Not Believing vs. Believing Not

There’s a difference between not believing in God and believing there is no God. It sounds like word games, but it matters. Not believing in God is like not believing in unicorns. You’ve heard the claims. You’ve seen no convincing evidence. So you don’t believe. You’re not making a positive claim about reality. You’re just not convinced by the arguments you’ve heard. Believing there is no God is different. That’s a positive claim about what exists....

March 27, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Why Purposelessness Might Be Good News

Most people find the idea that life has no purpose terrifying. I think they have it backwards. If life came with a purpose pre-installed, you’d be stuck with it. Like being born into a job you never applied for and can never quit. Think about it. What if the cosmic purpose of human life was to suffer beautifully? Or to maximize the number of paperclips in the universe? Or to worship a deity you found morally repugnant?...

March 26, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Pleasure vs. Happiness: What's the Difference? (And Why Most People Confuse Them)

I used to think pleasure and happiness were the same thing. More pleasure equals more happiness. Simple math. Then I noticed something odd. Some of my most pleasurable experiences left me feeling empty afterward. A great meal, an exciting night out, even good sex — the pleasure was real, but it didn’t stick around. Sometimes I felt worse the next day. Meanwhile, some of my happiest periods involved very little intense pleasure....

March 26, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Do You Actually Choose? The Science Behind Free Will

You decide to reach for your coffee cup. Simple choice, right? But here’s what’s strange. Scientists can predict that choice before you’re aware of making it. They hook electrodes to your brain and watch the electrical activity. A few hundred milliseconds before you “decide” to reach, your brain shows a spike of activity. The decision happens first. Your awareness of deciding comes second. This isn’t just true for coffee cups. It works for bigger choices too....

March 25, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

Why Philosophers Won't Shut Up About Trolleys

People roll their eyes at the trolley problem. Five people tied to tracks, runaway trolley, you can pull a lever to divert it but then it kills one person instead. Who designs these scenarios? But here’s the thing: you already solved trolley problems today. You drove past someone walking in the rain instead of stopping. You bought coffee instead of donating that money. You chose to read this instead of calling a friend who’s been lonely....

March 25, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

What Atheists Get Wrong When Arguing With Believers

Most atheists argue like they’re correcting a math error. They point out logical inconsistencies. They cite scientific evidence. They explain why the cosmological argument doesn’t work. All true. All beside the point. Religious belief isn’t usually an intellectual conclusion. It’s an emotional and social response to being human in a confusing world. People believe because faith provides comfort, community, and meaning. Because it helps them face death and loss. Because their grandmother believed and she was the wisest person they knew....

March 24, 2026 · 1 min · The Pleasure Principle

Russell's Teapot and Who Has to Prove What

Bertrand Russell had a thought experiment. He asked us to imagine he claimed there was a teapot orbiting the sun, somewhere between Earth and Mars. Too small for telescopes to detect. But definitely there. If Russell made this claim, who would need to prove what? Would you need to prove the teapot doesn’t exist? Or would Russell need to prove it does? Obviously, Russell would need to provide evidence. The burden of proof falls on whoever makes the positive claim....

March 24, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

The Simplest Argument Against God

Here’s the simplest argument against God’s existence: there’s no good evidence for it. That’s it. No elaborate reasoning about evil or suffering. No logical puzzles about omnipotence. Just the basic question: where’s the evidence? People believe in God for lots of reasons. They feel something in church. They see design in nature. They need comfort. But feelings aren’t evidence. Patterns aren’t proof of a designer. Need doesn’t make something true....

March 24, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

The Limits of Mattering

Science can tell you that sugar activates reward centers in your brain. It can’t tell you whether eating the cookie matters. Philosophy can’t either. Religion makes claims, but they’re not verifiable. Your parents had opinions, but they were just making it up as they went along, same as everyone else. This bothers people. They want an authority. Something to point to and say “See? This is what matters. This is how to live....

March 24, 2026 · 2 min · The Pleasure Principle

The Unbridgeable Gap: Why Facts Don't Come with Built-In Instructions

I was reading a debate about animal rights the other day when I noticed something strange. The argument went like this: factory farming causes tremendous suffering to animals. Animals are sentient beings capable of pain. Therefore, we shouldn’t eat factory-farmed meat. It sounds reasonable enough. But there’s a peculiar little jump happening in that final step — one that a grumpy Scottish philosopher named David Hume spotted nearly 300 years ago....

March 24, 2026 · 5 min · The Pleasure Principle