Decoding the Gurus - Special Episode: Sam Harris & Meditation is all you need
Episode Date: April 2, 2021Sam Harris is a public intellectual who inspires strong reactions both positive and negative. Here, Matt and Chris dip their toes into Sam's introspective universe by analysing a recent 9 minute mini-...episode of his Making Sense podcast titled 'Some Points of Confusion'. Sam intended to clear up some recurrent misunderstandings he has observed with maybe as much as 99% audience with this episode. What could be causing such a fundamental error and does he succeed in resolving the confusion? Join us to find out.In the episode you will learn about the true teachings of Jesus, how incredibly niche Chris' undergraduate degree was, the introspective case for social welfare, and why all meditators inevitably deny the existence of free will.This is an interesting one. And whether you love or hate Sam, we hope you find some value in our non-enlightened ejected introspections.LinksMaking Sense Episode 243: Some Points of Confusion
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to this special edition of decoding the gurus it's the podcast where an anthropologist
and a psychologist listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try our best to
understand what they're talking about i'm matt brown with me is chris cavanaugh and so tell me
chris for what special purpose have you called me here today well Well, I use the standard incantations to summon you
to discuss a fellow that you may have heard of by the name of Sam Harris, who's actually on our list
of gurus to do a proper episode on in the near future. But this is going to be something of a taster because he released a nine-minute podcast episode
which was titled A Few Points of Confusion.
And for reasons that will become apparent,
I thought it would be a very nice episode for us
to dip our toe into the Sam Harris sphere.
Sam Harris-o-sphere.
The world of Sam Harris, the wacky world of Sam Harris with this little taster.
And it's only nine minutes, so how long can we take, Matt?
That's the question to you.
Well, it shouldn't take us more than five, I would expect.
I mean, just an eight-minute clip.
Yeah, usually.
I've only got 70 clips from this.
Well, despite this being extraordinarily short,
I haven't even managed to listen to it, but I have heard of it.
But this will be good.
I can come at a cold and you can tell me all about it
and play me the clips
what you're doing matt is you're bringing your kind of crazy wisdom tantric insight to the topic
as you just riff off what you hear i bring the analytic rational doggedly researched perspective
and you bring the australian bombast the hot kicks the well why don't we just
throw it on the fire that's the dynamic play yeah i'll bring the jazz you can do the drums okay oh
it's pronunciated drummers very brave so like i said this episode was released on march 28th and
the title a few points of confusion might seem a little confusing as a
title, like who's he talking about? What he is discussing is how members of his audience in his
Making Sense podcast appear to be a bit confused about some of his positions and he wants to clarify them. And the relevant context for this is that he has another app where he also
produces content called the waking up app.
And this is focused more on meditation and introspection,
introspective practices.
But sometimes he releases content on both feet. So this is mainly directed to his
making sense audience. Okay. Gotcha. Let's play a clip to start off with why he is releasing this
podcast. Unless you're unusually well-informed about it, when I use the term meditation,
as I do from time to time on this podcast, I would bet that 99% of you get the wrong idea.
Okay. He's highlighting that a lot of his audience seem to be making mistakes when he's referring to meditation. And here's a little bit more clarification of what the issue is. I've had a few encounters recently on other people's podcasts and on social media that
have made me think that many people are confused about some of the views I express on this
podcast.
Okay.
So this is tantalizing.
Oh, and Matt, we should probably say that Sam Harris is famous for being a new atheist in the early 2000s, releasing The End of Faith and then talking in general about atheism and the dangers territory on a whole bunch of topics. He
talks about moral philosophy and the issues of subjectivity and determinism and
various philosophical issues. He's mainly, I would say, a podcaster and an author.
And the kind of public intellectual, that's what he's famous for.
So just to mention who he is in case there are some people in our audience
who have no idea who Sam Harris is.
Yes, and he's also well known for his very precise and careful way of communicating.
That's at least his style.
way of communicating. That's at least his style. So it's a shame, I guess, that 99% of his audience are not understanding him. So I'm curious as to what it is.
Yeah. So those clips that we just played, I think you can hear the deliberate speech style that Sam
is well known for. He sounds like a human ASMR track. And the fact that, like you mentioned,
framing it as 99% of your audience getting the wrong idea about something that you talk about a
lot, like introspection and meditation, it does imply that you might not be communicating things entirely effectively and that the limitation may not lie with the audience.
But in any case, 99% is a pretty disparaging number. It's basically saying almost nobody
is grasping what he wants to say. Well, it could be that he is talking about
such deep and meaningful things and such complex and sophisticated and
nuanced things that sadly his audience is not able to grasp them or maybe their
minds are clouded but we'll find out i'll find out yeah to issue a spoiler the basic
conceit of this episode is that to understand sam's positions properly and why they are correct you need to
meditate or have an appreciation of introspective practices and lacking that you would mistakenly
think that he's wrong yes and you may think that he's relying on these kind of cookie
practices that are mystical in nature rather than the rigorous science of the mind, which
is the kind of introspective meditational practices he's advocating. So let me play
a clip which highlights this distinction. First, let me say that unless you're deep into it,
the term meditation almost certainly conjures the wrong ideas in your mind. And meditation has no
necessary connection to Eastern religion, say, much less to beads or incense or any of the
trappings of New Age spirituality. So were you thinking of that, Matt, when you hear the term
meditation? No, I wasn't actually. I think it's pretty much general knowledge that
meditation doesn't require any religious belief or beads or incense. To push back just a tiny bit
against you and him. I think meditation is, for very good reasons, strongly associated with
Buddhism and other contemplative traditions, especially
from India and East Asia.
And that the kind of connection with the hippy-dippy health and wellness space, that also exists
for a reason that the meditational practices often are advocated in those communities. So like him pointing out
that that's not what he's engaged in and that people drawing those conclusions. I agree with
the point that you're making that those connections are not necessarily there. But I just want to say
that it isn't wrong for people to assume that Buddhism has an association with meditation, because in most cases, when people talk about meditation in
the West, they are discussing it in relation to either Buddhism or a variety of Hinduism.
Sure, sure.
It's got that history.
It's got those associations, but it's also done at corporate retreats.
I agree. So this might be running the topic into the ground, but here's another description of
just how wrong people are about meditation. So if you haven't checked it out recently,
I just want to invite you to do that, especially if you think you know what meditation is,
and you think it's not relevant for you. I can virtually guarantee
that you're mistaken about that. So if you're not meditating and you think that meditation
won't help, he can virtually guarantee you're mistaken about that. He's probably right. I mean,
I think meditation is good for you. I feel like for me, meditating is like dieting.
I'm pretty certain it would do me good. And if I don't do it, then I feel it's not because I don't
think it would be a good thing to do. I just I'm too lazy and weak. So is he wrong, Chris? I mean,
isn't meditation good for you? Well, maybe, maybe I'm being a little bit harsh here because the way I see it is that
having introspective practices is beneficial. If you've never done it before, it's definitely
something that's worthwhile to pursue just to see. Spending time trying to quiet your mind and what
happens if you're not stimulating your attention and you're just trying to follow your breath. It can genuinely be an
eye-opening experience. I think that is a worthwhile procedure. So maybe part of my
negative response to that is that he's assuming that if people were to engage in that, that they
will necessarily benefit and gain insights into themselves. I have some experience doing meditational practices.
I would say it gives me insight into attention and what your mind is doing.
But I think he's somewhat overselling it in regards to the amount of insight that it necessarily offers.
Because I think it very much depends on how introspective you are in your daily life.
Meditational practices are not a necessary thing to provide you this new avenue of insight.
I think there's other methods to reach that that doesn't entail adopting a meditational practice.
that doesn't entail adopting a meditational practice.
I guess I'm just pushing back against the assumption that the whole world would benefit from meditation.
I don't know.
Yeah, I guess what you're saying is that
he may not necessarily be wrong.
It's just the way he's framing it,
which is that the vast majority of you don't understand what I'm talking about, which is kind of annoying because I presume he's talked about meditation a lot and explained it in a lot of detail over a lot of episodes.
So I find it unlikely that 99% of his listeners, if they don't understand what he means by meditation, then surely that's got to be on him. Probably the thing that rubs you the wrong way is his cast-iron certainty that this prescription
is what you need. Yeah, that's exactly it. Overall, on average, engaging in some introspective
practices would be beneficial to people. I get that might seem like a very specific distinction,
but it's the level of certainty and the degree to which it's applied
which is what rubs me the wrong way.
I think that this strikes some chords in terms of the idea in Zen Buddhism
that the enlightened practitioner who has meditated their asses off for decades has access to
a level of insight that other people just simply cannot probably because it can't actually be
communicated you actually have to experience it who knows that may well be true But that can be a bit of a trick. There is no way to test their claim that they have
got this special enlightened state of mind because you can't access their inner thoughts.
Well, that's where it's going to go. So maybe this is why I'm projecting backwards to where
I know the logical conclusion of this argument goes. i agree that there's an issue with when it
comes to contemplative masters that verifying their claimed proficiency is somewhat impossible
because of the subjectivity but there are indicators right like it's essentially impossible
for someone to think that that they're sitting somewhere for hours
meditating if people are sitting there with them.
So I'm in no means dismissing that you can gain expertise in this arena.
But I agree with you that those issues were verification because of the nature of the
topic.
But let me move on to how Sam is applying it, because essentially he wants to argue
that if you're not engaging with introspective meditation practices, you're not really going
to be able to grasp his arguments.
But the benefits aside, more and more I'm realizing that many of you can't understand
the positions I take on this podcast without understanding your mind.
And these are positions which, on their surface, have nothing to do with meditation.
Okay. So you need meditation and to understand your own mind in order to understand his positions. And the way that he regards meditation is that it's
revealing like a level of insight and truth about how your mind functions that isn't available
through other avenues. Meditation is just a bad word for the recognition of specific truths about
the mind. It's a process of discovering what is already true of your own mind. It sounds familiar because I'm aware of the philosophy behind meditation and Zen Buddhism.
And the philosophy is that it provides you not just with the ability to do feats such as control your body temperature withstand pain or
something like that something that might actually be verifiable but that it draws away the veils
from your eyes and by accepting that all is nothing and you don't exist and those things
suddenly make sense because it's resolving the trap of the conscious logical mind so i'm you
know i have a vague level of familiarity with
the philosophy behind it. And it seems to me that what he's saying is pretty conventional
expression of Zen Buddhist philosophy, which is that you have to experience it.
And there isn't really much point talking about it, because you simply won't understand until
you get there. Actually, the point that you pick out there,
that these narratives are very familiar,
and I would say they fall within the Mahayana Buddhist milieu
of the way it's presented in traditional terms is Buddha nature.
Everybody, Tathagata Garba, I think the Sanskrit original,
that everybody has the seed of the
Buddha, their true nature is hidden underneath this illusion, which meditation and introspective
practice will reveal to you. And then you will realize that actually, you know, you didn't gain
anything, you just removed the veils and illusions that were preventing you from perceiving your true nature.
And that's a traditional strand within Buddhist Mahayana philosophy. And it can be recapitulized
without any metaphysical aspect, or at least with that shrunk down, which is what Sam Harris
would be talking about. He's presenting it as a science of the mind. But to me, this reads that
very much he's failing to appreciate that he has internalized a framework for understanding and
interpreting the experiences that you have during meditation and introspective practices that comes from a specific tradition.
And I've heard Sam discuss this in particular with the scholar of Buddhism and Gistigian
religion, Evan Thompson.
And Evan Thompson kept making this point to Sam that this isn't a neutral science of the
mind, that there is a tradition and there is a context
and that even the Western version of that, which often seeks to remove what it regards as the
cultural accretions from the fundamental, non-supernatural, non-denominational truths
about the mind, that version of Western Buddhism comes with its own
cultural baggage and attachments. And one of the things is that it regards itself as a non-religious,
secular, philosophically pure approach to the mind. And that's very much what Sam is reflecting,
that attitude. But he doesn't seem to critically reflect that he
might not be gaining this pure access to the mind, but rather an approach to understanding
the mind that is filtered for a specific tradition or set of traditions. This is an issue that I take
with a lot of people that argue Buddhism isn't the religion or feel to appreciate that that
specific framing was constructed, intentionally constructed, to make Buddhism appealing to
Western audiences. Because it was at a time when they were marketing it towards a West that was
secular and interested in science and so on, and kind
of presenting this is a better version than your superstitious Christian belief. And there's good
reasons for that, because as I've discussed in previous podcasts, colonialism was ongoing,
and there was genuine dangers of destruction and disparaging of non-Christian cultures. So it's entirely
reasonable and understandable that people would do that, but that history leaves a legacy.
If you feel the grapple with it, then you're in danger of falling for a particular framing.
That's what I would say. Yeah, I understand that. But putting aside the
cultural and historical background, which he's neglecting, even though I'm very sympathetic to
the benefits of meditation, but the issue I've got is epistemic. You cannot refer to that as
a science of the mind. And that's simply because it is entirely based in subjectivity.
It is entirely based on revealed truth and ineffable truths
that can only be phenomenologically experienced
and cannot be externally and objectively measured and verified.
This is just the nature of any claims that you want to make about some
special state of consciousness. We don't have the technology to verify any of those claims. So
it may well be the best thing since sliced bread, but you cannot refer to it as a scientific
But you cannot refer to it as a scientific enterprise.
It has to rest on a revealed truth that the person who has experienced it reveals it to you.
So in that sense, it is just like a religion.
It may not have any metaphysical trappings, may not make any claims about life after death or anything like that.
But in terms of its epistemics, it's the same as a religion and it cannot be described as a science yeah it's a mistake to regard what you gain from an introspective
practice and there may be strands which are recurrent right like everybody will almost
definitely realize that they have little ability to control their mind
without thinking about other topics for five minutes. They will quickly realize that that's
much harder than you may expect and that you have a mind that is running on an autopilot that you
seem to have little conscious control over. So I think that might be Sam's rebuttal to say,
well, these are very viable
experiences that you can have, but things go much farther than that. Sam is linking this
to his views about determinism and the non-reality of self. And these are grander claims attached to
philosophical positions, which can be related to introspective practices.
But it's an argument, because there are other introspective practices that could lead you
to having different positions.
But Sam seems to take it that, no, you can't, right?
If you do it properly, you will arrive at the view that determinism is real, and there's
no such thing as free will.
But that's my point, that you have to take it on trust,
that doing that particular thing in that particular way
will give you the correct insight about topic X.
Except he's saying you do it and you test it, right?
This is one of the things that people often cite the Buddha,
you know, saying don't take anything that I have said on my word,
you need to test it for yourself.
But it's a catch-22 because if you do it and you don't agree,
then it's just because you haven't done it properly.
Exactly.
That's the issue.
If you do it properly, then you will agree with me.
So it's a tautology.
It's a self-confirming prophecy.
Yeah, that's it in a nutshell.
And so here's another clip that relates to why I think this is an issue in the way that he's framing things here. and the conventional notion of self don't make any sense in terms of ongoing neurophysiological
changes in the brain. But even most people who understand and accept those arguments don't
really have the courage of their convictions because they still feel like selves that enjoy
free will. Most people don't have the introspective tools to discover that their experience is
actually convergent with what makes the most sense scientifically and philosophically. This segment struck me as incredibly lacking in self-awareness,
ironically, because he's essentially presenting that he has reached a position where his
introspective and philosophical positions are so in tune and coherent that
it's like he's seen through the frigging matrix.
Everyone else is just bundling around thinking that the stake is really staked.
But Sam looks in the mirror and all he sees is the green code flashing around.
That's really imagining a degree of consistency, which is an illusion,
and a degree of detachment from your opinions and positions, which he doesn't have, and he
never displays. He holds grudges. He gets upset about people mischaracterizing his positions,
and so on. And he does say later he's not perfect in all this, but his description of himself reads
unusually confident that he's achieved something which I think is debatable. Here's Sam talking
about how he is accused of being a victim of tribal identity, but this is wrong. And his
introspective practice makes him able to be certain of that.
And when some of my critics say that I'm just practicing my own version of identity politics,
I'm in a position to say bullshit. And to be clear, I'm not claiming to be fully enlightened.
I'm definitely still a work in progress. But there are certain things that I actually understand
about my own mind and about the mind in progress. But there are certain things that I actually understand about my own mind and about the mind in general. Yeah. So like I, I followed Sam, right. And I know that he's
displayed on many occasions that he has variable standards and the level of charity that he applies
to different people. And that he is to different people and that he is certainly
charitable towards anybody that he perceives to have been unfairly smeared in the public
consciousness like Charles Murray and his interpersonal relationships mean that it took
him a long time to issue like criticism of Dave Rubin, like long after it was
self-evident how partisan and biased that Dave Rubin was. Like Sam Harris actually invited him on
his podcast to defend him. So the notion that Sam's critics just have got it all wrong when they
assigned to him any tribal identity and that he knows that because he has the ability to see it just again
it's like this contrast between this level of self-awareness he's claiming and what he demonstrates
frequently to the public in his interactions so you're saying he's he should drop these
protections and admit that he's just wallowing around in the mud like the rest of us pigs.
Yeah.
And like people will point out, well, he didn't say he's perfect.
He didn't claim like pure enlightenment.
And sure, but he's certainly claiming that he's transcended it to a level than like his
opponents.
Right.
And maybe he has for some of his opponents.
But yeah, I just.
OK, so if it sounds like I'm being unfair,
let me just play one more clip where he's talking about his ability to intuit the real
meaning of religion. Meditation is also the key to understanding my criticism of specific
religious ideas. How can I say with confidence that most religious doctrines are not merely
scientifically implausible, many people can
say that, but that they are also a perversion of a very real opportunity to experience self-transcendence.
I can say this because there's nothing hypothetical to me about the kinds of experiences that people
like Jesus were rattling on about to anyone who would listen.
And when you've had these experiences and can have them on demand,
when it's absolutely obvious to you that the conventional sense of self is an illusion,
then it's also obvious that our spiritual hopes need not be pegged to the idea that some historical person might have been the son of God who died for our sins.
to the idea that some historical person might have been the son of God who died for our sins.
I have some weird sympathy for Sam because- I exercise that.
Looking at it from his point of view.
Yeah, exercise that.
Looking at it from his point of view.
He clearly does meditate a lot.
I don't find that hard to believe.
He says he's had these deep transcendent experiences while
doing so and i think he honestly believes that he has gotten a lot out of it and he probably has so
i know he sounds arrogant and lacking in self-awareness but
you can imagine being in his situation,
being convinced of those things, subjectively experiencing them
and feeling that you do have a better insight about things
because of how he's changed through this regular meditation practice.
So he feels it's true.
It's kind of real for him.
And, yeah, he's very frank in telling everybody that that's what he's accomplished.
It's his lived experience.
It's his lived experience.
Let me give my own personal testimony. So like I said, I had an interest in introspective
practices. This is partly why I ended up studying Tibetan
and study of religions in university, focusing on Buddhist traditions. That's why I did that,
because I was interested in meditation. I took time out, a bit like Sam, to go and hang around
meditation centers for half a year. I was interested in all the Buddhist stuff, but also
developed an interest in Christian mystics, Thomas Martin and Anthony de Mello.
Their teachings really resonated with me.
And I felt that these people grasped what the core message of Christianity or all religions have at their core.
They get it.
And this institutional focus on doctrinal beliefs and so on, they've
got it wrong, but there's something good in the traditions there. I had that exact same
sensation. So I not only have sympathy for Sam feeling that, I've had that sensation that I got
it and I've worked out what the beating heart of these traditions are. But here's the
difference. And this is the bit where I think Sam should have reached this point as well,
is that when I went to university and started studying about those traditions, I found out
that one, like we already discussed, that a lot of the things that I'd considered super appealing were designed to be super appealing to me. They were part of a tradition that was targeted at
Westerners who were disaffected with religion and were seeking out alternative spiritualities.
And that was part of what people had geared it towards. So they did intentionally downplay
supernatural elements.
They did intentionally present it as a scientific framework and so on.
Then secondly, I also realized from studying the history of these traditions
that they're these super complex, multifaceted things
with lots of different sects,
lots of different philosophical traditions within them.
And that there's a constant tendency from
people within native cultures associated with religious traditions and from people approaching
it later in life from that it might be regarded as more exotic to seek the thing that they see
appealing as being the original core truth of the tradition taught by the founder,
the real teaching of the Buddha, the real teaching of Jesus, not the cultural accretions,
not the mistakes. But you come to realize that, no, if you look at the history, what people were
teaching back then, you can extract parts that you like, yes, but you are cherry-picking the parts that you
ignore because they're talking to a completely different context. And there are elements that
you can take and apply to modern life and which may seem more transcendent than their rivalries
with specific factions. But in large part, you're just choosing that on your preference because they do have
supernatural elements. The early Buddhist traditions were significantly focused on
venerating relics of the Buddha, and that this was an important part of the practice of communities.
It still is in Buddhist traditions, and you can regard that as a perversion of the pure teaching.
traditions. And you can regard that as a perversion of the pure teaching. But the oldest texts that we have have magic mantras and stuff in them. And they tell stories about people going to heavens
and meeting gods and the different realms of reincarnation. And you can regard that as all
cultural baggage. But at some point, you're essentially inserting what you want to be the core of the religion or the philosophy.
And so I basically want to say that there's nothing wrong with doing that.
But what I would regard as the more intellectually rigorous way is to recognize that that's what you're doing.
And it isn't that all of these traditions had this truth that you've uncovered it's that
you have a specific approach that you find value in and that you think is valuable for people in
general but that doesn't mean that's what the oldest and most authentic teaching is that's my
issue so let's say you were saying this to Sam Harris, and he could
well concede that point and say that, yes, right back to the very beginning, Buddhism and
even other religions that have done transcendent meditation and activities like that have always
been contaminated by heaps of hocus pocus and magical things and even the good part of it
was always in the minority it could even be a small percentage of what was going on so he could
concede all of that chris but i think from his point of view what he's saying would still stand
up because he's he's saying that he the practice that he's describing may well be a
modern artificial construct, but the practice that he's experienced and has done routinely
for a long time leads one to an extra degree of philosophical insight.
No, because that's the problem. So I think he would quite happily acknowledge that the
Buddhists throughout history, I've heard him discuss this, that the majority of them
don't do this, don't do the kind of introspective practices that they're discussing, and that this
applies for all religions and so on. But my point is not to say that this is ignoring what the historical
and cultural context of Buddhism is. My criticism is that Sam doesn't say this is a modern thing
that I've interpreted and it doesn't matter if it is actually related to an ancient tradition. He
does project it back to the core insights of these philosophical and religious figures,
and that's what they were really talking about. So it matters, and he's defensive when it comes
to people suggesting that it is otherwise, or that that kind of view that the scientific western approaching these ancient
traditions can see through all the cultural bullshit that people have attached to it and
extract the core gem that there is a very clear history of this which is tied into a a kind of
you know i don't want to go all post-colonial theory and critical theory
type stuff about it, but they have an element of truth to it that there is a colonial mindset
to that in a sense.
Or you could even say a fundamentalist mindset.
It doesn't have to be colonial, right?
That just you see through the tradition that so many cannot and if sam was to say that
he is just constructing his philosophy and his approach and he's built a modern thing i think
it would lack a lot of the gravitas that he wants to claim so that's why he won't do that
yep makes sense yeah so i can see i Makes sense. I can see that point, Chris.
Well, I may have blown my load here.
But in any case, let's get back to what he actually talks about with Cliff,
talking about the extent to which meditation is core to his position on so many things.
My experience in meditation largely defines my politics too. And for instance, how can I be so
sure that the explosion of identity politics that we see all around us isn't a sign of progress?
How can I know that it's an ethical and psychological dead end to be deeply identified
with one's race, for instance, and that all the people who are saying that there's an ethical and psychological dead end to be deeply identified with one's race,
for instance, and that all the people who are saying that there's no way to get past race
in our politics are just confused. Well, because I know that a person need not even identify with
the face he sees in the mirror each day. In fact, the deeper you examine your experience,
the more you discover that freedom ultimately depends on not identifying with anything, even with how you look in the mirror. So what do you think, Matt?
You're going to hate this, but I kind of like it. We could easily make fun of this, but
he's talking about non-attachment, to connect non-attachment from Buddha's philosophy to
attachment to your identity.
But even putting aside these political hot-button things
like race and so on, like you see it in teenagers
where they're searching out for an identity
and become a goth or something like that,
and clothes are very important and how you present yourself
and how people see you and so on, right?
You know, I think most people who are
mature can realize that those are understandable impulses but ultimately a sign of immaturity
and so the idea of non-attachment's a nice idea so i kind of like where he's going with it i know
from a political lens people would just go no that's bullshit so naive or whatever
but i said something on twitter once which was that you don't need to worry about your sexuality
gender or race very much because by the time you get to 60 we're all going to be these gray
flabby amorphous sexless blobs and all that stuff kind of goes away and when when you get old a lot of your identity gets
stripped away and there's something sad about that i guess but there's also something good
about it so i guess i'm getting on board sam's you're gonna sign up for the mystical philosophical
i love it i love this guy he's my guru look i think you're reading me slightly wrong, though. And I don't have an issue with somebody arguing for a lack of identification being a good thing.
Whether you're tied to a Buddhist tradition or not.
And highlighting that attachment to identity, whatever the identity may be, is potentially something that could be beneficial to overcome, or at least to realize
that it isn't everything that you attribute to it, right? That you can let identities go,
even if they matter to you. I can recognize that being Irish is a part of how I see myself,
is a part of how I see myself. But I understand I'm not responsible
for most of the accomplishments of Ireland historically.
Most. I like that.
Just like, it's just a portion.
And I don't know most Irish people.
What do I share that we lived on the same piece
of like green, beautiful emerald island together i get it the artificiality of identities
which people regard as salient is like i think there's a fair point to be made there and even
when it comes to race this is where a lot of people have taken issue with this episode because
he's essentially advocating for color blindness which is passé in more progressive sectors. So here's him
specifically making this point about the way that he regards race and identity.
How much more so is it unnecessary to identify with millions of strangers who just happen to
look like you in that they have the same skin color. In light of what's possible
psychologically and interpersonally, in light of what is actually required to get over yourself
and to experience genuine compassion for other human beings, it is a form of mental illness
to go through life identified, really identified with one's race.
Yeah. So Matt, before you respond, I'll just say, I think again,
overstatement comes into play here and the potential lack of perspective about why some
people may choose to identify with racial characteristics or ethnic groups. But he does
discuss that later. He raises that point as a response. But before we get onto that, I just want to say that the part that I took issue with in
the previous call to drop identities was the implication that when you do that, when you
drop identities and when you no longer look at the man in the mirror and see like chris kavanaugh
matthew smith you see a collection of particles who temporarily are in the form of a man that
others refer to as chris kavanaugh matthew smith or brian you know whichever that's what i see
i just see particles yeah or the matrix right friggin green jargon scribbling down the screen but when you
reach that point what sam is editorializing is that you embrace his politics you embrace his
philosophy that's what that leads to and that's the bit where i'm like no sam that's what you
think that that leads to i understand that that's a conclusion you've reached, but it's
showing a lack of perspective to imagine that other people might realize the emptiness of the
various identity attachments they have, and yet not agree with Sam about determinism or his views
on self. That's the bit that I find objectionable not not the the call to like not focus on identity
sure no i get it yeah it's not so much objecting to what he's suggesting but more the rationale
that he puts forward why you have to agree with him or would necessarily agree with him if you
were clear-sighted like him. And
I know that that's annoying and would stick in people's throats. So here's a clip of him talking
about colorblindness and racial politics. But to insist upon the primacy of race is to be
obscenely confused about human potential and about society's potential. And I'm not going to pretend to
be unaware of that. So when I'm talking about racial politics on this podcast,
I am also talking about meditation. Yeah. So the thing that is difficult to stomach is
drawing together meditation and these political issues. The other thing that's kind of annoying
is I do think that he's misrepresenting the people that he's speaking against. I don't think
that they do valorize race. I've heard from many people on that side of things that they think it
is an unhealthy social colonialist construct. So you can certainly find crazies on the extremes that might conform to
sam's description but that's a familiar straw man that i've seen in idw circles i although i i will
say i think there's an element where it's maybe more mainstream than you suggest there to have the view that solidarity based on racial constructs, real, that you don't have a choice as a member of those
groups to discard that identity, and you need to organize together in order to fight back
against the hierarchical system. That's exactly what I'm saying. It's directly analogous to the
Marxist idea that there should be solidarity among workers, and maybe even violent antagonism towards the oppressors. But Marxists don't think that there's anything fundamentally different
about workers and capitalists.
They want to dismantle.
Metaphysically.
Metaphysically.
They want to dismantle the class structure.
System.
System.
That's it.
Yeah.
So.
Structure.
You're right.
You're using more Marxist jargon.
And, you know, likewise, the other rejoinder that I can imagine people saying is that if you are treated differently because you're black or because you're a woman, then you don't have the option to transcend identity.
I think it's only fair to play Sam addressing this point because he completely
preempts that he's going to get that criticism. So here's what he says about that.
It's just a bad dream. Of course, to say that as a white guy in the current environment
is to stand convicted of racial insensitivity and even seeming indifference to the problem of racism
in our society. I mean,
what greater symptom of white privilege could there be than to declare that we should just
all get past race? That's a retort that I believe I can hear percolating in the minds of many
listeners. And most well-intentioned people have been successfully bullied by that kind of response.
What's going on here, Chris? You tricked me.
You said this would be commenting about Sam Harris and meditation, and you've drawn me
into some kind of culture war race debate.
No, I will not go.
Silently into the night.
I'm just saying, this is part of the reason why some people have taken issue with
this short episode. But I don't actually have that much of an issue with Sam or anybody advocating
for colorblindness as a goal. I know that's passe now, but I think it's a legitimate goal
that we should strive to achieve. I think the debate is over how realistic it is to regard
that as something that we can focus on now, but I don't want to focus on that. It is impossible
with Sam, however, to not get his positions tied in to these kinds of topics. And that's part of
the criticism that I have here is that if he had just released this thing saying introspection is good, and I
encourage everybody to do it, you might learn more about your mind. You may understand my positions
better. That would be one thing. But what he's done instead is release a thing saying,
if you meditate, you 99% people who just constantly misinterpret me, if you only meditated,
you would realize how right I am am not just about the nature of mind
but i'm right about politics i'm right about racial politics i'm right about and it's all
self-evident if you meditate so like that's the problem right yeah that's the problem yeah i i
agree with you 100 i'm gonna say in the episode, we try to get the bits where they say something nice.
So here's Sam arguing that his meditation practice leads him to believe that social
welfare is a necessity.
Insights into the nature of mind can't help but touch politics.
For instance, my attitude toward wealth inequality is born of the recognition that no one is truly
self-made.
All these rich guys walking around with their copies of Ayn Rand, thinking they're self-made.
It's pure fiction. And given how we do become ourselves, given the overwhelming influence of
luck in our world, we have to recognize that we need an effective system of wealth creation
that doesn't allow people to
truly fall through the cracks. Yeah, I'm glad you played that because
I think the people that would recoil against Sam talking about colorblindness would be totally
on board with that. And that's a nice sentiment that I completely agree with.
But I'll just say that I don't know if you do have
to have transcendental meditative experiences
to come to the same conclusion because I kind of have.
And I'm a guy who doesn't diet and doesn't meditate.
So somehow I swung it.
How did I do it, Chris?
Am I just brilliant?
Am I a genius?
Maybe you are the Buddha that we all strive to be.
But I completely agree with his sentiment there.
And I'll play just one last clip, which also is stating the same thing, I think, in a nice way.
And as we get wealthier, the floor beneath which no one should be allowed to fall
should keep rising.
Compassion has to be built into capitalism because it doesn't seem to occur naturally.
That's a sentiment I'm 100% behind.
And I think that's also an indication that people who treat Sam as purely this closet
right winger, that they are misrepresenting him to a certain extent, because I think that does
reflect his view about social welfare and wealth inequality and that. And a lot of people will
hand wave that as a way as, well, you know, nice sentiments. But I think there's a difference there between him and a lot of the people that people would label as right wing.
That wouldn't evince that kind of criticism of capitalism and the need for a soft floor for people.
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
I mean, I don't know Samris anywhere near as well as you do
but i get the sense that politically speaking he's not terribly far away from where i happen to be
and i think where material like this is very annoying to people and annoying to you specifically chris is is it's more the complete overconfidence and a lack of
humility self-awareness you could say yeah where it's like a cultural thing and it's it's how he
frames it like you and i are people who react against people who take themselves extraordinarily seriously
and who appropriate this huge amount of gravitas and authority.
And, in fact, we like people who don't take themselves so seriously
and undercut themselves and have a laugh.
And even when you're talking about serious things.
And Sam's not like that. No things and sam's not like that yeah
no it's just not like that and it does veer into arrogance and this bullet-headed tunnel-visioned
kind of self-assuredness that is almost like the certainty of the religious zealot who just knows that this is it. And if you cannot understand that, then you need to sort yourself out.
There's a definite element to that, right?
And the atheists, there's this critique which sometimes gets leveled,
which I think is invalid to argue that, well,
if somebody is so certain that God doesn't exist,
aren't they just as religious as the religious person?
And I think that's not a great criticism. But the criticism that Sam is very
zealous about the philosophical positions that he adopts and that he regards them with the level
of certainty that is typical amongst people who would be fundamentally religious. I think that is a valid criticism
because that's the way he comes across in this. And I don't think he's advocating these terrible,
terrible things. They're positions I generally have a lot of sympathy for. So it's not that.
It's more, like you say, the level of certainty. Yeah. And the degree to which there's a claim of a transcendence of identity and ego coupled with a display of incredible ego and lack of self-awareness.
That's the shit sandwich.
Yeah, I think that's it in a nutshell. It's interesting, isn't it, how Sam, whose books were all about being anti-religious,
has just been increasingly interested in this thing,
which is not religion.
It's not religion, Chris.
It's just purely material, scientific, secular,
but still achieving personal revelation and a higher state of
consciousness through an entirely subjective, ineffable, untestable, unverifiable process
from which you can have special access to the truth that other people either need to get on board with or get with the program.
And so it's structurally very similar. Very similar.
Yeah. But I will say this has been in his content from the start. His earliest books
have this point about, because he had went on walkabouts before he went to grad school,
traveling around and going to India to find
gurus and engage in meditation stuff.
So he was the one of the four horsemen of the new atheist who recognized and debated
with the other ones that religion did have these aspects to it that were worth preserving
and experiencing.
So it's always been his thing, but it's become more of his thing as he's developed this
meditation app.
And that's the last thing I want to focus on is the potential connection.
And this is possibly the most worrying aspect of it between the commercial app that he has and the kind of community that he's growing there and this pitch that he's giving.
Because I don't want to make a big thing about it like this is all about profit and it's just
a way to get money because I think he's very sincere. But there is an element where there's
a commercial interest here and he's really presenting what you need. If you really want
to understand me, if you really want to get
my points is you need to meditate. By the way, I have a subscription app that will teach you
how to meditate. And that's where the real thing is. So I've got just two clips left,
but here's the first one positing what you get in the waking up app.
So this is just to say that what I think I've learned
through the practice of meditation
influences many of the views I express on this podcast.
But I can't get into the details here
because there are so many other things to discuss.
So that's what I'm doing over at Waking Up.
What I'm building at Waking Up is the laboratory
where you can run this same experiment for yourself.
Yeah.
That's more troublesome, right?
A little bit.
It's not a, God, this is such a terrible phrase, but it's not a good look,
given the other things we talked about to segue into a monetized service that you provide.
Yeah, and Matt, one point that people will raise in response to this is this.
And if you can't afford a subscription, you need only send an email to support at wakingup.com
and ask for a free one.
So please do not let money be the reason why you don't check it out.
Hey, so you can get access for free.
That's nice, right?
But that strikes me as a little bit
14 day money back guarantee
and how many people do it.
That's, you know,
it isn't 90% of your audience to that.
It's like 2% or 1%.
Yeah, yeah.
That's, that is something that marketers do.
If you're not perfectly comfortable
on your mattress,
you could send it back within a month.
90 days, no questions asked. Yeah, so it is nice of him to offer that but he must know that not
everyone's going to take that option yeah you know whatever it costs like they know that most people
don't take that up for certain reasons if you get people sufficiently excited about the product
most people can afford it and they will pay here's the last clip that i titled the
guru pitch so let's see what this is oh dear you can pretend to want to integrate your intellectual
and ethical and political life or you can really want to do it and to discover all the ways in
which you have failed to do it so far you can can either want to do it or you can not.
It's not like nagging.
That rubbed me the wrong way, right?
You know, you can be the one who walks the walk
or you're just some guy that reads my books
and doesn't really get it.
Yeah.
Well, personally, I'm going to keep drinking and vaping
and not dieting.
That's my plan.
Well, you're a bad person.
That's why.
We've discovered this.
But so look, summing up, I think I've said it too many times already, like what my issues
with this were.
And it isn't with the message that people should engage in introspective practices that
might be beneficial to people.
It's with all of the other things that we pointed out.
And I think that Sam Harris is not a Scott Adams type guru.
He's not even an Eric Weinstein type guru, but he's in the guru sphere, especially with
this move towards the meditation app and like this episode right this framing of
things that if you really want to understand what he's getting at you'll need to join with
his introspective practices it's kind of a version of the emperor's new clothes like if you're not
getting it it's because you're not really that enlightened or trying
hard enough.
And there's a hundred percent guru dynamics attached to that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I won't repeat myself.
I think I gave most of my takes.
I agree with you.
He's very guru-like.
He's not a toxic guru as far as I can tell, like some of them are.
guru as far as i can tell like some of them are and it's an interesting character because i feel that if he's not sincere then he's the best yeah the best actor um
so yeah just what a what an interesting character that's my take is that yeah yeah
yeah so you know some of you hear this please realize we don't have a grudge that we're
trying to tear you down this is it's just a little a little ounce of more self-awareness
it might it might benefit you it might make you less prone to engaging in prolonged battles with a
whole cadre of enemies but um yep yep try to be more self-aware like try to be more
self-aware like chris exactly that's it you know if you engaged in introspection practices the way
that i have if you had went to university and studied the history of buddhist traditions
then your only conclusion you could reach is my perspective So that's what you need to do if you really want to get to the bottom
of these kind of issues, Sam.
That's my message to everyone.
And it will also make you a better person if you agree with me.
So sorry.
Well, it's worked for me.
So are we done?
Do we have any special announcements to make?
So are we done?
Do we have any special announcements to make?
No, we've only took one hour longer than it took Sam to issue the podcast to add comments on that.
So I think that's about par for the course for us.
But yeah, but it's been fun.
And I think this has been a hell of an extended trailer for the Sam Harris proper episode.
I think a lot of these topics will probably repeat.
If we can spend an hour talking about Nate Miniclip,
then just imagine how epic the full Sam Harris episode will be.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
He's going to take a week off work and just deep dive.
It's unclear whether this episode will come out before or after
the Gwyneth Paltrow episode so you either have that to look forward to or this is your added
nugget of content but um yeah thanks everyone for listening we appreciate any feedback at the
the coding the gurus at gmail.com that's our email we have a active reddit which has
lots of nice threads which include discussion of this very content that we covered we have the
patreon and where we post extra content and uh do all our stuff and then we have the twitter feeds which is guru's pod for the show account and then r4c
dent for matt and c underscore kavanaugh for me and that is all of the ways you can reach us
that is it okay bye-bye all right matt go gravel at the feet of your muscle master. Ciao. Thank you.