The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 224. Questioning Sam Harris
Episode Date: February 8, 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 episodes (and the abi...lity to ask questions)*Presale access to events*Premium, detailed show notes for future episodesSign up here:https://jordanbpeterson.supercast.comThis episode was recorded on November 25, 2021.Sam Harris is a neuroscientist, philosopher, New York Times best-selling author, host of the Making Sense podcast, and creator of the "Waking up" app.Dr. Harris and I discuss the is/ought problem, dreams, attention, evidence, consciousness, logic, psychedelics, religion, Waking Up, and much more.Meditate with the Waking Up app:https://wakingup.comListen to the Making Sense podcast:https://open.spotify.com/show/5rgumWEx4FsqIY8e1wJNAk?si=14b735150ec24b84Sam’s website: http://SamHarris.org_____________Timestamps_____________[00:00] Intro[02:48] Background[06:04] The debates[12:25] Waking Up [16:18] The is/ought problem (1)[23:42] (Breaking out of) everyday patterns[24:22] Experience & Expectations[32:26] Evidence & Logic[33:10] The is/ought problem (2)[34:56] The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception[40:52] Attention[42:38] Carl Rogers[49:21] (Dis)satisfaction[51:01] Discomfort[51:17] Entering meditative states[54:06] Being like a mirror[55:58] Thoughts & The Self[56:56] Suffering[01:01:03] Dreaming[01:09:15] The Self & Psychedelics[01:14:29] Prayer[01:18:24] Organized religion[01:25:33] The postmodern predicament[01:41:54] Sacred texts#Philosophy #Ethics #Meditation #Mindfulness #SamHarrisÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to season four episode 81 of the JBP podcast. I'm Michaela Peterson. Sam Harris joined
dad on this episode and they had a chance to talk again after a long hiatus. As most of you know,
or might know, Sam is a philosopher and neuroscientist, a New York Times bestselling author,
the host of the Making Sense podcast and the creator of Waking Up, a meditation app informed by
decades of firsthand experience under various teachers and traditions. Dad and Sam discussed the
is-ought problem, meaning you can't make claims about how the world ought to be
based on what already is. They also touched on religion, psychedelics, perception
and attention, the waking up app, which mom has been using for about a year now,
and more. By the way, if you're
tired of me interrupting this podcast with ads, that's how we keep it in production.
Visit JordanB Peterson dot supercast dot com to sign up for an ad free version. It works
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access to pre-sale tickets for shows and monthly ask me anything episodes where members submit the questions.
Again, that's at jordanbe Peterson dot supercast dot com or in the show notes.
Please remember to subscribe if you enjoy this kind of content. Hello, everyone.
I'm pleased today in a variety of ways to have as my guest, Dr. Sam Harris, who is undoubtedly familiar to many of you watching
or listening to this,
Sam is a neuroscientist philosopher
and author of five New York Times bestsellers.
His work covers a wide range of topics,
neuroscience, moral, philosophy, religion,
meditation, practice, political polarization, rationality,
but generally focuses on our developing understanding
of ourselves and how our developing understanding of ourselves in the world is changing our sense
of how we should live. His books include The End of Faith, The Moral Landscape, Free Will,
Lying, and Waking Up. Sam hosts the popular Making Sense podcast. There's also the creator of the
Waking Up app, which we're going to talk about a fair bit today, which offers a
modern rational approach to the practice of meditation and an ongoing
exploration of what it means to live a good life. He's practiced meditation for
more than 30 years and is studied with many Tibetan Indian Burmese and Western
meditation teachers,
both in the US and abroad.
He holds a degree in philosophy from Stanford and a PhD in neuroscience from UCLA.
Sal and I spoke twice, few years ago, it's probably four years ago now on his podcast.
We got bogged down a bit the first time trying to agree on a definition of truth, which in our defense is not necessarily the easiest thing to come to an agreement on,
but our second discussion flowed more freely. Then we met twice in front of live audiences of about
3,000 in Vancouver and soon after at Dublin, and then at the O2 in London, those were tremendously
exciting events, I believe, for both of us and for everyone else involved, and perhaps even for the audiences, where something approximating 9,000 to 8,000 people respectively listen to our discussions.
And we haven't spoken well for a long time, perhaps not since then even. And so I'm very much looking forward to this. And the time I first thing I'd really like to know
is what do you make of those events in retrospect? And they attracted a very large crowd certainly by
our standards. And I'd like to know how you look back on that and what do you think about that?
Well, first let me say I'm just very happy to see you and to be speaking with you again. It's really it's been
I think we spoke once on the phone since those events if I'm not mistaken, but you know
It's been the years past quickly or all too slowly depending on what's going on as you know
And you know, I've heard about a lot of what you've gone through
indirectly and What you've put out there publicly and I just you know, I was you know, I was I was heard about a lot of what you've gone through indirectly and what you've put out there publicly.
I was worried about you and I'm incredibly gratified to see you reemerge and connect with
your audience and be back in the game. Thanks, man. I value your voice.
A lot. Yeah, well, I'm pretty thrilled to be back and to be able to be talking to people
again like this. So let's hope it continues. Yeah, yeah. Well, you know, it was very interesting
because I mean, as you know, and as your fans know, you really did kind of come out of nowhere
like a, you know, on a rocket like trajectory, right? So you were somebody I had never heard of,
and then all of a sudden you were the most requested person
from my audience to have on the podcast.
And then we did that first podcast
that you mentioned where we got bogged down
on questions of epistemology.
And which I think I haven't listened to it since,
but I still think it was a useful conversation.
And-
Not gone as going. Yeah, and I still think it was a useful conversation. And not going. It's going.
Yeah.
And many people found it very valuable.
I mean, you know, it's just to either to my advantage or your advantage,
people found it valuable.
They heard what they, you know, some heard what they wanted to hear in it.
And some, some had their minds bent around as, as was intended.
But people, most people, many people certainly people certainly felt it was a kind of failed experiment
in conversation and we should try it again.
And then we had a much more amicable discussion on my podcast and that planted the seed for
these public events.
And if memory serves, we had one event booked in Vancouver, and you were still not quite the famous Jordan Peterson yet.
And then in the like in the 15 days, it took us to actually get to that event.
Your star had risen so quickly that we recognize the promoter recognized that we had to book another event immediately
after, you know, so the next night we, so we had two backed, back events in Vancouver.
And then, yeah, those subsequent events with you were really a lot of fun because
we were disagreeing very stridently about fairly existential topics. And by the time we got to London and Dublin,
we had these immense audiences that were segmented in ways that I had never quite experienced.
I've been in front of my home team audience and I've been in front of a hostile audience,
but I've never been in front of an audience where, you know, fully 50% or 6040, I mean, I don't know what the split was at that point, but, you know, thousands of
people were on one team and thousands of people were on another team for questions of God and faith
and meaning and... Yeah, but everybody was on board for the discussion. You remember one thing that
happened, this was in Vancouver, we were going to switch to a Q&A. And we asked the audience
essentially if they wanted the discussion to continue because we were in the middle of
it, or if they wanted to switch to the Q&A. And it was overwhelming support of the audience
for the discussion to continue, which I thought was quite remarkable.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, so it was a lot of fun. And there was just a tremendous amount of
energy, but to have eight or 9,000 people show up
for an intellectual discussion, really.
I mean, it did have the character somewhat of a debate,
but it was not framed as anything like a formal debate.
And we were really just having a conversation
and agreeing where we agreed and disagreeing
where we disagreed.
And it was, anyway, I found it to be a lot of fun.
And, uh,
Those ridiculously exciting.
Yeah.
And people, people loved it.
So, yeah, I'm, I've,
Yes. And so what do you make of that?
It's like why in the world was what it was
that we were talking about attractive
to so many thousands of people?
Well, I mean, you know,
when you look at the full sweep of what we cover, I mean, in those
particular conversations, we weren't focusing on areas that we agree about much more. I mean,
you know, you and I, if you're going to turn us loose on questions of, you know, moral
panic around identity politics and social justice hysteria, you know, you and I will agree,
I think probably 90% or more on many of those topics. And I don't recall us touching any of that,
but that was in the background. It was certainly, it was certainly the wind in your sales,
you know, making you more and more prominent at that point, because you had hit those topics so hard.
making you more and more prominent at that point because you had hit those topics so hard.
But the topics we were touching, questions of what is reality and how we should live within it, really, the fundamental questions of what it means to live a good life, what are the
requisites for living a good life? How should we think about our place in the universe
so as to have the best chance of living a good life?
These are the most important questions anyone ever asks
provided they have sufficient freedom
to even worry about such things.
I mean, if the wolf is at the door or in the room,
well, then people really, for the most part,
don't have the luxury of
worrying about whether they're as ethical or as honest or as profoundly engaged with the present moment as they might be. But once you get to something like, you know, first world concerns,
where you have enough material abundance where your survival is
not a question.
And when political stability is sufficient that you're not continually worried that your
neighbors are going to murder you, then you're really, I mean, then we, you know, when
you wake up at three in the morning and can't get back to sleep, you're thinking about what does this all mean and what's, you know, what is a good life?
One of the things that we did agree on, I think, that sort of provided a container for the
discussions in total, was that there was potentially such a thing as the good life, that that's just not some, you know, epithenominal abstraction or
something like that, but something central. And to some degree, I think we disagreed about
where the information for deriving what might constitute the good life comes from,
but it isn't even clear to me exactly where those differences lie.
And that was part of, I suppose, the fun of the discussion and something that I also hope to continue today, because I've seen since then, it seems to me that you've turned your attention more and more, perhaps not more and more, but you certainly continued your route into investigation of what constitutes the good life. And also your attempts to bring what you've learned to,
perhaps an increasingly wide audience using the technology
that you're using now, this app that you have,
which is the waking up app.
My wife has subscribed to that for the last year and half.
And I joked with you earlier that she probably spent more time
with you than she has with me in the last year and half. So that's quite with you earlier that she probably spent more time with you than she has with me in the last year and half.
So that's quite comical.
But she finds it's quite useful.
And I took a good look at it today.
How does, tell me about that app and why you're doing that.
Are you doing that instead of writing a book?
Or is it another book and why are you doing that?
Well, I seem to be doing everything instead of writing a book.
The writing book has become an opportunity cost. I can't justify it at the moment, but no doubt I
will write another book at some point. But yeah, between my podcast and app, that's really
that those are the two channels where I am putting out my ideas at this point.
So why did you switch to that? Well, I looked at the app and one of the things you're doing is you've broken down lectures
in some sense into like 10-minute chunks that are focused on different topics.
A whole variety of topics I've got the app right here and assuming my phone.
So there's groups of lectures, fundamentals, mind and emotion, the illusory self, mysteries and paradoxes, and some of the
topics, for example, the illusory self, self and other, alone with others looking in the mirror,
the art of doing nothing, mysteries and paradoxes, what is real consciousness, the mystery of being,
in some ways it looks like a book, right? It's got chapters, it's got sub chapters, but why this, why this technology
and how is it performed for you in comparison to a book? Well, so I did write the book version of
this content or certainly most of this content. So I have a book waking up and it touches, you know,
it is my attempt to ground so-called spiritual experience, you know, experiences
like self-transcendence and unconditional love and the kind of things people experience
on, you know, various psychedelics. You know, I mean, this is all of increasing interest
to people now. I wanted to ground all of that in what I consider to be a rational empirical
understanding of the world, right? I didn't want to believe anything on insufficient evidence so as to
prop up
the
The importance of these experiences because they don't they don't actually need to be
Propped up by by
You know in my view faith or or any unjustified claim to knowledge
and they do you know in very points, deliver their own kind of knowledge
about the nature of the mind. I mean, there are things you can recognize directly in your experience
that puts your understanding of your own subjectivity in closer register with what we understand
about the brain, right? Now, not everything can be, can be a cashed out
experientially, but many things can. And, uh,
can I, can I ask you one question? Well, I, okay, so that's, there's a bunch of that
that I agree with deeply. And one of the things I've tried to do to the degree that it was
possible, when talking about, let's say, matters that could be religious, I've tried to stay out of the religious
territory as much as possible because it seems to me counterproductive to make an appeal to faith
would you can make an appeal to not just to experience, it's deeper than that to something like
the combination of experience and science. So let me run something by you as an example and see what you think of this. Because
one of the things that we really sparred about, I suppose, or discussed was the is-aught conundrum,
right? We agree that you have to have aughts because you have to act, and that's the landscape
of value. But we ran into some trouble, I think, trying to make our viewpoints about where
those odds might be derived from, you seem to be more convinced than me, perhaps, that
the step from is to ought was simpler.
And I was more convinced that it was more complicated and there were problems that still remained
there.
I'll let you respond to that, but I wanted to talk about this deeper experience.
So I was standing with my wife the other day
on the dock of this cottage we have up north,
and it's very dark up here.
And so when you look up, you can see the night sky
well enough to see the Milky Way,
and actually to see galaxies,
if you use the corner of your eye.
And so, and one of the things that's associated
with that is an experience of awe.
And it's not surprising because there you are confronting what's essentially infinite
as far as your concern, as much as it might be for us.
And I thought a lot about the experience of awe, one of the things, and it's also produced by music quite regularly,
one of the things that happens when you experience awe is that of this digital pylowirection mechanism kicks in.
And that's the mechanism that makes prey animals.
Puff up, you see this with cats.
They're quite funny when they do this.
They puff up so they look bigger.
In this, when they catch sight of a threatening predator,
and so they perhaps subjectively experiencing,
experience the more terror-stricken end of awe.
But that awe is very, very deep.
It's not a rational response.
It's way underneath rational,
and it's an instinctual response.
And it seems to me as well that it's associated very tightly with
our instinct to imitate.
And it's strange to think that you could look at the night sky, and that could catalyze
an instinct to imitate, but we're very good at using abstraction as creatures, and it's
not exactly obvious what we can imitate and what we can't. So I think that's an example of this idea that you're putting forward, that the domain
of religious experience, let's say a spiritual experience, has a biological underpinning,
a deep biological underpinning.
And part of my question is, what are the implications of that exactly?
If that happens to be the case?
So first, I'd like to know if you agree about that discussion about awe, and there isn't
a lot thing, and then anything else you'd like to add, I'd like to hear.
Yeah, we've opened many doors there.
I see a 10-hour conversation, but it's reading just those topics.
But to start with, the is awe that you're in very good company.
Most people in science and philosophy, as you know, believe there really is a disjunction
between is and ought and to follow Hume's really cast aside remarks.
He didn't go into it deeply, but at one point he wrote that you can't
derive an ought from an is. There's no description of the way the world is. They can tell you
how it ought to be. He was decrying the fact that so many scholars, in general, so many
theologians in his time, would move smoothly from is to ought without acknowledging that
they had committed a logical error.
But I do think there's a trick of language lurking at the bottom of this is an odd talk that is
misleading. And it's difficult to spot. And I believe I've spotted it. But the people who don't
agree with me don't agree with me. I mean, their intuitions don't pass through the point where I'm trying to shove them.
And it's somewhat analogous to the philosopher,
Vidconstein made a point when he was criticizing Freud. He was criticizing Freud's notion of
the unconscious. He thought this reification of the unconscious was was fallacious and I you know we can leave that aside. I don't you know that's
I'm not sure I agree with him there
But the the point he was making about the power of language was interesting. He said imagine if instead of saying
I saw a nobody in the room
We said I saw a mr. Nobody in the room
Imagine a language that forced us to say,
I saw Mr. Nobody, right?
Just imagine what confusion would be born of that convention of language.
That's something he said and I think it was in the blue book.
And there are many places in our thinking about the world where language plays a similarly confusing role,
where we have reified something, which is not.
Probably happens with free will.
Yeah, no, so I think it's a confused,
it's confused us about free will,
it's confused us about death, for instance,
and I think, well, if you're an atheist
who doesn't believe that anything happens after you die,
right, if you think there's no rebirth,
there's no reincarnation and that eastern picture of
karma and rebirth is probably not true.
And you think there's no heaven or hell.
And if you really think you get something like a dial tone when you die, well, many people
are left expecting some kind of oblivion, some kind of positive nothingness, some permanent
loss of experience where there's notion of oblivion is a kind of reification.
But if you think about it more clearly,
that's precisely the kind of thing you would not,
I mean, if it's simply the end of experience,
well, then you're not gonna be experiencing
the end of experience, right?
This is not, you didn't experience an absence
before you were born.
Right. Well, the idea that you would experience is implicit in the way the question is framed.
Right. Right. There's nothing you're going to suffer. I mean, this is something that Epicurus
pointed out through Lucretius that, you know, death is nothing for us. You know, where we are,
death is not and where death is, we are, right? Like there's just there's none overlapping sets of facts, whatever those facts are.
If in fact, death is the end of experience.
So which is to say there's nothing to worry about really if if death is just the end of
anything.
And so how do you think that relates to is a lot?
Yeah, so to come back to to is an odd, I just think really what we have, I mean, forget
about morality, forget about questions of good and evil, forget about any value judgment.
What I, and try to return your mind to something like the primal circumstance of consciousness,
right?
I mean, just just imagine waking up from, you know, a 100 year sleep,
and you've forgotten everything about yourself, and now you're just a mind in a world.
Um, in some sense, we're all in, we're all potentially in that position in every moment in our
lives, you know, just seeing creation of fresh, right? Seeing this moment of seeing here in smelling, tasting, touching, thinking,
for, you know, as though for the first time, you know, clearly. Do you know that have you ever
heard of the neurological case? I think it was a man who had bilateral hippocampal damage.
He was in the psychiatric hospital and he woke up like that every second. Yeah, well, yeah,
he would, yeah, his wife would come in the room and he'd say,
it's as if I'm seeing you for the first time.
He lost that, he lost the imposition of memory on his perception.
And so every perception was fresh and new.
Yeah.
Well, so I'm not recommending brain damage to anyone as a way of
freshening up the experience.
But there's a, there's a non neurologically compromised way of
grasping this intuition, which is just in this moment, you know, experience really is
potentially totally fresh and totally new. And
but for the fact, there's this there's this ever present layer of our thinking about it,
our remembering what just happened, our expecting the next thing that's going to happen.
It's really the conversation we're having with ourselves in each moment.
And meditation is a way of breaking that spell and actually being vividly aware of the
present moment in a way that that frees you from this automaticity of just viewing everything
through your, through your concepts and your
discursiveness.
That's a neurologically justifiable viewpoint too,
because it looks like the hippocampal map that more or
less keeps track of in some sense are memories.
And then also of our conditional positioning in the world
is likely either it's inhibiting that more primal perception, although it's doing it
in a very useful manner, generally speaking, because it keeps us oriented enough in the moment so
that we focus on minute, the minute details that might be necessary to our survival, but it's
conceivable that it's simultaneously blinding to, blinding us to a broader and deeper reality
that in some sense is deeply nourishing in the face of suffering.
Yeah. Yeah. And what's more, the mechanism that is tiling over reality with concepts in every
moment and keeping us thinking and perseverating about our experience, rather than recognizing that
we're identical to our experience.
Let's table this part of the discussion for a second.
This would go under the question of what is the self?
What do we mean by self?
What might self-transcendence be?
This whole mechanism is productive of most, if not all of our psychological suffering, right? Like there's just, you know, all of our anxiety and depression and fear and regret and shame and
and and inability to love even the people we ostensibly love, you know, in our lives, you
know, the contraction into self that is so toxic so much of the time, you know, all of our deferring our happiness to
some future time where we've met all of these goals that that that raise our status in comparison
with it, you know, everyone else we're comparing ourselves to that whole stratum of being a person
is a confection of endlessly thinking about ourselves, about our past and our future and even our present.
And it's possible to punch through that,
whether it's through using psychedelics
or practicing meditation or just having,
you know, just a collision with the present moment
that's engineered by something, you know,
you're someone close to you dies or say,
you know, something changes.
You can do that.
Yeah.
And dance can do that. Or, you know, something, something changes. Music can do that. Yeah. And dance can do that.
Or, you know, in certain cases, the, you know, the all you describe looking at, looking
up at the, the Milky Way, right?
I mean, that, that can do that for people.
Okay.
So let me, let me, but I just, I just didn't answer your, I didn't answer your question.
The, this, this notion that there's, there's this separation between facts and values, right, doesn't run through
when you think of what this primal circumstance is like, where you have to figure out, when
you have to make sense of the world, you have to try to understand what is going on in
the world, and you have to, most importantly, you have to figure out what to do next, right?
So I view, so you can forget about morality, forget about science, forget about anything
for the moment, and just recognize that the world is such that we are confronted with
an ever-p present navigation problem.
We have this the possibility of navigating both personally and collectively to places in
the space of all possible experience that are just manifestly terrible.
The worst place I call the worst possible misery for everyone.
It is possible to imagine a universe where every conscious system suffers
as much as it possibly can for as long as it can, you know, some, some version of it, the
perfect hell, right. And then there's, then it's possible to recognize that whatever you
want to call it, whether you, whether you want to use words like good and evil or right
and wrong or not, every other place on the, what I call the moral landscape is better than the worst possible
misery for everyone. Yeah, I agree with that completely. That's why I studied atrocity for so long
because I figured if I could find out what the worst thing was, that would be a pointer to the
best thing because if you know the worst thing, then the opposite of that is the best thing. Whatever
that is, that doesn't mean you have to propositionalize it. It's not even that easy to do. And there may be many
opposites of that. It may not just be one best possible place on the landscape. There could be
many peaks and valleys on the moral landscape, and there could be peaks that are not equivalent
in anything but the fact that they are equally distant from the worst possible misery for
everyone, right? So there could be, so I'm not, you know, this can sound like moral
relativism, but it's not. It's an objective picture of morality.
No, I don't think it does. But it's just to say that there are, there may be, there may
be very different ways of living where given the given the right kind of minds involved, you could be happy in very strange ways, and in ways
that would be counterintuitive for apes like ourselves. But nonetheless, they could be very far
from the worst possible misery for everyone. So in any case, I call this, so whatever you want to
call navigating in this space, moving away from just unendurable, pointless misery,
toward beauty and creativity and joy and love and all of the good stuff we recognize.
And again, there's no, we haven't seen the horizon of this.
We have no idea how beautiful life could be for minds like our own or or minds, you know, significantly more sensitive
and creative and intelligent than our own. I mean, there's no vision of heaven as a place that
was perfect where everyone that was in it was striving to make it better. Right, right. Yeah,
so there's there's some that we don't know how good things can get and we don't know how bad
things can get, but we know they can get quite terrible from where our current vantage point and we know they can get quite wonderful from our current vantage point and
This is where the distance between facts and values collapses for me.
There are right.
Let me ask you.
Let me just land this final sentence.
Yep.
There are right and wrong answers with respect to how to navigate in this
space. Right. There is it is and they're right and wrong whether we've discovered them or not.
Right. We could all be wrong about the thing we should do next. So as to be as happy as possible.
You know, we could be we could think we're doing something very wise and compassionate and useful and actually we're
you know, slowly poisoning ourselves with some, you know, toxin that we haven't identified, right?
I mean, so there are things, so it is truly possible to not know what you don't know.
It's truly possible to not know what you're missing, right? For there to be some happier place on
the landscape that you could get to if only you knew to try to get to it,
but you're not trying to get to it because you're satisfied, you know, drinking 12 beers a night
and, you know, cheating on your wife or whatever it is. You've got to have a whole civilization
that is unaware of just a local peak. Yeah, exactly. It's a local peak, but yes, not as good as it might be.
peak, but yes, not as good as it might be. So there are the two ways to see that this, in my view, that this disconnection between facts and values collapses. First, you need to value certain things
in order to get any facts in hand in the first place. Any statement about facts relies on having first valued things like evidence and
logical coherence, right?
If you're, if you don't value logic, there's no logical argument, you can give someone
to say that they should value it.
If someone doesn't value evidence, there's no evidence you could give them to say that
they should value it.
So that, so you know, epistemology sort of bites its own tail or Or picks itself up from its boot right?
Well, no, that actually that actually harkens back to the is ought problem right because
Right there you said and I'm not denying the validity of anything you've said so far about right there you said that
Without agreeing on the validity of evidence. Let's say there There's no agreement about what is. And there,
we've got a frame problem there, right? We have that value that you need to even determine what is.
Well, the question then is, well, where does that value come from? And you can't say, well,
it comes from what is in some easy manner, because you just said, unless you have a value of a
certain sort, you can't derive what is. And that's partly why this audit is is a problem just doesn't seem to go away. Yeah, but so, but it goes away because it goes
away the moment you recognize there is in principle always a mystery at our backs. You know, this is
true experientially. I mean, I say, I would say this is true experientially with respect to the
nature of consciousness, but it's true conceptually with respect to even those fields that pretend to be most
directly in contact with the nature of reality.
And so even physics, you know, when you're talking about the most rudimentary laws of physics,
right, there is still, there has to be a first brute fact or a brute axiom that you accept that need not prove itself,
right? Is there no self-justifying epistemology? Yes, well, yes, I believe that. Well, I think that
that's why there is an emphasis on faith in some principle in so many religious traditions,
is that there is a starting place there and you're trying to flesh out where
that is, at least to some degree. So let me ask you a couple of that, mention one thing and then
ask you a couple more things. So this is a distinction is even more peculiar when you look deep into
the neuroscience of perception. Okay, so one of the most influential books I ever read was an ecological approach to visual perception.
And it's a classic text on perception
and a very sophisticated one.
And I don't think it has no pretensions
to mysticism of any sort.
And so that's kind of interesting, given the conclusion.
And the conclusion of the author is that what we see aren't facts or objects.
We see meanings. So for example, a six month old who crawls towards a visual cliff, which is a plate of glass stretched over a or placed over a falling off place. This is the, the six month old will stop.
He won't crawl seven months.
I don't remember the exact date.
He won't crawl across that piece of glass.
Right.
He doesn't see cliff and infer falling off place.
He sees falling off place.
And there's a condition called neglect,
which is characteristic of certain people
of prefrontal lobe damage, it's called, sorry, it's not neglect, it's called utilization behavior.
And these people lose the ability not to act in the presence of a meaningful object. So if they
walk down the hall and the door is open, they will go through the door. If you put a cup in front
of them, they cannot stop but pick it up because they don't see cup and infer drinking.
They see drinking object directly. And so even that is our distinction is is
deceptive in a very fundamental sense because it's predicated on the idea that what we see are meaningless objects and that we lay an overlay of meaning on top of that.
And it's not by no means obvious at all
that that's how we see.
And that's part of the reason why it's been so difficult
to make machines that can see and act in the real world.
Because the object world is not simple
and that value structure that you're describing,
that over that value structure, right?
That is embedded in all of our perceptions and ways
that we are only beginning to understand scientifically.
Yeah, so many ways in which are, what's called
folk psychological sense of what our minds do is just completely broken. We have a sense of the tools we're using
to do anything, you know, that beliefs, desires, perceptions, expectations, the movement of attention,
right? And our sense of what all of this is from the first person side has definitely broken apart in
in many respects as we've studied these things neuroscientifically from the encyclodically from
the third person side and understanding ourselves, understanding the world and our place within it
and what's possible is inevitably a marriage of those two sides. I mean, you can't fully banish first-person experience because most of what we know about
ourselves has a cash value in terms of the experiential side.
I mean, to take the greatest case, there's simply no evidence of consciousness anywhere in
the universe, but for the fact
that we know it to exist in ourselves from the first person's side.
I mean, you can't look at a brain, even a living one, and form any intuition that it's a
locus of consciousness.
It's only by correlating changes in the experience of living people with, you know, tools of neuroimaging
in this case or things like EEG, where we say,
okay, well, when the brain's doing that, there's something that it's like to experience those changes.
And we pretend rather often to take the third person's science side off the gold standard
of first person experience and say, okay, that's really the mind may be an illusion,
maybe even consciousness is an illusion. What we know is happening is there are brains that
are processing information and we've got things like synapses and neuromodulators and neurotransmitters,
and that's the real stuff, right? That's the reality. This mind part is some kind of,
right, that's a definition. It's not an observation. It's just a tissue of
confusion. But reality, right. That's a big problem. Yeah, there's no you can't you can't banish the
the the side which is in fact, uh, cashing out so many of your claims about the the nature of, in this case, the brain. But that's not to say that we can't be deeply mistaken
from the first person's side about what our minds are doing.
I mean, as you indicated here already,
I'm an enormous fan of meditation.
I think it's indispensable for understanding certain things
about the nature of the mind.
But you can't even tell that you have a brain by meditating, right?
Much less, you know, what is doing.
Right?
So it's like, it's, there's things that you, there's some major blind spots in first person
experience, no matter how you train experience.
But you can notice, for instance, that the sense of self, the sense that you're a
subject interior to your experience, that you're a kind of a locus of consciousness that is
appropriating experience, that is an illusion or that best a convention, right, a kind of construction that you can cease to construct.
And so much of...
So why do you believe that that's so useful?
There's something core here.
Yeah, no, it's a great question.
I wanna make one observation before we go back to that.
So, well, one of the things I learned
when I was studying ancient Egyptian mythology
was that the Egyptians worshipped Horus. That's the eye. And we may have talked about this before.
But they weren't worshipping rationality. They weren't worshipping that monkey mind.
They were worshipping attention itself. And they regarded attention as the process that
revitalized dead totalitarianism because they had a god for that. That was Osiris. And so
there's something and when the Egyptians were contemplating what constituted proper political sovereignty.
They regarded the union of Osiris and Horus as the emblem of proper sovereignty, and that was the Osteris that was rescued from his totalitarian state by his union with Horus. So it's like the
conceptual world which tends to ossify, like, in Exodus book, and the attention process which
focuses perhaps on what's outside of totalitarian certainty and therefore continues to update it.
And that's not rationality. And I think it's pointing to something that's similar to what you're fascinated by with your concentration on it.
I think it's on attention per se. It's not rationality. It's certainly not. It's not the contents of
thought. It's something more like direct apprehension. And you know, in clinical, in clinical practice, Rogers, Carl Rogers, particularly, taking a bit of a leaf from Freud,
but he said that if you attend to your clients, which meant listen to them, but it meant attend,
it didn't mean engage them in rational dialogue.
It meant more like listen, they will transform psychologically as a matter of course.
Right. Right.
Yeah, so I use attention as slightly different way or a more specific way and differentiated
from something like consciousness or awareness itself.
So, I think this is, I'm sure there are different ways of using it, but one tends to meet this definition now in cognitive science and neuroscience, where it's
a narrowing of the field of awareness, but there's still a field or there's, or it's
like a spotlight within it, within a larger field.
So for instance, I, you know, I'm looking at you on zoom now,
and I can look at one of your eyes, specifically look at that eye, and I can focus on that,
but there are many other things within my visual field that I'm not focusing on, but which are nevertheless there, and one of them could suddenly capture my, quote, attention.
Right. So I'm looking at your eye. I'm doing my best to look at your eye to the exclusion
of everything else. But if, you know, if a mouse ran across my desk, all of a sudden, that
would have 100% of my attention. And that, so it's that shift, it's the shift of the spotlight.
That, that's the, that's the attentional mechanism that is happening within this larger
context of what I would call consciousness or awareness, because it's, you know, the, that's the attentional mechanism that is happening within this larger context of what I would call consciousness or awareness because it's, you know, it, so you're using
attention as, as the spotlight, like, like, like the phobia.
Right.
Exactly.
So it's the kind of the cognitive phobia where, so that's where consciousness is most intense,
right?
Right.
Because those neurons are each neuron in the phobia is connected to 10,000 neurons in the
primary visual cortex.
So it's tremendously dense, cortically. And then so you could think of maybe we could distinguish
these two concepts this way. So in the center of your vision at the fovea, it's extraordinarily
high resolution consciousness, which we call attention. And then as you move out from the fovee to the periphery, your consciousness becomes lower and lower resolution until out here, if you're speaking visually,
you can't even really count the number of fingers that you see. You can see the hands only if they move,
and out here it's black and white, and out here it's gone. High resolution, fove real focus, and you can move your eyes to put that
high resolution, high neurological vision to work. Yeah, I would use the terminology a little
differently here though, because I wouldn't say that consciousness is diminishing at the edges.
I would say that the visual perception is. So consciousness is just the fact that anything is being known. Right. So you can be
conscious, for instance, of a very blurry vision, right? Or you can be conscious that your blunt, that
you can't see anything, right? But like if you just close your eyes now, even your visual consciousness
is just as present, it's just you're used to wear this, the darkness behind your eyelids.
Right. And it's not even all that dark.
There's, it's scintillating with the various colors.
And, right, so.
Okay, so we could say that you've got
that high resolution, attention in the middle,
then it gets lower resolution out to here
where you can't see.
And then that's all contained within a broader
attentional field.
Right, yes.
And I would call that the broadest possible field, just consciousness. Okay, intentional field. Right. Yes. And I would call that that the broadest possible field
just consciousness. Okay. We're aware. So okay. So now we know exactly what we mean by our terms.
And so, and so what I would, what I would say is through to your question, which I think is a very
important question. What's the point of examining the self, you know, much less transcending it?
of examining the self, you know, much less transcending it.
There's several points. I mean, the main one is that it is the string upon which
all of our suffering is strong.
I mean, it's just, it is, when you feel as miserable
as you can feel, that sense of being at the center
of this torment. And like, what direction will
you find relief? Right? I mean, this is just this is you've got the cacophony of unpleasant
experience. And then you've got this place in the middle of it or apparent place in the
middle of it from which you're trying to resist this experience, right?
Or trying to figure out how to change it, right?
So let's say you have a terrible pain,
you know, somewhere in your body, you know,
there's the pain, there's a strong stimulus
of unpleasant sensation, you know,
the burning and stabbing and twisting feeling.
And then there's this reaction to it from apparently some point outside the pain, very likely,
you know, for most people up in the head, I mean, most people feel like they're a subject
in their heads that is not truly coincident with the rest of their body.
They don't feel, you know, most people, for the most part, don't feel identical to their bodies.
They feel like they have bodies and these bodies can misbehave in various ways.
And again, so you have a terrible pain.
The pain's down there.
Let's say it's in your knee.
You're up here, now a hostage being tortured
by the misbehavior of the rest of your body, right?
And you're resistant.
You're trying to find some way of resisting these sensations.
And so it is with emotional distress or unpleasant thoughts, right? You know, you can have thoughts
that terrorize you. And it all of it seems to suggest, I mean, this is, you know, this is the
extreme case of stark unhappiness. But even in the best of times, right, even when things are going really
well and every experience is very smooth and we're getting what we want and you know,
we're, you know, our favorite treats are just an arm's length away and we're filling
our mouths with with gum drops or whatever it is, we're, we're gratifying this thing
at the center of our experience.
And it can never be finally
gratified because experience itself is impermanent. It's just, you know, it's just you get to the
thing you want and you gorge yourself on it. And then you want a new thing. You want a new thing.
I mean, you then you need to drink a water because this, this lingering taste in your mouth of
chocolate moves or whatever it is, is too cloying and too much and you've got to wash that out so that you just, you
wouldn't want to stay in that state even if you could. And there's some, there's
this kind of this rolling dissatisfaction, even in satisfaction, that we
all encounter even in the best of times, right? Even when you literally can get
anything, more or less anything you want. And yet we know
any moment, it can be subverted by something terrible happening, you know, at any moment,
you can suddenly feel like you're, you might be having a heart attack, right? And then that becomes
the thing that the, the sense of me in the middle of everything collapses upon. And
of everything collapses upon. And it is, it makes life, I mean, this, again, the sense of being, this vulnerable center,
right?
It makes life this kind of long emergency that can be pacified by, you know, increasingly
strenuous efforts to control experience, right?
We have to control this thing because at any moment we're constantly, if you just look
at any moment, we might die.
Yeah, we're avoiding death.
But even for those of us who don't think about death very often, and there are those people,
we're constantly modifying our experience so as to avoid discomfort, whether it's social discomfort
or physical discomfort or just every correction in our body.
If you just try to sit still for an hour, you'll notice that all of the micro adjustments
in posture that you're now no longer making are made because you really
don't have to wait long before you feel miserable. I mean, the amount of pain you can get
just sitting in the most comfortable chair you can find in your home and just resolving not to move
is quite extraordinary. It's just, you know, it's just there's no position that's comfortable enough
that it will be comfortable an hour from now.
Okay.
So when you, when you rise out of that into this meditative state,
well, like what, what's your experience and what has that done for you personally and ethically?
Um, okay.
So, so the starting point, which I've just dimly sketched out of being a subject in the head,
right? I mean, this is something that I will be familiar to 99% of our audience or 99.99% of our
audience. People feel that they are, they don't feel identical to their bodies. They feel like
they have bodies. And now, you know, they might be told, okay, you might want to look into this
practice of meditation. You might want to just understand yourself a little better.
Here, start with this practice.
You can close your eyes and pay attention to the feeling of breathing.
You know, the sensation of breathing in the, in the, you know, the rising falling of
their chest or the, the air passing in their nostrils.
And every time you get lost in thought, just come back to the raw sensation of breathing.
That's a very, you know, basic exercise of, you know, what's called mindfulness. And the moment you try to do that,
you begin to discover, or, you know, some moments down the line, you discover that it's very hard
to do, that your default state is to get distracted by a conversation you're having with yourself.
And to forget all about
this project of paying attention to the present moment.
And it doesn't matter what it is, but the breath in this case.
And so it is in fact true to say that for most people, literally 99.9% of our audience,
they couldn't pay attention to the breath for a full minute, say, even if their lives
depended on it.
Right?
It's just, it's simply not in the cards.
It's not, it's, you know, the fate of the world could depend on it.
And someone who's not really fairly well trained in this just couldn't do it.
And so that's interesting, right?
What's interesting is that despite your best efforts,
you get carried away by thought, helplessly moment after moment. Now, being able to break that
spell, being able to see thought as thought, eventually, once you get some degree of mindfulness
in hand, you no longer can find your attention to the breath
or any other arbitrary object,
you begin to open it up to everything you can possibly experience.
So it's just you have sights and sounds and sensations
and emotions and thoughts themselves
can become objects of mindfulness.
But when you can, but this is where this is the kind of crucial, you know,
kind of almost binary difference, which, which produces an immense amount of psychological
benefit, the moment you can really notice thoughts themselves as appearances in consciousness
rather than what you are in each moment. Because what happens is
in the default case, the thoughts kind of creep up from behind us in some sense. They kind of come
out of nowhere and that just feels like me, right? So I'm trying to get some reflex of identification.
Yeah. Well, you wouldn't act the damn things out if they didn't feel like you.
Right. And so they have to have that impulse to action in them that that's part of felt identity.
Right. So what you're saying that you're saying, and this is part of, I suppose, part
of the Buddhist tradition, particularly, although not only that being the, the puppet of
those thoughts is part of what prolongs suffering, at least under some circumstance, especially
being the puppet of them. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. And so, and so this is, at least under some circumstances, especially being the habit of them.
Yes.
Yeah.
And so this is, but the people listening to us now can feel this.
So, you know, we're talking and people are trying to understand the thread of this conversation.
But they have a voice in their head that's competing with this, right?
They're trying to listen to us, but they're also thinking, right?
And the thing is, they might think, oh, what the hell is he talking about? Right? Like there's just some, some intrusive thought comes in or like, oh, no, wait a minute.
He didn't answer the question. That thought that that feels if you're identified with it, if you don't see it as mere language appearing in consciousness or mere imagery, right?
mirror language appearing in consciousness or mirror imagery, right?
It feels like me.
It's like, that is the self. That is.
It feels like what I believe.
Yeah, that's just that's all so.
It's so basic.
I'm interested.
Yeah. Well, one of the things you do in clinical work all the time,
especially in the cognitive behavioral field is you help people identify those
thoughts in some sense as as objects that to no longer identify
with them and say, you know, just because you think that it's not necessarily true, it's
not necessarily you, and it's not necessarily helpful. Now, we can check and see if any
of those three, you know, propositions were true. maybe it is you, maybe you do believe it, maybe it is useful,
but we're going to start by hypothesizing that some of these automatic thoughts are actually what's
driving your misery. And I really also see that as a tremendous danger of totalitarian ideologies,
because they're thought systems that are almost entirely foreign in some sense to the individual person that
invade that cognitive space that you're describing and then manifest themselves as unquestioning
identity.
And if they're blinding the person to some underlying reality that's actually revivifying and nourishing
and an antidote to suffering, then there are tremendous block to exactly that process.
Yeah, yeah.
So there are two levels at which we can address
this problem of thought and it's connection to suffering.
And one is that the level of thought itself, right?
So you can replace bad thoughts with better thoughts, right?
And you can get some, you can triangulate on your tendency
to have one kind of conversation
with yourself and engineer a better conversation with yourself.
Right.
And that's, you know, yes, in cognitive behavioral therapies.
You can start thinking like a six-year-old, for example, and start thinking like a 30-year-old.
Right.
Right.
And what's more a 30-year-old that actually has good intentions for you, right?
Like you could, a friend, right?
Yes, right.
You can make your mind your friend.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Love do uneven. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. I can imagine that. So, I imagine that. So that's that's a that's a totally legitimate way to
to climb out of the great whole of of suffering that people find themselves in.
But there's a there's a more fundamental and and I'm not saying what I'm recommending in terms of meditation
and mindfulness here is more fundamental, but it is completely compatible with that more
conceptual discursive layer.
And I would argue some things are best addressed on the discursive layer, and some things are
better addressed on the more fundamental layer of
levels. Well, when you're sitting meditating, first of all, you're sitting. And so it's perfectly
reasonable to adopt a mode of thought that's helpful and productive in relationship to the fact
that you're sitting. You know, those more discursive propositional thoughts that we've been
describing, they're higher resolution in some sense,
and they're more practically implementable. And so, you want to get that in order,
but that doesn't mean that there are that this phenomenon that you're describing that's
outside the entire discursive structure doesn't exist. And it's probably also the place we go,
at least to some degree, when we go to sleep, and we dream and get rivified. It's outside that discursive landscape. And that's necessary for physiological rejuvenation. Yeah, well, dreams are very interesting
because I think they are necessary. And we know a lot about the necessity of REM sleep for health.
And so there's no question that dreams are doing good things for us. But they also are an
experience of stark psychosis. You know, I mean, they are, they
are a condition, unless you're, unless we're talking about lucid dreaming, this is a circumstance
where you really have no idea what's going on. I mean, you were, you were in reality asleep
in your bed. And yet you have transitioned into another experience, which, where the laws
of nature are violated, you're talking to
dead people, the sky is the limit, right? And you're not even surprised. You're doing
so little reality testing. You're not even surprised about these changes. You have so little
purchase on who you were just 15 minutes ago when you went to sleep.
That it's, I mean, it does mean, it does mean to some degree at that point though that you have suspended your unthinking identification with your daytime propositional thought. Yeah,
you're, but you've been in the normal case, you're identified with your dream body and your dream
persona and whoever you, whoever you've become, I mean, you're being terrorized in a, in a,
in a more malleable right, the problem, the idea of the problem is still there.
Yeah.
It's just, it's more random and less logically coherent.
There's something there about exploration
and change of categories themselves that's going on.
But I can see your point about it still being hard at.
Well, actually, and more to the point,
there's actually a very close connection
between what happens with ordinary thought and dreaming.
So, for instance,
I mean, ordinary thinking is it, in my view, ordinary identification with thought, I'm not, I don't mean to demonize thought per se because we need thoughts.
And the goal of meditation is not to get rid of thoughts is to be able be able to recognize them as what they are and to recognize the process of thinking and to break
this pseudo identification with it.
But the identification with thought is very much analogous to dreaming and not knowing
that you're dreaming.
And the switch from a normal dream to a lucid dream is analogous to the kind of waking
up in the middle of life
that I'm advocating here, where you can actually just recognize thoughts as thoughts.
And there's something that the way in which thoughts steal over us, where it's like you're
trying to pay attention to something.
And then all of a sudden, you're replaying an argument that you had with your wife, you know, yesterday,
right? And helplessly, and it's actually, it's it's it's dredging up the emotion that
is appropriate to that argument. Right. So now you're getting angry or regretful or whatever
it is. It's quite crazy. It's totally normal. I mean, this is the default state of most people most of the time.
But given how unhappy the character of our conversation is with ourselves most of the
time, given that the stories we're telling ourselves are less than perfectly inspiring
and perfectly enobling and, you know, great, you know, opening us to great reservoirs
of compassion and wisdom, right?
They're not doing that.
It's worth looking into this.
And it does have this dreamlike character of both coming out of nowhere and completely
seizing the reins of attention and identity and taking us elsewhere.
And also we forget it. It has a, that's part of the totalitarian
spirit of rationality, that proclivity. Well, but it is, but a lot of these songs aren't rational.
It's just, it's just, you're just rehearsing your experience. It's just like, I mean, you'll tell
yourself the same thing 10 times in a row and never, and you won't be bored on the 10th time. You'll, you'll like, if you just imagine what it would be like to externalize your thoughts
on a loudspeaker for everyone to listen to, you know, and you were just, it was just helplessly,
but, you know, externalized every, every normal person would sound insane, you know, because because of the the perseveration and the and the just the redundancy
and the and the strange structure to the discourage of this. I mean, this is this is a, um,
you know, this is ever-present. It's so it's so ever-present that it's strike, it doesn't strike
people as strange, but to be presuming we have a dialogue with ourselves as though
the eye could talk to the me, and that made any sense at all. It's like, you know, I'm sitting
here and you're getting set up for this interview, right? And I think, oh, I got to get some
water, right? Now, I know, if I'm the one to say it,
and I'm the one to hear it,
I know I need water.
Who am I telling you?
It's like I'm telling someone else
who needs to be informed about this.
Well, you're probably telling the prefrontal cortex
and it tells the motor cortex.
So, you know, that's probably the hypothalamus
talking to the prefrontal cortex because it doesn't have direct output over the motor cortex. So, you know, it's, that's probably the hypothalamus talking to the prefrontal cortex because it doesn't have direct output over the motor cortex. Something like that.
But I mean, it, yeah, it remains to be seen whether any of that is actually functionally
necessary. But I think for the most part, it's not. I mean, for the most part, we, we
simply talk to, it's almost like we started talking to our parents, you know, once we,
once we had, once, you know,
my language is incredibly useful, as you know,
and it's, it is what defines us as, as people in many respects.
And once it gets, it's like once it gets tuned up,
it never shuts off.
And, you know, we're talking to, so, you know,
first we're pre-linguistic and we're just drinking in language
that's aimed at us, you know, all the time.
Our parents are jabbering to us. We begin to understand what they're saying as so much of it is,
you know, indexical. They're pointing to things and we're naming those things. We're hearing the
the sounds associated with those the things that are being grasped and handed to us. And
and soon we begin to participate in this language game in ways that we're not conscious of.
And once this gets tuned up, we talk to our parents, we jabber to our parents,
and then we jabber to ourselves when they leave the room. And it never stops.
Well, you know, in McGillcrest, and I have talked about this issue. And he's of the opinion, I hope I'm not misrepresenting him.
And it's an idea that I had shared to some degree
is that the right hemisphere in many ways,
this is in left-handed people at least.
And some sense is more regulated
by the underlying limbic structures,
the motivational structures,
like an animal is. And the left hemisphere to the degree that it's linguistic, it inhibits those
right hemisphere functions tonically. And that's likely the speech. And what that means implies,
perhaps, is that if you can shut that speech off, there's a different mode of perception
that's characterized by the right hemisphere's emersment in these underlying motivational
systems that might be part parcel of that revivification possibility that you're, I think
you're pointing to as something that lies outside the linguistic landscape.
And that can become maybe hyperdominant,
has become hyperdominant in us because we're so immersed in language.
I mean, from what I can tell, I mean, thus far, the research, the neuroimaging research on
meditation is still in its infancy, despite the fact that there have been hundreds and even
thousands of papers at this point on meditation. But silencing the default mode network is certainly part of the footprint of the change
here that is relevant.
And the default mode network for people, I mean, many people have heard of this by now,
but it used to be kind of an esoteric topic, but just to refreview, the default mode network is called the default mode because
it was noticed in virtually every neuroimaging experiment, ever designed that there was
the system of structures in the midline of the brain that would increase their activity
in between tasks.
So whatever the paradigm was, if you're giving people a reading task or a sensory task
or a memory task or a visual discrimination, whatever it is, you're putting them in the
scanner, they have to pay attention to something. In those epochs between tasks, when they
were no longer having to pay attention to something that were they're waiting for the next
thing to be presented to them, these set of structures in the midline would increase
their activity. And so it was called the default mode. It's just the kind of the brain's idling state. But these are also the structures
that that seem to have a disproportionate amount of responsibility for self-reference and
self-representation. And they get tuned up even further when you give people tasks that require a retrospective analysis of the self.
If I gave you a list of words and I was saying,
I asked you to decide which of these words apply to you
and which of these words don't apply to you as a person.
That's the kind of task that would increase
above baseline activity in the default mode network.
And there are other components to this.
You know, it's such a question of identity.
I mean, a lot of that is in whole or in part mediated by the default mode.
And this is what becomes noticeably quiescent when you are successfully practicing mindfulness and it
becomes quiescent in those experiences with psychedelics where this sense of
self is is transcended for a time. Now where linguistic communication often
becomes extremely difficult. Yeah, yeah, but people experience it but so what's
interesting here is that that you know, I think people, you know, ordinary people
who do not take psychedelics and have no interest in meditation do experience interruptions
in this sense of self a lot that just go unrecognized.
And sometimes they go recognized because they're, they're so called peak experiences where
you know, flow experiences where you know, flow experiences, where you
know, they'll, you know, even the kinds of experiences you referenced, you know, looking
up at the Milky Way, you know, the most beautiful encounter with a starry night you have, you
know, in that decade say, you've gone to the place where there's the least light pollution
and you've got, you know, a cloudless, moonless night, and then you point your gaze, skyward, and you get the full experience.
That's, you know, there are two experiences people tend to have when they have sought out
a peak experience like that.
If they're lucky, they really have something like a moment where they're lifted out of
themselves and they can just have something like a moment where they're lifted out of themselves and they
can just have something like this breathtaking encounter with nature, right?
And then all too often, that lasts, you know, a second and a half, and then they're just
talking about it and thinking about it and trying to get back to it.
But they're still just jabbering to themselves and to, you know, whoever's
with them very likely, trying to get a hold of this thing where if you took mushrooms,
or if you took acid in that circumstance, well, then your linguistic, you know, efforts
to get this thing in hand are completely blown over and you have the full multi-hour encounter with the thing itself.
That's what's so amazing about psychedelics is that whoever you are,
I mean, let's leave aside the prospect of having a bad trip,
which many interesting things can be said.
The so-called good trip you can have on mushrooms or LSD is this condition of
called good trip you can have on mushrooms or LSD is this condition of the data of your senses and you're in particular in a circumstance like the one you described, your engagement
with the natural world becomes so vivid, so salient that the boundary between self and
world is completely overcome, right?
So like, and the energetics of all of that suddenly becomes very salient.
So it's not just like you're no longer representing yourself.
Also, the consequences, you know, you know, Griffiths work.
And if someone has a mystical experience on psilocybin and their smokers,
they stop 75% of the time.
Yeah, yeah.
It's like they've lived so far out of themselves that even their
addictions left. Right, that's quite something. You talk about being possessed by that default
network. Well, to be possessed by an addiction like a nicotine addiction is something like that
gone wild. And nonetheless, going there apparently has this transformative capacity.
You also see the same thing with treatment for alcoholics,
you know, I mean, for years alcohol researchers have known
that the only reliable treatment for alcoholism
is spiritual transformation.
That's hard to know.
Empirical researchers have been wrestling with that
for a long time.
Well, it gives you the sense that, you know, again, I'm not, I'm not claiming that the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, at a minimum, this can end to the continuum of
positive experience, just being flooded with bliss and completely overcome with encounter
with the present moment.
Meaning, the perception of meaning, whether that meaning can be rationally justified in
the end, because literally, if you're in the right state of mind, it doesn't matter what you're looking at. It doesn't
have to be the Milky Way. You can just be staring at a, you know, a puddle in the concrete
in a parking lot. And all of sudden that is the, you know, the answer to the mystery of
existence, right? So in some ways, it's, it's, it's potentially, you, there's a place
to stand where you can pathologize this, you know,
this herophany of meaning.
But you know, leaving that aside, leaving that criticism aside, the experience itself proves
beyond any possibility of doubt that it's possible to have an utterly transforming, transformative, and totally satisfying encounter with the present moment that
isn't itself dependent on anything happening. It's a quality of your attention. Now, neurochemically,
that's something obviously has to happen in order to allow you to pay attention that fully to
anything. But there is a way of granting your attention
to the present moment so that the sacredness of anything comes fully into view.
So okay, let me, I got a couple of questions for you on that. So let's go back to this
starry night idea. So I want to tell you a story. I was always talking to my wife today about
the fact that I was going to talk to you because she's been following your meditation course, but at the same time that she's done, she
was, she had a medical death sentence two years ago.
Yeah.
Fundamentally.
Okay, so she's been through a variety of forms of hell and has come out the other side
and has changed in consequence of that.
And one of the things she started doing as well
as doing your meditation course was using the rosary.
And so I asked her today, she'd also be talking to Jonathan
Pagio, who's an extraordinarily interesting religious thinker
who carves icons.
He's a former French Canadian young guy,
he's a very, very deep person in my estimation.
In any case, she's been praying rosary,
and I said, okay, so, well, you do that,
and you listen to Sam's meditations,
and so how does that work?
And she said, well, I do the rosary first.
I said, well, why do you do that, and what do you do?
And how do you see them related?
And she said, well, with the rosary,
so she's concentrating on Mary,
and she said, Mary's as a conduit to Christ, and I'll explain
what she meant by that in a sec.
But I said, she said, well, first it's a practice, okay, so she does it every day.
So it's an embodied practice, right?
So she says the words, and she moves these beats, and so she's moving her hands.
And it's divided into five sections. And so when
her attention wanders from prayer, it's brought back because there's five sections. Right. So you
imagine you have this tendency to wander off into the default network. And, but by manipulating
something with your hands, it ties you to the present moment. Yeah. Okay. So it's a meditative
practice that that's more embodied than just sitting still say and she finds that useful and and while she says the words, well, we've talked a lot about what these words mean and so in reference to the starry night, for example, there's this series of Renaissance paintings, which are quite magnificent that show an image of Mary with her with 12 stars around her head and with her foot on a serpent and that's that's an image of Mary with 12 stars around her head, and with her foot on a serpent.
And that's that's an illusion to the Garden of Eden because, well, Eve crushes the serpent beneath her foot.
And so, and this is relevant to your discussion and our discussion earlier about the deepest of all evils.
Right? Because that that's a concern of yours. It's been a concern of mine. What's the darkest possible place? Well, that snake in those
paintings represents that. And that's why in Christianity, the snake, which is
a predator, is associated with Satan, right? As the, as what would you say, the
emissary of evil or malevolent, something like that. And so because Mary has her head in the stars, she can have her foot on the
serpent. And that's part of that meditation. And while she does that before she listens to your
meditation, but that's where I see the psychological link, let's say, because you want to put your psyche in
the highest possible place, whatever that is. And we don't know
what it is exactly, but it's something like what happens when you look up at the night sky.
It's something like that. And if you do that, that means that your foot is simultaneously
on that serpent. Yeah, I mean, I don't have any, for a while, it's wonderful that she's using the app and
getting some benefit from it.
I love that.
And the juxtaposition of doing the rosary with doing what I'm recommending in the app
is not as odd as you might, it's, there's so much of, there's so much, there's so much resonance
between what I think is true and the kinds of things Jesus said, right? My issue with organized religion, every organized religion,
is just that clearly what we're really talking about are deeper, universal truths about the
nature of mind, right? Maybe, you know, whether we're limited to human minds or just mind itself,
consciousness itself. And so there's no culture, there's no religion,
there's no provincial cult that has the full story. And what we really, really the burden on us
in every present generation, you know, but certainly now in the 21st century where all the barriers
now in the 21st century where all the barriers to universalization. All the barriers to get information and translating from other languages, all of that's broken
down. We have access to everyone's ideas. There have been a hundred billion people and a
bunch of them have had good ideas, a bunch of them have had bad ideas. And we have access to, to thousands of years of human conversation.
And so my only argument, my only argument is that we should only care about
using the best ideas.
And we should, and we, we no longer have the right to any deep, serious sectarianism. Right? Now, we can be,
that's not to say that you can't be especially taken with, with Jesus and the tradition that
has grown up around him. And, you know, you're not, you're kind of bored with Socrates and
see, you don't spend as much time with him. And that's all fine. But the problem I've had traditionally with organized religion is religion
historically is the only corner of culture where people begin saying to themselves and
to their children, we're playing a totally different game over here.
This is not just this is not a matter of just ideas and human beings and human conversations
and ordinary books. No, no, these books
were written by God or inspired by God, you know, and they can't be edited. And
everything seems to me that lay the danger in that. I'm not disagreeing with you. But
it seems to me the danger in that is that it actually minimizes the problem of atrocity
that's associated with sectarianism because perhaps you're not going to be able to do that.
I'll agree with you.
You can heap as many atrocities as you want on that side of the balance.
I will agree with you.
Well, okay.
So this is what I'm pointing to though because we're having a discussion in some ways about sacred things.
And so, and then we're talking about the issue of religion. And so, there's a couple of things I
want to say about that. Dostoevsky had it right to some degree in the Grand Inquisitor.
Because do you remember that story? The Grand Inquisitor? Yeah, I mean, it's been many,
in now several decades, it's actually read the book. Well, I mean, I'm it's been been many. Okay, well, several decades actually read the book, but well, the remarkable thing about
that story is Christ comes back to earth. Yeah, and he does some miracles. And
it's the church himself that puts him in jail. And then the head of the church
comes to the jail and says, what the hell are you doing back here? The last
thing we need is you. We've got everything sorted out. We know what's going
on. It's like we're gonna put you to death tomorrow.
And the Christ kisses him on the lips
and the Grand Inquisitor turns white.
And then when he leaves, the Grand Inquisitor,
he leaves the door open.
And that was, that's so brilliant.
And you know, Dostyewski was writing at the same time
of his Nietzsche and had quite an influence on Nietzsche
as it turned out.
And, but because Dostyewski was writing fiction, he could go places that Dostoevsky couldn't
go as a philosopher.
And one of the things he was trying to point out was that despite the proclivity to totalitarianism
that you can lay at the feet of sectarian religion, the doors left open. And you know, all of us have to come to terms with the
fact that our institutions, religious and otherwise, tend to ossify into these totalitarian structures
that are analogous socially, I think, in some ways to the default network that you just described.
They're trying to point to something beyond that. But, you know, they degenerate and ossify.
But then we have to go underneath that, too,
if we're going to get our criticisms right,
because as terrified as it's reasonable to be
about religious sectarianism and totalitarianism,
it's also necessary to remember that chimpanzees go on raiding parties
and kill the neighboring tribe, so to speak,
and they're not motivated by religious concerns. And so to put that at the feet of religion,
even implicitly, I think, is I understand why that's an impulse, but it doesn't face the problem
deeply enough. And it also obscures a potential solution, I think,
because it tends to throw the baby out with the bath water.
And I know you're going to regain the baby.
Yeah, no, I'm trying to save the baby.
Yeah, yeah, no, I love that baby.
Yeah, I mean, for me, the crucial variables
that make religion itself so problematic are one, the religions,
and this is true of the Abrahamic ones, in particular, the religions that are focused
on a text that can't be edited.
Now, religious moderates and religious liberals will disagree with me and they'll say that the whole tradition is a matter of reinterpreting and grappling with the contradictions and
there's all a very rich discourse and blah, blah, blah.
But the real problem is the books themselves betray their merely human origin on almost every page.
You know, there's just like, you know, it's true of the plays of Shakespeare.
It's true of the Iliad Neodosi.
It's true of Virgil.
It's true of Dostoevsky.
And it's true of the Bible, right, in all its parts, right?
So there's just, there's, and you know, if you just imagine how good a book would be, could be,
if it were truly written or dictated by, by an omniscient being,
I mean, it's, it's just, it's trivially easy to imagine that it would be,
it'd be so much better than the end facts. It's really not that easy to imagine that it would be so much better than the impact. It's really not that easy to translate the sorts of experiences that you're pointing to
into words.
No, no, I know I know.
I know, but you can do it better and worse.
Well, but even I, okay, okay, let's talk about that for a minute, better and worse, because
that's really that, and I want to tie this back to your comments about navigation earlier.
So you know, we do have,
and this is perhaps an issue of definition,
and getting the definition straight again here,
we do have the sense that some texts are deeper than others.
And I don't think it's reasonable to disagree about that.
You can read a shallow story, you think,
well, you know, that was shallow,
and you can read a deep story, and you think that was deep, but you don't know exactly what you mean by shallow or deep.
So let me just add one one foot note here, which is somewhat confounding. It goes to what we
were just saying about psychedelics. It's possible for you to be bringing the depth to a text
or to a circumstance or to a puddle in a parking lot that isn't
necessarily there.
Right.
So like this is where it gets used.
The postmodern quandary.
Yeah.
Like literally, you know, you, if you're, if you're going to connect all the dots, you
know, you can, I mean, this is something I did in the end of faith as a, as a parlor
trick, just because I wanted to prove this point is that I literally walked
into a bookstore and went to the cookbook aisle, the bookstore and randomly chose a cookbook
and opened it up and opened it up at random and just just dictated, it just wrote down
the recipe and then created a mystical text on the basis of that recipe.
I just I just showed that this recipe, which it was for some Hawaiian cookbook, was like, walkseered fish and shrimp cakes or something.
And I took the ingredients in that recipe and woe a completely confabulatory,
mystical text out of those ingredients.
Now that was something I was bringing to the text.
There was no author creating that document.
That's clearly a problem.
And look, I actually,
and through the people can always do that, right?
So that's it's very hard to keep score here and to and to be and to be rigorous.
All we can do is again and again, have this this experience of you say something
that that on your own side,
purports to be meaningful and intends to be meaningful
and you're trying to convey something.
And then I and other people seem to grasp what you're communicating.
And we have this intersubjective convergence, which is increasingly satisfying.
And yes, so I mean, but I do take your point that there I do.
Dostoevsky was writing, you know, the brothers Caramatsov is a deeply
interesting, meaningful document. Okay, so let's take that argument apart.
Because you put your finger on the postmodern quandary, right? Because the postmodernists,
in some sense, the reason that they ran into trouble with assuming they criticize the notion that there was a canonical interpretation of a text because there's so many subjective interpretations of any text.
In fact, there's a near infinite number of potential subjective interpretations of any text, just like there's almost an infinite number of places you could be looking right now. And so it's a huge deep problem. So, and when you say that you can project
something onto the text that in some sense isn't there, that's also an extremely deep problem.
And these problems are deep enough, you know, the fact of multiple interpretations of a single
reality is so pervasive that it stopped AI researchers. It's the thing that stopped AI researchers
from being able to build functional robots.
Like it's a killer problem.
Yeah, yeah, it's a frame problem.
So that's the frame problem.
Okay, so let's agree that that exists,
but we should also agree,
and partly I think by the merits of your own argument,
that we do have a reliable subjective intuition
that texts differ in depth.
And that means something.
So I'm gonna propose what it means
and you tell me what you think about this, okay?
Sure.
So one of the ways that we specify where to look at
is by looking at what we deem to be important.
And so here's a way of conceptualizing that.
And it sort of maps onto the idea of the pho-v-ex
standing outward to less high-resolution consciousness.
So I write a sentence because I want to write a paragraph.
I write a paragraph because I want to sequence paragraphs
into a book, a chapter.
I write chapters to sequence them into a book.
I write a book because I want to be a practicing scientist.
I want to be a practicing scientist because I'm a good citizen. I want to be a good citizen hypothetically
because I want to be a good person. And maybe I want to be a good person to avoid the
hell that you described. Okay, so those are nested value structures. And we see the world
through that structure simultaneously. The whole thing is there.
And if one part of it collapses, we make reference to the part that contains it.
That's how we don't crash like a computer.
Now, the navigation that you described, these nested structures,
their navigation maps as far as I can tell. Now, okay, so here's the depth issue.
Some maps have more other maps dependent on them than other maps do. Okay, so if I go into your
map structure, some of that's even propositionalized. And I mess about with the deeper axiomatic
propositions upon which many other propositions rest, then that's going to disturb you fundamentally.
And that's part of that experience of depth. And you know, look, look, you get much more, if you're
married and you love your wife, you're much more upset if she divorces you
than if you have an argument about who should do the dishes.
Well, why?
Well, because the stability of your marriage
is a precondition for all sorts of other ways
that you perceive the world.
And if that's violated, well, that's traumatic.
Yeah.
So, and the reason I'm trying to get this clear with you is because you think clearly about these things, but also because it allows.
To, it allows for clarification of language in some sense, so we could say that as you go deeper into that nested structure, what you approach becomes more and more sacred by definition, I'm trying to define it experientially
because the, so let's say you're transformed
at a fundamental level.
That means something shifts way down deep.
And that's how you feel it, even in an embodied sense.
And what we've defined as human beings, as religious as far as I can tell, or as sacred,
is our attempt to define the landscape that is characterized by those deepest structures of maps.
Now, what you're talking about, I think, is outside the map system altogether in some sense.
You know, it's the container for all of it. Yeah, it is in some sense. It's the container for all of it.
Yeah, it is in some sense because it's orthogonal to it. I mean, it penetrates it at every point, but it's not reducible to it. And that's why it's so consequential. For instance, I think
consequential. So for instance, I think you can, so to take in accepting your your picture of nested maps and and depth and all that, I agree with all of that. And maps can be more or less
useful and more or less in register with the reality they're purporting to describe, right?
So you can have faulty maps and in science,
we really try to get an accurate map and we have a high resolution map. Yeah, and we have a language
game, which is when it's working is optimized to, you know, as Richard Feynman famously said,
not fooling ourselves, right? I mean, that's like the master value of not fooling yourself, whereas
I would argue in religious discourse,
not fooling yourself is not a master value. And in fact, you know, so much of what goes by the name of
religious faith. Okay, but let me put that in terminology then because you talk about the sacred
right, and and and you accept that and and you also and you also see it as revivifying and and
and and crucial
to the prevention of suffering,
but you juxtapose that against religion.
And so what's the difference as far as your concern
between what's sacred and what's religious?
Yeah, good question.
So maybe the best way to get at it
is by reference to a principle,
which is I think anything that's true
Right, and this is true scientifically
But it's true spiritually and it's true with respect to anything we would call sacred anything that's true anything that's real
is
Discoverable now
Right, it's like a little like like if we if we lost everything if we lost all the books
If we lost all the tools if we lost everything, if we lost all the books, if we lost all the tools, if we lost everything, and we just found ourselves having to reboot
not only civilization, but human cognition, you know, everything that is real is discoverable
from that starting point.
Even if you're starting zero again, now we would we would talk about it differently. We would have, you know, we would we would
have memories of what, you know, some of us would have memories of all that we've lost
and that would anchor us to certain expectations. But the point is, what is true? What is real?
What is what is what is the real opportunity for a direct self-transcended engagement with reality, right? What is the real opportunity
for upcoming suffering? Let me take exception to that in one manner. I see what you mean. I understand
what you mean. I believe. But here's a potential problem with that. So... First, I'm not saying,
let me just close the door to a possible misunderstanding.
I'm not saying that we shouldn't stand on the shoulders of giants, and I'm not saying
tradition is useless.
In fact, I would probably agree with you that we should be fairly conservative in how
we overthrow our traditions.
I mean, so I'm not arguing that we should just be radical iconoclasts that tears it. We should tear everything down to the studs and start again. That's not that's
not what I'm advocate. Okay, well, what's the difference? What's the difference in your
vision then between the tradition that you would be conservative about and religion? I'm
not trying to corner you. I'm just trying to see how you're making the distinction.
It comes down to very specific claims that I think are
clearly false and which many of our religions advertise as not only important but indispensable
for their projects. So, to take Islam as a specific example, Islam, mainstream Islam, I mean Islam mainstream Islam, not just al-Qaeda style Islam, just any Islam that
really is worthy of the name in the year 2021 is founded on the claim that the Quran
is the literal word of God.
And it is not to be seen.
What does literal mean? Yeah, but in the minds of most Muslims most of the time, it means
that these
stanzas were dictated to Muhammad in his cave by the archangel Gabriel. And he was he was
commanded to recite and he recited them. And what we have here is in truth the claim, the Orthodox claim is even more stringent than the seemingly analogous,
you know, fundamentalist Christian claim about the Bible. It's not just that the text itself
is verbatim what God said. The document itself is, in fact fact, every instantiation of the physical document is itself
the word of God.
It's like, there's sort of a double layer of sacredness to it.
Well, it cannot be edited.
Is the problem that claim or is it the problem that the people who purport to understand
it claim to be 100% right?
No, no, but the problem is that given that claim and given the actual contents of the book,
which you have is an endless source of divisiveness and conflict. if you dignify that claim, okay, this is the most important
series of utterances ever expressed on earth. This is it. Let's find out what the creator of the
universe wants us to know. What he wants us to know above all else is that one, we should hate and fear and despise and resist and never befriend unbelievers.
Right? That's, that's, that message comes through on virtually every page and a hell has been
prepared for these unbelievers where their skins will be endlessly burned off of them and,
and, and replenished so that they can be tortured and new, right? Do you think there's any relationship between that claim and your observation that failure to take refuge in the sacred as you've
laid it out, dooms you to possession by the default network and puts you into the hell.
But tension, yes. Okay. So it is possible to give a very enlightened reading of this text or really any text that allows
you to step out of its divisive and toxic implications. So I would support that kind of reading.
You know, if we were joined in this conversation by Muslim scholars who said, no, no, don't you understand? Jordan's spiritual
interpretation of this admonishment is precisely what God intended. He intended it to be an
engine, not of hate and division and sectarian tribalism. He intended it to be a device that would allow you to recognize the emotional
and cognitive implications of being caught by dualism, say, right?
Like, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
He goes, as far as you want in that direction, that'd be great.
The problem is the book itself gives no indication that your interpretation is the right one.
In fact, it gives every indication that it's not.
And then it's heterodontic.
Well, I'm going to be speaking with a sequence of Muslim scholars.
Okay.
Good luck.
I wish you good luck there.
Yeah.
Well, I, I, I, I praying for good luck because it's a, it's a conversation that absolutely needs
to be had. Yeah. no, I would agree.
Sad, but I would love to keep you. Yeah, so I just, I was just a close, just to finally close
the chapter. I would just say that it's not that what you're doing with the book isn't possible.
My concern is that these books tend to make that very difficult, and there are other more plausible and easier interpretations
that require less hermeneutics, less cognitive bandwidth, less principles of charity, and
less cosmopolitanism.
And so therefore, it's no accident that you wind up with something like the Islamic state
if you take the Quran very, very seriously.
And that's what worries me as we live in this world
where it's increasingly easy for small numbers of people
to screw up the whole project for millions of us,
as technology leverages the consequence of...
Well, that's why we're focusing on development of the individual.
Because it is increasingly possible for individuals to do that. So we have to stop doing it.
Yes. Yeah. Yeah. I'm with you there. Look, I would love to keep talking to you. I want to ask you
one more. I'm getting tired. And that's why I'm going to get. Because I'm getting fuzzy minded.
One first, maybe we should do another event. Sure. OK. I will talk to my agents.
Second, this idea you had about escaping from the text,
let's say, and returning to existential first principles
or phenomenological first principles,
the only objection I can see to that is that if you lose,
you can't derive the way of producing a social organization directly from
the existential experience.
And so that's a, right, because you think, look, partly we're going to derive our sacred
values from this, this strata of experience that you described.
But there's also an element.
There's also the fact that we derive our values from collective agreement.
And maybe we feed the collective agreement with the sacred experience.
But then if we lose that collective tradition, it's very difficult to rebuild that from
first principles.
Yeah, 100%.
Okay.
And I would say just to clear up any confusion on this point, I'm not suggesting
that meditation or even the deepest insights you can have through meditation or psychedelics
is sufficient for everything, for us to get everything we want out of life.
Right. It's like it's, I think it's, it's, it's not very used is as you describe is seeding every other ordinary moment
in life with this capacity to refresh the mind and, and, and
and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and and, and, and, and, and, and, of just just it is the thing that equips us to actually be loving and
uncomflicted and relaxed in the present moment, whatever is going on.
But when you ask the question, what should we do to build a viable global
civilization? There's so many other modes of conversation and knowledge gathering and reliance upon institutions and
tradition that is necessary. I'm not imagining some beautiful state of nature where we have lost
all of the structure that we've built up over thousands of years and we just meditate as a yoghies
and then try to figure out then try to call
someone when our you know internet goes down right. We there's a tremendous amount of knowledge
that we need to do anything well at this point. You know as we've just witnessed in you know
getting through you know now now we're into our second year of a global pandemic right. I mean
we have a lot to figure out how do we how do we even make sense with one another in the presence of social media?
And how do we respond when, when trust and institutions has broken down?
Is a lot to, to figure out and meditation and, you know, psilocybin and any, you know,
and, and a, and a full speed collision with the, with the beauty and profundity of the
present moment isn't the answer to many of those questions.
It's just, it is the answer to...
Yeah, it's a way other things.
It's a way else spring.
You know, like existential dread and, you know, etc.
So yeah, I mean, that's, anyway, I love talking to you
and I'm very happy to see your face and this.
It's really good to see you again.
And I remember why we kept talking now.
Yeah. And maybe I remember why other people
came and listened. And so I would love to do it again. Sure. Sure. Well, because we'll hammer it
out, you know, yeah. Yeah. Hey, good to see you. I'm going to see you. Thanks for going to talk to
me again. And good luck with your app and everything that you're doing. Yeah. And with your orientation towards the highest good,
all of that.
Yeah, back at you.
Back at you.
Okay, man.
Take care of yourself.
Dark soon.
Okay, I'll get in touch.
I look forward to it.
you