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Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)

June 04, 2026 / 01:26:15

This episode features John Lennox discussing the intersection of artificial intelligence and faith, the implications of AI on human identity, and the nature of forgiveness in Christianity.

Lennox, a mathematician and Christian apologist, shares his views on the rise of AI and its potential dangers, particularly the idea of transhumanism and the merging of humanity with machines. He emphasizes the importance of understanding what it means to be human in a world increasingly influenced by technology.

The conversation touches on the concept of forgiveness, illustrated by Lennox's encounter with a convicted murderer who found peace through faith in Jesus. He argues that Christianity offers a unique perspective on forgiveness and purpose that transcends mere moral behavior.

Throughout the episode, Lennox addresses the challenges posed by AI, including ethical concerns and the potential for job displacement. He advocates for a thoughtful approach to technology that considers its impact on human dignity and relationships.

The discussion concludes with Lennox encouraging open exploration of faith and truth, emphasizing that understanding God requires a willingness to engage and seek evidence.

TL;DR

John Lennox discusses AI's impact on humanity, faith, and forgiveness in Christianity, emphasizing the importance of understanding our identity in a tech-driven world.

Episode

1:26:15
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There are worship groups that worship AI
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because it's got some of the qualities
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we normally associate with God. And some
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people welcome this and say this is the
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way we should go. But the danger is we
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treat these human robots as if they're
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conscious beings. This is a seriously
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important thing and I do feel that the
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Christian faith has a great deal to say
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about this
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>> and it's fascinating to me that you are
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very religious. You believe in God
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because typically I think that
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mathematicians lean more towards
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atheism. The great pioneers of modern
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science were all believers in God. And
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I've interrogated myself about its truth
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for over 70 years. I've made myself
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totally vulnerable. And I found that
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Christ offers me something nobody else
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offers me. Peace in my heart. The peace
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of knowing that I have real forgiveness.
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Things like for example, God has met
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people even in death row. And I never
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forget looking through the door for
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Russian security death row. I went up to
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the door and a chap came over and looked
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at me. He killed 12 women and he said,
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"I deserve to be here." And then his
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face just bursted into what I can only
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describe as a ghastly smile. And he
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said, "I met Jesus here and he forgave
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me."
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>> So on this point of forgiveness with the
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serial killer be forgiven and allowed
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into heaven and then how do you know
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that this thing you've committed
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yourself to is true? So I have had
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several experiences enough to tell me
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look this stuff is real. Okay. So
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Please help us. Really appreciate it.
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Let's get on with the show.
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>> John Lennox.
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>> Yes.
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>> You've published over 70 peer-reviewed
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mathematical papers, co-authored two
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research texts at the um Oxford
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Mathematical Monograph series, and
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you've really become a pioneer in many
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domains through your career. But for
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anyone that doesn't know you, what is
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the most important context they need to
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understand the reference points,
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experience, education that you're
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pulling on that that is going to inform
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all of the subjects we talk about today?
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>> I mean, I've written a number of papers.
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I got a certain amount of international
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recognition. I chaired Oxford and all
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the rest of it. But I think the real
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value of that has been the training and
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logic really saying that mathematics
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works. The fact that it works is for me
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one of the strongest evidences that this
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is what I call a word-based universe. We
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can use mathematics to describe things
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about how the universe works. Thinking
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God's thoughts after him, Kepler's
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famous statement. But also we've lived
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to see a biological revolution where we
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discover biology is word-based as well
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with the human genome. And that to me
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resonates
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with the explanation given in both the
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old testament and the new language of
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John's gospel. In the beginning was the
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word.
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>> I um I don't know a ton about the bible.
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I do come from a religious family. So do
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with um right
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>> we grew up as Christians. I think I I
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lost my faith faith at about 18 years
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old cuz you know me and my my brothers
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are extremely good at maths. They're
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very
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rational thinking maybe to a fault and I
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think maybe I am a little bit too.
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>> I am too.
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>> You are. This is why I find it so
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fascinating cuz you know typically the
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scientific community lean more towards
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atheism and typically I think that
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mathematicians lean more towards
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atheism. Just to sense check if that's
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true or not, we'll throw the numbers up
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on the screen. So I I find that to be a
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fascinating conversation which I'm
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looking forward to have with you today.
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>> Interestingly, you wrote this book and
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the word AI is on it. It says God, AI,
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and the end of history. Why are you so
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concerned, dare I say, about artificial
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intelligence as a leading pioneer in ma
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maths and sort of philosophical
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thinking? Well, because I'm interested
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in the bigger picture, anything that
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raises questions about
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the nature of human identity. And I was
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first struck by the drive for artificial
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general intelligence. It's really become
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one of the it looks as if it's the prime
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motivation of people like Sam Alman and
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so on. It is really hitting the
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headlines. But within that there's the
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notion of transhumanism.
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>> What does that mean?
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>> The idea is that we go beyond the human.
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One of our most famous astronomers,
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Royal, he put it this way. He says in
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the distant future, it won't be organic
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brains, it'll be machine brains. And he
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seriously believes, as do a number of
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scientists who are not science fiction
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authors, that there will be some kind of
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merger between humanity and machines to
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have a transhuman, something that's
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beyond the human and something that is,
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they hope, super intelligent, got all
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the human properties and much more. Now,
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one of the people who is spreading that
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kind of transhumanist vision is the
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Israeli historian Yuval Noah Hari. And
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he's written a book called Homodos, the
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man God. And that really made me prick
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up my ears because I know enough about
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this book here, the Bible, to realize
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that the drive for humans towards
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selfdeification
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is
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>> selfdeification. Yes, making themselves
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gods. And you see it all through
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history. The ancient Babylonian emperors
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were regarded as gods. The Roman
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emperors started calling themselves gods
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and all the rest of it. And what Harari
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says is the 21st century has two big
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purposes. Number one, to solve the
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problem of physical death as a technical
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problem
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>> to solve death.
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>> Yes. Solve death. Physical death is in
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his view technical problem and we'll
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solve it. The second agenda item and he
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calls them agenda items of the 21st
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century is to increase human happiness
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by bioengineering,
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cyborg engineering, mechanical implants,
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all this kind of thing and turning
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humans quote into gods with a small G.
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In other words, this is the drive for a
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super intelligent human. We've only got
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started. And his point is, and from his
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atheist perspective, one can understand
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it immediately. Evolution, unguided
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natural processes have brought us to
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this point. Now, we're going to take it
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into our hands and we're going to
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engineer humanity into the future very
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rapidly to approach this superhuman
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thing. Now I hear that and I see that
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but I see that as huge implications
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for one of the fundamental teachings
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that's behind I would argue western
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civilization
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and that is the notion that humans like
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us are made in the image of God as
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rational moral beings. Now, I got into
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this because some Christian leaders
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wanted to have a conference on AI and
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they wanted it introduced from someone
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who knew something about the teaching of
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the image of God in Genesis and who had
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a scientific background and who could
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perhaps begin to lead them in to what
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was going on in the AI field around. And
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once I got into it, I realized this is a
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seriously important thing because
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we haven't got to artificial general
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intelligence yet. That's still a pipe
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dream, but it's improving all the time,
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but we've got far enough. that is to
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what's called narrow AGI which most of
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the stuff that works is
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and that is posing a threat to human
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beings at all kinds of levels and I
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began to see that that was seriously
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important for everybody to take on
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board. So I wrote two books, one 2020
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called uh 2084 is the title of my book,
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artificial intelligence and the future
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of humanity and then the publishers
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asked me to update it in 2024. So
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there's a second edition twice as big
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and it is my main work on AI. That is
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not that is a work on the book of
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revelation with reference to AI. The
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other is directly going into AI,
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pointing out its values which I think
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are immense particularly in medicine but
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pointing out its dangers which I think
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are immense for bringing about a state
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in the world that none of us I think
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want.
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>> So let me just give some definitions
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then.
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>> Yeah, sure.
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>> You use the term narrow AI.
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>> Yes. Um, my definition of that is, and
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I'll put something on the screen for
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those of you watching, is AI that's
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focused on solving a very particular
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problem. So, AIs that might be able to
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diagnose lung cancer or that do some
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sort of um biometric data on your Apple
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Watch, very focused on solving a
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particular problem. AGI is artificial
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general intelligence which is what's
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being built at the moment and all the
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big AI companies are in a race to
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accomplish which is a machine that could
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do any intellectual task a human can
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faster than any human um and would be
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super intelligent. So you know maybe one
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way to think about it it would have a
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PhD in everything
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that's a very fair summary. narrow AI
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system does one and only one thing that
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normally requires human intelligence.
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AGI does the lot and more. You wrote
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this book 2084. You highlighted in there
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some of the concerns that you think are
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being overlooked in this race for AGI at
00:11:15
the moment.
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>> Well, they're not overlooked by
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everybody. There is huge concern.
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There's been a very interesting book
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published not long ago by Karen How. Oh,
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she was young. She's fantastic.
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>> Well, there you are. And she has got
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some very interesting metaphors, the
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pursuit of the machine God, which I
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think is a brilliant summary of what's
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going on. And I found it very
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illuminating because she's obviously got
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very close to the the major operators in
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this. But if I step back from it, I look
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at AI like a knife. A good knife. You
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can use it for surgery or you can use it
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for murder.
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And that leads us into it immediately.
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AI narrow brilliant for picking out a
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terrorist in a football crowd. Also
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brilliant for suppressing a minority in
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China and bringing in a totalitarian
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state through social credit systems and
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all the rest of it. And in a way, we're
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sleepwalking into a future where we are
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gradually seeding control and
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information and data all the time which
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could be used by bad actors against us.
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And this is the problem.
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>> I I really this question of um what it
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means to be human in a world of AI, I
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think has been really front of mind for
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a lot of people. like where do we live
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or exist or find our purpose in a world
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where theoretically these super
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intelligent systems will reach AGI which
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means they're more intelligent
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theoretically than any human on Earth
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but at the same time you've got these
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other um advancements in technology like
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humanoid robots
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>> where these humanoid robots there was a
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live stream I've talked about a few
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times and I'll just throw it up on the
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screen really quickly that shows last
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week a humanoid robot working on a
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production line for eight days straight
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and they show it up against a human
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being and it beats the human being on
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the production line because it doesn't
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need to sleep. It just needs to be
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charged for a couple of hours to full
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power. And so you combine these two
00:13:21
forces, super intelligence and the
00:13:23
disruption, you know, you can think of
00:13:25
it like one is disrupting
00:13:28
this thing here, the brain and the
00:13:30
intelligence within the brain. And then
00:13:32
the other technology that's emerged at
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the same time is disrupting
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my muscles and my mechanics and the two
00:13:40
come together to make voila.
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>> Absolutely. So you face joblessness at
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all kinds of levels and people are only
00:13:49
going beginning to realize the
00:13:51
implications of that and they're not
00:13:52
just low-level repetitive jobs as high
00:13:55
level jobs like lawyers and there's a
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deepseated
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ethical problem running through all of
00:14:02
this and it's a very simple one. It's
00:14:04
that technology advances much faster
00:14:07
than the ethics that's needed to
00:14:09
underpin it.
00:14:10
And the difficulty is the people that
00:14:13
have all the power will say, "Well, we
00:14:15
need some ethical control of all of
00:14:17
this, but we need to get on with the
00:14:19
research to make it safe for you. So,
00:14:21
let us get on with it." And you can be a
00:14:25
bit skeptical about the motivation
00:14:27
there. It's a colossal power grab. And I
00:14:32
do feel that
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uh the Christian faith has a great deal
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to say to this arms race if you like the
00:14:42
power that is being forced in to having
00:14:46
a technology that becomes the ultimate
00:14:49
source of truth. Now those two concepts
00:14:52
power and truth clashed centuries ago in
00:14:55
a very famous trial and it's the trial
00:14:58
of Jesus. And I used to wonder a lot,
00:15:00
you know, why is there such detail about
00:15:04
the trial of Jesus until I realized what
00:15:07
it was about? Jesus was put on trial for
00:15:11
political terrorism to put it in modern
00:15:13
terminology. He was a threat to the
00:15:16
Roman power base. And Pilate, the
00:15:20
governor at the time, put him on trial
00:15:22
and conducted the trial himself, which
00:15:25
was most unusual, and said, "Are you a
00:15:27
king?" And Jesus looked at him and said,
00:15:30
"Well, not in the sense you mean. To
00:15:34
this end I was born, and to this end I
00:15:36
came into the world that I would bear
00:15:37
witness to the truth." And Pilate
00:15:41
famously responded, "What is truth?" and
00:15:44
went out and declared Jesus innocent of
00:15:46
the charge. And then he said to him just
00:15:50
a bit later, "Don't you know I have
00:15:52
power to crucify you?" And Jesus quietly
00:15:56
said, "You would have no power against
00:15:58
me unless it been given to you from
00:16:00
above." So there's one of the most
00:16:02
famous confrontations between power and
00:16:05
truth. And that statement that Jesus
00:16:09
made, I have come to bear witness to the
00:16:12
truth. I regard that as the main
00:16:14
motivation for my life. I'm trying to
00:16:16
bear witness to truth as I see it at all
00:16:19
kinds of levels in my own limited way.
00:16:23
And that's what bothers me about AI.
00:16:26
It's a reductionist. We're reducing
00:16:28
people to machines. And you said to me a
00:16:32
few moments ago that flagged up a thing
00:16:35
in my mind that's very important. We
00:16:37
need to be very clear what AI is and
00:16:40
what it isn't. This is a machine.
00:16:44
Machines do not think. Machines do not
00:16:48
have quailia. They do not understand the
00:16:51
redness of red. They do not experience
00:16:54
emotion. They have no consciousness.
00:16:59
And you see, I believe that the genius
00:17:01
of God is that he's made you and me and
00:17:04
he's connected in us consciousness and
00:17:09
intelligence.
00:17:11
The machines are not conscious, but they
00:17:14
simulate intelligence. And the experts
00:17:17
are very clear that they're not trying
00:17:20
to construct intelligence for a very
00:17:22
simple reason. They have no idea what
00:17:24
consciousness is from a scientific point
00:17:26
of view, but they're trying to simulate
00:17:29
intelligence and go as far as they can.
00:17:33
And therefore, the danger is we
00:17:36
anthropomorphize everything. We treat
00:17:39
them as if they're conscious beings. And
00:17:42
we need to step back and realize that we
00:17:45
are conscious beings. And that gives us
00:17:47
a supreme dignity and value to reduce
00:17:51
ourselves to merely machines or on the
00:17:54
other hand merely animals is to demean
00:17:57
our value. And then where are you going
00:17:59
to get value from?
00:18:01
>> I've got a quote here that's um linked
00:18:03
to what you just said. It's from Uvel
00:18:04
Noah Harrari who you mentioned. He says,
00:18:07
"Humans are now hackable animals."
00:18:09
>> Yes.
00:18:09
>> The whole idea that humans have this
00:18:11
soul or spirit and they have free will
00:18:14
and nobody knows what's happening inside
00:18:15
them, that is over. And Sam Alolman
00:18:20
said, "The most successful founders do
00:18:21
not set out to create companies. They
00:18:23
are on a mission to create something
00:18:24
closer to a religion. And at some point,
00:18:26
it turns out that forming a company is
00:18:28
the easiest way to do so." And lastly, a
00:18:31
former Google engineer said, "What is
00:18:33
going to be created will effectively be
00:18:35
a god. It's not a god in the sense that
00:18:37
it will will make lightning or cause
00:18:39
hurricanes, but if there is something a
00:18:42
billion times smarter than the smartest
00:18:44
human, what else can you call it?"
00:18:47
>> It's odd. Thank you for quoting that
00:18:49
because I was going to quote it to you.
00:18:51
the the Saballet's point about about
00:18:54
making a religion and that is what is
00:18:57
happening and people have pointed out
00:18:59
the obvious here you have a system even
00:19:01
now that has got some of the qualities
00:19:04
we normally associate with God it
00:19:07
appears to be omnisient you can ask it
00:19:09
any question it is omniresent through
00:19:12
the internet etc etc and therefore
00:19:16
already there are worship groups to
00:19:19
worship AI high. And some people welcome
00:19:22
this and say, "Well, this is the way we
00:19:24
should go." And other people say, "Just
00:19:26
wait a moment. There's something very
00:19:29
strange going on here." And in the end,
00:19:32
you are bowing down to something that in
00:19:35
the end is idolatrous because it is less
00:19:38
than God. But it's very tempting to do
00:19:41
that.
00:19:42
>> I mean, people are basically praying to
00:19:43
it now. They're confiding in a in a way
00:19:45
that they might have.
00:19:46
>> Absolutely. Doing it. And you know, I'm
00:19:49
fascinated by this. I've never seen one
00:19:51
of these before, but I like it. And I
00:19:53
tell you why I like it.
00:19:54
>> So, for people that can't see what we're
00:19:56
doing, it's a brain.
00:19:57
>> It's a brain, and it's got two halves.
00:20:01
And one of the people who've influenced
00:20:04
my thinking about AI a lot
00:20:07
is uh Dr. Ian McIchrist, the author of
00:20:11
this fascinating book called The Matter
00:20:13
with Things. And he has studied the fact
00:20:16
that this brain has two hemispheres,
00:20:19
>> two halves. Both halves are involved in
00:20:22
almost every cognitive event. But the
00:20:25
two different halves have different ways
00:20:28
of paying attention to the world. One is
00:20:32
narrow focus, the left side of the
00:20:33
brain, and the other is the big picture.
00:20:37
And he says what has happened
00:20:38
historically in the west is for the last
00:20:40
five or so hundred years we have
00:20:43
concentrated on the narrow rationalist
00:20:47
reductionist left side of the brain and
00:20:51
we've forgotten the right side that
00:20:53
contextualizes everything. So that quote
00:20:57
we now find ourselves in a world where
00:21:00
we understand how almost everything
00:21:02
works but we know the meaning of
00:21:04
nothing. And what he calls for is to
00:21:08
open this sphere up. And of course that
00:21:11
includes to beauty, culture, art, music,
00:21:15
and religion. Step by step, he appears
00:21:18
to be creating more room for God because
00:21:23
God makes sense of the space he feels is
00:21:27
very necessary to fulfill. And I find
00:21:31
that absolutely fascinating. And you
00:21:33
probably noticed it too. the number of
00:21:35
intellectuals who are step by step
00:21:38
taking the Christian faith more
00:21:40
seriously as giving a rational account
00:21:43
of what's going on that makes very big
00:21:46
sense of the big picture
00:21:48
>> what is going on in society because it
00:21:50
does feel like more and more people have
00:21:52
these sort of existential questions
00:21:54
about meaning and they might be turning
00:21:56
to Christianity or Islam or other but
00:21:58
what is from a 30,000 foot perspective
00:22:01
happening to us which is making us ask
00:22:03
some of these questions
00:22:05
And for you know younger generations it
00:22:06
might be spirituality however they
00:22:08
define that but there's certainly a
00:22:10
macro picture here of something
00:22:12
happening.
00:22:12
>> Oh there is I agree with you entirely
00:22:14
and I think it's because we've had
00:22:17
pushed at us for too long a very
00:22:20
reductionist view of the world. It's
00:22:22
nothing but physics and chemistry. It's
00:22:24
nothing but this is that. And people
00:22:27
rightly feel it's too small a world to
00:22:29
live in. They're looking to break out of
00:22:31
this. Isn't there a bigger picture that
00:22:34
can make sense of my world and make
00:22:37
sense of my life and giving some
00:22:39
meaning? Because if you reduce
00:22:42
everything, it ends up in a black hole
00:22:44
of meaninglessness.
00:22:46
And that's one of my uh top reasons for
00:22:49
not being an atheist because it destroys
00:22:52
rationality by almost by definition
00:22:55
because it tells me that my brain which
00:22:58
does all the thinking it's not my mind
00:23:01
it's connected and those are two
00:23:03
different things and that's another big
00:23:04
story but this is the end product of a
00:23:08
mindless unguided
00:23:10
uh process and I have fun with
00:23:12
scientists you know sometimes I ask them
00:23:15
uh about the brain and how it arose and
00:23:18
they tell me something like that and I
00:23:19
said and you trust it. Tell me if the
00:23:24
computer that you use every day if you
00:23:27
knew it was the end product of a random
00:23:30
process would you trust it? Every single
00:23:33
scientist and some of them are very
00:23:35
highowered that I've asked that question
00:23:38
to have said no I would not. So I say
00:23:41
you've got a problem haven't you? Your
00:23:43
atheism goes too far. It undermines the
00:23:48
very rationality we need to do science,
00:23:52
let alone to believe in atheism. And
00:23:55
that's my main beef with people like
00:23:58
Richard Dawkins and the new atheists.
00:24:00
But I see they're fading. They're
00:24:02
fading. So here's the irony. Atheism
00:24:05
claiming rationality destroys it.
00:24:09
Whereas I believe the Christian faith
00:24:11
also claims rationality in in the sense
00:24:14
that evidence-based we shout about that
00:24:18
a lot in science and medicine and
00:24:20
rightly so. What we trust in ought to be
00:24:22
evidence-based. I claim exactly the same
00:24:25
thing for Christianity and that's why
00:24:27
I'm a Christian because I believe the
00:24:29
evidence supports it otherwise I
00:24:31
wouldn't.
00:24:32
>> So I guess how do I identify? Maybe as
00:24:36
someone that's agnostic, like I'm I
00:24:37
don't really know.
00:24:38
>> Well, that's okay.
00:24:41
But does that mean you're open to know?
00:24:44
You'd like to know?
00:24:45
>> Yes.
00:24:45
>> Well, that's I'm always open.
00:24:47
>> That's that's wonderful to see. That's
00:24:50
that seems to me to be exactly the right
00:24:53
attitude. Jesus actually challenged
00:24:56
someone in his day and says if anyone
00:24:59
wants to do the will of God he shall
00:25:02
know of the teaching whether I'm
00:25:05
speaking from myself or whether it's
00:25:07
from God. I notice what he doesn't say.
00:25:10
He doesn't say if anyone wants to know
00:25:13
he will know. If anyone wants to do he
00:25:16
will know. And the difference between
00:25:18
the two, and I'd be interested in your
00:25:20
response to it, is that being prepared
00:25:23
to do something when you know it is more
00:25:26
than just knowing it and possibly just
00:25:28
leaving it on the table. In other words,
00:25:32
Jesus is interested in people who are
00:25:34
going to take the step of trust and
00:25:36
following him. And that's the big deal.
00:25:39
>> There should be a button just down below
00:25:41
here. And if it says subscribed, you're
00:25:43
already subscribed. If it says
00:25:45
subscriber, that means you're not yet.
00:25:47
And if you're not subscribed, please
00:25:48
could you do us a favor and hit that
00:25:49
button? It helps the show more than you
00:25:51
know. And according to the algorithm,
00:25:53
you're someone that watches our show,
00:25:54
but you haven't yet hit that button.
00:25:56
Thank you so much.
00:25:57
>> Do you know what it is? I find all I
00:25:58
find all explanations as to like the
00:26:00
bigger picture to be like fundamentally
00:26:03
incomplete.
00:26:03
>> Yes.
00:26:04
>> Because there's many things you said
00:26:06
about the nature of Christianity and
00:26:07
religion that I go amazing. Yes. Yes.
00:26:09
Yes. And then there's a couple of things
00:26:10
I go well. Uh, and the same when I sit
00:26:13
here with a physicist that's telling me
00:26:14
about the big bang. Yes.
00:26:15
>> I have the same thing where I'm going,
00:26:16
"Yes, yes, of course, yes. Oh, we've got
00:26:18
evidence that the universe is
00:26:19
expanding." Okay. And then they'll say
00:26:21
other things and I go, "Well, that's not
00:26:23
complete."
00:26:24
>> And so, I find myself sat on the fence.
00:26:26
I would love you to convince me. I mean,
00:26:28
it's not your responsibility to do so,
00:26:30
but where does that journey of of
00:26:33
believing begin for someone like me?
00:26:36
Because, you know, people say the Bible,
00:26:38
and I go, "Well, it's kind of like what
00:26:40
you said about the computers. It's like
00:26:42
if you're using something to justify the
00:26:45
same thing is true.
00:26:46
>> Yes.
00:26:47
>> Then that circular reasoning I find to
00:26:49
be incomplete. Cuz I could write on this
00:26:50
piece of paper, uh, Steven Butler is a
00:26:53
lizard.
00:26:53
>> Yes.
00:26:54
>> And
00:26:56
this piece of paper is true. And then
00:27:01
you then use that same piece of paper to
00:27:02
justify the validity of that same piece
00:27:04
of paper.
00:27:05
>> Mhm.
00:27:05
>> And I go, well, that's not solid
00:27:07
reasoning.
00:27:08
>> No. But you see, I could say, Stephen
00:27:12
Bartlett, there's a red Ferrari parked
00:27:15
in the street outside.
00:27:17
>> Yeah.
00:27:18
>> And it's yours if you want to take it.
00:27:21
We could sit and discuss it for a
00:27:24
thousand years. You would never know
00:27:26
whether I was true or not unless you
00:27:28
went and looked.
00:27:30
>> And it seems to me the word skeptic is a
00:27:33
very interesting one. I regard myself as
00:27:35
a skeptic. But in Greek, skept means to
00:27:39
look at something from a distance. Now,
00:27:43
if you are ever going to get to know a
00:27:47
person,
00:27:49
you've got to begin to give up your
00:27:52
distance. You will know that from
00:27:54
everyday life. And it seems to me one of
00:27:58
the things to try to begin to grasp is
00:28:00
God is not a proposition or a philosophy
00:28:03
or even a religion. God is a person. And
00:28:06
as a person, he has entered our world.
00:28:09
However incredible that may seem.
00:28:12
Although this is the irony of the
00:28:14
Harrari position, if I might just say it
00:28:16
on a side, people come to me as they've
00:28:19
done with their transhumanist agenda and
00:28:21
say, you know, we're going to solve the
00:28:23
problem of death and we're going to
00:28:26
increase human happiness. And I look at
00:28:28
them and I smile. I say, you're too
00:28:30
late. And they say, "What? We haven't
00:28:32
got there yet." I said, "You're too
00:28:34
late." What do you mean we're too late?
00:28:36
Well, I said the problem of physical
00:28:37
death was solved when God raised Christ
00:28:40
from the dead 20 centuries ago. And as
00:28:43
for human happiness and uploading us
00:28:46
into eternity, you know, I'm waiting for
00:28:49
the biggest uploading that's ever going
00:28:51
to happen in history when Christ returns
00:28:53
and raises me from the dead because that
00:28:56
is precisely what he promises. And it's
00:28:58
most interesting watching people and I
00:29:01
say, "Isn't it fascinating that your
00:29:04
transhumanism consists in humans
00:29:07
reaching out to become little gods?"
00:29:10
Whereas Christianity is the exact
00:29:12
opposite. It talks about a god who
00:29:14
became human so that he could give us
00:29:17
life and give us a new relationship with
00:29:20
him. What really completes the circle
00:29:24
for me is that my relationship with God
00:29:29
is a relationship which is based on the
00:29:33
solution to the really hard problem. And
00:29:37
that is the problem that I
00:29:40
by nature have not always done good and
00:29:45
by my own standards I have failed. Now
00:29:48
all this talk of transhumanism, AI and
00:29:51
everything else, what it's trying to do
00:29:53
is to build paradise, utopia without
00:29:56
facing the problem of the damage that
00:29:59
humans have caused to themselves and one
00:30:01
another. They will not face the sin
00:30:03
problem. Christianity
00:30:06
to me doesn't compete with any anything
00:30:08
else because Christ offers me something
00:30:12
nobody else offers me. Nobody else
00:30:14
offers me peace. The peace of knowing
00:30:17
that I have real forgiveness. The peace
00:30:20
of knowing that I have a friend and a
00:30:23
companion to whom I can talk all the
00:30:24
time. That's been so meaningful in my
00:30:26
life as I spell out in detail my
00:30:28
autobiography.
00:30:30
And the peace of having been given a new
00:30:32
life that will not end when I die. I'm
00:30:36
82 now. I'm probably more than twice as
00:30:39
old as you are. As I look towards the
00:30:41
future, I have in my heart a certainty.
00:30:45
Not because I've merited it. The exact
00:30:48
opposite. Because I couldn't merit it,
00:30:51
but because Christ has done something
00:30:54
for me through the cross and the
00:30:56
resurrection. That may sound all mumbo
00:30:58
jumbo at the moment, but has done
00:31:00
something that enables me to have a
00:31:02
relationship that is secure, that floods
00:31:06
over the whole of life and has made my
00:31:08
life what it is for the last 70 years,
00:31:12
more or less. I think everybody,
00:31:14
especially in a world that's getting
00:31:15
increasingly lonely and disconnected and
00:31:17
isolated for many reasons,
00:31:20
>> is looking for that secure relationship.
00:31:21
>> They are.
00:31:22
>> They're looking for their own, you know,
00:31:24
a home that can't fall down.
00:31:26
>> Yes.
00:31:27
>> Yes. And a peace that doesn't fade and a
00:31:30
an inheritance that doesn't Exactly.
00:31:32
You're right.
00:31:33
>> If I could choose that, if I could press
00:31:35
a button and have it, I would have it.
00:31:38
But there's this other part of my brain
00:31:40
which
00:31:43
will naturally interrogate whether it's
00:31:44
real
00:31:45
>> or it's true.
00:31:46
>> You're absolutely right. Why am I
00:31:48
sitting in front of you talking about
00:31:50
this stuff? Because I've interrogated
00:31:52
myself about it and its truth for over
00:31:56
70 years.
00:31:58
I've made myself totally vulnerable.
00:32:01
That's why I got into all the debates
00:32:02
with you atheists and all the rest of it
00:32:04
because I want to be sure. But it won't
00:32:07
come about by pressing a button. It will
00:32:12
come about if you're open enough to say,
00:32:15
"God, I'm open. Reveal yourself to me,
00:32:18
and I'm prepared to take the steps that
00:32:22
I feel are leading me onto solid ground.
00:32:25
I do not believe that this is a process
00:32:27
of taking a leap into the dark, but it's
00:32:30
making a commitment on the basis of what
00:32:32
you know already and taking a step
00:32:34
further forward." And the interesting
00:32:37
thing about this is
00:32:40
the trust that's at the heart of
00:32:42
everything.
00:32:44
I trust my wife. I've been married to
00:32:47
her for 58 years this year. It's
00:32:50
evidence-based trust. I don't trust her
00:32:53
for no reason. And the same is true of
00:32:57
my friends, as would be the case with
00:32:59
you. evidence-based trust in science and
00:33:04
in Christian things. I don't regard
00:33:06
myself as religious particularly and the
00:33:09
reason is this and it's an important
00:33:12
reason. Most religions prescribe a moral
00:33:16
way that you try to follow and you've
00:33:18
teachers, gurus, imams, all the rest,
00:33:21
priests to keep you on the way and then
00:33:23
you come to a judgment at the end. And I
00:33:26
usually draw a scale of justice. And if
00:33:28
your good deeds tip over the bad deeds,
00:33:31
then you get in to whatever it is,
00:33:32
heaven, nirvana, all the rest of that's
00:33:34
religion. It's not Christianity, though
00:33:36
many people think it is. Because if you
00:33:39
ask them, are you a Christian? and say,
00:33:41
"Well, I do my best and I hope that God
00:33:43
will be kind." That isn't Christianity.
00:33:46
It's the exact opposite of Christianity.
00:33:49
That's a meritbased religion.
00:33:53
And you see
00:33:56
the irony of all this is that we would
00:34:01
never at least I don't know some people
00:34:04
might but in a human relationship
00:34:07
we don't base our affection and
00:34:10
relationship with someone on the basis
00:34:12
of their merit. I have a little analogy
00:34:14
I use that sometimes tickles people's
00:34:16
minds. I say that I met a beautiful girl
00:34:19
on my second day at Cambridge. I'd been
00:34:22
warned she might be there. And she was
00:34:24
sitting in church. And
00:34:28
I decided that I'd like to marry her. So
00:34:31
I bought the most expensive cookery book
00:34:33
I could. And uh I came and I handed to
00:34:36
her and she said, "What's that?" Well, I
00:34:38
said, "You know, we have a interesting
00:34:40
tradition in our family, you see. Uh and
00:34:43
if anybody gets married, they give the
00:34:45
potential bride a cookbook. Why?" Well,
00:34:48
look at page 152. Here's the the laws
00:34:51
for making an apple cake. And I like
00:34:53
apple cake. So law 1 22 two2 take so
00:34:56
much flour sugar. Now I said it's going
00:34:58
to be like this. If you keep those rules
00:35:02
for the next, let's be generous 40 years
00:35:04
or so. I will accept you otherwise you
00:35:07
can go back to your mother. Now when I
00:35:09
say that to an audience, they rock about
00:35:11
with laughter. But it's exactly the way
00:35:14
many of them have been taught to think
00:35:17
about God. keep the rules as best as you
00:35:19
can and hope that God is generous. When
00:35:23
actually I did no such thing. I've given
00:35:26
my wife several cookbooks, but they're
00:35:29
not the basis of the relationship. And
00:35:31
because the relationship is based on
00:35:34
acceptance that comes at the start of
00:35:36
the common journey, it sets her free to
00:35:39
live and do other things that she wants
00:35:42
to do. And I have noticed often that
00:35:45
once people begin to realize that
00:35:47
they're beginning to understand a basic
00:35:49
concept which is grace that God does
00:35:53
everything and if we trust him he it is
00:35:58
that gives us the certainty. So it's not
00:36:01
arrogance to accept it from him. It's
00:36:03
arrogance actually to reject and say oh
00:36:06
no no I'll go my own way and I'll try my
00:36:08
best and hope that you will accept me.
00:36:10
And the heart of the Christian message
00:36:13
which I believe is there is that the
00:36:16
trust is based on what someone else has
00:36:19
done what Christ has done not what I
00:36:21
have done and that's what's given me the
00:36:23
power and as I said earlier completed
00:36:26
the circle and enabled me to live.
00:36:31
>> That was a a really beautiful
00:36:33
description and definition of what what
00:36:35
the Christian faith is about.
00:36:38
It still leaves me with a question about
00:36:41
whether it's true
00:36:42
>> and this is the sort of central question
00:36:44
that I need to find my way over.
00:36:45
>> Yeah, I agree with you.
00:36:47
>> Absolutely.
00:36:48
>> And this is I find myself often I've sat
00:36:51
with a few um like Christian apologists
00:36:53
and asked them similar questions about
00:36:54
like how do I know if it's true?
00:36:57
And I guess so so far I've got you know
00:36:59
if there's a red Ferrari outside you'd
00:37:01
have to go outside and see for yourself.
00:37:02
That's the only way you're going to
00:37:03
know. But what how do you know that this
00:37:07
thing you've committed yourself to and
00:37:08
you've believed and you know talked
00:37:10
about for 70 years of your life is true
00:37:14
and could it be the case that it's not
00:37:15
true?
00:37:16
>> Okay, let's handle that. That's a hugely
00:37:19
important question. I have two
00:37:22
approaches to this which I call roughly
00:37:24
speaking objective and subjective.
00:37:27
And it depends entirely where someone's
00:37:29
coming from. They may start very far
00:37:32
back and say, "Look, we read about this
00:37:34
chap Jesus. How do we know he ever
00:37:35
existed?" Well, then you go to the
00:37:37
ancient historians and you find that
00:37:39
most of them, whether they're atheists
00:37:40
or not, believe that he existed and so
00:37:43
on.
00:37:43
>> I accept that he existed.
00:37:45
>> Yes. Yeah.
00:37:46
>> Okay. Well, that's a good start. You
00:37:48
know, some of the disciples when Jesus
00:37:50
rose from the dead, they just didn't
00:37:51
believe the story. Ridiculous. And
00:37:54
there's a famous story of Thomas who
00:37:57
said to the others, he said, "Unless I
00:37:59
see the marks in his hands and so on, I
00:38:01
won't believe." And then Jesus stood
00:38:02
among them and
00:38:05
he didn't make fun of Thomas's
00:38:08
objective. He said, "Thomas, come and
00:38:10
have a look." You never know what
00:38:12
swimming is until you get into the
00:38:14
water.
00:38:16
Isn't that true?
00:38:17
>> It is true. And all I can say is that
00:38:21
step by step, keep asking your
00:38:24
questions. Absolutely.
00:38:27
I don't believe that God will ever ask
00:38:29
us to take a step with which we should
00:38:32
be uncomfortable. I just don't believe
00:38:34
that.
00:38:35
>> Could you be wrong that Christianity So
00:38:37
could it be the case that Christianity
00:38:40
was
00:38:42
was about a real guy called Jesus? uh
00:38:44
based on a real guy called Jesus. But
00:38:46
the stories told, you know, there was
00:38:48
decades passed between the things that
00:38:50
happened and people
00:38:51
>> not so much as you'd think actually.
00:38:53
>> What for four decades for the first
00:38:54
time?
00:38:54
>> When you when you say to me, could you
00:38:56
be wrong? My academic mind says
00:39:00
theoretically, yes. But practically, no.
00:39:04
Could I be wrong? It would be like
00:39:06
asking me, John, you know, you've been
00:39:08
married to Sally for 58 years. Could you
00:39:11
be wrong that she loves you? Well,
00:39:14
theoretically, yes, but actually the
00:39:18
evidence all points in the other
00:39:20
direction. And that's what I would say
00:39:22
that I have built up in my life. And I'd
00:39:26
love you to ask me that question when
00:39:28
you've read that autobiography.
00:39:30
>> Why would you think it would read?
00:39:31
>> Because I I think what I relate there is
00:39:34
enough evidence for someone outside
00:39:36
who's skeptical to say there may well be
00:39:40
something in that. But in the end, you
00:39:42
won't know until you step into the water
00:39:47
and then you find that Christ is there
00:39:49
to catch you.
00:39:50
>> And what did you find in the water when
00:39:51
you stepped into the water?
00:39:52
>> Well, I was very young. You see, my
00:39:56
parents taught me quite clearly that I
00:39:59
wasn't born a Christian. You become a
00:40:02
Christian by trusting Christ. That's to
00:40:05
have somebody born or made a Christian
00:40:07
by some ceremony is absurd to my mind.
00:40:11
And so in my simple way, I responded as
00:40:15
a child. I didn't have any great
00:40:17
feelings or anything else. But what
00:40:20
happened to me as I grew, especially as
00:40:22
I I went to university in Cambridge, and
00:40:26
I decided, look, I really believe this
00:40:28
stuff is true. I'm going to stand for
00:40:31
it. And it was when I began to stand and
00:40:35
share with others that a great deal of
00:40:38
the underpinning came in and the
00:40:40
certainty came cumulatively. Not all a
00:40:44
big I've never had these big
00:40:47
flashes of anything. But I have had
00:40:50
several experiences of what I can only
00:40:53
put down to direct divine guidance and I
00:40:57
record them in the book.
00:40:59
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If I asked you to picture a Guinness
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I've got some um some of the questions
00:43:15
that really stumped me when I was so I
00:43:17
was I was Christian up until the age of
00:43:19
about 18 and then I went into the whole
00:43:21
like new atheist movement with Richard
00:43:22
Dawkins and Sam Harris and that little
00:43:24
phase of my life. But one of the stats
00:43:26
that used to get me when I went through
00:43:28
that new atheist movement
00:43:29
>> was that
00:43:31
>> globally 91% of adults simply adopt and
00:43:34
keep the religion they were raised in.
00:43:36
And if a person is born into a Hindi or
00:43:38
Muslim household, there is a 99%
00:43:41
statistical probability they will remain
00:43:42
in that faith. Only 1% switch out.
00:43:45
>> And then the argument, I think it came
00:43:47
from Dawkins or someone else, was that
00:43:50
>> is it fair that there's this birth
00:43:52
lottery determining who ends up
00:43:53
believing what or theoretically getting
00:43:56
into hell or heaven.
00:43:58
>> Yes.
00:43:59
>> Because if I was born in, I don't know,
00:44:01
Afghanistan, the probability says I'd
00:44:03
probably be Muslim.
00:44:04
>> Yeah. Well, I I take that absolutely.
00:44:07
>> So God gave you an advantage in this
00:44:09
context because he he he allowed you to
00:44:10
be born his in his all knowing all all
00:44:14
uh understanding way put you to be born
00:44:16
in a place where you were likely to be
00:44:18
Christian.
00:44:18
>> It sounds to me as if he gave the same
00:44:20
advantage to you.
00:44:23
>> So the question is what do we do with
00:44:26
that privilege? Now I know that there
00:44:29
are hard problems around the edge here.
00:44:32
There are really hard problems not only
00:44:34
where you're born and what you believe.
00:44:37
This was the argument that Peter Singer
00:44:40
advanced to be had a debate. I don't
00:44:42
know whether you've heard about it.
00:44:44
Peter Singer, you know, the Princeton
00:44:46
ethicist who really was one of the new
00:44:50
atheists but not quite very famous for
00:44:53
his views on dealing with the unborn all
00:44:56
the rest. when we had a debate in
00:44:57
Australia and I started as I always do
00:45:01
by being upfront about my background
00:45:05
and he when he got the chance to speak
00:45:07
he said well there goes my best
00:45:10
objection to religion people always stay
00:45:13
in the religion which they're brought up
00:45:15
you see when I next got a chance to
00:45:17
speak I said Peter I told the audience
00:45:22
about my Christian background but you
00:45:24
said nothing about yours now tell Were
00:45:27
your parents atheists?
00:45:29
He said they were. Oh, I said then you
00:45:32
remained in the faith in which you were
00:45:35
brought up. Oh, but he said it isn't a
00:45:37
faith. And I said, Peter, I was I was
00:45:41
convinced that you believed it. And it
00:45:43
brought the house down. Of course, this
00:45:45
the cyerspace went mad. And the point
00:45:48
was made repeatedly all over the
00:45:49
internet. Here's one of the world's top
00:45:51
philosophers. He doesn't understand that
00:45:53
his atheism is a belief system.
00:45:56
>> And the irony was the very first person
00:45:59
he met after that debate was a fellow
00:46:02
Hungarian Jew who was a friend of mine.
00:46:06
And then my friend said, "And I became a
00:46:08
Christian." So the very first person he
00:46:10
met was someone who had transitioned
00:46:13
from his background. That doesn't answer
00:46:15
your question. It's a question I ask
00:46:18
often
00:46:20
>> because God could correct this. Well,
00:46:22
this is just the point. And we have had
00:46:25
these arguments and debates. A good God
00:46:28
and an all powerful God would, could,
00:46:30
should, all this kind of stuff. And we
00:46:32
never get
00:46:34
a satisfactory answer to that. So, I've
00:46:37
come up with another problem possibly
00:46:39
because I'm a mathematician and we when
00:46:41
we've hammered at one problem for
00:46:42
centuries, we usually stop and try
00:46:46
another one. My other problem is just as
00:46:48
hard, but I think it gets me a bit
00:46:50
further and it's this. Every world view
00:46:53
must face
00:46:55
a mixed picture. I call it beauty and
00:46:58
barbwire or beauty and bombs. That
00:47:01
that's the world. It's mixed. And if you
00:47:03
don't accept that, you're not in touch
00:47:06
with reality. Now, here's my question.
00:47:09
Is there anywhere evidence
00:47:13
enough
00:47:15
to trust God with that situation?
00:47:18
That's a hard question.
00:47:20
>> And by that you mean the situation of
00:47:22
the sort of geographical distribution of
00:47:24
believers.
00:47:24
>> Yes. We'll never understand it or solve
00:47:26
it.
00:47:26
>> But do we trust God?
00:47:28
>> Do we trust God ultimately to be
00:47:30
absolutely fair? Because if God isn't
00:47:33
fair in the end, he knows what everybody
00:47:35
thinks, I believe. And we'll be
00:47:37
surprised maybe at what he does because
00:47:40
he can measure how much people know. My
00:47:44
responsibility is twofold. One, to
00:47:47
respond to the evidence I've had and
00:47:50
then Christ tells me to go and share it.
00:47:53
And that's what I do and I've been doing
00:47:55
all my life.
00:47:58
It doesn't answer a question, but it
00:48:02
gives you motivation. and the
00:48:05
alternative to rule God out has so many
00:48:10
uh negatives to it that I think I think
00:48:13
yeah so when I think about what I
00:48:14
understand of the Bible there's a
00:48:15
particular part of the Bible that talks
00:48:17
about the only way into heaven is
00:48:20
through Jesus and from that I inferred
00:48:22
that the only way to get into this great
00:48:24
place that everybody wants to go to is
00:48:26
by believing
00:48:27
>> but does everybody want to go to it I'm
00:48:29
not sure that they do
00:48:31
>> I I have met many people who when they
00:48:33
hear what Christ offers, they reject it.
00:48:36
But that that's that's another point.
00:48:38
>> So if if we talk about this
00:48:39
distribution,
00:48:41
>> yes,
00:48:41
>> sort of birthright distribution of what
00:48:43
you believe, um, and then those that
00:48:45
believe this one particular thing are
00:48:47
going to get into this heaven, it feels
00:48:51
unfair. Or this idea that only those
00:48:54
that believe get in is wrong.
00:48:57
>> Or God is not as nice as we thought and
00:49:00
he's playing a bit of a cruel game.
00:49:01
There's a fair bit going for your logic
00:49:03
there. I I I think and I think there are
00:49:08
aspects of this we don't understand
00:49:10
because to give a crude example of this
00:49:14
I expect to meet Abraham
00:49:17
and Moses but they didn't know about
00:49:19
Jesus
00:49:20
>> cuz they were before.
00:49:21
>> Yes.
00:49:22
>> When I approach this you said you're
00:49:24
agnostic. I like that word. People
00:49:27
rarely ask me if I'm agnostic, but what
00:49:30
I'm telling you is I'm agnostic about
00:49:32
masses of things. It's how I learn.
00:49:36
>> Agosco in Greek just means I don't know.
00:49:39
>> Yeah.
00:49:39
>> And once you take the other step and
00:49:42
saying I don't know and you can't know,
00:49:44
it then becomes illogical because if you
00:49:46
don't know, how can you know that I
00:49:47
can't know? And I always remember the
00:49:49
words of Richard Fineman who was a
00:49:51
brilliant Nobel Prize winning physicist.
00:49:53
You probably heard of Richard Fineman
00:49:55
who said, "Bend over backwards to
00:49:58
criticize yourself because you are the
00:50:02
easiest person for yourself to deceive."
00:50:04
>> Amen.
00:50:05
>> He was dead right. And that's why I love
00:50:09
exploring these things. And I feel
00:50:11
honored to talk to someone who's so
00:50:14
refreshing. I think there's great hope
00:50:16
for our culture in people like yourself
00:50:19
exploring and sharing
00:50:23
with the world the conclusions that
00:50:25
you've come to and the people that
00:50:27
you're interacting with.
00:50:28
>> Yeah, like I said, I have no I don't
00:50:30
have perfect answers either way. So
00:50:32
that's why the word agnostic seems to be
00:50:34
perfectly apt. Um the other real
00:50:37
question that I had that really stumped
00:50:39
me when I was 18 years old was this
00:50:41
point about omniscience. Yes. I mean,
00:50:43
it's the oldest question in the sort of
00:50:45
atheist religious battle, which is if
00:50:47
God is all knowing, he knew exactly
00:50:49
which individuals would reject him and
00:50:51
suffer
00:50:52
>> um and go to hell before he even created
00:50:55
them.
00:50:55
>> Yeah, that's determinism.
00:50:57
>> So, how is creating a soul that you know
00:50:59
is doomed
00:51:01
>> um an act of love?
00:51:02
>> Well, it isn't.
00:51:04
I don't go for that determinism. In
00:51:07
fact, I've written a book that thick
00:51:08
about it.
00:51:09
>> I think it was actually Ricky Jves tell
00:51:11
the story of the the baby being born in
00:51:14
let's say it's Africa or somewhere else
00:51:16
or India or wherever it might be the UK
00:51:19
who is born with a parasite eating its
00:51:22
eyeball out from the inside.
00:51:23
>> I know this. Yeah.
00:51:24
>> And I remember hearing that when I was
00:51:25
18.
00:51:26
>> Yeah. Terrible.
00:51:27
>> And thinking, okay, so if God's all
00:51:28
knowing, he knew that that baby was
00:51:30
going to have its eye eaten out by a
00:51:32
parasite before the baby was born, but
00:51:34
allowed the baby to be born anyway. And
00:51:36
with my moral compass, I would have
00:51:38
intervened. And if he's omnipotent or
00:51:40
powerful, he could have inter. So how do
00:51:41
you these qu where is the flaw in that
00:51:45
question?
00:51:46
Is there a flaw? Is there a
00:51:48
misunderstanding?
00:51:49
>> I I think there can be a
00:51:50
misunderstanding but it's a very
00:51:52
understandable one because I feel
00:51:54
exactly the weight of that as well. My
00:51:58
question that I set out a few minutes
00:52:00
ago is there any evidence anywhere that
00:52:03
God you can trust God with it? And the
00:52:06
major piece of evidence to my mind is
00:52:09
the cross of Christ. And if Christ
00:52:12
really is God whom he claimed to be,
00:52:14
this is God's suffering. And why is God
00:52:17
suffering? Well, it certainly tells me
00:52:19
that he hasn't remained distant from
00:52:21
human suffering, but has himself become
00:52:24
part of it. Now, that's not an answer.
00:52:27
There are no simplistic answers here.
00:52:30
But you see once you remove God
00:52:34
that child there's no hope for it. It's
00:52:36
dead gone out nothing but suppose God
00:52:39
can compensate that child because he is
00:52:42
the power to raise from the dead as he
00:52:45
did with Jesus
00:52:47
that changes everything for me. The
00:52:49
universe without a resurrection I don't
00:52:52
know whether you've ever watched my
00:52:54
debate the first one with Richard
00:52:55
Dawkins.
00:52:56
>> I suspect I have. the very last bit of
00:52:59
it, we were suddenly told we'd only 2
00:53:02
minutes to wrap up instead of nine each
00:53:06
and I said something about the
00:53:08
resurrection. And I never forget what
00:53:11
Richard said. It was something like
00:53:12
this. We've had a great discussion about
00:53:14
big ideas and so on. And now we come
00:53:17
down to the resurrection of Jesus. How
00:53:20
petty,
00:53:21
how paroial, how unworthy of the
00:53:24
universe. I remember thinking
00:53:28
if Jesus rose from the dead, it's the
00:53:30
biggest thing that's ever happened
00:53:32
because it may open the way to
00:53:35
understanding that there is life after
00:53:38
death. And you see CS Lewis has helped
00:53:40
me a lot. I used to listen to him. I'm
00:53:42
that old. He has helped me a lot in in
00:53:46
this idea of
00:53:49
a sense in which there's more than one
00:53:51
world. And we're so conditioned to
00:53:54
thinking that this world is the only one
00:53:56
there is. But if there is another world
00:53:58
and there is a loving God, then I
00:54:01
suspect, I can't prove this to you, but
00:54:04
when we one day see and enter that world
00:54:09
and see what God has done with the kind
00:54:11
of child you mentioned, we'll have no
00:54:14
more questions.
00:54:16
>> So, you think he's compensated that
00:54:18
child?
00:54:19
>> Oh, yes. God is a God of love. He will
00:54:22
do much better than look the biggest
00:54:24
gift that God has given you and me
00:54:28
is
00:54:29
our moral sense and the capacity to
00:54:31
love.
00:54:33
Now, we analyze problems like this with
00:54:38
our God-given capacities.
00:54:42
And we come, and I understand it
00:54:46
perfectly well because I've come to the
00:54:48
same place as you.
00:54:50
And say, "Well, God, if I had been you,
00:54:52
I would have done this."
00:54:55
Well, I suspect one day we're going to
00:54:57
find out why God didn't.
00:55:01
He's going to let me die one day. I've
00:55:02
nearly died died already. I've said
00:55:05
goodbye to my wife by the way and they
00:55:07
thought they weren't going 14 years ago
00:55:10
and I said goodbye. And it's interesting
00:55:13
when things like that hit you. Forgive
00:55:15
the personal reference, but it's very
00:55:16
real. Total peace both of us had
00:55:21
as I went into the operating theater and
00:55:24
the surgeon saved my life. And this
00:55:26
would take us down another rabbit hole.
00:55:28
But I got to New Zealand just a few days
00:55:31
after the earthquake. And I was on a
00:55:33
lecture tour and everything was
00:55:35
scrapped. I was in television, radio,
00:55:37
but only one topic, why earthquakes, you
00:55:40
see. And I met people that had lost
00:55:43
loved ones and all this kind of thing.
00:55:45
And I talked about the God who has
00:55:48
suffered and raised Jesus from the dead.
00:55:51
And the interesting thing was it was
00:55:53
that that gave the most hope to the
00:55:57
people that were listening to me because
00:55:58
they told me and wrote me little letters
00:56:00
afterwards and so on. So I I think
00:56:03
there's something big here. But that God
00:56:05
allows these things to happen is
00:56:08
something that in the end we have to
00:56:10
take on board even when they happen to
00:56:13
us.
00:56:14
>> What about all the um the humans that
00:56:17
lived before Jesus came? Well, God will
00:56:20
never judge anybody for not knowing what
00:56:22
they didn't know.
00:56:23
>> Interesting. That's an interesting idea.
00:56:26
So, I don't know.
00:56:29
>> So, am I good? Am I going to get into
00:56:32
heaven?
00:56:32
>> Well, no one is good but God. But you
00:56:35
see,
00:56:36
>> is it important for me to
00:56:38
>> You do know a great deal. That's obvious
00:56:40
to me. You do know a great deal. You
00:56:42
know what this is all about. And in a
00:56:45
sense you've been very near uh at the
00:56:48
beginning and you're now doing an
00:56:51
exploration and I mean your life stories
00:56:53
that you must write your autobiography
00:56:55
sometimes but wait a few years.
00:56:57
>> Yeah. I need I think I need a few more
00:56:59
experiences.
00:56:59
>> Yes.
00:57:00
>> But you will get them. I I I really
00:57:03
believe that the openness is the
00:57:05
important thing.
00:57:06
>> Yeah.
00:57:07
>> Quiz people. Put your Christian friends
00:57:10
under now.
00:57:11
>> Yes. I know. I know. It's lovely to find
00:57:14
someone who's prepared to do that quite
00:57:15
frankly.
00:57:16
>> Is it important that I believe in God?
00:57:19
Like if I live a good life and I'm kind
00:57:21
to people and I do my best.
00:57:22
>> But you see that's exactly the point I
00:57:24
was making that people think that living
00:57:26
a good life and being kind to people is
00:57:29
what God is interested in. When God has
00:57:32
prepared for us a relationship with
00:57:35
himself through Christ that deals with
00:57:39
the forgiveness of sins that we all
00:57:42
need, forgive me using the hackneed
00:57:44
phrase, but that's it. And will give us
00:57:47
a new life and a power to live, a new
00:57:50
power. You know, it's all very well
00:57:54
saying, I do good and I do this and do
00:57:56
the other thing. But we don't have the
00:57:58
power to live as we should. If we
00:58:01
compare ourselves to the sermon on the
00:58:03
mount for a week, we'll soon realize
00:58:04
that we're lacking. And I I think one of
00:58:08
the big changes comes in people as they
00:58:11
realize just the depth of what they
00:58:14
might be capable of
00:58:17
and possibly the depths of some things
00:58:19
that sadly they do and are facing a a
00:58:23
big need of forgiveness. You meet many
00:58:25
of them in prisons of course but I I
00:58:29
have seen such remarkable things happen
00:58:32
both directly and indirectly with people
00:58:34
who've made such a mess of life and God
00:58:37
has met them even in death row and
00:58:40
Russia and places like that where I was
00:58:42
able to go because I speak the language
00:58:44
to a certain extent again that I find
00:58:48
tremendously powerful evidence that God
00:58:51
is at work in these people's lives. It
00:58:53
is statistically the case that the more
00:58:56
hopeless your life becomes, the higher
00:58:57
the probability you have of turning to
00:59:00
um a religion and also if you're having
00:59:02
a crisis of meaning in your life for
00:59:03
whatever reason. I looked at some of the
00:59:05
data and it does show that
00:59:06
>> that's absolutely right and that's what
00:59:08
you'd expect if there if it's true at
00:59:10
least to a certain extent it gives
00:59:13
people something outside themselves.
00:59:15
That's simple psychology. I would have
00:59:17
thought
00:59:18
>> simple psychology
00:59:19
>> but it doesn't prove the truth or
00:59:20
>> it doesn't prove the truth because what
00:59:21
if I believe in the dragon at the bottom
00:59:24
of the garden or the spaghetti monster
00:59:25
>> lepreorns if you're Irish
00:59:27
>> and it seems to be the case that really
00:59:28
irrespective of which religion that you
00:59:30
know fills that you know place in your
00:59:32
life you still get the same boost in
00:59:34
meaning post starting to believe
00:59:35
>> well I'm not convinced of that you see
00:59:38
because I'm sitting here as a Christian
00:59:41
and I've reasoned for being a Christian
00:59:43
because I don't find this need met in
00:59:45
those practitioner ers of other
00:59:47
religions. I don't find that sense of
00:59:52
fulfillment and peace uh that comes
00:59:55
through the forgiveness in Christ. Now
00:59:56
when I say that I need to guard that
01:00:00
very carefully because one of the
01:00:03
troubles in and you will probably have
01:00:06
realized this in talking about different
01:00:08
religions is that once you begin to
01:00:10
criticize a religion,
01:00:13
people rightly think you're looking down
01:00:15
at them.
01:00:17
And so I clear the ground completely by
01:00:19
saying that
01:00:22
a pagan or a person in any religion
01:00:25
could put me to shame by their moral
01:00:27
behavior in raising questions about what
01:00:32
is taught by a particular religion. I'm
01:00:35
not criticizing your moral stance. And
01:00:37
CS Lewis helped me greatly there. He
01:00:40
wrote a book in the 1940s where he
01:00:43
tackled I think 40 different religions
01:00:45
and philosophies and in every one of
01:00:47
them he found the golden rule. Do unto
01:00:50
others what you would and he points out
01:00:52
that this is morally
01:00:55
hardwired into your system. So that when
01:00:59
I'm talking to people of other faiths
01:01:01
and ask these questions, I I'm very
01:01:04
careful to say that at the beginning.
01:01:06
But we've got to face the fact that
01:01:09
there are differences. My Jewish friends
01:01:13
believe that Jesus died and did not
01:01:15
rise. My Muslim friends believed he
01:01:18
didn't die. I believe he both died and
01:01:21
rose. Those three things cannot be
01:01:22
simultaneously true.
01:01:24
>> But when I look at the stats here, data
01:01:25
shows that devout Muslims and a devout
01:01:27
Hindu get the exact same psychological
01:01:29
meaning boost and sense of peace as a
01:01:32
devout Christian.
01:01:33
>> Well, how do you measure that? Well,
01:01:35
they ask them, "Does your life more
01:01:36
meaningful?" And sometimes, um, I've got
01:01:38
one particular friend who's part of his,
01:01:41
you know, uh, evidence that what he
01:01:44
believes is true is the feeling he got
01:01:46
when he started believing it.
01:01:48
>> Yeah. Well,
01:01:49
>> but the data suggests that
01:01:51
>> that if it is true, a positive feeling
01:01:54
would reinforce that, of course, but it
01:01:55
doesn't prove it in the end. But then
01:01:58
your criteria for yourself of what you
01:02:01
accept will be different from that
01:02:03
person. So you have to proceed
01:02:06
on the basis like Thomas of old. He
01:02:09
wouldn't accept what the other guys
01:02:10
said. He said I need the evidence for
01:02:12
myself and you need the evidence for
01:02:15
yourself. Evidence of the kind that's
01:02:18
going to give you a settled peace and
01:02:20
confidence in what you believe. I can
01:02:22
understand that perfectly.
01:02:24
>> Then there were also I was thinking then
01:02:25
I was thinking that there's fiction
01:02:26
movies I've watched that made me feel
01:02:28
really good.
01:02:29
>> Yes.
01:02:29
>> Afterwards and they made me feel like
01:02:30
more motivated and connected to the
01:02:32
university.
01:02:32
>> Yes, of course.
01:02:36
Steve, what are you doing?
01:02:37
>> Uh, just making myself a delicious
01:02:39
coffee
01:02:40
>> from the freezer.
01:02:41
>> From the freezer. Have you not heard
01:02:42
about Comtier?
01:02:43
>> No.
01:02:44
>> Oh my gosh, this is going to change your
01:02:46
life. I invested in this company called
01:02:48
Cometier last year and they're now one
01:02:49
of the sponsors of this podcast because
01:02:51
they've taken a pretty revolutionary
01:02:52
approach to making coffee. Every coffee
01:02:55
is precision brewed at 10 times the
01:02:58
strength and then they flash freeze it
01:03:00
with liquid nitrogen to lock in the
01:03:03
flavor and freshness and then it's
01:03:05
delivered to you on dry ice in these
01:03:07
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01:03:10
frozen like a little ice cube. All you
01:03:12
have to do is pop the capsule out, add
01:03:16
some hot water, and then you stir it and
01:03:20
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01:03:22
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01:03:24
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stir it up, and for anyone that hasn't
01:03:30
tried it, you can get $30 off your first
01:03:32
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01:03:35
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01:03:38
I've done almost 700 interviews with
01:03:41
some of the most interesting people in
01:03:42
the world. And one of the things you
01:03:43
learn, which is unexpected, is that
01:03:45
vulnerability is the doorway to
01:03:47
connection. And after sitting here for 2
01:03:49
three hours with a guest, I feel a deep
01:03:51
sense of connection to them. And as they
01:03:53
leave, what I get them to do is to write
01:03:56
a question in the diary of a CEO. We've
01:03:59
taken all of the questions from the
01:04:01
diary of a CEO. We have put the question
01:04:04
here on this card with the name of the
01:04:07
person that wrote it. So you can sit at
01:04:08
home as I do with my fiance and my
01:04:10
colleagues at work and other people in
01:04:12
my life. Whenever we get a minute, we
01:04:14
play the Dracoio conversation cards. And
01:04:17
it is incredible what happens. These are
01:04:20
great if you're in a romantic
01:04:21
relationship and you want to connect
01:04:22
your partner more. These are also great
01:04:24
if you're in a team and you want to bond
01:04:26
your team together. And I have to say
01:04:27
they're also great for families that
01:04:29
want to learn more about each other and
01:04:30
that need a good excuse to spend some
01:04:32
time in a digital world in the analog
01:04:35
environment connecting human to human.
01:04:37
It is remarkable what the right question
01:04:40
at the right time can do. Go to the
01:04:42
diary.com
01:04:44
and you can get these conversation cards
01:04:46
right now. So, going back to this
01:04:48
question I asked about good people,
01:04:50
living a good life. It it it seems to be
01:04:53
the case that the Bible suggests that if
01:04:55
you don't believe in God, even if you
01:04:57
lived a good life, you go to hell. And
01:04:59
hell is described as not a nice place.
01:05:02
So, I I was thinking about the most kind
01:05:04
person I know that's lived her life to
01:05:06
be unbelievable passed away. She didn't
01:05:08
believe. Does that mean she's in hell?
01:05:11
Well, you can't answer that. Let me just
01:05:14
say something here that
01:05:17
what scripture reveals is a very
01:05:20
interesting thing that the only people
01:05:22
to whom Jesus talked about hell were
01:05:24
religious bigots
01:05:27
who were in danger of it.
01:05:29
He didn't talk about it to ordinary
01:05:32
folks who were struggling with believing
01:05:35
and trusting God and all the rest.
01:05:36
That's point number one.
01:05:38
>> What is what are you implying there?
01:05:40
Sorry. Well, what I'm implying there is
01:05:43
that we paint hell as something
01:05:47
ogre like god stuffing and demonsting uh
01:05:53
bodies into hell when actually
01:05:56
I think Lewis got it right here you know
01:05:58
when he talks about this that
01:06:02
hell is absence of God and it's chosen
01:06:07
if a person doesn't want God in their
01:06:10
life and I've known people like that and
01:06:12
they choose it, God will give them what
01:06:14
they chose. Otherwise, God is going to
01:06:16
have to force his way into their lives
01:06:18
and they don't want him. And here is the
01:06:21
amazing thing to my mind about Jesus and
01:06:23
his attitude. He would go places. He
01:06:26
would heal people. He would bring peace
01:06:29
into their lives and all the rest of it.
01:06:32
But when folk saw what he did and said,
01:06:35
"Go leave us alone," he went.
01:06:39
He didn't force his way into their
01:06:40
lives. And it it seems to me that the
01:06:44
one example in the New Testament of a
01:06:47
person who did not live a good life and
01:06:50
neglected the poor around him and ended
01:06:56
in that place. There is no evidence that
01:06:59
he wanted out of it. What he said was,
01:07:02
"Please send Abram to my brothers that
01:07:06
they don't come to this place." There's
01:07:08
no indication that he wanted out of it.
01:07:10
And I think this is a grim reality here
01:07:13
that when we use these words, we need to
01:07:16
be immensely careful.
01:07:19
You can choose
01:07:21
not to have God and God will honor that
01:07:23
choice and that is hell.
01:07:27
>> One of the things that um I grew up
01:07:28
believing because of the the Bible was
01:07:30
that if you repented,
01:07:32
>> yes,
01:07:33
>> which is you know to ask forgiveness,
01:07:34
admit your sins, etc. acknowledge God,
01:07:37
believe, then your sins would be
01:07:39
forgiven.
01:07:40
>> So if someone was a serial killer for
01:07:43
their whole life and then repented at
01:07:44
the end of their life, would they be
01:07:46
forgiven and allowed into heaven? I
01:07:48
guess this kind of links to the question
01:07:49
I just asked, which is if someone was a
01:07:51
doctor for their whole life, cur curing
01:07:52
childhood cancer, but they didn't
01:07:54
believe they would theoretically be
01:07:56
going to this place described as hell.
01:07:58
>> Yeah, we can argue about cases like that
01:08:00
all the time. Neither of us is God. And
01:08:03
the way God deals with these people,
01:08:05
after all, next to Christ on the cross
01:08:07
were two thieves. Well, they were
01:08:09
terrorists, actually. They both murdered
01:08:11
apparently. And one of them railed
01:08:14
against Jesus and shouted and all this
01:08:17
kind of thing. And the other uh simply
01:08:20
said to him, "I deserve to be here.
01:08:22
Remember me when you come into your
01:08:24
kingdom." And Jesus turned to him on the
01:08:26
cross and said, "Today you will be with
01:08:29
me in paradise." And so yes, he in that
01:08:33
sense. Yes. And the Apostle Paul, you
01:08:36
know, was a murderer. There are deep
01:08:38
mysteries here. It's just amazing. I
01:08:41
never forget looking through the door of
01:08:44
a Russian
01:08:45
security death row. I'd never been in a
01:08:48
death row before. And the stink, it was
01:08:50
just like a nightmare. And because I was
01:08:54
the only one of the Brits who could
01:08:55
speak Russian, I went up to the door and
01:08:58
a chap came over and looked at me gaunt
01:09:01
and all this. And he was just awaiting
01:09:02
execution.
01:09:05
And what he said to me was this. He
01:09:07
said, "I deserve to be here." He killed
01:09:09
12 women or something. I can't remember
01:09:11
which. And then his face just burst into
01:09:16
what I can only describe as a ghastly
01:09:18
smile.
01:09:20
And he said, "I met Jesus here and he
01:09:22
forgave me
01:09:24
and you just
01:09:27
you go away with a very
01:09:30
burdened heart, I think."
01:09:33
And he said, "My colleague lying over
01:09:35
there is the same." What do you make of
01:09:37
it? I don't think we're going to find
01:09:39
out.
01:09:40
>> I don't know. I feel like I'm wired to
01:09:42
try I try and have to solve these
01:09:43
problems, these big questions. I
01:09:45
have to like figure them out or they all
01:09:47
just sit there causing increasingly more
01:09:50
confusion which pops me right on that
01:09:52
agnostic fence.
01:09:53
>> Yes, I would encourage you to
01:09:55
concentrate on the one that you think is
01:09:57
most important one at a time and I I
01:10:01
don't know because I've only met you. I
01:10:05
think what you're doing by
01:10:09
talking to people from different
01:10:11
backgrounds and so on. I'd love to be
01:10:14
able to say here's where you must look,
01:10:16
but each one of us is so complex and
01:10:19
what will answer the question for you
01:10:22
might not answer it for the person
01:10:23
sitting next to you.
01:10:25
>> Mhm.
01:10:25
>> But don't stop exploring, I would say.
01:10:29
But I don't think you will.
01:10:31
>> No, I won't. That's for sure. because I
01:10:33
find the the curious pursuit of truth in
01:10:36
and of itself a rewarding pursuit
01:10:38
irrespective of whether I ever find the
01:10:40
answers.
01:10:40
>> That's the key. A speech that made a
01:10:43
deep impression on me was given by
01:10:45
Alexander Soldier Nitsson when he was
01:10:48
pushed out of the Soviet Union. Do not
01:10:51
compromise in the least with lies. Live
01:10:53
not by lies. I think our generation
01:10:56
needs to hear that because one of the
01:11:00
great and tragic capacities of AI is the
01:11:04
spread of lies, deep fakes, all the rest
01:11:06
of it. I've been subject to it myself in
01:11:10
the last month. when you think about the
01:11:12
impact that AI is going to have on human
01:11:14
purpose. We talk a lot about job losses
01:11:16
and yes um you know white collar workers
01:11:18
entry- level roles and then really like
01:11:20
everything else if if you have a long
01:11:21
enough time horizon it's conceivable
01:11:23
that many of the roles we all do today
01:11:24
including maybe even as a podcaster um I
01:11:27
think Spotify announced this month that
01:11:28
you're going to be able to generate your
01:11:29
own podcasts with AI um what is the high
01:11:33
level sort of philosophical point we
01:11:35
need to understand about meaning and how
01:11:37
to live a good life uh in a world where
01:11:40
some of us might lose our jobs and have
01:11:42
to contend with change in a way that
01:11:44
we've not experienced before.
01:11:46
>> I think we just have to I mean I have
01:11:49
children, grandchildren, all the rest of
01:11:50
it. And one of my sons is beginning to
01:11:53
ask questions. Dad, AI looks as if it's
01:11:55
going to replace my job. Well, he's
01:11:58
techsavvy and he will rise to it, I
01:12:02
suspect. But all industrial revolutions
01:12:05
did this, but this is going to do it in
01:12:07
a scale never before seen. And the
01:12:09
tragedy is uh I was talking about this
01:12:12
in South Africa and they said it's all
01:12:14
very well to tell us to reskill people
01:12:17
but if you don't have the educational
01:12:18
infrastructure to do that
01:12:21
you'll just force a much bigger divide
01:12:23
between the rich and the poor and
01:12:25
they're really worried about it.
01:12:27
I think the important thing which is why
01:12:29
I wrote my books is to inform and get
01:12:33
people thinking and get them talking.
01:12:35
>> What is the conversation you want them
01:12:37
to be talking about? I think it's a very
01:12:39
wide-ranging
01:12:41
conversation. You know, there are
01:12:44
existential things for people. They're
01:12:46
afraid.
01:12:48
>> Should they be?
01:12:50
>> Well, they should be afraid of some
01:12:52
things. I think the creeping advance of
01:12:55
totalitarianism is something that could
01:12:57
engulf us all
01:13:00
if we're not very careful. It's
01:13:02
creeping, creeping, creeping, and is
01:13:04
being ruled out in parts of the world,
01:13:06
particularly China. But not only I read
01:13:09
a very interesting report by a Chinese
01:13:12
watcher saying beware you and the west
01:13:16
because the only difference between us
01:13:17
and you is you've got all the technology
01:13:20
but not yet a central government
01:13:22
imposing it. Not yet. Beware and I think
01:13:27
we have to beware because we are
01:13:29
sleepwalking into this. uh Sir Anthony
01:13:33
Seldon, I don't know whether you've come
01:13:35
across him. He's a an education is very
01:13:38
highly regarded by various governments
01:13:41
has written a book about AI and its
01:13:43
effect in education and of course it's
01:13:46
having a devastating effect as you know
01:13:49
what is an essay.
01:13:51
Everybody's using AI and it's hard to
01:13:54
recognize whether it's AI or not now. So
01:13:58
that we're into a whole new world or
01:14:01
coming rapidly into it.
01:14:04
How do we know what is true and what
01:14:06
isn't? A few weeks ago, I was contacted,
01:14:10
could a publisher produce a transcript
01:14:13
of a recent lecture I'd given because
01:14:15
they liked it so much. Never heard of
01:14:17
it. I looked it up, discovered a website
01:14:20
describing itself as Linux logic
01:14:24
and it was a picture of me, but it was
01:14:26
deep faked all the way through and AI
01:14:28
generated
01:14:30
material that I would never have said
01:14:32
all politicized and everything else.
01:14:34
>> Is it conceivable that maybe you know so
01:14:38
much of this technology has promised
01:14:39
that it would make us more human and so
01:14:41
much of it failed. It made us more
01:14:42
isolated and lonely.
01:14:43
>> Oh yes. Is it conceivable that if a
01:14:45
technology comes along like AI, it will
01:14:48
render us um useful for the things that
01:14:52
humans are uniquely positioned to do
01:14:55
>> as in you know being with each other in
01:14:57
the real world and absolutely
01:14:58
relationships and is it conceivable that
01:15:00
maybe we were never meant to sit in
01:15:01
front of screens tap tapping buttons and
01:15:03
>> oh I think that's absolutely true what's
01:15:05
already exercising many people's minds
01:15:08
in that direction
01:15:09
>> and could that be a better life
01:15:12
>> well how would I judge that I
01:15:14
>> I guess one way. Yeah, it's a good
01:15:15
point. Um, you know, I was thinking
01:15:17
about this. I was thinking, is this like
01:15:18
the moment where we kind of regress back
01:15:20
to
01:15:23
how we used to live, our true maybe
01:15:26
human nature? Is that is that what
01:15:28
happens here? Where I don't know, we
01:15:29
spend more time with each other in the
01:15:31
real world and we cuz that's what you
01:15:33
know that's very human and my Maslovian
01:15:35
needs of connection and touch and
01:15:37
>> Yeah. Yeah. Well, you can you can
01:15:40
demonstrate that. Look at these groups
01:15:42
of parents who have said to their kids,
01:15:45
"Look, we're going away into the country
01:15:47
for a week and we're taking your
01:15:50
smartphones away." And they grumble and
01:15:53
say, "No, no, no." And they come back
01:15:54
after the week having rediscovered
01:15:56
nature. They don't want to use their
01:15:58
smartphones very much. Totally
01:16:00
transformed by touch and taste and
01:16:02
feeling. You see,
01:16:05
AI is a machine.
01:16:08
It doesn't have any of our five senses.
01:16:11
which are all connected with our
01:16:13
consciousness. It doesn't see, it
01:16:15
doesn't hear,
01:16:16
>> it doesn't taste.
01:16:17
>> When you say it doesn't,
01:16:18
>> it doesn't touch, it doesn't smell,
01:16:20
>> it doesn't see.
01:16:21
>> Oh, it can it can be programmed to
01:16:23
recognize patterns, but it is no
01:16:25
awareness of what the process of seeing
01:16:27
is.
01:16:27
>> Does it need it?
01:16:29
>> Well, that's not the point. What I'm
01:16:31
saying is it's uh distinctively human
01:16:34
that we understand what seeing is. We
01:16:36
know what seeing red is. Do we the
01:16:39
machine? Yes, I think we do.
01:16:41
>> I mean, we can philosophize all around
01:16:43
it, but it's a conscious experience. And
01:16:46
consciousness from a scientific
01:16:48
perspective is called the hard problem.
01:16:50
No one knows what it is.
01:16:52
>> We don't understand it.
01:16:53
>> Yes, we can't re you can't replicate it.
01:16:56
>> So, how do we know if AI is conscious?
01:16:59
If the output is the same, I I can point
01:17:01
an AI at this and say, "What is it?" And
01:17:04
the AI will say, "It's a mug." And I can
01:17:06
get a human to walk in here and say,
01:17:07
"What is that?" and they'll go a mug.
01:17:09
Now the output is the same.
01:17:11
>> Yes. But the understanding is not there.
01:17:14
>> And why does that part why is that
01:17:16
critical?
01:17:16
>> Well, because there's a huge difference
01:17:20
in being a machine and responding to a
01:17:23
program created by others and being
01:17:26
aware of what you're doing consciously.
01:17:28
That's a totally higher level of being.
01:17:31
>> I agree. But why does that matter in
01:17:33
this context?
01:17:35
Well,
01:17:35
>> one another way of asking this question
01:17:37
is actually visualized by what I have in
01:17:38
front of me here because one of the big
01:17:40
big debates around AI is is it creative?
01:17:42
>> Yes, I know.
01:17:44
>> So, here we have a picture done by
01:17:48
>> a human.
01:17:49
>> Yes.
01:17:50
>> Here, which is you know picture of a
01:17:52
family and a dog and there and then we
01:17:54
have another picture here which is done
01:17:57
by AI.
01:17:57
>> Yes.
01:17:58
>> And we have another picture here which
01:17:59
is done by a different AI.
01:18:00
>> Yes.
01:18:02
Now there's a debate that um AI can't be
01:18:04
creative.
01:18:06
Now can AI be creative?
01:18:09
>> Well, if you call what's in front of you
01:18:11
as creative, then it can be. But it now
01:18:16
comes down to the very big question of
01:18:18
what you actually mean by creative.
01:18:21
>> Yeah.
01:18:21
>> You see, it can create things. It can
01:18:24
put things together that haven't been in
01:18:27
that form before, but it's not aware of
01:18:31
doing it. It doesn't know that those are
01:18:33
children
01:18:35
because it doesn't know.
01:18:36
>> But if I ask it what is that? It would
01:18:38
say a child.
01:18:39
>> Yes. But it doesn't know
01:18:41
like we know
01:18:43
>> and does and this it goes back to the
01:18:44
same question which is does which is
01:18:47
like what the process
01:18:49
why does the process matter if the
01:18:53
output is identical.
01:18:55
>> Well let me just say that that view is
01:18:59
exactly the view that Alan Turing took
01:19:02
at the beginning. And if you look at
01:19:05
what's often referred to as the AI
01:19:07
bible, uh Peter Norvik and his
01:19:09
colleagues, he said, "Look, we are not
01:19:12
trying to create a conscious machine. We
01:19:16
wouldn't even know what that meant."
01:19:17
>> Yeah,
01:19:18
>> we are happy with the imitation game
01:19:22
>> and that's good enough for us. We're not
01:19:24
trying to do it. But you see the
01:19:26
conscious side involves all that
01:19:29
appreciation of life and nature and
01:19:31
beauty and so on that we can see some
01:19:34
meaning in. But also there's another
01:19:36
thing. There's a consciousness of other
01:19:39
people and there's God consciousness. I
01:19:43
don't think AI anywhere near that.
01:19:46
Machines there are certain things they
01:19:49
cannot do even potentially that the
01:19:51
human mind can do. So there's no way a
01:19:54
machine is ever going to be able to
01:19:55
simulate a human mind completely. But
01:19:58
that's difficult. That's difficult
01:19:59
mathematics and all the rest of it. And
01:20:01
it's highly controversial.
01:20:03
>> Why is it an important conversation to
01:20:05
have that it is conscious or not
01:20:07
conscious when the output is is the
01:20:10
same?
01:20:10
>> Yes, I I can see the question. But if
01:20:13
you want to live in a reductive universe
01:20:16
which ends up being meaningless, well
01:20:18
then you can go that way. There's not
01:20:20
nothing to stop you. But it seems to me
01:20:22
there are enough indicators
01:20:25
within nature, within science, within
01:20:27
our human experience
01:20:29
that tell us there's a bigger world. And
01:20:33
this is the right and left brain stuff.
01:20:35
We're back to Beilus again. He would he
01:20:38
would his stuff in AI is very strong. He
01:20:42
thinks it's really dangerous because
01:20:44
it's ruining all this side of the brain
01:20:47
and the richness o of human experience
01:20:50
and it's in danger of destroying it. He
01:20:53
actually invites people to come and
01:20:55
fight with him.
01:20:57
>> So in such a world what is it that makes
01:20:58
humans um what what is it that makes us
01:21:01
special? Is it that those human things
01:21:03
we talked about relational?
01:21:05
>> Oh I think so. Yes, absolutely. And the
01:21:07
fact that you and I can have a
01:21:09
conversation like this,
01:21:11
>> you could have this conversation with
01:21:12
AI.
01:21:14
>> I'm the same way. AI is pretty thin
01:21:16
still. You can have a conversation of
01:21:19
sorts. But remember, who's responsible
01:21:22
for its capacity? Humans. It's something
01:21:24
made in the image of humans. And that's
01:21:27
a dangerous thing. I'd prefer I'd prefer
01:21:30
to have made with something made in the
01:21:31
image of God. It's interesting because
01:21:33
we almost we're getting to a point where
01:21:34
there's going to probably be some like
01:21:36
ethical questions around
01:21:38
>> Oh, there I mean around robotics.
01:21:40
>> Oh, everywhere.
01:21:41
>> You know, in the same way that many of
01:21:43
us feel quite empathetic towards like
01:21:45
trees.
01:21:46
>> Yes. Yes.
01:21:46
>> And we feel empathetic towards animals.
01:21:48
>> Um, now trees haven't got a brain, but
01:21:51
just cutting down a tree needlessly I
01:21:54
think would annoy a lot of people
01:21:55
because it's
01:21:56
>> it would annoy me.
01:21:57
>> Yeah, it would annoy me too. And I think
01:21:59
there's almost going to get to a point
01:22:00
where like you know people are going to
01:22:03
start asking similar questions around
01:22:05
>> robots
01:22:07
>> which is
01:22:09
it's an interesting question.
01:22:11
>> It is. It is.
01:22:12
>> Let me ask you a final question then
01:22:13
which is what is the the most important
01:22:15
thing we haven't talked about that we
01:22:18
should have talked about as it relates
01:22:19
to all of the work in these tangental
01:22:22
subjects?
01:22:24
>> Oh, I can't answer that. That
01:22:27
perhaps the most important thing is
01:22:30
finding the trigger that will help you
01:22:32
to take a step forward into
01:22:36
into faith into the Christian faith.
01:22:40
And I would just encourage you to keep
01:22:43
asking your questions in the open way
01:22:46
you've done. And I have regarded it an
01:22:48
honor to
01:22:50
have this discussion. And I hope very
01:22:53
much it won't be the last one, but age
01:22:55
may prevent that. But thank you very
01:22:57
much.
01:22:58
>> We have a um closing tradition where the
01:23:00
last guest leaves a question for the
01:23:02
next not knowing who they're leaving it
01:23:03
for.
01:23:07
And the question that's left for you
01:23:11
in a world with so many challenges, what
01:23:14
can we do to restore hope and trigger
01:23:17
engagement?
01:23:20
give people a real basis for hope that
01:23:24
transcends this world.
01:23:27
And the only place I know where to find
01:23:29
that
01:23:31
is in Christ and in Christianity.
01:23:35
John, thank you. One of the um one of
01:23:36
the most compelling
01:23:38
arguments for uh
01:23:41
God that you've presented and your way
01:23:44
of seeing the world in being is not
01:23:46
actually necessarily anything you've
01:23:47
written in your books or not not
01:23:48
necessarily anything you've said. It is
01:23:50
it is actually
01:23:52
you
01:23:54
and uh you you you have a certain peace
01:23:59
and contentment that I rarely see in
01:24:03
people that I interview but I often see
01:24:05
and I've almost always seen in the
01:24:08
Christians that I've interviewed and
01:24:10
this is a interesting phenomenon for me.
01:24:12
I interviewed Wesley Huff recently. Do
01:24:14
you know Wesley Huff?
01:24:14
>> Yes. Yes.
01:24:15
>> He was the same Canadian. Wesley's a
01:24:18
bright cookie.
01:24:18
>> Yeah. He was very much he gave me the
01:24:20
same feeling as you just like feels like
01:24:21
a really happy person very sort of
01:24:23
content rounded well
01:24:24
>> there are many of us
01:24:25
>> but it seems to be a trend that you know
01:24:27
a lot of the Christian apologists that
01:24:28
I've interviewed have that anchoring
01:24:31
that
01:24:31
>> yes
01:24:31
>> so many of us are looking for
01:24:33
>> there's a real sense of that you know
01:24:37
I sit in front of many people and of
01:24:40
course they often ask me questions I
01:24:42
don't even understand but
01:24:45
in life that peace is very important to
01:24:50
me and also what we started with when I
01:24:54
look at you I see someone who's of
01:24:57
infinite value made in the image of God
01:25:00
and so what I say to you or think about
01:25:02
you is hugely important to me and I wish
01:25:07
you well
01:25:09
>> thank you um I highly recommend I mean
01:25:11
you've written so many books I I don't
01:25:12
have all of them here but I have a long
01:25:13
list of them but I highly recommend
01:25:15
everybody goes and checks out your
01:25:16
autobiography which is your most recent
01:25:19
works.
01:25:20
>> Yeah.
01:25:20
>> Um it's called John Lennox and I'm gonna
01:25:22
link it below. It's a spiritual and
01:25:24
intellectual autobiography that I think
01:25:26
is highly fascinating to read because of
01:25:28
how diverse your thinking and skill sets
01:25:30
are. But also this wonderful I mean you
01:25:33
wrote if people are interested in the
01:25:34
subject of AI then I highly
01:25:35
>> then they should read 2084.
01:25:37
>> I'll link 2084 below as well. That's
01:25:39
2084 artificial intelligence in the
01:25:41
future of humanity. Um, and I highly
01:25:43
recommend everybody goes and reads both
01:25:46
books because they you are a truly
01:25:49
um, fascinating person with a very
01:25:50
unique skill stack and experience stack
01:25:52
and perspective. Fascinating. Thank you
01:25:54
so much, John.
01:25:55
>> Oh, thank you.
01:25:57
>> YouTube have this new crazy algorithm
01:25:58
where they know exactly what video you
01:26:00
would like to watch next based on AI and
01:26:03
all of your viewing behavior. And the
01:26:04
algorithm says that this video is the
01:26:08
perfect video for you. It's different
01:26:09
for everybody looking right now. Check
01:26:11
this video out. I bet you you might love

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 70
    Most quotable
  • 70
    Best concept / idea
  • 65
    Best overall
  • 60
    Most inspiring

Episode Highlights

  • The Intersection of Faith and AI
    Exploring how AI raises questions about human identity and morality.
    “The Christian faith has a great deal to say about this.”
    @ 14m 36s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Dangers of AI
    Discussing the implications of AI on society and human value.
    “We are reducing people to machines.”
    @ 17m 36s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Problem with Atheism
    Atheism undermines rationality by suggesting our minds are products of random processes.
    “Your atheism goes too far. It undermines the very rationality we need to do science.”
    @ 23m 43s
    June 04, 2026
  • Grace vs. Merit
    Christianity is about acceptance and grace, not a merit-based relationship with God.
    “The heart of the Christian message is that trust is based on what someone else has done.”
    @ 36m 13s
    June 04, 2026
  • Anker's World Record
    Anker's sound core earbuds hold the Guinness World Record for the world's clearest calls.
    “Did you hear that? That is what obsession sounds like.”
    @ 42m 18s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Birth Lottery Argument
    Discussing the fairness of religious beliefs based on where one is born.
    “Is it fair that there’s this birth lottery determining who ends up believing what?”
    @ 43m 50s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Nature of God and Suffering
    Exploring the question of why a loving God allows suffering in the world.
    “God hasn’t remained distant from human suffering, but has himself become part of it.”
    @ 52m 14s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Power of Vulnerability
    Vulnerability fosters deep connections, as revealed through countless interviews.
    “Vulnerability is the doorway to connection.”
    @ 01h 03m 41s
    June 04, 2026
  • The Nature of Hell
    A discussion on the implications of choosing to live without God and the concept of hell.
    “You can choose not to have God and God will honor that choice and that is hell.”
    @ 01h 07m 21s
    June 04, 2026
  • Living Not by Lies
    A call to resist the spread of lies in the age of AI and misinformation.
    “Live not by lies.”
    @ 01h 10m 53s
    June 04, 2026
  • Finding Faith
    Encouragement to seek faith and ask questions openly.
    “Finding the trigger that will help you to take a step forward into faith.”
    @ 01h 22m 30s
    June 04, 2026

Episode Quotes

  • I met Jesus here and he forgave me.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)
  • We are bowing down to something that in the end is idolatrous.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)
  • I trust my wife. It’s evidence-based trust.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)
  • If Jesus rose from the dead, it’s the biggest thing that’s ever happened.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)
  • Vulnerability is the doorway to connection.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)
  • AI is pretty thin still.
    Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)

Key Moments

  • Forgiveness on Death Row01:12
  • AI Ethics14:04
  • Rationality Debate24:05
  • Hiring Process Streamlined41:34
  • Anker's Obsession42:21
  • Debate on Faith44:50
  • Resisting Lies1:10:53
  • Book Recommendations1:25:11

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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