BHTV: Yudkowsky & Adam Frank on "religious experience"

14 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 23 March 2009 01:33AM

BHTV episode with myself and Adam Frank, author of "The Constant Fire", on whether or not religious experience is compatible with the scientific experience, or worth trying to salvage.

Comments (31)

Comment author: CarlShulman 23 March 2009 03:35:14AM 0 points [-]

I hope you email with him about the quantum physics point, and post the result of the conversation.

Comment author: MichaelGR 23 March 2009 03:41:16AM *  3 points [-]

Every time Eliezer gets very, very still while someone else is speaking on Bloggingheads, I think:

"Ah-ha! I knew it, he's a robot!"

or

"Is that part of the art? Be absolutely motionless so that more blood can be redirected from various muscles to the brain?"

or

"Great, Eliezer was disconnected and I'm seeing a frozen video frame."

Comment author: badger 23 March 2009 03:55:18AM 0 points [-]

I really enjoy listening to these Bloggingheads episodes, but Eliezer can be unnerving to watch because of this trait.

Comment author: MichaelBishop 23 March 2009 04:32:20PM 2 points [-]

I hate to do it, but I'll make another superficial suggestion because it may affect people's impression of you. Don't button the top button of your shirt unless you're wearing a tie. Shirts with somewhat larger collars are probably better.

It would be better if your camera was zoomed out a little.

Comment author: ciphergoth 23 March 2009 05:52:52PM 0 points [-]

I take it that a bookshelves backdrop, politician style, would be overdoing it? :-)

Comment author: dclayh 25 March 2009 02:39:05AM 5 points [-]

Myself, I was thinking it's a good thing Eliezer restricted himself to text interaction during his "AI in the box" games; otherwise, anyone would have let him out after enduring five minutes of his motionless staring.

Comment author: timtyler 23 March 2009 07:16:07PM 3 points [-]

Throwing out religion would be like throwing out folk medicine - you lose all the traditional knowledge about which plants are good for what. In both cases, it's best to squeeze out the cultural juices before consigning to the dustbin of history.

Comment author: Vladimir_Nesov 23 March 2009 08:15:49PM 5 points [-]

But practicing religion is as disastrous as practicing folk medicine. You may use both as raw material, as better-than-noise source of hypotheses, but not as out-of-the-box applicable techniques.

Comment author: timtyler 23 March 2009 09:02:38PM 3 points [-]

According to most of the studies I have seen, religious people are systematically more healthy than unbelievers. Also, atheists are one of the most distrusted American minority groups, according to a recent survey. "Disastrous" seems like a bit of a curious synopsis in the light of such results.

Comment author: SoullessAutomaton 24 March 2009 11:12:30AM 2 points [-]

Believing religion is disastrously antithetical to epistemic rationality. Practicing religion is potentially quite useful from an instrumental rationality standpoint.

Comment author: timtyler 24 March 2009 09:10:41PM 3 points [-]

Presumably, epistemic rationality only suffers if you believe untrue things.

The whole idea that religion is concerned with belief is quite a western one. Look at some of the eastern religions, and they are more concerned with what you do and how you live - and do not necessarily place an emphasis on faith.

Comment author: JulianMorrison 23 March 2009 09:29:26PM *  0 points [-]

Can you justify that tradition ought to contain knowledge? Folk medicine has a very crude optimizing drift - do it wrong and the patient dies, and some cures can be obvious. I don't see even that in religion. For what reason ought it to produce better results than noise?

Comment author: timtyler 23 March 2009 10:51:30PM 5 points [-]

You are doubing there are things of value in religions? Many religions contain things which have proved to be valuable in modern times. Consider Hinduism and Hatha Yoga, for example. Civilisation didn't get Hatha Yoga because science rediscovered it - it got it from the Hindu religious tradition.

Comment author: ciphergoth 24 March 2009 07:52:39AM 4 points [-]

Sure, so let's dump the religion and keep the yoga.

Comment author: B_Frank 24 March 2009 01:10:23AM 3 points [-]

I'm not sure who you're addressing this to.

It appeared to me that "squeezing out the cultural juices" was precisely what Eliezer was doing when he talked about the Old Testament, the kind of society it originated in, the way people have always tried to irrationally defend religious beliefs, and the process by which science has repeatedly devastated those defenses.

Freeing ourselves from beliefs doesn't mean ridding the world of all of the related literature and artifacts. I've never heard anybody advocate the complete elimination of all knowledge that was ever believed in religiously (any more than not practicing folk medicine means eradicating those species of plants, along with whatever information there may be about how many people lived/died because/despite of their application).

And what's wrong with being consigned to history? That's where scientific knowledge tends to end up, after all.

Comment author: Annoyance 24 March 2009 05:22:56PM 2 points [-]

Folk medicine is demonstrably useful, even if it's chock full of superstition and nonsense.

What benefits actually derive from religion that make it not worth throwing out before it's picked over?

Comment author: timtyler 24 March 2009 09:05:11PM 2 points [-]

Check Buddhism, Taoism and Hinduism. Numerous valuable things in there - including yoga, meditation, and lots of Taoist health practices.

Comment author: ciphergoth 24 March 2009 09:24:36AM *  4 points [-]
  • Joseph Campbell (1904 – 1987), American mythologist, writer, and lecturer best known for his work in the fields of comparative mythology and comparative religion.
  • John W Campbell (1910 – 1971), editor of Astounding Science Fiction (later called Analog Science Fiction and Fact), generally credited with shaping the so-called Golden Age of Science Fiction.
Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 24 March 2009 09:47:44AM 1 point [-]

Well that explains a lot.

Comment author: ciphergoth 24 March 2009 09:48:47AM 2 points [-]

Random thoughts:

I couldn't do that debate, I would have exploded with frustration and indignation much earlier, and sat there saying "But what on Earth do you mean by that ? You're saying all these things and they don't mean anything!"

The thinker namedropping alone would be enough to drive me crazy.

I'm sure that it seems to Frank that he won that debate.

The map/territory misunderstanding is absolutely central to all the errors he makes.

Comment deleted 24 March 2009 01:07:35PM *  [-]
Comment author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 25 March 2009 05:03:11AM -1 points [-]

Amplify?

Comment deleted 26 March 2009 12:20:42AM *  [-]
Comment author: pwno 26 March 2009 12:53:36AM *  3 points [-]

In many cases, I suspect that people adopt false beliefs and the ensuing dark-side for short term emotional gain, but in the long term the instrumental loss outweighs this.

Not only this.

If people never adopt the map that corresponds the most to its territory, they'll never have an accurate cost-benefit analysis of adopting false beliefs.

Maybe, in some cases, false beliefs make you better off. The problem is you'll never know that, unless you first adopt reason.

Comment author: AndrewH 26 March 2009 09:03:49AM 1 point [-]

In many cases, I suspect that people adopt false beliefs and the ensuing dark-side for short term emotional gain, but in the long term the instrumental loss outweighs this.

That may be one way of adopting false beliefs the first set of false beliefs. Once the base has been laid (perhaps containing many flaws to hide the falseness), then in evaluating a new belief, it doesn't need to have short term emotional gain to be accepted, as long as it fits in with the current network of beliefs.

When I think of this, I think of missionaries, promising that having faith in God with help them through the bad times. Then after they accept that, move onto the usual discussion of Hell and if only you do what they say, you'll be fine.

Comment author: timtyler 01 April 2009 08:35:51PM 2 points [-]
Comment author: David_Gerard 09 May 2011 02:32:40PM 1 point [-]

Now only on the Internet Archive.

Comment author: lockeandkeynes 06 July 2010 07:09:53AM 0 points [-]

Eliezer i so much younger than I expected!

Comment author: Tsujigiri 18 December 2011 12:25:46PM *  0 points [-]

It seems to me that Adam Frank doesn't do himself any favors in this debate by linking "spiritual endeavor" to religion. While one can argue that "spiritual endeavor" is the basis on which most religions are founded, if one wishes to debate the subject with an atheist it is probably better to not bring up religion at all.

You're more likely to have a fruitful conversation if you discuss "understanding the true nature of subjective reality" rather than "spiritual endeavor", "the overview effect" rather than "religious experiences", and neurological research rather than the Bible.

But even then it is probably pointless. The Buddha says that a student only obtains proof of the validity of his teachings when he becomes a Sotāpanna. Before that, the Buddha's teachings must be taken on blind faith -- not something any self-respecting skeptic is going to do.

Comment author: OnTheOtherHandle 02 September 2012 11:36:24PM 1 point [-]

This is a very old post, but I have to say I finally get what Douglas Adams was talking about in the Hitchhikers' Guide. I laughed like everyone else when people discovered the answer to the fundamental Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything without actually knowing the question - but I never spent an hour listening to someone who took it completely seriously. Frank seems to be asking a question without asking a question. Does he understand that "the question of Being" is in fact a noun phrase, not a question? It is unanswerable in the same way "the question of Bunny Rabbits" is unanswerable. What about Bunny Rabbits? Where's the verb, Mr. Frank? If you found the answer to your question, you would not even be able to recognize it as such.