Decoding the Gurus - Jordan Peterson: The Alchemical Lemon explains the Crystalline Structure of Logos
Episode Date: October 9, 2020Chris and Matt finally discuss the big kahuna Jordan Peterson by taking a deep dive into his extended 2017 interview on the Transliminal YouTube channel titled 'Ideology, Logos & Belief'.They lear...n about the alchemical nature of lemons, whether a professional footballer is playing a game or living life, and Jordan Peterson's crystal clear views on the nature of Jesus & his resurrection.Some people will say this episode is too cynical, but it's like... 'No. It isn't, man!' And furthermore, it's not at all obvious that we actually know... on a fundamental level... what cynicism is! It's mysterious and there is a lot we do not know.LinksJordan Peterson's 2017 interview on TransliminalA Transcript of the InterviewA Good (but very critical) article on JBP by Nathan Robinson at Current AffairsAn article by JBP's old mentor suggesting his long term goal was to become a religious guru
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome again to Decoding the Gurus.
It is the podcast where two academics, that is me, Matt Brown, and Christopher Kavanagh,
listen to content from the greatest minds
the online world has to offer.
I'm a psychologist and we specialize
in understanding the mysteries of the human brain.
Chris is an anthropologist
and I'm not quite sure what anthropologists do,
but I think they pursue primates
through jungles or something.
And we are going to do what we usually do which is get to the bottom
of the interesting stuff that comes across our feed in this interconnected online world culture
are you ready to go chris i am i'm just back from my latest expedition in the world famous
rainforests of japan trekking after the uh noted gorilla populations that exist here so i'm back
i'm back from that and i'm ready to ready to go yeah so i think your research method is you
basically interfere with them and bother them as much as possible until they react and do something
interesting that's kind of how yeah it's anthropology because i go and live with them
for several years i'm basically at one with the
japanese gorilla population they've accepted me that's i i don't want to get into it man because
it's it's kind of it's a spiritual experience for me as much as a research topic okay so we are at
episode three which i think is a pretty important milestone for us hey chris that's right the the death knell for many fledgling podcasts the the bermuda triangle of episode three
yeah yeah well we are flying through it with sailing colors
the reason people listen that's my is for kind of, you know, nice analogy and beautiful turn of phrase, I think.
Yeah, you can tell I've studied for years in higher education.
So the first thing we have to do today is issue a correction.
Oh, yes.
I know this is going to disappoint many of our listeners,
but we did get something not quite right in that last episode on James Lindsay.
That's right.
And we were hoisted by our own petard because after lambasting James
for his failure to research Jurassic Park canon in suitable depth,
we spent a significant amount of time discussing monkey
science fiction virus outbreak movies and
speculating on what was being referenced.
And we managed to cover a large amount of those movies, but
the one that we didn't mention was Outbreak, which is
the movie featuring Dustin Hoffman.
So look at that.
What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
We deserve that feedback.
Yeah, we did.
Okay, take this.
This is our mea culpa.
We humbly apologize and retract that.
No, I'm going to just say, Matt,
that the Jurassic Park one is still worse
because it's a much more important movie than Outwake.
I think the broader point still stands, Chris.
It does.
It persists unrelented.
And so the other feedback that we got was we had to in detail kind of tweet
threads breaking down the episode and giving some critical feedback um by skeptic review which is
gretchen and uh psych lockwood which is patrick lockwood, both people we follow on Twitter and interact with.
And they had various feedback,
and it was very nice to see, I would say.
But one of the criticisms they raised,
which it would be interesting to hear,
was that basically our view that James Lindsay is overreacting
to the critical theory and social justice threat,
that our view that it isn't causing dramatic societal changes
or that really puts us in the academics with our head in the sand uh camp
the the kind of people who historically when when the you know nazis were getting in power were
saying oh don't worry about it look at that you know they're just uh they're just a radical fringe
that nobody's paying attention to so So what do you think, Matt?
Do you think that's a fair criticism or would you like to defend your take?
Look, I think it is a fair criticism.
I'm trying to figure out whether I agree or not.
It's really hard to say because I think this is actually a bigger point,
It's really hard to say because I think this is actually a bigger point,
which is it's really hard to tell the relative magnitude or scale of a particular problem, isn't it?
Because, you know, the news and the Twitter feeds
and everything like that delivers this microcosm
and puts things under a microscope,
and it could well be symptomatic of a broader thing
or it could just be symptomatic of a broader thing or it could just
be a flash in the pan and you know that's that's true on on whichever um side of politics you kind
of lie um the um you know i can think of many um sort of um left-wing kind of scares or paranoias, I suppose,
which it's kind of, is it just a kind of a dramatic news event
or is it symptomatic of something much, much bigger?
So I honestly don't know.
I haven't figured that one out.
Have you?
Yeah, I've got it nailed down.
Yeah, I've got to kneel down.
I similarly, you know, I think that where I fall on this is that I'm not in the camp that says this is only a thing like the kind of critical justice or woke stuff is only
a thing that applies on like specific campuses and has no impact on the real world. Like, I don't think that extreme is true because there are cultural impacts and there are,
you know, even just the mere rhetoric is clearly relevant in modern politics.
But on the other hand, the part that I don't buy into is the kind of presentation by James and others that we are on the cusp of a woke totalitarian regime.
Because the examples that they use are, you know, that we have in the past have seen left wing totalitarian regimes, which we have.
But by and large, those have been communist regimes not woke regimes and the you know this
kind of image of uh i i think that genuinely people are imagining you know re-education camps
where you and i and and others will be like lined up and be made to recite d'angelo until or like or tattoo anti-racist to our forehead and like that seems to me you know
a kind of far-fetched thing which might be a result of having read too many uh young adult
fiction novels about dystopian futures but that's that's a cynical sarcasm uh for accordion for this
episode um going up so yeah yeah yeah well
you know i i agree with that i mean i think i said last um last week that um you know one thing about
the the the the more woke culture is um it's just how nicely it synchronizes with corporate
culture you know it's um you know i don't it's too big a topic to get into,
but it doesn't strike me as revolutionary.
Rather, it seems like very much a middle-class cultural kind of thing,
which is very comfortable with pretty much maintaining.
This is the sort of socialistic side of me coming out,
but it is very comfortable with maintaining the the class system chris you
are the revolutionary that we should be worried about this is the this is the third episode twist
mark come to the societal revolutionary well i am unironically in favor of um
fully automated luxury gay communism.
I'm putting my flag in the sand.
Oh, gosh.
Well, we'll have to have an intervention at some point after this episode,
but I'll accept that. And as I've invoked this episode,
Matt, maybe it would be interesting to mention
who we're dealing with this week and what our new topic is.
Yes, I'm very glad to do that. Okay, so today, we are going to be talking about the big one,
the big kahuna, the man, Jordan B. Peterson. It was just a matter of time before we got into JPP.
I think we wanted to save
him until we had a little bit of practice until we were warmed up properly um so it's kind of
exciting it's a big it's like a landmark moment it's a milestone I think in many ways yeah I I
think he's probably the least controversial person that we've dealt with to describe as a guru
yeah absolutely yeah he's yeah he set out to be a guru let's face it and you know
maybe he is we'll find out won't we so um do you want to give a very brief summary of jbp for the
two or three people who listen who don't know everything about him yes yes i i want nothing
more so um jordan b peterson is a clinical psychologist, maybe personality psychologist as well, who until recently was based at Toronto University and basically had a career publishing away as a clinical psychologist with fairly decent, I think, in fact, very decent citations and maybe sort of influential in his field.
He came to fame to the public and to myself.
More recently, when he was involved with publicly opposing the introduction of a law in Canada
that he presented as involving compelled speech about respecting people's pronouns.
And this obviously mainly associated with trans rights or trans people requesting different
pronouns.
And he didn't actually object or he clarified at various occasions that he didn't object
to using an individual's preferred pronouns interpersonally or in his classes. But he did object to the government having a law which he interpreted as mandating that
you respect someone's pronouns or face legal consequences.
And from that, he was recorded debating some students at the campus and that went viral.
And prior to that event, he had been recording his lectures and putting them online.
So had a, I think a not huge YouTube following, but in the wake of his growth with this viral
video, people became aware of his online lectures and those became popular. And then he gave some
talks and eventually published a self-help book called 12 Rules
for Life.
And his fame continued to grow until he became a regular fixture on social and political
topics, issuing his opinion and many think pieces written about him and his potential
connection to the alt-right or extreme right-wing communities online and his
objection to that connection being presented. So yeah, he became a controversial figure and
issued a lot of content online in the form of lectures and interview series.
It's interesting, isn't it? How so many of these figures kind of make their
path towards fame through one of these controversies that build up a storm, you know,
whether it's Brett Weinstein or J.B.P. or even Donald Trump. It's by saying controversial things
sort of sparking a bit of the sort of culture war backlash that really, in many ways, propels them to
popularity, hey?
Yeah.
And actually, I've heard Brett Weinstein discuss in an interview that admission to the intellectual
dark web, one characteristic or requirement might be to have undergone a public test of your commitment to free speech.
So in essence, an initiation ritual where your ideals are tested in public and you stand
up and reveal your true character.
And as a cognitive anthropologist who, alongside chasing apes through the jungles specializes in ritual psychology and
and i've done some research on initiation rituals it it definitely seems to fit the bill to me that
there is this group identification or or social bonding with people perceived to have undergone a public ordeal that they then link
to their commitment to free speech.
So it becomes like attached to a secret value and an identity, be it the intellectual dark
web or some other group.
So it's very interesting for me from that perspective of it being a kind of initiation
ritual that someone needs to undergo
yeah yeah very so so today we're going to look at a clip an interview um we've posted it on
twitter already so if you haven't watched it by now uh that's that's your problem you really should have that's always
the audience
okay so
this is an interview
with
about religion Chris
I think yeah so
content that we're looking at today
is an interview he did
on a YouTube channel called Transliminal, where it's actually another cognitive anthropologist from my neck of the woods.
So he's probably also just back from his field trips with primates interviewing Jordan Peterson in an extended two and a half hour interview, mainly about his views relating to philosophy and religion and this kind of topics,
not so much the culture war stuff, though that comes up at the end. And we kind of canvassed
people online to ask for content to look at. And this was recommended by a couple of people
as one of his more substantial and better pieces. So lots of his material is, you know,
the well-known stuff is confrontational interviews
or his lecture series.
But this is a kind of standalone episode.
And I think it's actually a very good one
for illustrating lots of the broader themes
that are in his work or the way he presents himself
so it's a good chunk of material for us to look at in terms of uh yeah as a guru yeah yeah and
very challenging too i mean we'll get into this but um yeah it's it's it is two hours long although
we can't criticize him for length because we've been known to create long content um but it is it is
challenging for me to understand precisely what he's arguing for and what he what he actually
means although you know and so i find it very interesting like if you look through the youtube
comments or you look at um you know i i'm mutuals with many people who like and admire jordan peterson and they they
haven't really cited this issue of finding him difficult to understand they they seem like they
often say he's insightful and stimulating and all that stuff so i don't know i i do get even from
people that like him they tend to acknowledge that he has a waffly way of talking they they just
they appreciate that about him so like i i definitely have heard even from people that
are fans that they find him at times impenetrable but that but that feels like a feature yeah yeah
i think that's taken as evidence of what a high level he's operating on.
So it does have that kind of guru-esque quality.
But we...
Oh, yeah, I should also have mentioned that, like, this is...
So there's two interviews on Transliminal Media, and this is the second one from 2017.
So this is kind of at the peak of Peterson's rise.
And the interviewer, Jordan Levine, the cognitive anthropologist guy, it's actually quite interesting because he's very good in his questions at rephrasing things very coherently and concretely and asking quite specific questions.
But he does so in a, you know,
friendly way. So it's, it's an interesting interview in that respect, just like from,
you know, good interview technique. Yeah. Although Jordan is equally good
at refusing to be pinned down. Yeah. Yeah. That's the contrast. That's what makes it like such an
interesting contrast because there's these very specific questions, and then the answer is never specific.
Or if it is, it comes after like 10 minutes of tangential discussion.
So the nominal topic is ideology, logos, and belief.
Yeah.
I had to Google, I should say also also i had to google a lot of terms
that were used in this it probably would make a lot more sense for a theologian or theology
scholar i suppose for whom this stuff might feel more natural do you you're an anthropologist so
when you're not bothering primates and you even study religion so like So do you think this made more sense to you than to me?
Well, that's impossible for me to answer.
But possibly so, because my background is,
like my personal background is that I was raised Catholic
in a Catholic family in Ireland.
And so the Christian components of it are not alien.
And then I also had an interest in mysticism and like my kind of thing up to my early 20s
and still do like find that stuff kind of interesting.
So I know a bit about Christian mysticism and the Sufism and various other traditions.
So that gave me, you know, like a foundation.
But this is not to say that there weren't times where I was like, what the hell are we talking about?
It's just that I think that foundation helped.
Yeah, yeah.
Good, good.
So, yeah, let's get into the clips shall we and we'll take that as a bit of
a like it is a difficult ball of string to unravel because just because jbp is who he is so i i tried
to make some kind of um structure or plan to cover this stuff and kind of failed but i think i think
if we work through some of the clips then we can take those as jumping off points to make some comments.
Yeah.
And so one of the issues is that in trying to extract clips from this, it's very hard to cut out a segment because he keeps linking things in or wandering down tangents to his tangents.
That would require splicing things together. so some of these clips might be long but um i'm just sharing with my you my
frustration where i was like okay i'll take a clip of this wait stop talking stop like going on about
you know side tangents like just can you can you say that again concisely um but that that rarely happens so yeah yeah look i i
think a couple of longer clips is really helpful for listeners because in terms of to illustrate
how he talks and and how he argues because it's all kind of the same like it's the same style
throughout so i think a couple of um a couple of longer clips we can afford the time
which will be really helpful to illustrate how it actually works yeah it's good no one complains
about the length of podcasts um so they they love it they love it they fall asleep to it
um so with all that preamble let me play the first clip which probably will illustrate some of these long, you know, winding connections.
So, here we go.
And I've been thinking about why that was, because many people have decried political correctness.
But they did it in generic ways, you know.
And so, here's a strange sequence of thoughts.
sequence of thoughts
so there's this idea in Christianity that the word which is the the
Capacity that's associated with consciousness. I would say is that is the mechanism by which
Chaotic potential is transformed into habitable order and also the mechanism by which order that has become too rigid is
dissolved and reconstituted right that's the basic element of the hero myth and and the the word the logos is a universally distributed eternal
phenomena but in the Christian context it's also been given a localization so
it's as if this universal principle well that's the word made flesh it's as if this universal principle, while that's the word made flesh, it's as if the universal principle was also instantiated in the local.
And there's a deep idea there, which is that the universal lacks something.
And what it lacks is specificity.
So in order to make the universal even more universal, you make it specific.
So how was that?
Yeah, that's the kind of thing i struggle with chris um okay so yeah i i look i think before even breaking down that you know what he's actually
trying to say i would just say that's characteristic of his way of speaking and presenting ideas that, you know, one thought leads to the next.
And before you know it, he's moved from why he remained popular when there's many people
decrying political correctness to discussing Logos and the instantiation of logos in a like embodied christ figure and the uniqueness of christianity
it does sort of follow a logical stream but it's it really is connecting a lot of desperate
things together into like a thought stream yeah yeah it's um yeah so the reason i uh have trouble
with it is that it is as as you say, very associative.
Yeah, a whole bunch of ideas linked together in this network of associations for one to kind of get the feeling of what is meant.
So, yeah, that's, I mean, you know, that's not rigorous, but I guess there's, I guess it's legitimate in that some, you know, it's almost like poetry.
I'm not sure how to describe it.
Yeah, I think, you know, it is kind of theological reflection, a lot of it.
And there's nothing inherently wrong with that, but it's kind of surprising that he
became so popular on the basis of this, because I can imagine some people saying,
you know, in a different era, I got a 15 cassette
thing on how to pray properly by some Christian theologian. That not being regarded as a cool,
edgy thing, but listening to Jordan Peterson discuss the Bible across like a 15 series
online lecture is regarded as something that that is not only interesting
and worthwhile but it's kind of like an edgy yeah thing to do yeah kind of new and it's just
surprising yeah yeah it is it is because i mean like i recognize and if i had to do a bit of
research but i recognize some of the substance behind this stuff. For instance, this instantiation of the universal in the
specific, I figured out there's an element in Christian theology. It's one of their ways of
thinking about the divinity of Christ and so on. He's both a specific human being, but also
representing these universal things and God and all that. So it's not like he's just making this stuff up, but that's a topic
that wouldn't seem to be either controversial or attractive to most modern people.
Yeah. And I think it's the linking of these grand narratives and large philosophical
topics to very specific culture war issues, right? That might be the
unique component. So there's a clip here of him talking about his origin story, where he emerged
from his opposition to this Bill C-16 in Canada. And I think this gives a good example of like how he links issues into broader meta
narratives. I believe that that's an unwarranted intrusion of a certain kind of ideology. It's
postmodern ideology fundamentally with its roots in a kind of a surround of Marxist identity
politics. And I think that it was completely inappropriate for that to be transformed
into legislation. So he argues that his opposition to that bill is a very incidental fact to his
bigger philosophical opposition to postmodernism and neo-Marxists who are destroying everything.
And he actually makes this point very clearly when he argues that he even sees the transgender
people, which were in some sense seen as the target for that bill, because it was about
using appropriate pronouns for people, that his opposition to the
bill is actually in defense of them from these philosophies that they are being sacrificed to.
And again, Matt, I'll play a clip and then see what you think about that.
I do not believe that legislation like Bill C-16 is in the least in the interest of people who,
these people who are marginalized. Quite the contrary. I believe they're the,
they're sacrificial victims to the onslaught of a continuing postmodern neo-Marxist ideology.
Yes. So he does characterize that this specific issue, which obviously was was became a big thing and played a big role in him developing
um a much larger profile he characterizes it as an instantiation this is his theme of you know
instantiating things in the specific uh of what he sees is this sort of great battle between truth and order and the word and habitable orders versus, you
know, chaotic potentials and so on.
I can hear from the tone of your voice, Matt, that you were really into this.
Yeah, yeah.
So we'll talk about this later.
But what comes through is his worldview view which it's it's amazingly
anti-materialist in in that he really believes very strongly in in that there's underlie there
is a there is a more true reality like a kind of spiritual he calls it theological but he uses his
own special definition of theological to mean I'm not sure what.
But, you know, he sees this hidden reality underneath the material
and he sees that the real stuff is happening there
and stuff like politics or, you know, economics
or even society and so on is just kind of the ephemera at the top.
So it is interesting.
He's a spiritualist,ist you know so he's very
much um it's a very different worldview from yours or mine yeah this this sort of surprised me the
way i came across jordan peterson was i i listened to him on the sam harris show and was like i was
aware you know of him the protests and the controversy surrounding him.
Then I heard him interviewed by Sam Harris and they had like a two hour endless debate about
like truth. Right. And that Peterson was arguing for what many would might consider the kind of
postmodern view that, you know, truth is not about something corresponding to fact or reality. It's more about meaning.
And it's a long episode.
You can go listen to it if you want.
No, I won't.
Yeah, but after that, I then didn't pay that much attention to his content, just in clips
and the interviews and whatnot with him.
And then I got The Twelve Rules for Life
long after it had exited the cultural moment
and like people weren't paying attention.
So I read it a year or two after that.
And I was kind of amazed at how much theological,
Christian focused content there was in it.
There was psychology, there was like self-help stuff
and it was some,
some culture war thing, but like the much more dominating theme for me was like religious themes,
connecting things to the Bible. And it, it surprised me that people didn't focus more
on this aspect of him, at least that I saw. Yeah. Yeah. So it is interesting that both his,
like, that's not the, that's not the that's not the
feature that is emphasized by either his fans or his detractors because his fans would sort of
characterize him as a as a rigorous facts don't care about your feelings kind of guy and his
detractors characterize some of his fans some of his fans because i just think i think he has a wing that like him because of this like the the side
that lean towards spirituality and maybe specifically christian spirituality and and
if they've spent a lot of time with his material it's impossible that they've not noticed this
so maybe the the people that you're talking about i I'm not sure, but there might be, you know, different wings of his fandom.
Yeah.
Well, he is there in the IDW and so on, you know,
so he's kind of got that sort of associations.
But, like, I do agree with you, though,
that I think one way to understand what JVP is about is part of,
like, a much bigger long-term trend, which is for religiosity, I guess, in the face of science
kind of eating away at it and undercutting it
over the last hundred years or more,
has progressively become more and more abstract
and more philosophical and spiritual
in a very vague, abstract kind of way.
So it's much, unless you're an evangelical Christian in the American Midwest, then, you know, if you are religious, you probably think about your religion much less in terms of concrete things about, you know, a bearded guy in the sky and about like the sort
of literal truth of things that happen in the Bible,
but much more in terms of how JVP describes it,
which is like psychologising it and making it more ineffable
and, you know, very vague but also much more congruent with a scientific view of the world, because
it's now operating in a completely different domain.
Am I making any kind of sense, Chris?
Yeah, yeah.
No, I'm just thinking that my image of popular religion, though, is that what you're describing does account for a lot of modern religious sentiment,
particularly amongst people who are not connected to traditional religious communities or arrived at religion later in life.
I guess my pause is that I think there's a substantial portion, especially in America,
in North America, of religious people for whom their beliefs are fairly literal and biblically based or fundamentalist based, at least, that there is a heaven.
There are angels interacting in the world and there's a literal devil and a heaven, there are angels interacting in the world, and there's a literal
devil and a hell, like not abstract philosophical versions of those, much more physical reality
stuff. And that's where lots of the opposition for abortion and things come from, that community,
opposition for abortion and and things come from that community or that wing of the religious community oh look oh look they absolutely certainly still exist and and are a strong force i guess my
point is is that characters like jbp appeal to both kinds like as you know as we see in this
interview he has it both ways he gets gets asked directly about the literal truth of
some Christian things. And yeah, he has it both ways in which it's kind of congruent with whichever
flavor of religion you prefer. Yeah, I have a clip that speaks nicely to this and also his issue
with definitions. So let's start with this one. Well, I would say the same problems with
the question formulation obtained. What do you mean by divine? And also, what do you mean by
Christ? These are very, very difficult questions. So that was in response to your question,
asking him, you know, does he literally believe in the divinity of christ for example and the
interviewer actually introduced that the evangelical people might like jordan peterson
stuff but be curious does he literally believe it and so his answer is you know well first it
it depends how you define divine and how you define Christ. And this is a common thing is retreating to,
it's all about definitions.
And the thing that strikes me about that is like,
on the one hand, okay, you want to get your definitions clear
for what you're talking about,
especially if it's a complex topic.
But redefining well-known terms constantly and defining them in a vague way is supposed to be something that critical theorists and postmodern people do.
And it's supposed to be bad, right?
They redefine common words in the way that suits their purpose, or they argue that there is no greed upon meanings.
They are happy using things
in metaphorical ways so it yeah it feels like there's at least one group of people that shouldn't
be cheering on this way to respond to direct questions no no exactly and it dovetails with
that other with that other theme of sort of having it both ways where, you know, Jesus Christ is both a literal figure who did do miracles and all this stuff,
but also he's like a Jungian hero and he's an archetype.
He's not just a hero. He's a meta hero.
He's a meta hero. Yeah, exactly.
And so you just left kind of...
Oh, yeah. There's a perfect clip that relates to this this is
in response to the topic of hell coming up right who believe in hell are terrified of hell about
for it for themselves and in my estimation they should be because i also believe in hell
although what that means again is you know subject to interpretation lots of people live in hell and lots of people create it
i i just it's so beautiful because he starts and like he's he's actually making the point i made
about you know there are people who have literal beliefs in hell it's a literal place and then his
response is to say and i believe in hell but then he realizes he's perhaps endorsed like the that
sounds like he's endorsing the literal one so he immediately goes well you know depends what you mean but and then he starts talking about
hell's all our people right or hell is you know it's so it's like but then didn't you just you
don't you believe in hell in the metaphorical sense right but not as a physical location and
i don't think he would answer that or you know
he can't answer those things directly yeah no i don't think he can um so yeah he's a psychologist
and he's he's obviously religious as well although it's very unclear what kind of religion he has
um but except that it's christian it is definitely christian yeah that he's very clear about that um
so yeah no so the interesting dynamic is him sort of transforming and melding psychological
or you know it's not contemporary psychology it's the more psych the psychology that's associated
with clinical stuff and and quite um old-fashioned stuff like Freud and Jung.
But yeah, sort of melding this sort of psychological definitions of things, like people creating their own hell with a religious conception of hell.
And yeah, it's just so nebulous.
I'm not really quite, I can't agree nor disagree with it
because I'm not sure what's being said.
Yeah, and this doesn't only apply like
this tendency to muddy the water and redefine things in unclear ways does not just apply to the
the religious content because maybe in that sense you could be like well he's he's talking about
concepts which are themselves vague and theological so that you have to give some leeway to do that. But let me just play a clip of him
talking about dominance hierarchies and how they, even though that's a topic that he talks about a
lot, they aren't dominance hierarchies. I use dominance hierarchy because that's a shorthand.
People understand what that means. It's not clear that hierarchies are in fact dominance hierarchies.
So he goes on to justify this because he's basically saying they don't necessarily have
to involve dominance. But it means that even words that he invokes fairly consistently and
which have well-known definitions,
that you can't trust them because he might be using it just opportunistically. I say dominance hierarchies, but I don't actually mean dominance hierarchies.
So it's impressive on the one hand.
Yeah, yeah, it is impressive.
And it's difficult to comment on except to look at the rhetorical maneuvers he's undertaking.
Yeah.
So I guess the point I want to make here, and it's something which actually applies
across some of the other figures that we've looked at, less so James Lindsay, more so
Eric and Brett Weinstein, that this use of strategic ambiguity so that you can say something,
but you can always retreat from it if you're pressed or if somebody tries to pin you down
by endorsing metaphorical and literal and alternative definitions that you can make
quite provocative statements, but then you can always say, well, yeah, but I wasn't talking about it in the way that you interpret.
Whereas James Lindsay style cultural commentators or gurus are not doing that so much.
What he thinks is relatively clear, right?
You know, he specifies out what he thinks about critical theory.
So I think this use of strategic ambiguity is something
that you see across a whole range of gurus and it's really common in new age type gurus which
aren't something that we've you know discussed or focusing on but but the parallels are clear
yeah yeah i think you're right it's like i guess it's like the uh morton bailey technique on
steroids because it as as you, it is really, really useful
because it allows you to make quite striking
and seemingly very forceful comments
when people are implicitly reading
the quite strong interpretation of the words you use.
But then if there are internal consistencies
that people point out or there's pushback where
it becomes difficult to defend you roll back to the very vague and nebulous definition of the
thing and and then you can switch back obviously to the powerful one whenever you like so it's this
back and forth which um you know jvp isn't the only one who does it. It's obviously very common, but he is very, he does do it a lot.
Yeah.
And there were some striking examples in this.
There was even an instance where Jordan Levine, the interviewer, essentially, I felt like he was giving him like, what's that soft pitch or what do you call that expression when somebody throws you an easy question?
Softball. Softball. Softball. Yeah, soft pitch or what do you call that expression when somebody throws you an easy question? Softball. Softball.
Yeah, soft pitch.
My baseball expertise is shining through there.
So a softball question because he asked him at one point about magic.
And he basically said like, because Jordan Peterson had talked about how when somebody comes to
embody logos in, in its fullest form, that they can do things which are magical. And then the
interviewer is like, well, wait, when you say magic, do you mean, you know, magic that it looks
to us hard to explain and feats, which, which seem incredible psychologically or, um, or do you mean pulling rabbits out of a hat?
And that felt to me like, okay, he's going to endorse the first one
and say, you know, obviously I don't mean that.
But that's not what he said.
So let me just play his response.
And when you say magical, you mean magical for all intents and purposes
in terms of our perception as relatively naive human consciousness?
Or magical in like, you know, rabbits out of hats?
Well, certainly the former.
And God only knows about the latter.
So, you know, that takes us afield into strange areas,
like Jung's observations of synchronous events, for example.
We don't understand the world.
Like, I do understand the world.
I do think the world is more like a musical masterpiece than it is like anything else.
And things are oddly connected.
So he does, like, he means, yes, he means psychological magic
or metaphorical magic, but literal magic, let's not rule that out.
There's Jungian archetypes about that.
And that goes to his worldview which i got a better
understanding of after listening to this which as i said before is in believing uh sort of an
underlying he calls it theological but he kind of means spiritual and matters of anything to do with
morality and good versus evil and so on he He believes in that spiritual world underlying reality
and influencing it in important ways.
And I think that's the one thing that we can say definitively
about J.B.P.'s point of view after listening to this.
Yeah, there's some segments where he starts to explain
why rationalists and Sam Harrison,
Dawkins in particular, are wrong.
And that their belief or the fact that they use evolutionary theory and that evolutionary
theory involves forces of selection means that they cannot be materialists and be consistent.
That's right. And his argument there was that selection, yeah, the action of selection is not a material thing.
Did I remember that right?
Yeah, hold on. Let's let the man say it in his own words.
The processes that make up social interactions among social animals
can't be reduced to their material substrate,
but they're real. And they're so real,
they select. So they're
real. And this is the problem I
have with the people who are simultaneously
reductionistic materialists and
evolutionary biologists. It's like,
sorry guys, you don't get to be both.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I think it's worth spending some time
on this argument that he presents because he presents it forcefully as you can see there
but i find it really silly like fundamentally silly because if i'm trying to summarize it
essentially he's saying that selection is such a fundamental
process in the world and maybe he's even talking about you know evolutionary processes
as they apply to the formation of planets or something like that right that no i think he's
talking about biological evolution he's talking about well okay okay i. I was going to let him, give him, but he is focusing on biological evolution
on the planet earth. So yes. Okay. But even taking that, you can abstract evolutionary processes
out into mathematical formulas, for example, and there's no reason that you couldn't apply them in
some respect to like different avenues. Dawkins has talked about this as well, right?
I'm talking about processes of selection, not the specific process of evolution amongst
biological things.
So even if you accept that, the part which doesn't make sense is he's very upset about
people acknowledging that and then trying to tie that to the material world.
But as far as I'm aware, Matt, the only place that we've ever seen selective processes in action
is the material world and reality, right? Like we don't have any evidence for
selective processes in the spiritual metaphysical realm.
No, it is a very silly argument.
You don't have to be a specialist evolutionary biologist to know that evolution is entirely based on the material.
And, you know, the fact that some selective processes in social animals like people may well involve things like communication and social relationships
and so on. In Jordan's mind, because those things are, in his mind, derived from theology,
this spiritual realm, then you can't understand evolution without appreciating its basis in
theology. Yeah, I thought his objection,
although this is probably illustrating the point
that you can interpret some abstract painting
in so many different ways,
and that's a lot of what he says,
but I thought his issue was more that
the interactions between animals
or these broader processes that they fall into,
they don't relate to
an individual's behavior like so they they can refer to species levels effects or they can
refer to processes that are only evident over generations and that that means looking at the biophysical level is reducing things to where you can't observe those patterns.
Oh, yeah.
Well, he might have been saying that.
He knows.
But obviously, your point is that emergent phenomena and selection and species evolution is like an emergent phenomena of just lots of little interacting.
Yeah, but my point is it emerges in the physical world yes that's what i was gonna say i mean that is
obviously true so yeah you can you know even the books where we write down our ideas are on paper
so like there's there's this part where he nods to this argument. And it's quite interesting because he's basically saying, well, people will say, you know, everything is tied to the material world.
And he's pointing out that's a bad argument.
So let me play him for body knows.
Now, you can say, well, it's associated with material phenomena.
It's like, well, yes, I wouldn't like to point out that that is hardly a brilliant observation.
Everything is associated with the material world because here we are in this world.
Right. So this this is like a tactic where you acknowledge a criticism, but you don't actually explain why it's wrong.
Right. And the other part that got me about this was he almost has insight.
You know, he's talking about like linking things to the material world.
But when I heard him say that, it was like, it applies to his argument, right?
You can link any two things together if you try.
But is that valid?
The more important question is how convincing are the links that you draw?
But yeah, he's not making that point.
He's not making a good argument.
I think, yeah, I think we've explained explained it enough but i'm pretty sure most people listening would appreciate that you can
understand evolution without requiring a theological level of analysis yeah in in that sense like it's
you know it's close to intelligent design right is arguing that there's a mysterious process in evolution that you you simply cannot
explain as a materialist yeah yeah so a point which derives from this which leads us on to
his colorful metaphors is that alongside seeing rationalists and theororialists or Sam Harris types as being
fundamentally wrong. He also
takes issue with anybody who would credit the
development of reason and democracy and
the modern West to the Enlightenment.
And there's this really nice quote where he explains why that's
wrong. And it invokes a metaphor that he uses elsewhere. So let me just play that for you, Matt.
What we're talking about here is something that's indescribably deeper than merely what
happened in the Enlightenment. I just see that as a, in some sense, as a sideshow of this crystalline process that's emerging.
So what's the crystalline process?
Yeah, that's the question.
Can you explain that?
I cannot explain that. Yeah, so perhaps not surprisingly, J.B.P. is not a fan of attributing
good things to the enlightenment or that general period of
empirical or rationalist type of thought, because he likes attributing the good things to
Christianity. And as you know, there's some limited way in which that is true. Obviously,
Christianity had a big influence on that part of the world and through the kinds of things that
happened through the Reformation and so on. I'm sure there are all kinds of influences one could trace back. But I
guess what he's trying to do is really cast this grand narrative, a grand Christian narrative,
sweep of history in which pretty much anything good, and, you know, he likes the word logos a
lot because that's kind of free speech and in his mind.
It's also the word, but it's also consciousness and it's also the sense of order and good generally.
So he would see that expressed in the Enlightenment, if I'm understanding him right.
Now I'm confused.
wait no i am confused so okay you're saying that the enlightenment is just like an instantiation of a a deeper philosophical force right the the logo that's that's it you're totally getting
jordan peterson now chris yeah so i this this crystalline structure metaphor i i think is
connected to that right where he in response to some
i i remember it as like a fairly direct you know straightforward back and forth between him and
the interviewer and then he just like comes out with well why you were talking about that i was
thinking about something and i just i want to play because it took me by surprise when I first heard it. Well, when you asked that question,
I had a vision and the vision was of a plane of earth, barren earth, with a gigantic crystal
lean structure underneath, forcing itself upward and breaking up the dirt. And that's exactly how
I would answer that question. It's that there's this great idea attempting to
manifest itself. Like it manifested itself, for example, in the decimation of slavery,
right? Because there was an idea and the idea was, well, all men are created equal.
That's the idea. And that idea is rooted in a much deeper idea, which is that there's a spark
of divinity in everyone. And that's this logos capacity that enables people to name things and give form to the world,
and that we're not to violate that. And that emerged, you know, you could say, well,
that emerged tremendously slowly, but didn't emerge slowly at all, man. The idea is only,
in its thoroughly formulated sense, the idea is only about 2,000 years old.
It emerged with incredible rapidity.
So that is one hell of a metaphor.
But, I mean, I've just got to, the thing that struck me
as I was listening to that was that when I hear Jordan Peterson
giving credit to white European Christianity for destroying slavery,
to white European Christianity for destroying slavery,
I can hear a million critical race theorists crying out in pain.
Yeah, they may have played a small role in that prayer history as well, right? yeah and there is a point where the the interviewer brings that up and asks him how does he
defend christian atrocities and you might imagine that he responds to that and gives a clear answer
but i don't think i even have where he answered because there isn't a straightforward response.
There's winding paths. So I can't even remember what his answer to that was. Do you have any idea?
No, I don't think he really answered it. I think he just went off on several tangents of tangents.
Oh, sorry. Actually, I've just realized that what we just listened to.
That was his answer to that.
That was his answer to that yeah so that was the initial answer was that question was posed and when he was asked about that he imagined a giant crystal
i think that's quite telling right and then and then he goes on to the enlightenment and how you
know that isn't actually the answer so yeah so does that answer the question correctly
about like why we shouldn't also you know attribute to christianity say the divine rule of kings or the
the civilizing mission no it's just the good stuff chris that we attribute to christianity
yeah no i mean the more i think about this the more it strikes me what a poor fit JVP is with the IDW.
Because all of the stereotypical things that people attribute to the IDW, he really is not on board with them.
Yeah, I think he's an outlier in a bunch of respects, unless you include in IDW the conservative Christian wing, like
Ben Shapiro and stuff.
I think he shares more in certain respects with their worldview than people like Dawkins
and Harris.
Although even the Christian ones don't really emphasize it as part of their sort of worldview.
I think, yeah, I think WP is a little bit unique in the way that everything is kind
of linked to to christianity yeah and so another aspect of the worldview that it does relate to
his interest in christianity and which which struck me repeatedly through this and also through the
12 rules for life is that his characterization of what is the fundamental
element of existence and being is remarkably bleak.
Like he's got a focus on the side of humanity, which is, you know, life is suffering and
humans are depraved and dark creatures and like he he does acknowledge
positive aspects like even even in that we should we should still you know fight for the light or
that kind of thing but but like he spends a lot more time in detailing the the fundamental nature
of pain and that pain is the characteristic of existence did you know that so yeah i think you
got a clip there with uh descartes and he sort of um starts doing my day cut and you think he's going
to talk about consciousness being you know i can perceive things and i'm aware of things and
therefore um you know that's kind of a starting point but it's not is it it's it's suffering
suffering is the starting point yeah let's let's play it? It's suffering. Suffering is the starting point.
Yeah, let's play and we'll go from there. You know, Descartes' great investigation into doubt led him to the conclusion that I think, therefore I am.
And I don't think by think, he meant think the way we think.
He meant more like the fact that I'm consciously aware is something that I cannot deny.
The fact that I'm consciously aware is something that I cannot deny. That's good. That's fine. And, you know, more power to Descartes for taking it to that extreme and then producing what he did produce out of that. But I don't, for me, when I investigated the structure of doubt, the conclusion that I drew was that there is nothing more real than suffering. Yeah, so whereas Descartes may say,
I think, therefore, I am.
For Jordan Peterson, it's I suffer, therefore, I am.
Yeah, and later on he emphasizes that happiness is more about,
in terms of how people act and behave,
it's more about avoiding suffering
rather than approaching and pursuing happiness.
And he's quite explicit about that.
Yeah, as we can hear here.
Because they're not differentiating.
Like there's the positive emotion end of being happy, and there's the not suffering end of being happy.
And what people mean when they say that they want to be happy is that they don't want to be suffering.
Yeah.
So it's the cessation of negative emotions, not joy.
And I will say there's validity to that point.
When you're measuring affective response in psychology, you measure positive effect and
negative effect.
And you can decrease negative effect without increasing positive effect, right?
So they're separate concepts, but it's his kind of relentless focus that when
people say they want to be happy, what they really mean is like, they don't want pain
and suffering and fatigue and negative feelings.
I'm kind of like, is that true?
Like, are people really, you know, not talking about, you you know they want to enjoy life and have
pleasurable moments and that kind of thing and the amount that he he fixates on this that this
says more about him than necessarily the human condition yeah i mean it's it's hard to escape the suspicion that this is the philosophy
of someone who has had a problem with opiates.
Or would go on to.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I think it's clear that just personally
he is someone who suffers from angst and, yeah,
sublimates that in various ways, perhaps.
But sorry, Chris, I find it hard to say something cogent about that.
No, I think you did.
I think the point that, like, somebody who would become addicted
to painkillers would think that the fundamental element
of existence is pain.
And this is the
core motivating factor, right? That seems relevant.
So look, I mean, this is more just an observation, more of a criticism or anything. But I guess,
yeah, I mean, I think one of the interesting points that comes out of this talk is very much
that he has quite a bleak outlook, as you said. It's quite dark.
And he talks about the role of evil in people's lives,
the evil that they inflict on themselves.
But he also emphasizes that coming into contact with evil people, really,
and that this is the cause of many issues.
So I'm not saying he's right or wrong about that,
but the general picture is a very bleak one.
Yeah, and the link at the previous point that we were making, he talks about the issue of suffering and its fundamental nature to philosophers as opposed to materialists. And let me just play.
From the perspective of the materialist, there's nothing more real than the atom,
let's say. Okay, from the perspective of a philosopher of being,
alternatively, there's nothing more real than suffering.
Right, like that puts it in quite stark contrast. And I think you're feeling that like we shouldn't,
that we're not attacking him for his personal focus on pain. I think the element of criticism
comes from the fact that he's not describing this as just like his personal philosophy or view.
He is instead attributing it to philosophers worldwide and to humanity writ large.
That's the issue.
It's making subjective assessments and connections and portraying them as obviously true, fundamentally correct facts.
Yeah, like a broad consensus among every philosopher who's thought about it. And,
you know, there's certainly themes in philosophy, whether it's existentialists or
Stoics or whomever, who do emphasize pain and suffering. Yeah. So, you know, like it's not,
it's not out there. It's just, it's just an important important yeah theme uh and flavor to jbp's way of thinking yeah and so just before
we get off the pain the pain there's there's an aspect where he is discussing like a lot of his
pain comes up when he is talking about being and what he means by being and how this is a more
fundamental force in the world than the kind of materialist one. And listen to the way he describes
pain from this perspective. People's actions indicate that they believe in their own pain.
And that's undeniable. You can't argue yourself out of it so it's it's
it transcends rationality and so it's real it's an axiomatic tenant of the of of religious systems
generally speaking that life is suffering which is a restatement of exactly the same thing
and so being is the domain in which pain announces itself as real and that's not the material world
it's not the material world pain is not a material phenomena
right so the part for me where the argument breaks down is again that pain outside of human
subjective experiences or you know or at least like some physical experience for some conscious being.
It doesn't make sense because there isn't a fundamental force floating through the universe that's like, you know, pain.
Like maybe in the Marvel conception of the universe, there is a character that does that.
in the Marvel conception of the universe, there is a character that does that. But in the world as we know it, that fundamental element of existence is like a subjective experience
of conscious beings. And he seems to regard it more as like a platonic ideal, which transcends
rationality, transcends the material realm. But like, why? Yeah look yeah look obviously the issue that we're talking about
is is dualism where jvp is coming at it from this sort of platonic dualistic whatever we're not
philosophers we're not going to pretend to be but you know where these these mental states and and
consciousness is is a real thing in the same way that atoms are real. And perhaps more real because that's the stuff
that we actually experience.
Whereas science-y, materialist-y type people
who aren't philosophers of mind like you and I say,
hey, these are just emergent phenomena
that arise out of the physical world.
Now, you and I aren't going to be,
we don't want to deal with the issue of dualism in this podcast. But yeah, it's just worth noting that JVP is definitely
of the brand that treats these philosophical, theological and spiritual things as having
a real basis in reality. Yeah. And I think the issue that I'm going to take is,
so while there are many people in this audience, including himself, who are very upset with
postmodern scholars for their denial of objective reality and their tendency to engage in obscurantism and play games with definitions.
All of the things that we're talking about fall into that category.
And there was this part where he's asked a question and to answer it,
again, you know, it's like the crystal structure thing.
He begins by saying, well, let's think about the spiritual essence of a lemon.
by saying, well, let's think about the spiritual essence of a lemon.
And like, when I heard it, I was like, why?
Why do I have to go down this torture route thinking about the essence of a lemon
and how it reveals the lack of a dichotomy
between spirituality and reality?
And like, does thinking about a lemon do that?
So again, Matt, I think hearing the clip itself
might help the audience understand
the persuasiveness of this point.
The concept of material reality
is a post-Enlightenment concept.
I mean, if you look, for example,
at how the alchemists described things
prior to the emergence of the material world,
they discussed the nature of the emergence of the material world. They discuss the nature of the essence of
the lemon. Well, you know, lemon is solar in essence. It partakes of the sun. Well, it needs
the sun. It's yellow like the sun. It has the same stuff as the sun. The sun is golden. The sun is
mercurial. The sun is illuminating. Like it has all sorts of attributes that we would consider spiritual. There was no distinction between the spiritual and the material. Let's say he's merely being descriptive, right? He's describing how alchemists and so on in the pre-scientific era
approached things.
And lemons, for instance.
That's nothing wrong.
You've got to get past the lemon.
So, okay.
And, you know, that's valid.
Of course, a lot of magical thinking was kind of interwoven
with natural philosophy for many hundreds of years but you know is he saying that we're right
like yeah that's yeah that's the issue i'm i'm fine with you describing you know alchemists and
what they previously imagined as the sympathetic magic kind of things right like a lemon is yellow and the sun looks
kind of yellow so they're connected and it's a plant so we know that it does derive like all
this stuff that's fine but isn't he saying they were yeah i think so i think he's saying that
that the truths arrived at through you know obviously religion is a pre-scientific concept
and to a life degree a way of understanding the world i suppose you know obviously religion is a pre-scientific concept and to a life degree
a way of understanding the world i suppose you know why do events happen why do why do bad things
happen to good people and and so on why has god angry with us yeah he he has a lot of respect
for the pre-scientific for one a bit of for one of a better phrase, view of the world. So to me, that sounds remarkably familiar for respect for other ways of knowing,
which is supposed to be a boogeyman that the postmodernists are trying to sneak in.
Yeah, I totally agree with that point.
I mean, critical theory has been, and social justice has been famously described as a religion,
as if that's a very bad thing. But yeah, JVP for
one is all for religion and all for a religious way of constructing meaning out of the world. So
yeah, it's perfectly at home with the social constructionists and postmodernists generally.
Yeah. And there's a part later where the interviewer tries to get him to characterize
the difference between himself and postmodern because this critique has been raised before
of his work. There's a bunch of rules of the game, and this is why the postmodernists, by the way,
are wrong about the infinity of interpretations. They're wrong. There is an infinity of potential
interpretations, but there isn't an infinity of viable interpretations.
And that's the issue. That's the critical issue. So what constrains the range of interpretations?
Well, let's say there's an infinite number of ways of construing the world.
Well, there are. And that's again the postmodernist take, right?
Not only can you interpret texts in an infinite number of ways, but the the world is a text and it can be interpreted in a number of ways.
And so you can't define any particular mode of interpretation as canonical.
That's the fundamental claim. OK, let's take that apart. Wrong.
and the postmodernists is that his realm of possible interpretations or meanings or whatever is constrained by the fact that he recognizes the forces of biological reality and evolution
and that kind of thing. But as we've already seen, his commitment to a hardcore empirical evolutionary framework is relatively, you know, the grasp is
not firm. So I don't know. And I also don't think that the argument of postmodern philosophers,
who again, I claim no expertise over, but I don't think their argument is like there is absolutely
no interpretation that is wrong. No, of course. That's a bit of a straw man.
I think where it's congruent with JVP is that they perhaps would emphasize the social construction of meaning and saying that overlaying the material reality, that the way things are perceived and the way it's negotiated uh socially is is of great importance you know and
there's obviously some truth to that but you can't criticize them for that and also be a fan of jbp
basically i think yeah and and be consistent at least there there's there's definitely overlap
in in those perspectives and him simply saying that his reasoning is more constrained it's it feels like
a relatively weak well it's pretty weak given that he sees that the theological reality gives gives
rise that evolution has to encompass that theological reality so it's it's not much of
a concession to say that he takes into account the capital S science of evolutionary
biology when he sees that that is itself strongly based on theological stuff.
Yeah. And so to take it to bigger themes, I think it's reasonable to focus, like, because
if you sit back and just consume the talk, I think we've both experienced this. If you don't question the connections being drawn and you just follow along, in some sense,
it's kind of convincing and compelling because you just get this narrative story almost about
how the world works, how all these things are connected.
And even if individual parts give you pause, it does come together in a
coherent narrative. And I think that's part of the appeal that he offers and which many of the
gurus that we look at offer. You're being inducted into this select group of people who can see
these hidden connecting structures, which apply across
culture, across religion, across time, and are like so fundamental. So yeah, you might be talking
about transgender people getting into the bathrooms, but actually it's connected to the
eternal battle between the forces of good and evil. Yeah. So he really does provide these,
Yeah, so he really does provide these, in his words, maps of meaning.
It's not really a logical or an analytical thing that he's doing.
It's a network of associations and feelings.
So I described it as poetry early on because I think that's why people like it,
and I think that's the mode in which he is communicating.
So that initial clip which we played where he went from,
he explained political correctness in terms of the word and consciousness and chaotic potentials and, you know, which creates habitable orders, but also dissolves habitable orders and the hero. Like, it's just a scattergun of associations, which if you sit back and let it wash over you, is quite sort of pleasant to listen to.
Like I find JVP annoying when I try to understand
exactly what he's saying and what his argument is.
But if I don't try to do that,
if I just sit back and listen to it
as if it's like art of some kind,
then I can certainly see the appeal
because it does give give it's very vague
but it definitely gives kind of a sense a sense of meaning like a it it gives a it gives a grand
narrative without actually and and when you're doing that kind of thing it's actually a negative
to be specific i can understand why it doesn't want to be pinned down because it's not about
being pinned down and being specific it's about
it's about providing the flavor yeah yeah so like you say staying away from the specifics is a good
idea and if you're going to do specifics you should make it into a narrative which is compelling so
a really good example of this a clear one i want I want to bring up, is when he's discussing how compelling and mysterious Christian iconography is.
So here's him discussing Christian iconography and its complexity.
The reason for that is it's too complicated for us to articulate.
So it's bottom up. it's bottom-up. It's bottom-up development. It's like the iconography
of Christianity is an attempt to express something that we're not yet smart enough to understand.
So we're not yet smart enough to understand Christian iconography. And this relates to a
story he tells where he went to an art museum and he spent some time setting this up in New York, where there was a bunch of pictures from the Renaissance era, but people were coming to see a particular picture of Mary and Jesus.
And this is the end of that story.
And there were a lot of people standing in front of the painting looking at it.
And I thought, well, let's be a cultural anthropologist about this all right that museum is on
some of the most expensive real estate in the world there's a tremendous amount
of time and effort spent on producing the museum and fortifying it and guarding
it and then people from all over the world make pilgrimages to stand in front of it.
And what they are looking at, they do not understand.
So what the hell are they doing there?
Why are they looking at those pictures?
Well, the answer is the pictures speak to their soul,
but not in the language that they understand.
Yeah. Yeah.
Okay.
So, Chris, I'll go first.
So, that sounds compelling to me.
You know, I've got this image of, yeah, you know, people coming and marveling at these
ancient mystical objects.
And clearly, why would they go to all that trouble and spend so much time and effort
to put themselves in their presence and be entranced by these objects they're clearly
speaking to them i think on some kind and communicating to them on some kind of ineffable
spiritual level that seems that seems right to me yeah yeah doesn't it so so let me make a
counter argument to that point and see if we can spread all that.
So when I lived in London, there was an art museum, which is quite well known, called the Tate Modern.
In that art museum, there is modern art, as the name might suggest.
And I have a feeling that there are a lot of people coming from various places around the world to look at
modern art, including things like, well, Jordan Peterson might be interested in this, but like
Andy Warhol's lobster phone, right? And setting aside the deep truth that lobsters communicate
to us spiritually, there's plenty of art in there that I doubt that Jordan Peterson or others would regard as speaking deeply to the
soul those things which are like a shade of blue or abstract objects arranged in unusual shapes
so fixating on like people come to look at a Christian painting and that gives us some
important insight about how deep christian iconography is
like yeah does it exactly yeah so that that's the thing jordan's analogies and argument sounds good
you know it feel it feels right when you listen to it as long as you don't think about it too
carefully which is i think that's the mistake you made there, Chris. Yeah, I have an entire folder from this episode,
which is just called questionable claims.
And it's full of things like this,
but that people might say,
well, you're fixating on like a small detail
in his grander narrative.
But his grander narrative is just made up
of a collection of these smaller
details. And this is the evidence that is used to support the bigger connections. So that's an issue.
Yeah, that's right. I mean, we don't have time to go through every single metaphor and every
single chain of reasoning, but the ones we've looked at are pretty representative of of of all of them i think
and yeah they're pretty weak like they don't really i mean yes you can you can put these
things together and use it as the raw material with which to create a sweeping narrative and
as a work of art or or poetry uh i think that's perfectly. But it shouldn't be taken as any kind of rational argument
or analytical argument.
It's an associative argument of feeling.
So, yeah, I think it's a fair criticism.
Yeah.
Okay, since you're not going to let me go through all the questions,
well, I want two of the superstars from that category to mention.
One is that the sentiment which people attach to furniture, so like you've got a favorite chair or whatever, that that is a more fundamental and important thing to understand about a chair than its material reality.
And you can dissociate the object itself from the, let's call it the subjective overlay,
but that's not such an easy thing to do. And it's not so self-evident. And it's not even
obvious that what you're doing when you do that is coming up with a more accurate picture of reality.
is coming up with a more accurate picture of reality.
Right.
So this is, again, him kind of saying,
like, there's an ineffable element of existence and the sentiments that are attached to objects
may be more important than the object's physical reality.
Right?
Now, when you make that kind of argument,
my brain immediately goes like, important to who who or on what basis do you judge that?
Because, sure, in regards to like individual people who have connections with the chair, there is memories attached to that and emotions attached to it.
But it isn't true to say that that's a fundamentally deeper truth about the chair than the fact that it's made from
wood right it just depends on your question or what you're asking but they take the chair out
of that context and just give it to someone who doesn't have all those connections and that's not
a deeper reality of the chair that's like carried along it's a reality that's in your head and yeah as a
psychologist it's kind of surprising that gpp doesn't doesn't emphasize that yeah and that
that's unobjectionable to say like a person has a you know psychological connection to an object
which can be fundamentally more important than the object. But that isn't what he says.
That's only the Mott and Bailey argument.
And there's another illustration where he's talking about a pro footballer.
And it's a short clip, so I'll just play it for you.
It's like the life of a pro football player.
Is that real life or is that a game?
Well, at some point, the game is life. Right. And so
then the question is, well, what should the game be? And Piaget's answer was, well, the game should
be one that everyone agrees to play. Okay. So that's part of a bigger conversation related to
like rituals and rules and the way that they are a microcosm of society. But the point I want to make in highlighting that analogy is this thing about, is a professional
footballer playing a game or living life?
That relies on like this, this kind of, I don't know, metaphorical trick or linguistic
trick that a footballer's livelihood is derived from playing a game yeah yeah but but
he's using it to make a point that games and life are in some ways like kind of interconnected and
hard to distinguish but but that specific example is just it just relies on the fact that you know
profession somebody who plays a game professionally
earns their livelihood from a game.
It feels like a cheap trick of an argument.
Because obviously a pro footballer is playing a game
and they get paid to play the game.
There isn't a mystery there.
No, no.
Yeah, yeah.
I know what you mean.
It's the linguistic tricks like playing on double meanings There isn't a mystery there. No, no. Yeah, yeah. I know what you mean.
It's the linguistic tricks, like playing on double meanings of words like game and using that to support an argument,
which is a pretty, it's a stretch of an argument
and you can't, to support it using pretty weak tools
like that is not very good.
Yeah.
Okay.
So look, we've went down a bunch of negative roads
and we've probably deeply offended all the Peterson fans in our audience.
So maybe we should shift back at least for a minute
just to say about some of the reasonable or semi-reasonable stuff he says or any of the
things that you find i have some ideas but maybe you uh have you oh i did i did have some positive things and I've kind of forgotten them after a long diatribe.
Okay, maybe I can get you started. So one of the things that I thought he does do well is that when he's talking about psychology, he's at one point arguing about the problems with our
measurement instruments for when we talk about well-being.
He kind of goes into a methodological critique of the psychological measures of well-being and how they're imprecise and how our measurement instruments are basically not up to scratch when it comes to psychological science to make extreme statements.
That's a big problem for someone who wants to do scientific measurement.
It's like, OK, we're going to increase well-being. Hey, no problem. How are you going to measure it?
And whose well-being? And mine? Okay, mine now, mine next week, mine next month, mine in a year.
How about 10 years? How about 50? And who chooses who, how to measure it? Well, precisely. And my
well-being in relationship to my significant other, in relationship to my family, in relationship to the community, at all those levels of temporal distinction, you're going to measure that, eh? Good luck.
important points. And similarly, when he's criticizing Sam Harris for having like a worldview and a set of suppositions, which he doesn't acknowledge as being important to arrive at
his conclusions, that all seems reasonable. The facts themselves cannot tell you that.
And that's why you have an a priori interpretive structure, which is, of course, what Kant was
insisting upon. And Sam doesn't take that into account. And that's mind bog have an a priori interpretive structure, which is, of course, what Kant was insisting upon.
And Sam doesn't take that into account.
And that's mind boggling to me because that a priori interpretive structure is the sum total of the effect of our evolutionary history.
So, like, what about that?
So, I mean, I just wanted to highlight that he clearly does have, you know, expertise, including in psychology.
And he can make well-argued coherent points.
Like it is possible.
Yeah, it is possible.
I think if he's talking about some specific or technical thing, then he's well able to string an argument together.
then he's well able to string an argument together.
I think it's more that the subject of his attention is so big and broad and so all-encompassing with the theory of life stuff
that I think he just overreaches terribly.
So I think if I was to sort of turn it around and try
to defend him a little bit and almost qualify a lot of our
criticisms is that, you know, in his emphasis on the subjective and subjective experience and
meaning and so on, I dispute the terms like theological and casting things in terms of
good and evil and so on. But in terms of that subjectivity, as a clinical psychologist
and as someone who writes self-help books, you know,
in many ways it's very right and natural for him to have
that obsessive concern with that non-material aspects of life, you know.
So that's not controversial or particularly bad
in as far as it goes.
Would you agree with that, Chris?
Yeah, yeah.
If you regard him as a theologically inclined self-help guru, I think it becomes a lot more tolerable. The issue is that he's also simultaneously treated as an empirical
psychologist who's very science-oriented, science and evidence-oriented. And those two hats don't
sit neatly together. There's a torture metaphor. You know, that's right. That's right. And so
the feedback I get from people who
like JVP, I don't think that they're reading him or listening to him and taking the stuff as like
literal truth or literal facts about the world. I mean, well, I think most of them, most of the
time, I think they tend to take it as stimulating things to think
about so i i suspect that many people who like his work um are not are not maybe taking him at
taking his words at such face value or taking them as seriously as we are like we're we're taking
what he's saying what he's arguing for and saying does that stack up does that actually make sense have you considered alternative explanations is it actually supported by the examples and
metaphors that you're giving and it's usually not but if you take it as as kind of inspirational
poetry or or self-help now that's a much lower bar and if it's a bit like it's a bit like the
modern art you were talking about the the lobster on the telephone or a big blue square.
You know, if it speaks to you, then, you know, all is well and good.
Yeah.
bring up if they've watched it is that towards the end of the interview, he does acknowledge quite openly his possibility to be mistaken and that he's really thinking out loud.
Most of the time I have a skeleton. There's the argument. There's a skeletal outline. I see
how I'm going to get from point A to B to C And then when I'm talking like today, it's an exploration
It's not here's what I think it's right and you should believe it. It's like no, I'm I'm I'm
I'm trying to
Rectify my errors and extend what I know when I'm speaking and when I'm listening. And so I think that genuinely is what I'm doing.
And I genuinely don't want to give people advice.
It's something I've learned, not least by being a psychotherapist.
It's like your destiny is not mine to mess with.
I don't want to be responsible for your decisions.
What if I'm wrong?
don't want to be responsible for your decisions. What if I'm wrong? So that I actually think,
you know, that's a very positively expressed epistemic humility and acknowledgement that he is riffing a lot of the time, just connecting things and seeing where they go. But the issue
I would take is that that comes at the end of the interview.
And it reminds me of when Eric and Brett Weinstein issued at the end of their to our episode where they basically allege all this misconduct by Carol Greeter, you know, targeting Brett.
And then at the end, they say, of course, we might be wrong. And we don't you know, everybodytt and then at the end they say of course we might be wrong and
we don't you know everybody's memory is fallible and there's two sides to every story but they
they don't display any of that humility throughout the episode as we you know showed on the first
episode we released and the same applies here that like there is very little of this epistemic humility throughout the preceding hours.
Exactly.
That's my problem, too, that throughout the whole thing, there's no qualification.
There's no caveats.
It's very vehement. And as if it's, as if, you know, you can't possibly disagree with this because it's just so,
it's so logically forceful is the impression,
even though as we've talked about, it's usually not.
So, you know, I really liked what you played there.
That sounded great to me in and of itself.
I remember that from the video.
But yeah, as you say,
it's not enough just to issue that disclaimer at the end because it is
like having your cake and eating it too isn't it like it's like the conspiracy hypotheses
and there's his position as a self-help guru and i also find in this some segments where it's really clear why people would form such a
personal attachment to him because he comes across and I think I don't think this is like
feigned or insincere.
I think he is somebody that gets emotionally invested and who is very, very personally involved in his philosophy,
right?
He really believes that.
And there's this point where he talks about how he wants to help people.
And I thought it was quite, I don't know the word, poignant or quite telling of his approach.
I truly want the best for what wants the best in you.
Yeah.
And people love that.
They love that, man.
If you're interacting with people with that ethos in mind,
they find that, well, I think that's partly why people are responding so positively to my videos,
because that ethos informs the videos.
I'm saying I'm trying to figure out what's the best for us, really, like the best.
Endearing.
Yeah, the final thing I'll say on that theme is that I find that aspect of him where he is clearly thinking aloud and thinking as he's talking.
And I think it's true what he said about he's figuring stuff out.
I mean, the downside of that is, of course, he's just kind of,
he's just riffing.
He's like improvising all the way through.
And that's a good reason, that's a prime reason
why a lot of it doesn't make sense.
But I just, in terms of a subjective impression
i actually find it a little bit endearing you know that willingness to think on your feet and
sort of talk you know think aloud um yeah yeah yeah i i i i sometimes use the same
technique at lectures right so i'm'm not knocking someone for doing that.
And he deserves credit for acknowledging that.
It's, yeah, I think it just sits uneasily
with the level of certitude that he displays
in other segments and in general throughout his material.
He basically gives the impression,
look, I thought about these things a lot and my
conclusions are not reached lightly so treat them treat them that way but that yeah that might be
true but i'm not sure that he's done the requisite like critical reflection on a bunch of the ideas
which are now pretty crystalline well look
i mean it's a bit like that mott and bailey thing we talked about before where he where he has it
both ways you know that's both he means both the very forceful and concrete specific thing but also
the very neb but you know you could also take it um as the very nebulous insubstantial thing so
he applies that to him to himself and his own material. And when he's actually presenting the ideas, it's absolute certainty.
But it's also just speculation at the same time.
So you can't really have it both ways, can you?
Yeah, yeah.
He has an emotional investment in his audience and and expresses it right and and whenever we're
talking about the techniques that you know people can use it's not to infer that those techniques
are used insincerely but just that they they do have a powerful effect on the audience i think
this is why people in part respond so defensively to him being
criticized or whatever because they they feel that his heart is in the right place yeah um
it could well be um it's it's hard to know isn't it um but i i agree with you that that he is
passionate and uh feels very strongly and i'm sure um that that's that's that's part of the
appeal well he breaks he breaks down in tears in multiple times of in his audiobook right and the
thing is when you're recording an audiobook presumably it isn't live yeah you you could
go back and edit that out but he chose to leave in the edits where he's, you know, in tears in multiple times.
So I think the emotional displays and I haven't watched like most of the content on his YouTube channel, but I gather that is something which happens.
And I like on the one hand, it's to his credit to show emotional fragility or, you know, like expressiveness publicly, given that he's seen as this quite strident conservative figure.
But on the other hand, it does feel a little bit potentially manipulative for parts of the audience.
Yeah, there's a there's a charitable interpretation and a slightly less charitable interpretation, isn't there?
I think we'll have to remain agnostic on that one.
Yeah, just a point to note.
So, okay, let's return to something fun.
All right, Matt. For something fun, we've kind of already discussed it a bit, but I think looking at the way that some of the material really comes across as almost indistinguishable from New Age,
kind of crystal fair stuff, it's hard to overstate how much that is the case.
So I'm just going to play you a clip that might illustrate that.
you a clip that might illustrate that if you if you contaminate the structure of your being with with false information with deceptive practices and you willfully blind yourself then you're going
to be led astray by your sense of meaning you're going to pathologize it so part of the issue here
is that you don't want to interfere with your ability to see because
you'll wander off the road into a ditch. Okay. Yeah. Well, those are some words.
Yeah. So how do you interpret that? Yeah. It's almost like, yeah, that new age idea of you need
to open your third eye in order to be guided along the correct path.
Yes, it is like that.
So funny you should mention, let's just listen to one more.
Because we're evolved for that, we can tell when it's happening.
And that's what the sense of meaning is.
The sense of meaning is, it's our third eye, you could say.
Your eyes blind you because they only see what's here right in front of you now.
They blind you.
And so you have to use modes of perception
that transcend mere vision
in order to conceptualize being properly.
And one of those modes is the sense of meaning
and engagement.
So the third eye, you do have to open your third eye.
You do indeed, I guess.
Yeah, yeah.
So yeah, look, that is very Deepak Chopra-esque.
He's definitely got a real interest in the,
I have to call it the ineffable.
Like we've talked about this earlier on,
but he really has much like a traditional New Age guru.
He's very interested in these deep truths that are so profound that they can't be made explicit.
So it's true mysticism, spiritualism, I suppose.
Yeah.
Okay.
So I promise this is the last one I'll play.
But speaking to that, I actually have a clip, which I call Deepak Peterson and explicitly discusses mystics. So, okay, you can handle one more, right, Matt?
Yep. Bring it on.
That's obvious. We're more than we can understand. Yes, by a tremendous margin. And we're trying to understand ourselves. And the artists and the mystics are at the vanguard of the development of that understanding. And they come up with ideas that are clearer than mere feelings, but are not yet clear. Clearer than mere feelings, but are not yet clear.
Yeah.
I mean, that's just one example out of many thousands, I think, during this talk.
To me, it feels like an over-reliance on metaphorical and mystical sounding language to imbue points that you want to make with a profundity, because there's
charitable interpretations of what he's saying, which are like the human sense of meaning derives
from the evolutionary history, which is deeper than any individual person and goes across
generations. So focusing just on, you know, your individual life doesn't tell you about how certain cognitive
architecture evolved in humans or so on right there's there's ways that you can interpret this
in a meaningful coherent sense but but that also applies in the case of like a lot of what new age
gurus are saying as well there there are interpretations of them which are less mystical
and more metaphorical and and yeah and he seems to jump back and forth depending on the argument
as to whether he's being like an empirical scientist or whether he's actually talking
about an ineffable metaphysical reality yeah that's right i mean you know for instance he says
um that it's very difficult
for us to understand ourselves that we don't have the the resources to truly understand ourselves
and you know that's that's a aphorism but it's it's true right you know it's it's true on a
certain level it's just that it's it's true in that kind of new agey superficial way which is yes but so what you know um yeah yeah and okay so switching
topics slightly another example a kind of clear example which brings this out this
this problem about the tension of metaphorical versus literal interpretations comes when he gets pushed on the issue of
the resurrection of Jesus and whether it is a real event or a metaphorical one.
So maybe I'll start us off with a clip of him discussing this.
Did his body resurrect?
I don't know. I
don't know.
The accounts aren't clear for one thing.
What the accounts mean isn't clear.
I don't know what happens to a person if they bring themselves completely into alignment.
I've had intimations of what that might mean.
We don't understand the world very well.
We don't understand how the world could be mastered if it was mastered completely.
We don't know how an individual might be able to manage that.
We don't know what transformations that might make possible.
So did he partly resurrect? He is saying that we don't know the world like we think we do,
and you know, if you master meaning, what kind of transformations are possible?
Actually, it reminds me of the, you'd know more about this than me, Chris, but the Buddhist kind
of ambiguity about sort of what happens when you truly achieve enlightenment. supernatural powers um just just like jordan peterson is implying heavily implying about you know christ having fully um come completely into alignment and mastered meaning and therefore
be able to accomplish things like coming back from the dead is that a am i right in thinking
that's a bit of a buddhist thing as well yeah but like a lot of religious traditions and buddhism
is no exception going along the path to enlightenment
includes the development of supernatural powers in in classical texts and there's also various
traditions like the theravada tradition typically does acknowledge that the buddha was a human who reached enlightenment and entered nirvana but the leader or or god i'm getting
into like uh buddhist sectarian disputes but the my hyena traditions which are possibly later but
at least or splinter sect they instead saw the buddha as a being that was putting on the display of being a human,
but was actually already enlightened.
And so there's many layers in these traditions, right?
It's not just Christianity, which has this ambiguity.
Yeah, but that's the point, isn't it?
That at this sort of abstract level that Jordan Peterson is speaking to,
it's a kind of a theme which you see in New Age stuff, in Buddhist stuff,
and in this kind of transcendental Christian stuff as well.
Yeah. And in the interview, Jordan Levine pushes him by saying, right, but fundamentalists or
Christians want to know this, this metaphorical discussion is all well and good. But like,
do you literally believe that Christ was
reborn and that he rose from the dead?
So let's hear him grapple a bit more with that question.
Did he, is his resurrection real?
Well, his spirit lives on.
That's certainly the case.
In what sense do you mean spirit, just to qualify that? Well, let's imagine
that a spirit is a pattern of being, and we know that patterns can exist in
patterns can be transmitted across multiple substrates, right? Vinyl,
electronic impulses, air, vibrations in your ear,
neurological patterns, dance.
It's all the translation of what you might describe
as a spirit, right?
It's that pattern.
It's independent of its material substrate.
Well, Christ's spirit lives on.
It's had a massive effect across time.
I'll jump in,
because that's a returning to the kind of thing
that really annoys
me as someone who gets grumpy with poor argumentation because he's asked specifically
about whether Christ literally resurrected and then he redefines living on in terms of the spirit living on in terms of any kind of transcribed substrates and patterns of writing or dance or whatever, and says that's the spirit.
And therefore, you know, avoids the direct question and instead redefines the word lives on to be such a broad general thing that the answer is kind of meaningless.
So anyway, that triggered me.
Sorry, Chris.
No, that's all right.
I mean, I think spending a couple, you know, 10 seconds or so to list the different patterns
of vibrations that exist might be somewhat deflection from the main question.
And in that case, in essence,
he's essentially endorsing a metaphorical interpretation, right?
Well, his influence exists in the world.
And by spirit, I mean the vibration of his teachings.
But there's another part.
So this section goes on for quite a while. And this
is him talking a bit more, I think, maybe arguing against that a little bit. So let's see.
Is there something more than merely metaphorical about the idea of dying and being reborn? Yes,
there is, because those are associated with physiological transformations.
being reborn? Yes, there is, because those are associated with physiological transformations.
What's the ultimate extent of that? That's a good question. The question is, what happens to the world around you as you increasingly embody the logos? And the answer to that is, we don't know.
answer to that is we don't know. So I'm just going to say that wasn't the question, right? The question has been redefined there. And again, it's like the slipping in and out of
endorsing a kind of magical, literal, physical resurrection, or at least dancing very,
very close to that. and then like slipping immediately
back to metaphorical mastery or transformation and like the different meanings that that can
attend to but at the very beginning he acknowledges is it something more than a metaphor is it a
physical thing yes but by the end he's back to talking about something which sounds fairly
metaphorical or conceptual.
I mean, there's a pattern I've noticed that just occurred to me just now,
which is that when he's being slippery and avoiding giving a direct answer,
that's when he tends to use those terms of phrase that he's well known for.
Like those things like, that's a good question.
Or, you know, that's very complicated, actually complicated actually that's much more complicated or we don't know
you know so like i i see that he uses those a lot yeah i i really like the i mean i like might be a
strong word but i get enjoyment from the fact that he so often engages in Socratic dialogues with himself.
And it leads to him often saying, somebody presented a point and then,
so it's like, no, you're wrong, man. You know, he has an interview there, but he still uses these little internal dialogues.
And I think to some extent that is, that's reflective of his mind that he's
he's constantly kind of battling back and forth and and in fairness he is usually falling on one
side in those arguments so it's it's kind of a rhetorical technique but it yeah like you say it
it comes out more on certain subjects than on others and i I'll have to say, though, I kind of like just subjectively,
I enjoy it.
You know, like it's quite engaging and a little bit,
I said it before, endearing, those rhetorical patterns
that he employs.
It's like when I actually pay attention like I am now,
I go, hang on, you're using this to actually avoid
saying anything concrete.
But when I just listen to it casually, I think those mannerisms are part of the appeal.
So it's like some people will say it's a technique, but it's like, no, it's not.
No, it's more complicated than that, Chris.
It's very complicated.
Yeah, it's more complicated.
Yeah.
isn't that Chris?
It's very complicated.
Yeah, it's more complicated.
Yeah.
I think you can both enjoy it and appreciate the rhetorical value
that it lends his arguments.
Both things are possible, Matt.
You can have both the best of both worlds.
I can hold both those ideas
in a state of quantum superposition, Chris.
Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, it is.
Exactly what I was saying Matt
okay and
this point about
the discussion about the resurrection and stuff
and this talk is about religion which
means that it features quite a lot
but the extent to which he is
interested in theology
and Christianity
it can't be overestimated
and it leads me to this point I want to discuss where he's strongly emphasizing throughout
many of the segments, the unique aspect of Christianity and that he ties this in like,
you know, Christianity and to a large extent, the West are seen as fundamentally connected.
Okay, so let me play a clip that might highlight the kind of thing I'm talking about.
The Western imagination has been at work for a very long time constructing up a meta hero and
also his adversary and clarifying the nature of those and that has been done in a sufficiently delineated way so that it's
Produced a major. It's produced a major impact on
the manner in which our societies are constructed because the cornerstone of our society is
Respect for logos and that's instantiated in the doctrine of respect for free speech.
It's also instantiated in the doctrine that every individual has transcendent value,
which I do believe is something that the West has developed to a far greater degree than any other culture that currently exists and probably ever existed.
That's a good example of the ability to jump from one topic to the next to the next and
connect them all together.
He's going from Christ as a meta hero to him being an instantiation of the fundamental
force of logos and not being the basis for free speech and also connected to the development
of human rights,
which reached their epitome in Western civilization.
And he's good at that, at putting it all together in a narrative. But I think that the degree to which he focuses on the Western and Christian
having these exceptional qualities,
Western and Christian having these exceptional qualities.
To me, it's an example of availability heuristic,
where he knows these traditions well,
and he's able to draw connections and link examples to it.
And it isn't like Christianity is not connected to the development of the West,
but like we've talked about earlier,
the notion that respect for individuals
is a feature only or like epitomized most in the West.
I don't know.
Do you find it convincing?
Well, you know, yeah, as you said,
he links together.
He's very good.
He links together about seven different ideas
into a narrative.
But, you know, each one of those connections is debatable.
As always, there's a charitable interpretation, which, as you said, obviously Christianity was an important influence in the West.
You know, cultural changes happened post-Christianity as compared to pre-Christianity in the West,
although it can be hard to separate
it from all kinds of other historical developments that went on, blah, blah, blah. But yeah, as you
said, it's partly the availability heuristic. Look, I mean, so putting aside the quality of
his argument, which is not great, but it's a very short argument where he's putting together so many
things that could never be that good. I think the interesting thing to note
is that he is a Western exceptionalist.
He does believe that there's something very special
and unique in the West, in capital letters,
and he attributes that to Christianity,
which I personally don't buy.
I think there are things that are distinct.
What about the emphasis on the individual?
Because, I mean, when he's talking about respect for truth and meta heroes,
I can't help but think of all those right speech in the Buddhist tradition.
And you can find plenty of exhortations that
the individual has to master themselves or that mastering the passions of the mind and
so on.
I think that there are concepts in other traditions, if you look, and it doesn't mean that they're
all equally distributed, but this notion that
it's Christianity that led to the development of individualism in the West.
I know that there's mainstream scholars who make this point too, right?
Like Joe Henrich is probably the most recent, arguing that the weird psychology, so-called
weird psychology that we see in Western societies, which include a focus
on individualism. He traces it to the ban of cousin marriages in the Western Catholic church.
And this is a book that's just come out and articles that were published in Nature,
which caused some controversy. But I mentioned that to say that he's not the only one drawing
connections. And there are mainstream scholars who argued for these kind of things as well. But I don't know. I'm not expressing it well, but I just find that there's a kind of tautological quality to the arguments because it's looking at what happened in history and what came before and saying, well, that that had to cause that and be the basis for
that. But the historical dice only gets rolled once. So if it was a Buddhist civilization who
had to develop gunpowder to a greater extent, it was like Buddhist civilizations that I think
discovered it. But if they had dominated for various different reasons,
maybe we would have a human rights system
that is less about the divinity of individual people
and being recreated in Christ's image
and more about respect for all beings and sentient life.
Yeah, of course.
And Buddhism has got that very important tradition of focusing on,
you know, internal individual enlightenment rather than, you know, as a thing to strive for,
which is, you know, obviously an individual focus. Look, I think what you're saying is
obviously true, which is that, in short, I don't know to what degree individualism is is uh is a distinctive characteristic of western
culture as compared to other cultures i know there's a lot of research on individualistic
versus collectivist cultures and so on but there's a real danger to looking at history with the
motivation of finding a single dramatic sweep. You know, history is extremely complicated
and isolating the causal factors is hard.
So I'm sure there are historians who argue it both ways
in terms of the degree to which Christianity inculcated
a greater sense of individual rights or individual freedoms
or whatever in European countries.
So I'm not really sure.
Yeah, I guess my broader argument
is that a whole bunch of the stuff
that he presents is arguments
which are already known
and which fall broadly
within the category
of Western exceptionalism
or Christian apologetics.
And there's a well-known argument
for the division between science
and religion called
Non-Overlapping Magisteria by Stephen Jay Gould, which argues that science deals with
the material and the real world, and religion is more to do with the spiritual realities
and metaphors and doesn't encroach on that.
And there's a point where Jordan Peterson essentially makes the exact same argument.
And some of it's also philosophical confusion,
in my estimation.
It's like once the rationalists
and the empiricists got going,
we started to formulate a very powerful doctrine
of the objective world.
And that doctrine appeared to stand in opposition to the doctrine that was put forth by the Christian church, the mythological doctrine, let's say,
if you assume that what the mythological doctrine was, was a variant of that kind of empirical truth, which it wasn't.
Yeah, I mentioned that to point out that it's carving out this realm for religion where it's metaphorical and mythological and it doesn't encroach on the empirical sciences and there are encroachments on scientific topics and debates that impact actual, like creationism and intelligent design are the clearest examples, but there's plenty
of others.
And it simply isn't the case that the majority of the world treat all their religious ideas
as metaphorical,ological and look and furthermore
jordan peterson doesn't either because earlier on he he talked about how that theological level
had to be influencing evolution so we have to take that into account you can't ignore that
the materialists can't you know you can't be a materialist and uh and uh evolutionary biologist
was his argument and yeah as you say pretty much all of the religions did make
or do make strong materialist claims about literally creating the creation
of man, for instance, mankind or humankind, I should say.
You know, and that's only made, it was only made kind
of abstracted once the evidence against that just mounted up and it became an untenable position for an educated person to have.
So JVP seems to be an apologist, as you say, because he's working hard to, he'll sometimes rely on that non-overlapping magisterial idea to carve out this distinct realm for theology, but he'll sometimes rely on that levels of reality idea
where he puts theology down there at the most fundamental level of reality and the material
stuff being kind of ephemera that sits on top of that. Yeah, yeah. So I guess we've banged the drum of his contradictions
and his Christian-centric obsession,
I might put it,
or you want to be nicer,
you could say.
Deep fascination, Chris.
Yeah, his deep fascination with Christianity.
We've banged that drum hard enough.
So maybe for the last point,
so we don't end up with like a four-hour podcast,
it's worth turning to some of the more grounded issues and some of the stuff that probably has made him a more controversial figure, which only really gets touched on the at the end of this interview. And this is his connections or his ideas being taken up or co-opted by the far right or alt-right communities and the issues that he has with the left and the far left.
So let's get started by, I'll play a clip with him talking about the left and what the issue is with them.
I don't believe that what I've been discussing has been co-opted to any significant degree.
I think that what has happened is that at this time and place, for some reason, it isn't the people on the left who are particularly open to the message.
isn't the people on the left who are particularly open to the message, but that's because I think that they're far more gripped by the totalitarian spirit than people aligned along the rest of the
spectrum. Right. So that's him pushing back on the suggestion, you know, that his message has
been co-opted and he thinks that's been exaggerated by various commentators. But you can also hear
there that he's basically saying for him,
that in the modern era, the totalitarians that he sees around and which are concerning are the left. And it's not so evident that it's a problem on the other ends of the spectrum.
Yeah, yeah. So it's pretty hard to say, look at a left political leader like Joe Biden and have any serious concerns
about totalitarianism, isn't it?
Yeah, I think this is a perennial issue that there's the concern about the far left woke
vanguard and their influence.
But a lot of it comes down to them being presented as the secret powers behind the
moderates like Clinton or Biden, that they're just the figureheads for the actual powers who are the,
in American politics, at least. In British politics, you had Corbyn who was, well, at this
time probably was the leader of the Labour Party, but he didn't get elected. And now Labour again has a
moderate leader in Keir Starmer. So there's this notion that the totalitarian ideology of the kind
of woke left will lead to a new Maoist regime. But there's a distinct lack of concern,
and this is part of what has got him in trouble,
with the existing far-right regimes,
several of which are in actual power.
And this is instantiated in his visit to Orban in Hungary,
who is residing over an actual regime which is rolling back
freedoms and, you know, curtailing the press, closing down universities.
But he was able to go there and have, you know, a friendly chat with him about the importance
of Christianity in Western civilization.
So, like, if you wanted to concede for the sake of argument that there was,
let's say, some concerning authoritarian tendencies on the extreme end of the left,
if one conceded that. Yeah, I think that's fine. Okay. So I think what you're saying is if one
concedes that, sure, but a complete myopic obsession with just that and a complete obliviousness to the very
widespread and large-scale tendency towards authoritarianism on the right is not a sensible
position. Yeah, and it leads people to question, essentially, where Peterson characters himself as non-political. It doesn't come across like that whenever you're kind of downplaying the extremism that exists on the right and elevating that which exists on the left. That comes across as partisan politics. And this is a clip of him talking about why he sees
the left as the greater issue in the modern world. The campuses have not been infiltrated
by right-wing radicals. Not at all. Not in the least. The campuses. Yeah. Well, the thing,
the problem with that is that's where the campuses, the humanities,
let's lay it out again, theology at the bottom, philosophy after that.
Well that's where the humanities are.
The humanities are nearest to the foundation of our culture, and they're completely dominated
by radical leftists, postmodern neo-Marxists.
It's not, and that's not my opinion.
That's well documented. There aren't even conservatives in those domains, let alone right-wingers. influence of the left and the radical left on education and that he sees you know post-modern
neo-marxist philosophy as infecting society from from academia outwards and from culture
outwards and and that that is what justifies his unrelenting focus on that topic and uh
what what do you think?
Well, I think there's a sense in which he's right
and a sense in which he's wrong.
So I guess the sense in which he's right is
when you look at surveys of academics,
then yes, we are generally strongly
on the progressive side of politics.
That's true.
So it's fair to say that left-wing ideas have a command in the academy
that right-wing ideas don't.
And, okay, so again, I'm trying to make concessions.
So the other thing that's fair to say is that, yeah,
that political slant is evident in many ideas that come out of academia
and are influential in society. So yeah, you know,
the people who go to university and get degrees, especially fancy universities, are the people who
end up running companies and being in managerial, administrative and political positions, and so on.
So that's the sense, I guess, in which he's right. I guess the sense in which he's wrong is that that's not a reason to completely ignore,
you know, society and politics is bigger
than just the academy.
And it's true that the right-wing populists
tend to have the greatest amount of popularity
with people who don't go to university
or don't have the highest levels of education.
That doesn't make them any less concerning.
And don't you think there's this element about this,
which is people are complaining about the left-wing elitists in academia
and their ironclad grip over society
and how we need to counteract their harmful ideologies being spread.
their harmful ideologies being spread. But it all rests on the notion that it's these quite academic ideas and the way that they're instantiated in activist movements, which are
the most important thing in the modern world and in politics. And it strikes me as a thing that
conservative academics or just intellectuals
would inevitably find more intuitively appealing, that it's about these philosophies and ideas and
debating them. And it's not just about political rhetoric and emotional appeals or the rise of
like xenophobia or these kinds of things. It is more about these quite rarefied philosophical approaches
and and that's what we need to talk about focus understand and and those are the the big threats
in the modern world yeah yeah no i agree with you i think when you're a sort of an armchair
opinionator and uh as someone who reads and writes for for a living or or like Jordan Peterson, you work in a university, then the stuff you see
is the kind of more rarefied stuff. But the stuff that's on TV and the stuff that's actually
relevant to most people is not the same stuff. So you get... Like the oppressors.
Exactly. It's not popular culture. Yes, it does feed in, but even then the degree to which it's not, it's not popular culture. You know, yes, it does feed in, but even then the degree to which it's actually causal is
debatable.
You know, it's, there might be some sort of ready-made buzzwords that apply, but I'm not
sure that the arrow of causality is, is, is, is completely in that one direction.
No.
And I think it's important to remember that this interview is taking place in the context of the first year of Trump's presidency.
And Boris Johnson is, I think at this time, the leader, or if not, it's Theresa May.
And Brexit has been in the wheels of moving.
So this is not an era in which the left are politically dominating the landscape.
That's right, because people who don't have PhDs get to vote too.
So, yeah, and, you know, the other thing where I think he's wrong is that he,
we've talked about this before, but he, like a lot of these figures,
they characterize academia as total and the social sciences as totally in the grip
of cultural Marxists or whoever. And we don't need to labor this point, but it's just not.
Psychologists are social scientists, and psychology is not like that. It really isn't.
Yeah, there's a very weird comment he makes round about the end where he says something like,
conservatives can be labeled right wing. And he basically suggests that that's invalid.
There's not even any conservatives. I mean, maybe you can call conservatives right wing. I think
you got to, you know, you're pushing your luck when you do that. I was just listening to you going, well,
who, who is right wing if conservatives aren't? So like there, there seems to be at least some
confusion about the relative proportions of people and the political spectrum. Cause like,
I think conservatives are right wing. Like that's a fairly uncontroversial thing to say.
Yeah, yeah.
Agreed.
All right.
Well, so we're probably like on the eighth far now.
So maybe we should bring it to a close with our concluding thoughts.
So since I enjoy putting you on the spot and forcing you to do this first,
Soma, how would you summarize all of this and all of the preceding discussion in a pithy,
short few sentences? I've told you before, I hate these takeaways.
My instinct is to say I'm a lot. Okay. So yeah, look, we've covered all of this i'm not going to reiterate it but this is
largely about a mystical christian view of the world he's pretty explicit about that
he makes a lot of specific arguments and as we covered when you actually look at the
argumentation that he provides it's extremely hand wavy and the connections he makes
between ideas are very tenuous which is is fine if you're not looking for that kind of argument but
i think i think we just need to be aware that he's not actually providing evidence or a logical
justification for what he's saying he's stringing together
a series of associations to paint a a kind of poem a narrative of of life in the world which is
which he sees as meaningful and you know i think that's a large part of the appeal i think people
seem to feel in deficit of meaning and they really appreciate the kind of things that
jbp offers which is the same things that religion and and new age gurus offer which is
that sense of wonder that sense of being in touch with the ineffable and the sense that the the
mundane events in in one's life like cleaning one's room, is connected to some sense of higher purpose.
So I appreciate the reasons for the appeal and indeed in JVP's interest in this stuff himself.
He strikes me as someone who is very much, you know, he's genuinely consumed with these issues and is, you know, talking to himself as much as to anyone else.
So what else to say?
I don't like this kind of thing, partly because I'm an atheist.
So it's not going to work for me.
Also, partly because I have to read a lot of student essays.
And when people string together bad arguments, not to say they're wrong, just if they're not tightly argued,
then my instinct is to get out the red pen and correct them. So it doesn't work for me on
multiple levels. And I think that's all I can think of to say right now. How about you, Chris?
Well, so thinking of Jordan Peterson as a guru, the impression that I get is that a large part of his appeal is the willingness to build these grand narratives that range across different disciplines and reference, you know, classical literature and mythology and biblical stories and a whole bunch of things
and pull them together into this narrative.
And I think maybe I differ a little bit from you
in that I think he does have arguments
for the linkages that he's fleshed out
in quite a lot of detail
in some of his other content
and even to some extent here.
But I agree with you that a lot of it comes down
to hand wavy associations and things that fall apart the more that you dig into them. But in
the same way as people like Jared Diamond, you know, Guns, Germs and Steel, or even Richard
Dawkins, people offering these grand sweeping messages
that help you understand society
and help you understand yourself
have a lot of appeal.
And his characteristic as the guru who knows,
has a mastery of so many topics
and is also emotionally available to his followers and cares deeply about them.
It's all classical guru stuff.
And the fact that it's tied up with a Christian and psychological bowl just leads to it having
an intrinsic appeal, which I don't find it that surprising that he was able to become so popular.
And listening to his 12 rules for life, if you let it all wash over you and you don't think too
hard about it, it's kind of an enjoyable thing. So yeah, I guess my point is just that I see him
as an almost prototypical guru and one who fits neatly into this modern age by providing
online lectures, getting involved with culture war commentary on Twitter.
And maybe a point to end on is that it looks like his tale will be quite a tragic one because
he ended up addicted to painkillers in part because of the fame and the schedule, it seems likely.
And then in efforts to get off those, seems to have suffered brain damage as part of an induced coma and may never return to the public stage.
So whether you see that as a good or a bad thing depends on your view on the man.
But it's certainly the case that
there's a tragic arc to his story
where there's a meteoric rise,
like a controversy-fueled period
where he's at his peak,
and then a dramatic and sudden collapse.
So maybe he'll be a figure that people
are still talking about in 10 or 20 years,
or he'll just be a minor cultural footnote. I can't predict.
Yeah, look, I completely agree with you about Jordan Peterson being the prototypical guru that
we're interested in. And it's surprising that he's not recognized as a new age meaning giver in the same mold as Deepak Chopra
because it is so similar in terms of the nature of the appeal and the style of presentation
it's interesting that it's simply because he's a Christian as opposed to being into some Eastern religion of some kind,
it seems that people don't think that he could possibly be a New Age guru in that case.
And the other interesting thing about him is that he does combine the mysticism
with a smattering of scientific evidence as well, although somewhat haphazardly.
Although even that is not entirely remarkable for a New Age guru.
Of course, we've got quantum consciousness and ideas like that
that came out of your more traditional New Age gurus.
They don't do it as well as Jordan Peterson,
but there's certainly a long tradition of wanting to incorporate the legitimacy
of science into into their worldview so as i said at the beginning he's the big kahuna he is the man
he is just a wonderful example of what we're interested in and um i i feel pretty sanguine
i suppose about jordan peterson i feel sympathetic because it does look like his arc has ended.
I think that the people who, or at least the vast majority of people
who get something from Jordan Peterson,
I think it's probably almost entirely benign
in that they really are just looking for a bit of help
in terms of their lives and just looking for a bit of meaning.
I think they could get that stuff from other sources or they can get it from JVP.
In terms of the political stuff, I could completely understand why more progressive people would have a big problem with Jordan Peterson,
because I think he, like a lot of the IDW figures, have that myopic obsession with the excesses of the left and completely give a pass to anything right of center.
So I think that's pretty much it.
All right.
Yeah, agreed. We're always good at this, but the last couple of things that we should mention is we have
a Twitter account, which is gurus, Paul?
Yes.
Yeah, it is.
And then we have an email account, which is decodingthegurus at gmail.com.
So you can send back any feedback there or tweet at us on Twitter where I'm at C underscore Kavanaugh.
And Matt is.
You can also leave us a five-star review on the iTunes store.
There's no other,
don't,
don't try to give us a four-star review or a three-star review.
It'll actually break,
break your browser.
So just. Yeah. These things, I actually, I didn't realize, you know, podcasts are always asking for those, give us a four-star review or a three-star review it'll actually break break your browser so just
um only yeah these things i actually i didn't realize you know podcasts are always asking for
those but i didn't realize they're actually like gold dust to get people to write the reviews
apparently uh you know it's a very rare thing so yeah do that and even if you want to write
something mean that's that's okay that's that's all right we can take no chris no is that the wrong way well yeah all right we don't we don't next week do we know who we're
dealing with uh we don't know yet but we will announce it very soon um so yeah this was fun
i think this is my favorite episode ever thanks chris all right same to you bye bye see ya Thank you.