The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 217. Talking with Russians | Mikhail Avdeev
Episode Date: January 14, 2022As an alternative for those who would rather listen ad-free, sign up for a premium subscription to receive the following:• All JBP Podcast episodes ad-free• Monthly Ask-Me-Anything• Presale acce...ss to events• Premium, detailed deep-dive show notes on future episodes.episodes (and the ability to ask questions)Sign up here: https://jordanbpeterson.supercast.com/ Mikhail Avdeev interviews Jordan Peterson in this episode.Jordan Peterson has as strong of an international following as ever with his lectures translated into fourteen languages. On his last speaking tour, he visited thirty+ countries speaking on the Twelve Rules all the while continuing to foster relationships and connections with thinkers, speakers, and fans from around the globe. Shownotes:[00:00] Jordan Petersons is interviewed in this episode by Mikhail Avdeev, a member of his foreign translations team. The interview focuses on the impact of Petersons work beyond the western world on the international community as a whole. They begin the discussion by talking about the forming of the international translation teams.[02:00] The healing effect of Jordan's lectures on people's personal life. The outcry for new material from jordans catalog of books, lectures, and podcasts has been overwhelming. [05:20] Peterson comments on another personal favorite author of his Mircea Eliade and his history of Religious Ideas. It’s an anthropological and sociological assessment of religion but it’s also deeply psychological.[06:40] How do Russian views respond to Jordan's affinity for Alexander Solzhenitsyn? Mikail details the feelings of the Russian people by their portrayal after the fall of communism.[10:00] How we deal with the guilt of the things our ancestors or society has done is a very difficult question because as humans we are very historical creatures. The best thing for us is to try to understand what happened and therefore try not to do it again in the future because all of us are living with this to some degree.[13:30] examining the trope that all white people are racist or white supremacist and this stems from the existential guilt of history.[20:00] Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Daniel Dennett seem to equate that religious belief is a set of propositions about the material world, in a way a direct competitor to scientific theory, and that’s just not fully accurate. There is something outside of strictly rationality in the human experience.[34:20] Fragmentation of the value structure necessarily leads to an increased level of constant anxiety in all experience[36:30] What parts of modern society are contributing to the integrity of consciousness, and what things are degrading that. A hatred for real success and striving for personal gain will tear us apart if it continues unchecked.[43:30] There is no doubt that economic exploitation occurs and that some wealth is gained in an unethical manner, but that is not the rule.[45:45] - Asking about the importance of beauty in all of our personal experiences as well as our collective experience as humans.[51:00] interesting to consider the differences in Fyodor Dostoevsky and Friedrich Nietzsche closeness to the ideal of beauty[56:30] The complexity of the language of Beyond Order:12 More Rules for Life. What is Jordan's process for increasing the precision of his speech and writing? [1:03:30] The divinity of the true word and the way this has been translated through Jordan’s book Beyond Order. Peterson's philosophy behind good writing and text structure of a truly complete work.[1:13:40] Mikhaila Peterson has had to choose to be strong because she has had so much suffering to overcome in her life. It’s wonderful to see her succeeding in her personal endeavors like her weekly podcast.[1:20:15] How do we best teach our children in a way that fosters their individual growth and a love of learning.Â
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Thank you very much for your attention.
Welcome to the JBP podcast season four episode 74. I'm Michaela Peterson. The wonderful
daughter dad was just talking about. In this episode, dad had an instantly translated conversation
with Mikhail, who's been translating dad's content into Russian for the last year or so.
The fact that this was done almost instantaneously is quite impressive.
I hope you find the conversation interesting. Your Bible Lectures and your books have a healing effect on people.
People write about it in the comments all the time because their lives begin to order,
and they find new purpose in life, find something to strive for.
You encourage them, and it seems to be an enduring effect. It's something that lasts for a long time,
and there are a lot of cases like that. So you can't say that's a random effect. It's a pattern.
People who read 12 rules, who watch your lectures, and especially those who have read maps of meaning,
and the books you recommend experience rapid personal growth, their emotional states, their health and
their relationships change. I'm shocked and surprised.
Yes, we try to do it. We're doing our best. And I can tell you that every day on our
different channels in different countries, people ask, when will you post the next Bible lecture?
When will we hear the maps of meaning?
And it's not fake.
It's not generated by any kind of advertising, you know.
It's not something artificially created.
We were just trying to do our best to do the best job we could.
Andrew and Matt did a vast amount of work for the channel.
Eric helped us a lot, so I'm not that surprised that our channel took off. We didn't use all
those traffic-boosting methods, we just took a very careful approach to translation and
quality of the content. My team and I spent hours every day talking
to publishers from different countries and to your fans from different countries, trying to figure out what kind of translation they
wanted.
How should we approach the translation?
What kind of voice is the best for the voice over?
We found a different tone for each lecture, and it worked.
In the beginning, we planned to make a single centralized hub for video production.
But we realized very quickly it will sooner or later turn into a treadmill, and the quality
and attention to detail that are important for, say, Korean or Arabic viewers can only
be provided by the team that shares the same mindset as those listeners. And so we almost immediately began to hire and form teams
within each country. That's how we created the Korean team. That's how we created the Arabic team.
The Russian team is now fully formed and these are people who know their thing very well.
They know your works and lectures and they are aware of all the things that surround it.
They know your works and lectures, and they are aware of all the things that surround it. Aware of the whole range of scientific knowledge they need to possess in order to properly communicate your ideas.
I want to thank you very much for introducing us to Eric Neumann, for example.
It was very interesting for us to get acquainted with his work.
I have something to say about that. So I spoke with Professor Camille Palia a while back, a couple of occasions, and she's
one of the West's foremost literary experts and commentators. And Pahlia told me independently of my liking for Eric Neumann that she thought
the whole history of universities in the West would have been different if the English
departments in particular had read Eric Neumann and understood him instead of Jacques Derrida and Michel Foucault.
And I believe that to be the case,
and I was amazed that she said that,
that's something I had thought for a very long time.
Neumann is extremely profound thinker.
The origins and history of consciousness
is a remarkable book, and so is the great mother.
And in some sense, he provides an overview and summary
of Jung's thinking, which you couldn't get unless you
read like 20 volumes of Jung.
It's all packed into those two origins
and history of consciousness in the great mother.
And so I'm amazed, but also extremely happy that his work has been more recognized because
he's very underappreciated in my estimation.
I mean, his books have been in print forever, but he hasn't had the impact on literary
critics, for example, English departments, et cetera. People concerned with literature that he should have.
Second-rate thinkers instead.
And he's not a second-rate thinker. He's a very deep thinker.
He is a very good psychologist, and the fact that you mentioned him in your works
has inspired a particular interest in him in Russia.
Viewers of our channel began to buy books by Eric Neumann,
after hearing about him
in your interview with Camille Pahlia.
That's really good news.
And also the fact that you mentioned him in maps of meaning has sparked a lot of
interest in Eric Neumann.
So the other person we should talk about then probably is Merchaya Aliyada, because he has a
three-volume history of religious ideas, and it's also great work in my estimation. I really
learned a lot from everything I read that Merchaya Aliyada published, and so for people who are
interested in Neumann, he's another person to study in
depth and the history of religious ideas. It's a three volume set and it's very readable.
It's easier to read than young and easier to read than Neumann. And it provides a great
overview of his amazing career as a surveyor of world religions. It's a phenomenal book, and so if people are interested in maps of meaning,
and they're interested in Neumann, they're interested in that.
It's an anthropological and sociological analysis of religion,
but it's also deeply psychological, and it focuses on meaning.
So it's in the same vein of thinking. And that's another set of books
that are very much worth pursuing for anyone that finds this kind of material captivating.
We will definitely do an event dedicated to Mercher Elia Day.
I think it will be met with great interest.
And so how are the Russian viewers responding to the more
to my reliance on Alexander Solzhenitsyn and my use of the events in the Soviet Union in the 20th century. I don't know how a
soldier in it is regarded in Russia now.
People in Russia have a critical attitude towards him in general.
Solgenitsin is a unique writer and this is recognized by everyone.
However, what he described in his works is rather his point of view.
It's a cry from his heart. It's a work of fiction.
And the problem is that this work of fiction began to be perceived as a documentary.
And when the Soviet Union began to fall, those who dealt the final blows to it,
they did it in the name of Sosha Nitsin.
And it was really hard for the ordinary people, because after 1991, more than 100,000
enterprises were closed down. Over night, the country plunged into chaos, and for 20 years,
all the media kept telling us that all the people in our country were to blame for the
Soviet Union, and that they had to redeem themselves in the eyes of Alexander Isiavich in the
eyes of the Western world. And it caused people a lot of pain, because they weren't doing
anything wrong. They were working in institutes, they were translating books, they were raising
children, and then suddenly all the media started humiliating them.
And the sense of guilt they tried to create was so painful that after 1991,
in the 90s, there was a huge wave of suicides.
People didn't know how to live their lives anymore.
This information kept being shoved in their faces.
They kept being told that it was their fault that people were being exterminated
in the concentration
camps, although they had nothing to do with it.
And that is why people have mixed feelings towards Alexander Isseovitch, and everyone
understands that it was a terrible time and a very difficult one.
And this wound has not healed to this day, and even now, as we're talking, as I get
back to those events. So, so everyone, I mean, we see that, I think we see that everywhere in the world now,
that guilt in the West, in the United States, in Canada, there is a lesser, it's a lesser
phenomenon, I would say, than what you're describing, and lesser than what the German
people felt after World War II.
But there are accusations of colonialism and white supremacy and guilt over the terrors of history that brought all of us to where we are now.
And I think that it's something that we all face in some sense as an existential problem.
I mean, there are permanent existential problems, death, suffering, deceit, sin, and all of the catastrophes of history
that for better or worse put us where we are now.
And the issue of how each of us bear guilt and responsibility for things that were done
by the culture that were part of, say, or by our immediate ancestors, or even by our distant
ancestors, that's a very difficult psychological question, because we're historical creatures.
The existential psychologists following Heidegger, I believe, talked about that problem as the issue of
thrownness, thrown as in THROWN. You're thrown into the world, all of us, and
you're thrown into your culture arbitrarily, you're thrown into your family,
arbitrarily, you're thrown into your body arbitrarily, and we all have to deal
with that. And figuring out how to do that individually is very difficult.
I mean, what I was trying to do in maps of meaning was to bring this down to, and in my other books for that matter, was to bring this problem down to the individual level.
Because each of us, in some sense, have the capacity to do all the terrible things that anyone has ever done.
And you see that manifest itself on mass very frequently,
and that happened in the Soviet Union.
It happened in Germany.
It happened everywhere, really.
If you just have to look hard enough and long enough in some ways.
And so I felt that it was necessary.
It seemed to me, and this was...
So the question is, what do you do about that guilt that's part and parcel of being a a member of any culture that has done things that are reprehensible in the past, and the
answer to that is try not to do it, to understand it, and try not to do it in the future.
And so we all do have that guilt, and we all do have that responsibility.
It's very difficult not for that not to become overwhelming if you look into it deeply.
And you have to look into it deeply to some degree to scare yourself badly enough into
putting your life together so that maybe the probability of such things will be less in
the future.
That's a very tricky thing to manage.
So I think maybe partly what you do is you regard it and
this is what the existential psychologists were pointing to. It's it's part of
the nature of being human to bear that historical guilt. So it's impersonal in
some sense. You still have to take it seriously and you still have to do
something about it, but
it's not.
There's an impersonal and universal element to it, and that makes it somewhat easier to bear.
I can say that a careful study of this issue and your writings help me to cope with the
feelings that arise from the fact that some great guilt, a great burden, is crushing me now.
When I do not even know if my relatives participated in these events, I know that they were repressed.
That's something I know for sure.
And I can't understand, and many other people can't understand, what they are guilty of,
when their grandparents were the victims.
You gave some very good advice about how studying existential psychology
can help you get a broader perspective on this issue.
If I may ask a few questions.
Yeah, well part of the problem, so for example,
there's this trope in, in, this is particular,
the case in the United States,
that all white people are racist.
And that goes along with this claim that American society in particular, but not only America,
European society in general, and that would include Russian society, are in some deep
sense white supremacist. And those accusations are variations of their variations of political thinking emerging from
from this sense of universal guilt. The answer to the question are all white people racist is yes,
The answer to the question are all white people racist, is yes.
But it's also no. And here's why.
And are all people racist?
Well, yes, all of us.
And why would I say that?
Well, the anthropological literature is quite clear
on this as far as I understand it,
that virtually every society that's ever
been discovered, especially when they're isolated, tends to refer to their own group members
basically as human beings and all those outside of that group as some other category.
And I think that's a reflection of our in-group preference and our ability to cooperate
and form bonds. So it's not trivial, and it's difficult for all of us to extend, to immediately
extend that sense of kin, and that's the root word for kindness, that extend, that extend that
sense of kin beyond our in-group. And it's also extremely difficult because well how many people can you actually
attend to and care for? You know you're limited in your scope. And so the answer to the question
are all white people racist is yes, but it's still a bad question because the inclusion of the word
white implies that it's unique to say white people. And that's just not the case.
It's true of human beings.
It's probably true of our closest biological relatives in a profound and meaningful sense.
chimpanzees go to war.
That was discovered by Jane Goodall in the 1970s.
It was a great shock.
They go on rating parties.
And if they outnumber, small troops of generally juvenile males go on rating parties
near the border of their territory and if they find a chimp from another territory
and they outnumber them, they'll tear them to pieces. And so this is a deep problem. And we, it's a problem for all of us because
it's tangled up, it's actually tangled up inside our goodness. That's also what makes it so difficult because the fact that I really love my family members, let's say, and then my community around that,
that in some sense is also why I'm not so positively predisposed to anything I see outside of that that I think might disrupt it. And so we have to have some
sympathy for that proclivity. And we need to understand what we do about it now in the modern world
where it's doing more harm than good because maybe we don't need to be
pro-killed in that sense, like we were in the past.
And perhaps we can't afford to be, because we're so
technologically powerful now, that that tendency to demonize
the out group member, that'll destroy all of us, if we
don't figure out how to get it under control.
And so I
Felt that the best because maps of meaning the reason I wrote maps of meaning essentially was to figure out how you get that under control as an individual
and
That took me deep into religious work and and religious morality. I would say and I
Think the answer to that
Pro that answer to the question of that problem is that we have
to become better people.
We have to become more conscious.
We have to become more conscious of our ethical obligations.
We have to become more conscious of the nature of good and evil to put it bluntly.
And we have to bear the responsibility, the ethical responsibility that our powerful
technology demands. And we have to bear the responsibility, the ethical responsibility that our powerful technology
demands.
That's also something I learned, I would say most explicitly from Carl Jung.
And he made the case, it's a very interesting argument that he believed that the scientific
endeavor emerged out of the alchemical endeavor.
And he has his reasons for believing that.
And I think it's a reasonable proposition historically.
There's many roots of the scientific endeavor,
but Newton was an alchemist.
So there's one staggeringly important example.
An alchemy was a fantasy about the value
that might be lurking in the material world
and Jung believed that we needed to fantasize about what value might be held in study
of the material world for thousands of years
before we could organize ourselves psychologically
to do something as technically sophisticated as science.
So, but Elkamy was still one tenth science
and 90% imagination and religion in some sense.
And then the scientific part of it blew up massively over the last 400 years,
and it's put us where we are technologically, but the ethical part,
the religious part didn't blow up and expand in the same way,
but it has to.
We have to be as ethical as we are powerful,
or we won't manage, and we'll destroy ourselves with,
and maybe we'll do it because we want to. So we have to grow up in some sense,
and that means we have to become conscious of things that we have not yet
become conscious of, and I think that that means becoming more conscious of what it means that there are religious values,
what that means ontologically, so what that means for the nature of being itself,
and what it means in terms of how each of us perceive and act, and what our obligations are,
and what the costs are of not doing that.
We have to become very serious about such things
in a way that we are not serious yet.
Most of the discussion I see about the relationship
between science and religion is the sort of discussion
that takes place between the viewpoint
that's put forth most eloquently and powerfully likely by the atheist materialists
like Dawkins and Harris and Daniel Dennett.
And as far as I'm concerned, they're just not contending with the problem.
What they do is they, there's a slight of hand, there's an intellectual, slight of hand
that's unnoticed by those that they're arguing against, and the slight of hand is they implicitly and explicitly presume that
the enemy they're fighting, which would be religious belief as such, is fundamentally
a set of propositions about the explicit propositions about the structure of the material world in some sense.
So it's akin to a scientific theory.
And then having made that presumption and having that presumption not be questioned,
they can take relatively straightforward steps to demolish it.
But the problem with that is that, well, there's a variety of problems, but problem number one is
that first move is not kosher, because that's wrong.
What part of what religious is, is what happens to you when you look at the night sky
in the pitch black and you confront
infinity. And there's an embodied set of experiences that manifest themselves independent of your
will. And part of that is fear and trembling in the presence of the infinite. That's the
awe, but there's also a call in that. There's an intrinsic call in that to greater being on your part, to be
better than you are, that's part of that experience.
There's an enobling aspect to it, and none of that is rational and propositional.
It's deep, it's instinctive.
It's part of the instinct to imitate. And serious scientists would contend with that.
And serious people would as well.
There's a set of experiences that ensnare all of us dancing to music is another.
What are we doing when we're dancing to music? Well, we don't know, but it's
and it's easy to think of it as mere entertainment or something trivial, but it's not. I had a one
of Canada's national treasures here yesterday, Rex Murphy, very, very astute and profound person. And he said, this wasn't his words,
but he read them and remembered them.
All art aspires to the condition of music.
Yes, well, what does that mean?
Well, it's something outside rationality,
greater than rationality.
And virtually everyone loves music. Well, what does it mean that they love music?
Why does that feed the soul music? What exactly is going on there? Well, something profound
is going on there. It's something that's calling us to align ourselves harmoniously with the patterns of being.
And this isn't none of this is optional. And the other issue is, well,
if the religious enterprise is failed
and anyone with any reasonable intellect can see that,
then from whence do we derive our values exactly? Because the science I know has
convinced me, and these are the most serious psychologists that I've read, people like
an ecological approach to perception is that the book. I can't quite remember. The title always
escapes me. Gibson, you know, Gibson, you know, Gibson, Gibson, Gibson, a visual approach.
I can't remember the book. Eric, maybe you can just look that up briefly. It's Gibson
perception. Anyways, Gibson was quite convinced that we perceived meaning, not objective reality.
And he didn't mean that.
He wasn't a religious thinker.
That was his conclusion from studying the visual system in depth.
And it's his case.
We see the world through the lens of value.
Where do we derive from?
Where do we derive our values?
And maybe even more importantly, from where should we derive our values? And maybe even more importantly, from where should we derive our values?
And you can say science.
Yeah, but that's a fast-sol answer.
And it's a dangerous answer, too, because it risks the politicization of science.
And science strives, at least, in some sense, to be value-free.
And perhaps for the better, and perhaps that's a necessary part of the scientific enterprise.
But we need values, they're not optional.
They're the necessity for values built into us
at an unbelievably deep level,
biologically, not conceptually,
not as a secondary consequence of our rationality.
None of that, it's a precondition for perception
itself. And we haven't wrestled with the significance of that discovery. Now, you see the earth-shattering
significance of that discovery manifested itself in part in the realization of AI, artificial
intelligence, engineers, that it was virtually impossible
to build an intelligent machine that could perceive the world unless it was embodied.
And the reason for that was that the problem of perceiving the world was way more difficult
than we thought, because we thought we just saw the objects that were there, the material
objects that were there.
But that isn't the case.
It's really not the case. It's so much the case that if you try to build a machine that perceives the
world that's just looking at the objects that are there, so to speak, you can't. It doesn't work.
And so people like Rodney Brooks, MIT, robotics engineer, and a genius, he started figuring
this out in like 1992 that in all probability, a machine would have to be embodied to perceive.
Because perception is so tightly associated with action, and action and perception are also
so tightly associated with value.
You can't perceive without a framework of values.
Where, from where do we derive our values?
From nowhere? And are they real or not?
Well, what do you mean by real exactly?
You can't see without them.
So there are a precondition for the perception of material reality itself.
And then we also know, we all know, we all know this.
Some values are more important than others.
Some things are deeper than other things.
We all have that sense.
We know the difference between a shallow story
and a deep story.
And but we don't know what we mean by deep
and we don't know what we mean by shallow,
but we mean something.
And so then I would say, well, the deepest values are religious.
That's a definition.
It's an observation.
And so when I could say we should scrap the entire religious enterprise as intelligent
21st century rational intellectuals. But well, what about all these other problems?
They're not going away. And they're not the, they're not problems that are imagined
by some codery of superstitious religious scholars. These are profoundly difficult scientific
questions, at least in part, the problem of perception.
And then the problem of depth, well, are some values deeper than others?
Are some values more basic than others?
That means there's a hierarchy of values.
And that means there's something at the top.
That unites it all, or everything is fragmented.
Those are the alternatives.
And then so one of my propositions is that,
well, what Christianity is psychologically speaking
at least in part, is the attempt to specify
the nature of the highest value.
And part of that's an abstraction.
And so that's what God is in the Old Testament
is an abstract representation of the highest value.
And then there's another problem is once you abstractly represent the highest value, how do you bring it down to earth so that it can guide your actions?
And the notion of the incarnation is the answer, it's at minimum, it's the answer provided by the collective imagination of
Western civilization to the problem of the embodiment of the highest value.
And are we going to, what are we going to do? Are we going to be, are we going to be
children in the face of that? Or are we going to think about it? Because it's a problem.
But one of the things, Merchay Aliy Elliott pointed out was he was commenting, at least in part
on Nietzsche's observation of the death of God.
And Elliott said, well, God has died time and time again, because one psychological problem
with abstract, ethical, religious thinking is that the highest value can
become so abstract that no one can have any relationship with it anymore. You
don't know how, you don't know what it means for you, you don't know how to act it
out, you don't know how to embody it, and so it's meaningless, it disappears, it
floats away, but then when that happens to a culture, there's no central unifying value.
And then the culture fragments, that in a manner that's analogous to the Tower of Babel,
in some sense.
So something has to serve as a uniting value, and it is the highest value.
And I do not believe that the rationalist types, the rationalist atheists, I don't believe they contend
with these problems at all.
And it's not because they don't understand them.
They don't know these problems exist.
They exist.
These are fundamental problems.
And when I say that Christianity is the attempt
to answer the question of how the highest abstract
value should be embodied, I mean that most seriously. And then you ask yourself as well, you
know, you said to me earlier that the people who have been translating the biblical lectures
have experienced some transformation in their own life, it's that's because they started
to embody the ethic. Now I can tell you, like, are you because they started to embody the ethic.
I can tell you, are you going to strive to embody the ultimate ideal?
Or not?
Because I could ask you, do you have anything better to do?
How could you possibly have anything better to do?
And if you don't want to do that, why don't you want to do it?
Well I don't believe in that.
It's like, what do you mean by that?
Exactly. Do you not believe there are any values? Do you believe you can just pick and choose?
Do you believe that there's no uniting values? And if there are uniting values, do you believe that
you have an ethical obligation to act in accordance with them or not? And then what do you think
will happen if you don't? Because I you think will happen if you don't?
Because I know what'll happen if you don't.
You'll fall into a pit
and you'll drag the people around you
into the pit with you.
And as you suffer because you're in the pit,
you'll delight in the fact that you're there
and that you've dragged all those other people
in there with you.
Yes, you you reminded me now. It's the ecological approach to visual perception. And Gibson,
none of that book is religious in nature, in fact quite the contrary, but it doesn't matter because
what it shows is that a value structure is a precondition for perception itself.
And I should say that over and over and over, a value system is the precondition for perception
itself.
You were talking about people dragging each other into a pit, and it reminded me of Peter
Berghels' painting, the blind leading the blind, where they all fall
into a pit. It really resembles people who don't want to see these values and don't want
to aim for them.
Well, what happened? How could failure to bring values under a unifying principle lead
to anything other than fragmentation and confusion? And I studied Jeffrey Gray's book, The Neural Psychology of Anxiety, which is the best book
ever written about the biology of anxiety, hands down.
And it's a hard book.
It took psychologists, I read that book in 1985, which wasn't very long after it was
published.
And I really read it.
It took me six months to read that book.
It was hard. And it took the general run of psychologists 30 years
to really notice Jeffrey Gray's book. There wasn't a lot of serious discussion about it
among personality psychologists and social psychologists, people who are far removed from
biology and animal experimentation. It took 30 years for them to start to digest that book
and that process certainly hasn't finished yet.
And so when I say that fragmentation of the value structure
necessarily leads to a predominance of negative emotion,
pain, anxiety, suffering in general,
I believe that to be true biologically.
And I think I understand, obviously not completely, but I understand the outlines of the neurobiological
reasons why that's the case.
I wrote a paper with my students a while back trying to tie the phenomenon of anxiety
to the thermodynamic principle of entropy.
And I think we were quite successful
to put physics underneath the science of anxiety.
And I think we were successful in that.
I mean, the paper was published in a very good journal
psychological review.
And as far as I know, no one's come up
with a thorough, going and serious reputation
of the proposition.
If you fragment your value structure,
then you're overwhelmed, you become overwhelmed by anxiety, and that's the price you pay for not
being integrated. So fine, you don't have to pursue value intensely and seriously. You don't
have to devote yourself to it. You don't have to worship the highest ideal, but the price you'll pay for that is fragmentation, nihilism, anime, existential angst, doubt, terror, stress, more rapid aging, all of that.
So fine, that's the alternative, and that's only on the personal level.
It says nothing of the sociological level.
Your books help readers become more integrated with themselves.
In the great mother, Neumann says that only the individual with integrated consciousness
can help the society become healthy.
Only through individuals with integrated consciousness can society properly form and become healthy.
What tendencies in modern society do you think contribute to the...
That's no different, by the way. That is no different than the statement that the imitation of Christ is the highest ethical
demand placed on every individual in Western society. It's the same idea. It's exactly the same idea.
The first idea, the Christian idea,
is the dream that preceded the psychology.
And that's what it is minimally.
That's what it is minimally.
That's what it is psychologically.
I'm not speaking as a religious thinker
when I make that claim. I'm not trying in some sense
to tread into religious territory, not as a theologian. I'm trying to explain something
and to make it real and to make it real.
What tendencies in modern society do you think contributes to the integrity of consciousness
and what tendencies interfere with it?
Some of that guilt that you were talking about, that can be extremely corrosive.
One of the things that I was extremely affected by when I went on my tour, I think this is
part of what made me ill, although it wasn't all of it,
but it was definitely part of it.
Was, I saw, I was offering people words of encouragement
and it seemed that the people who are benefiting
most from that in some sense were young men.
And I think maybe that's because they have been
formally criticized so much in the last 30 or 40 years.
So they had the deepest hunger.
And I saw how much hunger, how much thirst there was
for words of encouragement in the face of that accusation
and guilt.
Like we all stagger forward under our burden of sin,
that's the archaic language and modern people,
while they don't really understand what that means,
and yet they're discouraged and guilty about the conditions
of their own existence, and that's the same thing.
And so then, because I was offering words of encouragement, because I would rather
that people did well than do badly. And I mean that most sincerely, it was stunning
how much impact that had on people and how grateful they were for it. And that was very painful to me to observe because I had no idea that the hunger
was so deep and that people were so hopeless because they had been crucified by their own
guilt and by their accusations of their insufficiency and the malevolence of their ambition, let's say.
I mean, I experienced that very, very personally,
a friend of mine who was a very intelligent man.
Someone I knew from the time I was about 13,
he killed himself and he did that at least in part
because he believed that masculine ambition was fundamentally
malevolent.
And so he didn't trust his own forward striving, and he couldn't distinguish, let's say,
greed from valid ambition.
And I mean, he wrote a story that really affected me.
He was quite a good short story writer as it turned out. He only had one story published,
but I have his unfinished novel.
He wrote a story about a memory he had
when he was about 10 years old, 11 years old,
something like that.
He lived in this northern town, high prairie.
There was a large indigenous population there.
It's a town very much like the one I grew up in.
And he got beat up by a group of indigenous kids
or one or two or one.
I don't remember exactly the details of the story,
but he didn't fight back.
He wouldn't fight back because even at that age,
he regarded himself as his very presence there
as morally untenable.
And you know, fair enough, there's a real ethical conflict.
There, Europeans did come to North America,
and South America, 95% of the indigenous people
died from plague, you know, measles, mumps, smallpox.
And so that was an absolute catastrophe.
And then, well, the relationships between the Europeans
who have come to the Western Hemisphere and
the indigenous people have been fraught with conflict to say the least, and no one's
exactly sure how to rectify that, but he viewed any sign of masculine ambition, let's say,
as fundamentally immoral because of its association with colonial domination
and technological nightmare and the dispoiling
of the planet and all of that struck them to the heart.
Hellettia killed them.
I mean, there was more going on, but that was a big part of it.
And so we bear this terrible guilt all of us.
And it interferes with our rise, with our ability to rise up.
And all of that has to be sorted out.
You know, we have to distinguish between valid ethical striving to make the world a better place
and immoral ambition. And we have to be very careful that we don't look at those who have put
themselves together, perhaps better than we have and have been successful because of it,
and warp our morality because we want to tear them down because, as examples, their
examples that we fall short of, it's very easy for this sort of thing to become warped by resentment and hatred.
You know, you see this.
I think I saw an example of that in the United States.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
I'm probably pronouncing her AOC.
I'm pronouncing her name wrong.
She wore a dress to a Met Gala, big fancy artistic affair, white dress,
like a bride's dress in some sense,
and on it painted in red was taxed the rich.
And that's an example of that political twisting.
It puts itself forward as an ethical statement that's aimed at the betterment of the lives
of the poor, but lurking underneath that is a hatred for those who have been successful.
And an insistence that anyone successful has only become successful because they've exploited
and hurt others.
And sometimes that's the case in some situations, probably for all of us, but
sometimes and always are very different.
And I've studied deeply the political consequences, the consequences of that attitude going too
far.
What happened to the Kulaks in the Soviet Union is a perfect, perfect example of that.
Kill all the successful farmers because all they did was exploit.
Despite the fact that all those people were surfs like 50 years previously, kill them all,
take what they earned, what happened.
Six million people die.
It is a very difficult thing with the Kool-Ax.
This is still a very painful subject for millions of people in our country.
I can tell you that my family suffered from it, my relatives were dispossessed like that. Everything
they had was taken away from them. They worked hard for decades, and that being said, the
story is actually more complicated than that. There really were such people in the villages
who were actually called Kool-Ax, who lent to other peasants, and then forced them to
give back much more
than they gave in the beginning. I mean, they demanded from debtors so much that people
could not pay back the debt. That's why Kool-Ax were hated in the villages, because they were
basically usurers, and they could hurt or kill those who delayed or didn't pay their debts.
The authorities turned blind eye to this and
sided with the Kool-Ax. They could do anything they wanted to the poor. So when it started...
There's no doubt that economic exploitation occurs. There's no doubt that economic exploitation occurs. There's no doubt that not all material wealth
is gained in an ethical manner. All of that. That's why those discussions about oppression
and exploitation always continue. There's always some truth in it.
The thing is, now it is perceived as a sort of collective pain and drama.
I think someday the pain will pass.
Unfortunately this whole phenomenon, the dispossession of kulaks, is now perceived and interpreted
rather superficially, I would say.
It was much more complicated than that.
And the fact that there was a Fratricidal War,
the Civil War that occurred before it
makes it even more complicated.
There was no right and wrong.
There were victims.
Everyone suffered, you know.
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available only at netswet.com slash JBP. I wanted to ask you about Beyond Order.
We have already translated it into Russian,
and I think there's a very important point in the eighth chapter.
The translators and the editors especially liked it.
It's about beauty. Dostoyevsky said through one of his characters that beauty will save the world,
why do you think beauty is so important?
I think I'm so glad that that that's the case.
I think that was the chapter that I liked the best of both books.
So I'm very pleased to hear that that's been the response.
And part of that was motivated by my contemplation regarding
Dostoevsky's statement.
And Solzhenitsyn's comments about it, what does that mean?
Well, it means it's a variant of the idea we discussed earlier that all art
ascribe, all art aspires to the condition of music. It's akin to our discussion about
the night sky. Beauty is something that it calls you to that higher unifying ideal. It
calls you and it pulls you. And part of that is a manifestation,
technically speaking, of the imitation,
of the instinct to imitate.
Human beings are unbelievably imitative,
unbelievably imitative.
It's our main cognitive transformation, I would say.
I mean, every word we speak is the word
that everybody else uses.
That's an example of the depth of this imitative spirit. We were so good at imitation.
And I'll give you a quick example of that. So if you watch a child who's three or four years old, playing house, male or female, the females will usually act out mother and the males will act out father.
The females will usually act out mother and the males will act out father. And if you casually observe that, you'll say, well, they're imitating.
But that isn't imitation.
If I imitated you, I would sit like this.
That's imitation.
Because I'm precisely mimicking you.
But if I'm four years old and I'm watching my father for four years, and I'm watching
Disney movies that feature kings and so forth.
So I'm getting an image of the father as such.
I'm abstracting from each particular example of the father,
the commonality of behavior and perception
that characterizes the father across all those instances.
And when I'm pretending to be the father,
I'm attempting to take that abstraction and embody it.
And that's someone, a four-year-old is doing that.
It's unbelievably sophisticated.
And so the four-year-old is called
to manifest the spirit of the father.
And it doesn't take much imagination
to see that transformed into a religious statement
to be called to manifest the spirit of the Father.
It sounds like a religious statement, but that's what four-year-olds are doing when they play house.
They're very sophisticated.
Now, that imitate of instinct, imitation, that instinct to imitate is so deep in us that weel.
We're called to imitate things that aren't even animate.
So when you walk into it, when you see a cathedral,
and then you walk into the cathedral,
the cathedral is calling you to imitate it.
And the beauty, beauty is part of that call,
and it grips you.
It's pointing to this higher unifying ideal. And that's why, and the fact that that
higher unifying ideal is so vital is what accounts for the fact that beauty compels.
And it's pre-rational, just like music. You can't argue with it. I mean, you can say,
you could say, I suppose, that, well, all opinions about beauty or arbitrary,
it's just subjective, something like that.
You could brush it off intellectually,
but it just means you're shallow and you're not paying attention.
Beauty is mysterious.
And it's not completely subjective
because there's wide agreement, at least in some instances,
on what is spectacularly beautiful.
I mean, you can see that with the pilgrims that flood into Europe, and you think, well,
they're not pilgrims.
Well, what do you think the tourists are that go to Europe if they're not pilgrims?
What do they go look at?
They go look at beautiful things.
And they fall out of the religious landscape to such a degree that they don't even know that they're on a pilgrimage and they don't even know when they start to manifest themselves in an embodied
manner and pull us here and there. It's happening politically all the time. So beauty, the reason
that Dostoevsky, you see, it's so interesting to consider the difference between Dostoevsky
and Nietzsche in this regard, because their ideas are very
similar in many, many ways. They're like, one's more rational and explicit and one's more
narrative and literary, but they're like the same spirit. And, but Dostoevsky is in some
sense deeper, and I think Nietzsche would have agreed with this, and I know that Nietzsche
knew more about Dostoevsky than people thought. There's been recently scholarly work on that account.
Dostoevsky, in some ways, was closer to beauty.
His work was closer to beauty than Nietzsche's because Dostoevsky's work was literary and
artistic.
And so he dealt in that aesthetic realm.
And the idiot, for example, the idiot is a very interesting book, and
you see this in other bits of Dostoevsky's work as well, is that his most ethical characters
can lose every argument with rationalists and still be better men. And you see that in
the book because the book allows them to be embodied rather than mirror
carriers of propositional arguments and beauty is non-propositional.
And so it goes under our narcissistic and blind rational intellect that overvalues its ability.
That's the spirit of Lucifer that Milton warned everyone about.
It goes under that and grabs you.
And if you pay attention to that, then it's a pointer
to what is beyond your understanding.
And so it's vital.
It's vital. And Dostoevsky knew that.
And Sosha Nitsyn read that and he thought,
I see, I see what he means.
I understand what he means.
And you know, one of the characteristics
of our modern culture, especially in the architectural realm
is that it's replete with ugliness.
I mean, I've gone to medieval villages in Europe,
especially in east, what used to be east Germany,
that were so beautiful.
They just made me cry when I was in the downtown.
I thought, my God, this is so unbelievably beautiful.
How did people manage this?
And to think about all the effort that was poured
into those cathedrals, monuments to divine beauty.
What imagination those people had.
And what commitment, and we can't do that,
modern people can't do that. And so it's a
terrible loss. And it's partly because we just don't take such things seriously. And that's a big
mistake because they are more serious than anything else. Beauty, that's more serious than anything,
except perhaps truth. But it's a pointer. You know, in these religious thinkers,
philosophically speaking Christian thinkers,
they thought of God as the sum,
sum of Bonham, the sum of all good things.
Well, truth is something and beauty is something,
and courage is something.
These virtues that we all recognize as virtues
or are tormented by our conscience
if we don't. You sum those all together. That's the ideal that binds us all. And that's
God for all intents and purposes. You might say, well, is that real? It's like, well, it
depends on what you mean by real. And people laugh at me because I say that sort of thing
fairly frequently. It depends on what you mean by real. But when laugh at me because I say that sort of thing fairly frequently.
You know, it depends on what you mean by real. But when you ask the question,
is something real, it's like an equation. And the right response to that is,
well, what do you mean by real? And you think, well, that's an evasion. It's like, no,
I'm just not accepting your presuppositions as a precondition for this discussion.
accepting your presuppositions as a precondition for this discussion.
You can't use that slight of hand.
So beauty, it's like, at beauty tells you to be more than you are. Beauty tells you to aspire to that, which is beyond you. Beauty says there is something beyond you, all of that.
And it does that in enticing manner, right? It invites you to come along.
It's the opposite of authoritarianism.
It's an invitation.
It's like the most beautiful woman you can possibly imagine,
waiting there for you on the dance floor, inviting you.
That's beauty, and that's an invitation to be the sort of man who could dance with that person.
You think you don't take that seriously?
Like, you get rejected by some woman.
You admire that her beauty is captivated you and you're rejected because you're less
than you could be.
You think you don't take that seriously.
It's a miracle.
You don't cut your throat. You take a miracle. You don't cut your throat.
You take it seriously. You just don't know it. You don't know what you're, what she's angry, but why
is she rejecting you? Because you're not all you could be. And some of that's laid at your feet.
And men are angry with women all the time because that's what women do. That's what
they tell them all the time. And it's a terrible thing. But can you blame them? What else would
they do? And what else would you want them to do? You know, in your shallow thoughts,
you'd think, well, I wish that I was always accepted, every advance was accepted, uncredically.
Well, that world would be hell very rapidly,
if it was actually the case.
I wanted to ask you about your work on Beyond Order.
Our translators and editors have pointed out
that it has a very distinctive language
and many levels of complexity
to explore and comprehend. The peculiarity of this language is that it somehow helps the reader
set his perception, set his mind on the book's narrative. It flows very easily and deeply into
the reader's mind. Is there a special technique you use when you build up a sentence?
Because we were comparing this book with your other works, and we noticed that your wording has And is there a special technique you use when you build up a sentence?
Because we were comparing this book with your other works, and we noticed that your wording
has changed a bit.
It became even more accurate, even though it seemed like it couldn't be any more accurate.
But it became even more vivid, and we all enjoyed working on the book.
Well, that's remarkable.
You said deep in the light way. When I was teaching at Harvard,
I was really concentrating on my maps of meaning course, although I paid plenty of attention to
the personality course as well, and they fed it into each other quite nicely. I was struck by
this idea one day, and maps of meaning was such a serious course because it dealt with atrocity.
It dealt with the worst evils that I could extract out from the last hundred years of history
and that's pretty dark.
And so it was very serious, heavy, and maps of meaning is a heavy book.
There's not much humor in maps of meaning.
And I kept having this idea that I should, if I had really mastered this material, I could
present it in a manner that was light.
And I thought, well, how in the world could you possibly present such things in a manner
that was light?
It's not like I don't appreciate the necessity for humor.
I love talking to comedians, the most enjoyable interviews I've had.
And probably probably the most successful ones in some ways have been with comedians.
And the people I grew up with, I had a group of close friends from, say, grade eight to,
so I was about 13 until I was about 20.
I was five or six of them.
And all we ever did was try to make each other laugh.
All of our interactions were wit competitions, essentially.
And some of them were way much funnier than me,
one friend of mine, in particular, Randy Carlstad,
was he was a, so insanely funny.
I saw him again on my 50th birthday,
and he made me laugh so hard.
I could literally, I could hardly breathe.
He was so funny.
And so I love humor.
And most of what I watch on television
is stand up comedy or idiot humor,
like the trailer park boys or something
like some low-brow horrible low-brow show like that which I really enjoy. So there's something
to this lightness that's crucially important and I don't I haven't quite puzzled it all out.
I know when I'm on top of things that I can maintain my sense of humor and I haven't always
been able to do that especially in know, over the last five years because
they, well, for a variety of reasons, for a variety of reasons, sometimes it was the vitriolic
nature of the interactions and so forth.
But I know when I'm at my best that, you know, I have a sense of humor and I can keep things
light, even if they're deadly serious. And I'm very happy to hear that the translators
have seen that combination of lightness,
but depth in improve as I continued to write.
I wasn't sure about that.
I wrote Beyond Order under very trying conditions.
I was unbelievably ill while I wrote that book. I...
Tara, it was terrible. So I'm glad that that worked because I didn't... I had no idea if it would.
But I'm very happy to hear that that's been the experience of the translators,
because they're obviously interacting with this text in a very serious way.
And I'm thrilled that it was chapter eight in particular
that was most affecting because that was a particular
favorite of mine, that issue of beauty.
So it's so unbelievably crucially important
to what's happening in the world today
because of what it implies.
So people wonder what the purpose of such things as classical music, what's the purpose of classical music?
Let's say, let's say, this about any musical form, and I like a very wide variety of music.
Well, you know, and you see this with psychologists, even psychologists, I admire, they tend to just wave their hands about the entire cultural capability of human beings,
as if all of this entertainment, music, drama, art, literature, that's some...
It's just entertainment, you know, that's all it is.
It's not the central part of our function as human beings or the central part of our culture. This is completely backwards. It's absolutely backwards. It's crucial and vital.
So the lightness, well, that's good. And I've become more healthy recently.
In the last month, I've recovered a lot. Thank God. I can think again a bit.
And my sense of humor, I'm hoping, we'll come back. And I hope I can think again a bit and my sense of humor, I'm hoping we'll come back and I hope I can maintain it.
I'm going on tour again, I think next year perhaps for the whole year and it would be nice to have a sense of humor while that's happening.
That would be wonderful.
I would love to see you in Russia.
If you are willing to do it, that would be wonderful.
People here like you very much.
They like you and they would love to meet you.
I would love to do a lecture in St. Petersburg.
And so when we plan the European, and that's not the only place, but I would particularly
love to do a lecture in St. Petersburg.
When we plan the European tour, we will definitely
do everything to make that happen.
Definitely, it would be such a striking honor and privilege
to be able to do that.
I can't believe that that's possibility.
I would love to do it.
And the fact that I can speak with Russian people
and speak with people all over the world
is a miracle.
Really, it's amazing that you all are doing so much work to make this happen
and that you're trying to be so careful with your words.
I'm so happy about that. It's so great.
You know, and that part of that transformation that you were talking about,
perhaps part of that is a consequence of everybody trying to be very careful with their words.
It's not for nothing that our entire culture decided that the essential hallmark of the highest
uniting ideal was the word. We should take that seriously. The word is divine, your word is divine
if it's true. Think about that. What if that was true? What if that was actually how
reality was constituted? You think you have no relationship with reality, with the infinite? Where are
you going to find that other than in truth? And where are you going to approach truth more particularly
than with your words? Or a vague, or a vague, the truth,
with your words.
And so in so far as you have a relationship
with reality and with the infinite and with truth,
how could that not manifest itself in the word?
So it's crucially important to pay attention
to what you say.
And that's part of what we've all been trying to figure out
for thousands and thousands of years trying to understand what that meant,
trying to make what's most important, the word, the truthful word,
that's the most important thing.
Really? Well, that's what we've concluded, this immense religious exercise.
And I'm speaking as a psychologist. And it's amazing because the approach we took, it
worked the same way in different languages. Lectures in Chinese were received just as
well by the viewers as they were in other languages. And it's
amazing, all the kind words people write to us, they say that it's an amazing translation
and that they've discovered a whole new world and new meanings in life. We were all very
impressed by that. And all we did was we were just trying to be accurate, trying to avoid
adding something unnecessary, something of our own invention during the translation
process. We strive to convey the author's vision and ideas, and it works.
I can tell you that every time the translation deviated from your precise sequence of phrases,
the book made a completely different impression, and it somehow became harder to relate it
to the next piece of your work.
That's how neatly it is structured.
We noticed it when we were working on the Bible series and on Beyond Order.
We realized we cannot change your wordings and your choice of words,
otherwise the book loses its depth and energy.
It's like we had to follow some kind of star. Everyone felt that.
It was something elusive. It's hard to put into words. It's like music, like some kind of star, everyone felt that. It was something elusive.
It's hard to put into words.
It's like music, like some sort of magic.
And when we did it right, the text began to flow.
And it is so pleasant.
It is as if everything connects with each other.
And it is impossible to turn away from it.
Some lectures that we have translated and dubbed,
we listen to again and again.
You want to get back to them, to take a deeper look into them, you know.
And that's the way we translated beyond order.
It's a book that you want to read all over again, to get back to it.
I think we'll make sure that every library in Russia has this book,
that people have the opportunity to read it because by maintaining the sequence,
that you have laid out, it's like we're giving people the opportunity to read it, because by maintaining the sequence that you have laid out,
it's like we're giving people the opportunity to enter another world, to get a deep insight into it.
So, my son and I and a team have been developing software to help people write,
so it's a word processing program, but it's a tool to write more effectively. And it has technology that enables dragging
and dropping of sentences and dragging and dropping of paragraphs and modules that help
you reshovel. And so, and it's based on, I spend a lot of time developing an explicit
theory of writing and also of, say, text criticism because I
had to grade so many essays, I wanted to decompose the grading process and understand what I
was doing and formalize it.
So then I started to understand that a text, it's a multi-level phenomenon, a book, word,
phrase, sentence, paragraph, sequence of paragraphs, chapters,
sequence of chapters, totality.
It exists at all those levels simultaneously, and although you walk through it like you walk
through life from beginning to end, as the author, you have a God's eye view, and you
can see all of those structures simultaneously.
You can see the end even though, once you've written the book, even though it has a beginning. And what that means is that you can make the beginning
refer to the end. You can make the end refer to the beginning. You can make all
the parts of the text refer to each other. And one of the things that's
absolutely remarkable about the Bible is that it's hyperlinked like that.
There's a map that an image online that shows,
it's beautiful, it just looks like a rainbow,
in some sense, it shows how many references to each verse
are made throughout the text.
And so the Bible is, the world's first hyperlinked text,
thoroughly hyperlinked text, all of it refers to all of it.
Explicitly and implicitly, and the reason for that is because it's been reworked and reworked,
and reworked, and reworked to be made somewhat coherent,
to be made into an actual narrative by, you know,
an untold number of people working over an untold amount of time.
The old stories in the Bible, like the story of Adam and Eve
and the story of Noah, God old stories in the Bible, like the story of Adam and Eve and the story of Noah.
God only knows how old those are. I know that historians, literary historians, perhaps that's the
discipline, have traced back some fairy tales 10,000 years more than that. And so, and one, if a story is
10,000 years old, it's probably 100,000 years old because things didn't change much 10,000 years ago.
Right?
Not changing was how things were not changing.
And so God only knows how old those stories are
and how long they were told for.
And so when you write, if you think about what you're writing
deeply, you start to make everything refer to everything else, and that's part of
what makes you experience a text as deep.
Because
it's refers. There's all these references
within the text if the writer has done his or her job properly and
edited at every one of those levels of analysis, which
you have to do, is the word precise, is the phrase right, or the phrase's sequence properly
in the sentence, is the paragraph made of properly sequenced sentences, et cetera.
I edited all those levels explicitly over and over, over and over.
And with maps of meaning, I think I probably wrote every sentence 50 times.
Like, I literally, I mean that literally, I'd write a sentence out and then I'd write
another version of it.
Then I'd write another version of it continually until I couldn't, until I started
generating variance and I couldn't make any qualitative distinction between them.
So I'd write down three and I can say and I can't tell which of those is better.
So I guess I'm done because I can't make a finer value distinction.
Now I think I probably overworked maps of meaning to some degree because I did that so continually.
Some of the sentences are very long. They work.
But because they're so long, they're hard to,
it's hard on the reader.
And with that book, I was trying to figure something out.
I mean, I wanted to write a book, obviously,
and I wanted to communicate with people,
but fundamentally, I was trying to figure something out
with 12 rules and beyond order.
I was taking what I had figured out
and trying to investigate it further,
but I was also trying to make it much more accessible.
It was much more a communicative attempt rather than a investigative attempt.
So I'm so happy.
I think part of the reason your translations have worked is because of this emphasis on precision,
you said, you're not playing any tricks.
You're not trying to get false attention.
And thank God for that.
You definitely don't want. You do not want unearned attention.
Believe me, that is not something anyone with any sense
would ever wish for.
Because if it's unearned, all the people who are devoting
that attention, they will figure that out
and they will not be happy with you.
And so the catastrophe will be exactly proportional
to the degree of attention and the degree that it's unearned.
That's not a good idea.
And but you also, from what you told me,
you also realized that you had to really meet your audience
halfway.
You had to understand locally the vernacular of the community,
and you had enough humility to notice
that that was necessary.
You know, I was just talking to somebody,
a couple economists the other day about the failure
of foreign aid, the constant failure of foreign aid.
And part of the reason it fails is because it's like,
well, here is what we know,
and you ignorant people can just do it.
Whereas for it to work, there has to be a real deep study of the local environment and
and and some attention paid to how these things could be integrated with that environment
in an inviting way.
And so the fact that you paid attention to those local particularities and that you, you
know, you said you only tried to be precise here
and now. Well, that was how the translation came through. Well, that's not only that's
man. If you can do that all the time, you're attending to the moment, you know, accurately,
you're trying to establish a relationship with truth accurately every moment. So, that's
not only that's, that's a, that's's an active worship that only trying to be
precise here and now. And we could talk a little bit about that too because what
worship means is imitate. And you think, well, you don't worship, I don't worship
anything because I don't believe in anything. It's like, oh yeah, you think that's
true. You don't think you're imitating. Who are you imitating? No one. Oh, you're a
completely singular person. Are you? There's nothing you're imitating. Who are you imitating? No one. Or you're a completely
singular person. Are you? There's nothing you're imitating. This is like, think again, sunshine.
You're imitating. You just don't know who you're imitating. And maybe you should figure
it out because you might be imitating something you do not want to imitate.
I also want to ask you about the period you were working on the book.
Your daughter, Michaela, was a great help to you.
She always is.
She hosts a very interesting podcast.
She always chooses relevant topics.
We watch her podcasts and see that she is constantly growing.
What helps us stay so strong and keep people interested
and engaged in your opinion?
First, yes, she's been unbelievably helpful to me
and she's saved my life.
But I could say that of many people.
I'm not trying to devalue what she did at all.
In fact, I thanked her profoundly last night
for saving my life, literally, and her husband as well,
Andre, who went far beyond the call of duty,
caring for me, amazingly, remarkably, inexplicably even.
But I've had many, many, many people
have been a great aid to me.
My wife, a variety of close friends, all sorts of people have really
gone out of their way. And so, Michaela had to overcome a tremendous amount of obstacle
in her relatively short life so far. I mean, she was unbelievably ill as a child, and
she had 38 affected joints by rheumatoid arthritis and she was in pain all the time and
she basically walked around on two broken legs for like a year when she was a teenager for a variety of
reasons. Joints had deteriorated both in her hip and her ankle to the point where they were almost
non-functional and waiting times for surgery were very long. And it wasn't even clear that they could be fixed.
And her prognosis, when we found out what she had, I think we discovered that when she
was about six or seven, was multiple early joint replacements.
And she was put on an anti-arthritis medication, a new biologic.
She was the first kid in Canada who got that medication, as it turned out.
And it really worked.
So she had a reprieve for about five years, but then her hip de-integrated and then her ankle disintegrated.
And she also has suffered from very serious depression, which runs in my family on my paternal side, particularly extremely serious, severe depression,
and it affected my father and his father
and a variety of my relatives and me and my daughter,
not my son, thank God.
So she's had to overcome a lot,
and she has overcome a lot,
and she's trying hard. And so more power to her as far as I'm
concerned and I'm thrilled to see what's happening with her podcast. She seems to
be have enough humility despite her confidence to not presume most of the time
that she knows more than she does and to ask genuine questions and not to play tricks.
And I hope that that's working well for her.
Yeah, she's been extremely helpful to me and made some very wise decisions over the last
few years under very, very difficult circumstances.
For example, I was written into a comic book in April, Captain America, just part of the underlying mythology
in the West.
Now, the Marvel movies have become so popular,
and they are presenting mythology essentially
to a whole new generation.
I was written into Captain America as Red Skull,
you know, King of the Evil Super Nazis.
It was quite the shock to me. And she helped me weave my way through that quite successfully.
You know, we put out a line of red skull merchandise
and devoted all the profits, all the meat,
all that we made to charity.
And that was a good, that was good.
It was a nice kind of a judo move in some sense.
You know, we didn't go on the attack because why?
That's not helpful.
It's not like I don't wish Tanya Hisi coats the best
because I do.
He's the person who wrote the comics.
Like, I don't want bad things to happen to him.
I hope that he straightens up and flies right, you know,
because that would be better for everyone.
And so it was a tricky thing to manage and she was very helpful in doing that.
And so she's written, she's written a book about her experiences and she's
gonna hopefully, I haven't read it yet, I don't know if I can read it, I don't know if
I'm healthy enough to read it yet, but she's investigating all the possibilities
that lie ahead of us in this video frontier too.
And this is so exciting because look at what we can do.
It's crazy what we can do.
You know, one of the things we're talking about right now,
I talked to her about this last night is,
and I talked to a couple of educators about this.
You know, right now we could put our collective resources together for a relatively small capital outlay and we
could produce a curriculum from kindergarten through grade 12 of
the highest quality educational material possible. Right? Because
who cares if we spend a million dollars per hour? I think that maybe
you know tens of millions of kids could use it for
God only knows how long it would be, wouldn't cost anything and it would be basically free.
And there's absolutely nothing stopping us from doing that. And so we're starting to think
through how we could maybe initiate that program. And that's what faculties of education, if they
had any sense at all, which they don't generally speaking.
And I don't say that lightly.
They'd be all over themselves right now thinking,
look at what we can do.
We've got this free video technology
that enables us to produce material
that everyone can access for nothing.
And we could, we could scientifically determine
how to propel students through learning
at the fastest possible rate to cover
the deepest possible material over the course
of their educational career and to be completely
engrossed while they're doing it.
We could do that.
And that technology, that's only been technologically possible
for the last five years, let's say.
There's nothing stopping people from doing that. So,
you know, hopefully I'm hoping I'll be healthy enough to engage in some of these projects.
This is a very important issue. And I wonder how we can teach our children to learn and help
them develop passion to learn new things. It's not something done in a snap. Do you have any idea how to achieve this?
I don't think I can tell you how it's possible to do that.
I can only speak at the level of the family in some sense.
Well, I guess it's slightly broader. I mean, the maternal role, that's...
And the maternal role, that's, there's a, that's a, in some sense, that's fundamentally protective.
It's security and physical well-being.
It's more than that, but that's part of its core.
And the core of paternal care, I think, is encouragement as far as I can tell.
It's more than that.
And of course, the paternal and the maternal overlap.
I'm not trying to segregate them completely. And so you love and protect your children and you encourage them to
go out into the world. And that's that ethos should permeate our educational material, although it
isn't obvious to me that it should be taught explicitly. If the material isn't saturated with those
explicitly. If the material isn't saturated with those intents, then that message won't be transmittable anyways. You know, you already said when you're doing these translations,
you're trying for precision. Well, there's an ethos then that permeates the translations.
And so far as you're able to embody that, and we want to do that with the educational
material that we produce. And I think probably the way to do that is to make it beautiful, compelling, engaging, deep, rich,
accurate, and to have the notion of what's being served firmly
in the background, surrounding all the attempts
to make the material and love encouragement and truth,
let's say that's not about triumph
for it,
to meditate upon when contemplating educating children.
What would you teach them if you truly loved them and you wanted to encourage them and
you wanted to tell them the truth?
So how would you teach someone in grade one?
What would you teach them?
Obviously it would rely to some degree on stories. I think the first thing we're going to try to do is to
I
Is to produce video material to teach four-year-olds how to read
because if you can really teach kids how to read they're gonna educate themselves a lot
so and I
I've seen material produced by behavioral cognitive psychologists who are effective
that produced by behavioral cognitive psychologists who are effective that enables a four-year-old
who's ready to be taught how to read and write in three months with 10-minute lessons per day
and it works.
It's a really, I know the program, it's a really good program, it's brilliantly designed,
it's a phonics program and it's completely scripted and I think it would work, it might
work on video and then everyone could have it. And so that would be a good place to start, you know, because everyone should be able to read,
I don't think we're going to get a lot of disagreement about that.
You brought up the topic of higher education and establishing proper higher education programs.
Do you think modern academic education continues to yield the same great results that it used to.
Or does it require some changes?
When I went to university, I had good professors and bad professors.
And the best professors I had were at a little college I went to to begin with.
It was called Grand Prairie Regional College.
It was in the town of 25,000 in Northern Alberta.
And only had about 500 students.
The professors really liked loved to teach.
And I had great professors.
I had the two years of education I got there
where the best two years of education I got my life,
I think, although I learned a lot in graduate school,
but that's a whole different story.
That's a different kind of education.
So when students go to university now,
one went to a larger university,
I had good professors and terrible professors,
and it was sort of incumbent on me to shop
and find the professors who could really teach,
as far as I was concerned,
or who were teaching what I wanted to learn
and to differentiate between them.
And I think that that hasn't changed in any profound sense.
What I've seen happen over the last 30 years
in higher education in North America,
at least, is that it's got much more expensive,
especially at the high end and much more politicized
and much more laden with bureaucracy.
And but I still believe that a discriminating and serious student can go to a good university and get educated if that's what they're aiming at. A lot of that's up to the student themselves.
Having said that, I would also say, however, this tech, the technology that we're using right now is absolutely revolutionary
because what it means is that the best lectures
teaching the deepest material can now go direct to everyone.
And so that will have a revolutionary effect.
It can't not.
And you know, the response to my channel,
to my video efforts is a reflection of that because I was an early adopter in the educational realm of this technology. You
know, and I did it partly as a, just an exploratory foray. I had these 13 programs that had been
made by a small Ontario television station, TV Ontario, about maps of meaning.
And they were professionally edited and came out quite nicely as
reasonably digestible summaries of the maps of meaning lectures. And I thought, well, I'll put them on YouTube and see what happens. And you know, back then, that was like 2013, I think
YouTube, no one knew what YouTube was. It was a place for cat videos. No one took it seriously.
to no one knew what YouTube was. It was a place for cat videos.
No one took it seriously.
But I kept an eye on it.
I thought, well, this is interesting.
This is permanent.
This is everywhere.
This is new.
This is not just cute cat videos.
Not that there's anything wrong with those.
But, and then I watched my, you know,
the viewership rise and rise and rise.
And I thought, well, there's something to this. And then I started my, you know, the viewership rise and rise and rise. And I thought, well, there's something to this.
And then I started having my courses filmed for that reason.
It's like, I thought, well, I might as well teach everybody if they're interested.
And that's another thing that's lovely about YouTube is the only people that watch
are people who are interested.
It's like perfect students.
You don't want to watch.
Don't watch if you want to.
Great.
You know, and that's it available for everyone.
And again, to hope this is dependent on my health, but we're hoping to
talk to great lectures everywhere and to invite them and say, look, you know,
what would you really like to teach?
If you could teach anything you wanted, what would you really love to teach?
Because you should teach what you love.
It's the fact that you love it is an indication
that you should teach it.
And maybe even that you could teach it
because you can invite people say,
look, I love this.
And this is why it's like,
maybe you'll love it too.
Maybe you won't.
Because not everyone doesn't love everything.
That's for sure.
But so what I see see the future of education,
it's like the best lectures possible
about every topic conceivable,
produced in the best manner possible
for everyone, for nothing,
because we can do that too.
And it's gonna happen. it's going to happen.
It's going to happen, assuming we have any sense.
Like, why wouldn't it happen?
Why wouldn't we do that?
What a deal that is.
And then, you know, there's the problem of accreditation,
but that's a solvable problem.
You know, one way of solving that is to get a panel of experts,
like real experts in any domain and say,
well, look, produce 5,000 multiple choice questions that you think cover the entire territory or sample at at least, you know, because you don't have to ask every
expert about everything. You just have to randomly sample their knowledge.
Well, then you build a system that randomly takes those questions and aggregates
them in two exams, and if someone wants to be accredited, they take the exam or maybe they take
three of them. And then their score is number correct. It's absolutely accurate, it's absolutely
reliable. You know, you have a sample of their knowledge, and maybe then 20 tests like that or 50 tests
like that gives you the equivalent of a bachelor's degree, something like that.
The accreditation problem is solvable and without that much expense.
Now you might say, well, multiple choice tests don't test everything.
It's like, that's true, but they can sample pretty well.
And there are other, the problem of how to teach people
to write is a more complex one because it's really hard
to grade an essay, because you don't just write B minus on it.
You don't just write a percentage.
You have to tell the person what they did wrong.
And if someone can't write, they did everything wrong.
The words wrong, the phrases wrong, the sentences wrong,
the sentences aren't aggregated properly.
The paragraphs don't make sense.
They're not sequenced properly.
The whole essay is a mess.
And to explain why that's all wrong to someone,
it's easier just to rewrite the whole essay.
It's far easier.
But this is partly why we built this writing program
because we thought, well, maybe one of the way
to teach people how to write is to build how to write into the tool they used to write.
And so we're hoping that we'll launch that in the next three months, something like that.
The program is done for all intents and purposes.
We're still figuring out how to communicate about it.
And we're not sure it will work, because it's a very complicated thing
to produce a writing technology.
And we might have got it wrong.
I mean, we tried to pay attention to the user experience
and all of that.
But my sense was the best way to teach people to write
was to give them a tool that would help them write better.
Because that can be scaled, right?
And it's dirt cheap.
It doesn't require someone to do that grading, which is we can't automate yet.
You know, you talked about more mechanical translation. It doesn't work. It's not subtle enough. It's not
nuanced enough. And we can't use automated systems to grade essays. We don't have the technology for
that. And I don't know if we ever will. We might, it's possible. I doubt it, because I don't know if we ever will. We might, it's possible. I doubt it because I don't know how you could grade an essay
without being human.
So maybe if we build a machine that perfectly mimic being human,
it could do it.
And maybe it's a solvable technical problem,
but I doubt it.
We'll see.
Machines are getting smart quick.
So I hope the future of education, the higher education,
it's like experts who love their material, share their love with everyone for nothing.
And I would make a business out for nothing means it would still run on a profit basis,
because I think that's the most efficient way of doing this.
But fundamentally, the cost would be like one-one-hundredth of a standard university education.
So, now that doesn't solve the problem of the collegial experience of university
and the maturation that occurs when you leave your group of friends and make new friends
and the transformation of personality that moving enables and finding
a new group of people to associate with and the introduction to the world of culture.
You know, but I don't know how to port that online and that might be the most important
part of the university experience.
But on the merely educational front, well, all this technology backends.
So I wanted to ask if you're going to write your next book and if you are, could you tell
us what it will be about?
Yes, and then I should stop because I'm starting to get tired and I'm not going to be able
to provide any intelligent answers soon, but I'll answer that question and then we should stop.
I am working on a new book.
It's tentatively titled, We Who Ressel with God.
And I took that title from the biblical lectures,
because I discovered, for my, I discovered,
it's not that other people didn't know this,
that the word Israel meant We Who Ressel with God and and that's embedded in the narrative of Jacob wrestling with God or wrestling with an angel
It's a very strange story for a rational person. It's like what the hell is going on here?
This Jacob is wrestling with God or an angel. It's not exactly clear in the story. What does that mean?
or an angel, it's not exactly clear in the story. What does that mean?
And then his leg basically gets broken or dislocated at least.
It's like, well, why would God do that?
It's like, well, all the atheists that are watching
my biblical lectures, they're wrestling with God.
More than religious people usually,
they're more obsessed with the problem.
We all wrestle with God. It
doesn't matter if you're a believer or an unbeliever. It doesn't matter at all.
And you think that, you know, wrestling with God won't break your leg. It's like
you're bloody lucky if that's all it does. So that's us, man. We who wrestle with
God. So this book is about what that means, and it's also about what it means if we don't
know that that's what we're doing.
And one thing I'm very concerned with is the sacralization of politics.
So there's this comment by Christ that we should render unto God what is God and unto Caesar, what is Caesar's.
And I believe that's true psychologically as well as politically.
And the consequence of not doing that isn't that God disappears and we all become proper
thinking rationalists.
The consequence is that all sorts of things that should be secular and profane get inflated
with religious significance.
And then we can't even talk, you know, because someone who has a different political opinion,
then you isn't merely on the other side of a rational argument about how to progress
towards some agreed upon future.
They're, they're like possessed by the spirit of malevolence itself, as far as your concern, because you haven't got your category straight.
And so it's about that too.
It's like there's a religious domain.
I don't care if you're a believer or an unbeliever,
that statement is true.
And if you don't think it's true,
then you decide how you would describe the experience of awe.
Well, that's not religious.
It's all right.
Use whatever word you want, but it's going to come to mean religious.
So it doesn't matter because the central characteristic of the phenomenon of awe is what we call religious.
It's part of what beauty points us to, let's say.
So you can change the surface terminology,
but it's not going to affect the underlying reality.
Well, it's going to affect reality
and that we'll get confused, but the issues aren't going
to go away.
And part of what's happening in the West right now,
and it's not good, it's really dangerous,
is that we're having religious discussions disguised as political discussions. That's not
good. It's really not good, it's really dangerous and we have to be very careful. And it's
going to get worse I think before it's going to get worse for a while. So brace yourselves.
Thank you very much for this conversation. I really appreciate it. It was a profound conversation.
Well, thank you for enlightening me as to the extent of this translation enterprise. I really
appreciate that. I really appreciate the fact that you brought up and are attending to precision and and your description of the care that's being taken. And hopefully we're trading a good path.
And if we're careful, all sorts of good things will happen.
And I'm thrilled that I can, you know,
that I'm being able to communicate with people in Russia
and all these other countries.
It's such a privilege.
It's such a privilege.
And so remarkable.
So thank you for the intelligent questions.
Thank you very much. Goodbye. I think we will continue our conversation if you have time.
We have a lot of questions, a lot of questions from different channels.
People really want to talk to you when us to ask you these questions, and I'm sure it will be
just as fascinating
as this conversation.
Let's definitely, definitely, let's do that.
Collect the questions, figure out which ones you think
are most relevant.
Absolutely, let's do that.
Thank you very much, Jordan.
Goodbye.
Bye-bye.
you