[0:00]I don't know if you really think that when you die, you can be corporally reassembled and have conversations with authors from previous epochs. It's not necessary that you believe that in Christian theology, and I have to say it sounds like a complete fairy tale to me. The only reason I want to meet Shakespeare, or might even want to, is because I can meet him anytime, because he is immortal in the works he's left behind. If you've read those, meeting the author would almost certainly be a disappointment. But when Socrates was sentenced to death for his philosophical investigations and for blasphemy for challenging the gods of the city, and he accepted his death, he did say, well, if we are lucky, perhaps I'll be able to hold conversation with other great thinkers and philosophers and doubters too. In other words, that the discussion about what is good, what is beautiful, what is noble, what is pure and what is true, could always go on. Why is that important? Why would I like to do that? Because that's the only conversation worth having. And whether it goes on or not after I die, I don't know, but I do know that it's the conversation I want to have while I'm still alive, which means that to me the offer of certainty, the offer of complete security, the offer of an impermeable faith that can't give way, is an offer of something not worth having. I want to live my life taking the risk all the time that I don't know anything like enough yet, that I haven't understood enough, that I can't know enough, that I'm always hungrily operating on the margins of a potentially great harvest of future knowledge and wisdom. I wouldn't have it any other way, and I'd urge you to look at those of you who tell you, those people who tell you at your age that you're dead till you believe as they do. What a terrible thing to be telling to children and that you can only live, and that you can only live by accepting an absolute authority. Don't think of that as a gift, think of it as a think of it as a poison chalice. Push it aside, however tempting it is, take the risk of thinking for yourself, much more happiness, truth, beauty and wisdom will come to you that way. Thank you.

Hitchens' Closing Speech To A Christian Audience That Hit Different
Reason Revolution
2m 9s406 words~3 min read
YouTube auto captions
Transcript source
YouTube auto captions
This transcript was extracted from YouTube's auto-generated caption track. The transcript below is server-rendered so it can be read, searched, cited, and shared without opening the original YouTube player.
Pull quotes
[0:00]I don't know if you really think that when you die, you can be corporally reassembled and have conversations with authors from previous epochs.
[0:00]It's not necessary that you believe that in Christian theology, and I have to say it sounds like a complete fairy tale to me.
[0:00]The only reason I want to meet Shakespeare, or might even want to, is because I can meet him anytime, because he is immortal in the works he's left behind.
[0:00]If you've read those, meeting the author would almost certainly be a disappointment.
Use this transcript
Related transcript hubs
Watch on YouTube
Share
MORE TRANSCRIPTS


