The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 377. This is for the Anonymous Online Trolls | Dr. Gad Saad
Episode Date: July 27, 2023Dr. Jordan B. Peterson and Dr. Gad Saad discuss his newly published book, “The Saad Truth about Happiness: 8 Secrets for Leading the Good Life.” They also discuss the parasitic ability that ideas ...can have on the human mind, the predictors for left wing authoritarianism, the evolutionary argument for why humans are spiritual beings, the biblically rooted idea that divinity exists and manifests within rather than from without, the connections between religiosity and true happiness, and how the spirit of play is integral to living a meaningful life. Gad Saad, Ph.D is a Canadian author, professor, podcaster, researcher, and public speaker. Saad was born in 1964 to a Jewish family (Considers himself culturally Jewish, though he is spiritually atheist) in Beirut, Lebanon, before his family fled to Canada in order to escape the Lebanese civil war in 1975. Saad earned his B.Sc. and M.B.A at McGill University, followed by an M.Sc. and a Ph.D from Cornell University. Since 1994, Saad has been a professor in marketing at the John Molson School of Business at Concordia University, Quebec. From 2012 to 2015, Saad was the editor of the scientific journal Evolutionary Psychology, and currently writes a blog for Psychology Today called Homo Consumericus. Saad’s research pertains to hormonal effects from testosterone and menstruation on consumer decisions as well as risk assessment. Saad also runs a popular podcast, The Saad Truth, which has garnered over 20 million views on youtube alone. - Links - For Dr. Gad Saad: “The Saad Truth About Happiness: 8 Rules for Living the Good Life” (NEW Book): https://a.co/d/1IqTyM9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/GadSaad Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Dr.Gad.Saad/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doctorgadsaad/ YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLH7qUqM0PLieCVaHA7RegA Spotify Podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/5T2wjkFxsjvuxO1SDcZh29 Apple podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-saad-truth-with-dr-saad/id1516343565
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Music
Hello everyone watching and listening.
Today I'm speaking with my friend Dr. Gad Sadd,
professor at Concordia University researcher podcaster,
an author of the new book,
The Sad Truth about Happiness,
Eight Secrets for Leading the Good Life.
I'm here with my friend today, Dr. Gad Sad.
We've met a number of times.
I got to say, Dr. Sad was one of the first,
and really one of the few academics who supported me right at the
beginning when I was embroiled in the first round of controversy that enveloped me or
that I stirred up, you know, or that our idiot government stirred up, which is more accurate
description of the whole event. Gad was one of the first people who had the courage or the hootspa, I guess
that's the word, to interview me and to discuss my situation with me. He played that very, very
straight. I don't think it was obvious to him at all. At that point, when he took that risk,
he didn't know anything about me really. He could have easily decided like so many people did
that I was just fundamentally reprehensible
and stayed on the safe side of the fence.
But I don't really think that's the sort of person he is.
And I think that's become more and more evident
over the ensuing months and years.
And so I want to thank you again for that.
It was a brave man.
Thank you. One of the things I learned in the last six or seven years ensuing months and years. And so I want to thank you again for that. It was a brave man.
And one of the things I learned in the last six or seven years
is that courage is a very, very rare virtue.
Much rare than I even thought.
I'd studied totalitarian states for a long time.
And I knew that people were easily led
into a state of pathological silence.
But I didn't understand how rapidly that could occur
and how few people, even in a free society
with a long history of freedom,
would be loath to speak
and how rapidly that could occur.
You know, and then you do see people who stand up
and say things that might get them in trouble.
And some of them are just people who are unwise, right?
And who are willing to impulsively say what comes to mind.
And then there are other people and they're much rarer who are thoughtful and who've carefully
considered what they have to say and are willing to say
it anyways. And you fell into that camp right away and you've been pursuing that for a good
long time. And also with the sense of humor, which is I think a sign of mastery, by the way,
you just wrote a book called the Sad Truth about Happiness that's coming out July 25th,
I believe. And it is the case that I think you're a credible observer on that front,
because you have this playful aspect that you, it doesn't disappear even when you're
dealing with serious topics at some risk to yourself.
And so I think that makes you a credible observer on that front.
And anyways, I'm done complimenting you.
So...
You could say one or two comments about how how
might how good my time looks after spending two weeks in Portugal. If you're
it is it is very impressive. I must say you're positively glowing, sir. And so now
anything else is there anything else I need to add to the car? No, I'm just it's
it's been a delight. We'll finish with the reciprocal compliment,
a compliment, but it's been a delight forging a friendship
with you.
As you said, I think we got to know each other about seven years ago.
And you know, of the ecosystem that we both navigate in, regrettably, many people turn
out to be cowards, and you're certainly not one who exhibits any cowardice.
And so in that sense, we are truly sympathical. And it's a pleasure and honor to be your
friends. Yeah, well, and we we have areas of mutual interest as well. You know, I'm I've been
interested in the psychology of entrepreneurship and of of managerial and administrative ability
for that matter. I spent a lot of time studying that and also very interested in evolutionary
psychology and biology. And so we have those
overlaps, which is quite interesting professionally. And so I thought that's part of where we can
go today, as well as talking about your book. Let's start with your last book, The Parasitic Mind.
When was that published, GAD? So it came out right in the midst of COVID, October 2020 was the hardcover, and then a year later in October 2021,
the paperback came out. Yeah, and how did it do and how is it doing?
Well, it's always difficult to be excited about how well it's done when you're speaking to someone
who sold 12 million copies of his last book. So if we don't use you as a benchmark, then I think it did remarkably well. So I'm
very happy with it. But as I often tell my wife, it's done incredibly well, but not enough
to give me an exit strategy out of communist Quebec. So it's done well, but maybe I'm
saying this in front of a guys behind the line who are all proud to be Quebecers.
I love Quebec, but I'm not very happy about, as you might agree with the sort of socialist
communist ethos here, I'm not a fan of the cold weather.
So hopefully the next book will offer me at least the option of having an exit strategy
if I choose to implement it.
Yeah, well, the university that you happen to inhabit also has a very pronounced
left wing tilt to put it mildly. They do. Yes, that's for sure. It's amazing that you've been
able to survive there at all. So, do you want to just familiarize people with the thesis of the
parasitic mind? Sure. And then we'll turn to your new book and then we'll talk a little bit more
about evolutionary biology and psychology, I think. That sounds like a great plan. So my last book, what I was trying to do is argue that
in the same way that all sorts of animals can be
parasitized by neuro parasites, actual parasites that can go into an animal's brain,
altering its behavior to suit its reproductive interests,
I argue that human beings can be parasitized by another class of pathogens
called idea pathogens.
And so these ideological parasites can then cause us to take positions that are truly maladaptive.
And so what I do in the book is I first describe many of these idea pathogens, postmodernism,
social constructivism, biophobia, cultural relativism, and a slew of other
such parasites, all of which were regrettably spawned in the university ecosystem, because
as I, to sort of borrow from George Orwell, it takes intellectuals to come up with some
of the dumbest ideas.
And so then what I do is I trace the spawning of these brain parasites,
and then I offer hopefully an effective mind vaccine against these parasitic ideas.
So that's the general thesis.
Okay, okay, so let me delve into that a little bit.
There's a few things that I'd like to clarify on that front and get your opinion about.
So the first is, is that you could imagine
something approximating a Darwinian race
between sets of ideas for memorability and communicability,
so for an idea to spread, it obviously has to be memorable,
which means it has to be adapted
to the structure of human memory,
and there's a biological element to that,
but it also has to
be charismatic enough so that the people who remember it will also communicate it.
And so stories seem to fit into that category quite well. We seem to be very fond of stories.
So you could imagine that there's a competition between sets of ideas, and it's sort of a detached competition. In some ways, it's the free Darwinian play of ideas that can occupy our cognitive space, both in terms of memory and on the communicative front.
And so you could think about those ideas that come to the top of that as either having some practical function, or as actually serving is in some ways of genuine
parasites in the cognitive space.
But then there's another element to this too.
I want to know what you think about this.
So, you know, I've been delving into the, since about 2016, psychologists have finally
in their wisdom determined that there is such a thing as left wing authoritarianism.
And so that would be a web of ideas that are correlated in that if you have one you're
likely to have the others, you can identify that said I did some of the work on that early
work on that with one of my students Christine Brophy.
We found a set of progressive ideas and then a set of totalitarian leftist ideas that combined the progressive ethos
with the willingness to use fear and compulsion and force to implement them.
Okay, and so we found the following predictors, because we were curious, is, does this system
of ideas exist, or is it just a right wing conspiracy delusion?
And the answer is, there's clearly a set of coherent,
statistically coherent, left wing ideas that are allied
with the willingness to use compulsion and force.
And we found four major predictors of the proclivity
to have that idea set.
And the first predictor, and it was a walloping predictor,
negative 0.45, if I remember correctly.
Verbal intelligence and left wing authoritarianism correlated more highly than verbal intelligence and academic performance, right?
A stunning correlation. So when you ask yourself, you know, how can people be
daft enough to accept this relatively reductionistic and simple-minded view of the
world.
Everything is about power.
One of the answers to that is, well, they're not very verbally sophisticated.
The second best predictor was being female.
The third best predictor was having a feminine temperament, independent of being female,
right?
And the fourth best predictor was having ever taken even one explicitly,
politically correct, higher education course. So now, since then, other people have developed
analogous models of left-wing authoritarianism and looked for other predictors. And one of the most
interesting predictors that has emerged
is there's a very powerful relationship
between the dark tetrad personality characteristics,
including malignant narcissism,
and the proclivity to hold left-wing authoritarian views.
In fact, the correlation between malignant narcissism
and left-wing authoritarianism is point six
Which is so high that you could make the case because the scales are somewhat unreliable You could make the case that they're not distinguishable on the measurement front
Okay, I know this is a long-winded question, but I want to specify it exactly
all right, so
the dark tetrad personality types they have subcl, they have subclinical characteristics of psychopaths.
And psychopaths are predatory parasites.
And so we could imagine there's two forms of parasitism going on here.
There's the Darwinian competition between idea sets for memorability and communicability,
but then there's the proclivity
for people who occupy the parasitical niche
in the human ecosystem,
and that would essentially be psychopaths,
to utilize ideas like the parasitical idea sets
that you described for their own
truly parasitical purposes.
And then I wanna decorate that with one more thing.
So you correct me if you're wrong here. I think this is actually, especially because of the emerging
virtualization of the world. I actually think that there's an existential threat here because
parasitism is an unbelievably deep problem, right? Sex itself evolved to foil parasites.
problem, right, sex itself evolved to foil parasites. And there's always been parasitical people, criminals and the like, and the most parasitical of those are the psychopaths.
And we've evolved mechanisms to keep the parasitical predators under control. A lot of
them involve physical force. And all of our evolved mechanisms for dampening down the predatory parasites,
none of them work online.
And so I think our whole culture is enabling the predatory psychopaths on the criminal
front and on the sub-criminal front, right?
35% of net traffic is pornographic.
Online crime is rampant.
And then you have all the demon troll types, you know, who are polluting
the political discourse. And there's data on them too. So if you're an online troll, you're
much more likely to show all the dark Ted Tradd traits, narcissism, Machiavellianism,
psychopathy, and to top it all off, sadism. So, so please have that set of ideas.
There's a lot of good stuff that you put in there.
So I'll try to take a couple of threads.
Number one, your first point about the battle
between the Iranian ideas, there's actually
a whole field called evolutionary epistemology
that exactly speaks to what you're saying.
That idea, so think back of Richard Dawkins
when he introduced the concept of the meme
in his 1976 book The Selfish
Gene. So there was a whole field that unfortunately hasn't lived up to its promise called Mimetic
Theory that exactly tries to model what you said, which is there's a bunch of ideas floating
around and what is the Darwinian mechanism that allows some ideas to be selected versus others
that fail. Now in my book, and then I'll come in a second
to some of the predictors that you spoke about in terms of left-wing authoritarianism,
in my book, I basically argue that what is common to all of these parasitic ideas is they wish
to be free from the pesky shackles of reality, right? So postmodernism, as we both commented on,
is the ultimate granddaddy of all parasitic ideas because it basically freezes from,
you know, the pesky shackles of objective reality because it purports that there is no objective
truth. Transgenderism frees me from the pesky reality of my genitalia. Social constructivism frees
me from the idea that there might be innate biological differences between people. So it
really stems originally from the noble notion of seeking to maximize empathy, right? So
the idea starts off as a noble idea, but then it metamorphoses into complete garbage in the pursuit
of that empathy to the detriment of truth, right?
So that's number one.
Number two, regarding your predictors, I actually am familiar with the study that you mentioned.
I think it was a thesis that you supervised, correct?
Yeah, that's right.
So we actually looked, so I'm actually working right now with a
graduate student myself where we're looking and we've actually looked at the thesis that you
supervise with your student. We're looking at another set of predictors that might interest you
Jordan and specifically we're looking at more philogical predictors of ideological positions that
people take. Now that's uniquely interesting,
because you might otherwise not think
that your morphology might be linked
to the ideological positions that you take,
but it turns out, and I discussed this
in the parasitic mind, that for example,
your likelihood of supporting military interventionism
is correlated to your upper body strength.
Not surprisingly, so now I'm talking about male subjects.
Male subjects who are stronger are more likely to support
military interventionism.
Stronger men are more likely to be against egalitarianism.
I mean, enforced egalitarianism.
Right.
Taking from one, and so that to me is uniquely interesting because-
You can look at symmetry.
So there's a paper.
Exactly.
I don't know if you guys know this,
but there's a paper that was published two months ago,
something like that, looking at,
they used facial averaging of activist types on the left
and then conservative types, you saw that so the conservative.
I was obsessed that I saw that paper because they're kind of,
they're stealing some of our thunder.
Right.
You might remember in the parasitic mind,
although I remember I think I first proposed this theory
to you in our first conversation when you came on my show.
Remember I talked about male social justice warriors
as sneaky fuckers. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's an actual term, right? Yeah, social justice warriors as sneaky fuckers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's an actual term, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, sneaky fuckers is actually not a term that I came up with to be profane.
It's actually a zoological term that captures a nature, the idea of kleptogamy, where
you're trying to steal mating opportunities.
So for example, let's say you have a type of fish where there are two phenotypes of a male,
you know, of a male.
There's the dominant physically imposing male.
And then there's a whole bunch of other males that actually pretend to be females so that
they can sneak by the dominant males and then have a sort of ticious coupling opportunity
with the females.
And that became known as the sneaky fucker mating strategy.
And so in the parasitic mind,
I argue that male social justice warriors
are instantiating a form of sneaky fucker strategy, right?
Look, I'm very sensitive, I hug trees, I cry
when I watch Bridget Jones die, see,
I'm not, you don't have anything to be afraid of.
And then hopefully that can allow me to have access
to some willing and available female.
So, you know, you know, they're literature on orangutans?
So, you know, there's two forms of male,
well, there's two forms of male orangutan in any given,
eco, like what would you say,
roughly tribal local ecology.
So there's one form of male develops, he's like the quarterback orangutan.
He gets so big he can't even really be arboreal.
He has the huge fat pads around his face that make him round.
It makes his face round. He has the huge fat pads around his face that make him round, that makes his face round.
And he's very physically powerful.
And the females come to him to mate.
But then there are other male orangutans in the same area that for a long time anthropologists,
primatologists thought were juveniles.
But it turns out they're not juveniles.
They're males who don't undergo the complete transformation
into the non-arbreal male,
and they use exactly the mating strategy
that you described, right?
So there's, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, that's why I was so, I'm always amazed
that people get so triggered by your lobster analogy,
because the whole field of comparative psychology
operates on the premise that we could learn a lot
about human cognition by studying our animal cousins.
I mean, right?
I mean, that's the whole premise behind the tree of life.
So I don't really see why someone would be so triggered
by the fact that you use the the dominance hierarchies
of lobsters to then make certain points about human society.
There's a whole field called comparative psychology that does that. So to me, the people who are
coming after you for those kinds of analogies between us and other animals are simply displaying
their ignorance, right? Yeah, well, they're mad at me because if lobsters have hierarchies,
it's pretty hard to blame hierarchy on capitalism. You know, because we haven't discovered a subgenus of capitalist
lobster yet. And strikes me as highly unlikely that we will.
But let me ask you this. I mean, we're going off sort of our, but I mean, conversations are
organic. So this might be a good opportunity to talk about this. Why do you think that you trigger a lot more animus than I do?
Because one could argue that I actually, on any given Tuesday morning, will tweet as many,
if not more things that are quite quote controversial.
And yet somehow I, now obviously your platform
is larger than mine.
But even if we correct for that, even if we do it
per capita, there seems to be something.
And by the way, I've been asked that many times
when I appear on shows because people know
that we're friends and they'll ask me, you know,
how come you don't get, so let me turn it to you
since we're now chatting.
Do you have a theory as to why you are such a polarizing figure
whereas I might one can argue, I take positions.
I mean, I'll criticize Islam a lot more forcefully than you do.
And yet somehow I don't trigger as much animus.
What do you think is the dry?
Maybe I annoyed people on more fronts simultaneously
than you did.
Partly, well, so what happened?
This is a possible explanation.
When things first blew up around me in 2016, I already had 200 hours of lectures on YouTube.
And so I was pilloried as a right-wing demon, essentially, by the sorts of people that
were discussing who liked to do that sort of thing to hide their own character, let's
say.
And then people looked me up online and went to my YouTube channel and then found this
extra hundreds of hours of content, which demonstrated rather incontrovertibly that I wasn't the sort of person that I was being
accused of being, but also touched on all sorts of other topics that people might not have
expected, like in the religious and mythological domain, the psychoanalytic domain.
And so I think the fact that I had that storehouse of lectures already stored up when the trouble emerged,
expanded out my reach in a very dramatic manner. And that's probably,
as the first occupier of that position in some ways, because I was an early adopter of YouTube,
I know you were too, but I think I got there a little faster than you did and a little broader.
And so I think that's probably a fair bit of it, you know?
I wonder also, so like in my latest book now, which I guess we'll talk about in a second,
I also engage in prescriptive remedies.
You know, here are some steps by which you can increase your happiness.
But historically, I've been much more of a descriptive somewhere.
I describe how things are.
Now, in your case, by virtue of you also having
been a clinician, by definition, you engage in the ecosystem
of prescriptions a lot more.
And that, I think, triggers people's eye
or because you're telling them how to behave.
And by doing that, you're obviously going to alienate people.
Whereas I come along and I say,
here are the evolutionary reasons
why there are differences between men and women.
And I stop there.
Whereas by you taking the prescriptive jump,
that probably augments the amount of animus
that you receive.
What do you think of that?
Yeah, yeah, I think that's a reasonable proposition as well.
I also think that I think we could develop that line of hypothesis a little further too.
I think that many of the people who have an animus against me, and almost all those people
are anonymous online trolls, by the way, because I never encounter that, or virtually never
in my actual life, by the way, because I never encounter that or virtually never in my
my actual life, quite the contrary. I think they're very, very irritated that my simple-minded prescriptions like take some responsibility for yourself and don't play the victim because it's
not good for you or for anyone else. I think they're very, very annoyed that first of all, I'm calling them out on their hypothetically empathic virtues signaling attempts to escape from all possible
responsibility, which is exactly what they're doing. And second, they're very annoyed that the
simple ideas that I've been putting forward and the simple somewhat conservative ideas in
that they're traditional, they're very annoyed that those work.
And then they're also annoyed
because I have this very deep interest
in religious issues that also grates on people
to some degree.
And this is something you and I are gonna talk about
because it overlaps with our interest in memetic ideas
because religious ideas are memetic ideas
for better or worse. And we can
talk about that. And then I'm also, I think I'm also probably enabling to the degree that
I'm enabling young men and speaking to them about the virtues of their ambition instead
of dismissing them as pathological patriarch you know, patriarchal oppressors.
That's also very annoying, especially to the types of men that you're describing who want to
sneak about in the background and pretend to be virtuous and harmless, which is a pretty damn
pathetic way of comporting yourself in my estimation. Like, I've watched those kind of men operate
in the protests against me.
And so I can be surrounded by a mob of pretty decent screaming harpies.
And they're annoying as can possibly be imagined.
But when I look at the men that are with them,
they just make my blood run cold.
And that's with my clinical eye.
Those are not good people.
They're hanging around those women who are doing the harpy thing.
And they're there as exactly the kind of parasitical predator that you're describing.
And I can see that and they are not, they're not the sort of person that you would want
anyone you cared for to come to, to have any association with whatsoever.
Plus, because they have to be sneaky fuckers in your terminology, you know, they're bitter
and resentful and they're very likely to want to tear down anything
that approximates true accomplishment, because all those who have true accomplishment are
their genuine competitors.
And that's partly why I think the radical left-wing authoritarians go after merit, so acidulously,
is that they operate on a completely non-meritorious basis, and it's in their best interest to present
merit itself as a falsehood to take out their sexual competitors.
What do you think is the main predictor of folks like you and I who are willing to speak
our minds unencumbered by any shackles of political correctness. And maybe
I'll start by answering it for myself. I absolutely think it's an indelible part of your
personhood. But if I were to give a more vivid account of that, I always tell people when they
ask me, you know, why do you take on these risks and speak your mind? Then as you know, Jordan,
last year, I received some pretty serious
death threats and many, many years. And you were very kind to right away contact me.
Well, you get more flack on the Jewish front, eh? So like, I've got more flack, but I would
say I haven't got flack as serious as some of what's been levied against you. Like, I've
been fortunate enough to escape that now because I'm associating with all the evil Jews
at the daily wire, I get some anti-Semitic blowback,
you know, but it hasn't, I've watched a lot of that online
and it's bloody vicious.
The anti-Semitic parasitical psychopaths
are in a demonic class of their own.
They're so, They are. Yes, yes.
And so you've...
So I have been targeted more frequently,
but I think you've been targeted more terrifyingly.
That is true.
But to make the point about my unique situation
in terms of why I take the risk,
I always argue that at the end of the night
when I put my head on the pillow,
it is important for me in order to be able to sleep
well at night to know that I did not modulate my speech
in any way and walk away from defending the truth.
If I feel that I have done that,
then I would feel fraudulent and I would feel inauthentic.
And one of the probably the highest ideals that I hold to close to my heart are freedom and truth.
And so I speak not because I'm trying to signal that I'm courageous.
It's because I don't know how to be anything else.
So for example, it took me a lot of effort while I was on my Portugal vacation
to not jump in whenever I'd go on Twitter and see some idiot saying something. My first
instinct is to always come in with some correction. It's just an indelible part of my
personhood to speak the truth. And of course, in my forthcoming book, as we might talk about, I talk about authenticity
and realness as a important pathway to happiness, right?
I mean, even the ancient Greeks, as you know, the Delphic Maxim, know thyself.
And so I know myself, and I know that I can't modulate my speak.
So that's my answer for why I can't hold back and I always speak
the truth. Is it the same for you with that exact answer applied to you? What drives you
to take the difficult positions that you take?
Well, I think, I think, you know, they say the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.
And I think that what happened to me in the course of my studies is at least an analog of that.
You know, GAD, I started studying totalitarian atrocity when I was 13.
It's really been an obsession of mine, and it was really a psychological obsession rather than a political one.
So I was always curious about the psychology of the perpetrator, right? What sort of person would you have to be to do
those sorts of things? Or what spirit would have to inhabit you? You know, and one of the things I
learned, I learned a lot of things, I learned that it's easier to be that way than you think,
that you could enjoy it more than you might possibly imagine and that people do,
and that the true grip of the totalitarian state isn't talked down tyranny. It's everyone's
willingness to abide by the principles of the lie. And so the more totalitarian the state,
the more every single person in that state is gripped by the lie.
And for me, that's indistinguishable from hell.
And I think I mean that practically and also metaphysically.
And I learned that the willingness of people to utilize their speech instrumentally was
literally the pathway to hell.
And so once I actually understood that and understood it in a manner that made it an incontrovertible
truth for me, everything else became less frightening by contrast.
Just like so when I spoke out against this idiot Bill C-16 back in 2016, which was the
four runner-up, much of the trouble we're seeing now, especially on the gender insanity front.
You know, on the one hand, there was the threat of me putting my job on the line and it's
turned out my clinical practice and, of course, making myself unpopular with the government.
And I thought, that's nowhere near as frightening to me as the prospect of losing control of my
tongue because I know where that leads. That
leads to the worst place you can possibly imagine. And I know that. Like, I wouldn't even
think for me that it's an axiom of faith. It's like, no, I know how totalitarian states
develop. They develop when people who have something to say don't speak. And I don't want to go there.
I think I've lived that reality having grown up.
I mean, some of your viewers may not know my personal history.
Having grown up in the Middle East, having gone through the early parts of the Lebanese Civil War,
I always contextualize any threats that I might face in my job, which of course are serious
to what I faced when I grew up in Lebanon.
And it's no surprise then that many of the stoncious defenders of Western values end up
being immigrants like myself, because we have sampled from the wide buffet of possible societies.
And we know that the Western experiment is an outlier, right?
It's an anomaly.
And therefore, it typically takes people who did not grow up in a Western tradition, who've
escaped the hellholes from which they've escaped, to then be able to hey Westerners don't take for granted the the freedoms that you have and
And so if you look at many of the you know think of Ion Hershey Ali, right?
She can speak you know with a lot of clarity and authority about
Some of these issues precisely because she too has come from a similar rock
round to mine and so-
You on me, Parach.
I want-
Ion me, Parach is another fantastic example.
We've both had wonderful chats with her.
And you know, I don't know if you know, Yasmeen Muhammad, who didn't grow up.
You know, Yasmeen Muhammad?
No, no.
She wrote a book.
I think she grew up in Canada, but she had a
Very tough upbringing where she was married to an Islamic extremist who forced her to wear the knee cub and so on And so I wonder also if the fact that we come we meaning myself and Ion and yeah, yeah, so on
We come from these societies
Affords us a bit more leeway when we speak than someone like you because
you know, you're the, you know, evil, Western, white male, whereas, you know, we're quote,
you know, brown people and so on.
And so we do have high victimology scores.
So when we then play the, the oppression Olympics against those who might be coming
after us, we can always cash in our chips because
as I've often joke, but I'm being serious, that my, my victimology poker card is going
to be higher than most people as will, young me parks, as will, I have to see Ali.
Whereas the fact that you don't have that currency puts you at a distinct disadvantage
in the victimology poker game, right?
Right, right, right.
Well, yeah, so that might be one level of defense
that I that I don't have automatically.
You don't have it, yeah.
So, okay, so let I want to delve a little bit more deeply
into your observations about your conscience.
And I want to tie that into our discussion of memes
and parasitic ideas, okay? And I want you to, and I think,
for those of you who are watching and listening, Gadna, I have had some exchanges in the past
with regards to our somewhat differing opinions about the utility of union ideas about archetypes.
And I want to segue into that given this particular issue. I think it's a good entry point.
So, Gell, I've been reading the biblical corpus in great detail in the last months, and
of course, previous to that, because I'm writing a new book called We Who Resseth With
God.
And one of the things that I discovered in the analysis of that sequence of stories was
that there was a transformation at the time
of Elijah, which is what makes him a canonical prophet.
There was a transformation in the conceptualization of what constituted the highest animating
principle, the ultimate deity, let's say, Yahwa, in this particular case.
And this occurred when Elijah stood up against
the prophets of Baal, and the prophets of Baal, Baal was a nature god, and so you could imagine
among primordial people, and there's certainly echoes of this still within our own psyches, that
extraordinarily awe-inspiring natural events would produce a kind of religious apprehension.
So that could be earthquakes or typhoons or tornadoes or thunderstorms.
These manifestations of quasi-cosmic force that can in some ways they definitely inspire
awe and can bring you to your knees. Now, Baal was a nature god, plain and simple. And so what that meant at that time was that
the highest authority to which people owed field tea was the authority that made itself manifest
in the storm and in the earthquake and in the thunder. Now Elijah had an intuition.
and in the thunder. Now, Elijah had an intuition.
He was, what would you say, uniquely isolated follower
of Yahwa at that time, because the Israelites,
the Israelite king had married this woman named Jezebel,
and she brought ball worship into the Israelite society
and attempted to obliterate the worship of Yahweh as an enterprise and
really reduced the ranks of the Yahweh supporters to almost nothing, to Elijah, you might even say.
Now, Elijah defeated the priests of Paul in a head-to-head competition, which I suppose was the
archaic equivalent of a debate, but then he had to run off because Jessabell got wind of his victory and was going to kill
him.
And then he spent some time in a cave.
And when he was in the cave, he experienced an earthquake and he experienced a thunderstorm
and some of these magnificent displays of nature.
But he had this intuition that whatever the ultimate voice was, was a voice that spoke within
and not externally. And so it's Elijah, it's in the book of Elijah that you first find the phrase,
the still small voice within, essentially. And so what happened was there was a transformation
of the notion of the highest deity to something that was external and a manifestation of the grand
grand, uh, what would the grandiosity of nature to this idea that no, it was something akin to
the voice of conscience within. And so the reason I'm bringing that up is because it's a radical
psychological transformation and a subtle one, but I also think, I want to know what you think.
You said that there are two things that give you a biting, that you have a biting faith in.
And one is the power of the word, right? You're a professor, you're a writer, you're a communicator,
you're a podcaster, and you are very careful in your selection of words. And not only,
so not only do you have faith in the word, let's say, but you also believe that
you have your highest moral obligation is to be guided by your conscience in the formulation
of your words.
So now you could think of that, and this is where I want to know your opinion. As far as I can tell, one of the
meme-like qualities of the biblical corpus is the increasingly sophisticated insistence
as the stories unfold that the highest animating principle is to be understood not as a manifestation of the awe-inspiring power of nature,
but in terms of something that is relational, that's associated with the conscience,
and that's tied to something like adherence to this spoken and communicated truth.
And so, and that that's become a very powerful meme in the West, right? The dominant meme you might say.
And so I'm wondering what you think about that.
Like, especially given your admission,
let's say that the principle that does animate
your behavior for better or worse
is this fidelity to the accuracy of the word.
Right, so I guess, I mean, there are several ways that I can answer this. One of which is
that I don't need to situate my pathological and obsessive defense of the truth in a
supernatural cause. Having said that though, or in a supernatural reason, right? Having said that though, as an evolutionist,
I'm fully aware that the default value of human beings
is precisely to be moved by religion.
In other words, being a non-believer
is certainly not the default value of humans.
That often surprises people because they often think that,
given that I'm not particularly religious,
that somehow I have a built-in animus towards religion.
To the contrary, I fully understand
the functional value of religion.
But, and I can, I can concede that point
without necessarily believing that, you believing that the specific supernatural elements
are true.
I can see that there is great value in the moral stories and the parables and the allegories
that are taught.
And so a lot of the stuff that you might talk about or a lot of the stuff that the Jungian
archetypes, I can completely situate them within an evolutionary paradigm and fully agree
with them.
I think the main place where I might disagree with some of the more religiously oriented folks
is that I stop at simply recognizing their functional value without necessarily believing
in their veracity, the action.
Right?
Okay.
So let me ask you about that.
So let's take that apart very carefully, okay?
Because you said that you can take the stance that you've taken
with no reference to the supernatural.
All right, so let me delve into that and you can help me clarify my thinking
on this regard.
So, okay, so the first, I'm going to make some, I'm going to offer some propositions.
The first is, is that you're strangely, I don't just mean you, I mean human beings in general,
but also particularly you, you're strangely beholden to your conscience.
And in some ways, it operates as an autonomous entity, right?
Because you know, you know this, your conscience will call you on things.
And you could say, well, my conscience is me, but then I would say, well, if it's you,
why the hell don't you get the pesky little thing under control and bend it to your will instead of
subordinating yourself to its claims? And then I would it's claims because I think that you can make a credible case that
the voice of conscience within you is very much analogous to the voice of conscience within me,
let's say, but also within all people. And that in that manner, the person who does determine to
abide by their conscience is conducting themselves in accordance with something
that, if not supernatural, at least has to be given status as something transcendent. Like,
let me decorate that a little bit. You know perfectly well that when you're thinking something
through, right, when you have a pressing question on your mind, that you'll get flashes of intuition.
And I don't really think there's a hell of a lot of difference between intuition and revelation, technically speaking, right?
And it isn't obvious at all where those flashes of intuition come from. And I think that if you're a genuine scientist, the voice of revelation within isn't pretty distinguishable from that willingness to pursue the truth and the willingness to attend
to the voice of conscience, right? Because you're supposed to be pursuing the truth as a scientist
and you lay yourself open to... So can we separate transcendent and supernatural in some manner
that's productive? I'm not sure that I'm able to answer the precise question, but what I can say is that our
conscious, our morality is exactly what you would predict of a social species in a very
material way, right?
Because, and I'm willing, and as my fact, many ethylogists and evolutionary scientists
have already made these arguments, that there is a very compelling
scientific argument that can explain the evolution of morality
without situating it within some transcendent religious
framework.
Because many of the religious folks will say,
yeah, sure, evolution can explain why we have opposable
thumbs, evolution can explain why there are sex differences thumbs, evolution can explain why there are
sex differences, but it can never explain morality.
And of course, many evolutionists, some of whom are incredibly accomplished thinkers, have
argued that there is nothing uniquely magical about the construct of morality.
When you have a social species, the most dangerous thing that humans have faced in our evolution and history,
other than predators, is our conspecifics, is other people. We're walking through the savanna,
and here comes another group of folks that are unrelated to us. We don't know if they are
friend or foe, and that's why one of the reasons we've evolved to collisional thinking,
right? Blue team versus red team. And so it makes perfect sense when you have a non-solitary animal to evolve things like a conscience, things like
the emotions of anger, retribution, vengefulness, right? So all of these mechanisms, whether it be
morality or our emotional system, can be completely couched in an evolutionary adaptive framework.
But again, that said, I think that it makes perfect sense for an animal like us who's
developed this big prefrontal cortex, who is regrettably aware of their mortality
to be uniquely intoxicated by religion, because religion offers us the ultimate pill
for the most fundamental problem which we face,
which is the recognition of our mortality, right?
If I have high cholesterol level,
and if we agree that, let's say,
having bad cholesterol is bad for you,
although of course that's debated,
then I can go see my physician,
he can give me a statin,
and my cholesterol scores will drop. Unfortunately,
there is no pill for my mortality fear other than the religious solution, right? And so to
me, as a, you know, as a functional analysis, it makes perfect sense for us to be susceptible
to believe in religion. Now, I don't think, and here I'm going to link up to,
I saw that you've recently been having some spicy exchanges with Richard Dawkins. I don't think I'm nearly
as, I don't exhibit as much animus towards religion as does, let's say, Richard Dawkins. Again,
I think because I'm coming from the perspective that there are very clear evolutionary
reasons why we evolve to be believers.
And so, and oftentimes, this assuages some of the anger that the religious folks might
feel towards me, because they actually see that I don't have a built-in hatred towards
religion.
As a side note, it might be interesting to know that there are two
fundamental ways by which evolutionists can study religion. There is what's called the adaptation
approach and the exaptation approach. So maybe I could take a minute or two to address them.
The adaptation approach is why would religion have ever evolved? What survival or mating advantage would be conferred
on those who are religious,
as opposed to those who are not religious?
And the top argument that's been proposed
is one by David Sloan Wilson, the evolutionary biologist,
who actually wrote a great book called Darwin's Cathedral,
which if you haven't read it, Jordaner, I think you'd enjoy it.
He uses a group selectionist argument to argue that religious group,
as compared to non-religious groups, are going to have greater likelihood of surviving
because religion affords you greater cohesion, commonality, cooperation.
And so that would be one approach to
situating an evolutionary understanding of religion. The
exaptation approach, many of your viewers may not be familiar with that term,
an exaptation is a byproduct of evolution. So for example, if I say, why do
humans have the color of the skeleton that they have? That itself was not adaptive. It's a byproduct of evolution.
Now, the top guy for the
exactation approach of religion is a
evolutionary anthropologist named Pascal Boyer,
who basically argued that
religion piggybacks
on neural systems that evolved for other reasons,
and hence it's a byproduct.
So even if you are someone who is not very religious,
but you are grounded in evolutionary theory,
you can fully understand why it is so easy for most people to be religious rather than
wrong religious, if that makes any sense.
Okay. Okay. So let me address number of the things that you just said. The first,
the first comment I might want to make, and you tell me what you think about this,
GAD, you know, I don't think that it's unreasonable from a narrative perspective to frame you as someone possessed by the same
spirit that made itself manifest in the prophetic tradition. Now, and this makes sense to me,
partly because of your cultural heritage and the way that you approach ideas. But I also think
that it's true in a more than merely passing sense, you know, because one of the things that you
see that constantly characterizes the prophetic tradition and the Old Testament is that people
like Jonah. So I just took the story of Jonah apart from this book that I'm writing.
And so it's very cool, Gads. So this is the proposition in Jonah, right? Jonah is just minding his own business and God
makes himself manifest to Jonah in the form of a call from conscience. That's
the simplest way to think about it. And he tells Jonah, there's this city up near
you called Nineveh, which is full of foreigners that hate you and that that are
your enemy, but they're deviating from the desirable
path, and I'm thinking about wiping them out.
But I think you should go up there and say what you have to say on the off chance they'll
listen so that they tap themselves back onto the straight narrow and don't redefine retribution. And Jonah being a very sensible person says,
yeah, I don't think I'll do that.
It doesn't sound like a great deal for me.
It's me who's a foreign Jew against 120,000 of my enemies.
Why the hell do you think they'll listen to me?
I don't really care if they're saved anyways.
How about I just go in the other direction?
So he rejects this call to speak, right? Now he's on a boat getting the hell out of there.
And the sailors, the storms come and the waves rise, and now the ship is in danger. That's the first
hint in the story that by refusing to speak when you're called upon, you put the
ship itself in danger. That could be the ship of state, right? Now, the sailors are kind
of superstitious. And they think someone on this boat is on out with God or with their
gods. We better find out who it is so we can rectify this situation. So they go interrogate
all the passengers and Jonah admits that he has defied a direct order.
And so he basically tells the sailors who are somewhat low to do this by the way,
to throw him into the ocean where he's going to drown. And he might think, okay, so what does that
mean? Well, this is what it means to me, is that if you're called upon to speak and you stay silent,
then you're going to put the ship in danger and at the great peril of your own life.
So now they throw in the ocean.
You think, well, that's about the worst thing that could happen at Port Jonah, because
now he's way the hell away from shore and he's going to drown.
That isn't the worst thing that happens, because the next thing that happens is that some
horrible demon from the abyss itself rises up from the bottom of reality and
takes them in its jaws and pulls them down to hell.
And I say hell because that's how Jonah describes it.
And it's also a type of the harrowing of hell that is laid out in gospel stories much,
much later.
And so this is my sense of what that story means, you know, and I think this is something
particularly relevant to the experience of the Jews, let's say in the 20th century, is that if you're called upon to speak and you reject that call, not only do you put the ship in danger and your life, but then you're going to be like, what would you say the jaws of hell itself are going to close around you and take you to the bottom, the very, very bottom of things.
And I do think that's what happens to states when the people in the states don't speak.
So Jonah is down in hell for three days in the belly of this whale, this dragon whale.
And, you know, he has a chance to think and he decides, well decides, well, maybe I should have said something when
I was called upon to say something.
And he repents, and the whale spits him out, and then he goes to Nineveh, and he talks
to all the foreigners who are his enemies, and they actually listen, and God decides not
to destroy them.
Now, in that story, the spirit of your ancestors and mine is portrayed as the voice that calls from within
to stand up and say what you have to say, even to those who would want to destroy you, even to those who have habitually
been your enemies, and that if you don't do that, well, you bring the forces of death and hell
against yourself and everyone else.
And so, well, there's, see, that's not exactly a, what would you say, a testament to the
existence of the supernatural, but it is definitely the testament to the existence of something
transcendent that you have moral obligation to.
And so, well, so.
Yes. Yeah, no, I buy all of that.
That's precisely why when people ask me,
well, how can you be so attached to your religious identity
and not be much of a believer?
It's precisely for the reasons that you said, which
is I come from a very long line of thinkers.
There are cultural values that come with being Jewish
that I'm very proud of.
I don't know if you saw it just on a slightly
a note of levity.
Have you seen Jordan, the Dutch AI group
that put together their best rendition
of what Jesus would look like.
Have you seen that image?
No, no, I haven't.
Where would I find that?
Well, that image turns out looks hauntingly like the guy that you're speaking to right now,
right?
I mean, it's literally shocking.
So if you take that image that the AI Dutch researchers came up with and you take it,
now, I'm not engaging in a delusion
of grandeur saying that I'm Jesus,
but what I'm saying is that there is a lot to be proud of
in the heritage that I come from.
I'll tell you a quick story, personal story that speaks
to that kind of Jewish ethos that I discussed in my last book
in the Pericetic Mind.
When I was talking about the differences between
values of one culture and another, which by the way speaks to your point about personal
responsibility and so on. So after I had finished, so I did an undergrad in Mathematics
of Computer Science and then an MBA at McGill, I'm saying that's not to flaunt my CV because
it's relevant to the story.
And so after I had finished my MBA,
my goal was always to continue, you know,
do a PhD, behavioral science and so on.
But one of the places I had been accepted to for my PhD
was University of California, Irvine.
And my brother at the time lived in Southern California.
He was a very, very successful entrepreneur.
And he was trying to convince me,
having just finished my MBA to
take a couple of years, put on the proverbial suit, work with him a few years, get some experience,
and then of course go back and pursue my PhD, but I was really not interested in that I
always knew that I wanted to be an academic.
Well when I returned home to Montreal and my mother had caught wind of the fact that my brother
was trying to convince me to stop
my studies for a few years. She takes me to a side room. She says, come, I want to speak to you.
It seemed like an ominous thing that she wants to talk to me. I said, what's up, mom? She said,
well, I hear that you're thinking of not continuing with your PhD. And before I could even
assuage her fears, she said, well, do you want people to know
you as somebody who dropped out of school?
So for her, for the standards of excellence of my family, having a degree in mathematics
and computer science and an MBA, and then not going on and doing your PhD would bring shame
to the family, would be a manifestation of having dropped out of school.
Now, of course, I didn't do my PhD to please my mother, but it gives you a sense of...
That's what you say.
Right.
You're speaking as the clinician that you are.
Right, right exactly.
And so, that gives you a sense of the importance that learning has.
It's really a pathological desire for it that is instilled within you from the youngest
of age to be a learned person.
And so I can be incredibly proud of that heritage because it is a real material heritage. It's a real sociological
reality, cultural reality, to be from that long tradition of Jews. Again, without necessarily
buying into every single element of the supernatural. So, for example, even if I were to concede that
God exists, I can't imagine that the ruler of the universe cares about whether you like the Shabbat candles at 821 or 822.
But I can promise you that if you go to some of the Hasidic neighborhoods in Montreal where there are very orthodox Jews,
they would argue that no, no, God absolutely cares at the exact minute when you so so in that sense I
could be very very much tied to my religious heritage without necessarily caring
about some of the ritualistic elements. Okay so so I want to tell you about a
study that someone brought to my attention about six months ago it's not a very
old study and it's a really remarkable study. In fact,
I think it's revolutionary. So it turns out, you know, that when DNA molecules are damaged,
they can repair themselves and they generally do that with spectacular accuracy. But the accuracy
varies. Okay, so imagine this. Imagine that there's a hierarchy of genes, and that some genes are so fundamental that
if they vary even a trifle, the organism that they produce will be non-viable.
And then imagine that there are other genes, like the ones that code for eye color, where
there can be tremendous variability with virtually no consequence.
Now, there might be minor consequences, like maybe blue-eyed blondes have a sexual advantage over those who aren't blue-eyed and blonde, you know,
because of attractiveness. But having brown eyes or darker hair doesn't make you unviable,
right? Now, it turns out that there is a relationship between the accuracy of DNA repair mechanisms and the canonical status of the genes that
are being repaired. Is the more fundamental the gene is to the morphology upon which existence
itself depends, the closer to 100% accuracy the repair mechanisms manage.
Okay, so that means there's a core set of genetic axioms, you might say, that don't
vary with mutation, and there's a peripheral set that are allowed to vary, you might say
as experimental variations on the adaptational landscape. Now, I think there's an analog between that and conceptualizations,
let's say, means is that there are some axioms, some conceptual axioms that have to remain utterly
unchanged across time. And then there is a host of more peripheral propositions that can very
substantially with with no disadvantage and maybe some advantage because of the variability. And I
think also that we regard the canonical axioms as deep and profound and were affected if they move,
where we're willing to allow and even to enjoy variation on the fringe.
So I'm wondering, you tell me what you think about this with regard to what you claim,
is that you said that you're unwilling to adhere to
the more pequeon distinctions that are made on the religious front,
and some of those might involve the propositions of the existence of something supernatural
and inexplicable in its fundamental nature. But it also seems to me that for you,
that's allied with an unshakable faith in certain axiomatic presuppositions,
some of which we already discussed, which is, like, is it incorrect for me to say that your
attachment to the communicated truth is most appropriately conceptualized as adherence to an unshakable,
axiomatic faith.
Like, I don't understand how,
I don't understand how it isn't.
So if you don't think it is,
then help me understand.
And, right.
So, for example, now let's bring in, say, my math background.
In mathematics, there are axiomatic truths, right?
So take, for example, the transitsivity axiom. If I the Transitivity axiom if I prefer car a to car b and I prefer car b to car c
It must be that I prefer car a to car c if I don't then that's called an
Intransitive preference and therefore I'm committing a violation of rationality those are axiomatic
Mathematical truths, but they are also empirical truths, right? If I throw a person off a 100 store story building, 100 times out of 100, I'll know exactly
what will happen because there's a thing called gravity. So in other words, I can pursue
truth without, and as you said, universal truth that is invariant to time or place and those truths while we may couch them in a supernatural cause, I can completely adhere to them without them being, you know,
co-opted with a supernatural element. So for example, in the parasitic mind, I hope we'll chance to talk about my forthcoming book soon. We can actually talk about it in the context of religiosity and happiness,
if you'd like, that could be a good segue.
But in my last book, in chapter seven,
I talk about how to seek truth,
and I offer the epistemological approach
called nomological networks of cumulative evidence.
And I think we had discussed that privacy, right?
So the idea there is that if I wanna demonstrate to you,
Jordan, that there is a unshakable universal truth,
what would be the data that I would need to amass
and present to you for you to start coming around to me?
And the way that you do that,
if you're building a nomological network
of cumulative evidence, is you come up with data
that is across cultures,
across eras, across species, across methodologies,
across theoretical frameworks,
and if all of these triangulate to demonstrate
that your phenomenon is universal,
then you're well on your way to having built
a rather unassailable argument.
And so, in order that I've been able to do that,
without ever requiring some higher supernatural authority to contextualize that truth. And so,
again, I'm very, very open to the idea that people need religion. I think religion, in most cases serves more benefits than then then costs.
Although I wouldn't have left Lebanon were it not for religion, right?
Because it is specifically religious hatred that caused me to leave Lebanon, right?
It wasn't feasible in the mid 70s when the Lebanese Civil War broke out to be Jewish and Lebanon,
because Lebanon is exactly what happens to a society that is completely organized along
identity politics lines. So it's particularly dismaying that the progressives and the West
wish to model that from which I escaped in Lebanon. But in that case, the reason why we had
to leave Lebanon is exactly due to religion,
because somehow our religious heritage was no longer possible to hold to practice in Lebanon,
and we left. So I can't have an ambivalent relationship with religion.
All right, so let me ask you, okay, let me ask you a couple of things about that. So the first question might be, and this is something that we both
grappled with as academics, you know, the universities have become very corrupt. Now you could argue,
on the one hand, that that corruption is just an extension of the intellectual enterprise as such,
or you could argue that the corruption that's made itself manifest in the universities
is a parasitical excrescence on the core enterprise, the intellectual enterprise of the universities.
Okay. Now, on the religious front, the same issue emerges, right?
The question is, is that when, you know when you already pointed out earlier that the parasitical predator
types can utilize strategies of empathy, let's say, to amplify their attractiveness on
the sexual front, right?
So they can co-op something that emerged for other reasons and bend it to their own
purposes.
So what do you think is more reasonable?
Like, do you think that on the religious front, that the danger you were exposed to in Lebanon
is merely a consequence of the fact that the religious enterprise itself is flawed
and will produce this multiplicity of competing and often murderously competing claims?
Or is it reasonable to assume that something
analogous happens on the religious front and that the fundamental conflict is a consequence
of the predatory parasites twisting fundamentally axiomatic and necessary religious claims
to their own devices and and sewing discord as a consequence?
Well, I can't be so charitable as to give religion a free pass
because many of the religious narratives,
certainly in the Abrahamic faiths,
are precisely us versus them, right?
So there is no way to misinterpret
some of the teachings in many of these books,
whether it be Deuteronomy,
so the Old Testament, whether it be in certain of these books, whether it be Duteronomy, so the Old Testament, whether
it be in certain Christian doctrines and certainly when it comes to Islamic doctrines, it
is very difficult to quote misread or mistranslate and it's certainly difficult to tell someone
who Arabic Arabic is their mother tongue that I'm misunderstanding what is being communicated,
let's say in some
elements of the Islamic faith.
My point here is not to uniquely bash Islam because, as I said, all Abrahamic faiths have
a us versus them mentality.
So I think what happened in Lebanon is not some human co-opting of otherwise benign and
loving religious narratives.
Let's put it another way.
And again, this you may not like because I'm boring from Richard Dawkins.
And I know that you've been having a little tiff with him.
Richard Dawkins famously said that the difference between an atheist and a very staunch believer
is really very minimal.
If we assume that there are 10,000 gods,
the very religious person is an atheist on 9,999 gods,
but is very fervently a believer in one,
whereas the non-believer atheist is a non-believer on 10,000.
So there's only a difference of 9,999 to 10,000.
That strikes me as a pretty compelling argument.
Let me put it another way.
And the consuming instinct,
which was one of my earlier books in 2011,
I had a whole chapter where I was talking about
the thought experiment of what might happen
if an extraterrestrial being came to earth
shopping for the one good faith.
And what I did there, I mean, some people might think that I was, you know, being
facetious, but I actually I was being deadly serious. I said, take every single
issue that you could think of from the most consequential to the most banal,
and I can find you two religions that purport the exact opposite prescription.
Does God want you to eat prosciutto? Yes,
if you're Catholic, absolutely no, if you're Jewish or Muslim. What's God's view on homosexuality?
I can give you some that are totally okay with it, some that are not. I mean, literally, I give
a million. So how can you then argue for a specific religion when on any given point, I can find
two religions that are perfectly contradictory. Okay. Okay. Okay. So I think I have an answer to
that that you might find at least interesting. So I forgot that in your book, you laid out the
rationale for nomenological networks. Let me just develop that a little bit. And this is your new book. Okay, so the idea of a normal logical network is akin to the idea of sensory
quintangulation. Let's call it that. And so
everyone knows that we have five senses. Now, each of those senses uses a qualitatively
different strategy of measurement, right?
Somewhat independently evolved.
And so our proposition as embodied biological organisms is that if something manifests
itself simultaneously in the domains covered by the five dimensions of our senses, it's
real, right?
So what's real? You can taste it, you can touch it,
you can see it, you can hear it, you can feel it. If you can do all five of those, then there's a
pretty damn good chance that it's real. Now, actually, that turned out not to be real enough.
And that's partly why the development of language
And that's partly why the development of language had some adaptive utility. Because you and I can communicate, I can use your five senses transmitted to me through
the linguistic domain to calibrate my five senses.
And then we can do that on mass and to a large degree.
That's what science does.
All right.
So you take multiple independent sources of measurement.
And if they converge, then you assume that there's something there.
Fair enough so far?
Yeah, I'm with you.
Okay, okay.
I would say from what I've been able to understand that that's what the unions did in
their archetypal analysis.
Now you can debate, as the postmodernists have, about whether or not what they found was
curious.
But in my maps of Meaning Book, what I tried to do was to take what the unions had discovered
by constructing a normal logical network of cross-cultural, mythological analysis, and I tried to beat
that against the measurement techniques of behavioral psychology and neuroscience. And
I found, at least I claimed in that book, to have found like a substantive, non-trivial
and surprising degree of overlap. So, so let me, and I think this is relevant to your
book on happiness. Now, you tell me what you think about this because happiness doesn't just mean transitory, he don't enjoy.
And you certainly don't think that because that isn't how you live.
So, the core element of the hero archetype is the injunction that you should advance courageously
in the face of threat.
If said threat stands as an obstacle
between you and a valid goal.
Yes.
Right, right.
And so that's different than rabbit mythology,
which would be when you see a wolf freeze.
The human myth is, no, no.
When you encounter a threat,
you explore it until you master it.
Okay, and as far as I can tell, all the variants of hero mythology are basically that, right?
It's the dragon fight is that you find the terrible predator, and that's what a dragon is.
It's an emblem of the predator, and you encounter that voluntarily, and as a consequence, you get the virgin.
So that's on the sexual front, and you get the gold, and that's on the material front.
And so, and, you know, the Jungians to their credit, and I really do think to their credit,
pointed out that that underlying narrative structure
makes itself manifest cross-culturally in a multitude of forms.
Now, unfortunately to understand that, you
have to throw yourself pretty deeply into that body of research, right? And it's pretty
arcane and Jung thought symbolically. And so he's not a particularly, he's not a thinker
who's particularly amenable to people whose primary mode of thought is rational rather
than pattern recognition, right, right, right.
So, but, like, I do think the unions used a nomological network and I think that the core religious
doctrine that they converged on was something like the University of the University of
the Hero Myth and the redemptive quality of that courageous advancement in the face of
the unknown.
And so, that's a place where you could,
because your question was, well,
there's all these competing religious claims, right?
And I'd say, well, there's no way I can offer
a contrary perspective to that viewpoint,
given the multitude of contradictory religious claims.
But then I would say there's a hierarchy of claims
and some of them are more central. And there is a convergence at the level of what claims are most central.
And I think the convergence is analogous to your proposition that you should abide by the truth
in your communicative, in your exploration and your communicative enterprise.
And I think that's associated with the kind of happiness that you're writing about in your new book.
Write a kind of deep happiness.
Right. I mean, I agree largely with all that you're writing about in your new book. Write a kind of deep happiness.
Right.
I mean, I agree largely with all that you've said about the universal myths that young
ians talk about.
And again, there have been many studies from an evolutionary perspective that look, for
example, that if I want to study female sexuality, the best way to study it is to do a archetypal analysis of the male hero in
romance novels. And it turns out that
the male hero in romance novels is the
exact same guy in every single romance
novel that has ever been written. I
mean, to the point that you would think
it's been plagiarized. He is tall to my
detriment since I'm not tall. He
wrestles alligators on his six pack and wins.
He is a surgeon and a prince.
He's reckless in his behavior,
but he can only be tamed by the love of one woman.
And so I just describe every single.
Beauty in the beast.
Yeah, exactly.
And so these archetypal narratives are universal precisely because they are an
indelible part of human nature. And that manifestation exists independently of whether you believe in
the supernatural origin of those stories or not. But if I can just quickly segue into my forthcoming
book, so I do talk about religiosity and happiness in my forthcoming book, and you and
many other folks who are, you know, are very pro-religion, will be happy to know that the research shows,
and I know that you probably know this, that there is a moderate correlation between religiosity and
happiness, meaning that on average, people who are more religious tend to manifest higher happiness scores,
but we can discuss why that is. Now, I argue that that doesn't mean though that if you're not religious,
you can't find your way to mount happiness. And I can couch it in a divine language. So you and I
are right now engaging in an intoxicating conversation
that is truly divine, right?
Friendships are divine, as Aristotle said,
and as I describe in my book,
the love that you have for your children and your wife
is a form of divine love.
Having purpose and meaning in your chosen profession,
I talk about that in the book.
I basically argue that the two most important decisions
that either make you happy or incredibly miserable
is choosing the right spouse and choosing the right profession.
If you make those two choices correctly,
you're well on your way to being a happy person.
That was Freud's observation, right?
Work and love, that was his prescription
for a meaningful existence.
Exactly.
And look, and he
said it 100 years ago, and I've said it today precisely because they are universal truths to our
earlier point. One of the things that I did in this book is really delve into the ancient Greeks,
you know, Epicetides and Sanica and Marcus Aurelius. And here I want to point to a quip that my fellow Lebanese friend, Nassim Talib once told
me, which turns out to be hauntingly true.
He once was teasing me that he said, I don't know what you study in psychology, God, because
everything that there is to know about human nature, the ancient Greeks have already said.
And now he was, he was quipping me, he was teasing me.
But as I started delving into that literature,
I said, I think Naseem might be right,
because I would get some, I would get some insight,
for example, about the link between cognitive behavior,
therapy, and some other mechanism of, you mechanism of happiness and so on.
And then I find out that epictetus had made that exact point over 2,000 years ago.
So I think that there are these universal truths that exist, whether it is in how we seek
happiness or in any other domain of human import that are universal precisely
because they are an indelible part of our human nature.
I mean, that's why I love evolutionary psychology so much
because it is very difficult to have powerful explanations
of human behavior void of an evolutionary understanding
of our species.
And so it always amazes me that people exhibit
an animus to evolutionary psychology.
What else could it be?
Where did your brain come from
if you take it outside of the purview of evolutionary theory? So one of the things that I talk about in the
book that speaks to your very kind introduction at the start where you talked about me having a
sense of humor, I have a whole chapter on I call it life as a playground and I basically argue that even the most serious pursuits,
for example, the pursuit of science, is a form of play.
It's the highest form of play, right?
Because in the same way that you try to solve
a 1,000 piece puzzle by putting the pieces together,
well, what is science?
It's drawing links between a whole bunch of variables
that here to four, you didn't know, were linked together.
So the whole endeavor of science
is a form of orgeastic higher order play, right?
And so, if it's done right.
If it's done right.
And so that's, by the way, one of the reasons why,
I have the sense of humor that I have,
is because I think it's a very, very powerful way
to communicate very serious things.
Some people will say, oh, but aren't you abasing yourself as a serious professor by
dawning that pink wig or by self-flagulating because you're mocking that your friends
with Jordan Pearson?
No, because mockery is actually an astronomically powerful way to demonstrate certain forms of
lunacy, right? That's why
dictators will usually try to eradicate the satirists first. They don't go after the guys with
the big muscles. They go after the guys with the sharp tongues and the stinging pen,
because those are the ones that are the biggest threat. And so, so, Gat just you might be interested in this. So I spent a lot of time studying
Yacht Pankseps work on play and he he detailed out the neurophysiology of play to a greater
degree than any other scientist that I know. And Panksep conceptualized play in really I would
say is the highest as the state of highest possible neural integration,
because play only emerges when all competing motivating and emotional systems have been
satiated and put aside.
So if you're able to enter into a state of play, that's actually an indication that you've
mastered the domain in which you're exploring so thoroughly
that no other competing motivations whatsoever
can emerge to disrupt that.
You know, and laughter,
laughter eradicates muscular tension.
When I used to work out with my friends,
we used to make jokes when people were bench pressing
and as soon as they laughed, they couldn't hold the weight anymore, which was a good part
of the joke. But, you know, I've spent a lot of time in my last tour laying out the
idea to my audiences that the antithesis of tyranny is playing. Like, if you had to
get tyranny is a spirit of sorts, right? It's a malevolent spirit. And you might say,
well, what the hell's the opposite of that? And I don't think it's joy. And I don't think it's like the absence of fear or
pain, I think it's literally play. And so I think you're dead on in that, in the allying of
the spirit of play with the highest form of happiness. It's really something to aim for.
Yeah, exactly right. And actually, so to link play with our earlier discussion about choosing the right spouse.
So as you know, Jordan, one of the fundamental rules, universal rules for a happy marriage
is the birds of a feather flock together maximum.
So they are sort of two competing ideas, opposites attract versus birds of a feather flock
together. Now, if you're interested in a short term sexual dalliance, then opposites attracts might
perfectly, might work perfectly well. I may be introvert, you're extrovert, you might bring me out of my,
you know, sexual shyness, but that's for a short term, you know, dalliance, but for short,
for long term relationships, it is birds of a feather flock together,
at least on things like life, goals, values, belief systems.
It's not at all opposites to try.
Now, that principle of birds of a feather flock together applies specifically
to playfulness. And there's very, very interesting research, which if you're not familiar with,
I'd be happy to send you some links that looks at how
people who assort on their adult playfulness scores tend to have happier marriages. And I give several examples.
Oh, I'd like to see that. Yeah, I'd like to see that.
Yeah, I'll be happy to send you that. Okay.
And so, for example, one of the things that makes, I mean, I know you've met my wife a few times
and you know that we have a very strong relationship,
we've been together for 23 years,
is that we're constantly in play mode, right?
She can rib on me and so for example,
I'll walk into the room,
you know, I'll engage in some kind of full grand
deocity showing off my muscles
and then she'll say something like,
oh, we might need to fortify the base of this house
because I don't think your ego fits in this house anymore.
So that's a very fun, right?
And we're constantly engaging in this kind of play.
We're very, very good friends with each other.
Now, of course, you can't always predict up-pre-rearly
when you're choosing to marry someone,
whether you score perfectly
comparably on all of these things, but trying to find someone who shares your life mindsets
is certainly a prescription for leading a happy marriage.
I'm willing to go play together.
Maybe that's why he was made out of Adam's rim.
Perhaps there you go, bring in the religious narrative.
Wonderful.
Some of the other things that I talk about is I talk about.
So I argue that the most fundamental universal law that is most ubiquitous is
something that Aristotle had already talked about in his Nicomachian ethics book,
the golden mean, right?
Too little of something is not good. Too little of something is not good.
Too much of something is not good.
And the sweet spot lies somewhere in the middle, right?
Which mathematically is referred to as the inverted U, right?
Somewhere in the middle is the time.
And I demonstrate in one of the chapters
that whether it be at the neuronal level,
the individual level, the economic level, the societal level, the
same pattern of the inverted U manifests itself across countless domains.
So for example, how much alcohol should you consume?
That follows and inverted U. How much fish should you consume?
That falls and inverted U. How intense your exercise should be?
That follows and inverted U and how intense your exercise should be, that falls and inverted you and on
and on and on. So the challenge is to try to find where your sweet spot is. And if you can find that,
you're well on your way to happiness. Another thing that I talk about in the book is how to
assuage the threats of regret at the end of your life. So, and here I talk about my former professor of psychology at Cornell, Thomas Gilevich,
who is a pioneer of regret theory.
He argued that there are two sources of regret.
Regret due to actions and regret due to inactions.
So I regret that I cheated on my wife and now my marriage is over.
That's a regret due to action.
Versus regret due to inaction is I always wanted to be
an artist, but I became a pediatrician because my dad was a pediatrician.
And it turns out that people's most looming regret are those of inaction, right?
The what if I wish I would have done.
And so I do you think that's the same thing that befalls people when they hold their tongue,
when they have something to say?
Because that's a form of inaction that could easily resolve the regret.
Exactly.
And that's the same thing.
That's exactly right.
Exactly right.
And that's why, by the way, to use my earlier argument about when I put my head on the
pillow and I need to feel that I didn't walk away from defending the truth, I would be regretful if I did that. If I held my tongue and did not weigh in on Twitter
to some enane BS that someone,
then I would be very regretful.
And therefore I live a life,
some might argue of obsessive authenticity.
And I say obsessive because sometimes I'm authentic
to a fault, I can't hold my tongue
if it means that I'm doing it
for careerist reasons, because then I feel as though
I'm being inauthentic, right?
And so, but that makes me happy
because then my personhood has no fissures.
I don't feel like a fraud, I feel real,
and for better or worse,
then I present myself to the world
with full confidence and happiness.
GAD, how do you, you know, how do you, Twitter is a good example, you know, because
you're very active on Twitter. I don't know if you're as active as I am on Twitter, but we have a
pretty, it's a close battle. And I think our style of interaction on Twitter is analogous.
So I have a couple of questions for you there.
It's like how do you protect yourself against using your,
what would you say, your charismatic fourth rightness?
That's a good way of thinking about it.
How do you protect yourself against using that
egotistically and for instrumental gain?
I mean, you have a wife that pokes fun at you
and that's helpful.
And how do you know you're doing that?
And how do you know you're doing that? And how do you know when you're
poking and prodding to be authentic that you're not, you know, you're not mousing off and going too far
and showing off and engaging in an ego display on that front? How do you do you think you always keep
yourself and check and how do you do it if you do it? Successful. That's an amazing question because I've struggled with that conundrum when two important values
within me conflict with one another. So I'm going to give you an example.
I may have a good friend who's spouting nonsense on Twitter.
And because of my values, maybe my Middle Eastern values, you know, you
don't go after a friend. So I'll hold my tongue for a while. But then I start, there's
that voice in my head that says, but wait a minute, if you hold your voice and don't correct
that person, if you think that they are uttering gibberish, then you're being inauthentic.
That's exactly what happened. not that I wish to bring
him back to the forefront, but that's what happened between Sam Harrison, me, because we were on
very friendly terms. We got along very, very well. We've gone out to dinner. I've been on his show,
and for about four, five years, I get completely quiet about his, you know, Trump hysteria,
because I felt that I owed him him because I knew him, I had
to have kind of a higher standard of restraint. But then at one point, I felt that my being,
restraining in my interactions with him, I was being inauthentic to the truth. And therefore
I went after him. And I thought was a playful way, but he didn't take well to it. And regrettably, I guess I presume that we're no longer friends now, which is a real shame.
And so I struggle with that exact issue.
But I think the fact that I struggle with it is itself a form of ultimate humility, right?
Because if I didn't struggle with it, if I was always self-assured in everything that
I did without having the back voice in
my head, telling me, are you doing the right thing, then I would never engage in these
auto-corrective behaviors.
So I don't have a definitive answer.
I do struggle with that issue.
Is it always best to tell the truth or should you hold your tongue once in a while?
It's a tough one to navigate.
Well, how much do you think, how much of a role do you think the social connections that
you have play in helping regulate your behavior? You have a good relationship with your wife.
Like, are there people in your family, the people that you're close to? Are they keeping an eye on
you and giving you a whack when they think that you've stepped out of line? Well, certainly,
my wife is very good at doing that because in her case, she sees the fact that I might get
because in her case, she sees the fact that I might get angry at some insane thing that's being said at Twitter on Twitter. And then she'll kind of come in because she'll see me like having,
you know, kind of shaking my head on my laptop. She says, okay, what are you upset at now? Who said
what? And then she'll try to kind of come in and say, why don't we go out for a walk or why don't
we play with our children? And so that's another
thing that makes choosing the right spouse so important because they recognize your behavioral
traps, they recognize where you might falter and they make you a better person. I hope I also
offer that to her. And so it turns out to be a beautiful symbiotic relationship.
Yeah, well, I see from how you interact
with your wife, you share a similar love of your wife.
Yeah, you know, and I think we like we used to play together as kids, like we were childhood friends.
And that's true. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you know, what's really been interesting,
God, and this is a really a form of miracle as far as I'm concerned. And I, I think it's because
both of us passed so close
to death in the last few years. I mean, Tammy almost died every day for about eight months. It was
really quite awful. And I was out of commission for two and a half years. You know, when we came
back together, we were pretty alienated from one another because I really hadn't been around for
two years. And she had been recovering from her terrible illness and to some degree in isolation. And, you know, we diver, our pathways had diverged to some degree.
And I was still quite sick when I came back home, you know, and what saved us was the habit of
play that we had established over decades, you know, and we came together again in the field of play.
And that reunited us very quickly.
And the thing that's been so miraculous about this,
and it really has been a staggering revelation to me,
is that that spirit of play has magnified itself now
to such a degree that when I'm with her
and we're in a playful mood, I can see her across in some ways. I can
perceive her across the whole span of the time that we spent together right from 1969 to now.
And it's like I'm playing with that person that I've always known, you know, and that's actually
deepened as we've got to know each other over the decades, that's got more and more profound
and also more and more like a return to the state of mind that we had when we were young
kids, eight years old, you know, playing together as as as friends.
And that's really it's an amazing thing.
It's it's certainly one of the best things that's that's ever happened to me in my whole
life.
So you know, and Eve, the word Eve, I learned this from Ben Shapiro,
the word Eve means beneficial adversary, right?
It means something like optimal partner in play.
That's, oh, I don't know that either.
That's why it's not cool.
That's so cool.
That is very, very cool.
Yeah, so, so the, you know, one of the things,
one of the reasons why I wrote this book,
I never thought that I would write a happiness book.
I thought that Jordan Peterson had already occupied that niche.
But the reason why I wrote the book is because a lot of people would write to me and say,
how is it that you always are able to present yourself to the world as happy?
And of course, about 50% of your happiness comes from your genes that can't be controlled.
Some of us have a Sunday this position, some of us have a more gloomy this position.
And that's fine.
But the good news is that there's still 50% up for grabs, right?
So even if 50% of your genes is coming,
of your happiness is coming from your genes.
There is another 50% that the choices that you make,
the mindset that you adopt that can either increase
the likelihood of happiness or decrease it.
And so I thought, you know what? I'd never thought about the idea of writing a book of happiness,
but tons of people are approaching me with, you know, asking, soliciting advice, why
don't I take a shot at it? And that's what led to my latest book.
Well, you know, maybe to tie this back to the way that we opened our conversation, you
know, maybe one of the reasons too that has protected you to some degree against
being pilloried too extensively, except in those serious cases that we discussed, is the
fact that you've been markedly good at maintaining that playful man through all of your interactions
and that you are willing to put yourself forward, you know, on a fairly, on a fairly regular
basis, even in an absurdist guys with your bright wig and your self-flagelation weapon.
And so, you know, I think that good humor has also been a really good, it's not a defensive
shield, you know, because that, that, that's like something you're hiding behind.
You're not hiding.
And it takes humility, right?
And it takes the supreme self confidence, right?
Because someone could look at that and say,
by God, this guy is looking like a buffoon.
And so it takes a lot of courage to your earlier point
to be able to put yourself in that position, right?
I remember the, one of the first times that I,
I know we've both been on Jordan,
on Joe Rogan's show many times.
One of the nicest compliments that he gave me times that I know we've both been on Jordan, on Joe Rogan's show many times.
One of the nicest compliments that he gave me said, you know, you're really cool because
you're not like many other professors who take themselves too seriously, right?
So I can be austere and professorial when I need to be when I'm speaking at Stanford
and I can be a complete Joker when the occasion demands it.
And one doesn't diminish from the other.
You can both be a serious person and an incredibly playful person. That's certainly a path to happiness. Oh yeah, yeah,
you bet that that's an optimized path to happiness, right? That look, yeah, that's a really good place
to stop. And so your book is coming out in late July. That's the sad truth about happiness. You
said it comes out in July 25th. And so those of you out there who are pouting way miserably and wretchedly might want to go pick up that book and
see if you can pick up a tip or two and also you know as we discussed God
wrote the parasitic mind and that's definitely a book worth picking up if you
haven't done that already so you could you know by both what the hell you know
and then you can free him from the terrible shackles of the communist
satan Hordea University and not be an adjunct from your lips the God's ear and then you can free him from the terrible shackles of the communist sat cantority of university.
And that'd be an illusion.
From your lips the God's ear.
No kidding, yay.
So look, thank you very much for talking to me today.
It's always a pleasure to talk with you.
I hope we see each other in Montreal in person.
That's some not too distant point in the future.
That seems highly probable.
For those of you watching and listening on YouTube,
thank you very much for your time and attention. I hope you appreciated the conversation as I did.
To the Daily Wire Plus folks for facilitating this conversation,
that's much appreciated,
Film Crew here in Toronto, that's appreciated as well.
I'm gonna take that over to the dark side,
the Daily Wire Plus side behind the paywall,
and we're going to talk about more autobiographical and personal
issues, I would say. That's generally the tender there. And so if you want to join us there,
please, please feel welcome and invited. We certainly appreciate your patronage. And otherwise,
GAD, thank you very much for talking to me today. Thank you, sir. Cheers. Yeah, and good luck with the launch of your book, man.
I hope that you rip up the best seller charts and that the New York Times is forced to put you in its list.
Thank you so much, Jordan. Such a pleasure to talk to you and please stay in touch.
I might be coming down to Florida at some point, too. Are you going to be in Florida anytime soon?
Are you coming down to do some lectures for Peterson Academy?
I am. The only decision is whether it's going to be in Toronto or Florida. I'm discussing
it with your people. So that's on the roster, I think, for August.
Excellent. What are you going to let? What are you going to lecture on?
Well, so that's the thing. Of course, it could be the happiness book or evolutionary psychology or the prosthetic
line.
My penchant is to go with the happiness stuff.
It's only to time it with the current book, but we'll see.
I'm open to all possibilities.
Well, you could do three sets of lectures and then you wouldn't have to choose.
That would be great.
Yeah, that would be good.
Okay, well, hopefully we'll see you there or we'll see you in Montreal or we'll see you
in Toronto.
Thank you, Jordan.
Take care. You bet, man. You bet'll see you in Toronto. Thank you Jordan. Take care.
You bet, man.
You bet.
Talk to you soon.
Bye bye.
Bye bye.
you