Dr Jordan B Peterson | *full-length* 2014 interview

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

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  • @williamkoscielniak820
    @williamkoscielniak820 8 лет назад +613

    I just discovered this man like a week ago. I'm convinced he is the true successor to the likes of Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Jung, and Campbell, along with being one of the most important geniuses among the living. I just ordered his book "maps of meaning". Can't wait to read it! More people need to know about this man!

    • @syanyade1260
      @syanyade1260 8 лет назад +5

      William Koscielniak

    • @mwnciboo
      @mwnciboo 8 лет назад +34

      William Koscielniak very interesting but don't fall under the spell of someone who is erudite. Give it more time to consider his positions and his ideas, just because someone sounds convincing doesn't make them a genius.

    • @lioncaptive
      @lioncaptive 8 лет назад +2

      +mwnciboo
      Brilliant man who spend his career builder exploring the meaning of singularity.

    • @mwnciboo
      @mwnciboo 8 лет назад +12

      Marion Deleon i would agree but the word Genius gets bandied about far too much by people who don't understand the subject who are bamboozled into awe. His explainations and suppositions often are predicated on his own beliefs the whole "Snake piece" and the stories of early man was conjecture and pseudo-science e.g Belief without firm evidence
      , based on conviction.

    • @kiddcode2848
      @kiddcode2848 8 лет назад +31

      I agree! His views offer a very refreshing alternative to the nihilistic or morally self-aggrandizing doublespeak I hear from many so called deep thinkers today. I also hope/suspect listening and thinking about these ideas may one day allow someone to pull others out of the same philosophical swamp I only recently realized I was standing in!

  • @wizkid2000
    @wizkid2000 8 лет назад +731

    Ever watch a 2 and a half hour interview and wished it was longer?

    • @--___--d
      @--___--d 8 лет назад +29

      Its a cue for you to look up the details for the rest of your life.

    • @mycattitude
      @mycattitude 8 лет назад +28

      Yes, the Joe Rogan one he did recently, even moreso. I've listened to that one 3 or 4 times. I'll give this one another go when i've had lots of sleep. Philosophy is tough sledding for me. Peterson is the only one who doesn't make it boring as paint drying. But i have the deep religious background as well as lifelong interest in psychology to keep me anchored.

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 8 лет назад +9

      *Philosophy is tough sledding for me.*
      Mate, it's like that for _everyone_, even the people who make it look easy.
      *Peterson is the only one who doesn't make it boring as paint drying.*
      Sam Harris does that for me as well on his podcast, though I may be more interested because I'm an atheist, and he often presents how spirituality (for lack of a better term) can be pursued without the metaphysics, which is a relatively new idea (sorta, depending on how you look at history).

    • @HypnoticRhythmm
      @HypnoticRhythmm 8 лет назад +3

      If you enjoy listening to philosophy Stefan Molyneux is another incredible voice to listen to. Stefan has the largest show on philosophy in the world and is possibly the best example of someone who elicits philosophical thought in an effective yet entertaining way.

    • @wizkid2000
      @wizkid2000 8 лет назад +17

      J Puleo Stefan Molyneux is a fraud! The only original thing he ever created was UPB which is nonsense that he doesn't even bother trying to defend anymore. Every good idea he has he ripped off from some other philosopher (mostly Rothbard) and pawned it off as his own. He is a liar and an unstable megalomaniac who thinks he is the most important philosopher of all the past 5 thousand years. He just abandoned Anarcho Capitalism for Trump-ism... I guess the grass was greener. As an Ancap I'm pretty ecstatic that an embarrassing fool no longer is associated with my political position.

  • @TheWildernessLife
    @TheWildernessLife 4 года назад +88

    This man has changed my life so deeply that it is totally beyond my ability to articulate. It’s not an exaggeration to say that he has saved my life. From the bottom of my heart, thank you Dr. Peterson!

    • @coledriescher9401
      @coledriescher9401 2 года назад

      I didn't know how to articulate how I felt but I think you come very, very close to this feeling and you say it well!

    • @Zinzinnovich
      @Zinzinnovich 2 года назад

      I just discovered him last week, how he changed your life? happy that it turned good for you :)

    • @Greg400
      @Greg400 2 года назад +3

      This is the Dr. Peterson i miss

    • @gary_michael_flanagan_wildlife
      @gary_michael_flanagan_wildlife Год назад

      Same. I am much better working with people than ever before. When you understand human personality traits, it really helps you figure out what people want. Especially when your job is to talk to people for a living and inspire them

    • @celineschlup1758
      @celineschlup1758 Год назад

      Me too! He was min-expanding, non-divisive and exploratory!!! When the world has not inflated him yet. I always come back to him around this time of his life, because there is just no better thinker/articulater around!

  • @alexanderpetrenko539
    @alexanderpetrenko539 9 лет назад +52

    I can never seem to get enough of Dr. Peterson. I started sometime in late 2012 with his Maps of Meaning and never looked back.

    • @tonygram5414
      @tonygram5414 4 года назад

      I feel the same.

    • @Axillity
      @Axillity 4 года назад +4

      Damn you really got in early!

    • @sunriseWorld-007
      @sunriseWorld-007 3 года назад

      @alexander petrenko how did you come across Dr. Peterson?

    • @quantumfizzics9265
      @quantumfizzics9265 2 года назад

      @@sunriseWorld-007 he sold edibles across the street from where I live

    • @anonymousanonymous7593
      @anonymousanonymous7593 2 года назад +1

      You should consider looking back

  • @richardelliott2768
    @richardelliott2768 7 лет назад +158

    While listening to this a memory bubbled up which reminded me how wise children can be, and which confirms what Petey is saying about one essential difference humans have from other primates is that we can invent new dominance hierarchies: "That's what creativity is."
    When my son was about 8, and being a single Dad, I took him to a holiday park where there'd be lots of other kids. He used to run around the adventure playground having a fine time.
    One morning he noticed I was sat on my own reading the paper and he trotted over and asked "Haven't you got any friends?" I said "Well no, not here." So he said in all his genius, "Oh, it's easy, Dad. All you have to do is make up a game, teach people how to play it and then you'll have some friends." He'd consciously accessed his hard-wired instinct for surviving in a hierarchy.
    So then the little fecker ran back to the group, whispered something to them, came back to me and said "Right, you're the monster and you have to get us!" and ran off. As soon as I stood up all the kids started screaming and ran off into the undergrowth or climbed up into tree-houses. How archetypal it that!

    • @detBits
      @detBits 7 лет назад +4

      Richard Elliott
      Funny story.

    • @rockhard2654
      @rockhard2654 6 лет назад +6

      i love that story ,if that story was a movie it would win an oscar

    • @Schleicherfreund
      @Schleicherfreund 6 лет назад +21

      +Richard Elliott
      One other thing that you're eluding to, is that kids, cross culturally, that are isolated from one another seem to make up the same games. "Monster. You're it and you have to catch me and I am afraid of you touching me", that's a game virtually every kid will conjur up, because it's embedded into them, an archetype dramatized.
      PS: Not a good look, a grown man in a Park, chasing kids. :D

    • @MariaSpooon
      @MariaSpooon 6 лет назад +5

      The story is funny and real, I laughed so much. It shows that you are bringing your son up in the perfect environment for him, respect.

    • @lukiso5734
      @lukiso5734 4 года назад +2

      Wow, your kid very smart

  • @antypasandreas8435
    @antypasandreas8435 2 года назад +6

    I believe this is possibly the best material on JP available online. Not that the lectures and newer interviews are not worth listening to, but there is something about this interview that seems to me at least to be unadulterated by his more reactionary/ideological thoughts. There is value in both to be sure, but you get a Jordan Peterson here that is truly in his element as a humble meta-thinker. It also helps that the interviewer was great and could actually follow along with the conversation, which is more than I can say about myself at certain points.

  • @qounqer
    @qounqer 8 лет назад +336

    I admire how he can hold an argument with himself for 20 minutes and when he's done he looks like a combination of someone who has just came and a paranoid schizophrenic. A true philosopher. I wish my professor was him, not an elderly gay man who spent 6 weeks explaining why God wasn't real and made us read the colour purple.

    • @francescop1
      @francescop1 8 лет назад +21

      you have articulated my already existing abstract thoughts in your words in a beautiful way. I also enjoy it tremendously when he is arguing with himself.

    • @startup_dream
      @startup_dream 8 лет назад +13

      I spat on myself while laughing out loud reading your comment.

    • @georgechristiansen6785
      @georgechristiansen6785 8 лет назад +6

      Best commentary on JP I've come across.
      My first read had me picturing a group of students reading the color purple the way they might try to read the color red.
      I like my version a bit better. ;)

    • @thealchemistdaughter3405
      @thealchemistdaughter3405 7 лет назад +17

      Haha!!..excellent comment!!!."the test of a first rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time".Scott Fitzgerald...most of us end up with cognitive dissonance and fall into one camp or the other. not this man!!..I think he is a secret Jedi zen master sent to save humanity from the clutches of soulless Marxist professors...:-)

    • @hrvad
      @hrvad 7 лет назад +17

      Tyrone Slothrup And this lunatic uploaded his damn lectures to his channel. I'm going back to university on his channel. It's absolutely amazing. When I saw this one I went "YES! Two and a half hours! Oh man this is gonna be awesome."

  • @rhettmelton
    @rhettmelton 5 лет назад +74

    This is the best distillation of Peterson's overall worldview that I've found. Thanks for evoking it from him, and capturing it for the rest of us to see

    • @TheRealStoryWeaver
      @TheRealStoryWeaver 3 года назад +1

      Definitely the best distillation I have seen throughout all of his lectures and interviews! Thanks!

  • @mohammedhanif6780
    @mohammedhanif6780 8 лет назад +429

    he is a global treasure - even if you disagree with him

    • @waksibra
      @waksibra 8 лет назад +4

      Disagree with him? can anyone claim to follow what he says? sounds like esoteric woo to me.

    • @mohammedhanif6780
      @mohammedhanif6780 8 лет назад +34

      waksibra​ if you're predisposed to dismiss religious or mythological truth then I agree that it could be just so much woo. However, he's a trained psychologist, former Harvard lecturer, and a tenured professor with oversubscribed courses and hard nosed corporate clients seeking his services.
      Watch some of his online lectures.
      (You know you left the door open for me to make a typically dumb internet putdown about your intellect but Professor Peterson's videos ain't the place 😆)

    • @mohammedhanif6780
      @mohammedhanif6780 8 лет назад +5

      Feral try Carl Jung, Friedrich Neitzche, Alexander Solzynitsin.

    • @ianipoo
      @ianipoo 8 лет назад +28

      Blue Jacky name 1 original thinker that wasn't inspired by someone else and didn't depend on anyone else's research to study

    • @terrancevanliew1814
      @terrancevanliew1814 8 лет назад +14

      Blue Jacky If you even understood half of what he was saying, you wouldn't be using the term "original thinker" as a tool to dismiss his ideas.

  • @Fanofjambi
    @Fanofjambi 8 лет назад +83

    It hurts, therefore I am

  • @cheesepwnage
    @cheesepwnage 8 лет назад +294

    man I love this guy.

    • @eleannakritikaki4811
      @eleannakritikaki4811 8 лет назад +3

      I know, same. He actually looks a lot like my father. It is scary =s

    • @wodenravens
      @wodenravens 8 лет назад +21

      Would he be the archetypal father?

    • @eleannakritikaki4811
      @eleannakritikaki4811 8 лет назад +12

      woden1809 I think he is. He wants to toughen you up. I also think this is a father's role. This is what my dad has told me too. But his face looks like my dad's face as well. Like, fuck mate

    • @hydraelectricblue
      @hydraelectricblue 7 лет назад

      Lol you racist always think you have so much influence and the rest of the world pictures a bunch of lunatics dressed in tank tops who reside in the woods drinking beer. We nod our heads and smile as you work yourself into frenzies about how "you are the superior race." As you walk away and turn your back to us we say to each other "poor thing, god bless him." We try to avoid you on the streets because we don't know if lunacy and a low IQ is catching, but we aren't taking any chances.

    • @maksgonopolsky8374
      @maksgonopolsky8374 4 года назад

      @@hydraelectricblue Whhhhat

  • @Kosumo73
    @Kosumo73 8 лет назад +63

    When I first found this guy, I thought he was just your regular college professor but with enough common sense to see through the PC bullshit. But I never expected to find him so interesting. Now I want to read everything and everyone he mentions.

    • @sunriseWorld-007
      @sunriseWorld-007 3 года назад

      @Kosumo how did you come across Dr. Peterson?

  • @williamvanevery3536
    @williamvanevery3536 Год назад +18

    This is truly the peak of Peterson's philosophical veiws. He is so sharp here and doesnt leave questions hanging like nowadays

    • @zacw812
      @zacw812 Год назад +3

      I think his illness really took a toll on him. He's still great, but it seems as though his ideas are sort of rehashed now rather than new insight.

    • @sunriseWorld-007
      @sunriseWorld-007 3 месяца назад

      @@zacw812 it sure seems like it and to make matters worse when he is interviewing someone he will dominate the conversation and go on these rambling tangents and like you said rehashes the same ideas.

    • @zacw812
      @zacw812 3 месяца назад

      @@sunriseWorld-007 Agreed. Used to be a fan but not so much anymore.

  • @frepi
    @frepi 8 лет назад +44

    Man this guy is brilliant.

  • @photosolutions8618
    @photosolutions8618 4 года назад +10

    I've never been this captivated to listen to a man speak about subjects an topics that could be stereotyped as "boring" and "tedious". But somehow, Dr Peterson is so genuinely passionate and knowledgeable about what he talks about that I can listen to his interviews and lectures for hours even if I struggle to grasp or retain a lot of it. I've listen to comedian's podcasts that I'm a fan of for hours, but these lectures are on a whole different level of pleasant entertainment because at the end of them, even if I don't retain most of it, I know it wasn't a waste of time.

  • @Ostsol
    @Ostsol 8 лет назад +194

    14:50 This is why I often scrap my own RUclips comments before submitting them... I write them, then re-read them, then realise counter arguments and solutions in a cycle until I find that I don't have a concrete position. :/ It dawns upon me that what I initially wrote was what I wished to be true, rather than what after careful thought I honestly believed to actually be true.

    • @lioncaptive
      @lioncaptive 8 лет назад +3

      I too find myself thinking for the deepest rationalist comment before submitting to viewing. Abraham Lincoln had similar struggles before addressing his generals but made great historical narrative in context...it served its function.

    • @rkane19
      @rkane19 8 лет назад +1

      Ostsol me too! If only more people did it as well.

    • @CaptCutler
      @CaptCutler 8 лет назад +8

      I just deleted my comment to this.

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 8 лет назад +7

      Congrats, you have a brain that appears to be functional!
      Seriously though, Ben Franklin was bang-on when he said confidence begets ignorance more often than it begets intelligence.

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 8 лет назад +3

      *****
      Confidenception.

  • @fantasick8880
    @fantasick8880 8 лет назад +148

    How could anyone possibly listen to this guy and conclude that he's hateful in any way? SJW's are pure poison.

    • @Ton-uy1xd
      @Ton-uy1xd 7 лет назад +10

      FANTASICK They really are poison. I heard Peterson explain somewhere in another interview that what's at the core of the SJW mentality is revenge. These people really are acting out their hatred for existence itself through passive aggression.

    • @jonnyenough1531
      @jonnyenough1531 7 лет назад +5

      FANTASICK Yes. They are. Look up yuri bezmonov useful idiots. They didn't come out of nowhere. They were raised. He said this back in 1984,-kgb defector. That'll blow your mind when you see the Marxist plan.

    • @ImNotJoshPotter
      @ImNotJoshPotter 7 лет назад +1

      John G. Boy you were busy giving weak arguments in this comment section. Is Peterson's analysis of communism unfounded too? Or how about his thoughts on free speech? Did you read a Dawkins book and feel super duper smart or something?

    • @davidsirmons
      @davidsirmons 7 лет назад

      FANTASICK actually, social INjustice warriors are poison.

    • @GordieGii
      @GordieGii 6 лет назад +3

      It's like he said in the Kathy Newman interview. "They don't actually listen."

  • @skumflum3768
    @skumflum3768 Год назад +32

    Never saw this interview before! It’s nice to hear “Jordan Peterson the professor” and not “Jordan Peterson the political/anti-woke commentator”

    • @christophersnedeker
      @christophersnedeker 10 месяцев назад +4

      Agreed I lobe Jordan's philosophy and psychology even though I disagree with his politics.

    • @Jesper-bl2ns
      @Jesper-bl2ns 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@christophersnedeker I think there are many of us that are like that. I thoroughly enjoy his books and university lectures, his tour lectures and the motivation videos, while being more selective when he is not being the "Professor".

    • @sunriseWorld-007
      @sunriseWorld-007 3 месяца назад

      Does it seem like The Daily Wire "bought" him? His topics and monologues are considerably less multi-dimensional and nuanced than they were.

  • @heyfriend8519
    @heyfriend8519 2 месяца назад +3

    This remains in my view, one of the best if not the best interview of Peterson out there. He lays out his way of thinking so well, you really get to see the foundation on wich he builds his ideas, the aesthetic is also incredible.

  • @jeffschoolmaster4737
    @jeffschoolmaster4737 8 лет назад +147

    Holy shit, a Canadian figured it out.

    • @mycattitude
      @mycattitude 8 лет назад +13

      Team Canada.

    • @zo1dberg
      @zo1dberg 7 лет назад

      Jeff Schoolmaster LOL That should piss of the Americans :)

    • @orloification
      @orloification 6 лет назад

      good one!

    • @leefithian3704
      @leefithian3704 6 лет назад +2

      He is my favorite Canadien , but he doesn’t come across like the know it all canadiens I saw every winter while they were ( being Canadian .......in south Florida) lol

    • @dr.jackdempsey8712
      @dr.jackdempsey8712 6 лет назад

      Captain America! Wrapped in a red oak leaf flag! Oh, the beauty Canada exports.

  • @danrocky2553
    @danrocky2553 4 года назад +20

    I don't think I ever heard a more valuable interview in my life. Going to rewatch it with a notebook for sure.

  • @MagnumOpusYT
    @MagnumOpusYT 7 лет назад +34

    Too many people commenting who obviously cannot comprehend his valid argument. He has considered this for 40 years. Read all the scientific, neuroscience, social, mythological, political, philosophical, economic, anthropologic, religious literature. All hail the logos embodied and articulated. Poppa prof peterson the prophet. The great father, orderer of chaos, cleaner of rooms. Teller of truths. Articulator of the archetypes.

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 4 года назад +1

      I am an atheist but I think theology might be a really interesting subject to study, in a similar way to me as mythology might be really interesting to study. Jordan Peterson goes over my head but I really enjoy his passion, enthusiasm, dedication, and love of his studies that he expresses so well ( although as I said, it goes over my head, but I presume from comments and my general belief that his studies are expressed so well ).

    • @bblackburn1823
      @bblackburn1823 9 месяцев назад

      I love it! Go clean your emotional room one little problem at a time! Reminds me of the 12 Steps.

  • @LittleLikeness
    @LittleLikeness 8 лет назад +28

    It's so great to have another lengthy video where we can listen in depth to Dr Jordan Peterson! Thanks for posting!

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +2

      Our pleasure, glad you find it interesting.

  • @dwight4k
    @dwight4k 8 лет назад +144

    I firmly believe that his brain uses his body as means of transportation.

    • @darthstigater6642
      @darthstigater6642 6 лет назад +8

      This is the way it should be. The tragedy is that we can't say that about most of humanity.

    • @jamiemb17
      @jamiemb17 5 лет назад +1

      Yep! That is what bodies should be!

    • @scotti23q81
      @scotti23q81 4 года назад

      :D

    • @notloki3377
      @notloki3377 3 года назад

      @@darthstigater6642 get off your high horse. you're no more objective than anyone else.

    • @notloki3377
      @notloki3377 3 года назад

      the brain and the body are the same thing.

  • @shmay6148
    @shmay6148 3 года назад +14

    JP has primed my brain with the prerequisite knowledge required to read and digest books that, despite my interest, I just could not fully absorb a few years ago. Thanks JP 🙏

  • @xbrando7
    @xbrando7 5 лет назад +15

    I think this is the most profound JP interview/conversation I've seen. It shows how well-read and comprehensive his thinking is, and it helps me to close some of the gaps in my own thinking. It's great that the interviewer can keep up and help the conversation flow the way it should.

  • @konberner170
    @konberner170 8 лет назад +44

    Wow, really great stuff. Very rare to find such an intellectually honest proponent of philosophy.

  • @xitzprofessor
    @xitzprofessor 9 лет назад +9

    been watching Dr Jordan for a long time now and I just have to say...you have saved me man. A huge part of my journey. Continue to be..

    • @xitzprofessor
      @xitzprofessor 9 лет назад +2

      +Michael Randell - xitzprofessor obviously not the original jordanpeterson channel but if you ever read these...

  • @tttrrrification
    @tttrrrification 6 лет назад +4

    JBP you are the only one that made me listen to the part of me that wants to change my life for good.
    I'm 32 years old, all my life I have been attracted to the hyper rational, religion bashing atheistic, arrogant left leaning world view. I had a traumatic life, raised by a neurotic single mother after my father was murdered few meters from my home. I always saw myself as impossible to fix, as a deterministic result of a chain of bad events. I have made bad decisions that were self destructing, and I knew it and did it anyway, and I justified it by saying to myself that those decisions were a deterministic result of my unfixable character.
    The way you harmonize theology, philosophy, evolutionary psychology and self help is magical to me. I now see the value in religion and tradition, I'm less cynical, more respectful to people, more open to learning from people I always saw as inferior to me.
    Most importantly I think I can be a good father to my daughter and stop hating and fighting with my wife.
    I want to thank you, I thought I know everything and no one has anything to teach me, but I was really really blind. Now instead of always loosing to the part of me that wants to be lazy, and blame others, and escape from responsibility, the good part wins sometimes, and you feel it when it wins and that's how you know which way is up. It is still a daily struggle for me, but when I'm aiming down I listen to you and you orient me up again.
    Thank you for believing in the part of me, that I didn't even knew existed, without you even knowing me personalty.

  • @BradSayers
    @BradSayers 9 лет назад +101

    I appreciate the fact that Jordan Peterson gets Carl Jung AND religion. On both points, Richard Dawkins (et al) looks foolish and irrelevant.
    It's not an accident that Peterson starts this long 'interview' by referencing Jung. Some believe that there is no one like Jung today, even though he died in 1961. Might Peterson be in the running? I think so.
    This talk, and Maps of Meaning, does a good job discussing the ineffable - *'being'* and *'existence'*.
    On a specific point, I agree with him that Jung's message is terrifying. I think the reason is as follows:
    Many of us, perhaps all of us, from time to time, have moments when we are conscious of _being lived_. Let me say it some other ways: I am _Being_ lived. Or - I am Being _lived_. Or, I _am_. These experiences are unfiltered, and unmediated by language/culture, and are definitely rare, but they provide a powerful, unforgettable experience of transcendence when they do happen.
    Another way to say all this might be 'we don't have the control of our lives that we might imagine'. There are other, larger, archaic, eternal, ??, forces at work - in and through us - that we hardly understand, merely because *_we are / in_* this creative destructive dynamic grip we call life.
    Where are the intellectuals discussing good and evil today? The fact that Peterson takes Jung / Religion / Myth / Metaphor so seriously makes him relevant and worth listening to!

    • @MrPiragon
      @MrPiragon 8 лет назад +3

      Very well said

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +2

      Hear, hear. I'm glad that came through in the interview.

    • @Sternertime
      @Sternertime 7 лет назад +5

      blue jacky hey hope youre enjoying your ivory tower! Hows the view up there? morons eh? cant live with em cant live without em though eh?

    • @ImNotJoshPotter
      @ImNotJoshPotter 7 лет назад +3

      John G. Have you never noticed women often choose partners who are similar to their fathers? Or seen jealousy from a male toddler when their dad kisses their mom?
      Pretty weak to just dismiss an idea like that.
      I'm not even a big fan of those two but it's retarded to find one idea from someone you don't like or that is incorrect and dismiss all their other ideas. For instance I don't find much quality content in the idea of manifest dreams or the idea that people are born bi and socialized into their adult sexuality, but Freud still has some ideas with merit.
      Oh, and good argument, bro. Super insightful, great points made. I'm convinced

    • @GH3K3
      @GH3K3 7 лет назад +1

      John G.: You obviously haven't read Jung.

  • @coltonjackson3425
    @coltonjackson3425 8 лет назад +47

    great interview and discussion. Sums up many of the points from Dr. Peterson's lectures. Thank you for posting and I look forward to more!

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +11

      Our pleasure. Glad you enjoyed. You may be interested in the new series we're working on: www.newscienceofreligion.com ... It'll be a converted into a MOOC on edX.org in Jan 2017.

    • @anialiandr
      @anialiandr 8 лет назад +12

      Wonderful and the interviewer was great too. You got the BEST from Jordan Peterson. Thank you - what a delight.

  • @draconiansolo
    @draconiansolo 9 лет назад +16

    This is a better synthesis than the TED talk as far of time constraints go :)
    So nice to have his classes here in youtube as well to go to the depths of all this genius.

  • @sunnydae9
    @sunnydae9 7 лет назад +5

    This interview is pure gold. How anyone in their right mind can dislike it is beyond me.

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  7 лет назад

      Thanks sunnydae9! Check out the 2017 one as well, you may enjoy.
      FYI, we just filmed a new one, focused more specifically on his experience reading and presenting the Bible. My Patreon supporters get early access to the audio and/or video (depending on level of support), so if you’re curious, please sign up! www.patreon.com/transliminal

  • @MusixPro4u
    @MusixPro4u 8 лет назад +85

    Immensly valueable --> 2:31:54
    This whole interview is gold, though.

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +6

      Thank you, we're glad you think so.

    • @Midnight_Rider96
      @Midnight_Rider96 6 лет назад

      hydraelectricblue what? I didn't notice any racist comments. Racism is definitely stupid, and so are SJWS because they are implicitly racist ie they believe that skin color is important and a cause for concern. Skin color is not a causal factor in behavior and life outcomes, there is only a correlation.

  • @sunriseWorld-007
    @sunriseWorld-007 3 года назад +3

    i keep coming back to this interview.... AND it keeps getting better!

  • @mynonprofessionalopinion
    @mynonprofessionalopinion 8 лет назад +3

    I'm not a "clever" or "educated" man, so it was great to hear him say he didn't understand a book and had to read it three times before he started to get his head around the concept of it.....

  • @donasaunders3047
    @donasaunders3047 8 лет назад +10

    Thank you Dr. Peterson for putting this on RUclips.

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +3

      I can't speak for Dr Peterson, but as the interviewer/videographer, you're certainly very welcome. I hope you find it insightful.

    • @donasaunders3047
      @donasaunders3047 8 лет назад +2

      Oh! O.K. Yes the interview is very insightful and for me dense. I will watch it a few more times. Thanks so much!

  • @iisaka_station
    @iisaka_station 7 лет назад +6

    Jordan is my hero. I don't believe he just talks about hero myths; I think he's lived many cycles of hero myths in just his one life and he shares that experience with everyone because he can.
    Thank you for this interview

  • @seblauu
    @seblauu 4 года назад +3

    Revisiting this older Peterson content really re-ignited my appreciation for the guy. He has had such an influence in my life and thinking, and I am so grateful for having access to his journey and his mind.

  • @shivanshtyagi3254
    @shivanshtyagi3254 4 года назад +3

    I am visiting him after a 6 month hiatus. He still never misses to amaze

  • @greatmomentsofopera7170
    @greatmomentsofopera7170 4 года назад +3

    This was the interview that started it all for me with Peterson - it totally took my breath away.

  • @SlothPilgrim
    @SlothPilgrim 8 лет назад +34

    Wow, what an absolutely amazing interview. Thank you for sharing.

  • @AdelheidHornlein
    @AdelheidHornlein 7 лет назад +4

    If Jordan Peterson could see me he would have fun seeing my eyes shine every time when it clicks while listening to his lectures or interviews. He is certainly the source of opening my eyes - to something which I had somehow intuited, but couldn't get it in words. After I met Ken WIlber's books 20 years ago, Jordan is an equally big impact on me and my understanding of the world. I am very grateful for that!

  • @LiamPorterFilms
    @LiamPorterFilms 9 лет назад +8

    This is the perfect primer for JP's mighty philosophy. I'm a fan of one year and have changed a lot of my thinking because of the lectures he puts online.

  • @looqo7632
    @looqo7632 8 лет назад +28

    Well, that was.... wow. At the end, when he talks about seeing the "light come on" in his students, that happened with me.
    Just in the short time of listening/watching this, I've begun to rethink the way I see atheism and religion (I've been an atheist-agnostic for many years now). I remember reading Dawkins and being excited for new information but walking away feeling very uninspired. The question "why do I need to feel inspired" has been gnawing at me ever since. I think it may be that I found some things within religion that resonated with me.
    Still need more thought on this though.

    • @zo1dberg
      @zo1dberg 7 лет назад +1

      John G. I've written better stories about my experiences with your mum.

  • @tonygram5414
    @tonygram5414 4 года назад +2

    There's something calming about listening to this man. The fact that I know there is a person out there that will speak out to stop ourselves from ripping each other apart makes feel like there's hope for us. Dr. Peterson has a way to see things and explain them to a simpleton such as myself that I would otherwise never be aware of. I honestly feel he genuinely cares about humanity. No one I know comes across to me like he does. He understands humanity and the horror we are capable of. I think we humans scare the crap out of him. And he definitely feels threatened by power and the human who craves it is also capable of. He has obviously read, heard, and most likely seen how dam destructive we can be.

  • @honestlyforreal6304
    @honestlyforreal6304 7 лет назад +3

    I can't conaint the waves of excitement, fear, and awe. "The truth will set you free.", Is haunting me.

  • @georgechristiansen6785
    @georgechristiansen6785 8 лет назад +43

    This is really one of the best discussions of epistemology I have ever heard.
    It is interesting how, from what I can see, JP runs through a perpetual cycle of using Darwinian and Newtonian thinking to make his points. Everyone does it, but he is one of the few people with the humility to acknowledge this and admit we may know jack shit.

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +17

      Thank you for your kind words. Please share and stay tuned for more content. As mentioned under my personal avatar, we hope to do another interview in the spring.

    • @bblackburn1823
      @bblackburn1823 9 месяцев назад

      His definition of Truth as Utility, considering that we are Motals, is a fantastically humble concept. Absolute Truth my ass!

    • @georgechristiansen6785
      @georgechristiansen6785 9 месяцев назад

      @@bblackburn1823 Utility doesn't exist without a goal which requires an ideal which requires absolute truth to be justified as aiming for.
      Thanks for playing though.

  • @dr.jackdempsey8712
    @dr.jackdempsey8712 6 лет назад +13

    I cried at approximately one hour into the documentary. This man has saved my life.

  • @Mrplatyz
    @Mrplatyz 5 лет назад +5

    wow... watched this interview years ago and who knew this would have been the catalyst for me finding God and drastically improving my life. One of Petersons best interviews imo

  • @dashthepoet1
    @dashthepoet1 8 лет назад +107

    I am an atheist, but I still admire Jordan Peterson.

    • @stefanfrunza1697
      @stefanfrunza1697 8 лет назад +7

      Dash Antony Same here

    • @dashthepoet1
      @dashthepoet1 8 лет назад +7

      *****
      He's a Christian.

    • @konberner170
      @konberner170 8 лет назад +25

      We might need a definition of "Christian" here.

    • @Macheako
      @Macheako 8 лет назад +8

      Your system of belief shouldn't determine who can and can't receive your respect. I just hope other Atheists have the courage to come forward with such moral principles like you :)

    • @dashthepoet1
      @dashthepoet1 8 лет назад +2

      Kon Berner
      The problem is, it's hard to believe that there's a perfect God who would make his message so ambiguous and in need of re-interpretation.

  • @theevermind
    @theevermind 7 лет назад +1

    Whenever I listen to Jordan Peterson dive deeply into these subjects, I am shocked at how much of what I've learned, of what I consider to be true, fits exactly into the framework he describes. And we have utterly different backgrounds and life paths, yet have come to the same place.
    That is not random chance or accident.

  • @Cinderella227
    @Cinderella227 2 года назад +3

    Every time I watch one of Jordan’s videos for the first time, I love him even more. He is brilliant. ✝️❤️

  • @morpheusxnyc
    @morpheusxnyc 8 лет назад +14

    DAMN, is that amazing quality video... Gorgeous, cinematic, well lit.... It looks like a feature film. Excellent!
    I'd love to know what camera is being used.

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +7

      Panasonic GH3, Lumix 12-35 f2.8

    • @morpheusxnyc
      @morpheusxnyc 8 лет назад +1

      Transliminal Thanks! I know what I want as a birthday gift! XD

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +1

      It's actually old kit. If i were you, i'd spring for the GH4 or even GH5, which is supposed to be released early 2017 ;)

  • @eliteakm
    @eliteakm 4 года назад +3

    I watched this Interview at least 5 times so far. Really loved it. Good job man, keep going.

  • @stevenschuster
    @stevenschuster Год назад

    I remember mowing a very large lawn in 2016 listening to this. I'm so GLAD its still up, took a minute to find. A seminal JBP interview covering what Jordan found personally interesting at the time, pre fame.

  • @JonathanLaliberte1
    @JonathanLaliberte1 8 лет назад +7

    Absolutely brilliant. First time i properly spent some time to hear what he has to say. Was not disappointed.

  • @kantraxoikol6914
    @kantraxoikol6914 2 года назад

    from my earliest years, i was hardened against death itself. my father was old enough to be my grandfather....which meant all our relatives were dropping like flies , we had death as a constant companion..was years before i figured out there are much worse things than death...suffering, depression, etc. then i got diagnosed with a death sentence...and continue to live under one , if not two of those factors, it's brought me to realize, at age 55... that i'm far more afraid of suffering before death than death itself. i'm almost thankful that i had those harsh lessons early in life.

  • @jmoreira2
    @jmoreira2 8 лет назад +54

    This interview is superb. Peterson does much more than 'fill in the gaps' left by thinkers as great as Nietzsche, Freud, Jung, Darwin, Mill, and Descartes. He presents, in the course of two and a half hours, a near complete ethics; metaphysics; epistemology; philosophy of religion; philosophy of science; philosophy of mind; and philosophy of language (and perhaps even fragments of a political and aesthetic philosophy), all of which are grounded in and unified by a highly parsimonious evolutionary framework. It's genius. Not to mention that he did all of this completely off the cuff.
    I really wish he answered the question of how Islam figures into all of this. He may have glossed over it simply because his experience lies predominantly in ancient and Judeo-Christian mythologies. Or he may have glossed over it deliberately for some other reason.
    In any event, thank you so much for capturing this for posterity. And kudos to the interviewer, whose questions, patience, and demeanor were top notch.

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +7

      Truly our pleasure. Glad you found it insightful.

    • @mycattitude
      @mycattitude 8 лет назад +2

      Yes, that's the only thing I found unsatisfying about this interview, was how he did an almost politicians dodge of the question. it was the only place he fell into word salad for a bit. His reaction and agreement w/ the interviewer's very pointed questions said it all for me though. I take the latter, didn't want to deal w/ the hot potato approach to why he dodged it.

    • @mycattitude
      @mycattitude 8 лет назад +6

      Oh, and when he answered that ideology is a parasite on religion, in his Joe Rogan interview recently. I'll hazard a guess that is part of where he feels Islam falls. He answer answered about dogmatic hell. How the dogma is needed to uphold the structure and integrity of religion, but to go extremely dogmatic creates a rigid, over structured hell w/ no joy and freedom. Sound exactly like Islam to me. And he wasn't dealing w/ Bill C-16 then and his stand against it, so since U of T is so multi culty, I guess it would be really akward to take a strong public stand against it. W/ today's climate, that would probably get him in front of a tribunal quicker than tranny pronouns.

    • @mycattitude
      @mycattitude 8 лет назад +3

      ***** I agree. He's smart enough to not spread himself too thin. There are plenty of other people taking on that fight and doing a great job: Ezra Levant at Rebel Media; Mark Steyn, formerly of McLean's Mag.; Gad Saad, of Concordia U, a jew who fled Lebanon during the Islamic takeover attempt there and religious cleansing that took place; Tarek Fatah, a muslim himself who addressed our Canadian congress about the dangers of extremist and even so called moderate Islam and what they really say in those mosques.

    • @frankenspecies
      @frankenspecies 7 лет назад +2

      He probably ignored Islam because it's incoherent, toxic, groundless, psychotically hateful, and utterly worthless.

  • @TruenorthmtGod
    @TruenorthmtGod 11 месяцев назад

    I’m going to see him in Providence R.I. next month. I can’t wait to give him the respect of a standing ovation. Also bought his book. God is good. And waking him up and now he shares his message with all. Thank you Mr Peterson.. ❤

  • @rickjack78
    @rickjack78 8 лет назад +30

    I love the way he uses a cross discipline approach.

  • @solaveritas4493
    @solaveritas4493 4 года назад +1

    Watching in 2020. Still superb. We need JP back in shape!

  • @Fosvis
    @Fosvis 8 лет назад +4

    That was excellent. Thank you for a job well done on the interview. It was elevating.

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +1

      Thank you, and our pleasure. You may be interested in the wider project we've been working on, www.newscienceofreligion.com. It'll be available as a full-length online course (for free) via the edX.org platform in 2017: www.edx.org/course/science-religion-ubcx-religionx

  • @lidu6363
    @lidu6363 8 лет назад +2

    Very enlightening. I wish I could have a talk with him some day. This is how far a human can get with paying attention and speaking the truth.

  • @LetsFindOut1
    @LetsFindOut1 3 года назад +3

    1:10:15 enlightenment thinking (not approaching religion rationally enough?) it's only partial truth, "powerful but partial"

    • @sunriseWorld-007
      @sunriseWorld-007 3 года назад +2

      When he said that the enlightenment was a thin shell on 3 miles of rock... i had to investigate my beliefs!

  • @viorikaaresteanu5932
    @viorikaaresteanu5932 7 лет назад +1

    Such a beautiful mind ! I never get enough of his ideas ! He is answering questions I was ashamed to ask even myself. I love his passion when he walks the shadowed territory between science and religion.

  • @wpahp
    @wpahp 8 лет назад +9

    heavy stuff, thanks! can I share from this on my channel?

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  8 лет назад +2

      Sure, ideally in a playlist just linking the original video, here. ... Otherwise please be sure to note the production team (us), the URL and CC-BY-NC-SA license.

  • @GordonGarvey
    @GordonGarvey 8 лет назад +1

    It's a privilege to be able to listen to the thoughts of someone who's been thinking and educating them self on the these matters for so long.

  • @oneonetwothreefiveeight
    @oneonetwothreefiveeight 8 лет назад +6

    this is fascinating, i could listen to this man talk for hours (more than these two and a half)

    • @MagnumOpusYT
      @MagnumOpusYT 7 лет назад

      Tyler J hundreds and hundred of hours on youtube

  • @MrLuqasshh
    @MrLuqasshh 6 лет назад +1

    I'm very happy that he got better with his health. Here you can clearly see how he struggled to even breathe before he had started eating beef.
    I love this guy, I get almost hypnotyzed listening to him. I can say without hesistation that her filled a missing a father figure in my life.

  • @devanrohrich
    @devanrohrich 3 года назад +7

    Hey Jordan, I doubt you will ever see this but I just want it known in the world that this is the best video of yours I’ve found. I am so glad you boil everything down and you’re not afraid of metaphysical arguments, something that too many people avoid when attempting to make a coherent argument. You’ve helped me become one of the best psychology students and achieve a level of thought I never thought possible. Thank you. Also, on the small chance this is noticed, what is your choice university for a PhD in Clinical Psychology with psychodynamic training? Thank you and I’m glad you’re still here

  • @jeruon
    @jeruon 8 лет назад +1

    So many layers of reality...hard to keep up with them all...but every time you try you understand yourself a little better.
    "The best thing you can do for the world is to straighten your mind out. Understand the scope of things you are capable of, and choose the path that keeps you out of proverbial hell/the distorted mind"

  • @yexey
    @yexey 8 лет назад +15

    "The first guy who figured out how to drop a stick on a snake... he was VERY popular"

  • @vexivero
    @vexivero 6 лет назад +2

    I've watched a lot of Jordan Peterson interviews..this has to be one of the best ones out there

  • @joshmolina4435
    @joshmolina4435 5 лет назад +3

    Interviewing Dr. Peterson before he became famous. Well done.

  • @MrBadPriest
    @MrBadPriest 4 года назад +2

    Dude, this is great. Sums up his thinking and then some. Still haven't finished though.

  • @TheModernHermeticist
    @TheModernHermeticist 8 лет назад +3

    Great interview, thanks.

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад

      The Modern Hermeticist our pleasure.. you may enjoy: www.newscienceofreligion.com

  • @bcagz9835
    @bcagz9835 7 лет назад

    I respect your ability to get the best out of Dr. Peterson. It doesn't matter how many times I watch I extract value from these talks. Thank you.

  • @mattbray_studio
    @mattbray_studio 8 лет назад +6

    wow. what a great conversation. well done to the interviewer, and prof peterson as always is incredibly lucid and profoundly moved me.

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +1

      Many thanks for the compliments. I'm glad you found it valuable.

  • @tttrrrification
    @tttrrrification 6 месяцев назад

    2024. This is still the best interview of JBP. So deep and profound

  • @wasumyon6147
    @wasumyon6147 6 лет назад +4

    These are still the best interviews of JBP after these two years of interviews. Just ridiculously dense compared to all the others - even most of his own lectures - for some reason. What is your secret Transliminal!?

    • @Transliminal
      @Transliminal  6 лет назад +5

      Thanks for the kind words :) ... I think the secret is that i'm not interested in Peterson's take on SJW/free speech stuff in the least. This interview took place before all that nonsense began. I'm a cognitive anthropologist by training and i just find Peterson's actual work interesting. .... Please consider signing up as a Patron for more like-minded content! :)

  • @ellocofin
    @ellocofin 6 лет назад

    Awesome work with the timetable there! Much appreciation.

  • @Minmaximus
    @Minmaximus 7 лет назад +3

    Thanks for this great interview. My friends and I are starting a book discission group to delve into the sources Peterson discusses here.

  • @williamvanevery3536
    @williamvanevery3536 Год назад

    I wish you would do another one with Dr Peterson. You are certainly his best interveiw imo

  • @Kazzpi
    @Kazzpi 8 лет назад +3

    Brilliant mind, new look on some things. Thank you Profesor!

  • @geico1975
    @geico1975 4 года назад +1

    I loved how JP explained breaking things down to a singular element. For instance, when at the beginning talking about "power and sex" being the motivation for a phenomenon. That's exactly how most of my undergraduate classes went.

  • @brandonroberts13
    @brandonroberts13 3 года назад +3

    This is hands down the best a la carte Jordan Peterson video.

  • @junepedersen5434
    @junepedersen5434 6 лет назад +1

    This man is the best public persona to come to light in the last 50 years or more. Whoever does not believe this is really lost.

  • @MrSayonara7777
    @MrSayonara7777 9 лет назад +9

    Thank you for filming and sharing this interview. Thank you also for the laborious labeling of the different parts of the interview.
    The part titled : "like a smart 13 year old boy" referring to Richard Dawkins is funny, as there is a video where Dawkins goes around trying to peddle his views to high school (or elementary ?) children, while vehemently refusing to debate some particular people who challenge his views.
    in my uploads, I have a video honoring Prof. Dawkins, titled : "Richard Dawkins : Verbal Gymnastic".

  • @fredpauser6228
    @fredpauser6228 7 лет назад

    This is tremendous! This man combines extensive study with deep thinking and deep honesty. What a wonderful teacher!

  • @ThePeaceableKingdom
    @ThePeaceableKingdom 8 лет назад +6

    YES!
    That's all. Simply, yes.

  • @1989221
    @1989221 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for uploading this video, thank you so much.

  • @daseinbellen
    @daseinbellen 8 лет назад +8

    dr. peterson your definition of religion as an 'evolved action' is the best working phenomenological definition i have heard.

  • @luzzerr55
    @luzzerr55 8 лет назад +1

    Need the podcast! This is awesome!!

  • @nazimikor
    @nazimikor 9 лет назад +9

    Thank you thank you!!!

  • @AkashYU
    @AkashYU 5 лет назад +1

    This is brilliant beyond belief. Its explains so much where Dr. Peterson is coming from. I get reminded of one reaction of Sam Harris against Dr Peterson, where he was puzzled that he likes Most of what Dr Peterson says but now and then Dr Peterson says something so flippant and with so much confidence that it catches him off-guard like "You are judeo christian to the core..". Well you will know if you see this interview that what is the basis of that claim.

  • @KitLamb33
    @KitLamb33 8 лет назад +4

    Such a brilliant and admirable way of thinking.

  • @anomietoponymie2140
    @anomietoponymie2140 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you ever so much for this enlightening interview. Thank you also for the Table of contents, that's very useful. It would be nice if you included, in the info about the video above, where this was recorded (in Peterson's house? His dog is there), on what occasion or why and by whom.

    • @Jordan-mi7xz
      @Jordan-mi7xz 8 лет назад +1

      Truly our pleasure. Thank you for your kind comment. Awkwardly, the Table of Contents literally takes up the entire word limit for the Info section. In short: filmed in Toronto, as part of a wider series on the science of religion (www.newscienceofreligion.com), which is now being turned into a MOOC, free for all. The interviewer (myself) was a UBC graduate student (at the time), and currently a producer of online academic content. Thank you again for your comment, and-please check in regularly for fresh material.

  • @Drew15000
    @Drew15000 9 лет назад +5

    Thank god for Dr.Peterson

  • @anne-gaelletitaut8441
    @anne-gaelletitaut8441 2 года назад +1

    Astounding interview! This brings together a lot of the themes I’ve been battling with for the last few years. This will need at least 3 listens! I’m still not sure of the path out of Dostoyevsky fear and terror, particularly Ivan karamazov as he presented it. Talking to priests and clerics and all manor of thinkers, I’m hoping to find some sort of path out of these dark woods.