The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 426. Sex, Death, & Storytelling | Andrew Klavan
Episode Date: February 26, 2024Dr. Jordan Peterson speaks with author and podcaster Andrew Klavan. They discuss the beauty in the “tough guy with a purpose” archetype that inspired Klavan to write, the loss of idealism in main ...characters, the eye-rolling anti-realism in media portrayals of young women, and how superhero films have ushered in an era of storytelling devoid of human nature, and why most new stories and adaptations feel deeply empty. Andrew Klavan is an American podcaster, essayist, and novelist. He has written more than 30 novels since 1977. His podcast, the Andrew Klavan show, has been a staple for years, though Klavan has had other similar shows produced by companies such as Truth Revolt and the Blaze. Klavan has also produced modern “radio plays” for the DW with “Another Kingdom,” which has three seasons. Notably, Klavan was born jewish, but in his adult life converted to Christianity. Andrew grew up as one of four sons in Great Neck, Long island. His father, Gene Klavan, was a NY disc jockey. Andrews 1995 novel, True Crime, was adapted into the hit film by Clint Eastwood. His novel Don’t Say A Word was adapted into a film of the same name starring Michael Douglass. Many of his other works, along with original screenplays, have also been produced. - Links - 2024 tour details can be found here https://jordanbpeterson.com/events Peterson Academy https://petersonacademy.com/ For Andrew Klavan: Watch the Andrew Klavan Show on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/@AndrewKlavan Andrew Klavan’s newest book, “The House of Love and Death” https://www.amazon.com/House-Death-Cameron-Winter-Mysteries/dp/1613164467
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Hello everybody. Today I talk to Mr. Andrew Clavin, who's a compatriot of mine at The Daily
Wire, but also much more than that, an author of some 30 books. He started publishing when he was 25.
He's a thriller writer, a writer of crime fiction,
very much influenced by Dostoevsky,
Crime and Punishment, influenced by Raymond Chandler,
who's probably the greatest noir novelist of all time.
Also the instigator of a number of great movies
like The Big Sleep.
We talked a lot about the noir genre
and about the motif of the flawed masculine hero,
which I suppose is every man that's ever lived,
although they vary substantially on the hero front
and less substantially on the flawed front.
Anyways, we had a chance to delve into all of that
in some depth, into the reality of murder and mayhem, into the difficult
balance between the monstrousness that character is a good man and his necessary guidance by
consciousness, by the necessity for productivity and generosity, the complex decision-making
that a woman has to undergo to evaluate a man who has to be a monster,
let's say, to even be good, but also a tamable monster, so that he's not too terrible in his
monstrosity. We've talked a fair bit about religious issues delving into Mr. Clavin's journey
to Christian faith that paralleled his investigation into the literary domain,
so all that and more in the upcoming conversation.
So, Mr. Clavin, thank you very much for agreeing to sit down and talk to me today.
This will really be the longest extended period of time.
I think that we've been able to talk to each other directly, eh?
Well, you've come on my show a couple times and we've discussed things,
but usually it's pretty brief.
Yeah, yeah, well, good.
This will give us a chance to get into things more deeply.
I thought we would concentrate primarily, I think, today on writing, although we'll
branch out from that wherever we happen to go.
So maybe, first of all, tell me, how many books have you written so far?
I'm afraid there's over 30 of them.
It's been at it a long time.
How long have you been at it?
I published my first novel when I think I was about 25
and I'm now like 110, so it's...
Right, right, right.
It's been a long, long haul, yeah.
So the first one, when you were 25 and there's been 30, are those, is that all fiction?
No, I wrote a memoir of my conversion to Christianity called The Great Good Thing. And
recently, I wrote a book called The Truth and Beauty, which was about the romantic poets.
Right, right.
And, and I'm working on one now, actually.
Ah, what are you working on now?
Now I'm working on a, uh, a book about, uh, about why I write about murder
and my thoughts about murder and what it means.
Oh, yes.
In this society.
Murder and mayhem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I know a couple of, uh, thriller murder mystery writers and I'm a great
fan of, well, I like the genre actually, especially the noir genre from the
1940s and their abouts. Raymond Chandler is something else, man. He's the one who made me
a mystery writer. He's the guy. Is that right, eh? Oh, yes. What do you like about Chandler?
Well, the moment I became a mystery writer was the moment in the big sleep is right at the opening
when Philip Marlowe walks in and he sees a knight in shining armor on a
stained glass window trying to rescue a woman who's tied to a tree and Philip Marlowe says,
if I lived here I'd have to come up there and help him because he's not making any progress.
And that was the first time I saw a tough guy. I was very enamored with tough guys when I was a
teenager. It was the first time I saw a tough guy who had a purpose enamored with tough guys when I was a teenager. The first time I saw a tough
guy who had a purpose, he was carrying within him an ideal of chivalry that he wanted to bring
into the corrupt world. And that was actually Chandler's idea. And I just thought, that's who
I want to be personally. And that's what I want to write about. Yeah, right. Well, there's a St.
George image lurking at the bottom of that. And, you know, that ties in for me.
So the Google boys a while back, the engineers,
they did an analysis of women's use of pornography.
Men's too.
Well, so males use visual pornography
as everyone in their dog knows,
but women prefer literary pornography.
And it's very tightly themed.
Like it's very archetypally themed.
So the typical protagonist is surgeon, werewolf, vampire, pirate, or billionaire, or some
combination, interesting combination of all of those attributes. plot is attractive young woman,
all of whose virtues are not well known.
So it's like Mausie librarian type,
you know, the Hollywood beauty who takes off her glasses
and you know, exactly that.
She attracts the attention of this more predatory male,
let's say, or at least a male with the capacity
to be predatory, entices him into a relationship and helps him reveal his commitment and his good side.
It's beauty in the beast fundamentally, which I really think is the fundamental female archetype.
There's a heroic archetype that goes along with the feminine as well, because women also
confront the unknown and all of that.
But it is the fundamental, it's certainly the female, fundamental
female sexual archetype. And so what that means, this is perhaps what struck a chord in your soul,
is that you were enamored, you said, of the image of tough guy, right? And so that would be equivalent
in some sense to a desire from the Jungian perspective of incorporation of the shadow, right, to make
yourself into someone who's capable of being stalwart and tough, a James Bond sort of figure.
That's a good example in the modern age. But then you found that that should be
allied with a purpose, right? And that rescuing of the maiden, you know, that goes two ways.
Of course, the maiden gets rescued. But the fact that that dangerous herouing of the maiden, you know, that goes two ways. Of course, the maiden gets rescued,
but the fact that that dangerous hero rescues the maiden
and is therefore attractive to her is also his salvation.
Right, and I mean, it is the problem
that young men have to solve, right?
It's the problem of power.
You know, we have strength, we have power,
we have a kind of sexual power as well.
And you start to think, well, you know, if you don't want to be the bad guy.
I mean, at some point, every young man realizes that nasty guys get more sex and they realize
that people who push women around can be very successful.
And you have to say to yourself, well, is that who I want to be?
And I very much did not want to be that guy, but I did want to be successful with girls. And I also, I also could perceive just in an actual fact that the world is a
corrupt place and its power that makes it corrupt. And Raymond Chandler has his, that
famous wonderful line down these mean streets, a man must go who is not himself mean. And
that right, okay. So, so on that too.
So the literature shows, so what, what the psychopaths and narcissists, the Machiavellians
and even the sadists do the man is that that the false confidence of the narcissist is a
mimicry of competence.
That can be put on very early.
Young women are particularly susceptible to that camouflage, and that partly accounts
for the differential success of bad boys, let's say.
It's partly because the women are looking for the beast that can be turned into the
ally, but it's not easy for them to distinguish the beast
who is beast right to the bloody core
and should be stayed away from in every possible way
from the potentially redeemable Philip Marlowe hero.
And then there's another complication too,
to say something in favor of the more beastly man
is that the other thing a woman doesn't want
and no
man really want to have around either is a man who's actually weak and unskilled
who pretends to be moral and kind you know not only to cozy up to women but
also to parade his weakness as moral virtue you know I'm not the mean guy
I'm not the bad guy well I'm not the bad guy.
Well, the reason for that is you're too goddamn weak
to manage that.
And that, and instead of just admitting that forth rightly
and doing something about it,
you parade it as a moral virtue.
You know, and I think that sort of man
is actually a lower form of man than the outright bully.
And there's some evidence that other people think this too,
you know, because the kind of anti-social bully types,
especially in elementary school, aren't unpopular.
They're ambivalently popular.
Now, what happens is that as their life progresses, if they continue with the bullying attitude,
let's say that sort of narcissistic and even callous attitude towards others.
It doesn't work well as a long-term strategy,
but the bullies are certainly more popular
in elementary schools, say, and even in junior high
than the bully victims are.
I think it goes beyond that.
I mean, I think this is why feminism
has blown up in women's faces so much
is when you outlaw masculinity, when you call it toxic,
when you make people feel bad about their masculinity, only outlaws can be masculine.
So if you look at the golden age of television we just passed through that lasted about 10 years
from about 2020 to 2010 or 15, all of the shows were about bad guys, the Sopranos, the Shield,
the Wire, all about guys who really cut the edge. This fellow Andrew Tate, who is a buffoon and a pimp and just a terrible person, for
a period he was immensely popular, especially with team boys.
He would tell people how to abuse women and how to get them into sex work for your profit.
I would look at that and I would say, the guy's a pimp.
What are you talking about?
Right. But they would say, well, you're not hearing him,
you're not really understanding him.
But I think I was, I think that what they had lost
was the idea of St. George.
They had lost the idea that your power
is a path to virtue, it's not an obstacle to virtue
if you use it correctly.
Yeah, well, you know, and to give the devil is due.
I mean, the thing about Tate is he is a complex character
because not all of his bravado and posturing and to give the devil is due. I mean, the thing about Tate is he is a complex character because
not all of his bravado and posturing is false because he is a mixed martial arts fighter. He is a genuinely tough guy, and he is also someone who came up from the street. And so you could
imagine that within his soul, all sorts of different forces contend. And just, and I am not making excuses for him
because I think the electronic pimping aspect
in particular is like, I think that's unforgivable.
It's absolutely 100% unforgivable.
There's no excuse forever having done that in your life,
not even once, and it's not even necessarily
the kind of sin that you can recover from,
not without like 20 years in serious
hang your head repentance. But he is a complex
figure because allied with his bravado is a genuine physical toughness. And it is definitely the case
that as you pointed out, something I learned about years ago is that, you know, if you think that
like strong men are dangerous, you wait till you see what weak men are capable of. And if you demonize everything that's positive, everything positive that's
associated with masculinity, you do drive it into the unconscious,
you drive it underground.
And then you do get this weird attraction, you know,
like another element of that attraction is who is that?
There was a, there was a show for a long time about a serial killer who
decided to dexter, dexter exactly the same sort of thing, right?
And you see the same sort of thing pop up, for example,
in 50 Shades of Grey, which is, again,
an archetypal example of the feminine proclivity
for a certain kind of structured pornography.
So, yeah, okay, so when you started writing,
it's so interesting that that image,
that stained glass image of St. George, right?
Because St. George fights the dragon, which is the real evil.
He's like Prince Philip in Sleeping Beauty.
You remember when the evil queen turns into the dragon?
Prince Philip fights off the dragon,
which is the unknown itself.
And then he's able to free Sleeping Beauty.
It's exactly a St. George motif.
And the same thing happens in the Harry Potter stories,
right? Because Harry goes underground to fight off the dragon of chaos, and that's the basilisk
that turns you to stone, the thing that makes you terrified. And he frees Virginia, Ginny, Ginny,
his best friend's sister, right? And they kind of have a romantic entanglement. And he does that
with the help of the phoenix
in some sense that helps him be reborn.
And he's reborn in partly part of consequence
of actually having faced the,
this under structure of chaos, right?
And confronted the mean streets and the darkness
that's underneath every society.
So that's that called to you from,
from the Philip Marlowe novels, from Chandler's work. So that's that called to you from from
The Philip Marlowe novels from Chandler's work. Oh, it was it's the moment reading that passage was the moment
I thought this is the kind of writing I want to do and also this is the kind of person
I want to be because one of the things one of the problems with
Storytelling and with mythos is that when it conflicts with reality
You start to have you start to leave victims behind.
And one of the great scenes in the big sleep
is when the detective is playing a chess game
by himself, a solitary chess game,
and he turns over the board and says,
this is not a game for knights.
In other words, this mythos that he brought,
this ideal that he brought into the world
is not fitting with the Los Angeles of the 1950s, which is full of corruption.
And the problem for me with, if you watch, for instance, movies that make romantic heroes
out of mafiosi, the Sopranos, I mean, you're talking about the attraction of a guy.
Tony Soprano is a very attractive person.
The godfather is a very attractive person.
And then you talk to police officers who've actually dealt with those people and every single one of them, their faces turn
scarlet, they just spit rage because they've seen them, they've picked up the bodies, they've
picked up the people they've killed and exploited and they'll tell you they're animals, they're
not really admirable at all. And so bringing that masculine energy into the world, a very delicate operation,
and something that you have to remember as you're doing it, that the people you're dealing
with are real and have the same right to life and health and happiness that you have.
It's very complicated, Enterprise.
Yeah, well, this is also the terribly narrow needle eye that women have to thread, right?
Because they have to find a man who's capable of contending with the darkness of the world,
which means he has to be able to reflect that darkness in his own soul and his own actions.
But he also has to do that while simultaneously being productive and generous.
And so it's an unbelievable tight balance
of opposing forces that women are aiming for.
It's no wonder they overshoot in either direction.
And so, and it's not surprising at all
that they have that proclivity to overshoot
towards the more negative end when they're young.
And that's well documented in the clinical literature.
Right, right.
You mentioned 50 Shades of Grey.
I mean, that's one of the 10 bestselling series
in all of fiction, which is amazing.
Well, it also came up so interesting.
It developed its popularity during the Me Too movement.
So you saw this height of attack on toxic masculinity
at the same time that in the unconscious, so to speak,
there was this
burgeoning desire among women who were listening to this discussion regarding toxic masculinity to
be taken by a brute, this billionaire. You see the same damn thing in Ayn Rand's novels as well
with the interplay between Dagny Taggart. I think it is. And is it Hank Reardon?
Is it Hank Reardon?
I think so that she ends up in a kind of semi-rape dalliance with.
And so the other thing that's very cool about Chandler,
and I'm wondering how this impacted you too,
is he's an unbelievably good stylist.
And master of dialogue, that w that witty harsh film noir dialogue
I mean, I don't think anybody ever topped what Chandler did on the on the gritty novel front
And the big sleep is also a great movie. It is I mean, that's a great movie that long goodbye is a great novel
Yeah, and his writing his writing is unparalleled
I mean, I think that that was one of the key things, of course, like every young man of my time, I was enamored with Hemingway. But when I got to Chandler,
I found something much more beautiful actually on the page. And there was also something
that bothered me about the tough guys. Ernest Hemingway, I think, had a very
deep transsexual theme running through his stories. And one of his sons became an actual transsexual.
And there was always something that bothered me
about his view of sexuality.
And I was also bothered by the fact
that a lot of tough guys become tough
by not caring about the things that I cared about.
So for instance, Castle Blanca may be my favorite movie.
I think it's one of the great movies of all time.
I just watched that this week, man. Yeah, it's perfect. It's perfect. It be my favorite movie. I think it's one of the great movies of all time. I just watched that this week, man.
Yeah, it's perfect.
It's perfect.
It's a perfect movie.
It's a perfect movie.
But there was a point when I started to say to myself,
well, you know, his girl dumped him.
And so he's staying out of World War II.
It's kind of weird.
Right, right, right.
It's kind of like.
And he's bitter about it.
Yeah, I thought your girl dumped you.
You still got to fight World War II, you know?
And so what Raymond Chandler captured
was the responsibility that this guy had.
He was not just a tough guy.
They were not just moments when he had to break the law
and break people's backs and bones,
but they were also these moments
when he was trying to preserve
something that he knew he had inside himself.
And that was just really important to me as a kid.
Right, you see that in the Maltese Falcon too, by the way, which we also just watched, same sort of thing,
this underlying moral commitment of the flawed tough guy.
Yeah, yeah. Well, and you know, the attraction, I think a better example for young men at the moment,
well, Rogan's a good example, Jill Rogan's a very good example, because he's definitely a monster
who's got himself under control, but Jocko Willink as well.
Oh, yes, of course.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, because Willink is tough as a boot.
He knows perfectly well, and he's told me this repeatedly in our various conversations
that he could have been quite the criminal because he's definitely got a, I wouldn't
say a bloodthirsty aspect, although that's in there, you know, because he's a
disagreeable guy, he's very competitive, and that disagreeableness and competitiveness
goes together.
Hey, I read an interesting study this week, man, this really helped me understand something
I've been studying for a long time.
So people tend to feel pain as a consequence
of the disruption of social relations.
It's not anxiety, it's pain.
And so loneliness and grieving, for example,
are variants of pain.
And if you take a child who's misbehaving
and you isolate them, that isolation is a punishment
and it's a punishment because it's associated with pain.
And that can be ameliorated with opiates
By the way, like this is very well understood. So part of social bonding
Part of social bonding is mediated by pain responses and I read a paper this week that showed that
People who are more disagreeable, right? So that would be, that's a masculine characteristic,
show less activation in their neurological pain systems
when watching someone else in pain.
And so that's part of that underlying neurology
that can lead to a certain callousness, right?
And a certain lack of care in reference to other people. And it's all, but then you can also understand it as a necessity for things like, well, hunting
would be an example, military service, police, like anytime you're dealing with something where
the threat of physical combat is real, an excess of empathic responding
is likely to be an impediment.
Now the price you pay for that is that if you do have the wiring that makes you less
directly sympathetic in the face of other people's suffering, let's say, you can easily
tilt into the antisocial. Right? So this is another precipice that has to be negotiated
by men who are wired to be competitive and tough. It's like, well, how do you ally that
forthrightness and bluntness? Because that's also part of that, with the willingness to be
generous and productive. I think, you know,
generous and productive. I think, you know,
Jocko told me that the way he learned that
was in the military,
because he found that the development of high levels
of skills in other people,
like that mentoring relationship,
was so rewarding that that's what oriented him.
That was one of the things that oriented him
primarily to the good.
You see this to some degree in those stories that you were talking about, even in the Sopranos.
One of the things that makes movie mafiosos admirable is that they actually produce a
family around them that's structured. There's a mentoring relationship
there. You even see that in Breaking Bad with Walter White's relationship with Jesse, for example.
Oh, absolutely. Breaking Bad is a perfect example of what we're talking about. But again, it's also
an example of the breach between storytelling and reality. I mean, we think in stories. You deal in psychology.
Psychology is a kind of story. Sexual fantasies are a kind of story, and stories are all about
physical action. They're all about things, people moving and doing things. But in real life, I've
met many a man who could break me into physically who hasn't got a moral or strong, morally strong bone
in his body and will cave immediately when he is dominated by a stronger mind.
You yourself, you're not an absolute physical monster, but you're standing up to entire
Canadian government because you have that spine.
One of the tricks for women growing up,
I think is understanding the difference between the kind of strength that turns itself into
brutality in a sexual fantasy and the kind of strength that simply stands where it's supposed
to stand and will not let the world push it aside. And then you return to that fact that
you're not afraid to be isolated. You're not afraid to walk away from the society because when the society is wrong.
I mean, I think this is one of the terrible things we're dealing with now throughout a society
that's lost its mind and lost its way a little bit, is that you have to be willing to be canceled.
You have to be willing to be thrown off social media. You have to be willing to lose your job
even in order to simply speak the truth
And that's a kind of strength that I think men exhibit more than women
And I think that men exhibit it sometimes when if you looked at them you'd think like yeah, that's kind of he's not a real tough guy
He's not I could I could knock him out
Which is why you know you hear the stories of Ben Shapiro being bullied and you think like,
sure, you know, you can be bigger than him, you can hit him, but it's a little hard to
have as much integrity as he has to stand into to walk into a riot and make your speech.
Those are the things that actually in the end play out in a civilized society.
Yeah, yeah. Well, well, well, that speaks to a to a higher order virtue than mere absence of empathy or fear, I think,
because it isn't that certainly like I am very agreeable by temperament as it turns
out and so conflict really does bother me.
Now, I don't think Ben is particularly disagreeable, but he's certainly more disagreeable than
I am.
And there's an element of him that really likes the conflict.
This is obviously not a criticism,
but the issue there is that
there's a kind of commitment to character,
and this is probably the apprehension of this
is what attracted you when you saw that,
or when you were thinking about that stained glass window,
is that there's a kind of character
that's sophisticated
beyond mere physical strength, which isn't trivial,
that enables people to move forward
or to stand their ground despite being afraid, say,
and despite being empathic.
You know, and the fact, it is very complex
because you said, for example,
that that's likely more true of men than women
and that's a tough one, eh?
And so we could take that apart a bit.
I mean, it's certainly the case that the most woke academic disciplines are female-dominated.
And it is definitely the case that women are by temperament more agreeable than men.
And what that means, I believe that's primarily a specialization for infant care.
And that means that the proclivity for...
Because, look, an infant, an infant is always right when it's in distress.
And your moral obligation, this is, say, an infant under six months of age,
your moral obligation as the primary caretaker of an infant
is to never question its emotional distress,
never, and to respond immediately, no matter what.
And being able to do that, and also simultaneously having the wherewithal to withstand conflict,
especially if it's generated on emotional grounds, that's a very contradictory set of demands.
I think that's partly why human beings require two parents.
Because it's just too much, well, it's just too much, I think, for one person to take
primary responsibility for that intense care that characterizes especially the first year,
but particularly the first six months.
And then also to have the emotional capacity to start to implement necessary disciplinary
procedures that result in some definite, some emotional tension, no matter how short term.
You need a man and a woman to play those things off one another.
Oh, I think that's definitely true. Yeah. And also to work out, I mean, mercy and justice are in
conflict everywhere, but in the mind of God.
So I think that it takes two people really
to bring that together.
Yeah.
And it also means you're not just dealing,
when you're dealing with all these archetypes
and when you're dealing with these fantasies
that are stories and these stories that are fantasies,
you have to remember the moral web.
And the moral web is a complex thing.
You know, those things are borderlines that only we can see.
They're not railings in the road.
They're things that you have to be able to say,
I am going to stay within this borderline
and I'm going to be able to define that.
And that's one of the reasons, for instance,
that men go out into the world to support their,
the mothers at home and the mothers don't always know
what the men have to do to get that done
and the men have to make those very difficult decisions. Am I going to, you know,
take this guff from some guy because I need the money? Am I going to do a job that I shouldn't do?
All of those things come into play and that's, you know, again, the complexity is intense and
it definitely takes two people at least and it definitely takes two different kinds of people.
At least, that's right. Yeah, to find the way. Yeah. Yeah, you talked about the interplay of mercy and justice
you know, I think that's a good definition of conscience. The conscience is the voice that
signifies the interplay between mercy and justice and you see this in characters like Philip Marlowe, right? Because
they're obviously meeting out justice
constantly, and that's part of the attractiveness of their character, especially when it's devoted
towards, you know, defending the femme fatale from some evil persecutor. But they're always
leaving that with mercy, and it is as a consequence of following the dictates of their conscience.
And certainly Marlowe is a very conscious,
ridden creature.
So as is Sam Spade for that matter.
And even James Bond for,
on the more comic book end of things.
You know, you were talking too about characters
like Breaking Bad, the guy in Breaking Bad, Walter White.
And in the Sopranos. It's also
been in recent years where we had the rise of the Marvel Universe, and Tony Stark is another good
example of that sort of thing, because that guy is so hyper-masculine that he's damn near fascist.
And it was so interesting to see, first of all, that Iron Man was the Marvel character who rose to
preeminence in the movie fictional universe,
because that certainly wasn't the case
in the comic book world.
He was kind of a minor superhero.
But Tony Stark had those same attributes of, you know,
this sort of hyper masculine, almost narcissists,
this hyper almost narcissistic masculine element.
And it was also very interesting that he ended up allied in
some profound way with the Hulk, right, that they played off each other and that Stark was the person
who was also able to control and deal with and channel the Hulk in the most effective possible
manner. It was very interesting to watch all that unfold, you know, while the whole culture was
spiraling off in the hyper feminine direction.
Well, I think the superhero is a really interesting genre. It always bothered me because it seems to be storytelling without sex and definite, which means it's storytelling in
some sense without human nature in it. And what disturbs me about that is I see this across all genres.
One of the things, one of my absolute hobby horses
is women beating men up in stores.
Every movie is a woman who's gonna punch a guy
and he goes rolling ass over tea kettle out the door,
which is not what happens when a woman punches a man,
her hand breaks and then he beats the crap out of her
and that's a dangerous thing.
But it's also saying something about our attitude to our humanity are turning away from humanity as
Possibly hyper humanity through technology approaches. I mean, I think when I was young you watch stories that were largely about the past
You watch
War movies and cowboy movies and the science fiction that we have is very rare
But it was also kind of a projection of the past into the future.
So even when you dealt with monsters that were very human, they were Dracula, the werewolf
and all that, whereas now we're watching movies and telling stories that seem to look forward
into an inhuman future.
And what bothers me about that is without, because I think it's actually true, is that
without sex and death or beyond sex and death, there's still going to be a moral web and we're still
going to have to negotiate it. And yet the immediate punishments for immorality, the fleshly
results of immorality are not going to exist anymore. Just like with, for instance, birth control,
you can treat your body like a pincushion and not get pregnant and maybe solve your syphilis problem.
And yet the moral web is still in place.
You will destroy yourself by simply
retreating yourself with this respect.
Well, let's walk down.
Yes, well, absolutely.
Let's walk down that road a little bit.
I mean, I think at a deep level, part of what you see,
part of the reason that you see the sorts of things
that you're describing, which is women occupying
the more masculine heroic role taken to the extreme
in say the superhero movies where women
are regularly beating the hell out of men,
which as you said, virtually never happens in real life.
And this sort of ties into some of the things
that the Daily Wire has been doing, for example,
with their documentary questioning, what is a woman? And, you know, it's easy for that to be a
satirical question, and that was a satirical documentary. But there's actually something
really fundamental going on at the base of that, because the truth of the matter is that with the
introduction of the birth control pill, The question, what is a woman,
actually became immediately paramount.
And now that's been unfolding for multiple generations
because the obvious distinction,
the most obvious distinction between men and women
prior to the pill was the ease
with which one of them could get pregnant.
And it was impossible for one of them and very
easy for the other. And that turned out to be a walloping difference and perhaps the cardinal
difference. I mean, the biological definition of female is literally that sex that gives up most
in the process of sexual reproduction, that devotes the most resources.
And you see that even in the relationship between the sperm and the egg,
I think the egg has 10 million times the resources of a single sperm
in terms of what it's donating to the gamete.
It's something like that.
And so, and that's echoed at every level of the dichotomy between masculine and feminine.
So, what is a woman?
A woman is the human sex that devotes most to the problems of reproduction.
So that's a good definition.
Now you upend that with the pill, right?
Because all of a sudden that difference is ameliorated to some substantial degree.
Now your point is that doesn't change the underlying moral landscape.
It changes it somewhat, right? Because the immediate consequences for for fornication,
let's say, to use an archaic term for sleeping around, the immediate consequences are clearly
ameliorated. And that leaves us to wonder, well, you know, the whole 1960s was an experiment in some ways.
It's like, all right, sex has now become consequence-free
or so we thought.
Well, then why not have an endless orgiastic party?
And that's actually a real question
because the reason to do it is clear.
And the reasons not to do it have become murky.
Well, AIDS put the paid to that demented dream quite rapidly.
But then there were more subtle things, right?
And one of the subtle things is, well, okay,
why isn't a woman, why can't a woman
just replace a man now entirely?
And how do we discover the limits to that?
You know, I see some limits emerging and, you know, I mean,
we now know, for example, that half of 30-year-old women now don't have a child.
Half of them. It's more than half, actually.
Half of them will never have a child.
And 90% of them will regret that. And so even if we push, even if we erase in
our 20s the difference between men and women as the difference is erased in childhood,
because boys and girls are quite similar compared to say teenage boys and teenage girls,
even if we equilibrate men and women in their 20s, that certainly
doesn't mean we equilibrate them in their 30s.
I think it's an open question whether if you remove the immediate physical consequences
of a bad act, it ceases to be a bad act.
I think that this is the key question that you're facing right now.
In the truth and beauty, I write a chapter on Frankenstein in which I make the argument
that Frankenstein, the doctor Frankenstein who creates this monster has not violated,
as Mary Shelley did, has not violated God's prerogative.
He's violated a woman's prerogative.
He's created a being, which we all do.
Anyone who has a child has created a living being, but he creates
it without a mother. And if you read Frankenstein in that way, you begin to see that science
and fantasy have been beginning, have been trying to solve the problem of women and the
fact that they create a consequence, a deep consequence to our chief physical pleasure.
They've been trying to solve that since science existed and really since imagination existed.
I mean, prostitution in some ways is a way of trying to solve that problem as well.
And I believe that the attacks on men now are not really attacks on men.
What I think they are is trying to clear men out of the way so that women can cease being
women and can actually become men as well because what women do is they raise this question
Are we purely physical beings if you can remove the physical consequences of a bad act?
Does it cease to be bad? Is there something within us and I obviously I'm a Christian
I believe there is it is there something within us that is damaged by
Immoral action well the evidence seems to be that there is actual.
Well, actually the evidence with regard to that is clear.
So let me lay it out.
The clinical evidence is clear.
Okay, so let's go down deep into the biological for a minute to sort that out.
Okay, so there's two fundamental strategies of reproduction among sexually reproducing creatures.
There's the zero parental investment strategy, and there's the profound parental investment
strategy on the two ends.
So fish and mosquitoes by and large are on the zero investment end.
What they invest is sperm and egg, and that's pretty much it.
And so, and what, the way those organisms manage that is they produce
tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of copies of themselves
and leave them to their own devices and almost all of them perish.
But almost isn't the same as all.
And if you produce 100,000 offspring and only one survives,
you're successful in replication.
Okay, on exactly the other end of the spectrum are human beings,
because our offspring have the longest dependency period
period by a long margin, even compared to our
immediate primate cousins, and that's partly a consequence of our
rapid or comparatively massive cortical expansion and the need for
extensive socialization. We're a high investment species. Okay, so now let's look within the
realm of human attitudes towards reproduction. There's a distribution. There are those who engage
like mosquitoes in short-term mating strategies. And there are those who engage
preferentially in long-term pair-bonded mating strategies. Okay, now we could ask ourselves,
what are the personality characteristics that go along with that? Well, the clinical literature
and the personality literature are clear. Here are the predictors of short-term mating strategy preference. Early-onset criminality, familial
history of antisocial behavior, psychopathy, narcissism, Machiavellianism,
and sadism. Right, and so and it's worse than that. Not only do those predict the
proclivity and preference for short-term mating,
one night stands, let's say, sex only for pleasure in the absence of a relationship.
It's also the case that
practicing that
produces those personality characteristics.
And then you could see why, because if the goal is that you're going to subordinate all things,
including the possibility of any relationship whatsoever,
to mere sexual pleasure, you're now using the other person as an object for pleasure,
but you're also using yourself. You're also training yourself in a form of psychopathy.
And so I don't even think this is debatable. I think the evidence for this is like I've known for 35 years that one of the best predictors of criminal
Proclivity among teenagers is early
Early and frequent sexual experience. That's been known forever forever
No one debates it in the in the criminology domain and the same is exactly true in
Personality with regards to these dark, you know, sadism in the criminology domain. And the same is exactly true in personality
with regards to these dark,
you know, sadism, psychopathy,
Machiavellianism and narcissism.
So for all the women who are listening,
men too for that matter,
if you're out with a guy and his orientation is,
you know, let's get it on, babe.
It's one night stand.
There's no more reliable marker
of his untamable primordial malevolent beastliness than that.
Right. And there's not a debate about that.
And it brings us back to where we started in a way. I mean, this is the conundrum we're faced with
in this scientific moment, is can you solve the problems of being a human being without
solving human beings, without getting rid of human beings themselves. Because all of the things that we admire are very basic and yet in a
civilized society have to be maintained in a civilized way. And so this is, to me, the
essential question we're looking at. We talk about what is a woman, which is an excellent
question, but what is a human being and what exactly,
we can't even begin in my opinion,
in my opinion, we're in this moment of great transition.
Not only is my generation passing away,
but all kinds of world orders are passing away
and a new age is coming in.
And we're asked, we have to start with this question,
who are we trying to serve?
What is the creature that we're trying to build governments around,
that we're trying to build communications around,
that we're trying to build avenues of information around?
And I don't think the question is asked often enough.
What you have is the people at the top trying to solve problems with great big,
wonderful ideas and in Davos,
they're going to have the great reset and so on.
And then, yeah, the people on the bottom are just saying,
leave me alone.
And let me do what I wanna do.
And obviously somewhere between those people
is the idea that kind of the American founders started out
with is what are people, what do they do right,
what do they do wrong, and how do we not only control
the people, but how do we control the people
who control the people?
And I think we're back to those questions again and and I fear that these
not the scientific worldview, but the scientific worldview
Blinds us to certain things that that people are and that may be ineffable
I think everything has a has a physical analog, but it doesn't mean that that's its cause and you see this in
in for instance when we drug people
for depression and they feel happier, are they happier? And I think a lot of them are not as
shown by the fact that we now have a medicine for depression and yet depression is spreading.
When you have a medicine for polio, polio goes down. When you have a medicine for depression,
it spreads. And I think that's because we're not actually treating the depression.
I think most psychologists now agree with that.
Well, you know, one of the things
that we're skirting around in some sense
is the question of what limitations,
like the question of what defines a man or a woman
or a human being is actually a question
in some sense of boundaries and defining limitations.
Right.
Right.
Now, one of the ideas I've been wrestling with recently is that death makes things real.
You know, because one fundamental philosophical question is, well, what does it mean for
something to be real? And it seems to me that the hallmark of the real is death, is the finitude of existence.
Something can be so real that if you encounter it, it kills you.
And then if that's true, if mortal limitation defines reality,
it makes...
Let's walk through that.
Is something that threatens you with death serious?
Well, yes.
Right, right.
Death now, it might not be the most serious reality,
because I think you could make a case
that something that threatens your soul
is more real than something that threatens your life.
And I think if people understood that distinction,
they would sacrifice their life to save their soul. So that's something we could talk
about. But in any case, the logic of the argument depends on accepting the proposition that what
we take most seriously is what we regard as most real, and certainly those things that threaten us
with death we regard as most serious, and therefore are those things that help us define what is real.
I don't know if we transcended our mortal vulnerability,
which is the dream of the transhumanists.
It seems to me that we would,
instead of solving the problem of mortality,
I think we would substitute a kind of soulless existence for life itself.
It's something like that, you know, because you might say, well, if you now can't be killed,
if you're now an immortal creature, which in principle is the aim of, you know, of all of our
striving to overcome our illnesses
and our subjection to weakness.
Like, are you, is there anything in you that's now human?
Yeah, I think this is absolutely true.
And death not only makes things real,
it actually gives us meaning.
You know, the poet John Keats said
that life was the veil of soul-making.
And I think that the reason it's the veil of soul-making
is death gives everything,
all meaning I think comes from death.
Even the moment of love, the fact that it's precious,
the fact that it passes,
the fact that every moment passes
is what gives it such urgency and importance.
And then one of the arguments I've heard
against Christianity, against the Christian idea of eternity
is that where will the meaning come from?
I think that's a solvable issue obviously, but still here now
We are dealing it is it is death that gives our life meaning and is death in which we find the meaning of life
there would be no purpose
I don't know. I believe that if we
If we had no death if we actually eradicated that, we'd get something like the
end of the time machine where those people are sitting around doing absolutely nothing
and just kind of floating downstream.
And it looks like paradise, but in fact, it's hell.
And I think that that is...
This is the thing that disturbs me so much about these superhero movies is really when
you take away the traits that make us human, death and sex,
eros and thanatos, you've taken away the meaning of being human as well and you leave us with
virtually nothing. And some of these transhumanists also become death worshipers because what they
talk about is it's, it'll be great when human beings are gone, it's time for these meat sacks
to get out of here and leave
everything to AI.
There are people who believe that AI is more important than we are.
And for me, it's always the question of like, why?
What consciousness does AI have?
What is precious about AI?
We're the ones who are precious precisely because we die, precisely because this moment
and this internal life that I lead and that you have to assume
I lead because you lead one too.
That's where all of the meaning
exists and the fact of your life is so urgent and sacred.
Well, right, right. Well, the relationship between urgency and the sacred is definitely
it's a very close relationship.
And if you have infinite time,
the question that immediately arises is then why anything now?
Right?
And I think that's actually in some ways you might say even
that that's one of the curses of plenitude and wealth,
especially if it's unearned.
It's like, well, how much urgency does there have to be
to drive you forward in a meaningful fashion?
You can think about this in terms, for example,
of the effects of pornography.
You know, we know that young people are much less likely
to couple than they were.
This is particularly pronounced in places
like Japan and South Korea,
where I think it's about one third of the young people there
under 30 are virginal. And one of the questions you might ask yourself is, well, how much is
the fractious but necessary long-term relationship making between men and
women driven by what? By sexual urgency and scarcity, right? And you see the same thing
if you're reasonably well off financially,
the same conundrum emerges with regards to your children,
which is, well, how do you provide them
with optimal deprivation,
given that you could provide everything for them,
in which case you become something like the,
you know, the infinite mother that destroys their souls by providing them with so
much care that there's absolutely no reason for them to ever get up and do anything.
That's what I think this whole moment in history is about. I mean, we do seem to be on the verge of
solving so many problems, and yet you solve the problem that the solution is in some ways the problem and the idea of choice
and the vastness of our choices and the lessening of the consequences of our choices actually
threatens to strip us of the human being for whom those choices are made.
Right, right, exactly.
Yeah, and I think that's why the actual, the actual, we have to return to those actual Aristotelian questions of who we are, what we are. It's
a weird thing to be talking about in this moment when it seems like we're going to travel into
space, we're going to travel into interspace, we can clone people, we can make people live forever.
But to me, it's the urgent question. and it's why the ancients matter more than ever
in this hypermodern moment.
It really is, we really are reaching a branch in the road.
I think everybody can feel it coming, and it's dispiriting to hear our leaders talking
in these old-fashioned terms about what they're going to do and how they're going to solve
our problems for us without really taking into account who we are and their responsibility of leaders
to our happiness and to make our happiness possible and to make it possible for us to
find our happiness, which we can only do on our own.
This is something, I think, that makes it so important that we look upon the least of us with compassion. You know, this is why you
look upon the least of us with compassion because they're us. Because in the end, if we can't figure
that out, we can't figure ourselves out. It really is amazing that people who are somewhat older than
this generation, Recently I heard somebody
after the October 7th attacks on Israel, I heard a Columbia student, a woman,
celebrating the slaughter in Israel and quoting Chairman Mao. And I thought Chairman
Mao was the worst mass murderer in human history. I don't think anyone has ever
racked up the body count that Chairman Mao has racked up.
And the ignorance that that entails,
and the ignorance that that entails
spreads out to an ignorance of Shakespeare,
of Plato, of the Bible.
You have to be totally ignorant
in order to be quoting Chairman Mao
as if he mattered morally.
And so I think that we've come to this moment
when futurism makes it seem as if all of the wisdom
that was piled up behind us is meaningless.
What did they know?
They didn't even know whether the sun goes around the earth or vice versa.
But in fact, they knew all the things that mattered because they were dealing with life
at a much more basic level.
And without that basic understanding, the future is going to be a disaster. So there's a scene in the story of Noah that's apropos in that regard.
So Noah is presented as a man wise in his generations, right?
So which means that for a man of his time and place, he was properly morally oriented, which is all that can be required, expected, even in the best
possible case of any of us, with like vanishingly few exceptions.
So he's a good man, and he attends to the warnings of his conscience, and he shepherds
his family and the human race, for that matter, through a complete, bloody, apocalyptic catastrophe, comes out on the other side, which in some
ways is what every single one of our successful ancestors did, right, to manage to negotiate
through life with all its vicissitudes and leave progeny behind,
and leave behind the progeny who actually survived.
It's so unlikely.
So all of our ancestors are Noah to some degree.
Now, after he washes up on shore and the flood recedes,
he plants a vineyard and proceeds to get ripped,
roaring drunk on the consequences, right, once it's
all brewed up.
And he's lying in his tent, nakedness fully exposed, and his son, Ham, comes along and
has a pretty good time poking fun at the old man, right?
And then he decides to get his brothers in on the joke, and he invites them to come and have a gander.
And instead of acting in a manner that's
derisive toward their father, they back into the tent
and they cover him up with a blanket.
And so, and then, but this is where the story gets serious,
because the tradition that surrounds that story is quite
clear. The descendants of Ham are slaves. Right? And so what that means as far as I'm concerned,
and I think this is dead right, and it's relevant to what you were saying, is that
you adopt a pose of moral superiority, derisive moral superiority to the past
at your immense peril.
Because if you're foolish enough to presume that,
for example, in your stunning ignorance and moral superiority,
that Chairman Mao is a model,
the probability that you're going to end up as a slave is 100%. You're already
a slave to the ideology. You know, it's only by...
I have to tell you a wonderful story from my Hollywood days because they made the Noah
story into a movie with Russell Crowe, a big epic movie. And they completely changed God's
motive being Hollywood. They completely changed God's motive, being Hollywood, they completely changed God's motive
for destroying the world from sinfulness to being not environmental enough so that they
weren't being green enough. But according to the producers, what the evangelicals complained about
was that they showed Noah getting drunk. And the poor Hollywood producers were left explaining
to the religious Christians that,
no, that was actually scriptural.
That was actually in the Bible.
So piety of any kind is actually a way of blinding ourselves to what human beings are
in both their decency and their wickedness.
And I actually think that this, I believe, you know, there's always been, especially
in the, once the stage of science begins, there's always been, especially in the, once the stage of science
begins, there's always been this idea that you can find a single governing motivation
for human behavior. So you have Freud with ours and yeah, and power and alienation.
But I think one motivation that we completely forget about is the motivation to appear virtuous
to oneself and others. And I think that the knowledge of our brokenness, the knowledge of what we really
are is just intolerable to so many people.
And it's that that I think causes you to have both the pious Christian who couldn't
care less about the person next to him and the guy in Davos who thinks he's going
to, it's fine for him to make the decision.
Okay, well you put your finger on something absolutely crucial there, I think. So
one of the things I've been exploring really in depth, especially in the last month,
is the intersection between a biblical injunction and a gospel injunction.
intersection between a biblical injunction and a gospel injunction.
So the biblical injunction is do not use the Lord's name in vain.
Now, people think that means don't swear, and that isn't what it means.
It isn't what it might mean that in some peripheral sense, because it is a warning against the careless use of God's name.
But what it really means is, do not claim moral virtue,
especially of the highest sort,
for acts that are clearly self-serving.
Now, there's no more self-serving act
than one that's narcissistic,
and by definition,
because narcissism is the core of self-serving.
Okay, so a narcissistic act is one
that elevates my moral virtue falsely.
Okay, so now then imagine the worst extent of that sin
is for me to claim that my narcissistic motivations
are actually done in the name of what's highest.
And that would be God in the case
of the totalitarian religious zealot.
And it would be compassion in the case
of the modern
left-leaning
atheist who, you know, has basically made the goddess of mercy his or her unconscious God.
Okay, so now I can claim false moral virtue and I can elevate my
social status and myself regard without commensurate effort,
especially, and I can circumvent all the problems you just described,
which is actually contending with the depth
of my genuine misalignment and sin.
Okay, now that's echoed in the gospels.
Like Christ goes after the Pharisees in particular,
particular as hypocrites.
And so they're the religious types
that you just described,
the ones that parade their moral virtue.
They're the same as the bloody modern protesters too.
But the false butter won't melt in their mouth, evangelical types,
and the zealots in the Islamic world, they're all of the same type.
They take this unearned moral virtue,
their acolytes of God, and they use that.
Christ accuses their praying in the marketplace,
which is no different than protesting,
to elevate their social status
so that they have good reputation among men,
which he also warns about,
and so that they can occupy the highest seats
in the synagogue.
And so there's this terrible
sin and its opposition to that sin that gets Christ crucified, right? Because it's the Pharisees
he really makes enemies of. And he says to them, he says, they worship the dogma of men as if it's
the commandments of God and that they are the same people that would have killed the prophets whose words they purport to worship.
Like their vicious criticisms being put forward by Christ.
He makes terrible enemies out of the Pharisees.
But what he is calling out
is exactly what we see at Davos.
It's exactly that,
this presumption that mere ideological purity
and the claim to serve a higher power, I'm saving the
planet, is sufficient to pass for genuine, the genuine moral effort of
hoisting your own goddamn cross as it turns out in a more
fundamental sense, right? It's a substitute for true moral effort.
That's, it's true and it brings us back to the idea about sometimes solving the problem is the problem.
One of the wonderful things about the Enlightenment
is it gave us all these systems that marshal human flaws
for the good of all.
So you have capitalism, which is, you know,
a wonderful economic system.
And you have democratic republics,
which elevate people to power ostensibly on merit
and some kind of
connection to the people. But they don't eliminate the fact that the love of money
is the root of all evil and power corrupts. So what you now have is
people who no longer have to confront the parasitical nature of their wealth
because they can say, oh well I created jobs, I created wealth, I spread the wealth.
But they're still corrupted in soul because they fall in love with money which is a form of idolatry and it does eat people away.
And you have people who are in power, whether through wealth or through election, who can
say, well, it's not like Henry V thinking all this is a ceremony.
I actually have been elevated by the people or by election or I created amazon.com or
I did something like that.
And yet that power is still corrupting.
So as we solve the problems, we still haven't eliminated the fact that the human being is
a broken system.
It's a contradictory system, a system that actually is aiming, but it was at Oscar Wilde,
I think, who said, we're all standing in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the
stars.
And I think that that idea that we forget that we're standing in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars. And I think that that idea that we forget that we're standing in the gutter, because
now we can actually say, you know, Tolstoy, you know, found God and he realized he thought,
oh my God, I'm a parasite.
I'm living on the backs of the serfs.
But now you don't have to say that anymore.
And people, this is why I despise Ein Rand, by the way.
This is why I just, I spied from the fact that she's a terrible writer. I just can't stand this elevation of power and wealth
to a state of virtue.
It's simply not.
It is power and wealth and sometimes it's deserved
and sometimes it's used correctly
by people who have virtue,
but it's not the virtue itself
and it can be incredibly destructive to the human soul.
Yeah, well, the reason that I've stayed as firmly as I've been able to in the psychological
domain is because I don't believe that systemic alteration strikes to the core of the problem.
I've always been concerned, I would say, my fundamental intellectual interest.
It's not only intellectual.
Existential interest is the issue of evil.
And I'm not really that interested in systemic evil,
partly because I'm much more interested in actual individual motivation.
Because I wanted to know, see, I wanted to know how I could be an Auschwitz prison guard.
But more than that, I wanted to know how I could be an Auschwitz prison guard and enjoy it.
And if you don't think that you are that person, you don't know much about people.
Now, that doesn't mean that there are some people, there are some people who would be tilted more in
the direction of the temptations and
pleasures that being an Auschwitz guard would provide.
There are some people who are more temperamentally protected against that particular sinful
root.
It would be very hard for someone who is hyper-compassionate to make that particular error.
They'd be much more likely to turn into a devouring mother, for example, and infantilize
everyone. But I was
still very curious about how you erect barriers in your own soul to the blandishments of those who
would provide for you an avenue to that kind of sadistic misuse of power. And you might say,
I'd never do that. And I'd say, no, the opportunity for you to do that just hasn't presented itself.
And that might be because of your own inability, not your moral virtue.
You've just never managed to elevate yourself to a place where you have power over anyone
else.
And that's not a virtue.
That's that weak man that we were talking about at the beginning of the discussion.
And that's also what this can segue us into the next part of this conversation. Maybe that's actually also what got me interested in in theological ideas, you know, because I became convinced that
The fundamental issues that be set us are psychological, but that the fundamental psychological issues are indistinguishable from the theological
And so I think the get well, I think the battle against evil,
and I do believe in the reality of evil,
the battle against evil is fundamentally fought in the soul.
And so, now you have had a long journey
towards a relatively elaborate faith,
and it's not the faith that you were born into.
Right.
And so, do you want to walk us through that a bit? And I'd like to know, like, what were the steps?
How did this come about? I'd also like to know how it dovetailed with your fiction writing,
in particular, because I think of the theological as like meta-fiction, you know?
Yeah, it created actual problems in how to write natural fiction.
I, for a while, I wandered into fantasy writing because it was the only way I could express the new level of reality that I was seeing.
But ultimately, I found that very unsatisfying because I feel that God is God of the real world.
I feel he's not a fantasy God, and he's not God of candyland, he's God of this world.
Since I was baptized at the age of 49, it's kind of a long story, so I don't want to go in and do it.
That's okay. We'll lay it out because I'm very curious about, I think it'd be helpful for the
listeners. Well, when I was in college, the first wave of the post-modernists were coming on, and
we're starting to hear about relativism and the disjunctionists were coming in, and we're starting to hear about
relativism and the disjunction of language with meaning and all of these things.
And I guess I was 19 years old and I read Crime and Punishment.
And when was this?
What year was that?
See, if 19, it would have been 73.
73.
Okay.
So now I'm situated in time.
You read Crime and Punishment.
Oh, that'll do the trick. 73. Okay. So now I'm situated in time. You read Crime and Punishment, oh, that'll do the trick.
Exactly.
And you know, here's the scene of a man who, and you know, Dostoevsky was writing before
Nietzsche, but he actually, Dostoevsky, I believe, was an actual prophet and he actually
prophesied what Nietzsche was going to say.
He saw those ideas coming.
And so you have the scene in a novel where a man takes an axe, not just to the pawnbroker
who is bedeviling him, but to her retarded sister
and kills in just a scene of incredible innocence
and evil, kills a woman who has his can't think straight
and just looking at him with
this blank look and I thought you know you know there is no way this is not an
evil act and that's right there is no construct that you can have and this to
me is the only leap of faith I ever took the only leap of faith I ever took in my
journey to Christianity was saying that there is something that is that is evil and therefore something that is good or not
Evil whether or not every single person in the world thinks so and whether or not you can convince yourself
It's not it remains evil and that means yeah
That means that our physical actions and our our mind is linked to a level of meaning
Above the natural which is what I mean when I say supernatural.
I don't mean like magical things happening transcendent transcendent. Yes. And it is it transcends the natural and the physical.
And so for that to be true, first of all that moment when that murder happens in that book inoculated me
to the blandishments of postmodernity.
inoculated me to the blandishments of postmodernity. So when I read, if you read the mad scene in Hamlet,
Hamlet goes through, walks through all of the ideas
in postmodernity.
He says, well, I'm reading, what are you reading?
I'm just reading words, words, words,
as if the words were disjointed from meaning.
He says, nothing's either good or bad,
but thinking makes it so.
Right, right.
And the only thing about that is
Shakespeare, the great, said, was saying, showing to you that Hamlet is pretending to be mad. He
knows that the things that he's saying are mad, but the professors who were coming into my university
didn't know it. They actually thought what they were saying was sanity. And I think what Shakespeare
was saying was they really did know, but they were saying it anyway
because the logic was following that way.
So that did not get any more.
For other darker motivations, right?
Because it allows for a complete abdication
of responsibility and a descent
into responsibilityless hedonism, that comes along with it.
There's no way around that.
That's why the Marquis de Sade is also a standard bearer
of the Enlightenment
rationalists. And Dostoevsky knew that. I mean, the thing that's so remarkable
about crime and punishment, you pointed to one of the things, you know, and it was
certainly my investigations into what had happened in Nazi Germany and in
worse places even, the horrors that were perpetrated, if you can read about those
and you can imagine human beings doing that
and you don't regard that as evil,
I don't wanna be anywhere near you.
That should wake you up, yeah, yeah.
Oh, God, if that doesn't wake you up.
And I think this is so interesting
that you had a very similar experience.
I think Sam Harris had a very similar experience
by the way too, because he's been obsessed
by the issue of evil as well.
Like evil is something so palpable
that if you face it, then you will become,
you'll either become convinced of its reality
or there is no hope for you.
That's right.
That's right.
And when you become so-
So that happened with crime and punishment for you.
That's so interesting.
Well, it did, but because of my milieu, because I was a secular Jew in coastal cities in the
artistic world, I was a novelist, I was dealing with sophisticated people, the idea of believing
in God unironically or even beyond the Jungian, well, you can't tell whether
this is a delivered meaning or a real meaning.
That idea was absolutely close to me.
I couldn't reach it.
So I spent many years struggling with the postmodernist and my novels, the themes of
my novels, how could you tell what was real?
I'm writing thrillers, but there were thrillers about the nature of reality, the inability
of theory to contain reality. And so I was struggling with that. And I was beginning to realize
that you simply could not get to moral reality without some idea of an ultimate good. And
that ultimate good had to be a personal good because there is no good without choice, without
consciousness, without morality. So I was beginning to understand-
Maybe without relationship, without morality. So I was beginning to understand... Maybe without relationship, which is why...
Without relationship, right?
Well, it's so interesting, because one of the things that happens in the Old Testament
is this weird insistence that our fundamental relationship with reality must and should
be covenantal.
It's actually a relationship that's best construed.
Well, and then you
think, okay, let's think about that for a minute. Okay, so what's a human being? Well,
a human being is a personality. Now, if a personality can function in the world, like
a personality exists in relationship, that's like the definition of a personality. And so if it's our personality that enables us to survive, to exist,
then in what possible manner is our relationship with the world not covenantal in the final analysis?
Like, I can't see a way out of that.
And so that means there's a personal element to it. That's relationship-like. It's not like we stand as dead objects in relationship
to a set of dead facts.
That's not how it works.
You know, this is why to me,
if there's such a thing as the most profound moment
in all of literature,
it's Moses confronting the burning bush
because he's confronting what's a symbol
of the creation and destruction of the world.
Things are born and they die,
they grow and they're consumed and they never end.
And it says to him, I am, I am.
It says that this is a person speaking to him.
And the fact that that is happening, yes.
And the fact that it's happening
between a consciousness, Moses's, and this object,
which is the universe essentially in small,
makes it impossible to know whether it's
in that relationship that it becomes I am, which is kind of what Jung I think was talking about,
the uncertainty of that. But it also sort of says, more in an equinous point of view, that if you
accept this on faith, you will then contain it. It will then become part of what you see.
Well, there's more in the Moses story than that too, which is absolutely crucial,
you know, because up to that point, Moses is a escapee from Egypt,
he's essentially a wanted criminal, and he's a shepherd. Now, he's doing all right as a shepherd,
and he's made a good relationship with his father-in-law, and he's got a couple of wives,
like he's got a normal life. But then he has that encounter with the ground
of being, right, that beckons to him, and he pursues it deeply, and then the voice of
being itself speaks to him. But then the next thing happens. That's when God charges him
with the responsibility and the ability to stand up against tyranny and to oppose slavery.
So now all of a sudden,
because Moses has made that connection with being itself,
he now becomes the person who can genuinely lead.
And then he says to God, it's like,
well, you're charging me with this and this is revealed to me,
but I don't even know how to speak.
And God says, yeah, that's your problem, buddy.
And that's so interesting because it, well, because it's so interesting because
so Moses is now delved deep into something, some interest that back into him,
and he's confronted the fundamental reality of being itself, and that's transformed him.
And now he's left with the aftermath of that, which is he has to figure out how as the flawed person
he is unable even really to speak,
because Moses has some impediment
in his ability to communicate.
He still is charged with the moral obligation
like your superhero characters
or like Philip Marlowe, like your heroes,
to stand up against tyranny and to oppose slavery.
And you know, it's an open question for all of us, especially if we're concerned with authoritarianism
or licentious hedonism, for that matter. It's like, what is it that transforms us into the sort of
person who has the moral fortitude to stand up against that? And it is something like the
establishment of a relationship with the ground of being itself. If you have that burning inside you, nothing is more frightening than losing
that relationship, nothing. And it also gives you the idea that because you can communicate with it,
you can become like unto it. You can move into that image of God within that is your
essential personality that we all know we've fallen short of. What happened to me, and
this is kind of interesting because it goes back to the Marquis de Sade, is I came to a point where
the logic of God became unavoidable. But almost the same moment, and maybe for similar reasons,
though, I think they were much more deeply personal and connected to my past, I had a
crack up. I went nuts. And I found a psychiatrist who was recognized as one of the greats. And
what I now consider to be a literal miracle, he cured me.
I went from being a suicidal, delusional, hypercontrational, paralyzed human being
to being one of the more joyful people I know. It was insane. I mean, this transformation was
entire and insane. I always do- When was this? When was this? I was about 28 when I cracked.
And by the time I was 30, I was on the way out.
I was on the way back.
And by the time I was 32, I was fine.
So what happened?
What were the precedents of the dissent?
Well, what caused the dissent?
What caused the breakup?
What caused your breakup?
I mean, I had a child, my wife and I had a child.
I was absolutely, as I am to this day,
madly in love with my wife.
And that was one of the things that kept me alive.
And we had a child and I couldn't make a living
doing what I wanted to do.
I knew I had a genuine talent for what I wanted to do.
And I was absolutely a complete failure.
I'd published a book, it had sold no copies.
I had nowhere to go.
I was just getting my writing,
which is based on the tough guy writers,
was crystal clear,
polusively clear, had become impenetrable,
if not what I was saying.
So I was unable to make a living.
I was unable to proceed in my profession.
And I just broke and I had all kinds of psychological problems and getting to the place where I could
act in the world.
And here was the interesting thing.
I mean, the guy who cured me was a, I would call him a neo-Froidian.
And Freud was an atheist.
And so I began to feel that, I feel until then the question of God, I was kind of, you
know, I was agnostic.
How can you possibly know?
And how can you, you know, why would you have faith?
Why can't you just go in uncertainty, the burden of uncertainty, had a certain nobility
to me.
But at this point, I thought, well, maybe I should become an atheist.
And so I started to read atheist philosophers, and one of them was the Marquis de Sade. And he was the only atheist
philosopher to this day, maybe Foucault. He was the only atheist philosopher who made sense to me.
Everybody else, I thought, you know, you cannot maintain a moral stance and be an, you can be a
moral person and be an atheist because you're basically what Nietzsche said, you're living in
the shadow of a dead God. But yeah, absolutely. But you can't make, you can't be more than make sense.
Can't be internally consistent. Yeah, yeah. Well, Raskolnikov had figured that out in crime,
or Dostoevsky had figured that out. You know, and he, that's one of the things that's so
absolutely powerful about that novel is that Dostoevsky was such a genius, right? Because he set Raskolnikov up with every metaphysical reason
to commit the crime, every personal reason to commit the crime, right? Every opportunity to
commit the crime, and then he commits the crime and he gets away with it. Like it's perfect.
And then, oh, and then everything collapses around him because it turns out that he does violate
this intrinsic moral order
There is no such thing as the perfect crime even though he could have got away with it
He ends up killing someone innocent which is an
Inevitable consequence of starting to wander down that road right Dostoevsky had all of that
He's the perfect
counter enlightenment thinker because he does he does exactly as you're suggesting.
He does exactly what the Marquis de Sable does. He says, oh, I see. So there's no final arbiter.
Oh, I see. That really means I can do whatever I want.
Yes. He used to stand in front of a painting by Hans Holbein of the dead Christ in which
Christ is buried.
He's in his coffin and he's looking through the earth at him.
And he's so entirely dead that Dostoez loved the painting because he thought it was the best
argument against Christianity and he wanted to confront it. And that's why he gets such wonderful
arguments in Brothers Karamazov because he confronted all the hardest arguments.
So that was my leap of faith.
I read the Marki De Saad and I thought that's right.
He's absolutely right.
If there is no God, this is the world of sadomasochism,
of torment, of torture, for pleasure.
That looks like hell to me
and I am going to go home by another way.
I'm turning around and I'm just going.
That was my leap of faith.
My leap of faith was-
Why do you think you rejected?
Why did you reject it?
Because look, what's happening now?
We have this weird marriage of licentiousness
and power mad striving.
And they go together by necessity
because there's no licentiousness
without an accompanying tyranny
because someone has to mop up the responsibility.
But then you might say,
but you might say, like Raskolnikov did, you might say
like the pleasure worshipers do, it's like, you know, fuck it, nothing matters. Why shouldn't I just
pursue my whim? Why should I make that my identity? Because all these identity crises that we're seeing
now are nothing but the elevation of whim to the highest possible place, right?
Why aren't I identical with my momentary sexual proclivity,
fluid though it may be?
You know, like that's a real question, right?
And what do you put in, okay, so why did you decide not to?
I mean, you've got the logic for it now,
you accept the conclusions that Desaad put in front of you,
but you rejected that, but you rejected
that. Like you rejected Raskolnikov's triumph to some degree. Why do you think you rejected it?
You know, my only answer to this is what I consider to be Jesus' hardest saying. He says,
to them who have it will be given, and to them who have not, even what they have will be taken away.
Something was inside me that looked at that.
And I thought, it's pornography.
He wrote his philosophy in Sadomasic Pornography.
Some of it was kind of a turn on.
I thought it was kind of exciting.
And yet it horrified me.
It made me think, no, I'm just, it was just that thing.
There was something inside me that rejected that.
And I don't know.
C.S. Lewis says, nobody knows any story but his own. And I don't know, you know, C.S. Lewis says,
nobody knows any story but his own.
And I don't know if everybody has that thing inside him.
I really don't.
Oh yes, I think everyone, I think,
I hope so.
Well, I don't think there's any difference between that
and the essence of consciousness itself.
You know, and now I've thought about this a lot, you know,
because I know, for example, that there are
families where the tendency for the proclivity towards antisocial and psychopathic behavior
is transmitted, and I know that there's a genetic proclivity for that. Now that doesn't
mean a determinism. And so it's certainly the case that you could say, well, the constraints around our relationship
with the good vary substantively
from individual to individual.
But I don't think it matters in the final analysis
because it looks to me like this is the truth of the matter.
It's something like you're given your talents
and they differ widely from person to person.
But you're given your talents and your impediments,
and those vary too.
But with every talent comes a corresponding impediment.
You see this in the rich man, the story of the parable, the rich man,
who has to give up everything that he has.
Now, Christ doesn't tell him that there's something wrong with money.
What he says, he does an analysis.
The guy says, I'm miserable.
And Christ says, well, you know, are you doing the right thing?
Do you honor your parents?
Do you abide by the commandments?
Are you living a good life?
And the guy says, yeah, like I seem to be a good guy.
I'm like, I'm checking off those boxes.
So I got the dogma thing going down.
I'm adhering to it.
And Christ says, and I think in some sorrow,
it's like, well, you're screwed.
Like you have to radically revalue your entire life.
And that probably means you have to give up everything
that you've accrued because it's not working for you.
And the disciples themselves,
they say in the aftermath of that,
they say, oh, well, they say in the aftermath of that, they say, oh,
well, if that's the price of salvation, no one will pay it. So it's not a point to the
fact that the money itself is the problem. And the parable of the unjust steward also
makes that crystal clear, because Christ says directly that often the people who are just pursuing money
are wiser and more moral
than those who claim dogmatic moral virtue, right?
So that's crystal clear.
Yeah, yeah.
But it is a question.
I mean, you know, think of the blessings
I did have in my life, chief among them,
a wife I loved so dearly and who loved me back
and a profession I loved. I mean, who loved me back and a profession I loved.
I mean, I love to write and I love beauty.
I still, I'm still a kind of beauty monger.
I love culture and the things that work and sing.
And so I had so many things to turn away from,
that caused me to turn away from ugliness and cruelty
that maybe it simply was life,
enough life experience to do that. I was not,
I was a young man in many ways, but I was not chronologically young. I was 30 already and
I think it just made me turn back. Well, you had, well, that also says that you had higher order
forms of even pleasure, let's say, beckoning to you, you know, that affiliation with beauty.
That's a good counter position to the most
aimless form of idiot sadistic hedonism,
because it's a higher form of pleasure.
You know, it's like Jocker-Willink discovering
the pleasure of mentorship, as opposed to the pleasure
of domination, you know?
I mean, there's something to be said for being able
to pound someone out, you know?
It beats the hell out of being weak and useless.
Getting pounded out, yeah know, it beats the hell out of being weak and useless. Getting pounded out, yeah.
Well, absolutely.
And then you also said, you also, and you pointed to this a couple of times in our conversation,
you also talked about the love that you still had and still have for your wife.
And so what role did that capacity for love and that experience of love, especially within the bounds of a
committed relationship, what role did that have in orienting you and guiding you like through that
period of misery, but even later than that? And why do you think that's still alive for you?
Well, it has a double role. I mean, one is, of course, love is a civilizing and it just is
a wonderful pleasure. As you say it just is a wonderful pleasure.
As you say, it's a higher pleasure.
But the other thing about my wife is that
I picked her up hitchhiking and I wasn't even driving a car.
She was a very beautiful woman and she was hitchhiking.
And I thought, I've got to go get my car.
And I ran up to get my car and drove around the block
at 50 miles an hour so I could get to her
before anybody else.
She sat down in my car.
I know. That's a in my car. I know.
That's a very creepy beginning.
I know, in those days.
It wasn't as creepy in those days.
No, no, that's true.
No, absolutely, absolutely.
It definitely wasn't.
But she sat down in the car and the experience
was exactly like if you've ever done a jigsaw puzzle
and you've been looking for a piece for 20 minutes
without finding it and then you find it and it goes in.
It's this very quiet sense sense of ah, you know
And the fact that I recognize that and now it's many years later at least 10 years later and I'm I'm still absolutely
Romantically head over heels with her meant to me that I was capable of perceiving a spiritual reality
that I was capable of perceiving a spiritual reality honestly. So this is one of the problems I've always had with the postmodernists.
They talk about the meaninglessness of language,
but I understand what they're saying.
And so obviously, except with Derrida,
who had the integrity to write Absolute Gibberish,
they actually are disproving their own point.
And they talk about basically the fact that
we can't know anything, but we can.
We can know if I go north, I get to Canada.
If I go south, I get to Mexico and Southern.
We can't know anything purely by words.
Yeah, that's right.
That's right.
And so I really did have some kind of trust in myself.
I simply could not break through my milieu, which was so default, at
least agnostic and really atheistic.
Right, right, right.
The funny thing is that after...
The other thing about this too, by the way, is being a bit of a tough guy, I thought
that in my misery when I cracked up to embrace God, even though it was logical, was a crush.
So how would I know whether I had embraced him in reality
or just because I wanted to get out of this incredible pain
I was in.
And so I couldn't do it.
And when years later, I was now a very happy person.
My career took off, everything started to go right.
I still had that logic.
And something else was true as well, which
is that I had been a real Freudian. I had grown up in that real core of the Freudian
world where all the art stank because everybody's trying to prove your mother was to blame for
everything and all that. And I didn't come to feel that what Freud said was utter nonsense.
I came to feel that the details of what he said were utter nonsense, that the structure of the relationship
between a therapist or a mentor and a client
or a son or a friend or whatever.
I thought he got a lot of that quite right,
the idea of a transference and all this,
which made me feel that all of the insights I had had
in therapy that I thought were salivific
had not been and what had been salivific was the loving relationship I had had with this older
man who had taken the place of a father who has not been very helpful and it was actually the love
that had saved me and I began to believe in psychology. Well, that's relationship again, eh?
Yep.
Yep.
And it made me feel that psychology is a story that stories give us the ability to take the
ineffable and move it around a little bit.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you split up things that are actually unified into pieces that you can move.
And that brought me back to God and I ultimately as an experiment
Here's and it comes back to fiction again how much I love fiction. I was reading
I don't know if you've ever read the Patrick O'Brien novels. They're just wonderful seafaring adventure stories
About the Napoleonic Wars. They're absolutely brilliant. Hmm. No, no, I don't know of them
And there's a very intellectual
character named matron who's an ugly little
man, but very brilliant and kind of a spy. And I kind of admired him and identified with him a
little bit. And there's just a scene, he's a Catholic, and there's a scene where he was falling
asleep. And the line is he said a prayer and went to sleep. And I was reading in bed. And I thought,
well, if Maturin can say a prayer, and before he goes to sleep, so can I.
And I just thanked God for the journey
I had come out of, this horrible darkness
that I thought was the end.
I thought I was gonna kill myself.
Instead, I had come out and here I was now.
I had two children, my career was great.
I was so happy to be with my beloved wife.
I was living in a wonderful place.
And I thanked God and it changed my life.
I woke up the next morning and everything was brighter.
Everything was clear, the details of life.
I called it, I christened it, the joy of my joy
because I realized up until then I had not been.
That's like the definition of gratitude, man.
Yeah.
So you use three things you pointed to there that we should take apart.
Maybe we can close with this. So the first is, you know, one of the primary Freudian accusations,
and the Marx did this too, was that religion was just, what would you say, a shield against death
anxiety, you know, or a soft for the victimized poor, right? So that would be Marx. But Freud, a little bit more trenchant,
it's like, well, it's a shield of meaning the weak
used to protect themselves against the ultimate reality
of pointless death.
Right? And people like Ernest Becker made much of that
in his Denial of Death, which is actually really a great book,
even though it's fundamentally wrong.
It's great book.
But, you know, there's something really not wise
about that perspective.
So, and here's like, here's three arguments against that
from someone who really admires Freud, by the way.
First of all, if that was the case,
why bother with hell?
Because hell, medieval people were as scared as hell
of hell as modern people are of death.
The evidence for that's clear.
And you might say, well, hell was just a convenient place
to put your enemies.
It's like, no, no, that's not a good analysis.
So if it's just a death anxiety shield,
then why decorate it with this terrible moral obligation
and the reality of hell?
So that's a big problem for that theory. And then
you have two other problems, which is, well, you're supposed to hoist your cross as a Christian
believer. And there literally isn't anything worse than that by definition, because it means you have
to stand up to the mob, even if they're your brothers, that you have to forsake your family in pursuit of ethical truth, right?
That you have to suffer torment, physical and metaphysical,
and that you have to face the reality of hell itself.
It's like, sorry guys,
that is not a defense against death anxiety,
not least because I think you can make a very powerful case
that confronting malevolence is worse than confronting death.
Yes.
Like I've watched, we know this because people are rarely traumatized by a brush with death,
and they are routinely traumatized by a brush with malevolence.
So even on those grounds, you can see that the reality of evil is more
So even on those grounds, you can see that the reality of evil is more
trenchant and salient than the reality of death. So that Freudian argument, that it's just not right. He got that wrong. This is where Freud indulges in quackery a little bit. He's interviewing
20 hysterical Victorian Viennese, and he decides that God is a projection of the father, and he
says it very definitively, and you think, like, hey, you're welcome to your opinion. But it really, what you're
talking about to me is like saying that you believe in bread to forestall the fear of hunger.
You know, CS Lewis points out that we don't have any desires that don't have an answer or all our
desires have an answer. In fact, in the world. Everything that we hunger for is actually there.
And this is one of my problems with the evolutionary biologists who think that they can trace the
creation of morality.
And my point about that is it's like saying that because I have eyes that I've invented
light, you know, I've invented the human experience of light perhaps, but not light itself
And it's the same thing with the moral sense that we have you can say it's a result of evolution
That's fine
but it's a result of evolution like the eye in relationship to something that exists which is the moral order and
And I think that these arguments really do fall apart
Once you begin to have a realistic view of
Of God and not the sort of happy, you
know, yellow face with a smile on it.
Right, right.
So much.
Right.
And I have to tell you that weeks after my baptism, my wife, who now knows me to my
foot-soles, turned to me and she said, you are such a different person. You are just filled with
joy and relaxation and knowing God has been joy on joy for me. I have to tell you. This is one
of the least quoted lines in the gospel is Jesus said, I'm telling you things so that my joy will
be in you and your joy will be complete. And somehow religion manages to turn this into this tormented
struggle with your sexual desires or whatever. But no, I actually do think this journey toward
the self that you were made to be is a very joyful journey. And every time you take a step on it,
your joy. And by joy, I don't mean happiness. I don't mean, again, that smiley face. I mean,
what the poets make, gusto, you know, that vitality of life. And that, like,
in love, the only evidence for love is over time, experience over time is the evidence for love.
And I think that's true of God too. Ultimately, there's no proof of God. There's only experience
over time as you get to know Him and it develops in your life. And I highly recommend it.
That's all I can say.
Well, I think that's an excellent place to close.
It's a timely place to close.
I think one of the things that we could discuss
on the Daily Wire Plus side,
for all of you who might be inclined to join us there,
is I'd like to talk to you a little bit more
about the overlap between evolutionary views
and potential religious views,
because I think there's something interesting there.
And I'd like to talk probably a little bit more
about this idea of gratitude and joy
and how those things are linked together.
So if you're interested, everyone watching and listening,
if you're interested in continuing this discussion,
you could do that on the Daily Wearer Plus side.
We'll talk for another half an hour.
In the meantime, thank you very much for sitting down
and talking to me for 90 minutes.
We got deep into many of the things
that I was hoping we would cover today.
And it was a pleasure getting to know you a bit better.
And thank you to everyone who's watching and listening
for your time and attention.
And for the Daily Wire Plus folks
who made this conversation possible.
We'll see you in a bit, Andrew, and bye everybody else.
Thanks very much, Jordan.