The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - Reality and the Sacred
Episode Date: December 8, 2016In a public lecture recorded by TVO, Dr Peterson describes the way the world is portrayed in deep stories, such as myths and religious representations. The world in such stories is a place of action, ...not a place of things, and it has its archetypal characters, positive and negative. Culture is typically represented as paternal, nature as maternal, and the individual as hero and adversary. Culture offers people security, but threatens them with tyranny. Nature offers renewal, but also brings death.
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Psychology in the Modern World
A podcast by Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
Episode 1 Reality and the Sacred
A lecture recorded by TV Ontario
Dr. Peterson's self-development programs
are available at selfauthoring.com.
That's S-E-L-F-authoring.com.
You can also support this podcast on Patreon
if you search Jordan Peterson Patreon.
I want to talk to you today about what I think is a relatively new way of looking at your
experience, but maybe even more broadly than that, a new way of looking at reality itself.
You all come to university, I suppose, to make your conceptions of reality more sophisticated. And you want to do that because you have to live in the world.
And the more sophisticated your conceptions,
the less likely you'll encounter
tragic or harmful circumstances that you will be unable to deal with.
It really matters if you know what you're thinking and you know how to think.
Over the last 20 years, I would say, if you know what you're thinking and you know how to think.
Over the last 20 years I would say there's been a revolution in psychology and the revolution
has involved a transformation in the way that we look at the world and that's what I want
to talk to you about today.
I entitled this talk Reality and the Sacred.
It's a strange title for a talk to modern people because we
don't really understand what the sacred means unless we live within a worldview that's essentially,
I wouldn't say archaic, but at least traditional, for modern, free thinking, fundamentally liberal
people.
The idea of the sacred is anachronistic, or if not anachronistic, at least incomprehensible.
So, I want to start with a story from the Old Testament.
There's a scene in the Old Testament when the ancient Hebrews are moving the
ark of the covenant and the ark of the covenant is a device that was
manufactured in order to contain the word of God. And there was a rule among the
ancient Hebrews which was, you were not to touch the ark of the covenant, no matter what.
And there's a story in the Old Testament where the bearers of the ark of the covenant,
they used to carry it.
The bearers of the ark of the covenant trip, and a man reaches out to steady it,
and when he touches it, God strikes him dead.
And modern people look at a story like that,
and the first thing they think is,
that seems a little bit harsh on the part of God,
given that the man was attempting to do something
that he believed was good.
But what the story is designed to indicate, in my opinion,
is that there are certain things that you touch
at your peril, regardless of your intentions.
And those things that you touch at your peril, regardless of your intentions. And those things that you touch at your peril, regardless of your intentions, most cultures, regard as sacred,
as untouchable. I want to make a case for you today that those things exist and also why
they exist and why it's necessary for you to know that they exist. I would also say that
if you're properly educated in the university, especially with regards
to the humanities, which are in some conceptual trouble at the moment, what you are, what
essentially happens to you is that you're introduced in a relatively secular way to the concept
of the sacred.
You're here in the university to learn about the eternal values of humankind.
And I think that people who tell you that those values
do not exist or that they're endlessly debatable,
do you an unbelievable disservice?
Now, I'm going to tell you first how you think about the world,
I think.
So this would be a Newtonian view of the world.
It's Newtonian and deterministic.
And it's a worldview that dominated psychology and economics and anthropology and political
science, you name it, for probably 400 years.
But it's come to a crashing halt in the last 50 years.
And the consequences of that have been manifested in a number of domains.
The old world presuppositions are something like this.
The world is made out of objects.
When you look at the world, you see the objects.
There they are in front of you.
As a consequence of seeing the objects,
you think about what to do.
And after you think about what to do in presence
of the objects, you act.
Now, that seems self-evidentident because when you look at the world,
there the objects are.
And it appears to you that you see them
and then you think about them and then you act.
But there's a real problem with that.
First problem is,
use half your brain to see, literally.
Human visual cortex is a very large part of your brain.
And the reason that the visual cortex is so large is that seeing is, as far as we can tell, actually impossible.
Now, the fact that seeing perception is impossible, wasn't discovered by psychologists, and it wasn't discovered by philosophers. It was discovered by people who were working on artificial intelligence and trying to make
artificial intelligence machines.
The presupposition of the people who were making intelligent machines was the hard part
of interacting with the world is figuring out what to do once you see the objects, but
it turned out that making machines that could see objects was impossible.
And the reason for that is that boundaries between objects are not obvious. They're not obvious at all.
In fact, it's very difficult to understand how it is that we separate things up at all.
Now, let me give you an example. So, if you think about yourself, when you look at a mirror,
you see yourself as an object, you see your eyes, you see your nose, you see your face,
you see your body, and that's pretty much what you see
when you look at other people.
But that isn't all there is to you.
In fact, that's hardly any of what there is to you.
So you could say, for example,
you exist at the level of the quantum particle.
You can't perceive that.
In fact, people didn't know that until 75 years ago.
Above that level, you exist at an atomic level, and then a molecular level, and then you
exist at the level of complex organs, and then the interactions between those organs.
And then you, and then your family, and then the groups that your family belong to,
and then the ecosystem that the groups of your, or that all your groups belong to,
and on and so on and so forth until what it is that you are
can expand to encompass virtually anything.
Now, when you look at yourself, you don't see that.
You see yourself at a certain level of resolution.
When you look at the world, you see yourself
at a certain level of resolution,
but all those other levels are equally real and equally relevant. And we, in fact, have
very little idea how it is that you're only able to see what you see. Almost nothing
has obvious boundaries. And this has real world consequences. It's not something that's
merely abstract. The technical term for this problem, the problem of how to bind your perceptions,
to limit them is called the frame problem.
The frame problem was discovered about 40 years ago,
and the philosopher Daniel Dennett called it
the most important philosophical discussion
discovery of the last 50 years.
The frame problem emerges to cause all sorts of trouble
for people.
So, for example, when Henry Ford invented the automobile, well, at least invented the modern procedure of building the automobile,
what Ford presumed was that he was building an efficient means of transporting people from one place to the other.
There were other unintended consequences of Ford's discovery.
So for example, Ford happened to be a great supporter of fascism, and the reason that he
was a supporter of fascism was because he regarded the fascist political structure as a
logical extension of the efficient methods that he'd used to assemble vehicles.
So his mode of production was instantly manifested in a political philosophy.
Furthermore, now, 2009, 100 years after the invention of the automobile, we've discovered
some other things that the car was other than a place to move people from point A to point
B. So for example, it turns out that the automobile and the internal combustion engine are among
the most effective technologies ever devised to transform the automobile and the internal combustion engine are among the most effective technologies ever
devised to transform the nature of the atmosphere
and to heat up the world.
Not only that, the car has completely transformed
the nature of cities.
And these were all unintended consequences of the fact
that the car was far more than what people thought it was.
And you can say that about any technological structure.
No one knew what TV would do to the news, for example.
No one knew what the internet would do to the music industry.
Everything that you interact with is far more complicated than you see.
The most ancient ideas we have about the nature of reality are predicated on a certain presupposition.
And the presupposition is this.
There's two fundamental modes of being
that characterize reality.
One is the absolute.
And the absolute is the sum total of everything.
So if you think about things in their most unbounded,
possible form, if you think of things
in their infinite number of potential variations,
you can think about that as one pole of reality. It appears classically that people have regarded their encounters with the absolute, which
is all those multiple levels of being that are beyond your perceptual capacity as equivalent
to an encounter with God.
Now you know that in the Islamic religion it's against the rules to make a grave an image
of any sort of Muhammad, right?
The idea is that you're not supposed to make an image. And among the ancient Hebrews, the idea was very similar.
The Taoists say that you shouldn't confuse the moon with a finger pointing to the moon.
And what all that means is that the absolute is always something that transcends the finite
frame that you place around your perceptions. So as soon as you start talking about it,
representing it, making statues of it,
or idolizing it, you lose your connection with the absolute,
because you've turned it into something
that's understandable and concrete.
Part of the wisdom traditions that the world still maintains
make the constant moral presupposition
that you should always be aware of what it is that transcends both
your understanding and your perceptions, and you should keep firmly in mind that that
exists.
Now, when people talk about God in the modern world, they tend to think about something
that has more the characteristics of a being, and I suppose that's where most of the debate
about religious reality comes in.
But the idea that there's an absolute that's outside of your perceptual capacity
seems to be merely a statement of fact,
especially given what we know now about the nature of perception,
that the phenomena always transcends the matter in which you frame it.
We've also come to understand that not only does reality have multiple levels of existence, but in order to perceive it, you have to stand inside multiple frames.
This is a picture of a French city. It's a walled city.
Now, the walls are there to keep the people in,
and the walls are there to keep what isn't in the walls out.
And so you can think about that as a protective structure.
Now, I want to tell you how it is that you still inhabit
a walled city and exactly what that means.
So for example, you think about this room.
And I'm going to tell you how it is that this room
allows you to see what it is that you see.
Now, when you're interacting with a computer,
you actually don't interacting with a computer,
you actually don't interact with the computer.
You interact with the keyboard and the screen.
If the computer crashes, then you interact with the computer.
And you find that as a general rule, very annoying,
because you don't really understand the computer very well.
And you don't actually see how complex it is
until it stops working.
Most of the time, when you're interacting with the world,
you're doing things with the world. You're interacting with it in a way that produces
some consequence that you want. And that means in part that your perceptions are always
framed by what you want. And that's actually one of the reason why the world isn't just
made out of objects. The world is made out of things you use and things that get in your
way. Now, you're always applying a frame like that to the world in order to simplify it enough
so that you can understand it.
And you're aided in this process.
By all sorts of processes you really don't notice.
Because when you look at the world you think, well there are the objects.
But there's a thousand things going on before you make that judgment.
So we'll look at this room.
When you walk in here the room tells you what to do.
The reason it tells you what to do is because all the seats are pointed in the same direction.
They're all slanted in a particular way.
When you walk in here and there's other people sitting, you can see that all their faces point to the front.
People's faces point towards what interests them.
The room is set up to make you face the front.
The theory behind the room is that the thing that's interesting in the room is happening at the front. It's
a theater. What's happening at the front is a drama, right? Because theater is there
to promote and undergird drama. A lecture is a dramatic act. The room tells you what
to do. So you don't have to think about what to do when you come into a room like this.
You can just do it because the room tells you what to do.
And then you can think,
you can sit in here in relative comfort and listen to this lecture.
Why can you sit in here in relative comfort?
Well, the people around you have been relatively carefully selected, right?
As a consequence of analysis of their 12 years in school,
the university has made a determination
that they know how to sit down and listen.
That hypothetically, they are intelligent enough to understand the lecture and that they're
very unlikely to disrupt the proceedings with any unexpected outburst of emotion or motivation.
Now, if anybody broke one of those rules, you can be sure that your eyes would move very
rapidly away from me and directly towards the person who was causing the trouble because that would take center stage.
Now this room is actually supported by a million invisible processes.
So for example while you're sitting in here, you don't have to worry about whether it's
raining because there's a roof and you don't have to worry about whether the roof is going
to fall in because you make the presumption that the people who built the roof are competent.
And the electricity works because the electricity is, the utility is run by people who are competent,
so it's almost always on.
Buildings hardly ever burn down.
The electricity hardly ever fluctuates.
There's thousands of people out there working as hard as they can diligently to make this
environment constant enough so that you can ignore all the thousands of things that you're
ignoring, so that you can concentrate well enough to attend to the few things that you are attending
to while you're in this room.
You're in a walled city.
There's multiple walls and those walls protect you from what's outside the walls.
You can think about it this way.
This is a Taoist image of reality. Now people think about this as a metaphysical
symbol, but it's not a metaphysical symbol. It's an unbelievably practical symbol. The Taoists
believe that the world, the reality, is made up essentially of chaos in order. Chaos is all those things you don't understand.
So I would say that chaos is all those things that exist outside of your perceptual preconditions.
Order is all the things you do understand and all the places you go where the things that
you do produce the results that you intend.
And the Dallas would say everywhere you go is like that.
Everywhere you go has things that you understand that are orderly
and has things that you don't understand that are chaotic.
And the chaotic things attract your attention because you already understand the orderly things.
If something unexpected happens, your nervous system automatically reacts to it and
orients you towards it. And sometimes that can be catastrophic.
So this is an experience that some of you will have
in the next four years.
Undoubtedly, there's a number of you
that want to go to medical school, or to graduate school,
or to law school, or to business school.
And a certain percentage of you will take the admission tests
that will determine whether or not you're
able to take that path.
And a certain percentage of you will score below the 50th
percentile on those tests.
And that will mean you will not be going to those institutions. And when that happens,
first of all, you'll shake and tremble when you open the envelope to find out your results.
And second, if you haven't achieved the score that you expected that you will achieve,
your world will fall apart. And what that'll mean is that you descend from the domain of order into the domain of chaos.
And that happens to people all the time.
It happens to people when they develop an illness that's serious that they can't control.
Because then their body stops becoming something they can predict
and starts to become something that they can't predict.
It happens to people when they're in an intimate relationship
and they're betrayed.
They assume fidelity and the person tells them that they've had an affair. That's chaos.
That means you didn't know who that person was. The future you imagine no
longer exists. Your perceptions of people are erroneous at some level of analysis
that you don't understand. It's conceivable that your naive beyond belief and
that everything you believed about yourself and other people up to that point is false.
And when a revelation occurs that knocks out one of the walls that supports you,
and you descend accidentally into chaos,
you'll regard that as one of the worst experiences of your life.
When that happens to your brain knows exactly what to do,
it stops thinking about the future,
it stops saving up resources
for the future. It puts you in emergency preparation mode so you're ready to do anything at the
drop of a hat because you don't know what to do. So your body prepares to do everything.
It shifts your cortisol levels up. It activates your left and right
cortices. Your limbic system and your motivational systems are disinhibited, turned on, and you sweat and you can't sleep.
Because the orderly structure that you thought you inhabited, that provided you with security and direction, has now disappeared.
And the Dallas believe that the world is always an interplay between chaos and order.
And that if you live your life properly, you stand with one foot in order
and one foot in chaos.
Because if you're only in order, nothing that's interesting ever happens to you.
Nothing is anything but a repeat of all the things that you already know.
That's the state that fascists desire.
Because fascists desire things to be exactly the way they are forever.
And if you're in a state that's only characterized by chaos, you're at sea or overwhelmed or things have fallen apart for you. And there's
too much of everything for you to deal with. Now the Taoists being very wise people know
other things as well. And they know, for example, that chaos can turn into order. That's
why there's a white dot in the middle of the black paisley. And they know that order
can turn into chaos, which is why there's a black dot in the middle of the white paisley. And they knew that order could turn into chaos, which is why there's a black dot in the middle
of the white paisley.
And the Taoist believed that a meaningful life,
the optimally meaningful life,
is to be found on the border between chaos and order.
And I would say that your nervous system tells you
exactly when you are there, and it's a kind of place.
And you can tell when you're there, because you're secure
enough to be confident, but not so secure that you're bored and you're
interested enough to be awake but not so interested that you're terrified and
when you're in a state like that when you find things interesting and meaningful
time slips by you and you're no longer self-conscious. This is a medieval
Christian representation of the nature of reality. On the outside, you have the Virgin Mary.
Inside the Virgin Mary, you have God the Father.
And God the Father is supporting a crucifix
with an individual on it, the individual in Christian,
thinking is Christ.
What does this image mean?
The walled city divides order from chaos
or order from nature.
We think about nature as the thing
that's outside of what we understand.
That's mother nature.
Mother nature gives birth to all things.
That's the idea that's expressed in this image.
It's the Virgin Mary is standing for Mother Nature.
Out of Mother Nature arises order and tradition.
That's true for primates, like chimpanzees, as much as it's true for us.
Any social animals that are grouped together have to form an orderly structure that they
can inhabit together, that defines their boundaries and their goals, because otherwise they fight
each other to the death.
So in the state of untrammeled nature, as Hobbes pointed out, it's every man for himself.
And without the order that tradition brings, there's nothing but chaos.
And chaos is murderous and unproductive.
Well, there's a problem with order.
If you look at the history of the 20th century, it's a toss up whether Mother Nature has been harder on us or whether
are governmental traditions of being harder on us. You know, of course, that the dictatorship
of Hitler killed six million Jews, 120 million people in the Second World War. You may not
know that the Stalinist dictatorships in the Soviet Union killed an estimated 60 million people in internal repression, not counting those people who died in the Second World War.
And the internal repression that characterized Mao's communist China killed 100 million people. Sometimes it's a wise king, and sometimes it's a king that eats its own sons, which means that although we need tradition to guide us into structure,
or even the manner in which we perceive the world,
our traditions can become archaic and outdated and cruel and inhuman.
And as a consequence, they can pose a worse threat to us than chaos itself.
Nature or chaos is exactly the same dichotomous structure.
The figure on the left is a Medusa or a Gorgon.
If you look at a Medusa, as you probably already know, you turn to stone.
The reason you turn to stone is because when you look upon nature or chaos, without your
normal veils, it paralyzes you, physiologically, just like a prey animal like a rabbit is terrified
if it sees a wolf.
For millions of years, human beings were prey animals.
We were probably prey animals for large reptiles, which accounts, for example, for the reason
that it appears that primates like us are naturally afraid of predatory reptiles. If you're in the
presence of something that violates your assumptions of safety, you'll freeze.
You freeze so that the thing that might eat you can't see you, and that's what
turns you to stone. That's nature and its's terrible aspect. And the terrible aspect of nature
can freeze everyone. And you can be sure and will be seldom taught that you will encounter
that at some point in your life. The primary Buddhist dictum is that life is suffering. What
does that mean? It means that because you're finite and you're surrounded by something that's absolute,
in a sense you're in a battle that you can never win.
Because there's always more of what it is that you're trying to contend with than there
is with you.
And worse than that, and it's for this reason that tyrannies can't last, is that the
thing that you're contending with isn't even static.
It keeps changing so that what worked for you yesterday
won't necessarily work for you tomorrow.
This is an alchemical version of the Taoist,
Yan and Yang symbol, and basically it says something
that's more sophisticated and complex.
It says that the world's made up of chaos and order, things that you can predict and understand, and things that you can't predict
and can't understand.
And inside the order, there's some chaos and inside that chaos, there's some order and
inside that order, there's some chaos, and so on and so forth, and equally the case
for order. You have Mother Nature, representation of chaos, sometimes positive, sometimes negative.
You have a representation of the great father, that security and tyranny, two things you'll
always have to contend with.
And finally, in this representation, you have a representation of the individual, at
least a Christian representation of the individual.
And that's Christ, and it's a terrifying representation. It's a remarkable representation,
because it's not a representation of transcendence. It's a representation of suffering.
And it's a funny kind of representation of suffering, because the manner in which the story unfolds
is this, Christ as the archetypal individual,
the model for individuals from a psychological
or mythological perspective, knows that he's limited
and knows that he's doomed to both suffering and death.
In the Garden of Death's Seemony, the night before his
crucifixion, he has an argument with God,
and the argument basically is,
do I actually have to do this?
And the answer is twofold, well, no, actually you don't have to accept your suffering,
but you don't have to voluntarily accept your suffering,
but there are consequences if you don't.
Now, the Christian story is predicated on the idea that if you voluntarily accept your suffering,
you can simultaneously transcend it.
It's a remarkable philosophy, and it's also something that we have very good
support for from a psychological perspective. So for example, if I'm treating someone who
has an anxiety disorder, a panic disorder, who can't go out of their house without their
heart rate elevating and without collapsing into a panic strick and heat, without visiting
the emergency ward, every time their heart rate accelerates, every time they're in a
subway or every time they're in a mall,
so they're so terrified of existence
they can't even get out of their house.
The way you cure that person is
by getting them to voluntarily approach
the things that they're afraid of.
And it turns out that physiologically,
if I force you to accept a certain kind of challenge,
your body will go into emergency preparation mode
and you'll become stressed
and that stress will cause you physiological damage, including brain damage if it's sustained for long enough.
But if I present you with the same challenge and you accepted voluntarily, your brain doesn't
produce stress hormones in completely different physiological systems kick in.
And what that means is that people have evolved two modes for dealing with the unknown.
One is voluntary approach and the other is panic, stricken, paralysis,
and flight. In this representation, you can see that there are crowds of people standing
in the wings of the open statue, looking at the crucified individual. It's a very strange
thing, but you still see this. You still see people doing things like this that they don't notice.
I went to a museum in New York and there were a very large number of paintings there from the late Renaissance and they were all religiously themed,
like medieval paintings except they, they featured recognizable individuals. And people had come from all over the world to look at those paintings.
They were extremely valuable paintings.
They were painted by Michelangelo or Leonardo da Vinci.
And each of them was probably valued for reasons
that are very difficult to understand
at something approximating hundreds of millions of dollars.
The late Renaissance was the first time in human history
where human beings dared to presume that sacred images
could be given an individual
human face. And that idea was actually what launched the Enlightenment and launched the development
of modern culture. The late Renaissance thinkers, the artists in particular were the first people
to posit that there was some direct relationship between these sacred images and actual people.
And people come from all over the world to look at these paintings even though they don't understand what they mean. I want to show you some images that
describe how the idea of the suffering individual developed and what that
means. The first thing I want to show you is this picture of St. George and the
Dragon. Now you know the main street that runs through the university is named after St. George, right?
This is a very old image.
The oldest story we know, which is a Mesopotamian creation myth, features a God who confronts a reptilian monster
and makes the world as a consequence of the conflict.
He faces her, she's terrifying, he cuts her up into pieces, and out of the pieces he makes the world as a consequence of the conflict. He faces her, she's terrifying, he cuts her up into pieces,
and out of the pieces he makes the world.
Now the mess of battanians 5,000 years ago,
were trying to figure out what the nature of individuality
was and what the nature of consciousness was.
And their presupposition, which was dramatized
because these people told stories,
they didn't think the way we think
in explicit philosophical, logical,
with philosophical processes. They thought in stories, which is a natural way for people to think.
They came to the conclusion that the object of their ultimate worship was the God who confronted
the dragon of chaos, cut it into pieces, and made the world. And that idea has echoed down
through the ages. It's an has echoed down through the ages.
It's an idea that human beings have never lost. Now this idea is very interesting.
So you see the castle in the background. And we already know what the castle stands for.
The castle stands for order. And it's a multi-walled castle because everyone's
protected by multiple walls. But those walls are constantly breached. Now young people,
especially modern young people, are often very cynical about the traditions
that they inhabit.
They're cynical about them because they see the fact that the world is theoretically
devolving into some kind of environmental catastrophe.
And they're cynical because they're still warned, because they're still hunger.
They're cynical because often the people who are teaching them the traditions don't seem
to believe in them themselves.
And it's very easy for young people to look at the traditions that were and to notice the breaks.
But the truth of the matter is, is that throughout human history, tradition has always been anachronistic and out of date.
And what you see in images of St. George and the dragon is that the dragon's always breached the walls.
Which means that tradition is always under-attacked from chaos.
Well, of course it is, because the future is different than the past.
But that doesn't mean that the past should be abandoned the future is different than the past. But that
doesn't mean that the past should be abandoned because if you abandoned the past and you knocked
down all your walls, you fall into a pit of chaos. And that, classically speaking, is
indistinguishable from hell. And I can tell you that if you spend long enough in that state,
you'll become bitter and cruel because that's what happens to people who suffer endlessly.
St. George is a different kind of individual.
When the walls come crumbling down, as they always do, he decides to go out and to confront
the dragon.
Now, dragons are very strange creatures, as you may have already noted.
First of all, they don't exist.
Second of all, they have very weird propensities.
So for example, they hoard gold,
and they tend to trap virgins in their lair,
which you will also admit is very strange behavior
for a reptile.
Now, the idea behind this is that it's very, very
complicated idea, and it's all presented pictorially.
The idea is that the thing that lurks underneath,
if you look to the right of the picture,
you can see that there's a cave.
The cave goes way down into the ground, and way down into the ground is the terrifying place that's underneath everything.
The dragon crawls out from time to time to threaten the structure of everything that's known.
St. George comes out to confront the dragon has been guarding.
It's a very complicated story.
It means that the things that terrify you contain things of value.
That's also what the image of the gold that the dragon hordes represents.
It means something else as well.
It means that the individual man who's likely to go out and confront chaos when tradition is
crumbling is more likely to find a mate.
This is Jonah.
Jonah had a very weird experience.
He was swallowed by a whale.
That's a very strange whale, as you might well note. It's a medieval whale and of course
medieval people didn't really know what whales were and so they were guessing what a whale
was. A whale for a medieval person would have been a big fish, it would have been a squid,
it would have been some monstrous thing like a shark that lurks in the deep because they
didn't have to be able to segregate all those things out biologically. Their powers of collective observation weren't that good.
So the way of for them was what lurks underneath in the darkness.
And the idea with Jonah was that now in that what lurks underneath in the darkness rises up to swallow you.
But if your attitude is proper, then you can come back out the other side changed.
Now that's a story of redemption.
So for example,
changed. Now that's a story of redemption. So for example, imagine that you are a word of bad relationship and maybe you weren't that happy about it but you know
it was better than no relationship at all and then the person that you were in
a relationship betrayed you and maybe they did that because you actually
weren't that happy with the relationship anyways. Maybe they did that because
you're a little bit naive or maybe they did that because you're a little bit too easy to get along with and
has a consequent a little bit on the boring side. And so when they first leave you,
it's a catastrophe because your world falls apart. But when your world falls apart,
you're somewhere new as possible to learn something new in that place. So you
might learn for example that you should be a little sharper the next time that
you go out with someone or you should be a little sharper the next time that you go out with someone, or you should be a little bit more careful about picking up on clues that your partners bored with you,
or that maybe you should stop associating with lying psychopaths, and your life would be
a lot more positive, and stop thinking that you have the capacity to redeem somebody that
is not after redemption in the least.
And what that means now and then is that when you fall into the belly of a whale and
you're swallowed up by something that lurks underneath, that you can come out the other
side transformed.
And that's actually how people learn.
Every time you learn something, you learn because something you did didn't work.
And that exposes you to the part of the world that you don't understand.
Every time you're exposed to part of the world that you don't understand, you have the possibility
of rebuilding the structures that you use
to interpret the world.
That's often why it's more important to notice
that you're wrong than it is to prove that you're right.
One of the things that you're supposed
to learn in university is precisely that.
It might be useful to listen to people that annoy you
on the off chance that they know something.
That if they tell you, you can use instead of dying.
Talking to people who agree with what you say is like walking around in a desert.
You already know everything that they say.
The reason you're associating with them in that situation is so that they never say anything
that challenges you because you're afraid that if you go outside of what you understand that you won't be able to tolerate the chaos.
But it isn't the case. People have an unbelievable capacity to face and overcome things they don't understand.
And not only that, that's essentially what gives life its meaning. The Buddha's say life is suffering.
And you think, well, if that's the case, why bother with it? And people do ask that question, and they ask it in ways that result in their own destruction
and worse in the destruction of others.
So for example, people who become particularly cruel, particularly in a genocidal manner,
are more than willing to dispense with as many human beings as they can possibly train
their sights on, because they're so disgusted by the nature of human limitation that they'd rather eradicate it.
And lots of people become suicidal,
because they can't bear the conditions
of their own existence.
And suffering is real, and it's inescapable.
So the question is, what do you do about it?
You notice in your own life,
and you can do this by watching your own life.
I often ask my clients to do this.
So you look, watch your life for a week.
Pretend you don't know who you are because you don't know who you are at all.
What you understand most about yourself are the arbitrary presuppositions that you use to him yourself in.
And you act as if those presuppositions are true so that the revelation of the full nature
of your character won't terrify you.
People hide in their own boxes and it's not surprising, but it's not a good idea because
life is too hard to hide in a box.
You can't manage it if you do that.
If you watch yourself for a week, you'll see certain things.
You'll see some of the time that you're resentful and annoyed.
And those are times when you're either taking advantage of yourself or you're thinking improperly.
Some of the time you'll be bored.
In which case you're either undisciplined or you're probably pursuing something you don't want to pursue.
And some of the time you'll actually be engaged in life.
And the times that you're engaged in life, you won't notice that you're there.
Right? The distinction between subject and object disappears. life. And the times that you're engaged in life, you won't notice that you're there.
The distinction between subject and object disappears when you're engaged in something
that you find meaningful. The purpose of life, as far as I can tell, from studying mythology,
from studying psychology for decades, is to find a mode of being that's so meaningful
that the fact that life is suffering is no longer relevant, or maybe that it's even acceptable.
And I would say as well that people know when they're doing that.
You know when you're doing that in part because you're no longer resentful.
You think, geez, I could do this forever.
There's a timelessness that's associated with that state of being.
From a mythological perspective, that's equivalent to brief habitation of the kingdom of God.
That's the place where you are that's so meaningful
that it enables you to bear the harsh preconditions of life
without becoming resentful, bitter, or cruel.
And there's nothing that you can pursue in your life
that will be half as useful as that.
Your nervous system being an evolved structure
is evolved for a universe that is composed
of the interaction between chaos and order.
Those are the most fundamental constants that we know.
They transcend the mere perception of objects.
Everywhere you go is chaos in order.
Traditional Chinese doctors go into people's houses to diagnose why it is that someone in that house is suffering.
And they walk in and they think, there's too much order here.
I've been in houses like that.
That's a house where all the furniture is covered with plastic.
That's a house where if you put a glass on a wooden table,
the mistress of the house runs over with the coaster,
slips it under immediately and gives you a dirty look.
That's a place where the children never play in the living room.
That's a place where the lines in the carpenter vacuum
so precisely that they're actually parallel.
That's a place where there's so much order
that no one can survive because the person
who runs the house is a tyrant.
And that anyone who's sick in that house is sick
because they're suffering from an excess of order.
And then you can walk into a house that's completely different
and you can even see this in your own room if you want
Everything's in complete disarray. You can't even look at that place You're sick the moment you cross the threshold because everywhere you look there's parts of
Untransformed chaos yelling to you do something about this
Loser
If you walk into your study and you have a stack of papers in the midst of which is buried your homework, you'll notice that you have a very
tough time looking at that stack of papers. And the reason for that is that the
stack of papers that you're ignoring that's aging and causing you more trouble with each passing day is a portal into order through
which chaos is flowing. And if you ignore that long enough, the chaos will flow
through that portal and take over your room and then take over your life. And you
might think, well, that's a very strange way of looking at things. And I suppose
it is.
But just as an experiment to see whether or not this is true, try not paying your taxes
for 10 years and see what happens. This is an old representation, right, atlas with the
world. Well, it's a representation that says that that's the proper way to live, right,
that the way that you live properly, so that you can withstand the nature of your own
being, is to pick up a load that's heavy enough so that if you carry it, you have some self-respect.
That's a very weird idea because it's frequently the case that people do everything they
can to lighten their load.
But the problem with carrying a light load is that then you have nothing that's useful to do.
And if you have nothing useful to do, all you have around you, unless you're extremely fortunate,
and not will only be the case for very short periods of time, is meaningless suffering.
And there's nothing worse for your soul than meaningless suffering.
If you look around, you see the people that you respect.
And I don't mean that you think about respecting.
I mean, the ones that you're got, your whole being, your embodied being, tells you to respect. And I don't mean that you think about respecting. I mean the ones that you're got, your whole being,
your embodied being, tells you to respect.
You'll see that it's always people who picked up something
heavy and are carrying it successfully.
You think, now that's what it means to be a human being.
And when you see that, you can think, well,
perhaps life is worthwhile, despite the fact
that the essential nature of reality is suffering.
There's an old Jewish idea and the idea is that man and God are in a sense twins.
It's a very strange idea but it seems to hinge on something like this.
The classic attributes of God, these are the attributes of the absolute, are omniscience,
omnipotence, and omnipresence.
Do anything, be anything,
can't translate the other one momentarily.
There's a question that goes along with that.
What is a being that's characterized
by the absolute attributes of God-lack?
And the answer to that is limitation. And that's an unbelievably interesting idea.
The reason it's so interesting is because one of the things that modern psychology is increasingly
telling us is that without the limitation that a creature like us, with the structure of
our consciousness, brings to bear on the world, there's no reality. That what reality is
is an emergent consequence of the interaction between something that's painfully limited like us and whatever the absolute is,
which is something that is completely without borders.
And what that implies in a sense is that without limitation there's no being.
With limitation there's suffering.
Without suffering then there's no being.
Well you might think well perhaps there should be no being.
And lots of people act their whole lives in order to see if they can make that a possibility.
And that's really a luxury we don't have anymore.
But the alternative is to presume that being is worth the suffering
and to find a mode of being that allows you to make that claim in reality.
And I would say in a sense that's your existential destiny.
And if you're here at university rather than a trade school, your job is to figure out
how to be a human being.
And that's a much more important job than any specific time limited concrete pragmatic
plan.
You have an unlimited possibility for good.
Really, individuals are way more powerful than they think. They're more powerful for evil, but they're also more powerful for good.
These are KX stories that I've been telling you about. They have something to say to you. They say, life is uncertain.
You'll never know enough, and not only that, you never can do enough. And not only that, everything that you stand on is shaky.
And not only that, everything that you stand on is shaky. And then they say, but you still have to stand on it.
And while you're standing on it, you have to improve it.
And that's how life goes on.
And that's how you live your life.
And if you forget those things, or if you undermine them,
you're in the same situation that the unfortunate man was,
that I told you about in the Old Testament,
who reached out to touch something he should
have left alone. To the degree that you're human, you have to abide by a certain set of
truths. The truths that I told you about today are as far as I can tell, something that's
close to a minimal set. There's chaos. There's order. You're stuck with both of them and they both have a cost and they both have advantages.
And your job is to figure out how to serve as the appropriate mediator between the two. And you can tell when you're doing that because when you're doing that,
the dismal circumstances of your life
manifest themselves to you as eminently acceptable. And it's in that situation that you know that you've
placed yourself in a position in nature where everything is in harmony
and that's the place to aim for.
At this point in the lecture,
there's a question and answer period.
Question one.
How do you take your ideas about embracing suffering and apply them to treatments for mental
illness?
The first thing I would say is that if you're dealing with someone who's depressed and
they're really depressed, you should try giving them antidepressants.
Because if they die, you can't help them. Okay, so if you're
suffering, you are obligated in a sense to hold on to whatever rope someone
throws you. And one of the things I do with my clients all the time, especially if
they're really in trouble is to tell them, look, I don't know exactly what's
going to help you, but don't arbitrarily throw out any possibilities
because you might not have that luxury.
Anti-depressants help a lot of people, and there are technical reasons why that's the case.
So that's a simple answer.
It's not relevant to what I already described, except that if you're offered a gift by your
society and it works, try it.
I don't care what your presuppositions are. Apart from that, lots of time, lots of
time you see people who are suffering with depression, for example. There's a multitude
of reasons, but I'll take one common reason. You can think about it as associated with the
story of Peter Pan. A Peter Pan is someone who won't grow up, right? Now the problem with Peter Pan is he gets to be king, but it's king of Neverland. Neverland doesn't exist. So being king of
nothing isn't that helpful. Well one of the things that you often see with people who suffer
from depression and I'm not making a blanket statement about the cause of depression because
there's lots of them is that people who don't have enough order in their life tend to get overwhelmed.
there's lots of them is that people who don't have enough order in their life tend to get overwhelmed.
So for example, if someone comes into me and sees to see me and they say they're depressed,
I always ask them a very standard set of questions.
Do you have a job?
If you don't have a job, you're really in trouble in our society.
First of all, your biological rhythms tend to go off the rails right away because there's
no reason to go to bed at any particular time because there's no reason to go to bed at any particular time, and there's no reason to get up.
And for many people, if they don't get up at the same time, they follow up the functioning
of their circadian rhythms, and that's enough to make them depressed right off the bat,
especially if they start napping during the afternoon.
They don't have a purpose.
People aren't good without a purpose.
And this isn't hypothesizing.
We absolutely understand the circuitry that underlies positive emotion.
We know how it works.
Almost all the positive emotion that any of you are likely to experience in your life
will not be a consequence of attaining things.
It will be a consequence of seeing that things are working as you proceed towards a goal you value.
That's completely different.
And you need to know this because people are often stunned for example.
They finish their PhD thesis.
And their presupposition is that they're
going to be elated for a month.
And often instead, they're actually depressed.
And they think, what the hell?
I've been working on this for seven years, and I
handed it in.
And what do I do now?
And that's what depresses them, right?
It's the what do I do now?
Well, they're fine if they enjoyed it,
pursuing the thing.
As long as it was working out, they get a lot of enthusiasm and excitement out of that,
because that's how our nervous systems work.
Most of your positive emotion is goal pursuit, emotion.
If you take drugs like cocaine or amphetamine,
the reason they're enjoyable is because they turn
on the systems that help you pursue goals.
That's why people like them.
So if you don't have a job, you've got no structure.
That's not good.
Plus, you tend not to have a point. So, you're
overwhelmed by chaotic lack of structure and you don't have any positive emotion. Well,
do you have any friends? So, sometimes you see people who are depressed, they have no
job, they have no friends, they have no intimate relationship, they have an additional health
problem, and they have a drug and alcohol problem. My experience is being, if you have three
of those problems, it's almost impossible to help you.
You're so deeply mired in chaos that you can't get out
because you make progress on one front
and one of your other problems pulls you down.
So one of the things I tell people who are depressed is like,
don't sacrifice your stability.
Get a job.
Even if it's not the job you exactly want.
Get a damn job.
You need a job.
Find some friends. Get out in the dating circuit. See if you can establish an intimate relationship.
Put together some of the foundation items that are like pillars that your life rests on.
Well, that's the practical thing to do. So that's one example with regards to depression. question.
Question 2.
How do your clients respond to the suggestion that they establish structure in their life
as an antidote to depression?
Well, the thing is, you don't just launch it on them.
You know, you got to negotiate with the person person and you also got to teach them to negotiate with
themselves.
And this is something that's very useful to know.
You can tyrannize yourself into doing things but I wouldn't recommend it.
What I would recommend instead is that you ask yourself what you're willing to do.
It's a really effective technique.
It's like a meditative technique.
So for example, you can get up in the morning and you can think, well, you know, I'd like
to have a good day today. So I'd like to go to bed tonight without feeling guilty because I, you can get up in the morning and you can think, well, you know, I'd like to have a good day today
So I'd like to go to bed tonight without feeling guilty because I you know didn't do some things
I said I was gonna do and I you know, I'd like to have kind of an interesting day
So you got to fulfill my responsibilities, and I want to you know enjoy the day
Then you can ask yourself well, okay, what would I have to do in order for that to happen that I would do?
And the probability if you practice this for three or four days, is your brain will just tell you,
say, well, there's that piece of homework
that you haven't done for three weeks.
You should knock that sucker off, because it will only
take you 10 minutes, and you've been avoiding it
and torching yourself to death for 72 hours straight.
And if you do that, here's a little interesting thing you can do.
And maybe this is a little obligation
you should clean up.
So what you do in a situation like that is
you teach the person to negotiate with themself. Say, well, let's figure out what your aims
are. You've got to have some aims, whatever they are. And they might say, well, I'm so depressed,
I don't have any aims. And then I say, well, pick the least objectionable of the aims and act
it out for while and see what happens. Because sometimes your emotional systems are so followed
up that you have to pretend, you have to act the thing out before you can start to believe it.
I mean people always assume they have to believe in them act, but that's sometimes that's true in lots of times it isn't.
So the trick, if you're doing therapeutic work with someone and you're helping them establish a structure, is to find out what they'll do.
Now, if they want to get better, which is not a given, because there are often payoffs for not getting better,
that's basically the payoffs of being a martyr,
or maybe the payoffs of doing what your entirely
pathological family members want you to do,
because they actually want you to fail,
assuming you want to get better, there's usually something
you can figure out that would constitute a step towards some sort
of concrete goal.
And my presumption, it's a behavioral presumption fundamentally, is that small accruing gains that
repeat unbelievably powerful.
So this is another thing to know about in your own life.
It's something I learned in part from reading the writings of Alexander Solzhenitsin.
It was a great Russian philosopher and novelist.
You know, he said, you can look at your life and you can see what isn't right about it.
I mean all you have to is look. And then you can start to fix that. And the way you fix it is by noticing what you could in fact fix.
You know people are often trying to fix things they can't fix, which I would not recommend because if you try to fix something you't fix, you'll just ruin it. Like you can find all sorts of undergraduates who are perfectly willing to restructure
the international economic system who cannot keep their room clean.
And there's actually a gap there, which, and it's surprising that people don't actually notice.
So I would say, if you pay attention, you can see things that you could fix.
They yell at you.
They really do.
We even know how that happens.
Let me give you an example, because rooms are full of stories.
And the stories have effects on you, so here's a classic experiment.
So you take two groups undergraduate, you bring them into your lab,
and you give one group a multiple choice test that has a bunch of words in it that are associated with being old.
And you give the other group the same multiple choice test, except the words are associated with being young.
This is independent of the content of the test.
It's just descriptions.
And then you time the undergraduates
as they walk back to the elevators.
The ones who read, the ones who completed the multiple choice
test that had more words associated with aging
walk slower back to the elevators.
And they don't know that.
And they don't know they're doing it.
And that study's been replicated in various forms many, many times.
You're unbelievably sensitive to the story that your environment's telling you.
Because your environment is not made out of objects.
That's just wrong.
Your environment is basically made out of something like tools and obstacles.
You're a tool using creature.
You're a tool perceiving creature.
The things used, like if I take you out of this room and I say, well, what was in the room?
You're not going to say, you you know random patterns in the carpet because they're
real, just as good an object as anything else, you're going to say chairs because you can
sit on them and you're going to say handrails because you can hold them, you're going to
say stairs because you can walk down them. That's what you see and that's what you interact
with. And if you pay attention to your environment, which is you by the way extended, all of
your experiences you, it will tell you extended, all of your experiences you,
it will tell you all the time what you should do,
all you have to do is do it.
But then you have to decide if you want to do it.
One of the things I've noticed about people,
because I've wondered, once I started studying
this mythological stories, and I got this idea about
the fact that life can be meaningful enough
to justify its suffering, I thought,
God, that's such a good idea. Because it's not optimistic exactly, you know, some people will tell you what you can be happy, to justify its suffering. I thought, God, that's such a good idea.
Because it's not optimistic exactly.
Some people will tell you what you can be happy.
It's like those people are idiots.
I'm telling you, they're idiots.
There's going to be things that come along that flatten you
so hard you won't believe it.
And you're not happy then.
And so if life is to be happy, well, in those situations,
what are you doing?
Why even live?
But that isn't, life isn't to be happy.
If you're happy,
you're bloody fortunate and you should enjoy it. You should because it's the grace of God so to speak
with regards to to meaning. I thought well people know when they're doing something meaningful.
They can tell so why the hell don't they do meaningful things all the time. It seems obvious. You
could do it. It means hard, you know, because other people want you to do other things, and it's a struggle, but everything's a struggle. And then I thought, well, oh, I get it. I see why.
It took me about 10 years to figure this out. People have a choice. Choice number one. Nothing you do
means anything. Well, that's kind of a drag, right? Meaninglessness of life and all that existential
angst, you know, that's kind of a pain. But the upside of nothing that you do is meaningful is,
you don't have to do anything.
You've got no responsibility.
Now, you have to suffer because things are meaningless,
but that's a small price to pay
for being able to be completely useless.
The alternative, the alternative is,
everything you do matters.
Really, if you make a mistake, it's a real mistake.
If you betray someone,
you tilt the world a little more sharply towards evil rather than good. It matters what you
do. Well, if you buy that, then you can have a meaningful life. But there's no mucking
around. It means responsibility. It means that the decisions you make are important. It
means that when you do something wrong, it's wrong. Well, do you want that?
Are we centers of our own morality? See, that's a very hard question because people don't
always mean the same thing when they say their own moral compass. Now, so here's what I mean by that
technically.
Part of the reason that you're able to distinguish
between right and wrong is because you are a certain
kind of biological organism.
And then another reason is that your head is full
of other people, all the people you've
met, all the people that you've interacted with.
They're all telling you a way to behave that's good
and a way that isn't.
There are circumstances under which your conscience should, the duty you have to your conscience
should override the duty you have to social norms.
But before you break a rule, because you think you're going to be doing a good thing, you bloody
well, better make sure you have your head screwed on straight.
Because every time you tell yourself a lie and every time you act out of falsehood,
you disturb the pristine integrity of your nervous system,
and the reports it'll give you about the nature of the world
will be distorted as a consequence of that.
So yeah, you have a moral obligation
to follow the dictates of your conscience,
but you also have a moral obligation
to make sure that your life is straight enough
so that you can rely on your own judgment.
And you can't separate those things.
Thank you for listening to episode one of Psychology in the Modern World with Dr. Jordan
B. Peterson.
That was episode one, Reality and the Sacred.
You can support this podcast by donating the amount of your choice at Jordan Peterson's
Patreon, which you can access by googling Jordan Peterson Patreon.
Thank you for listening.