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Transcript of Bret Weinstein on The Tucker Carlson Show

Read the full transcript of author Bret Weinstein’s interview on The Tucker Carlson Show titled “Tucker and Bret Weinstein Debate Evolution, God’s Existence, Israel, and Will AI Gain Consciousness?”, premiered May 7, 2025.

Listen to the audio version here:

On Evolution and God’s Existence

TUCKER CARLSON: First of all, thank you. It’s great to see you.

BRET WEINSTEIN: Great to see you, Tucker.

TUCKER CARLSON: And I hate to start a conversation about me or our relationship or whatever, but I just. I’ve been wanting to talk to you for the last year. I went on Joe Rogan’s show about a year ago and I stated that I don’t believe in Darwinism, and basically, I think God created people. I don’t think it was much a matter of belief. And you texted me and said, I’m an actual evolutionary biologist. We need to have this conversation. We haven’t. So I will just restate my one sentence position, which is, I think. I don’t know about the timeline or the means. I’m not interested. But I think that people are a creation of God, not an accident of biology. That’s my position.

BRET WEINSTEIN: Got it. Yeah. I’m hoping that the text I sent you was not as.

TUCKER CARLSON: No, it was good. Are you kidding?

BRET WEINSTEIN: But in any case, no, I did want to have this conversation with you. And let’s just say, because evolution is my professional realm, I’m sure I could cite you chapter and verse.

TUCKER CARLSON: Well, you definitely could, but it’s pointless.

BRET WEINSTEIN: First of all, it doesn’t. That doesn’t make me right. You know, the fact is, yes, I know a lot of factual material, but there are some deeper issues here, and I thought it would be useful if you and I just explored them because I think you’re standing in for a lot of people who have begun to have very profound questions about the story that they’ve been told about evolution and what its relationship is to biology and, most importantly, to people.

TUCKER CARLSON: Yes.

BRET WEINSTEIN: So I just want to confess a few of my positions so that your audience knows where I’m coming from.

TUCKER CARLSON: Okay.

BRET WEINSTEIN: I do not believe that there is a creator in the literal sense. I am in no way hostile to the idea. But I’ve come to the conclusion that there probably isn’t such a creator, because all of the things that we have been able to figure out about the world, things that we know are true because they carry a great deal of predictive power, have come to us through the principle of parsimony. And I will clean up the principle of parsimony a little bit, because the way it was originally formulated is clumsy. But if we had access to all the information, then the simplest explanation for each pattern that we observe would be the correct one.

TUCKER CARLSON: Right?

BRET WEINSTEIN: Simplicity is our guide to what’s true. And for me, the problem with the hypothesis that there is a creator is that it answers one very difficult question. Problem. Where did the universe come from? At an expense that is vastly greater in terms of the assumptions. Right. If the universe came from a creator, well, that simplifies one thing. But now we have to explain where that creator came from, and that’s a much harder problem than explaining the universe itself.

So as much as I agree explaining the universe and explaining biology is difficult, it does not solve a problem to imagine that a creator is the answer. And even if there was one, well, maybe that creator was existing in a universe that was created by another creator. But eventually, you’re going to get to a place where you’re going to have to reach for the only explanation we have ever come up with for where radical increases in complexity come from.

So even if we in this universe are the product of a creator’s work, ultimately that creator is going to have to have come from somewhere, and the only explanation that could possibly work is going to be Darwinian. So, again, I’m not saying that I know whether there is or there isn’t, but I am saying that the principle that has allowed us to see all of what we can see, that has allowed us to build all that we have built, that principle is parsimony. And it suggests that this universe is not the product of an intentional.

TUCKER CARLSON: Okay, so the Hebrews explained it this way, and the Christians, too, that.

BRET WEINSTEIN: The.

TUCKER CARLSON: Process is inherent in the description. So the creator is the force that creates and is not himself created. So, in other words, there is. God was not created. God has always been there, period.

BRET WEINSTEIN: Right. And I. I see, you know, you can make the question go away, but I don’t know what that means. We don’t have any example of such a thing. So it.

TUCKER CARLSON: No, we definitely don’t, because everything apart from God is created.

On Evidence and Faith

BRET WEINSTEIN: Well, okay, let me take a different tactic. Yes, say that. Let’s just start from the premise that there is a creator who intended this universe and the biota. So I’m a product of that in this thought experiment. And in such a case, I know that this creator gave me a capacity to reason. I’m pretty good at it. And so I’ve invested in it professionally. And he gave me an incredible set of evidence for Darwinian evolution.

And I’m now forced to grapple with the question of why a creator would have given me a capacity to reason, would have given me the principle of parsimony, the power of which I can see, and a set of evidence that forces me to conclude that the biota at least evolved in a Darwinian way. Now, it could be. Let’s put it this way.