http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCofmZlC72g
A theory acclaimed to be the best new and upcoming argument against the existence of God:
IMO, the author is a man using desperate measures to argue against and to try to avoid responsibility, therefore I would suggest it reflects on his hopes of avoiding judgment. (Yet: Rom 1:20) Denying “free will” exists is becoming all the rage as the best weapon to prove God does not exist. To no surprise a belief in “cause and effect” is a hill that they are willing to die on. The proclaimed Atheist must either think himself intellectually justified in avoiding “moral responsibility” or face it and if he is to face it then who is he held accountable to? Himself? God? To the Atheist, if he admits to the highest authority being himself he has become a god in which the very notion of such, any being to be the supreme judge of moral principles deplorable, he finds this idea repulsive. The Atheist has thus found himself stuck between a rock and a hard place concerning moral authority; he has to either deny responsibility exist by denying free will or admit morality exists and it is beyond his ability to achieve moral perfection in his own judgment between good and evil. He would then have to face his sense of sin and folly while trying to be god…DUH (Gen 3:22).
It must be a comfort to the Atheist to know that more and more Christians today are claiming to be in agreement with them, an ally, on this principle and are abandoning the only logical explanation that would assign responsibility for one’s own action…”free will”. I must say that I find the motive to generate an “excuse” much more reasonable for the proclaimed Atheist than the proclaimed Theist being the Theist shouldn’t need an “excuse” if he truly believes in the loving “grace” of God and is “willing” to “freely” accept that gift.
A theory acclaimed to be the best new and upcoming argument against the existence of God:
SAM HARRIS IS THE AUTHOR of the New Work Times bestsellers, The Moral Landscape, The End of Faith and Letter to a Christian Nation. His new book is short (96) pages, to the point, and will change the way we all view free will, as Oliver Sacks wrote: "Brilliant and witty — and never less than incisive — Free Will shows that Sam Harris can say more in 13,000 words than most people do in 100,000." UCSD neuroscientist V.S, Ramachandran notes: "In this elegant and provocative book, Sam Harris demonstrates — with great intellectual ferocity and panache — that free will is an inherently flawed and incoherent concept, even in subjective terms. If he is right, the book will radically change the way we view ourselves as human beings."
The physiologist Benjamin Libet famously demonstrated that activity in the brain's motor regions can be detected some 300 milliseconds before a person feels that he has decided to move. Another lab recently used fMRI data to show that some "conscious" decisions can be predicted up to 10 seconds before they enter awareness (long before the preparatory motor activity detected by Libet). Clearly, findings of this kind are difficult to reconcile with the sense that one is the conscious source of one's actions. The question of free will is no mere curio of philosophy seminars. A belief in free will underwrites both the religious notion of "sin" and our enduring commitment to retributive justice. The Supreme Court has called free will a "universal and persistent" foundation for our system of law. Any scientific developments that threatened our notion of free will would seem to put the ethics of punishing people for their bad behaviour in question.In Free Will Harris debates these ideas and asks whether or not, given what brain science is telling us, we actually have free will?
It must be a comfort to the Atheist to know that more and more Christians today are claiming to be in agreement with them, an ally, on this principle and are abandoning the only logical explanation that would assign responsibility for one’s own action…”free will”. I must say that I find the motive to generate an “excuse” much more reasonable for the proclaimed Atheist than the proclaimed Theist being the Theist shouldn’t need an “excuse” if he truly believes in the loving “grace” of God and is “willing” to “freely” accept that gift.