take a look at history, all we have are
reports. Somebody said they saw this, somebody said they knew this person, somebody said this
other thing. That's all well and good when we're trying to put together the best understanding of
history we can, but we shouldn't be proclaiming it as truth and we shouldn't necessarily be saying
that this particular version of history is particularly reasonable because history tends to be written by the victors.
And so history is always suspect.
And there are two quotes from David Hume that are the cornerstone of how and why I go about determining if something is or should be considered reasonable.
The first one is that he said, the wise man proportions his belief to the evidence.
And all he's really saying is your confidence level in the truth of a claim should be proportional to the evidence that is there to support it.
You barely have any evidence for, and similarly, if there's mountains of evidence or something,
and you're just like, well, you know, then you're not proportioning your confidence
to the belief or to the evidence. Sorry.
The second quote from you, which I'll go ahead and read because it's a little lengthy.
When anyone tells me that he saw a dead man restored to life, I immediately consider with myself whether it be more probable that this person should either deceive or be deceived
or that the fact which in he relates should have actually happened.
I weigh the one miracle against the other, and according to the superiority which I discover,
I pronounce my decision and always reject the greater miracle.
Now, what Hume is essentially saying there is, is it more probable that someone has either
been deceived or is intending to deceive me than the claim is true?
deceived or is intending to deceive me, then the claim is true.
And when he says reject the greater miracle, that is incredibly important and significant to understand.
Hume is not saying accept the lesser miracle.
That is not it at all.
It is reject the greater miracle.
It's not, it doesn't just say, oh, here's two potential candidate explanations that
we have at this particular moment in time.
Throw the one out that's more at this particular moment in time.
Throw the one out that's more ridiculous and accept the other one.
No, it's just you should throw out the one that's more ridiculous.
And so if we're hearing a claim that someone rose from the dead,
when we have no evidence that this sort of thing is possible or probable,
then the greater miracle is that someone rose from the dead versus that someone was deceived or that someone was intending to deceive, that someone was mistaken. Nobody has to lie for any
of this. They can just be wrong, or we can just have stories that don't accurately represent the
facts at the time. So if a claim isn't falsifiable and there's no way to show it's wrong, we can't
reasonably accept that it's correct. And if we're left with no physical evidence about the existence of Jesus or the interactions of Jesus or his death and resurrection,
what we're left with is testimony. Now, I'm not willing to dig in on whether or not the
gospels were written by eyewitnesses. I don't think they were. I don't think that most reasonable
scholars aren't going to say these are eyewitnesses. But it doesn't matter to me because even if they were all eyewitnesses, we already know that eyewitness testimony is unreliable under the best circumstances.
In this case, we don't know whose testimony eyewitness second or third hand.
We can't investigate it at all. The things that they say happened don't have corroborating evidence.
They don't have supporting physical evidence. We don't have any way to question them about their reliability.
We don't have any way to talk to them to determine, you know, are these stories accurate? You know,
do they overlap? What we do know is that the Easter narrative from the different Gospels
does not line up and cannot be reconciled with the different accounts of it. But in the absence
of any physical evidence, we're left with assessing the nature of the claim and the nature of the
reports. If it's an extraordinary claim, and it needs to be an extraordinary claim, as it would
be really remarkable to say Jesus ate figs for our salvation, the claim needs to be extraordinary
because of the narrative. So, you know, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Oh, wait a minute. Is that actually true? Everybody's heard that. I've said it. Other people have said it. I accept that aphorism
for what it means, but not as it's written because all claims require sufficient evidence.
And what counts as sufficient evidence to believe a claim is going to differ based on how consistent
that claim is with reality. Mundane claims benefit from having a common pool of knowledge
and evidence within reality. We know that figs exist. We know that dogs exist. We know that
people name their dogs funny things, and it's not extraordinary to think that somebody might
name their dog piggy. We know that figs exist and are eaten, so it's not extraordinary to claim that
Jesus ate a fig unless Jesus didn't exist or figs weren't around at that time. Although we have from the Bible a strange claim of Jesus cursing a fig tree
for not producing figs when it wasn't in season,
which I would argue isn't something that a divine entity
knowledgeable about figs and fruit seasons would do.
And it seems bizarre to curse a fig tree,
but I can't say whether or not that actually
happened.
Maybe it didn't happen and it's just there to teach another lesson.
I have a hard time going through some of these things and saying, yes, that's being reported
as this actually happened.
So what evidence do we have?
Copies of copies of translations of copies from unknown sources that may have been, but
probably weren't eyewitnesses.
And even if they had been eyewitnesses, it wouldn't be sufficient to confirm that someone actually rose from the
dead. What sort of evidence would we expect for a claim where someone rose from the dead?
Depends on the timeframe. Sure. Back in first century Judea, probably not a lot. You don't
have a way to test for sure that somebody's dead. You don't have like x-rays. You don't have DNA.
don't have a way to test for sure that somebody's dead. You don't have like x-rays. You don't have DNA. But the question is, if this story is true, then Jesus was divine and God exists.
And what sort of evidence could a God provide? Well, God could provide the best evidence possible
such that there would be no reasonable debate to be had at all. Theists often claim that it's more
believable because it's a miracle. It's more believable because it's a miracle.
It's more believable because the first people to the tomb were women and women weren't trusted.
Nobody would put these details in, so therefore they must be true.
But that's like saying, you know, that's exactly what the butler would say if he did do it.
If it's on par or worse than the evidence offered by someone trying to sell me a bridge, someone trying to get me started as their underling in a multi-level marketing campaign, or the money that my Nigerian prince has set aside for
me, then the evidence isn't strong and no amount of pretending will change that.
It is unreasonable to believe it because there isn't sufficient evidence, no physical evidence,
nothing about this claim would pass muster today.
There's no body, no tomb, no blood, no sword, no cross,
no DNA, no burial rags, despite the fake shroud of Turin, no witnesses to question currently, no crime scene investigators, no findings of fact at all. I understand and appreciate,
as I'm a former believer, that there are testimonies here that people find compelling.
And I could probably speculate as to
what it is that convinces people and what it is that keeps people in belief, but it is not
the physical evidence. It is not what is reasonable. It is probably the extraordinary
narrative, the emotion that people feel and connect with it, fear of finding out you are wrong,
fear of dying and not going on to an eternal paradise, fear of being the odd one out when
everybody around you believes, I have experienced those same concerns for the Christians out there
who believe this. And you believe all kinds of supernatural things. And many of you believe in
demons and angels and all of the things that go along with this because you've accepted the
supernatural. The only reason this feels reasonable to people is because they've already accepted
other things that aren't reasonable to accept. We have no way currently to investigate or confirm the supernatural at all. We can't confirm that anything supernatural exists. We can't confirm that anything supernatural interacts with reality. And to say that, well, we've seen the writings of these people who we don't know, we can't investigate from a long time ago.
we can't investigate from a long time ago. And it's just so darn extraordinary. And we can't think of a better explanation than it likely happened. Therefore, it's reasonable to believe
it. I cannot get on board with that. And it frustrates me that other people can't see this,
because if I were to come to you with the story like this today, if it didn't have the history
and the baggage, not of actually being
true, but of being convincing enough to foster a bunch of followers, nobody would reasonably,
all right, let me take that back. Almost nobody would argue that they could reasonably accept it
today. And many of the people who are accepting these sorts of claims are also at odds with science. And it frustrates me that someone could, I don't know,
fear getting a vaccine for fear of being microchipped or it being the mark of the beast
while they accept claims that don't have good evidence.
All right. Thank you, Matt. Thank you, Trent. Those were two excellent opening statements.
I'm going to make an executive decision here, if that's okay. We kind of did agree
upon it before the debate began, even though there was some confusion. What I'd like to do is
do two eight-minute cross-examinations and then open it up to just kind of 20-minute general chat
between the two of you. Well, Matt, I remember, well, this is going to get confusing.
Frad, I remember Dillahunty, it sounds weird weird to do that like i'm a sergeant or something
i remember dillahunty saying um that uh the original email only said just 30 to 45 minute
discussion which i don't know you're i guess you're you're in charge but i'm fine whatever
the original said that you're you're the host the the reason i like the idea of you guys beginning
with eight minute cross examinations it'll put one of you in the driver's seat to kind of drill into the points the other was making,
and you can be rude during that time.
You can cut them off.
You can press them.
Oh, you're trying to give me a little leeway here.
I come in with a reputation.
Well, see, that'll be good.
You'll have eight minutes to just sort of be full Matt Dillahunty.
It'll be great.
I'm fine with whatever.
Tear me up, Trent.
Okay, well, I think we'll do that, and then we'll go into 20 minutes, just the two of you can chat,
and we'll see how civil and logical we can both be.
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All right, Trent, let me ask you one
last time because i don't want you to feel uncomfortable about this you're okay doing an
eight minute cross-examine and then it is fine my friend all right let's do that then let me just uh
set this timer um so just to kind of reiterate this especially for the crowd who are watching
and by the way we've got one thousand over 1 100 people watching right now it's fantastic
during the during the cross-examination period the one who is doing the cross-examining who are watching. And by the way, we've got over 1,100 people watching right now. It's fantastic.
During the cross-examination period,
the one who is doing the cross-examining
is welcome to interrupt
the other debater,
to press them,
to cut them off.
And this isn't considered being rude.
This is just so that
the debaters can ask questions
regarding the opening statements,
I suppose,
that were just made.
And so we'll start
with eight minutes for Trent to cross-examine Matt, and then Matt will have eight minutes. So,
Trent, whenever you're ready. Sure. And Matt, just for common ground, I also am irked by Christians
who deny basic aspects of science. I am very irked at those who deny the efficacy of vaccines,
the fact the universe is
billions of years old. So for fine common ground, I share your frustration. I want to be reasonable
in my beliefs. And frankly, there are Catholics even who believe things about the Catholic faith
that I don't share because I believe they're being unreasonable. So, okay, here are a few
questions I have. You said something really interesting. You said 2,000 years ago,
it could be reasonable for someone to believe in geocentrism because that's just how the world appeared. That's the way the evidence was. Did I hear that right? Well, I don't know if I tied
that to 2,000 years ago. At some point in the past, it was reasonable. All of the best evidence,
the most reasonable conclusion was that the earth orbited the Sun, yes. I'm just saying because, like, 500 years ago, people believed...
2,000 years ago is pretty uniform.
Okay, so if that's the case, then, is it reasonable for people to live, according to this motto,
things are as they appear unless evidence shows otherwise?
No.
No.
What would you consider faulty about that kind of a way of approaching the world?
It is.
It's one of those things that I would say is probably generally true.
And by the way, thanks for the comment earlier.
I don't want to take any of your time up, but it's been frustrating to me to watch people who deny vaccines and COVID and all that stuff. But so to say things are as they appear, unless evidence shows otherwise is the sort of
truism that feels right and maybe a good kind of starting rule. But we already have at this point
in human history, a good understanding of how, how we can be fooled optical illusions, let's say,
and mirages. We know those sorts of things exist.
And so now I would say that while generally speaking,
we should largely trust our senses and how things first appear,
we have to do so tentatively with the knowledge that we might be wrong.
Well, unless evidence shows us how things appear, that's not the way they are.
Well, it's one thing to say, I'm convinced that this is likely to be the case. And it's another
thing to say, I think this is the case. And what I worry about is that this statement would be like,
oh, I'm right and rationally justified until you prove me wrong. And that's not the way.
Let's go to the meat of this. I would fill in the blank.
The belief in Jesus's resurrection is unreasonable because I tried to,
I think you put down multiple things at the very beginning.
You said something like it's unreasonable because it's not consistent with
what we know to be true or in accord with reality.
Is there a way you could give me like a one or two sentence if that's correct or more needs to be added on?
Belief in the resurrection is unreasonable
because I caught at the beginning,
not consistent with what we know to be true.
A reasonable belief has to be consistent
with what we know to be true,
is what you said earlier.
Well, at the closing of my opening,
it's not reasonable to believe
because there isn't sufficient evidence.
There isn't physical evidence. There's none of this believe because there isn't sufficient evidence. There isn't
physical evidence. None of this. We just have testimonial accounts.
Okay. But part of it is, you also said that it's an extraordinary event because resurrections
don't happen. They've never been confirmed. Right.
Okay. How many resurrection claims have you investigated?
Well, just from the Bible, we have Jesus's, Lazarus's, and then all of the saints who rose up out of their graves and marched on Jerusalem in the middle of it.
I find no compelling evidence for any of those.
There was a resurrection...
Oh, I'm sorry.
Right.
Were you alluding?
I'm curious if you have how many read how just under the question is just how many resurrection claims outside of the Bible have you investigated to see if this does happen?
Well, I don't know what we're going to call investigating.
I saw a YouTube video that purported to be of a resurrection, but there was no way to investigate it.
If there's no way to look into the details of the claim beyond the claim itself, I don't know what investigation can happen.
I don't know how to investigate something that supposedly took place.
In Craig Keener's two-volume work on miracles, he lists about 600 resurrection claims. I think about 500 of them,
at least more than 500 are outside of the Bible. Let's say only 5% of them,
30 of them, you could contact witnesses or things like that. It seems like there are these claims of
resurrection out there. So is your answer to the question, how many resurrection claims outside of the Bible have you investigated?
The answer is one, by watching a YouTube video.
So I don't know how this is remotely relevant, because what I'm trying to say is I'm...
Well, it's relevant, Matt,
because you're saying that the resurrect,
like resurrections don't happen.
It's an extraordinary event.
It's not consistent with reality.
And that's a claim.
And you, but I'm wondering,
what's the evidence for that claim?
What is the evidence for that claim?
If resurrections were known
and we would have scientific journals on them,
people would be getting Nobel prizes
for demonstrating resurrections. People would be coming on the
news to say, hey, here's a resurrection, which is what happened with the YouTube video that was
purportedly a resurrection. I'm not a resurrection investigator, but of the ones Craig Keener
investigated, how many resurrections did he confirm actually happened? Well, he's providing
the evidence there for other people to look at. So I'm just curious, you know, you don't, you say it doesn't happen, but there are
claims out there even today, but they're not investigated. So let me, so I think that's
Do you believe those claims, Trent? Do you believe those claims?
You can ask me in your cross-examination, Matt, that's fine. Okay, here's the next one. You say
that we don't have sufficient evidence for the resurrection, so that's why it's unreasonable to believe in it. What would sufficient evidence for Jesus' resurrection look like?
I listed the thing. It would be nice to be able to show that we have good reason to think that a person existed, that they died, and that they rose afterwards. Something other than just a story and claims of that. Is there physical evidence for this? Okay. Fine then. Is it reasonable to believe that Jesus
was crucified under Pontius Pilate? I don't think so. Okay. So do you think that all historians
in the world that teach at major universities, it's unreasonable for them
that they believe Jesus was crucified under Pontius Pilate? For them to believe it? Perhaps.
Perhaps it's unreasonable for them to believe it. For them to teach it as this is what is believed
is not problematic. No, I'm saying that, so you're saying it's unreasonable to affirm
that jesus was crucified under pontius pilate
this is what i'm saying i am not convinced i am not personally convinced that that's the case but
that's not what we're talking about i'm not interested in what you're convinced by i'm
because you you agree there's a difference between what would convince you and
what is reasonable to believe. Are there any things out there? Well, let me ask you a question.
Are there any things that you don't believe, but you think it's reasonable for other people to
believe them? Other people at different times? Yes, as I already alluded to. But no, I of course,
other people at different times yes as i already alluded to but no i i of course i think i'm reasonable okay so no i'm not saying you're not reasonable i'm saying there are other
sorry we might be running out of that was to keep me on track did you want to finish that question
have matt respond and then i'll let him go no like i gave an example in my opening statement, like at least from what I saw with
your engagement with Alex O'Connor, you do not believe a person. What's wrong? What the hell
does Alex O'Connor have to do with this? You've mentioned him twice. He's an atheist. It was a
discussion wasn't about. OK, look, what I'm trying to find is that there is a belief you're not
convinced of, but you wouldn't say is unreasonable.
Do you think ethical veganism that Alex endorses is unreasonable?
Yes.
And I was getting ready to get that to that in my response.
Okay.
All right.
So, yeah, all I wondered was, because there are things I reasonably disagree with others.
I don't know if you do, but it's your turn.
All right, Matt, I'll give you nine minutes to start whenever.
Yeah, no worries.
So, yeah, it's the first time I've had an advertisement in mid-debate,
especially one for a dating site.
And since I'm neither Catholic nor single, I'll just skip it.
But that was kind of cool.
So I wanted to thank Trent from the start because he said something that was incredibly true
and that other people frequently get wrong in his opening, which is my position is not to show that it's not
reasonable to believe that it did happen and not to show that it's reasonable to believe that it
did not happen. I don't have to be convinced that it didn't happen. I just am unconvinced that it
did. And so on the issue of Alex and whether or not his ethical veganism is reasonable, no, I don't think it's reasonable.
Of the claims that Craig Keener, since you referenced him, found about resurrections, how many of them was he able to confirm actually occurred?
Well, I don't know because I haven't spoke with him about how many he believes happened.
I think some are related.
How many do you believe happened?
I don't know.
I've heard a claim.
Well, there's one by a guy named Simon Kimbangu in 19th century in Africa
who had a reputation for raising people from the dead
that Robert Price cited as an example of having evidence similar or less than to Jesus
and that's possibility but I'll be frank I haven't I haven't investigated them
thoroughly because I'm not setting out to debunk them they could have happened
they couldn't have happened it doesn't really change my major views on things
so I haven't really set out to say they don't happen but I'm open to them having
happened it's quite possible okay major views on things. So I haven't really set out to say they don't happen, but I'm open to them having happened.
It's quite possible.
Okay.
Except that resurrection stories are at least likely happening now or that resurrection,
sorry,
not resurrection stories.
Um,
it's,
um,
it's possible,
but I think that it would be very infrequent.
How do you know it's possible? How do you know it's possible, but I think that it would be very infrequent.
How do you know it's possible?
How do you know it's possible?
Because Jesus rose from the dead.
You don't know that?
That's the thing we're debating.
You don't get to assume that. Hang on.
If your belief that resurrections are happening now is based on the fact that you think Jesus resurrected, that doesn't mean that your belief is reasonable. That just is a cascading unreasonableness. Well, no, because I gave an
argument for why it's reasonable to believe Jesus rose from the dead based on the evidence provided.
And so if he rose from the dead and he's divine, he could have power to work miracles today or
throughout history. So you're basically saying that you're willing to accept a claim of a resurrection as reasonable without any physical evidence.
Well, what kind of physical evidence would a resurrection have, especially one in the past?
We would just be trying, when it comes to a claim of resurrection...
All resurrections are in the past. Everything is in the past.
Right.
I'm asking you, are you willing to accept a claim of resurrection is reasonable in the absence of any physical evidence?
What do you mean by physical evidence?
Well, do we have, you know, doctor's reports on the cause of illness and death and then a period of time where they were confirmed to be dead and then a period of time where they were confirmed to be living again after that with medical examinations?
And how do you know you're not just being conned?
Okay, so you're saying to be reasonable.
I think I was seeing your tracking here.
For it to be reasonable to believe in resurrection,
you'd have to affirm a person did exist and they died
and they were seen alive after their death.
In some cases to prove that death happened.
You skipped past the important points there.
were seen alive after their death. In some cases to prove that death happened. I was specifically asking about with a lack of physical evidence and the physical evidence that
I would be talking about is medical scientific evidence about that individual. It's not that,
you know, it may be the case. That wouldn't be physical evidence. That would be another kind of
testimonial evidence from someone like a doctor who says,
yep, this person is dead because I'm very familiar with what constitutes a dead person.
Now, modern medicine is fairly new.
So in older resurrection accounts, like the one we're currently debating, we would have to rely on other kinds of testimony.
And I think it's very likely, well, basically what happened is that Jesus did die from crucifixion based on all the details and all the accounts related there.
So you're willing to accept that an individual rose from the dead with nothing more than just testimonial evidence?
Well, how do we know that anything happened in the past?
I don't know why you won't answer the question.
I'm asking you, are you saying you're willing to believe a resurrection with nothing more than testimonial evidence?
I am willing to believe that Jesus Christ died by crucifixion under Pontius Pilate for the same reason.
That is not the question I asked.
Why is it every time I ask a question, you go back to something that's not the answer?
Is it my time to ask questions or not?
I thought this whole thing was to be able to interrupt, to redirect.
I'm willing to let you answer if you will answer the question.
Objection, Your Honor, non-responsive.
Are you saying you are, are you saying, are you going to keep trying to talk over me while
I'm asking the question again?
Go ahead.
Are you saying that you are willing to believe that a resurrection occurred based only on testimonial evidence?
Will you allow me to answer the question sufficiently?
I promise I can do it in less than 30 seconds.
It's a yes or no question, Trent.
Yes, I believe that people can testify to things that happen that's not what i asked
i said are you willing to be fine yes yes yes fine if you only want to answer no then yes
it's not interesting but okay i i'm not i'm not here for interesting i'm here to find out what's
reasonable and here's the crux of it which we can have this discussion afterwards because i don't
i don't have any follow-up questions after this.
And that is this.
You are willing to accept that an extraordinary, miraculous event occurred based only on testimony, and I am not.
That's it.
That is the foundational difference between our epistemology.
I will not accept that the physical understanding of the universe was suspended for an individual based only on testimonial accounts.
It is unreasonable.
That is how you get conned.
That is how magicians fool you.
No, I didn't, but it's my time, isn't it?
If you want to pontificate, go ahead.
I did, and now I'm done.
Okay. did and now i'm done okay well now how would you like to proceed all right let me what are discussion time i but i was i just try to get the yeah yeah we'll move into 20 minutes of discussion
i want to kind of maybe kick it off by asking each of you a question. Would that be okay? Trent, do you think that uniformity
of the laws of nature provide evidence against miracles? I think, well, actually, no. The
uniformity of the laws of nature are necessary for something to be a miracle. In my opening
statement, I gave the example of a life jacket.
Like you notice an orange life jacket because the water around it is totally different.
So if you didn't have uniform laws of nature, we wouldn't have any way. The word miracle actually
comes from a Greek word that means sign. So if God were to make a sign of his intervention in
the world, it'd have to be different from the natural world
around us. Otherwise, we'd just say, oh, well, that's like how everything goes. We wouldn't
notice it. So I don't think that it's evidence against it. I think rather that we have to think,
OK, well, I agree with Matt. We should try to figure out how the world is. But the world is
a strange place. And so there are things that upset the
apple cart a bit, and this may be one of them. And so I say, is this an exception to a general
rule we have, just like we have discovered other exceptions? For example, for 1500, and I promise
to be done, for 1500 years in Europe, people thought swans were always white. That was their
uniform experience. But then there was testimony in 1697 that black swans had been found in Australia. But it wasn't like, oh, we can't possibly believe that. It's
like, oh, we might need a little bit more. But if it's sincere, reliable testimony, that actually
shows the world's very different from what we know. And I think the same can be done for the
resurrection. Matt, why don't you respond to that question? Then I'll ask you a question,
and I'll have Trent respond, and then you guys can get into it. Is this how you want to do it?
Well, I just want to ask each of you one question and
give you both time to respond and then I'll let the two of you
go at it. So I just wanted to give Matt a chance
to respond to you there.
So yeah, actually I'm in agreement
with Trent.
In order for something to be considered a miracle, it
must violate the laws of nature. There needs to be
order in order
to recognize the thing that's different. That's not at all i think it's absolutely hilarious though uh at all the
people in chat who are claiming that i'm angry and rude when during my questioning time i'm just
trying to get a question across it's funny oh there's my message everywhere in the chat that's
that that's just how it goes actually i mean i could drive down i wish i could drive to
i wish i could drive to austin i'm only three hours away from you we could grab a beer or whatnot it's it's just folks
once the quarantine's over do it i will i will this quarantine's over i i'm up for my second
inoculation in like two weeks i think um we can sit down in the studio and record it all right
well i'm older so i'm older and diabetic, so I got my appointment.
All right, here's a question for Matt.
I'll let you take some time to respond, and then Trent, you can respond to him,
and then I'll let the two of you feel free to have a conversation.
Matt, can testimonial evidence alone make a belief reasonable?
On its own, no.
a belief reasonable? On its own, no. But the testimonial evidence is always viewed within the pool of things we already understand. If you say, I got a new puppy last night,
that is reasonable for me to accept because I know that puppies exist and people get them for pets,
and there's nothing extraordinary. Everything about your claim is consistent with what I
already know and understand to be true about reality via experience and evidence.
So it's not, you could view that as, oh, your testimony alone is enough.
But that's a colloquial thing.
That is us saying, I will take you at your word.
But the truth is, when I say that, I'm saying, I will take you at your word, considering
all the mountains of evidence I have about how the universe already works. Trent. Okay. Yeah. What I would say is that
in the vast majority of cases, testimony is sufficient. But in some cases, we might need
a little bit more. So I think, for example, with the resurrection, I think we have very good
testimony. So we have testimony going back to St. Paul, who was an eyewitness of the original
disciples. So we have good evidence to believe, and even atheistic scholars, as I cited, like
Paula Fredrickson and Richard Carrier on this, would say that the original disciples claimed
Jesus rose from the dead,
and this was motivated by a genuine experience that they sincerely thought this had happened.
So, yeah, I would agree, like, a testimonial is something,
one person's testimony for the mundane.
For something that's extra mundane, I might need more testimony.
If it's a group of people and they're willing to suffer costly punishment for affirming this belief, then that starts to raise the likelihood the belief is true.
Most things we believe about, nearly everything we believe about the ancient world, for example, is based on testimony.
Like I cited in my opening statement, if you went on Matt's conclusion, and he even said it was not reasonable to believe Jesus was crucified. You're going to abandon ancient history and scholarship.
It's not reasonable.
All right, I'll let the...
I said I wasn't convinced it was reasonable.
I didn't say it was not reasonable.
All right, we have 18 minutes.
I'll let you guys have a conversation, and then we'll have 30 minutes of Q&A after that.
So if you're in the live stream right now, just save your questions until that time.
All right, guys, go. Well, how do we do this without, because I enjoy talking with you.
You're fun. I do too. And that's, gosh, I wish people could understand that more that just
because there might be a minute of raw doesn't mean that we're, you know, so you talked about
having more testimony and I'm on record as saying the plural of anecdote isn't data. So it doesn't matter how many testimonials you have. That
alone is not going to be enough. And unless you view that in the broader stream of things.
And the way I've explained this is that like my mom,
okay, screw it. I don't like doing this, but my mom is a fundamentalist Southern Baptist Christian who believes she has seen demons.
Okay.
Now, I'm happy to believe that my mom thinks that she has seen something, but that doesn't mean that I'm justified in accepting that she's correct about what she's seen.
Same with people who are abducted by aliens or people who claim they're abducted by aliens um or claim i'm sorry people who claim they're abducted by well so it
sounds like your epistemology because if you notice my opening statement i didn't use like
natural supernatural i used usual unusual because like alien abduction that's a natural occurrence
well what's the difference between like there are plenty of things that are unusual in my life
but um usual and unusual unusual is like that's a wide spectrum
to go from hey it's unusual for somebody to win the lottery even though it happens all the time
well to somebody who's raised from the dead i guess like what do alien abductions
resurrection claims it seems like what they have in common is they're disputed and they don't happen very often.
That seems to be like just basically what they have in common. So like, what would we use to
determine, like, like when would it be reasonable for someone to think they had an encounter with
an extraterrestrial being, I guess? I don't, I don't know what it would take.
See, here's the thing.
We're talking about two different things.
What would it take for, like, if I had an experience that I was convinced was being abducted by aliens, that is independent from what it would take for you to believe that
I actually was abducted by aliens.
Okay.
What if you told me you had been abducted by aliens and you called me and like,
I talked to you at nine o'clock at night and you're in Texas.
And then you call me at 3.
A.m.
And you say,
I was abducted by aliens and they dropped me off in Tokyo.
And like,
well,
hang on.
You just invented something that has potential physical evidence that's completely different.
You added something to the story.
Well, I'd be adding more testimony.
Like there'd be people who would say like, I saw Matt, your Japanese fans be like, I saw Matt Delahunty in Tokyo.
It's not just, oh, I saw Matt in Tokyo.
We could prove that I was in Tokyo.
Okay.
So if that, but if that, okay, let's just say we have the physical evidence there um would you then be allowed to go through this
reasoning process um i can't provide explanation for how i got to tokyo so it must be an
extraterrestrial explanation no no no that's a fallacy. Well, then how would you, would that circumstance with the physical evidence convince you you'd
been abducted? No.
It wouldn't. No. If my position is I don't have an explanation for how this happened,
I don't get to invent one and I don't get to claim it's aliens or angels or gods or demons or
anything. If I don't have an explanation, then I don't have an explanation. As much as that sucks, that's the truth. So even if there was Independence Day spaceships
over the earth, would that... I'm picking aliens because I'm just saying this isn't a natural,
supernatural question. I'm trying to figure out... You say we don't have sufficient evidence for the
resurrection, but if you can't tell me what the sufficient evidence is, like what
would be sufficient evidence, like if I guess here, I'll ask this question and you can rip it apart
if you want. Is your position that you have no idea what sufficient evidence for the resurrection
looks like, but you're confident you haven't seen such evidence. Correct. In the same way that this is asked of me quite often about,
you know, what would change your mind about God?
And my answer is, I don't know what would change my mind
because it would be arrogant of me to presume
that I have the understanding of reality
to be able to tell the difference between a real God and a fake God
or some being that's just powerful enough
or a strong delusion or an evil demon or whatever else.
But if there is a God, that God absolutely knows what would convince me and has not provided that evidence yet.
Okay. But then here's my follow-up question.
If you don't know what the sufficient evidence looks like, you have no idea what it looks like,
how can you be convinced you haven't seen it?
Because what if you've failed to recognize
it it'd be like if i said i have no idea what a hygrometer looks like but i know i haven't seen
one seems like you've left yourself open to you've missed it because you don't know what it looks
like i i would never say if i don't know what a hygrometer looks like i would never say i know
that i haven't seen one okay i could i could not say that I haven't seen something I don't know. What
I'm saying is that, and so, and all the opportunities for somebody to prevent sufficient
evidence, what they have presented are fallacies and testimony. There's no physical evidence.
There's nothing that would rise to the level of being admissible in a courtroom.
Okay. Well, at least in a courtroom, and I've heard you make this analogy before,
and I think it's problematic for claims related to history, because a courtroom is not actually
ordered towards, a courtroom is not ordered towards finding the truth. There are biases
in the courtroom to prevent the punishment of the innocent. So, you know, so I mean, we, like, I'm sorry, go ahead.
I'd mean to, well, like, we don't do that. We can't try somebody twice, even if we get new
evidence, like, it's slated, so that we'd rather let an innocent, you know, a guilty person go
free. It's not just about finding truth. It seems like I'm just I'm wary of those kinds of analogies.
I think we should say, well, what does the evidence point to this in the past? And for me, go ahead.
That's the foundation of my epistemology, which is what I pointed out in the opening.
This whole notion about the bias in the courtroom to avoid punishing the innocent is exactly the
same thing is I have a bias in my epistemology to avoid being conned and duped into believing something
that isn't true. I want to believe as many true things as possible and as few false things as
possible. And you have to have both prongs of that because you want to believe is good.
My problem with that, Matt, it'd be like if we said our courtroom is set up to maximize punishing
the guilty and minimizing punishing the innocent. Those are
actually contradictory. You can't do both of those. It seems like you're-
No, no, no, no. Those aren't contradictory. How is that contradictory?
For example, if you wanted to maximize punishing the guilty, we would get rid of double jeopardy.
No, no, no. It would be, I want as many guilty people to be convicted and as few innocent people
to be convicted as possible.
That is the direct analogy to my epistemology.
Right.
But then it's like, okay, should we have double jeopardy?
That would prevent innocent people from being punished, but reduce our ability to convict
the guilty.
Much the same with your epistemology to say, well, I'm going to maximize my true beliefs
and minimize
my false ones. It seems like your epistemology more, this is my honest appraisal of it.
I want to minimize believing false things. Trent, I apologize. My internet froze. I need
you to back up about a sentence or two. Oh, okay. Can you hear me now? Yes. Okay.
That it minimizes, I need the train of thought to get on the
track skin. Hold on. Uh, that, that it minimizes, uh, believing false things, even at the cost of
losing true things like, like take unusual historical claims. Like Josie, the Jewish
story in Josephus says a thousand soldiers committed suicide at Masada to avoid being
captured.
And he's actually our only source for that event happening.
And he's a very biased source because he's a traitor.
Like, you know, is it reasonable to believe these kinds of things when we only have testimony?
Well, my confidence in the claim is proportional to the evidence.
And in this case, when we have one biased source, my confidence in that claim
being true is very, very low. I'm not, I'm not, I wouldn't even say I'm convinced that it is true.
Um, okay. Why, why do you think though? So it sounds like you're taking not just an epistemology,
but a historio, historiographical approach, like how we do history that is just totally
different from every other historian in the world.
I'm not a historian.
I'm not a historian, and I don't care what methods historians use.
Okay, so then you're not, would you say that you're not qualified to tell us what's reasonable to believe in historical matters?
I can explain to you what I do and don't find reasonable and why.
I'm not a historian.
Okay. What I'm, what I'm saying is though, what is, what is reasonable for people to believe about the past, whether you're convinced of it or not, doesn't, it doesn't matter. You can say,
well, I'm not sure this or that, but there seems to be evidence and historical scholars in agreement on this.
And I'm trying just to go with the bedrock here that that Jesus was just starting with Jesus was crucified.
He died by crucifixion. That's every it's not they believe it.
Every historian in the world who teaches at a major university affirms.
What a strange what a strange clarification.
Every historian who teaches at a major university, while you're excluding the two people you've referenced, who I disagree with, by the way, Carrier and Bob Price, who are historians who don't think that Jesus existed.
I disagree with them on that, even though people keep trying to saddle me with that.
I included the qualification, Matt, because there are many, and I'm not saying this about Richard or Bob or anything like that.
But for example, there's lots of people who go, like they're a young earth creationist who get PhDs in geology.
Yes.
But they're not teaching, except for Kurt Wise at Harvard.
They're usually not teaching at major universities.
I use that clause.
Well, now we've gone to usually.
What?
Well, now we've gone to usually because you had to add a cleric.
Well, that was one.
That was just one.
And now you've got one outlier.
There's more people in academia, Matt, who believe the earth is less than 6,000 years old and think Jesus was never crucified.
So it's a fringe view.
It's rejected.
And I know you don't hold that view.
But that's an argument to add populum because the fact that people are
convinced of something is not a measure of whether or not it's reasonable reasonableness. So first
of all, the truth, neither truth nor the reasonableness is determined by the number of
people who believe it or how convinced they are. Uh, if you knew someone who is skeptical of
getting a vaccine, would you think it'd be good evidence then to say that like all the major medical associations in the world say it's safe and effective? I'm sorry, one more time.
If someone, a family member was hesitant to get the COVID-19 vaccine, would it be legitimate
evidence to tell them every major medical association on earth says this is safe and effective.
Would that be good evidence?
Yes.
Yes.
Because medicine isn't history.
Medicine is science.
It's history.
It's good evidence because it's science,
not,
not history.
It's a different category.
Okay.
So you,
you don't think we can have a,
what about historical sciences like geology?
That's, that's not history.
That's science.
Just because it covers a period of time.
I mean, everything covers a period of time.
Evolution covers a period of time.
That doesn't make it historical science.
It's science.
You're putting that on there because you want to smuggle history in.
Well, history isn't a science.
Okay. Let me ask you, to smuggle history in. Well, history isn't a science. Okay.
Let me ask you, and if you have questions for me, I don't want to like, let me, I got one here.
I'll come up with some at some point, but this is a good conversation.
Sure.
I would say that we kind of diverted from the courtroom thing because on this notion of wanting to convict as many guilty and as few innocent which is the same as believe as many true and as few uh false things as possible neither of
those set up a contradiction because one category is about guilty people one category is about
innocent people um there's no contradiction there because what i'm saying both with the epistemology
and with the courtroom is this i want my internal model of reality to match reality as best as I can
and I want the justice system to be as just as possible. Sure. So then the question is,
should we have double jeopardy? Like we don't try somebody twice for the same crime.
I'm not sure whether or not I'm opposed to having a node or hang on. The,
the no double jeopardy seems to me to be a case where guilty people are
getting away with it.
And so I,
I would prefer a justice system that didn't allow guilty people to get away
with it.
The problem.
But then if you,
you'll see this coming out.
The problem is,
is that you could keep innocent people going back over and over and over and
over again.
And while they may never be convicted, you're now wasting their time.
And so in that sense, we do this knowing, okay, both with the epistemology in the courtroom,
when I say as many true and as few false, as many guilty and as few innocent,
I do it with the recognition that there will never be perfection,
that there will always be some, I'm always going to believe something that's false,
and I'm always going to believe something that's false and I'm always going to believe, not believe something that's true.
But we can get to a point where we have based on the information available and a consideration
of all the evidence, the most reasonable view possible.
And for me, when it comes to claims about the supernatural, not once has anybody demonstrated
the truth that there is something supernatural or that it can interact
with reality in any way? It's all just claims something. Where is the testable supernatural
claim? I guess so that's a claim you made. No one has demonstrated the supernatural.
Where is your evidence for that claim? If someone had demonstrated the truth of the supernatural,
it would be a function of science and scientific knowledge.
Well, what is science? Science is knowledge. It's literally what the word means.
They're the same thing? Well, that's where the origin of the word science is.
If I go downstairs and look in the fridge and I see
that my wife put Coke in there and I have new knowledge, did I just do science? Yes, you did.
Science is not a beaker. Science is the process of investigating the world to come up with the
best explanation possible. Science does not make proclamations about truth. It just says,
based on the information, here's the best explanation we have. That's exactly what science is.
Okay. Is science limited? So what it tests, it can only test things that are material
in nature. Like it deals with things within the material space-time universe.
Well, nobody's ever demonstrated that there's anything other than the material space-time universe well nobody's ever demonstrated that there's anything other
than the material space-time universe so obviously we can't investigate beyond the material until
somebody makes a demonstration that it's there and how we could investigate it if in fact the
supernatural exists and someone were able to demonstrate this it would be a field of inquiry
an investigation within the sciences it hasn't happened okay um okay so everything has to be
science things that are tested it seems like we've already said that you can't really test things in
history uh it's just testimony so it's not science are you saying like history is not a part of our
knowledge so within the realm of within the realm of things that we know there are beliefs and
knowledge is a subset
of beliefs.
And within epistemology, sometimes knowledge is defined as justified true belief.
I have a problem with that definition because I don't know how you verify truth.
And we're basically, you and I are arguing, as are many other people, about what is or
isn't justified.
And so history doesn't qualify as a science.
But that doesn't mean that if there are claims about history that are consistent with the evidence and facts of the universe, like I can't, Donald Trump is no longer
president, but he was for four years. And I remember this and the people around me remember
this, but it's in the past. So am I remotely saying that, oh, because it's in the past,
we can't prove it? No, there's mountains and mountains of evidence testifying to the events
that took place in that past is it reasonable to believe pontius pilate was the procurator
of judea from 26 to 36. i don't know what the dates are but i i it's my understanding is that
there's considerable extra biblical support for that what kind of i'm not a historian support
support for that.
What kind of historical support?
Okay, because it's just... So when you have
testimony
from the past,
what you look for, what is the best
source of historical testimony
is what's being said by the people
who don't have
something to sell.
Who in some cases were the
opposition. What is the opposition saying
about this? And is what they're saying consistent with what the proponents are saying?
Okay. We're freezing up a little. Matt, are we still...
Sorry.
Frad, are we still doing all right? Sorry. Frad, are we okay?
Yeah, yeah. You're good. You've got just nearly five minutes remaining,
and then we'll do Q&A.
Okay.
Did you hear what I said, Trant?
A little bit. maybe a quick... I'll do it as quickly as possible.
You were talking about unbiased, they don't sell stuff, it's not MyPillowGuy, it's a good source.
I didn't mention the MyPillowGuy, but that makes me funny that you did, because I almost did.
No, it's when you look at historical events, if the enemies of this particular regime
and the proponents of this particular regime
are stating the same thing,
those things are more likely, more probable to be accurate.
So it's where they agree.
So what I'm trying to figure out,
like my case for the resurrection,
was just, it's basically just showing, coming down its reasonable belief someone was alive they died and they were seen
to be alive again so i'm trying to show is it reasonable to when is it reasonable to believe
that somebody was alive uh and for pontius pilate you're saying well is there's an extra biblical
source that tells us about him why isn't the Bible sufficient to tell us who
was alive and did certain things? These are just ancient documents.
They're not just ancient documents. They're a curated collection of ancient documents
from a source that's trying to sell you something. By the way-
Is the Roman historian Tacitus trying to sell us something when he's writing a history of
Rome and is paid by Rome?
Tacitus is not a contemporary. That is after the fact.
By the way,
there's plenty of people who
think they saw Elvis in supermarkets
after he was dead.
Why don't we believe that Elvis was resurrected
or that he was abducted by aliens or that he never died?
Is that reasonable to believe?
Yeah, I was saying, is that reasonable to believe?
Okay, well,
there's three different claims
there. One would be that seeing Elvis alive after his death does not necessarily entail resurrection.
It could entail that he faked his own death, which is unusual, but people have faked their
own deaths, right? I agree, but Elvis's body is buried and we can exhume it and check.
Right, exactly. And we don't have that countervailing evidence with Jesus.
That's what makes believing that you saw Elvis after his death.
Remember, I gave three tests for reasonability.
Test one is it doesn't contradict an established fact.
We have Jesus.
We have Elvis's body in the ground.
The National Enquirer paid 18 grand to get a picture of his body.
So we also have testimony from the medical examiner.
And then my other things here. I agree. There are other usual explanations
for Elvis sightings because the people who are claiming to have seen Elvis
are people who didn't know him. It could be misidentification.
Back in Legoland in the 1990s, people thought they saw
Elvis there. It turned out it was a bunch of Elvis impersonators.
So that's something we have for Elvis we don't have for Jesus.
But what if somebody, I don't even want to go down that route.
I was going to go, what if somebody removed Elvis's body so now we could no longer verify it.
The point is, this is relatively close to us temporally.
The point is, this is relatively close to us temporally.
If in a thousand years or a couple of hundred years, people start thinking that Elvis rose from the dead, while we have a monument to Elvis in Graceland and a tomb there, nothing like that exists for Jesus.
People keep pointing to, and I know, by the way, hang on one second.
Sure.
I know you did not mention this.
I am not trying to saddle you with this, but I think that accept it you well here i'll just ask you do you accept that there is in
fact an empty tomb that was once jesus's i believe there's i thought you're gonna ask me something
about all this but uh i do um yeah i do believe it's good evidence that jesus's tomb was empty
yes yeah but do we know anything at all about the tomb? Where it is? Which one it is? Can you take me to that tomb and show me and prove that it was Jesus's? Well, we have good
evidence that the site of the tomb was discovered in the fourth century, because after Jesus's
resurrection, the tomb became a pilgrimage site, and then the Emperor Hadrian built a temple on
top of it to discourage Christians from going there,
but that actually helped to mark where the location was. That temple was then later identified by Constantine in the 4th century,
and a church was built on top of it that you can visit today
that is located outside of the old walls of the city of Jerusalem.
Even skeptical scholars think this is good evidence to where Jesus' tomb was.
Okay, and how—all right, never mind, go ahead. Sorry, Matt. Even skeptical scholars think this is good evidence to where Jesus' tomb was. Okay.
All right, never mind.
Go ahead.
Sorry, Matt.
No, you're fine.
This is a fascinating discussion.
I'm really enjoying it.
Thanks a lot, guys.
That was great.
All right, we're going to take about 30 minutes to take your questions,
whether here on YouTube or over on Patreon.
So feel free to address them either to Trent or to Matt.
Whoever it's addressed to that person
will have around two minutes and then the other debater will have one minute to respond do that
as I say for about 30 minutes before doing five minute wrap-ups so okay so I'm going to begin
Trent with you we've got a question here from patron, let's see here, Stephen Brosco.
He says this,
Trent, in a hypothetical situation where archaeologists find the bones of Jesus,
provided it can be verified they belong to Jesus of Nazareth,
would you cease to be Catholic and maybe follow Judaism?
How would that cause you to reevaluate your belief in not only Jesus but God?
Well, yeah, I would say if some element of Christianity was falsified or Catholicism,
then I would fall back on the next major belief system I had.
Like I gave an argument for the existence of God in this debate that we unfortunately never had time to get to,
which I think is a demonstration of the supernatural, frankly. So I wouldn't just become an atheist if Christianity were falsified.
Now, this particular example, if we had a bone box and it said Yahshua of Nazareth on it,
well, that would make me curious, but it wouldn't falsify the other evidence that I have related to the disciples' proclamation.
We'd have a very difficult time saying that this actually was Jesus' tomb.
I don't know how we could prove that.
I think if we found a first century document showing the apostles recanted, for example,
that would cause a severe lack of confidence for me so um i'm not beyond
falsification though i will point out that matt hasn't shown anything like what specific example
would would move him towards the position okay um matt you got a minute
if christianity were falsified i would stop being a Christian, but I already did that.
I would stop being an atheist the instant somebody demonstrates that a God exists.
Now, I wouldn't necessarily become a worshiper or a follower of the God in question, because I have issues with the notion of worship, but I would definitely believe that a God existed.
I have no objection to believing that there is in fact a God
just as soon as there's evidence for it.
And Trent and I could maybe have a debate on that at some other time
because when he mentioned his infinite series of boxcars
and how they would just sit there without an engine,
well, they wouldn't just sit there if they were on a slope,
and that only requires the physical facts of the universe,
that and somebody to invent boxcars.
Okay.
All right, this question here is for Matt.
This comes from, let's see here,
excuse me, David Zapata.
He says, Matt, if there has to be a demonstration that the... Oh no,
I want to get a different one than that. You've answered that. Sorry about that.
Jack Skian says, Matt, you said in your opening statement what the physical evidence of the
resurrection tells us. As far as I'm aware, there is no physical evidence. There's only a story.
Have you investigated the authenticity of alleged resurrection artifacts such as the Shroud of Turin?
If the resurrection is true, the Shroud is exactly the kind of physical evidence we would expect to find.
And if you haven't yet investigated it, why should we take your claim that there is no physical evidence for the resurrection seriously?
the physical evidence for the resurrection seriously?
Ah, well, because my friend Joe Nickel investigated the Shroud of Turin, as did many other people, and concluded rather strongly that it is in fact a fake for a number of reasons that's
too much to go into here.
So my investigation of the Shroud of Turin was in studying Joe's work and other people's
work early on to show that this is not what it claims to be, and it's most likely a forgery
from, I think, maybe the 13th century or so. But I'm not saying this is in fact it claims to be and it's most likely a forgery from i think maybe the 13th
century or so but that's i'm not saying this is in fact a forgery i'm saying the most reasonable
belief about this given the results of the testing is that this is not from first century
judea and jesus all right sure and by the way the answer to the second part of that
real quick you shouldn't take my word you shouldn't take my word for anything All right, Trent. that it's not authentic. And actually, I like Joe Nicol. He has a lot of great investigation, all kinds of paranormal stuff.
It's really fascinating.
But I just wonder what Matt would do
if somebody said to him,
like, why do you believe in the resurrection?
Well, I studied Mike Lacona's work on the resurrection,
and I'm convinced at what Mike has found.
It's like, well...
I can answer that.
Well, I don't think we have time to do it,
but maybe you can bring it up in your next answer.
Okay.
Well, let me finish, and then... Yeah, answer. Okay. Well, let me finish, and then...
Yeah, finish, Trent.
Yeah, let me finish,
and then you're creatively bringing it up
in the next question.
Because that's one.
Two, I actually agree with Matt,
and this might make some Catholics in your audience
come after me with pitchforks
and say I'm a heretic,
which Matt and I will have something...
Dill Hunt and I...
I might be a sergeant. Dill Hunt and i will have something in common you know and
that we're both loathed over this which is fine because i believe in following the evidence so i
have not done a thorough investigation of the shroud but let me finish but i am generally
skeptical of it for the same reasons matt and and nick will bring up so for me i don't believe
things just because they're a part of my religion or religious tradition. I just believe them because of what the evidence points to.
And the 10 second answer is, I don't believe Joe, I believe Joe's data.
All right here. I'm sorry, I'm trying to try to go back and forth between Trent and Matt, and sometimes they're
a bit lopsided.
Maybe I'll just ask Matt this question, and then I'll give you both two minutes to respond.
Matt, what do you make of the fact that the apostles gave their lives for the sake of
the gospel?
Why would they, and numerous Christians after them, willingly accept death if it wasn't
true?
This is the, would they die for a lie?
They don't have to knowingly think it was a lie.
They didn't have to knowingly be deceiving.
There are plenty of people who have died for many different religious beliefs all around the world.
Some in suicide packs like Marshall Applewhite's group
or in terrible situations like Waco where they were willing to stay there or forced to stay there, as in the case, perhaps in Waco and in Ghana and others.
But the notion that someone is willing to die for something testifies to how strongly they believe, how convinced they are or how convinced they want someone to think they are.
It has no bearing on whether or not it's actually true.
OK, Trent. Well, two thoughts there minor and major point minor point is uh with waco i actually did a podcast on this
from my council of trent podcast i don't think that they committed suicide frankly i i i think
they were murdered by the by the government but uh that's yes let me talk for another time i agree i
think they were forced to stay there oh right but yeah some people could take you make you think that koresh did that i think the
government anywho we'll do a separate show on that i'll go on atheist experience we'll talk about it
uh number two i i agree um that being willing to die for something does not prove the thing you're
dying for is true being willing to die or be persecuted is a
demonstration of sincerity. So I think because of the disciples, their willingness to endure
persecution, which we have good evidence from in Paul's letter to the Corinthians,
all of his letters, the Acts of the Apostles, non-biblical works, that the disciples were
willing to endure a hefty cost for this belief, which would make it seem like they're
only doing this because they sincerely believe. Then the question arises, well, what caused them
to sincerely believe this? And I think my opening statement gave good evidence that
a resurrection from the dead is the best explanation for that sincere belief.
All right. Maybe just so Matt can actually be the last one to respond. We have a lot of questions
here for Matt.
So maybe occasionally Trent wants to go first and Matt wants to go later so we can get the last word.
I don't know. I'm trying to be fair here, but a lot of questions here for Matt.
I feel underappreciated.
However you guys want to do it, I'm fine.
If I really feel like I have to say something, I'll let you know.
All right. Sounds good.
I can see some answers.
Thanks, Matt. All right. Here's a question. And this comes from Super Chat. Thanks a lot. The
Casa Man. He says, Matt, are you aware that repeating I'm not convinced is just a cop-out
for not being able to respond to arguments? It doesn't matter if you are convinced. What matters
if you are able to respond to the arguments, which you never do?
Are you convinced that that was just an ad hominem attack I act that in fact it
began not not you the questioner then in fact the things that you're accusing me
of not responding to I am responding to by talking about what's fallacious and
what's reasonable and whether or not it's convincing and to respond to those
things this is where people are like oh well you're going to dodge the question and that's because too many
people are wholly uncomfortable with the notion of i don't know may in fact be the one and only
correct answer at any given time and they really really get mad because i'm willing to say i don't
know rather than arrogantly pretending that the universe was created with me in mind and that i'm
the special creation of a god who decided to sacrifice himself to himself to serve as a loophole
for rules he's in charge of so you can come at me with the dodge thing and are you are you aware
that this is just a cop-out well i'm willing to say i don't know i wish you were trent
don't know. I wish you were. Trent? Yeah, I will say Matt Dillahunty is a special creation of God.
And if he's not convinced of that, that's fine. That's within his epistemic rights to not be. But Matt's not being convinced of something, or anyone's not being convinced, tells us more
about what they think rather than what we should
think about the world. And I think about the world is that Matt is a special creation of God and Matt
Dillahunty would not exist unless God desired that he exists on this earth for a particular purpose.
And then I will say when it comes to saying, I don't know, I share Matt Dillahunty's, Matt's
concerns, like going back to my own conversion experience with Catholicism,
Catholicism has all these
saint stories. A lot of them,
people love them in the Middle Ages,
and they say, oh, this saint did this, this saint
did that. Then I look at the stories, and they're written
two or three hundred years later.
Way, way longer than what we have
in the resurrection accounts. And I say,
did they not happen?
I can't say they didn't happen, but I have to say,
well, I don't know if your favorite saint story happened.
So to say to Matt Dilley, I've been in that position.
I'm just not in that position when it comes to the resurrection.
All right, we've got a question here for Trent.
We've got a few questions here for Trent now,
so we can let Trent go first here.
This comes from Jimmy McDermott.
Trent, what do you think of the argument that if Jesus was born
in the modern day, it would be easier
and more reasonable for us to
prove it? Video, for example.
Seems like bad timing on God's part.
Well, these kinds of arguments,
and Matt
alluded to one in the debate,
like, well, if God existed,
then he would provide a different kind
of evidence to show that he exists and that he loves us. But that's just, that's a claim. It's
an assertion. I don't see the evidence for that. All we need to say is, well, does God have good
reasons for revealing himself in the way he does? Even if Jesus were to appear today, he would have
missed the billions of people that lived in the past 2,000 years.
You might say, why doesn't he go back 50,000 years?
Well, it's good he appeared in a time and place with writing and Roman roads and things like that
so that eventually Christianity would become the largest religion in the world and 2 billion people would believe it.
But even if he appeared today, I mean, the fact is Matt has not said what would convince him.
Even if you gave something over the top, Matt has never said, oh yeah, that would convince me. Even if he showed up today,
there would still be people, if they have the bar set too high, they wouldn't believe. Instead of
talking about the evidence we wish we had, it's better to talk about the evidence we do have,
and then subject it to see if it is reasonable. Okay, Matt. So yeah, first of all, I didn't say that God would give better evidence. I said he
could give better evidence. It's not my position to tell you what God would or wouldn't do,
but I would argue that a case for a reasonable God who purportedly wants us all to know him and
love him and understand him would give the sort of evidence. And for Trent or anybody else to
just assert that, or suggest that either
I or somebody else has the bar too high and no amount of evidence would be enough, that is
absolutely ignoring the fact that I've already acknowledged that God could absolutely, without
question, provide sufficient evidence to convince even me, and it hasn't happened.
Okay, we've got a question here from Anglican Aesthetics, and I might have
a follow-up to this because I think you've addressed this already, Matt. You said, this
bloke says, we don't have physical evidence that Hannibal crossed the Alps. Would you say that
historical event is therefore dubious? Well, so first of all, I'm not absolutely confident about
anything, and so my confidence level in particular claims is always proportional to the claim.
I don't know enough about this claim to establish a confidence level or say whether or not I believe it.
I haven't spent any time at all studying it.
But to say that somebody crossed the Alps, we know people have or there's evidence of other people crossing it.
So then it becomes a question of timing and method and all of that.
And if the story is that Hannibal crossed the Alps on a
flying giraffe, okay, well, I'm more dubious of that than on an elephant or at some other time.
So I can't tell you whether or not I'm convinced it exists because you're presenting something that
I haven't spent any time at all looking into. Here's a follow-up question because it sounds
like you're saying, okay. Do I respond to that, Matt?
Well, I'll give you plenty of time to do that, Trent. I just wanted to have a quick follow-up here.
It sounds like you're saying, you know, we experience these things.
They're not outside of our everyday experience.
Therefore, it's easier for me to accept.
So here's a question.
What is maybe the strangest thing that you think is still reasonable that you accept?
Does that make sense that you don't have immediate access to epistemologically?
Yeah. does that make sense that you don't have immediate access to epistemologically yeah I don't know if I could I'd have to spend some time thinking about it
to figure out what's the strangest maybe if
somebody made a list I could pick what's the strangest
but I will say that unlike a lot
of other people I don't accept
string theory partly
because I don't understand it well enough
partly because or string theory
and multiverse both of these are speculative
things that i'm not convinced are falsifiable and fully testable that doesn't mean i think
they're wrong it doesn't mean that i'm considering say that didn't happen i'm just talking about i
don't know enough and and haven't found the evidence for them particularly compelling it's
it's a sort of speculative endeavor and so there are many strange things like coincidences i've
i've experienced things that as far as i can tell are like coincidences. I've experienced things that,
as far as I can tell, are extraordinary coincidences. You know, the, oh, I was thinking
about somebody, and I picked up the phone to call them. I was thinking about my mom, and I picked up
the phone to call my mom, and there was no dial tone, and it's because my mom had called me, and
before the phone even rang, I happened to pick it up in that gap, and so we were connected, and this
is the sort of thing that my mom would be like, oh, it was Jesus.
God has connected us.
And for me, it's like I believe that it's a curious coincidence, but I don't know how you reach the conclusion that the best explanation is Jesus wanted us to talk on the phone.
Trent, I'll give you two minutes since I gave Matt a two for there.
Go for it.
Sure.
One, I would say I think it was G. gk chesterton who said coincidences are god's
attempted humor uh so i don't know anything about that and that might be wrong this is the guy who
wrote a book on what the saints never said uh i don't know he might not have said that but somebody
said it i said it uh but the coincidence is like for me like i think yeah when christians are like
oh look at this amazing coincidence uh it's not great evidence for God because we have this thing called the law of large numbers.
Like if there's billions of people, there's bound to be weird coincidences.
I need the evidence far to be higher.
And I think I've shown it for the thing we're arguing for today.
Number two, you asked Matt Dillahunty about what's the strangest thing you believe in that is what's the strangest thing out there that's reasonable?
thing you believe in that is what's the strangest thing out there that's reasonable so for me i would say belief in a multiverse and belief that extraterrestrial beings live somewhere in the
universe uh i'm not necessarily fully convinced of them i don't think it's unreasonable to believe
that given the size of the universe and given the nature of inflationary cosmology.
So, I mean, for me to answer that question, I guess that's two.
And, yeah, I just think the world is a super-duper strange place,
and we're always learning new things.
I mean, prior to 1982, we didn't know that people could come back from clinical death after failed CPR.
It's called Lazarus syndrome.
It's seen about 30 times.
But, I mean, like 200 years ago, people
didn't know about that. So would you not believe someone came back from clinical death if you had
a chat with them? Like if we have too narrow view, like reality has to be whatever's consistent
about it. How do we know we have a consistent nature of reality? We're finite. Maybe there's
a counterexample staring us in the face. As for Hannibal, I think we have, I believe the Hannibal account, even
though there's less evidence for the
March of the War elephants in particular,
even though it wouldn't fit Matt's
standards, because the Roman
historian Polybius wrote about it
60 years later. It's secondhand.
It's highly unusual. It sounds like the stuff
of legends. We got a few coins
minted in Spain that might
have pictures of elephants at the same
time, but that's circumstantial. That's my best to get all three of those in one answer.
All right, Trent, let me ask you more of a psychological question for what it's worth.
Suppose, because you had a conversion, it seems, you believed in sort of deistic God,
and then you came to accept Christianity. Do you honestly think that if you didn't believe in God,
to accept Christianity. Do you honestly think that if you didn't believe in God, that the evidence for the resurrection, as you are putting it forth now, would convince you of the resurrection of
Christ, or would that just not be a live option for you? Well, it's hard for me to think,
what would I think if I had been different? That's a hard question to answer. Although I think there
is a philosophical view called modal realism that says parallel worlds exist and all these
counterfactuals really exist out there. I don't think it's an unreasonable thing to argue for,
even though we don't have empirical evidence for it. It explains why these counterfactuals are true.
But yeah, for me, what made me open to the resurrection was that there was a God who was capable of doing this. So I am, I do believe that miracles can
move people into believing in God. Some people that's reasonable for them. I wasn't really wired
that way. Like I had always like my background, I was never an atheist, but I believed in a
distant deistic God who struck the cue ball and that's it. That was that I wasn't Christian
So seeing better evidence for God. He's more of the theistic God that made it more plausible for me to accept the resurrection
So if I didn't believe in God, I think I would have a harder time believing in the resurrection
That's why when I share the faith
I tried to give philosophical arguments for the existence of God and historical arguments that this God revealed himself. That's my particular method. Feel free to respond there, Matt.
Sure. I'll hit a couple things really quick. First of all, I'm with Trent on the Drake equation and
the likelihood of aliens. I just don't consider that strange. When I look at the enormity of the
universe, it would be stranger that the Drake equation and other things didn't suggest that
there's potentially other life out there. I still don't know how we falsify this claim of the resurrection of Jesus, but
Trent's talking about whether or not he would believe the evidence that he's presented now.
I used to believe this, and not just because I walked down the aisle at the age of five in a
Southern Baptist church, although I'm sure that had something to do with it and all the people around me believed it. But I thought, hey, when I read the Bible, I'm reading
reliable accounts that are necessarily accurate because there's a God who's preserved the word.
As soon as I realized that I didn't have a good reason to believe that,
and people are like, oh, well, there there's your problem it all crumbles because if
there's not this foundational thing that the words in this particular book or this particular
collection of books are being uh vouchsafed by the eternal creator of the universe then they become
as suspect as anybody as anything else and i have to view them that way i have no choice but to view
them that way and i think that if if if view them that way. And I think that if we were
all to acknowledge the truth of this, that we all have our biases. And while I have escaped one set
of bias, moving from a bias towards Christianity, now I have a science bias. And the difficulty for
many people is recognizing that my science bias may in fact be the foundation of the most reasonable position.
Okay, thanks. Okay, question here.
Matt, isn't it arrogant to hold that reasonable beliefs are only those which would convince you personally?
I'll answer this with a question.
If my answer to your question doesn't convince you,
is it arrogant of you to hold me to your standard?
I don't have any option but to consider reasonable what I consider reasonable.
There's no other way about it.
It's not about arrogance.
It's not about me thinking I'm special.
It's about recognizing the value of having good standards of evidence in order to avoid
being conned.
As a lifelong magician, I've watched people be fooled by what I've done.
I see how easy it is for people to fool themselves.
And I've seen people from the countless thousands of religions that are out there.
You've evidently got the right one in your mind.
And I'm just agreeing with all the rest
of them that don't agree with you as well. And so if you think it's arrogant of me to say that I am
the standard of reason, that's not what I'm saying. I'm saying I am convinced that I have a good
standard of evidence and reason and a sound epistemology, and if you want to view that as
arrogant and dismiss it, I would argue that the same would apply to you. Okay, Trent.
dismiss it, I would argue that the same would apply to you. Okay, Trent. Yeah, what I think is key here that I tried to flesh out in our discussion was the distinction between a belief
being reasonable and a belief being convincing. And I didn't really hear Matt offer a distinction
for his own beliefs, because that's what we're talking about with the resurrection. Reasonable is a lower bar than convincing. That's why if you ever reasonably disagree, you have to have
convincing and reasonable. Because if you didn't, you could never reasonably disagree with someone.
Like there are events in history, like the Mary Celeste I brought up earlier. Why did they leave
the boat? Maybe there was a water spout and it scared them.
They got in the lifeboat and left.
Maybe they thought the alcohol would explode and they got out of the lifeboat.
There's competing historical hypotheses for things.
And so I might pick the exploding alcohol, but I don't think the water spout guys are
unreasonable.
It's all on the table.
So for me, when I look at reasonable, unreasonable, I have all the possibilities on the table.
And I gave a three-pronged test to show what is reasonable, and I think it was more detailed
and useful than the specific examples that Matt gave in his statement.
We've got a question here for Matt.
This comes from Shivery Bob.
You're going to love these names.
It's hard not to smile when you're reading some of them.
He says, Matt, if there were first century doctor's reports of Jesus' death by crucifixion and resurrection,
would believing in the resurrection be more reasonable or reasonable?
It'd definitely be more reasonable. I mean, the more evidence you can add to something,
the more reasonable it becomes until it approaches reasonableness. I'm not sure,
and I would love to have a conversation with Trent about this another time, because
his distinction between reasonableness and convincing is one that I find very interesting,
because I think that there's something definitional that we're, like, we're so close
to figuring out what it is between the two of us in particular, because I'm not convinced that two people can both be reasonable and disagree if they are
looking at and viewing the exact same information. So like that once upon a time, it was reasonable
given the information to think that the sun went around the earth. But once we had the information
that showed that that was not a reasonable position, now I don't know how anybody could
reasonably defend that. And so if we're talking about something and i don't know enough
about the the mary celeste to use that as an example but if we're talking about something
uh where like let's say multiverse there are people who think multiverse is reasonable and
there are people who don't think that the multiverse is reasonable i don't think that
you can both be reasonable and disagree about that because it may, when we're in that state, I would say that not one can neither reasonably say X is true or X is false.
And so in that state where we don't have enough to be compelled to reasonably believe a position, I don't know that there can be reasonable disagreement, but I would really want to think about it a lot more.
Maybe Trent and I can talk about it some other time, because to me, what it it's not I do agree there's a difference between reasonableness and what's convincing
but I think if an argument is reasonable and you are you should be convinced and if you are not
convinced by a reasonable argument you are by definition unreasonable Trent um well i'm glad that matt brought that up but i think that to say a reasonable
for an argument to be reasonable it must convince anyone i think that's an incredibly
incredibly high standard i agree that there's going to be something
like any reasonable reasonable people sure of course
we only let reasonable people in our club
for the hypothesis
not reasonable people because people aren't reasonable
people are
in accordance with
reason on a particular subject
not a category of who they are
but on a subject
if the position is reasonable and you're not convinced,
then you are in conflict with reason on that subject,
not in general in your life.
Is that clear?
Kind of.
I mean, we'll have to have a longer discussion.
Yeah, it's a lot.
I'll shut up now.
I apologize.
No, that's fine.
That's all good.
I would say that the problem is one can be reasonable
but people interpret the problem is i think we think of evidence as like evidence is this neon
sign that will tell me the way the world is when it really isn't evidence are just things that are
out there it's stuff in the world and then we interpret it to reach certain conclusions.
That's why, like, when you're in a courtroom, evidence is introduced. It's like the fingerprints
are on the knife. That proves he stabbed her. No, that only proves that he had the knife when he was
in the house that day. So, I mean, people will interpret evidence differently and reach different
reasonable and unreasonable conclusions. Well, you have to try to establish in a case. And what I tried to show is that certain beliefs are, they become reasonable based on other factors. Like, do they
contradict established facts? Like I would say geocentrism contradicts, like flat earth contradicts,
geocentrism contradicts tons of facts. Does it contradict expected evidence? Is there a usual
explanation that could go in its place? That's what we're always trying to look at.
Though I will say that in Matt's example, notice that even if we had, even if Luke said,
I'm a physician, because Paul calls him a physician, and I was there, and I could testify Jesus was dead,
that would be physical evidence, but it's not enough to convince Matt, because Matt has not given us any particular standard of when it
would be either reasonable or convincing to believe in the resurrection. Okay, man,
we could just keep talking forever, but I want to respect your guys' time. Why don't
we take maybe two more questions, and then we'll do the closing statements, if
that's okay. Let's see here.
I just saw it a moment ago. It was a...
Sorry, guys. I saw a question fly by that I'd like to quickly address if it's okay go for it
yeah somebody was like you can't click that little uh click there it just happened it just happened
to pop up real quick somebody basically the thing is matt if you say you can't be absolutely certain
about anything why should we take your word on on anything at all um well first of all i said
you shouldn't take my word but this notion about not being absolutely certain about anything is a
very particular philosophical thing that i think just anybody would accept once they understood it.
But a lack of absolute certainty doesn't mean that you can't be supremely confident and know at the highest level of confidence that the answer is wrong, because you can't be more accurate with your measurement than the measuring device you're using.
And so if reason, if we can't be absolutely confident in reason,
which I don't know how you demonstrate that,
then we can't be absolutely confident there.
But if you have a ruler
that's divided up into 16ths of an inch,
and I say measure 4.89248923 inches,
and you do a measurement that is at four and a quarter,
I don't have to be able to measure to eight decimal places
to know that you are absolutely wrong
in that measurement. And if the ruler only measures things in 16th of minute increments,
it is impossible for you to ever be confident, perfectly confident that you have measured 4.89248923
inches. That's what I'm talking about. Good for Trent.
Yeah. And I think this actually bolsters a point that I would make in that just because you don't Go for Trent. in a court of law that Jesus rose from the dead, but I don't have enough evidence to show 99% of
history in a court of law that it took place. Yet I, and for that most of that history, all the
scholars in the world agree it did take place. We use a different type of tool to still reach
certainty to, to justify belief. And so I would say that we have that. So like absolute certainty, that's like, I know I
exist because who's asking the question. I know that I'm being appeared to Matt Fradley and Matt
Dillahuntley. I can't even absolutely certainly say you're there, but I know I'm having an
experience of seeing the two of you. That should go in the vernacular, Matt Dillahuntley and Matt Fratley but then from that absolute certainty
we get
different moral certainty
and I think that when you weigh the evidence
and it becomes more likely than not
that gives you certainty to act in the world
my last point to add to that
is
that the whether a belief
changes our lives
the amount of evidence needed to affirm the belief does not change.
People need to know that.
If there is an article that shows acne paint causes cancer,
and the article is sufficient to prove that,
I don't need more evidence if it turns out my house is painted in acne paint.
Much the same way, however Jesus affects your life,
it's the same amount of
evidence that's necessary to affirm whether he rose from the dead. All right, let me ask one
final question before we get into our closing statements here. This is for Matt from Trevor
Adams, and I apologize to all of you who've been asking questions in the chat. I'm trying to get
to them all, but there's just too many, so forgive me. If everyone other than you, Matt, claimed to see someone die and rise,
would it be reasonable for you to believe the world's testimony?
Well, if it's just everybody telling me, then no. But what I would be reasonably justified in believing is that everybody believes something I don't, and that that's an issue.
So I may not be convinced that they are all accurate, but it's not like...
See, people phrase this question in such a way that if everybody on the planet said that, hey, we saw somebody die and rise, would you believe it? No, I wouldn't necessarily believe the fact absent
other evidence, but I would absolutely believe that all of the people on the planet were honestly
trying to convey to me what they experienced and what they saw. This is what I was talking about
when I talked about my mom, who, by the way, is still alive. She's not watching me because she's
no way in hell she's going to watch this debate. she's not watching me from on high. When my mom
tells me that she saw a demon, I believe that my mom had an experience that her best description
is to say I saw a demon, but I'm not convinced that she actually saw a demon. That doesn't mean
I'm convinced she's a liar, it doesn't mean I'm convinced she's wrong, it doesn't mean I'm
convinced that she's suffering from strong delusions it just means i am not yet convinced and the the reason that i'm not convinced
is because of what i said at the outset which is from david hume that if somebody tells me
that somebody rose to the dead i have to reject the greater miracle and right now given the facts
of the universe that i know and understand that are demonstrated that we we don't spend any time at all debating, given those facts, it is more extraordinary that my mom actually saw a demon than that she was mistaken or misled.
OK, Trent.
OK, a point of agreement and disagreement with Matt Delahunty. I agree with him that it
wouldn't be justified to believe something merely because the entire world believes it. I mean,
2,000 years ago, the entire world, except for 12 people, believed that nobody rose to glorious,
immortal life prior to the end of the world. But I wouldn't say that the apostles
should have given up their belief in Jesus because everybody else in the world disagreed with them.
Matt Dillahunty is right. You should ask, well, why do they believe it? Why do they believe that?
So just because a lot of people believe something, that's a tiny arrow towards truth,
but not a big flashing neon sign. We need to go and look at the evidence that's
involved. However, I will disagree with Matt's assertions about the nature of uniformity of
experience, because it seems like, okay, the problem with Hume is you can't believe something
if it violates our uniform experience. Well, how do we know? So these resurrections,
these weird things don't happen. Well, how do we know nature is so uniform? Under these rules, you have all kinds of false beliefs.
Like, for example, a Polynesian native, if they met a British sailor in the 18th century,
under no circumstance could they believe the sailor about people walking across frozen lakes.
Because that goes against their uniform experience.
But that would lead to a falsehood.
And that's concerning to me. And also Matt saying, well, I don't believe my mom.
She says she saw demons. I don't believe him. Why should we think that's strange?
The vast, even many atheists believe that ghosts or immaterial things exist, or at least non-religious
people believe that. I would say that the vast majority of human experience affirms the existence
of immaterial things, or people have said they've cited them.
And it's like, well, we can't believe that because I can't test it in a laboratory.
Well, yeah, unless we have Ghostbusters, old Ghostbusters, not new Ghostbusters.
You can't get it in a lab. experiences that people have, that this assumption of the uniformity of nature, I think is more a reflection of the arguer's personal assumptions about nature,
rather than the way nature really is. All right, thanks. Okay, we could keep going,
but we need to wrap up here. This has been absolutely fantastic. Trent, do you want to,
whenever you want to begin, you can begin with your five-minute closing statement,
and then Matt Dillahunty, since he went second in the opening statement will have the final word while
you're looking that up i just want to let people know that if you're enjoying these sorts of
debates if you want to see more of them consider going over to pints with aquinas.com support
there's a link in the description below you can support us on patreon or directly if you hate
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things we'll send you is a pints with Aquinas beer stein. Now, I know Matt Dillahunty is not a big
fan of beer necessarily, but I would love to send him one as a thank you for being on the show.
But we like to pay the debaters who come on because they're going to put a ton of work into
this. You know, we just get to sit back and be critical. At least a lot of people seem to be
doing that on YouTube live stream and kind of armchair sort of philosophers and stuff.
But these guys put in the hard work, and I'm really grateful for it.
So if you want to see more of this stuff, go over to pintswithaquinas.com slash support.
You can give on Patreon or directly, and then we give you a bunch of free things in return.
So with that shameless plug out the way, Trent, whenever you're ready, I'll click the five-minute timer.
plug out the way Trent, whenever you're ready, I'll click the five minute timer.
Um, well, we, before you click the timer, um, question for Matt Dillahunty, do you just not prefer beer or is it more like a diet issue? Cause I also don't like beer.
Uh, I think my favorite beer is Polliner Oktoberfest. I'm diabetic. And so what alcohol
I imbibe, um, I'm kind of picky about. So so i i go for really good beers on rare occasions but
mostly it's tequila or bourbon if i if i drink it all i'd rather just not drink it all but i will
drink socially with people i don't like being drunk i like my brain when it's working and
that's hard enough i agree what's your favorite beer who who yes until hunter me trent what's
your favorite beer uh you know what i don't like the
taste of beer i only drink it to look like a grown-up when i'm out of people um but uh i guess
if i had to have one a blue moon with a orange slice oh gross but no there you go see that's
completely unreasonable if i look like a grown-up that's why i just go with a rum and coke i'm like
okay that makes me seem mature and it tastes good and it-up, that's why I just go with a rum and Coke. I'm like, okay, that makes me seem mature, and it tastes good, and it's smooth.
But that was just a little thing.
It's nice to meet other people that have the same sensibilities there.
Okay, so five-minute closing statement.
Here we go.
Whenever you're ready, Mike.
Yeah.
Well, this was just a lot of fun.
And we really just scratched the surface with this.
You know, it's funny.
People are telling me like, why are you debating Matt Tillahunty?
He just, you know, he's rude or this or that.
And it's like, you know, everybody has their approach to things.
But I don't mind a vigorous discussion as long as somebody doesn't like totally go bonkers.
And that didn't happen.
And it's okay.
Because here's the thing.
I would rather talk to someone with the vigor and interest that Matt has than just somebody who's like, oh, yeah, whatever.
I don't really care.
Whatever.
To me, apathy is more irritating than vigorous denial.
I'm more interested in the reasons Matt Dillahunty has, and maybe we'll dialogue about this again. I
think that would be fun. So that's what I would just affirm to that, and people who might give
Matt a hard time, it's like, look, we're grownups, we're big kids, it's okay, we can have a vigorous
discussion, and that's fine.
But my closing thoughts are,
I think what you'll notice what will come down to this,
it's not even really about Jesus's resurrection,
though it is.
Our fundamental disagreement is,
how do you figure out what's true in the world?
And I think Matt and I would both agree,
you should follow the evidence to figure out what's true.
Don't just take it at somebody's word per se.
But a lot of times the things we know,
it comes from testimony from other people. Like the reason I first learned about the Holocaust
was because my seventh grade teacher told me, but I know it's true. And I've had to learn more about
it when I've dealt with obnoxious Holocaust deniers on the internet to challenge them.
So we, testimony informs us, but then sometimes you have to look at the evidence.
I think that,
you know, Matt said, well, I have a science bias and that's okay. I just think we should use,
there's lots of different tools to figure out and understand the world. Like, let me give you an
example. Let's say you have a metal detector that's 99% accurate at finding metal. And you
have a sonar detector that's 75% accurate at finding inorganic things underground. Which is better? Well, you
can't say one is better. They're both better at different things. The metal detector is better
at finding metal, but the sonar gun is way better at finding non-metallic objects. So you'd use
different tools. So I think science is really good at, it's really good at figuring out how the laws of nature
work, how they function, how the universe acts. Though we do have problems, like since 2010,
there's been something called the replication crisis, where we think we've established
scientific truths, and we can't replicate them. And it turns out we haven't. And science gets
replaced, phrenology, the study of like, are you a criminal if you have a lump on your head?
That was a respected field
and then it was eventually overturned.
So scientific knowledge is provisional.
The way we understand the world,
our consistent nature of the world,
it's very dynamic.
And so I think that the question
about Jesus rising from the dead,
while it's a very unique thing
and we ought to be cautious
with unique claims that are presented to us,
I think that the test I gave was not falsified in this debate, the three-pronged test.
The fact that God can raise Jesus from the dead is a live option, because I gave an argument for God,
and unfortunately we didn't get to that.
Maybe Matt and I will have a debate on God.
That will be part two of our little dialogue.
It might be fun.
So it's possible.
There's a explanatory thing behind it. It's reasonable.
And ultimately, it comes down to what's sufficient to believe. And I asked you,
what was Matt's standard? And he never gave one. So for Matt, it's sufficient evidence will convince
me. I don't know what it looks like, but it'll convince me. If you don't know what it looks like,
you could have missed it. Well, I won't have missed it because if I've seen it, then I would
believe. But if that, and Matt can correct me if I'm wrong about this, but if it eventually comes down to it will
be sufficient if it causes me to believe, then by that logic, I have reasonable evidence because
it's sufficient and it convinces me, or maybe it convinces you. So by that own standard,
you can believe the resurrection is reasonable but hey I got about 40
seconds left so here's what you should do if
you're watching research
this read the best books for and against
so if you're a beginner do
Justin Bass's the bedrock of Christianity
for the Christian view
Bart Ehrman's how Jesus became
God for the non-Christian view if you're
advanced read Andrew Lokes
the resurrection of Jesus Christ investigating resurrection of Jesus Christ became God for the non-Christian view. If you're advanced, read Andrew Lokes' The Resurrection of
Jesus Christ, Investigating the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, or Advanced Treatment. Read Chris
Komarnitsky's Doubting Jesus' Resurrection for the Advanced Treatment. Look up the evidence,
make up your mind. Don't just follow what people say. Go through it and reach your conclusion.
I hope you'll reach it. I hope you'll come to the conclusion I have that gives me great hope in a
world that needs it, that this life is not all we have that gives me great hope in a world that needs it,
that this life is not all we have,
and we have hope in rising from the dead
by being united with Jesus Christ.
Thank you, Trent.
I was going to give you an extra minute
for spending a minute saying nice things about Matt.
Matt, you got to take one minute out of your five minutes.
That was intentional.
Whenever you're ready, Matt.
I will spend two whole minutes talking about how awesome Trent is.
No, in all seriousness, I mean, so there's,
I've done a lot of debates and some of them are definitely better than others.
And some of them are likely to produce better conversations after the fact.
I've had opponents who showed up at debates completely unprepared
and unwilling to even address the topic at all. Like, let's talk about 20 other things,
and then let me throw in the topic at the end. Trent didn't do that. He made a case for things.
And I appreciate that. One of the problems is that an audio cut out, and so of his three-pronged
test, I only had notes on two of the prongs, but that's okay because there's some questions that I can kind of address. And in truth,
I want to, I didn't phrase this very clearly when Trent talked about what my burden of proof was
during this debate. It was that I needed to demonstrate why it was not reasonable to accept the claim.
And the important thing about that is that it was not my burden of proof to demonstrate that it was
reasonable to conclude the claim was false, because the truth of a claim is independent
from whether it's reasonable. There was somebody in chat who had gone off on the,
oh, well, how can we even conclude that Genghis Khan exists,
you know, and if it's all in history, are you throwing out all of history? No, I'm not throwing
out all of history. I'm throwing out extraordinary claims from history that fly in the face of
everything we know and understand about reality. Do supernatural events actually happen?
Trent, in his closing remarks, just before that in one of the
questions, talked about all these people who have told stories of their experiences that they
believe are supernatural. And he thinks that all of this together attests to reality having a
supernatural component to it. Mike Lacona did something similar by talking about trash can
lids flying and Ouija boards to argue that reality strongly suggests that reality has a
supernatural component to it. My response to both of those is that that's not what I see that
attesting to. It attests to human brains being fallible in reaching conclusions. And so when we
say, hey, if you don't know what would convince you, how do you know you haven't missed it?
Because in this case, we're talking about a God. And my claim that I don't
know what would convince me that a God exists is independent of other claims because a God
necessarily could convince me, which is something that I said from the outset. So I haven't missed
it. God, if he wants me to know, can present evidence in such a way that I cannot miss it,
which means the only option that you're left for is that Matt's a big fat liar
or slightly less fat than he used to be,
but Matt's still a liar,
which I get on occasion from people.
Now, I promise in future debates,
I will do a better job of ignoring chat
and making sure that I pay attention to what's going on
despite the internet hiccups.
But if I were to tell you that there's somebody who never eats
a meal and they survive off prana, sunlight, and that they can heal people, would you believe me?
What if I found 10 other people to say so? What if I found 100 people to say so?
Well, those sorts of claims exist. They're out there. Do you believe them? What if we move the
claim further and further back from us in time where we are less and
less capable of investigating it?
If somebody were saying, hey, here's somebody who was resurrected last week, we would have
a much better way of investigating this than we would for somebody 2,000 years ago.
I don't need to have absolute certainty or even know what would convince me to know that
the amount and quality and style of evidence available for a resurrection claim today is vastly superior to one 2,000 years ago. And by the way,
for the metal detector that's 99% accurate at finding metal and a sonar detector that's 97%
or whatever it was at finding non-organic, the question is, which is better? One of them is
definitely better depending on what you're trying to do. This is the same thing when you say, hang on, what methods are
we going to use other than science? Well, somebody needs to show a method that we can use other than
science because science, the scientific methods are the single most consistently reliable method
of creating an accurate understanding of the world. And when we find problems with things
that are being proposed within the scientific realm, things like phrenology. What corrects that? Science, more and better science, the evidence and the methods that lead
to the discovery of how we can better understand the world. At no point in history has a supernatural
claim or a religious claim shown that science was wrong about something. That has not happened.
And Trent's already acknowledged that he can't prove the resurrection with science
or in a courtroom,
so he wants some other standard of evidence.
And that's the historical argument.
That is the trend of people accepting things
because we start with this notion
that this book is reliable,
and I don't accept that.
I'm sorry that I don't accept it,
but moreover, I don't see how it's reasonable
to conclude that it's likely a resurrection occurred at this particular point in time with this individual without physical
evidence to support it. Almost time. Matt and Trent, thank you so much. I thought this was an
excellent back and forth, vigorous, respectful. It was great. As we wrap up, I would love to give
you both a chance to tell people where they can learn more about you, Trent? Sure. I would recommend, I have a website, trenthorn.com. I have a podcast called The
Council of Trent, C-O-U-N-S-C-L. If you're Catholic, you get the pun. Hopefully you get
the pun if you're Catholic. The Council of Trent. You can get that on iTunes, Google Play. I also
am now just breaking into YouTube. Episodes are there. I also do videos
on YouTube at Council of Trent on YouTube. So just search Council of Trent. And if you want to
become a supporter, just go to trenthornpodcast.com. But there and also some of my work is available
at catholic.com as well. Thank you. Matt? Well, I'm named after the very first gospel, and
I don't think that's clever at all.
The best thing to do is go to Linktree, which is linktr.ee slash Matt Delahunty,
and that will send you to my YouTube, my Twitch, my Twitter, my Facebook.
It doesn't send you to Patreon, but you can go to patreon.com slash atheistdebates for my—
you'll see this debate up there at some point.
You'll see debate review stuff up there and conversations that I've had with debate opponents and other debaters. Maybe one of
these days after we get out from under COVID, Trent will come down, we'll sit over in the studio
and we'll put some videos up on Atheist Debates talking about the stuff that interests both of us.
I would like that a lot. Thank you. God bless y'all. Thanks so much. 1 tbsp. vanilleekarot
1 tbsp. vanilleekarot
1 tbsp. vanilleekarot សូវាប់បានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបានបា Thank you. Bye.