Modern Wisdom - #891 - John Vervaeke - The Psychology Of Finding Meaning In Life
Episode Date: January 18, 2025John Vervaeke is a cognitive scientist, professor, and YouTube educator. Humans are meaning making machines. Even when we believe our lives lack meaning, we instinctively follow something; an idea, a ...goal, or a routine. So, how can we intentionally create more meaning in our lives, and what’s the best way to discover it when it feels absent? Expect to learn why humans need meaning and why having meaning is very important to humans, what creates meaning for an individual, why the word purpose is not the same as meaning, the relationship between affluence and meaning, how to avoid self-deception, how to think about meaning without embracing something outside of reality and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D, and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with any purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Given that we are biological creatures, why do we need meaning?
Why do humans need to do all this extra work in order to be satisfied with life?
Well, I have to tell you that I've been going through a… since the publication of the
book, I've been going through a serious reflection on this question again and going deeper into
it. There's many levels of
answering that question. At one level, meaning has to do with sense making, it has to do with how we
properly pay attention to the right kind of information that can allow us to reliably solve a wide
variety of problems in a wide variety of domains.
And that's one aspect of meaning, that sort of agentic aspect.
But consonant with that is we need to be connected to other people because most of our problem
solving is done in connection with other people.
So there's an initial sense making dimension.
This is often talked about as sort of coherence in the meaning in life literature, does your world sort of, is your sense making making sense to you is
how I sometimes put it. Like the sense making is what you're doing sort of automatically.
And when you reflect on it, you go, yeah, that makes sense. My, my world isn't absurd
or things like that. And then we need to feel connected to other people because most of our problem solving is done
via other people.
That's our great superpower, individually, biologically, as you framed it.
We're pretty pathetic animals.
A really angry dog can take us out.
And so our superpowers, we can coordinate together and train some of those dogs and sharpen some of those sticks
and then kill anything on the planet. And so we need to be connected to other people.
And that brings with it its own special problem that my friend Greg Enriquez made sort of
prevalent. We developed the superpower of connecting and coordinating called language.
And language is something really, really powerful in helping
us coordinate, but it also does something really novel. It makes the content of our
minds accessible. We're sort of exposed to each other in a way in which no other organism
is exposed to its fellow creatures. And so we have to also develop
this way of balancing between coordinating with other people, but not being overexposed.
So we have to develop relationships of trust and forgiveness and belonging, and we have
to balance between being individuals and having an individual identity and a group identity. So that's all central to meaning. And then beyond that, we fall prey in both
of those domains to massive self-deception. I don't pay attention to the right things.
I misframe you. I'm biased in my attitude towards you.
And so we have to do a lot to correct that. We have to try and ameliorate that. And what
that means is we also have to be connected to standards by which we can correct ourselves,
standards about what is most real, what is best, what is most beautiful. And that's
a deeper kind of connectedness. That's kind of a connectedness to what we consider
ultimacy.
So I've tried to show you how all of these things
are all important dimensions in why we have to pursue
meaning in life.
I've become increasingly dissatisfied with the standard
psychological construct called meaning in life
to measure and talk about all those dimensions in a coordinated fashion.
Can you talk to me about the sort of established body of work when it comes to meaning and
how you diverge from that or what you would suggest as an improvement?
Yeah, so the standard metrics are around sort of four dimensions, really three. One is coherence, which I mentioned,
which is, does your sense-making make sense to you? Another one is purpose. That's not
well-posed because if you think standardly of how people think of purpose, purpose is
you're working towards some ultimate goal. That's a very dangerous way of framing meaning because if you never reach a goal, your life was meaningless.
And if you reach it, going forward, you're pretty meaningless.
And I discovered that way back in high school and that sort of really bothered me.
And so I think what they're talking about more is orientation.
And then orientation is a more important way.
People have to feel not disoriented, but oriented in the world.
And then the next one they talk about is significance.
That you have things in your life that aren't transitory, ephemeral, shallow.
But that seems to be just sort of one side of this deeper thing, which is called mattering. You need
to feel connected to something people typically use the metaphor bigger than yourself. I want
to be connected to something larger than myself, right? They don't mean that literally because
that would be ridiculous. Attaching you to a locomotive engine doesn't give you a profound
sense of meaning
in life.
So what's going on there is, I would argue something like this.
There's a deep connection between the sense of bigger and more real.
And let me try and give you an everyday example of this.
When you're in a dream world, you're in this little world and it seems so real to you.
And then you wake up.
Notice we have all these waking up metaphors and
enlightenment metaphors, you wake up and from that larger world, you can see how the earlier
world, the smaller world is limited in biasing you and warping and thwarting you in you trying
to get a flourishing life. And I think that's what people are really struggling
with when they're talking about mattering, about being connected to something larger than themselves.
And it's this sense of realness, which I don't think is properly captured just by the psychological
notion of mattering. And here's the fundamental thing. I mentioned that meaning has to do with being connected
to something that's more real than yourself in some important ways because it helps make
you feel more real to yourself. Now, that's a problematic notion to think of as just purely, I'm just describing something
like a standard psychological phenomena.
This is actually, if you'll allow me one technical term, this is a normative term.
Meaning is, a meaningful life is not a script.
When I say your life is meaningful, I'm not just describing it, I'm praising it.
I'm saying there's something fundamentally good to it.
It's meeting some standards of evaluation. But those standards of evaluation are completely
absent from the standard psychological model. That would be the crux. That's one of my two
main criticisms. And so in a very deep sense, the standard meaning in life psychological model is completely divorced
from the cultivation of wisdom and virtue. And if you look across all the religion and philosophical
traditions, that's not the case. They're deeply wound together, bound together. The cultivation
of meaning and the cultivation of virtue and the cultivation
of wisdom are profoundly intertwined. Stoicism, in fact, is that they're exactly identical,
which tells you how strong some positions have been on it. And the psychological model
is missing on that.
The second one is the psychological model, and this is ironic because it's talking a
lot about connectedness, but it doesn't talk about the connectedness.
What I mean by that is it only talks about the individual agent's attitudes.
It doesn't talk about how the world is showing up for them.
So let me give you an example of how this can go wrong.
You can ask somebody, and you ask them the standard sort of
questions on meaning of life. And they have friends, and they have family, and they have
work projects. So their life is pretty meaningful above average. But you ask them,
do you think your world's very coherent? Do you think the world makes a lot of sense?
You have a lot of trust in the world. Is the world presenting itself with a lot of beauty and depth to you?
No, you'll get people saying exactly the opposite. And then if you ask people,
is your meaning in life actually bringing you a lot of peace? Is it really integrating you well
as a person? Is it reciprocally opening you to reality? No no because people are experiencing a lot of burnout, a lot of bullshit,
and a lot of betrayal. They're losing trust and faithfulness in their institutions and in fellow
people, right? And so there's a famine of people being able to get into the flow state,
and able to have that basic trust and forgiveness with others, fellowship, and a sense of faithfulness
is massively diminishing.
I just saw a report that Americans' trust in the Supreme Court is at an all-time historical
low.
It has never been so low.
And of course, that is only prescient, I think, of what's happening all throughout the Western world.
And so the Meaning in Life construct is leaving out all of this that's really bedeviling people in a very powerful way.
And so I think the Meaning in Life construct gets a little bit about how our agency works and contributes to Meaning in life, but it's leaving out a lot.
Let me put it one last sentence and then I'll stop.
The issue isn't just about finding information relevant.
It's about can you enter into resonance?
This is what Rosa calls this relationship
that is so centrally lacking in most of our life.
This is, does your meaning in life allow you
to reciprocally open?
Does it take you into the depths of the psyche
and align them?
Does it take you into the depths of reality
so you feel you're meeting standards
that allow you to correct yourself according
to what is true and good and beautiful?
Is it doing any of that?
That's resonance.
And then resonance also needs to be transmuted into reverence. Are you, are you ultimately oriented to what you consider ultimately most real?
Uh, because that's the, that's the, that's the, that's the judge behind
everything else that we're evaluating.
So sorry, that was wrong question, but I.
Not at all.
Not at all.
Uh, the realness point I think is very interesting.
I, maybe it's a connection to, but I. Not at all. Not at all. Uh, the realness point I think is very interesting.
I, maybe it's a contemporary problem because of how much people are mediated by the screens.
Maybe this is worsened by the fact that we're atomized and isolated into our little droid boxes and we spend a lot of our time on our own.
Maybe it's because of a lack of connection to nature and, or, and
dread or whatever it might be.
But I would guess that, um, a lot of people have this sense that their life is so
real and not surreal in the, I can't believe how amazing it is.
I'm so blessed that everything's going right.
But in a, I don't necessarily feel fully connected and grounded to the
experiences that I have day to day.
My mind and my feet don't rest in the same location all that much.
You could maybe call it presence.
But it's sort of, it's more than just presence.
Presence is necessary, but not sufficient.
It's, it's the connection to it.
It's being able to feel like I can reach out and grab it.
Like things are happening and the things that are happening are, are, they're
important and I have some sort of agency and they affect me and, and that they're actually
going on as opposed to kind of like everything being a sitcom and it all just sort of playing
out in front of our eyes.
So I want to, I want to really dig into sort of things becoming really real and, and sort
of where that comes from.
I think that's important. I think that is the thing that's quintessentially missing
from the psychological construct. That's the sort of ultimate norm within the normative
dimension. Because you can undermine any of these relationships that are giving people
meaning in life can be immediately undermined if there if like any of these relationships that are giving people meaning in life
can be immediately undermined if there's a sense of betrayal
or that that was an illusion or they were being deceived.
Explain, can you think of an example of that?
So there's a standard one I use.
So, and I've done this multiple, multiple times
and it's never failed to work.
So it's not quite a scientific study, but it's pretty good.
So I asked my students, how many of you are in really deeply satisfying romantic relationships?
Romantic relationships are the culture's current surrogate, or at least one of its surrogate,
idolatrous surrogates for God and culture and virtue.
It's like you're supposed to find the one and they're supposed to do everything and
you're supposed to transcend yourself and find familiar fulfillment in it.
Which of course leads to the weird thing that people value romantic relationships sort of
most of all right now, except maybe with their kids.
Yet romantic relationships are the source of most suffering and a lot of mental health
disorders.
And so that tells you we're treating something, we're putting too much pressure on something.
Okay, so let's take that.
We've got this thing.
This is like, our cultures tells you this is where it is at.
This is where you find it.
I asked them, okay, how many of you are in such a really satisfying romantic relationship?
They put up their hands.
They say, okay, now I'm only addressing the people
who are in relationships.
So the rest of you, sorry, you're not in this now.
But for those of you who put up your hands,
how many of you would wanna know
if your partner was cheating on you,
if that meant the absolute dissolution of the relationship?
And almost all of them, like somewhere between 95
and 100% reliably put up their hands.
And I say, well, why?
Why, like you could continue to go on
and enjoy the relationship and get all the pleasures out of it
and all the companionship and all the sexual gratification.
Like what, like why?
And here's my students and they're at the university
so they're hard bitten with cynicism and postmodern nihilism
and everything and all this sort of stuff.
And they without a beat say to me, well, because it wouldn't be real.
It wouldn't be real. And then that removes all of the other ways in which it is contributing
to meaning in life for them. That's the example of what I mean.
So good. So good. And intuitively, everybody knows that there is this sort of sense of honesty,
the honest, that you need to, that you expect.
And, uh, you know, who was the experience machine?
Who did the experience machine?
No, it's Robert Nozick.
Yeah.
It's not too dissimilar, I guess, to the experience machine, but it's a much
more salient example that everybody knows.
Um, yeah. Would you. Yeah. It's not too dissimilar, I guess, to the experience machine, but it's a much more salient example that everybody knows.
Um, yeah, would you, how would your experience change?
It, you know, the Truman show might be another example of that where, you know,
you're going around living a good life and everything seems fine, but what if
everybody else was an actor?
So I wouldn't want that.
Why? The, to you, the sort of felt sense, nothing would have changed.
It's the exact same.
There's something about sort of intention.
There's something deeper.
There's something beyond, not just the sort of utilitarian,
what do I get out of this situation?
What is the intention behind that? What's the meaning?
Exactly. And notice His name, which is really central, true man. It's about truth. And it's
not about just conceptual truth. It's about like being true to, right? True to His humanity,
true to reality. And of course, He's willing to break through the wall, right? Remember, he's sailing on the little sea to break through the wall. And the same thing was offered in the
Matrix when Morpheus says, all I'm offering you is the truth, right? And the villain, of course,
Cypher, which means a symbol without any depth, right? He wants to go back to the matrix. And, and, and we know that's why he's a villainous person because he's
betraying the commitment to reality and to his own humanity.
Just lingering on what you said before about the difference.
A lot of people, I think will use purpose and meaning almost interchangeably.
Even though when, when you think about it, it's not quite, but the two kind of
come as a package pair, they're a twin pack of, uh, values that a lot of people talk about when you were
mentioning about how, if you use the word purpose, if you don't achieve it, your
life is worthless.
And once you do achieve it, if you do achieve it, what do you do next?
It seems to me the difference between purpose and orientation is the same as between destination and journey.
Yes.
That one is moving you in a direction and it's kind of an endless game.
It's an infinite game.
Whereas the other by design, the purpose is this thing, unless you do some jiggery-pokery with your purpose and create some sort of like instrumental purpose.
My purpose is to show up every day in a manner that's like,
yeah, whatever, don't litigate me out.
Don't litigate me out of what most people mean by purpose.
Yeah, it feels like that attachment, attachment to outcome.
Yeah, and I think when you, as soon as you talk,
I think that's exactly right,
journey rather than destination.
I think, and playing the infinite game rather than the finite game, Kars's notion, I think that's exactly what I'm trying to convey. What also comes
up when you get back to the notion of orientation, you start to connect what can be isolated by the
term purpose. You start to connect back to, well, what ultimately orients you is what's true, what is good, what is beautiful.
Whereas purpose can be very ego-centric.
It can be what I most want to have.
Whereas orientation is reality-centric.
What do I most need to be in order to be in touch with reality, to be deeply
in touch with myself, with other
people, with the world.
And see, a lot of people have kind of, and you see this in sort of the rampant rise of
cynicism and nihilism in popular media, because of massive senses of burnout and betrayal
and bullshit, people have sort of given up on the world in some ways.
And the problem with that is that's not optional.
Our model of who and what we are is inevitably bound up with our model of who and what the
world is.
And so to the degree to which we find the world an incredibly scary place is the degree
to which we create sort of an insular model
of ourselves. We withdraw and we withdraw and we withdraw and we withdraw. The problem
with that is that's the behavior ultimately of an organism in pain and in distress. And the fact that we don't recognize it as that isn't the central of central
importance, we're withdrawing.
Um, and that's the, that's the move of pain and distress.
That's the fundamental move of depression.
So even if you don't feel depressed, you're already
behaving in a depressive, uh, manner.
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What do you make of the recent uptick in depression and anxiety?
How this sort of relates to the work you've been looking at?
So Chris and I, Christopher, Matthew, Petra and I, we talk about three kinds
of responses to the meeting crisis.
One is just a reactive sense of like despair.
sense of like despair. You see this in depression, anxiety, increasing rates of suicidality in places
that are marked by affluence, which is a very strange paradox given our current cultural way of thinking about things. Loneliness, addiction, all of these things are people basically falling into some kind
of drift towards despair in powerful ways.
The number of close friends you have is going down reliably decade by decade, even on the
number of social connections you have, how it's going up exponentially, things like this.
Obviously, we're doing it the wrong way. We're doing more and more that's giving us less and less.
So that's one group. Then there's a replacement strategy where people try to replace the kinds of things that used to give this normatively charged sense of orientation and meaning in life and give us ways of cultivating wisdom and virtue therein,
meaning the religion and philosophy. People are trying to replace that with, you know, with things
like, you know, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which they investigate. They identify with,
they go to, they often dress up as these people or put markers up them in their home.
And they protect this universe with a religious fervor.
So there has been rage, self-righteous rage at how Hollywood has destroyed these universes.
I agree with the aesthetic criticism, by the way.
I think Hollywood has just destroyed a lot of these things.
But people aren't paying enough attention to,
why does this matter so much?
Why do you spend hours online aging like this?
That's a replacement strategy.
And of course, people are also doing this,
can do this in the political arena.
They can do it with pseudo-religious ideologies.
They can do it with this weird amalgamation
of conspiracy theory and spirituality called conspirituality on both the left and the right.
Neither pole has any monopoly on foolishness.
So there's a lot of that.
And then there's a replacement strategy, which is where you see hopeful responses to the meaning crisis.
You can see the rise of an ancient Roman philosophy, Stoicism, becoming super important.
You can see the psychedelic Renaissance, the Mindfulness Revolution, the rise of dialogical
practices in communities around the world.
All of these are showing that there's also a healthy response.
What was interesting is how COVID was such a cleaving point,
because it showed that how many people have what's called existential resilience.
Sooner is the normal routine that keeps them busy,
busy unto death, soon as that gets disrupted, they are confronted with, some people were confronted with an abyss of meaninglessness.
And they dove into in spirituality and all kinds of stuff. Other people turned to a replacement strategy and they started, you know,
attending online mindfulness courses, starting to read some philosophy.
So it's, it's a very, it's a very complicated response to the meeting.
I'm interested in the role of the individual on their own. And, you know, even beyond the sort of connectedness interconnectedness
thing, the fact that, uh, seeking meaning as a, a purely selfish pursuit.
And, um, I heard a quote the other day, which I loved, which was after a while,
you just get sick of yourself.
And, uh, it really made me think, um, about that step change that a lot of
people go through from just living for me, just thinking about me to trying to
serve a pay it forward perhaps and pass it on and that, that perhaps comes along
for the ride as a byproduct of getting older, but yeah, I'm interested in the,
the self versus selfless
element here.
Excellent. And this goes towards another criticism I have of the standard meaning
and life construct. It's completely egocentric in its orientation. It should be asking questions
like how much are you making meaning for other people? How much coherence and beauty are you bringing
into the world?" And it doesn't ask those questions. And that's exactly right. And you
see, the self-centered orientation is extremely problematic. Obviously, there's ethical problems
and we get the increasing growth of spiritual bypassing as a growing psychological problem. So people
pursue spirituality as a way of avoiding their important economic and ethical responsibilities
and obligations. And I think, and spiritual bypassing is an offshoot of this large, this
growing group of people, spiritual but not religious.
So if you look into the academic literature on spiritual but not religious, like people
who do the anthropology and sociology of religion, what they'll tell you is spirituality means
the religion of me.
That's what it means.
It's you're doing all the standard religious behavior, but you're doing it for you and towards you
and by you and evaluated by you.
And that's extremely problematic because autodidactically, we're really bad.
So if you notice, for example, you're very good, and this shows up metabolically in terms
of even of cognitive effort, you're very good at pointing out the biases in your friends and other people. You're really good at it.
You are, by the way. You are really good at it. The objective evidence shows you're really
good at it and you do find it relatively easy. And what that evidence also shows is you're
really crap and I'm really crap at doing it for myself. I'm really bad at finding my
own biases, my own self-deception. Now that doesn't, let's be clear what I'm not saying,
that doesn't remove the responsibility for addressing those from me. Of course not, but
I'm not saying that. We are still always individually responsible for our vices. So I want that
clearly stated. But what it shows is, and this is something
that we've known since Socrates and we emphasize
until recently in current scientific practice,
you are my best source of self-correction,
and I am your best source.
This was supposed to be the engine of democracy,
but we've lost that too.
And so the degree to
which we become withdrawn and self-centered is the degree to which we are going to fall prey to
self-deceptive behavior and the degree to which we might not pay proper attention to the deep
interconnections between our spirituality
and our responsibilities.
How can people work out if they're being self-deceptive?
By design, we're good at deceiving ourselves.
Yeah, but we're also really good at determining it in other people.
That's the counterbalance. So you have to practice a
lot with other people, and then you have to imitate what it's like with other people,
with yourself, until you get good at doing it by yourself. And then there's a lot of
things you can do that do that.
So something that might not seem obvious that actually relies on that. Mindfulness. Mindfulness practices like meditation are a good way at becoming aware of how you
are biased in how you're paying attention. But how did you get that ability? Well, you got that
ability by doing the following. When you're a kid, you imitate how adults, because you trust them,
they're credible to you, you imitate how
adults are taking a perspective on how you are taking perspectives in the world
and allowing them to correct you. And you imitate that and imitate that and
imitate that until you can take a perspective on your own perspective that
is corrective. That's metacognition to use the technical term and that's what
you're exercising in mindfulness. But that's a broad lesson to be learned. You practice dialogically with others until you can
do it internally and reflectively. It's the whole point of Socratic philosophy. You hung around with
somebody like Socrates and you did all of this Socratic question and answer and exploration with him.
And then eventually you got to the ability
where you could do it by yourself.
Antisthenes, who was considered the fore founder
of Stoicism, when asked what he had learned from Socrates,
he said, well, I learned how to dialogue with myself.
He didn't mean talk to himself
because we do that automatically all day long.
He meant that he had so practiced it and imitated it so that he had internalized it so he had
an inner Socrates that was quite competent at pointing out to him his own bullshit and
self-destructiveness.
We sort of touched on it earlier on, but I'm interested in how contemporary of a problem
a lack of meaning is.
And you also said about how as people become more affluent or as nations
become more affluent, uh, problems of meaning seem to increase.
I mean, what, what, what use is there in us all trying to attain a chase
after affluence if all that comes along is a heavy side order of meaninglessness?
That's a good question. Rosa talks about the fact that we're in kind of what he calls dynamic
stability. I talk about it as a frenetic frozenness. We have to put more and more effort in not to make
things better, but to make sure we don't fall behind or miss out.
Um, of course, and this is what's predictive of the massive amounts of burnout.
And Han talks about how we've, we've become, we're not so much oppressed
and exploited by other people as we are exploiting ourselves and oppressed by ourselves.
The Red Queen fallacy, right?
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Um, and, and so I think again, if you asked people and you use the standard
metrics, they'll tell you, well, I know I have connections, so I care a lot about my
kids and I care a lot about my friends and work's important to me, you know, blah. And
so you'll get that. But if you ask them, like, and we know burnout is arising, the number
of close friends you have is going down.
People's sense of trust in others and in institutions is massively declining.
So again, that's why I keep pressing on this. You have to ask this question really, really carefully.
And I think around those issues of burnout and being busy unto death and,
you know, sense of ever increasing bullshit and betrayal I think
that or if you want to put on the other way a famine a famine of wisdom scarcity
we don't know where to go no we we find it very difficult to get into healthy
flow situations we have addictive and maladaptive forms of flow generation like video games.
We lack fellowship.
Fellowship isn't friendship.
We've lost the whole category of getting together with people that we basically trust because
we all participate in something that we all are committed to together, like what used
to happen in the church or the mosque or the temple or the synagogue, etc. We've lost all of those things. And again, we've lost faithfulness. We've become increasingly
short-term, and so it gets harder and harder for us to be faithful, which means sticking in with
things, staying connected to things because of their realness, even though it's at times very unsatisfactory to do so.
And so, you know, this shows up in the fact that people are finding it harder
and harder to maintain long-term relationships.
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You mentioned there about kids and I'm going to guess that most people would say
a source of great meaning or one of the greatest sources of meaning in
my life has been kids.
Have you guys considered the base rates reduction in the age of people becoming
parents and the number of people becoming parents that I've got it in my head.
A friend messages me semi consistently when I do Q and A's on the show.
And he's very interested, but he's a dad of two, an old school sort of Irish guy.
And, uh, he says, so many of your audience just need to have kids.
Like they're asking questions.
And as am I about fulfilling my higher purpose about, you know, enacting my
logos forward about how, why, why can't I give myself a break?
Why is it that I never really seem to be connected to the achievements
that I have in life, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
break? Why is it that I never really seem to be connected to the achievements that I have in life, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And I think, you know, what the sort of subtext of his point is
lots of those problems are fixed or pale into insignificance once you have children.
I guess two questions then, first off, meaning crisis and associated with declining levels of
people becoming parents.
And then the second one, is there something wrong or shallow or, or compensatory about leaning on your children to provide you with meaning in life?
Yeah, this, first of all, excellent question, Chris. Eberstadt and How the West Really Lost
God talks about the fact that the countries that are the most secular in their orientation
are all, are, is predicted by how much people are living atomically, individually, alone.
And whereas more religious communities tend to be related to people who live in more extended
family kinds of situations. This goes towards a lot of research that puts, I think, puts
the nail in the coffin of the idea that people are religious because they're stupid and intuitive
and not rational. So some of the best research done by Gervais and others,
who by the way are atheists, shows that's not why people are atheist or religious. That's not what
predicts if people are atheist or religious. In fact, you get weird anomalies. There's kind of a
very weak correlation between how analytic people are and how irreligious they are. But you get
important anomalies. Like in the United Kingdom, analytic thought is more predictive of being
religious than non-religious. And so, the whole Enlightenment mythology still espoused
by people like Dawkins and others, that's not what matters. What matters is how many…
Remember the kid we were talking about earlier and how you get metacognition?
You have to trust, right?
You have to trust.
You have to entrust yourself to credible others, people that you trust because you can't believe
this, but you have to trust that they can see things you can't see.
And what seems like senseless behavior to you actually has a deeper meaning to it, a
deeper function.
And that requires typically, we've relied on families to give us those kinds of entrusted
relationships, but we've narrowed the family down to the Nukitor family, the nomadic Nukitor family. And that has seriously eradicated a lot of
ways in which we could get meaning in life. I think your friend is right in the sense that
children are very powerful indicators, especially of how meaning in life is not about wealth,
because you have a child and your wealth goes down, man.
because you have a child and your wealth goes down, man. The other one is it's not about subjective well-being, especially at the beginning. Having a child crushes all the measures of subjective
well-being. You're not sleeping, you're not eating, you're wet all the time, you're under
high stress because the baby's crying. The person who you thought loved you the most in the world
hates you right now, your partner,
and yet, so that shows you the two things our culture tells us are necessary and sufficient for meaning in life are neither necessary nor sufficient for meaning in life. So I think having
children is important. Children orient you non-egocentrically. You have to go from how is
everything relevant to me to how am I relevant to somebody other
than myself?
And I think that's a big, those are important moves for meaning in life.
Although as I've been arguing, not captured by the current psychological measures.
Now I would say he's wrong and you're right about we can turn our children into idols
too.
And we've done that.
Jonathan Haidt has made a good career out of pointing out how an idolatrous relationship
to our children, in which we made them the be-all and end-all of existence and helicopter
parenting and trying to wrap protective layers around them so they never
suffer hurt or pain has actually destroyed them in some very important ways. And he's got a ton of
research to show this. I know most people don't like hearing that, but it seems to be the case.
It seems to be the case. And so we have to be careful about that.
I think having children is a powerful way of reorienting you.
I think our meaning in life, the way I've been talking about it, evolved out of our
capacity to be parents.
But it's not enough to be a parent because if you're just a parent, and here's
my point that I've already made, you're still withdrawing into your own little circle.
And you can be having children and not really caring about the world. Now what's interesting, of course, is children make you care about the world, or at least
they should make you care about the world.
And then that's my final point, which is being able to care about things in the right way
and really focus on what's the really real.
I mean, that's wisdom. And your friend sounds
like a good person. So for whatever set of reasons, they probably were wise parents,
or at least wise enough. That's not necessarily the case. So you could get sort of intense feelings of meaningfulness, but you could be an
incredibly foolish parent, and I think that's very problematic.
Hmm.
Yeah.
The, I had Dawkins on the show maybe four months ago, something like that.
And we had a live event.
We had a discussion in, uh, in Austin, Texas, where I hosted him and he was lovely.
Uh, but I got stuck. We both got stuck twice in two nights in a row,
first live on stage in front of his audience and then again
the next day when we did the podcast.
And I mentioned how
derogating the story behind
religion, whatever it is that people choose to follow,
because you can't prove it
or it can't be proven in the manner that you want it to be able to be proven.
It doesn't reduce its effectiveness.
It doesn't make it any less useful, even if the level of truthfulness, the bar that you
want it to reach is something that it can't do.
And I've been obsessed over the last couple of years with things that are literally true, but figuratively false and figuratively true, but literally false.
And, um, yeah, I kind of feel, I get a sense in the zeitgeist that people are
sort of turning away from the very hard, cold, sterile, uh, well, it doesn't matter.
It has to be literally true at all costs.
Uh, that, that doesn't seem to quite be the case.
And I wonder whether that is born out of a, we kind of had a crack at this.
We tried to simultaneous equation our way through coming up with answers to big
questions and maybe I just need something that works, even if I can't
describe to you why it works.
Okay.
Well, that's a tall order, but, uh, I, I,'s a tall order, but I do feel I have a responsibility to respond.
You have to be careful about this notion of truth.
It's very one-dimensional that's being used by Dawkins.
It's about evidence that convinces you that
a proposition should be believed. I think that's important. I'm a scientist and that's
what theories are built out of, scientific theories in the scientific sense of theory,
not in the everyday sense, which is completely opposite to how scientists use the word theory.
So I think that's important and Dawkins is a scientist, so of course he values that. But of course, those are not the primary ways we feel in contact with reality.
So evidence isn't the same thing as relevance.
So your skills, they have to be true to things.
Your aim has to be true.
There's a different sense of truth.
You have to be able to make things present to yourself and you have to be able to like
interact with the world in a way that reliably gives you some degree of agency in the world.
That's really important to you. In fact, I
would put it to you that if you had to choose between your skills and your
beliefs, you'd give up your beliefs rather than your skills. And they're a
big part of how you sense what's real. This is know-how and this goes into your
procedural memory. But you talked about it a bit earlier, and this is important.
We also have like what it's what I call perspectival knowing what it's what it's like to be you here now in this situation in this state of mind. And that is a different set. This is knowing by noticing it's knowing by being present.
It's how you're sizing things up.
What's your take on things, how you're framing things, all that sort of stuff.
Now notice, so my partner, she was gone recently because she was at a yoga retreat getting
her certification to be a yoga instructor.
We're going to run retreats when we're both retired.
And so now I had still had all my beliefs about Sara. I still believe that they're
all true, right? And I still have all my skills for interacting with her in place and everything,
but she wasn't present to me. And she that's, oh, and we, there's a sense of that lack of presence
really matters to us. And there's a sense, and you can just feel it right now. There's a sense of that lack of presence really matters to us.
And there's a sense, and you can just feel it right now.
There's a sense of this is real because it's present.
It's present.
There's this power of presence that matters to us.
That's not captured by propositions.
I could state all of the propositions all day long about
Sarah that didn't make her present to me.
I wonder whether that's why long distance relationships are often difficult.
Exactly. That's exactly right. And then beneath it is this, what I've called participatory
knowing. This is knowing by sort of emplacement, being in place. like you belong. It's not just a space, it's a place. You
belong, you fit the space and the space fits you, so it's a place for you. And this is
often very unconscious, but you lack it. For example, when you're homesick or you lack
a certain version of it when you're lonely.
And this really contributes to your sense of real.
Have you ever gone that thing where you've traveled
to another country and it's all exciting and interesting,
but you don't really feel like you're properly in place,
you're getting a bit of culture shock,
and then it starts to feel less real to you.
It starts to feel surreal to you, to you usually.
And see, so what Dawkins is forgetting, he's forgetting all of those other aspects of realness
that matter if what we want is to be in contact with reality.
And secondly, right, it's not that he's forgetting all of those.
He's forgetting that our access to those non-propositional kinds of knowing is largely done through what's
called the imaginal.
So for example, I'm present to you, I hope.
Can you literally see into my mind?
No, you're imagining it.
Now it's not imagining the way you're imagining a sailboat where
imagination is taking you away or distracting you from reality. You're looking through your
imagination because you're trying to have the insight look into my mind. Now let's make
it even more freaky. That space inside your head where you're aware of yourself, is that
a literal space? Nope. Is it just a fable?
Is it just false?
No, because you get real self-knowledge.
In fact, that's central to you being a rational being.
So that's imaginal.
It's fictive.
Or, Richard Dawkins,
open a science book.
Oh, look, here's on page 3.
Here's the solar system
model of the atom.
That's almost completely false.
Yeah, we teach it to kids.
Why do we give them this image?
Because the image trains their perspective taking,
gives them skills so that they can get to the place
where they can then get the deeper propositional knowledge.
The imaginal is irremovable from the way in which we need to train the non-propositional
in order for us to get those proper connectedness to reality that allows us to find the causal
patterns that establish the propositional, the scientific kinds of claims.
What about people that think meaning is a thinking problem?
A lot of us spend a lot of time in our heads.
We're learning.
It's this is somewhere between philosophy, psychology, sociology, all of these things.
I think the only place I have to experience these things is, is in the head, a little
bit in the body and that gets fed up through my head as well.
Can we fix this by just thinking our way out of the problem?
No. I mean, especially if we think of thinking as just running a lot of propositions together and making sure they're coherent and computing with them, that's not going to work. As I said,
most of what we're talking about here, when we're talking about this kind of connectedness,
this sense of belonging, this sense of emplacement is happening, right?
It's happening in a completely embodied fashion.
It's happening non-propositionally, like your skills.
You have the skill of swimming.
Can you get access to that skill without swimming or doing something imaginal?
No, you can't.
Right?
What about, you know, what your state of consciousness is like?
You have a kind of memory for that, episodic memory.
Did you take a shower this morning and you sort of remember and you relive it for a moment?
That's different from your knowledge of our cat's mammals.
You don't relive that.
There's whole aspects of you that you can't get access to unless you're doing it imaginally. And that means embodied.
Like, this is all dependent on the fact that you're embodied. If you that this is just sort
of a matter of not having the right propositions. Look, look, here's how it's fun. Well, here,
let me give you a concrete example. This is from Thomas Nagel.
All of the arguments for reality being absurd aren't actually good arguments.
This came out in, you know, really, I think the movie is really good, by the way, everything,
everywhere, all at once.
But all the, all the arguments in there are, well, everything all at where, you know, everything
everywhere all at once that makes your life meaningless. Well, how?
Well, because there's so much it makes this
Insignificant, but if it makes each part insignificant, how can the whole have significance?
That doesn't make any sense
Do you understand if if all these little individual parts are made insignificant
by this huge collection of all the parts,
how does the huge have a better standard
by which it renders all the parts so meaningless?
Like, well, I'm so small.
If I blew you up to a galaxy,
would that make your life more meaningful?
Well, you know, what I'm doing now
won't matter a million years from now. So that means what's happening a million
years from now shouldn't matter to you now. Like none of these arguments
actually work. They're really bad arguments. They self-destruct. That's not
what drives absurdity. What drives absurdity is, right, when there's a
clash between your perspectives. When you have this Thomas Nagel tells this
wonderful story and he wrote this way back when we used to the dark barbaric days where
we had answering machines that were actual machines that were actually in your home and
things like that because we couldn't carry our telephones around with us.
And he tells this thing about, you know, Tom who realizes he loves Susan and he calls Susan up and he
hears the receiver get picked up.
He says, Susan, don't talk.
I have to tell you I love you.
I love you.
I love you.
And then he hears Susan is not here right now.
And notice you laugh.
And laughter, like humor, is that there's a contrast between the two perspectives there's the personal perspective of his life and the
Impersonal perspective of the machine and there's a clash there
Humor is when you when you're on the cusp of authority and I got to meet John Cleese by the way
What sort when you're on the cusp of absurdity and Monty Python was brilliant at that, right?
They could take it to the edge of absurdity. And then what you do is you have a weird insight
that relieves the absurdity.
But if you can't relieve the clash between perspectives
with an insight, because that's what insight does.
It relieves a clash between perspectives,
then you will experience absurdity.
Now I ask you, Chris, can you think your way into an insight?
Huh?
I don't know.
Well, have you ever needed an insight?
Yeah.
And realized it just wasn't coming.
Yes.
Many times.
Insight doesn't work that way.
Insight doesn't work propositionally. You can't infer your way into an insight.
In fact, it looks like the parts that are responsible for insight and the parts that
are responsible for inference are kind of like an opponent processing with each other.
Let me tell you why I say that.
When we're doing bad inference, it's because we're jumping to a conclusion.
That's insight. Insight is when you jump to something, when you like it, you
call it insight. When you don't like it, you call it jumping to a conclusion. They're like
that. Insight has to do with changing your perspective, altering your perception and
attention, but also participating in a process that is self-organizing.
You don't make an insight, you don't just receive an insight, you participate in a self-organizing
process.
So this is why you can't think your way through these things.
Thinking matters.
Don't misunderstand me.
Propositions matter.
I'm not saying they don't, but it's not just a matter of running good arguments
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I remember you saying that some truths are only knowable
through transformation.
Oh, totally.
And, uh, I was having a great conversation last night and we came up
with this term of unteachable lessons and an unteachable lesson, one of the best
unteachable lessons I think is money and success won't make you happy.
And you know, it is a unique category of lesson where nobody gives the people trying to teach it
sympathy.
They're derogated in a manner that no teacher would typically accept.
And I'm yet to, I know of nobody who has arrived at that realization logically.
They've arrived at it experientially.
I was trying to think about some other ones that are not too dissimilar.
I think, don't be swayed to falling in love with somebody who looks very pretty, but has no morals or
anything sort of deeper to do with you.
You know, it's very much the thing that I kind of came to realize, at least with some
of the unteachable lessons, I'm sure there's a million, but the ones that I'd found were
ones that sort of limbically were very seductive in one form or another.
They were about status, they were about acclaim, they were about resources,
they were about sex, they were about power.
And, um, that was so salient that what you end up with is this Europe war.
There is one hired version of yourself that goes, ah, I remember the last time
that I got into a relationship with a girl that was pretty and kind of didn't
really have much to say and we didn't
really have much to do or whatever.
And, you know, that, that didn't end too well, but, you know, she's just so hot.
I can't not think about it.
And then, you know, the same with everybody else says that sort of money
and success didn't change any of the internal voids that they had, but that was them.
I, I will be able to thread the needle in a different way.
And, uh, I just, I thought it was so funny that, uh,
unteachable lessons came to me last night, uh, knowing that I was
going to speak to you today and the some truths that are only
knowable through transformation.
I thought that was a nice, uh, a nice parallel.
That's powerful.
I like that.
Um, yeah, LA Paul's work on transformative experience that, yeah, because we don't know who we're
going to be and what's it going to be like to be that other person until after we've gone through
the transformation. So we can have all the propositions we want. We can even have some
relevant skills, but the perspectival knowing, knowing what it's going to be like, the
participatory knowing who are we going to actually be, we won't know that until we undergo the transformation.
And so we draw very poor conclusions because we've been sort of educated for quite some
time since Descartes that truths are just accessible to calculation.
We should just be able to calculate all possible
truths. And that was to overturn an older religious idea that no, no, many truths are,
as you're indicating very powerfully, many important truths are only disclosed to us
after we commit to undergoing a fundamental transformation. I think that's deeply right.
The issue around this is, well, if you're ignorant, what do you do?
And then here's where the imaginal comes back in, right?
So let's use one of L.A. Paul's powerful examples, having a child.
You don't know what it's like to be a parent until you're a parent.
And we were kind of talking about that a few minutes ago.
You can read all kinds of books, but they really
don't help that much, right? And you can even practice some skills sort of in your head
or on your friends or something. But what do people do then? Well, what I've noticed
is a lot of people do, and some people are even noticing that other people do this, is
they get a dog. They get a dog and they pretend, but it's
not really a pretence because it's actually a dog. It's an intelligent living being that
needs your attention and your care. And it's very demanding. I'm helping to raise a dog
right now. And so they get a dog and they treat it like a little person. They name it
and they talk to it and sometimes they'll even give it its own room, and have family pictures of the dog is included.
And so this is what's known, what I've been calling serious play.
What we do is we set up this liminal place,
Winnicott talked about this as this transitional place,
where we're neither fully apparent, but we're not just single anymore.
We're in this liminal place where we're doing this
very serious play by imagining through the dog, imagining a dog, but imagining through the dog
what it would be like to have a child that I'm responsible to. Now, the thing about the dog is
it's still an element of pretense because it's not a human child. And so you can do things with the dog.
Like you can say after three weeks, no, I'm not up. This isn't really for me. And then
you can find a new owner for the dog. And nobody thinks you're a particularly immoral
person. But if you do that with your kid, now I'm three weeks in. No, no, this isn't
for me. I'm going to find another. Here, do you want my child? People think there's something
and as they should, there's something dramatically wrong
with you.
So we need serious play, which is an imaginal practice in order to try and get a taste so
that we can properly commit ourselves to the transformations that will disclose those unteachable
truths.
So let me give you a more concrete example
that goes back to your first thing. I'm going to use myself as an example, so I'm going to make
myself vulnerable here. I've not been what I would call successful in my romantic life. I've had lots of relationships, some of them very long-term, but in many ways, they did
not bring out the best in me and I did not act my best within them.
I'll put it as succinctly as I could.
So after my second, isn't that a point of vulnerability, second marriage fell apart.
I'm on good terms with both of my exes, by the way.
I realized that I had been doing what you were talking about.
I had a type that I found particularly attractive, and this was probably driven largely by genetic
Darwinian factors.
We sound like Plato now with the monster in our genitalia, right?
And I decided I was going to change my attraction radar.
I was going to go not go to as the women that immediately were salient to me, sort of physically.
And instead, I tried to break against my type, which wasn't easy, by the way, especially
when you're like feeling so vulnerable and that you'll never be loved again because the
relationship has ended and all that crap that that little thing says in your head.
And I found this woman when she found me and she wasn't my type. And because of that, and because I really wanted to be different on how I entered into
relationship, I allowed myself to be attracted in ways I hadn't been attracted before.
And I fell in love with her soul.
And then only did I realize, and now to my great joy, do I realize she's actually a very physically
attractive woman. And my type that I find attractive has completely shifted because
of that. And that was powerful for me. And I'm not holding myself out as any kind of
exemplar for relationship advice. I'm saying that sometimes we have to be
willing to overcome our automatic salience projector, salient what grabs our attention, right? If we want to actually find deeper connection and meaning. And this woman and I,
Sara and I, we have made a lifetime commitment to each other because we have found that we reliably
bring out the good in each other, which is actually the basis for a relationship.
And we realize that that is what you should base a commitment on.
Not as this person satisfying all of your wants and needs,
not as this person helping you with all your projects
and helping you to self-actualize
and all the stuff that we say in California.
But are the two of you reliably bringing out the good in each other such
that I, I, I texted her today and I said, I love that I get to know you more and
more and while realizing that I'll never completely grasp you and so that, that is something I would, I did not have access to as long as I was
going according to what I typically found sale yet.
That's a beautiful story.
And, uh, I've been thinking a lot recently about, um, why do you think
that you know what's best for you?
Like, why is it that you have, you know, you had this assumption.
I have a type, I have a type, I have a type, and, uh, there's a need for control.
There's desire for control there.
You know, I have a predictive model of how things are going to unfold.
I can therefore have a good example of the trajectory.
I know exactly where this is going to come into land kind of ish.
And I know that maybe a couple of times this evidence has shown,
you're actually denying evidence, especially if you've had a couple
of these things occur and you go, well, those ones didn't quite go the
way that I wanted to, uh, and this is something different.
Well, maybe different could lead to a different sort of an outcome.
It's like, ah, no, I I'm pretty sure that the same will somehow
lead to a different kind of an outcome.
And, um, yeah.
an outcome, it's like, ah, no, I'm pretty sure that the same will somehow lead to a different kind of an outcome.
And, um, yeah, as in a world where people want to control, they do not like the idea
of not being able to fully predict where things are going to come into land.
Uh, reminding everybody, myself included, that you are not necessarily the best
judge of what is best for you.
You don't actually always know,
or you can't always predict what's best for you.
And that's a lovely example of a time where perhaps
you were right to be wrong in that regard.
Yeah, thank you for saying that.
I mean, one of the hallmarks of modernity given to us from the period of the European
Enlightenment is this sort of putting on a pedestal in franchising autonomy, self-government.
It's Kant's biggest virtue.
And there's value in that again, because autonomy reminds us that we are simultaneously our
best friends and our worst enemy, and that we are responsible for the content of our
behavior and our thoughts and our affect.
And so that's important.
I don't want to just go back, but it's also given us this,
and there is no other word for it, a lack of humility.
It's given us an arrogance that we always know
what is best for us.
And that's simply not true.
In fact, we are really bad at discovering our own self-deception.
We are really bad at affective, what's called affective forecasting. We're really bad at
predicting what will make us long-term happy and what will make us long-term really, really sad.
We're really bad at that. We're really bad at it. We're really bad at it because we fall prey to hyperbolic discounting.
That's a fancy sounding term of means. We find present stimuli very salient and long-term stimuli
very non-salient. This is why it's hard to lose weight and it's hard to study and all those kinds
of other things because the chocolate cake is there or the party is there and health and, you know, the exam or would
off in the future.
And by the way, you can't argue yourself away from that hyperbolic discounting.
It doesn't help giving people lots of reason and evidence for why, for example, why they
should save for their retirement doesn't really help them do that.
But if they do some serious play by imagining their future self as
somebody, a family member that they've always loved and taken care of, and they form that
effective bonding, then they'll start to save for the retirement kind of thing. So there are lots ways in which we are not the best authority.
We have to become adults in which we take responsibility.
And that's important, and I don't want to denigrate that, but that's only one half of
maturation. John Roussin, I think, is right when he talks about the main part of maturity is facing
up.
I like that phrase.
It's beautiful.
Facing up to reality.
And facing up to reality is humbling.
You're looking to something.
When you're looking up, that's a humbling stance and you're facing
it. You're confronting a reality that is making you look up, right? And so that is an attitude
in which you realize that you don't know best. So how's, for example, as things started to succeed for me,
I had the Verveki Foundation, but I
was blessed by terrific people.
But I asked them to act as a constant check on the fact that I could
fall prey to self-aggrandizement, hubris, arrogance, all the proclivities we see in
social media people. And they, and I committed them to this because I did not
trust that I would be a good enough person for determining that issue. And this, and
we've done things specifically, like we pivoted away from
Voices with Reveki and I was doing all these videos and we've just do now a couple videos a month
And I've become very clear. We know how it's called the lectern my role. I'm a teacher
People are not my fans are not my followers. They're my students if they want to study what I've teach what I'm teaching
That's my role. That's who they are
And I'm emphasizing quality over quantity a lot of things to try and
prioritize virtue over
success and that initiative wasn't my initiative it was the initiative from
Ryan Barton and Christopher Mastapietro at the Vervecki Foundation.
But as soon as they said it, I recognized that it was true.
So thank God for that.
This is one of those moments.
My background when I first started the show was a sort of productivity bro world. I was very much trying to wrangle chaos and have the right notion template and
the morning routine and time blocking and the calendar and all of this stuff,
trying to create some sense of organization out of what had been a
pretty sort of messy twenties.
And, um, it's funny that even in things like this, you know, we're talking about
transcendent, we're talking about, you know, uh, accounting for the various
machinations and ways that your ego is going to pervert the incentives and, you
know, your higher calling and what, how do we really pay this forward in the
best way and so on and so forth.
And what it comes down to in some ways are an operational set of principles.
Like that you need some hard and fast rules. You need to actually put some bright lines in the sand and sort of draw those around
you.
And, um, I've got it in my head, sort of thinking about, uh, people for whom that
approach is very seductive.
Uh, I would probably put myself in that category that, um, again, if I just have
the perfect to-do list template, then all
of my problems will be sorted, et cetera, et cetera.
Let's say that somebody is operationally pretty effective when
it comes to that sort of stuff.
What are some of the practices that you like that you use the most yourself
to get you out of that kind of mode, to get you out of the mode of logic, of reason, of
rationality, of logistics, of operations, and get you into a more embodied or dread
joy kind of sense.
Because I feel like that's important.
So we've been talking, this ultimately goes back to sort of a compilation put together
by Nathan Vanderpool, who I was working with. We talk
about dime. We talk about these four dimensions, the dialogical, which I'll come back to each
one in a minute, the imaginal, which I've been talking about a lot, the mindful, both
meditation and contemplation, seated and moving, and embodiment. So So you need these four dimensions, you need practices in all
four of these dimensions, and you need sets of practices because there is no panacea practice.
Practices have strengths and weaknesses and you need to align them so they're correcting
and compensating for each other. So one of my standard examples is meditation
is training attention.
Meditation is you're stepping back,
I'm looking at the lens through which you're normally
looking through at the world.
You're trying to pay attention to your mental framing.
This is meditation.
The problem with that is you need to determine
if any intervention, well, I stilled my mind.
Well, does that allow you to see better into the world?
And you have to do contemplative practices
where you look out and see if you're seeing the world more deeply,
more clearly. You have to to and fro between them. You have seated practices where you're sitting,
right? But then you should do moving practices where you're trying to carry mindfulness into
your movement. So I do like Tai Chi Chuan and things like that. You need imaginal practices where you're engaging your imagination, not for entertainment,
but you're doing that serious play that allows you
to taste what it might be like to be somebody
other than who you currently are
and how you might identify with that.
but how you might identify with that.
And those are very important practices. So, dialogical practices, we have a bunch of those.
We have, oh, let me give you an example
of an imaginal practice.
Lexio divina, which is reading a text
in an imaginal fashion, not just reading it
to get information.
You're trying to create that, trying to take up the text as a serious play, as an imaginal fashion, not just reading it to get information. You're trying to take
up the text as a serious play, as something imaginal through which you're trying to see
the world differently, take a different way of taking perspectives you haven't taken before
and taste what the transformation might be like that that text is providing you, that
other voice, that other
perspective. The sage that you're reading is like a parent to a child as the adult as
the child is to the adult, the adult is to the sage and you're doing this imaginal work
in order to try and undergo a transformation. That's a kind of imaginal practice, lexio
divina. You want to do dialogical practices. We have a whole bunch we've been teaching on the Awakened to Meaning platform where you
can go now and there's a whole website where you can do all of the
practices. You can take courses. There's drop-in things. My good friend Taylor
Barrett, by the way, that is now running autonomously separate from John Dravicki.
I get nothing from that other than
the satisfaction of knowing that some of my ideas have been put into practice.
And Taylor's a good friend of mine. And so we have what a practice called dialectic into
dialogos, which is how can you talk, how can two people enter into this mutual midwifing, this fellowship where they're trying to give,
I'm trying to help you to give deeper birth to yourself and you're trying to help me,
we're trying to do that in a reciprocally opening fashion and how can we do it with like three or
four people so that sort of gets into a shared flow state where we start to be drawn into those
kinds of life-giving conversations, which
we've all had, because they take on a life of our own and they take us to places we didn't
think we could go to.
We don't necessarily end up agreeing, but we all say, wow, I never thought I could get
here and I couldn't have got here on my own.
Those kinds of practices.
We're just putting the final touches on a practice we've been working on,
cultivating, developing for the past year or so in which you teach people a Socratic practice of
go into something, a deeply personal problem you're having, and then how can you go through a set of,
with the help of other people's, a set of transformations on your
perspective and also on your sense of identity so that you can go from it being your personal
problem that's just yours to an existential dilemma that is probably shared with many
people. And then once you get at the level of existential dilemma, the tradition can
talk to you and tell you what virtue might be relevant to the existential dimension.
And then you can then address that part of it.
And then that you bring that back into and transform your personal problem.
We're doing things like that.
Where can people go?
Where should they go if they want to check out more of that?
Awaken to meaning.org.
It's a platform that last thing, which is called the Socratic Search Space, we're just
going to roll it out in the next month or so.
The Dialectic and Dialogues, you can do that.
Philosophical Fellowship, you can do that.
You can learn about Alexia Divina, meditation, contemplation, various
other kinds of practices.
That's so awesome.
John, I appreciate the heck out of you.
I really, uh, I have to say as well, it's, it's beautiful to see you smitten.
Uh, uh, it's, it's really, it's really lovely.
It genuinely is me.
Uh, you know, I think, uh, good people deserve good relationships and I'm very
glad that you've managed to find yours.
So, uh, what can people expect next?
You've kind of rounded out this chapter.
You, I mean, how, when was the first.
Meaning crisis video put on YouTube?
Uh, February, 2019.
Okay.
Yeah.
So a good half decade journey on one thing.
Right.
Well, the book is only part one.
Right.
There's part two coming out, uh, which is the second half.
Um, that'll have even more revisions in it.
Cause all the scientific work on relevance realization has gone through a lot of
revision and collaboration with other people publishing papers like this year.
Um, and stuff like that.
Um, then, uh, the next thing is, um, well, I've got a bunch of books coming out.
I've got a book, uh, while I'm working I'm working on Einstein and Spinoza's God,
and then a book called Reimagining Religion
and then a book by Greg Enriquez.
We're we've got a lot of that written on on consciousness.
That's coming out.
The big project is
the Philosophical Silk Road,
which is going to be my next big multimedia endeavor. It's going to be
sort of at four levels of presentation. One is, well, it's based on this thesis.
This is what's next. I made a fundamental mistake in Awakening for the
Meeting Crisis. I thought, you know, the solution was to engineer
an ecology of practices, a religion that's not a religion, failing to realize that's
exactly the framing that I was criticizing throughout. So I felt afraid of very serious
performative contradiction. Because I realized like that example of the living conversation, the sacred, you can't
manufacture it, you can't engineer it.
It has to show up with a life of its own or it's not the sacred.
It's not that fount of rejuvenating meaning that is deeply transformative of individuals
and communities.
But what's happening and what I've seen since all of the connections that were formed by awakening from the main crisis
is communities around the world and things happening
in academic, cognitive science and philosophy
and psychology and biology.
What I call the advent of the sacred,
it's like sacredness is trying to be born in a new way for us,
I think as a response to, it's the,
I'll be Hegel here for a second, so this is my only technicality. This is the Weltgeist,
the spirit of reality that's challenging the Zeitgeist, the spirit of the times of the
Meeting Crisis. And so I want to do this. I want to, in fact, it's not I want to do this, I feel called
to do this. One of the things I'm going to do not I want to do this. I feel called to do this.
One of the things I'm going to do is I want to try and teach by undergoing a pilgrimage.
I want to go to the various places in the world where the sages of three great traditions
that sort of built comprehensive ways for people to deeply dialogue with each other.
The neoplatonic tradition that runs through Christianity
and Judaism and Islam.
So I wanna talk about, right,
I wanna talk about, you know,
Maximus the confessor or Nicholas of Cusa,
and I'm gonna go there, or Clement of Alexandria,
or Sura Vardhi, the Sufi, right?
I'm gonna go there and I'm going to walk and talk and live, um,
and really undergo and try and make myself vulnerable to hearing these people.
I'm going to go to India or, you know, with all of the Vedanta and everything
wrapped around it and Vedanta is like wrapped with Tantra and Jainism
and original Buddhism.
And then I want to go to Japan because there's Zen because Zen integrates Buddhism and Taoism
and Shinto and get all three of these.
Like, what would it be like to do the philosophical Silk Road, create a lingua philosophica so
we could engage in these, not just an ecology of practices, but an ecology of traditions
where we could really deeply talk to each other and people can travel and transform
and maybe return and recover their home or travel and find a new home.
That's going to be the upper level.
Then below that is going to be a lecture series, like Awakening from the Meeting Crisis, where I go through each one of these thinkers and explain them in great detail.
And then below that is going to be specific video essays on more technical topics, like comparing the non-duality in Vedanta to the non-duality in Zen, for example, or neoplatonism.
And then below that, we have what's called the Codex.
We have a whole bank of volunteers taking all of my language,
and they're creating like a Wikipedia of it where there's...
And it's being written at multiple levels of accessibility.
Somebody in grade 10, completed high school,
all these levels, there's cross-referencing,
there's diagrams, there's practices you can undertake
to get a deeper understanding of the concepts.
And so there's gonna be these four tiers,
and there's gonna be like a narrative structure
and an argumentative structure, right?
And a reflective structure, it's gonna be this.
And the hope is that that, and
that a lot of the teaching will not go just in what I'm saying, but what I'm undergoing
and how I'm being transformed. There's going to be people that are going to travel with
me in various places and meet me in various places. And the hope is to open people up to the advent of the sacred so they can properly orient to receiving
it so that we can really, uh, transformatively trust each other in the way we need to, in
order to address the meeting crisis.
I'm glad after taking on such a medium sized topic, you're taking it a little bit smaller for the next one.
Very, very reassuring that you're going to keep it, keep it nice and niche.
John, I appreciate the heck out of you, mate.
I can't wait until you get whatever you've got coming out next out.
And I would love to bring you back on whenever you're ready.
Uh, I'll always come back and talk to you, Chris.
Uh, thank you very much.
And thank you for allowing me to shamelessly plug my new book, which I really appreciate. Everyone should go and check it out. I appreciate you, mate. Thank you. Thank you very much and thank you for allowing me to shamelessly plug my new book, which
I really appreciate.
Everyone should go and check it out.
I appreciate you, mate.
Thank you.
Thank you so much, Chris.
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