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Bo Bennett on Faith & Doubt

Bo Bennett on Faith & Doubt

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## Episode Summary Can a life without God be fully human — and fully good? Bo Bennett, philosopher, social psychologist, and author of *Positive Humanism*, makes the case that secular flourishing doesn't require dismantling religion, just ignoring the parts that aren't doing any work. The sharpest moment: Bennett's argument that accepting "I don't know" is an act of intellectual discipline, not defeat — and that filling mystery with God is a form of lazy thinking he calls the God of the Gaps fallacy. ## What You'll Learn - Why Bennett separates "angry atheism" (fueled by feeling deceived by parents, churches, and pastors) from Positive Humanism, which simply ignores religious critique rather than waging it - The one thing Bennett concedes religion does better than humanism: structured, weekly social cohesion — the community formed by showing up to the same place with the same people, reliably - Why humanists say people should be good "for goodness sake" — rooted in evolutionary cooperation and biological empathy — rather than fear of cosmic judgment or an afterlife - How Bennett distinguishes high-empathy people (for whom hurting others is "literally against their nature") from the small sociopathic segment where religious belief might actually serve as a behavioral guardrail - Why "I can't fully explain this, and that's okay" is the honest humanist response to mystery — and why reaching for a god-story instead is the same cognitive move humans have made since the first myths were invented ## Notable Quotes > "We are good for goodness sake. That's the only reason for the sense of being good." — Bo Bennett > "The truth is, we don't know — and I'm okay with that." — Bo Bennett ## About the Guest Bo Bennett is a philosopher and social psychologist whose work centers on Positive Humanism, a secular philosophy focused on human flourishing rather than religious critique. He has written extensively on the subject and operates multiple web properties, including his personal hub at bobennett.com and his business site at archieboy.com. In conversation, he draws fluidly on both evolutionary psychology and social science to explain why humans tend toward cooperation and empathy — without any appeal to the supernatural. His tone throughout is notably non-combative: he explicitly leaves religious debate to others while staking out his own affirmative ground. ## Topics Covered - Positive Humanism Defined - Angry Atheism vs. Secular Flourishing - Religion and Social Cohesion - Goodness Without God - Biological Empathy and Morality - God of the Gaps Fallacy - Tolerating Uncertainty
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