Shawn Ryan Show - #108 Dr. Jordan B. Peterson - We Who Wrestle With God
Episode Date: May 6, 2024Dr. Jordan B. Peterson is a Psychologist, Best Selling Author, Professor and Thought Leader. He's taught some of the most highly regarded courses at Harvard and the University of Toronto and authored ...three books that have sold over seven million copies. Peterson also maintained an active clinical and consulting practice where he's helped thousands of people develop personally and professionally. Well known for his lectures, Peterson is now traveling across the world on his "We Who Wrestle With God" Tour–a continuation of his critically acclaimed seminars on the book of Genesis. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lairdsuperfood.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://helixsleep.com/srs https://meetfabric.com/shawn https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://bubsnaturals.com - USE CODE "SHAWN" https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner Jordan Peterson Links: Books - https://www.jordanbpeterson.com/books Tour - https://www.jordanbpeterson.com/events Podcast - https://www.jordanbpeterson.com/podcast IG - https://www.instagram.com/jordan.b.peterson X - https://twitter.com/jordanbpeterson Tik Tok - https://www.tiktok.com/@dr.jordan.b.peterson Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/drjordanpeterson YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/jordanpetersonvideos Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Dr. Jordan Peterson, welcome to the show.
Thank you, sir.
Thanks for the invitation.
My pleasure.
It's an honor to have you sitting here.
I went to your event in Nashville, We Who Wrestle With God event, and very intriguing.
I loved it, and I want to dig into some of that today.
And just our previous conversation
right before the show started,
dig into a little bit about PTSD,
is I have an audience that's very veteran heavy
and veteran family heavy. And so there's a
lot of people that are watching this that struggle with the aftermaths of a lifetime
in combat. And so I think that will be very helpful. And then on top of that, my original
plan was you have all these kind of religious figures, philosophers, you discuss
the Bible a lot, and I've seen just some really interesting content, one being I saw a lecture
of you where you talk about how the Bible references itself 65,000 times approximately.
Hyperlinked. 25,000 times approximately. And I would like to dig into some of your personal beliefs
and maybe if there's time,
a little bit about what's going on in the world
and why you think this is all kind of happening right now.
But first, let me give you a quick introduction
for anybody that doesn't know who you are,
which I don't imagine there will be.
But Dr. Jordan B. Peterson, an author, psychologist, online educator, and professor at the University
of Toronto.
The Jordan B. Peterson podcast frequently tops the top charts in the education category
and among all podcasts.
You've written three books,
which have sold more than 7 million copies,
maps of meaning, 12 rules for life, beyond order.
For 20 years, you've taught at some of the most
highly regarded courses at Harvard and University of Toronto.
You've published more than a hundred scientific papers,
nominated for five consecutive years, is one
of Ontario's best university lecturers, was one of only three professors rated as, end
quotes, life changing in the U of T's underground student handbook of course ratings.
You've released a 17 part seminar on the biblical book of Exodus as the continuation of, excuse me, and a publicly
acclaimed lecture on Genesis.
7.5 million YouTube subs, 150 million podcast downloads, 8 million IG followers.
You've been a dishwasher, a short order cook, a bookkeeper, a tow truck driver,
a gas jockey, bartender, plywood mill labor and railway line worker.
Quite the resume there.
Uh, your husband to the, to your wife, Tammy and a father of two kids.
And currently on the we who wrestle with God tour in 2024. Am I missing anything? I'm sure I am.
But how long have you been married?
Got married in 1989, so I think it's coming up on 35 years.
Congratulations.
35 years in August, thank you. But I've known my wife for longer than that. I've known her for 52 years.
52 years?
Yeah, we met when we were 8.
Wow.
We were childhood friends.
That's incredible.
What would you say the secret to a successful marriage is?
Well, being like insanely attracted to your partner is helpful.
You know, that's helpful. What else?
More practically speaking, she's honest.
Like we swore when we decided to get married that we'd tell each other the truth.
And you know, that's a vow that has expanding benefits as your life progresses.
It's very useful to be able to trust your partner.
It makes your life a lot simpler.
A lot simpler.
Plus, you sort things out if you tell each other the truth.
That means that there's conflict when it's necessary, but there's no difference between
conflict when it's necessary and thinking
They're the same thing and so people who avoid conflict avoid thinking and that's not a good idea
You know you have to think when things are difficult. Mm-hmm
Well, of course, there's going to be conflict you're gonna have conflict around how you discipline your children for example, because it's hard
Figure out how to do it. You have conflict around your finances,
because you have to sort it out.
And there's lots of options.
And so, it's one of the things people don't understand
about thought, it's like, should speech be offensive?
Well, only if you want to talk about things
that are difficult.
Why would you talk about things that are difficult then?
Well, because life's difficult.
You might as well sort it out.
Instead of running headlong into a wall or off a cliff.
So, yeah, so she's very useful.
And...
A lot of people avoid conflict.
And I think a lot of...
That's a great point.
I ask this question a lot, and that's the first time I've heard
You know live by truth and then you got into how people avoid conflict
So my question would be
How do you approach your wife when there is conflict
Well, one of the things you have to understand about women is you have to listen to them so
Women are more sensitive to negative emotion than men on average. My wife is actually pretty
Insensitive to negative emotion for a female but generally speaking women are more agreeable
that would be part of the
Maternal dimension of their personality and they're more sensitive to negative emotion. So they're threat detection
systems and so a woman will bring you her concerns. Now because she's sensitive
to threat she produces a fair number of false positives, right? So she's concerned
about things that maybe aren't, maybe it's not necessary
to be concerned about, but she'll be concerned about them before you are. Women initiate about
75% of divorces for example, and you might say well that means women are primarily troublesome
within a relationship. It's like well possibly, it's also possible that they pick up what's wrong
in a relationship before men do on average.
And so, and because women have to care for infants, that's why they're more sensitive to threat.
That's not the only reason. They're also more sexually vulnerable.
They're more physically vulnerable. Makes perfect sense that they'd be more sensitive to negative emotion.
And that means that in a relationship, they serve the function of threat alert and so a woman will be concerned about something and
She'll bring her concerns to her husband and he'll try to solve the problem right away
But that's not helpful because she doesn't know what the problem is necessarily so she has to wander around and
Talk about all the things that might be a problem
And if you let her do that she'll dispense with most of that and Then you can kind of zero in on what the problem might be and then if you like if you let
The discussion unfold to that degree then you can potentially offer a solution
But you can't do that too early you learn this in therapy too. Like when people come to lay out their life to you
You might even know what they should do but
you can't tell them. First of all they won't listen. Second, they're annoyed if
you tell them because they need to figure it out. You can't steal
someone's destiny from them. You know if you solve all your children's problems
for them, well you might think well they have no problems. Like yeah they have a
problem. They don't know how to solve their own problems. That's a big problem.
And so you got to back the hell off and it's frustrating for men often
to
participate in that more feminine mode of
approaching the world, but
if you understand that a
Woman who's more sensitive to trouble
A woman who's more sensitive to trouble will detect things early and that her discussion of those things that upsets her will clarify problems maybe even before they arise.
Then you can understand that it's useful.
I mean, I still have to, even after years of practicing this with Tammy, I still have to stifle my proclivity to leap to the solution.
You know, but it's, you want to solve the right problem, man. So you got to listen.
And my experience as a therapist indicated to me that in the typical marriage, people need to spend at least 90 minutes a week talking to each other just about their lives
Just about the domestic economy about their kids about their relationship
just to
Keep everything up to date and it's very difficult to have any true intimacy if that isn't
Allowed for did you I'm sorry, did you say 90 minutes a day? No 90 minutes a week. Is that rare?
Half marriages end in divorce so it's rare enough
You know, I mean you might find that frustrating that you have to spend that much time
attending to
Your domestic landscape, let's say but it's better to do that on a regular basis than to do it in divorce court
While you're paying your lawyers, you know $500 an hour and having a custody battle for your kids for ten years, which is not a
Fate that I would recommend for anyone who wants to have a happy life
So it's also the case. It's very difficult to
engage in any romantic Adventure with your wife if there's things between you.
It's very hard, because that's a form of play, that romantic adventure.
And play is a very fragile, psychophysiological state.
If there's anything between you that hasn't been sorted out, you can't play. So very interesting. I did not
realize that was a mean 90 minutes a week sounds like
nothing.
Hey, man, if it stops you if it keeps your marriage together,
it's pretty decent investment. You know, I would say that's a
minimum. Yeah, but you know, and, then that would be 90 minutes a week
that's specifically devoted to, well, like your marriage and family as a
business, let's say, you know, practical affairs, practical affairs may take
longer than that depends on how much disarray there is in your life.
But if you start hoping that it's going to be less than that, well you drift apart too.
You have to weave your stories together like a rope across your life.
You have to know what your wife is up to and what she's thinking and vice versa.
You have to be on board with your interpretation of the past and the present and also your aims in
the future and that's constant negotiation. See you you know, in our culture, we have this idiot idea that
your identity is whatever you say it is.
I mean, it's unbelievably immature and narcissistic.
In a marriage, your identity is almost never what you say it is.
You're negotiating who you are with your wife all the time,
and vice versa.
And with your kids, for that matter, your identity... If you're a civilized for that matter your identity
If you're a civilized human being your identity is a negotiation, you know people think I just got to be me It's like I don't want to be around you if that's what you're like
I don't mean that you should be a pushover and that there should be nothing in the situation for you
You know that you live like a bitter martyr only for the pleasure of other people. That's not helpful, but
Being mature means negotiating your identity
constantly constantly, you know that keeps you alert and alive too and I
Spoke with a very wise man here torn our trenders just a week ago and and
He said something interesting.
He said that he could see all women in his wife and I thought, how the hell do you figure
that out?
That's a rare thing to understand.
He's a very wise person, a Danish author.
If you communicate and you, then you have all that in your relationship you can let
all that make itself manifest and if you do that don't box up your wife what is
it Peter Peter pumpkin eater put his wife in a pumpkin shell and there he
kept her very well what does that mean well that's what people do to each other
they put they put each other in a box, and they don't let their partner
or themselves out of that box, and then they get bored.
Well, if you communicate with your partner
and you facilitate their development,
then they continually reveal new parts of themselves,
and then your relationship stays dynamic and alive.
And that's a good deal.
Do you think people realize they put their partners in a box?
You can get to a very bad place one idiot step at a time. So do you realize it? You realize
what you're doing at each micro step. You may be completely ignorant of the total consequence of that
You know like if you want to build a pathological personality you do that one lie at a time
And you might say well is someone with a pathological personality conscious of their pathology and the answer is no It's ritual by that point, but they were conscious at each decision step
Interesting it's terrible It's terrible.
It's terrible.
It's a frightening thing.
This is why you shouldn't lie.
So if you lie, you,
well, you automate your deception.
That's what you become.
Then it's built into you then.
It's not just some attitude you have.
You rewire yourself in accordance with the lie.
It's a very bad idea.
If you knew what that meant, you wouldn't do it, really.
If you could understand what the full consequence of that, you'd step very carefully in your
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It's interesting to see people
who,
who lie. And I don't, do you, I don't know if they actually believe their own lies eventually.
Yes, definitely.
But you believe the story you tell yourself.
If you tell yourself habitually, it happens very quickly.
So there are experiments, for example, showing. So imagine I brought students into a classroom,
and I gave them a questionnaire that
assessed their political attitudes,
say with regards to abortion.
And maybe they were pro-choice.
And so I said, OK, now you write a 500-word essay
on the contrary view
And then you have them come back a week later and measure their political attitudes they tilt way over in the direction of what they wrote
so when you explicate yourself you build the structure through which you
See the world. So if you lie habitually about something that that's the world you come to inhabit. Now,
if you do that with enough heart, let's say, you can live in a delusion and then your perception
of the world doesn't match the world. That's like having a map of the wrong territory.
That's a really good way to get lost, like seriously lost.
And then you get lost like that, you get bitter,
and then you get resentful.
And then, well, then all the real hell starts to break out.
So, very bad idea.
It is.
I see people do it all the time on social media.
They build, they lie about their background, they lie about what they own, they lie about
past experiences, they lie about what happened in war, and they build this character.
And I see it time and time again with, I would say more than not,
the social media phenomenons.
You think social media facilitates that?
I think it, maybe, but where I'm going with this is,
then I see them get trapped.
This has happened to friends of mine
that build a character around themselves
rather than just be themselves.
And they get trapped in that character.
And exactly what you were talking about, they get resentful and angry at the world and just
having to put that false cloak on every day when you wake up.
They go out into the world and it's a completely false person.
And it follows them for years.
And the resentment, that's a very good aspect of that.
Where I'm going with this is one particular part of your tour that I went to,
We Who Struggle With God God you were talking about pride and
and
Where I'm going with this is the e is
They live this lie and they think that they're trapped
but they're only tracked because their ego won't allow them to come out and tell the truth and
They just dig themselves. So deeper and deeper in the story of Exodus
And they just dig themselves deeper and deeper. In the story of Exodus, the Egyptians are freed from the tyranny of, or the Israelites are freed from the tyranny of Egypt.
But that tyranny has two elements, say, because the Pharaoh is a tyrant, but the Israelites are slaves.
Like, a tyrant needs a slave. So they're both morally culpable. The tyrant's
culpable because he's a tyrant and the slaves are culpable because they're
slaves. It's a dance. So Moses comes along, he's speaking on behalf of God
and he opposes the tyrants and then he frees the slaves. Freeze them. They cross the Red Sea, which is a bit of a catastrophe.
But they end up not in the promised land.
They end up in the desert.
And the reason for that is that when you abandon
your tyranny, you end up in the desert.
That's why people stick pridefully,
one of the reasons people stick pridefully
to their erroneous presumptions.
It's like once you've built that false character,
you let it go.
It's not like you're, it's all good then.
It's like, no, you're lost.
And the Israelites, they're lost for three generations, right?
So you may be so lost that you just can't get it back together
in your lifetime,
especially if you stick even more bitterly, let's say, to your pride.
You know, because it's a real mystery.
Imagine this.
There's a pathway to enlightenment. Just imagine that might be the case.
Of course, sages have said that forever.
And you might say, well, why the hell wouldn't people just walk it then?
If there's a pathway to enlightenment, that seems like a good deal.
It's like, well, there's a lot of desert to wander through when you let go of your stupidity.
And so people don't.
They double down, which is what the Pharaoh does in the Exodus story.
And he doubles down 10 times until he destroys the future and his own people.
That happens all the time.
People do that all the time in their lives.
States do it.
Nations do it. Nations do it.
I think it's sad. I have friends that do this. And I think it's, I'm sad for them that they put on
that false cloak every day. And it carries on for years and years and years. And I see them. I see how exhausted they are.
I mean, and that is, you know, with...
It's very difficult to maintain a structure built on lies.
You lose track of them.
Well, that's for sure.
No kidding, no kidding.
This is why in a marriage, it's just so much better
just to say what you think.
And I mean, without being...
Telling the truth is complicated.
You can't use the truth as a weapon.
If you're telling the truth, it's a multi-dimensional problem.
Like if I'm talking to my wife, I have to talk to her in a way...
I can't use the truth as a cudgel.
That's a lie.
Like then the truth isn't...
It's not the truth.
It's truth as weapon.
Really what I'm doing is beating her with the truth. I'm looking for a club, not the truth isn't it's not the truth. It's truth as weapon really what I'm doing is beating her with the truth
I'm looking for a club. Not the truth. Could you give me an example of that?
well
Maybe you're you're trying to sort something out even about how things are working
On the domestic front who does what job and maybe?
She's doing something that isn't up to scratch. Let's say with regard to the house
well, you could try to
address that as a problem to be solved or you could use it as an opportunity to punish and trumpet your moral superiority and
You could you could say well, I'm just telling the truth. It's like yeah. Well, you're not doing a very good job of it
You know because the truth would be well, I yeah, well, you're not doing a very good job of it, you know, because the truth
would be, well, I need to tell you what I think, but I have to be around you tomorrow and next week,
so I should try to tell you what I think in a way that isn't going to turn you against me. You know,
I guess there's something in that that's something like minimal necessary force with regard to the
truth. The truth has to serve the harmony of the
relationship, you know, as well as describing whatever the problem is that has to be solved.
So I would say the same with children. If you're disciplining them, you want to do that in the
spirit of love. And what does that mean? Well, the reason you're disciplining them isn't to lord it over them or to indicate your
moral superiority, but to put a wall up to protect them, let's say, or to specify a pathway forward
that they can walk down that would be productive. And if you're not doing that, well then you're not
serving the truth in the highest sense. And so that's why there's a religious insistence that
truth has to serve love that the two things are united and
love means
It means care I suppose
People often think that means the provision of security and safety, but it love means encouragement, too
right, that's in some, that's the distinction between the female role and the male role in a family.
You know, or feminine and masculine. The feminine tends to provide security and safety,
and the masculine tends to encourage and challenge.
Both those are aspects of love, and that's also the case within a relationship.
I mean, you want to provide your wife and her to you
a certain degree of security, but you want that allied
with an optimal challenge because that facilitates
development and that's, well, that's one of the things
that lends life interest and adventure.
an adventure. So... For somebody that is living a lie, how would you, how would you advise them to get back to baseline? Well, I have a program online that's actually actually designed to deal with that problem. We put together my colleagues and I,
Daniel Higgins and Robert Peele. Robert Peele was my graduate supervisor at
McGill and Daniel was a student of mine at Harvard. I've worked with these two
for about 40 years now. We put
together a series of writing exercises at a site called selfauthoring.com and the
past authoring program helps you write an autobiography.
Break your life into seven epochs, identify the events of emotional significance during
those times, positive and negative, tell the story of your life. Write it down
as honestly as you possibly can. That's a good way of figuring out where you are.
The next program in that series helps you identify your faults and your virtues
in the present. So everybody has a temperament and your temperament is
going to provide you with opportunities. Like if you're extroverted, for example, you're going to be someone,
you'd be tilted in a sales direction, you know.
So that's a benefit that comes along with that temperament.
Extroverts can be narcissists as well.
And so that would be the sin that would be associated with that temperament.
And wherever you are in the temperamental landscape,
you're going to have some advantages conferred on you
by those temperaments and some disadvantages.
And it's useful to sort those out.
So it's easy for creative people, for example,
to be scattered.
It's easy for people who are high in intelligence
to be prideful.
So probably the biggest individual difference
between people is intelligence.
And you might think in some ways that that's unfair.
Some people are born with an IQ of 130
and some with an IQ of say 70,
and those are very different people.
The person with an IQ of 70 is gonna struggle
to become literate, regardless of the amount
of time they put into it, right?
But the temptation that goes along with intelligence
is to be prideful, to assume that you should be worshipped
because of your intelligence, or things should go your way
just because you're smart, that the world should bow down
at your feet, that the fact that you win arguments means that you're right.
Well, that's...
Anyways, the present authoring program helps people identify their faults and virtues.
And then there's a future authoring program.
That's the third step.
You can do any of them or all of them.
That helps you lay out a pathway to the future.
And it's very structured.
All those are very structured, because it's hard to write an autobiography.
It's hard to write a plan for the future.
The future plan, we've done a lot of research on.
If a young man does the future authoring program, when he goes to college, he's 50% less likely
to drop out.
50% is a lot.
And grade point average goes up about 35%.
The future authoring program helps people develop a vision for their life.
And you actually don't have any hope or any freedom from anxiety without a vision for
your future.
A vision for your future is the structure that provides you
with hope and that regulates your negative emotion because it specifies a goal. Once a goal is
specified you feel positive emotion in relationship to the goal and your anxiety is constrained
because you have a direction. You're anxious when you have way too many directions. That's why you get anxious if your car breaks down.
It's like, what do I do now?
Too many pathways.
You want the pathways through life collapsed
to a single implementable dimension, one that goes uphill.
And then when you walk uphill, so to speak,
each step that you see yourself making
is indexed by positive emotion, hope, enthusiasm, uphill so to speak each step that you see yourself making is
Indexed by positive emotion hope enthusiasm
Meaning so you need a vision
This isn't optional people are very bad at this. We're very bad in our culture at helping people develop a vision We don't actually do it with student with kids in school. It's it's a blind spot. That's so large that it's kind of miracle
So the way this program works is that
So here's the game. Okay, so you're gonna look five years out in your life and
You're going to treat yourself for the purpose of this exercise like somebody that you care for
That's a hard thing for people to do like most people are reverse
Narcissists most people are harder on themselves than they are on other people.
That isn't always the case.
There are narcissistic people, but most people are harder on themselves than they are on
other people.
And they don't really believe that it would be just or good if they were successful and
not miserable.
You know, because they know their sins.
They know the ways they've wandered off the path.
They carry a lot of guilt with them
as they don't really believe they deserve anything good.
That's a depressive temperament when it really gets out of control. So you have to put yourself in a position where
you treat yourself like someone you care for. Okay, so
get in that
frame of mind. All right, now here's the deal.
You can have what you want and need within the bounds of reason in five years,
but you have to specify.
So if you could have what you wanted and needed that would satisfy you,
what would that be?
Well, that's a complicated question.
People have a hard time answering that, right? But we break it down for them, too.
It's like, well, if you had the family you wanted, your siblings, your parents, your wife, your kids,
what would that look like in some detail?
Dream a bit. Like, if you could have what you wanted, what would it look like?
With your friends. Same thing. You have the friends you want. People who are happy when good things happen to you and commiserate with you when bad things happen to you
and that you can walk side by side with and that are on your side. People don't
even understand that they can choose their friends, you know, and that they have
a moral obligation to do so. What would your career look like? How would you
educate yourself? How would you take care of yourself mentally and physically? What
would you do with your time outside of work that would be productive and meaningful?
How would you serve the community if you could have what you wanted?
Well, this exercise helps people specify all that and it's
ridiculously useful. You need
to orient yourself in the world. You need a vision. It's like the development of a map.
It's a map of the future and without that you're lost and people are lost and they blow in the wind and then their lives are
meaningless and they feel like they're powerless. And it's because they haven't developed a
vision. The people perish without a vision. It's a very old idea. It's definitely true.
There's so many directions I want to go just off that piece of conversation that we just had one being I
Want to know why so many why you think so many people are lost but before I lose this one you talked about
When your car breaks down you talked about when there's too many directions to go. That's when people feel anxiety. Yeah, it's entropy. Do you think
That that is part of what's
think that that is part of what's, look, the country seems to be in shambles. It's lost right now.
I think a lot, it seems like half of the people want to be
told exactly what to do.
That's the slave problem.
So is that in, is that part of what is happening right now to this country?
I mean, if you get a tear, you get the slave tyranny, the slave tyrant dynamic always works.
Sure, people want, they want whatever they want on the sexual front, on the hedonism
front right now with no responsibility.
And tyrants make that offer, the state will take care of you.
There's no reason for you to be mature. There's no reason for you to be mature.
There's no reason for you to forego gratification.
You can be taken care of from cradle to grave.
Fair enough, you know, but the price you pay for that
is that you're a slave.
And inevitably, and it's worse, the religious dynamic.
So imagine the tyrant makes an offer to the slave
and the offer is an offer of unbridled
hedonism essentially, something like that.
The tyrant always kills the source of pleasure in the final analysis.
It's like you'll be offered what will attract the immature part of you, but don't be thinking
you're going to keep it because that isn't how things work. Why take responsibility for your life? All the responsibilities you do
not shoulder will be taken up by tyrants and used against you. That's the iron law of human
existence. And so why mature? Well, because if you turn that responsibility over to someone else, they'll become a tyrant and you'll be a slave.
And that won't work out very well for you.
Because tyrants become contemptuous of their slaves.
And unsurprisingly, Stalin was completely contemptuous of the Russian people.
He thought they all lied in kowtowt.
Why? Because they all lied in kowtowt.
It wasn't that he was wrong. I
mean, he produced the situation in a dance with his people, but Hitler thought the same
thing about the Germans by the end of World War II. He thought, contemptible people, they
deserve what's coming to them. He didn't think he was wrong as the tyrant. There's always a dance between the
slave and the tyrant. And the way you get out of slavery is by taking responsibility
for your own destiny. And you do that by developing a vision. It's not optional. None of this
is optional. And you might say, well, why bother with maturity even if I could just have what I wanted first of all?
You aren't built so that you would be satisfied with just having what you want any more than a two-year-old is ever satisfied
If you give the two-year-old everything he wants all you get is an angry two-year-old if you do that
Because you don't get what you want by always getting what you want when you want it. That is now life works
You get what you want by always getting what you want when you want it. That is how life works. You get what you want by molding yourself into something mature and communal and capable
of sacrifice.
Like we're built for way higher order journey, way higher order adventure than just infantile
hedonistic gratification.
That's a dismal bloody vision of the world. This is the celebration of pride,
the hedonistic celebration of pride. You know, we have Pride Month. Well, what are we celebrating?
First of all, how about we don't celebrate pride? Pride's a cardinal sin. And you might say well they don't mean pride they mean you know it's
a group of oppressed people and now they're just finding their identity and
they're getting some security in that identity and so what they mean by pride
is security in that identity. It's like the words pride that's the word that was
chosen so I don't care what the lies around that are and it's pride. That's the word that was chosen. So I don't care what the
lies around that are. And it's pride in relationship, as far as I can tell,
to nothing but hedonistic self-gratification. It's like you're going to, your identity is going to be
your sexual desire. That's your identity. Your sexual desire. So that's sexual desire is at the center of hedonism.
So that means you've reduced your identity to the most immature and hedonistic part of you.
The part that would exploit someone else for your own gratification, for example.
The part that would exploit you for your own gratification.
And now that's your identity. And now that's what we celebrate.
Yeah, no. That's a very bad idea. That's the worship of the golden calf. And that's what
in the Exodus story, for example, when Moses disappears, so he's the prophet of God, when
the prophet of God disappears, the Israelites are left in the hands of Aaron and Aaron's a political leader and in no time flat
The political leader offers the slavish Israelites the worship of the golden calf
They're all drunk and dancing naked around the fire in a way that makes them contemptible to their enemies. That's what it says in the
Biblical text you don't have to be much of a genius to understand that you know
biblical text. You don't have to be much of a genius to understand that, you know,
Rachel Levine is not exactly striking heart in the, striking fear in the heart of the Iranians.
We're so damn stupid.
I'm with you on that.
You'd also mentioned how lost people are nowadays and I see it everywhere I go. Why do you think so many people are lost,
and why are they missing the direction that they need to?
Well, I think I know why,
because I've watched crowds of thousands of people,
hundreds of times, respond to certain things I've said investigating that problem.
For, since 1960, we've insisted that the purpose of your life is a kind of hedonistic happiness,
that you have rights which includes the rights to that hedonistic happiness,
the capitalist marketers certainly capitalize on that,
just as much as the, you know, governmental tyrants.
Rights, rights, rights. What I want right now,
that idea of infantile consumption fundamentally.
Well, you have rights for a particular reason and the reason you
have rights is so that you can shoulder your responsibilities. And you might say
well I don't want to shoulder my responsibilities but that's where all the
meaning in your life is. And so when I tell people this, the audiences
always go dead silent. It's like the adventure in your life will be found in
responsibility. No one ever hears that. We haven't told young people
that for like 60 years. You pick up the cross and shoulder it uphill
because that's where all the meaning in your life will be derived from. It's
in the difficulty. It's in the responsibility. It's not in the hedonistic
self-gratification that, as I said, won't even satisfy a two-year-old, not in the final analysis.
All you do is, if people just get what they want all the time, immediately, it's not like that
ennobles their character. Like, obviously not not your character is made noble by sacrifice by the delay of gratification
that's all associated with maturity and
The community itself is a sacrificial
The community itself requires sacrifice on the part of the individual
Obviously like to be in a community is to sacrifice your individuality to the community. It's the definition of community. You know, you
don't get everything you want the second you want it in your marriage. You have to
take the other people into account. Well, that's a sacrifice of immediate
gratification. Now you might say, well it's a good long-term deal. It's like,
yeah, that's kind of the point. It's a good long-term deal.
So you sacrifice the idiot present
for a good long-term deal, a good communal long-term deal.
If you do that properly,
then you have a stellar reputation, right?
Because you're someone who can be counted on, relied upon.
And then that also is something
that provides your life with meaning.
We're lost because we have no direction
We don't even believe that there is such a thing as direction and then you might say well, what's what's the proper direction?
The direction of maximal voluntary self-sacrifice. That's the proper direction every military person knows that
It's the core of the military enterprise and
There's obviously adventure in that, you know, there can be catastrophe in it as well It's the core of the military enterprise.
And there's obviously adventure in that.
There can be catastrophe in it as well.
I wanted to also elaborate on what you were saying at the event on pride and how pride
can trigger all of the negative emotions,
depression, anxiety, you went down the list
and could you please explain how that works?
Because when you were talking about it up there,
I had thought about a lot of the times
that I had felt anger or regret or resentment
I had felt anger or regret or resentment. And a lot of that was when I refused to, it was my ego.
It was my ego getting in the way.
OK, so I should return to one thing we discussed.
So I discussed that self-authoring program.
You'd asked me about lies and how people get out of it.
Well, one way you get out of your web of lies
is to replace it with a truthful story.
And that has to cover your whole life, right?
Past, present, and future.
And so you retool your life
if you want to escape from your web of lies.
And you try to do that by laying out what happened
as clearly as you possibly can, right?
With no...
You lay out the unvarnished truth and
there's going to be real pain in that. This is a treatment for post-traumatic
stress disorder, for example, so if you... if the terrible thing that happened is in
the past, because you don't want to do this if it's too soon, you know, you have
these psychologists who rush in to schools during a shooting and have
the kids talk about it.
All that does is make it worse.
Like it's a traumatic event.
If you dwell on it while it's happening, it makes it worse.
Now if it's something that's five years distant and still a hot memory It's it's something that has to be confronted then you go and
Write it down in painful detail and try to assess
Exactly what happened and why you acted the way you acted and that can be curative, but that's painful
it's painful in the short term and the
It's painful in the short term. And the research on these sorts of programs shows that if you have people write about
a traumatic experience, let's say, that it worsens their mood in the short term.
It's not surprising.
That's why they want to avoid thinking about it to begin with, but the long term consequences
are positive.
So if you've encountered something traumatic, it's like you've, there's an abyss in your life and you had fallen into it and the reason you're still upset about that is because you don't know why
You fell into it. And so your brain your mind your soul is warning you
It's like you fell into a pit buddy, and you don't know why and so you could fall into it again
And so I'm not gonna let you forget it
You have to figure out why you fell into that pit and if you've done something particularly terrible then that's a very deep pit
And that's very very hard on people. It's very common for soldiers for example to
Develop post-traumatic stress disorder when they watch themselves do something
They can't believe they could do and it flips their understanding of themselves upside down
They don't know who they are.
And they also don't know who other people are. And they don't know what the world's like.
It's not what they thought it was, that's for sure. And there's a lot more to them on the dark side,
let's say, than they could have ever imagined. It's like, that's definitely the case. Well,
how do you come to terms with that? You come to terms with that fundamentally.
that. You come to terms with that fundamentally. The deeper the trauma, the more a religious
approach is necessary. Because if you're traumatized, you're in the landscape of good and evil.
Right? You're traumatized by an encounter with evil. It's not mere tragedy. It's not just that something bad happened to you. Bad things happen to people all the time without them being traumatized.
Usually if someone being traumatized.
Usually if someone's traumatized, they've been bit by malevolence. Might be their own,
might be someone else's. They've been bit by malevolence. They don't know what to do
with that. They don't know what to do with the reality of evil. One of the things you
do with the reality of evil is start to understand the mythological landscape, and that is the
landscape of good and evil. And then you have to start to understand what good means
and what the pathway back there is.
Part of the religious enterprise, the Christian enterprise,
deals with this very forthrightly.
It's like people can wander very badly off the path
and end up in places they can't tolerate being.
How do you get back?
Confess, repent, atone. That's exactly right. What's the confession? Well, what do you do?
Everything. What do you do? Okay. Repent. Well, could you set yourself up so you wouldn't do that again?
How would you have to change yourself the way you look at the world so that you don't fall into that pit again. Atone. What do you have to do to make it good, to make it right?
And if you don't do that, then, well, then you're stuck in hell.
Do you think there's always a way to make it right?
You could pray that that was the case. They promise, like the Christian promises that the answer to that is yes.
But the depth of the confession
and the difficulty of the repentance and atonement
is proportional to the magnitude of the sin.
So that's rough, but it makes sense, right?
I mean, if you did something terrible,
it's not gonna be easy to fix it,
but that doesn't mean you.
The Christian insistence is that
there's always a pathway back.
I have a friend that's coming on,
and he's gonna be here towards the end of this year.
And he was a SEAL.
And generally with the special operations crowd,
I do, if I have a guest on from that community,
it's a life story.
And there's so much truth that comes out of those interviews.
And it's almost turned into like a therapy session.
Yeah, that's the confession.
I have somebody coming on who had to,
maybe didn't even have to.
I told him I didn't want to have the entire conversation
on the phone and that if he wanted to have it here,
then we could have it here.
And he says he does, but he killed a child.
And it's stuck with him for years.
It's haunted him.
How do you,
how do you make that right?
How do you make something like that right?
How do you make that right? How do you make something like that right?
I would say in a situation like that,
the devil's in the details, right?
So if I was working with someone like that,
the first thing I would find out is, well, what happened?
Because you need to know the details.
You know, because for example, in the story that you laid out. I don't know if that was how much of that
Outcome could be attributed to the situation
well, let's let's just say it was a a
justified kill
But it yet it's still haunts him
I think it probably haunts a lot of the team members that were a part of that operation.
And, but whether it was justified or not,
he's still struggling with it.
Yeah.
He doesn't feel, I don't want to speak for the man,
but it obviously bothers him
because it got brought up right away.
And he wants to bring that up here.
And so...
Well, what would I investigate then?
So imagine he's torturing himself.
And imagine he's doing that in a way that is counterproductive. And that's also counterproductive in relationship to his family.
Is that helping or making it worse?
Right? I mean, so that's something to think about.
This isn't, I mean I'm speaking hypothetically because obviously I don't know this person.
I don't know what their situation is. but almost everyone has other people depending on them
you know and if you
Overburden yourself with guilt and take yourself out you're gonna hurt people around you So you have moral obligation to not do that if you can avoid it
So that's one of the things I would investigate to begin with I would find out what exactly what happened
What were the situational requirements?
conscientious people tend to find out exactly what happened, what were the situational requirements.
Conscientious people tend to overestimate their culpability in any given situation and downplay
the situational factors.
And that's called the fundamental attribution error.
And it's particularly true for conscientious people.
So I do very careful analysis of the situation and find out, well, was it likely that anyone
would have done that in that situation
okay well then then well then you there's another problem that comes along with that which is well
what does it mean about life that you can be in a situation where you have to do something terrible
to proceed that's a religious question to some degree and and there are ways of addressing that
And there are ways of addressing that. In terms of atonement, likely what I would have him do is I would ask him,
to begin with at least, is like, well imagine that you were counselling one of your friends
who has this problem, and you wanted to help him calculate a pathway forward that would enable him to
get on with his life.
What would you require from him?
What sacrifice would you require from him?
You know, because people will often burden themselves
with an impossible moral task, and it's not helpful.
You're not, you're not, it's not right
to take yourself out of the game.
Right, so I can't be much more specific than that
because the devil's always in the details.
It has to be personalized.
One of the things that I've done with people
who've had post-traumatic stress disorder
is I've familiarized themselves with the literature of horror.
That's very useful.
So there's a book called Ordinary Man
that details how a battalion of German police officers
were turned into the murderers
of naked pregnant women in Poland, one step at a time.
There's a book called The Rape of Nanking,
which is about what the Japanese did in China
at the run up to the Second World War.
The woman who wrote that, Iris Chang, she committed suicide.
It's a rough book.
Human beings have a very dark side.
And now and then, what happens to someone who's traumatized is they run into that dark side.
Well, how would that be conceptualized religiously? Well, if you meet Satan at the crossroads,
there's no necessity that you're going to recover from that.
These are realities.
In fact, they're the deepest realities.
That's why people break apart in a situation like that.
They come across something that's so dark
that they just can't function.
Well, the first thing to become aware of is that's actually how the world is constituted.
It's constituted as a landscape of good and evil. We're very bad at teaching people that.
We portrayed in our movies, always, in action adventure stories, always, a landscape of good and evil.
A mythological quest, the Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, the Marvel Universe.
You know, those are all landscapes of good and evil.
What we don't understand is that is the landscape.
Now, partly we don't understand it because we're in pumpkin shells.
Right? It's like, you know, normal middle class existence.
There's not much good in it, in the extreme sense.
There's not much evil in it, in the extreme sense.
It's all middle of the road. There's not much good in it in the extreme sense. There's not much evil in it in the extreme sense.
It's all middle of the road.
But that's not life.
And if you're in that pumpkin shell and you're naive
and then you encounter life, it's like, well,
good luck to you, because you are completely
without resources in relationship to how to deal with that.
People have an immense capacity for darkness.
But it's bottomless, it's bottomless.
No matter how bad you think someone can act,
there's something someone did that was worse than that.
And no one wants to go there.
And people, even when they conceptualize themselves,
when people read the history of Nazi Germany,
they always think they're Schindler.
They always think that they're the person
who would have saved Anne Frank in the Netherlands.
They never read history as a perpetrator.
That would, I wouldn't have done that.
It's like, did you watch people during the pandemic?
In Canada, 30% of my neighbors were thrilled that they had the opportunity to inform on the people around them.
Trilled. They would have worn those goddamn masks for the rest of their life if the payoff would have been they could feel morally superior and informed.
And so, you know, people have a very dark side.
And see, once you start to understand that, it also lifts the moral burden off you to
some degree.
It's like, well, you aren't who you think you are.
You're way worse and way better.
And that's your friend, for example, he discovered that.
He discovered he was way worse.
It's like, yeah, that's the world.
That's reality.
Okay.
Now you know that. Now you know that. You're no longer naive. You might say that.
What do you do about that? Well, that's the next question.
The antidote to evil is good. And good is deeper than evil.
I don't know how good your friend would have to be in order to
free himself from his entanglement. You know, maybe he has to become a saint, so to speak.
Could be.
There's a lot of atonement there.
I think the fact that...
I appreciate the fact that people who think like that because so many people just justify
their wrongdoings in their head.
They justify why they did it and they look for reasons to convince themselves on why
they're sinning. Why do you think people, why is it so hard for people
to just admit wrong instead of justifying?
Well, so that's related to that question
you had about pride.
We like to be right.
If I'm right and you're wrong, I don't have to change.
And so that's pretty convenient for me
because change, there's a desert part of change.
Like if I have to change, I have to fall apart
and then I have to put myself back together.
It's very annoying to fall apart.
You know, if you're arguing with your wife
and it turns out you're wrong,
then you have to go figure out why you're wrong.
God only knows why you're wrong.
Like maybe it's a deep wrong, maybe it's a pattern,
and you have to take, maybe 10% of you has to go,
something like that.
And that's a kind of death.
It's really hard.
And so people will insist that they're right
so they don't have to change.
Because change involves sacrifice, change involves death.
When you learn something new,
the stupid part of you
has to go, and it has to die.
And that's actually painful.
You might have put a lot of work into that stupid part
of yourself.
And then you have to let it go.
And then it's not like you're, like I said,
it's not like you're better as soon as you let it go.
It's no, you're just lost on that front.
And you have to figure out what to do instead.
In the religious orientation, what you try to do
is you try to replace insisting that you're right
with trying to find out how to be right.
And that's the opposite of pride, that's humility.
It's like, okay, there's some pathway forward here
that I could journey down if I could only specify what it was.
My wife has started praying the rosary, and she does that every morning for about an hour.
It takes her about an hour to orient herself properly because she's trying to be grateful.
Practice it. Practice it. Right? To orient herself upward to commit, to recommit to the truth.
That's the attempt to find the right pathway rather than to insist that the one you're
on is already right.
It's a completely different orientation.
In the Christian landscape, that's something like Christ within me and not me, not my will.
Well, what does that mean? Well it means you replace what you want with the attempt to do what's
right. Well what's right? Well, truth. So in our conversation, I weigh my words. I'm
trying to find the words that are solid. That's the pathway forward. Each word is a stone on the water
that specifies the pathway through chaos even.
You know, if you're in a tight situation,
you should be very careful with what you say,
especially if you're around dangerous people, say.
And so you weigh your words
and that's an attempt to find the pathway forward,
instead of to insist that you're right
in your current configuration.
It's a form of faith, too, because you might say,
well, do you want to put faith in who you are?
Do you want to put faith in who you could become?
And it's way better to put faith in who you could become.
That's a much better deal.
Then you can give up who you are.
You put your faith in the right place.
You don't have that tyrannical insistence
that you're right all the time.
When I'm dealing with my wife,
like we're trying to sort something out, what's my aim?
I want to sort this out
so we don't have to fight about it anymore.
I want to put it right. And if I have to give up something stupid that I'm doing to put this right,
that's okay because what I'm aiming at is peace and tranquility and romantic adventure.
And that's the pathway that I want to take forward. And if I have to give up something idiotic about
myself to make that happen,
I'd like to find out what it is so I can get rid of it as fast as possible.
That's a sacrificial offering.
There's an insistence in the biblical corpus that
sacrifice is the pathway forward.
There's no difference between that and maturation.
There's no difference between that and work.
Those are sacrificial offerings, right?
They're delay of gratification.
So you sacrifice what you want.
That's what you do when you work.
You delay gratification.
You sacrifice what you could be having right now
for the future.
It's a sacrifice.
That's the communal,
that's the communal orientation of human beings, that sacrificial pathway. And if you're smart, you look for what you can sacrifice.
Why?
To replace it with something better, always.
And that's your upward aim, and that can be the antithesis of that sort of pride.
You're prideful when you don't-
Do you think that's a good thing?
Sacrificing for the future.
I personally struggle with this because there's the live in the now,
which when I can do it I feel great,
and then there's the sacrifice for the future,
which we all do through work.
So, the Sermon on the Mount is about that.
So the central idea in the Sermon on the Mount is that you should aim up,
and then you should concentrate on the present.
Then you get to have your cake and eat it too.
But the first thing is that you aim up.
So you want to orient yourself so that everything you do is in keeping with an upward aim.
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So what does it mean to aim up?
You might ask that.
Well, in the final analysis,
it means to align yourself with the spirit of God.
But if you wanna bring it down to earth,
it's like well
There's undoubtedly some things you're doing that, you know aren't optimal and
You could aim at improving those well
That's an upward aim and you could imagine that the sum total of all those incremental improvements is the upward aim
You know and that as you make an improvement, you get better at seeing the next step upward.
The ultimate upward aim is,
what would you say, the heavenly city on the hill.
It's something like that.
It's existence that would be optimal for you
and optimal for everyone else. But that's a that's a receding goal, right?
That's a kind of impossible heaven, but it's the thing that sort of
Stands behind all your proximal aims
When I aim upward and then you can concentrate on the present, you know
So what I'm trying to do in this discussion as I'm sure you are is what are you trying to do in this discussion? You I'm sure you are, is, what are you trying to do in this discussion?
You're trying to have an honest discussion.
Okay, why?
Why?
I wanna learn from you.
Why?
I wanna improve my life.
Okay, and you're bringing other people along on that trip.
Why is it useful to bring other people along?
Because it improves their life.
Okay, and is there something meaningful in that?
For you? Absolutely.
Okay, so that's a mystery.
I talked to Jocko Willick.
Jocko wanted to be a soldier from the time he was like three.
And he's a complete bloody monster, you know?
He's four feet thick and rampaging.
And he said he could have easily been a criminal.
He's a disagreeable militaristic guy.
He went off to train and he found that it was,
he really liked mentoring young men.
That was way better than being a criminal.
He found a better pathway.
You know, in these discussions that you're having
with the people you bring on here,
like you said, you're trying to learn,
so you're trying to shed your stupidity and
move uphill, but at the same time you're doing that, you're engaged in a communal
endeavor, right? Because you're helping other people do that too, and so then
you've got this great alignment between what's good for you and what's also good
for everyone else. That's a good deal. God comes to Abraham as the voice of adventure. So Abraham is rich
and he's 70 years old when the story starts. He spent his whole life in his father's tent just
living a hedonistic and secure life. And there's no reason for him to do anything else because
his parents are rich. But God comes along and and says get the hell out of your zone of security
leave your parents leave your tent leave your community go out into the world and
Abraham agrees he commits to it and he makes the sacrifices along the way that are necessary in
expanding
Each sacrifice in expanding each sacrifice that marks his pathway forward
requires a greater giving up. It culminates in the offering of his son.
God tells him to sacrifice his son to God.
And so that's the culmination of the sacrificial process.
But God makes Abraham a deal.
It's such a cool deal.
This is such a wonderful thing to understand. So imagine there's an instinct in your child that
causes that child to push himself beyond his limits and to develop, to become
mature, to become independent. Imagine that you foster that as a father, right?
So you'll challenge your child because you want him to be able to bear the weight of existence by himself.
But more than bear it, to bear it in an adventuresome manner.
God comes to Abraham as the call of the spirit of adventure.
And he makes Abraham a deal.
He said, if you abide by the spirit of adventure wholeheartedly,
and you make the sacrifices that are necessary, no matter what they are, He said, if you abide by the spirit of adventure wholeheartedly,
and you make the sacrifices that are necessary,
no matter what they are, you'll be a blessing to yourself.
Your name will become renowned, so you'll have a reputation.
You'll establish something permanent that's good,
and you'll do it in a way that's good for everyone else.
And that that's all aligned with that spirit of adventure.
Now that's a good deal.
If that's, I think it's true.
Like, if it's not true, it would mean that
what calls us to develop is not in alignment
with communal life, society,
or with what's good for other people.
It could easily be the case that if you treated yourself properly, in the highest sense, that
that would align perfectly with the deepest needs of other people.
And that's that divine harmony that is on offer on the religious side of things.
That's associated with what's good.
And it seems to me, it seems to me true.
You know, I would say for your friend
who committed this terrible sin
is that his pathway forward is to swear to do what's good.
And I don't know how deeply he has to swear that.
It would be commensurate with his error.
And that could be of great benefit to him to some degree,
because it's a very rare person who becomes good without running
into Satan at the crossroads.
You're not serious enough before then.
You don't take yourself seriously enough.
Think, well, what does it matter?
What does it matter what I do?
I'm just one dust speck among eight billion.
It's like, no, if you start to see yourself as,
what would you say?
The author of all evil.
That's a good one.
You might just start taking yourself
with a certain degree of seriousness
and then you can do a lot of good.
Let's go back to post-traumatic stress.
I've done three and a half years of therapy twice a week.
I've done psychedelics treatments, therapies.
I've done, I've explored all kinds of different ways to overcome post-traumatic
stress, TBI, but let's just concentrate on post-traumatic stress.
It always seems to go back to childhood.
Everybody I've talked to, the therapist starts in my childhood, I started at childhood. Then when I got into when I started researching the psychedelic therapy and I
started interviewing people about it, a lot of the visual experiences that they relive
is not wartime. A lot of it is I would say more than not our childhood memories.
Why? The psychoanalyst would have called that a complex.
Well, imagine that
It's the same as a portal into hell, I suppose.
That's another way of thinking about it.
All things you haven't dealt with are the same thing.
And why? Well, all things you haven't dealt with are things you don't understand.
Well, how can you classify things that you don't understand? Because you don't understand them.
Well, you classify them with negative emotion. That's the class. The class of all things that
produce negative emotion.
Okay, what's at the core of that? The deepest hell you've managed to fall into.
What's associated with that? Everything you haven't dealt with in your life.
Right. So...
That, if you encountered something particularly traumatic it would aggregate everything that was partially traumatic around it
It's something like that because it's the same thing. It's all those places in your life. You did not traverse properly
right, and those all have to be mapped because otherwise they're
pitfalls and
That's how your psyche responds to them
There are dragons there look out do you have to sort that all out you do if you don't want to carry it
with you you have sort everything out that you don't want to carry with you
that's partly why the Catholics insist on confession it's like what do you do
wrong this week well I don't want to think about that It's like, what did you do wrong this week?
Well, I don't want to think about that.
It's like, fair enough, but then you carry it.
It's very difficult to keep,
and this is the same thing in marriage.
This is why you talk for 90 minutes.
It's like to keep things from aggregating.
So, the small things that you avoid collect in your closet and in the closet they turn into a monster
and then one day when you're weak they come leaping out of the closet and devour you. That's an ancient story.
So when you were with the psychedelic experiences, you said that there was a relationship between
childhood experiences and the traumatic experiences that you were describing.
Was that something that you experienced in a rush?
How did those connections make themselves manifest?
With me, there was not really any connection.
It was more chronological order.
And I don't understand what the connection is.
And that's why I'm asking you, is because it's a trend that I see.
When I talk to gents about this type of stuff, it always seems to go back to childhood.
You know, that's what Freud observed.
Well, it's because everything that you don't, everything you've encountered in your life
that you don't understand is traumatic to some degree, merely because you don't understand
it.
It's unmapped. You haven't coped with it properly.
You don't know how to deal with it. And so all of those things are tagged pretty much
forever with anxiety, with entropy. Like they are entropy itself. They're confusion itself. itself and you have to make the world out of that. So the great hero creators
of the cosmos in the mythological world are always those who face the dragon of
chaos who cut it into pieces and make the world out of the pieces. It's the
oldest story we know. It's the dragon fight in its most fundamental sense. A
dragon is a monster that's composed of monstrous parts and monstrous parts are
parts that are terrifying but that also don't like a monster is something that's
an aggregate of the in a monster is an aggregate of the incomprehensible that's
a good way of thinking about it and so everything that's happened to you that's incomprehensible is going to be part of that monster.
You have to deal with all of it. Well, you either deal with it or you don't.
And if you don't deal with it, you carry it with you. That's how it goes. That's how it works.
It could easily be too that people who were primed, let's say, for post-traumatic stress disorder had a sequence of traumatic occurrences in their past that have already cracked them
in some ways.
I want to switch gears now.
I want to get into the lecture that you gave about how the Bible references itself approximately
65,000 times.
And you had a great visual, which I like. Yeah, you had a great visual which...
Yeah, it's a great visual, eh?
It was very captivating. Could you elaborate on that a little bit?
Well, the first thing we could say is that the Bible is the world's first hyperlink text
because many of the verses refer to many other verses.
And that means it's a very complicated text because you can find your way through it many, many ways.
Like the more a text is cross-referenced, the more pathways through it there are.
And you can imagine that that explodes exponentially.
So you might say, well, what does a Bible verse mean?
And the answer is, well, it means whatever it means
in reference to all of its cross references.
And then each of those cross references
has cross references.
So it's a web.
It's a web of meaning, a very complex web of meaning.
And so that's what makes it deep, technically speaking.
OK, so what does that mean? This is a good way
of understanding a symbol. See if I can explain this properly. Imagine that you have a belief
of any sort. Then imagine that there are other beliefs that are statistically likely to co-occur
with that belief.
Right? So if you believe one thing, here's four other things you're likely to believe.
And then each of those four has four things, four beliefs that are likely to occur with them. That's what you'd say if someone was conservative, right? If you know one of their beliefs,
you can predict many other beliefs. Or if they're liberal, Every idea, no idea exists independently.
It exists in a web of ideas.
That web is something like the statistical probability
that another idea will co-occur with that idea.
That's what the large language models map.
They map that mathematically.
So here's a way of thinking about it. Imagine a word like hilt,
like the hilt of a sword, H-I-L-T.
Well, how do you know that's a word?
Well, you know the meaning of the word,
but you also know it's a word because
a word is identifiable because of the statistical
regularities between the letters.
You know
perfectly well that ZQNX is not a word. Why? Well because there's no word that has that
statistical relationship. There's no word that's four consonants, not one. You have to have a vowel
in your word. So one of the ways that helps you identify a word is your understanding of the statistical regularity between the letters so
the word c i l t that's not a word but it's quite a lot like a word it's a lot more like a word than
z q n x so a word has predictable statistical relationships
between its letters.
Words exist in relationship to each other.
Patterns of words exist in relationship
to other patterns of words.
Paragraphs exist in relationship to paragraphs.
All that's a mathematical domain of statistical regularity.
That's what a symbol is. A symbol is the
complex of ideas that are associated with a particular idea.
And so when you're exploring the symbolic landscape, say, of the biblical
stories, you're exploring the statistical relationship
between all the ideas.
That's a reality, that statistical relationship. It's a reality. It's like does a witch live in a
swamp or a high-rise? Well, witch lives in a swamp. You know that. Well, why? Well, because in portrayals
of witches from time immemorial, witches are likely to be in swamps.
So when you think witch, that's one of the things
you sort of think along with it.
And everything we think is like that.
And the part of what the biblical corpus is,
is a walk through, how would you say it?
It's a walk through the patterns of character and order
that have been reliably observed to exist,
to coexist over thousands of years.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
So here's an example.
This is very complicated, but here's an example. So I talked about God for
God for Abraham was the spirit of adventure, the call to adventure. This is
a definition. This is very much worth knowing because people have no idea what
to do with the concept of God. It's like God's the call to adventure. That's a
definition. Okay, but that's not all. So God for Noah wasn't the
call to adventure. Not exactly. For Noah, God was the call to batten down the hatches
when chaos looms. So imagine that you're a wise man, which is how Noah is portrayed in
the story. So you've actually, you see things straight. You're wise for your time and place which is how Noah is described
Your eyes are open and you get an intuition that all hell is about to break loose
And so you take the appropriate precautions
Okay
God is defined in that story as the spirit that comes to the wise to have them prepare in times of trouble and then
The co-occurrence of those stories is the insistence that the call to adventure
and the call to prepare are the same thing.
That's the monotheism that's underneath it.
Right, and so what the biblical corpus is doing
is aggregating visions of what's highest
and making the presumption that they're all manifestations
of a unity.
Now the alternative is that it's a plurality, right? I mean
You're gonna cope with this one way or another like either everything that calls to you morally is the manifestation of one thing in some complex
manner or there's a plurality of moralities. Those are the only options. The monotheistic
Insistence is that what's highest is in the final analysis one thing?
So what else? So how else is it portrayed in the final analysis one thing. So what else?
So how else is it portrayed in the Old Testament stories?
God is the voice of conscience.
That's another portrayal.
And so you could say God is the voice of conscience,
God is the impetus to prepare in times of chaos,
and God is the call to adventure.
And that's all the same God.
It's just manifesting itself. The same spirit is making itself manifest in different conditions.
In the Christian corpus, God is identical with voluntary, God is the spirit of voluntary self-sacrifice.
Right, right. And that's the same as the spirit of adventure.
And that's the same as the voice of conscience.
And that's the same as the voice of prudence
during times of chaos.
It's all the same thing.
And I think that's right.
I think that's exactly right.
What was the most referenced verse in the Bible? If
I remember right, the graph showed. Yeah, that's a good question. I don't know the answer
to that actually. It was very, yeah, I was... See, that's a very good question because that's
actually one way of determining what idea is central, right? Because some ideas are
going to be more central than others.
At the bottom of the visual aid, it showed.
The number of connections, the number of cross references.
It was right smack dab in the middle.
There was one that had to be at least double the length
of all the others.
I was just, yeah, that would be interesting.
Yeah, that's for sure.
Did you put that together? No, no, right. I was just, yeah, that would be interesting. Yeah, that's for sure. Did you put that together?
No, no, someone, I found that online.
You can find it online if you look up biblical, graph of biblical cross references,
it'll pop up right away.
Something you can probably find for this podcast and show people.
Yeah, it's great. It's great. It's great.
I'll find it.
Your brain is organized like that too, by the way.
So it's, every neuron isn't connected to every other neuron. I'll find it. Your brain is organized like that too, by the way.
So every neuron isn't connected to every other neuron.
That isn't how it works.
That's too much connection.
Actually, that's what starts to happen in a psychedelic experience,
is that the number of connections increases dramatically.
That's partly why there's that overwhelming sense of increasing meaning. So, but you don't want everything to be connected to everything else.
I mean, that's part of the pathology of the modern world.
We're connecting everything together.
It's like that's a little too much connection.
It's insanity making, right?
We may be driving ourselves mad with the interconnectivity online.
You know, it's a great way of educating yourself. It's a great way of having access to information
but I'll tell you man it's a great way of being connected to all sorts of
things you don't want to be connected to. And it isn't obvious which of those is
going to get the upper hand. You know like I'm not... it isn't obvious to me that
Twitter could be good. See because I'm afraid It isn't obvious to me that Twitter could be good
See because I'm afraid that the social like let's take Twitter for example Twitter is speech without responsibility
Speech without responsibility might be fatal, you know, and I'm saying that as an advocate of free speech
But there's a very big difference between free speech on Twitter and the free speech you and I are engaging in right now.
Like you're sitting right there.
There's a lot of things that I'm not going to say to you.
Like not because I'm hiding, but like I'm going to be polite.
There would be an immediate consequence.
Would definitely.
There is no immediate consequence on Twitter. Well, worse.
The consequence of being psychopathic
might be positive on Twitter.
Right?
Whenever the psychopaths get the upper hand, society dies.
And it could be.
I'm afraid of this.
I think it's possible that social media enables
the psychopaths, fundamentally. It's very that social media enables the psychopaths fundamentally.
It's very worrisome. I mean there are a lot of bad actors on, well, you know, you read comments, you know,
people need to slap.
Yes, they do. They certainly do.
And there's no way of administering said slap and so one of the consequences of that for example many
Psychological commentators had made this point Twitter devolves into female aggression
So females when they're aggressive they use reputation savaging
Gossip and innuendo. It's unbelievably corrosive because they can't engage in
physical combat.
And so that makes female anti-social behavior unbelievably pernicious and difficult to regulate.
Twitter enables gossip, reputation, savaging, and innuendo.
Unconstrained.
So what does that mean?
It means everybody who tilts in that direction
has free reign, but it also means that
even if you don't tilt in that direction,
it's gonna tilt you in that direction.
So, and we don't know, these are unbelievably
powerful communication systems.
You know, you can write something casual
that a million people will read.
Well, maybe you shouldn't ever write something casual
that a million people should read.
Maybe that's a reason for it not to be casual.
Maybe if we have a technology that enables people
to discuss things casually with a million people,
we just all die.
Like that could be.
We have no idea what we're doing
with these transformations of communication.
We have no idea.
It's very difficult to be on Twitter
without always feeling like you need to take a shower.
You know, and I don't, I wouldn't say
that I'm at my best on Twitter.
Why do I use it?
I use it because that's how I keep track of the doings
of 700 people that I know.
I do it so that I know what's happening in the moment,
and that's often where I find my podcast guests.
What's the downside?
It's easy to say stupid, casual things. often where I find my podcast guests. What's the downside?
It's easy to say stupid, casual things.
And you're immersed in this responsibilityless landscape
of casual speech, where all the psychopaths come out to play.
It's made, I mean, I don't know if this is what made it,
but this is something that I want to get into with is the polarization.
People have become, I don't know if this is the right word, but almost tribal, it seems like.
And, you know, what really, I'm always, every day, every single day I wake up, I'm wondering,
how did we get here? Why is the country the way it is? It's not just the country,
it's the entire world. Why is the world the way it is now? And, you know, kind of where I'm going
with this is people have put so much faith into political parties, political candidates.
They refuse to look at or admit wrongdoings of anybody that they back.
And that's, you have the right call and the left sheep.
And they're doing the same thing.
They're doing the same thing.
I could show them a million different things of,
hey, look at, this is what this person did.
And they will dismiss it and they will make excuses for it.
And they would put, why do people, why is it become
so polar?
Nobody can, it's like we've lost all critical thinking skills in the world, it seems like
to me.
Well, the new technologies flattened the information hierarchy
so that everybody can communicate with everyone.
Everyone's now a journalist.
That might be too many journalists.
You know, we've radically expanded the degree
to which we're connected with people.
And okay, so you can imagine if you're a good person,
perhaps that's a good thing.
If you're a bad person, it's a really bad thing.
A lot of the people that aggregate together online,
for example, they wouldn't have a single friend
in the actual real world.
No one would, like your base, you know,
your typical basement dwelling resentful keyboard warrior.
It's like if he was left to his own devices
without this technological intermediation,
he'd have zero impact on anything
because no one can stand being around him. But he's magnified madly online and can aggregate
with other people. That's what I mean in some ways by the enabling of the psychopaths. So it's not
that easy for psychopaths to organize because no one likes them, including other psychopaths. But
them including other psychopaths but they can certainly organize they can certainly organize online and so we're enabling that and people are not
cognizant of the danger I've talked to Democrats for seven years 50
congressmen senators people in positions of authority, RFK, Dean Phillips, I always ask them the same question,
when does the left go too far?
They never answer. They have no idea.
They don't take the fringe seriously.
They think, oh, those people don't mean it.
It's like, you...
People tend to mean what they say.
You know, I know people lie, but often the easiest way to find out what someone's up
to is just to listen to what they say.
They'll tell you.
Hitler told everyone what he was up to.
He wrote an old book about it.
Oh no, he couldn't be up to that.
It's like, yeah, yeah, pretty much he was up to that.
These people who come out and say, you you know we should burn everything to the ground and start again. It's like that's what they mean.
Oh they don't really mean that. They don't mean that with equity. They don't mean equality of
outcome. They don't really mean that. They mean it. They have sway online and far more Than is good for us Is that part of the polarization? I think so. I think the polarization is driven
To some degree by the fact that social media enables the psychopaths. So we know what they're like
So here's the we know this is true by the way because these people are much more likely to troll post online
So there's been psychological investigations into that. What's the psychological makeup of LOL troll posters?
These are people who are doing it for the laughs,
doing it for the lulls, just causing trouble, ha ha ha.
They're psychopathic.
So that means they're predatory parasites.
They're narcissistic, which means they want reputation without
earning it. They're Machiavellian, which means that they use their words to do nothing but
manipulate for their own short-term benefit. And to cap it all off, because that's not enough,
they're sadistic, which means they take positive delight in the suffering of others All right, that's that's not good. None of that's good
And so you let those people take the upper hand you're in serious trouble and you don't need that many of them
To bring things to a shuddering halt, you know, it was a very small minority of people who fomented the russian revolution
Tiny percentage of the population you let those people out of the out from under their rocks at your peril and
The marginalized it's like we should welcome the marginalized. It's like, okay
What are you gonna do with the fringe of the margin?
Well, they don't exist. It's like wait till they show up at your door, buddy
You'll be You'll be pretty, you'll be thinking twice about the fact
that you opened the gate when those people show up.
And if the fringe of the fringe isn't enough to terrify you,
the margin of the fringe of the fringe,
they'll do the trick.
And people don't have, we talked about this earlier,
they don't have imagination for that kind of evil.
They don't wanna look at that.
Even Michael Schellenberger. I talked to Michael a couple of weeks ago about the WPATH files.
Marcy, I think Bowers is his name, the surgeon who runs WPATH, the surgeon who operated on
Jazz Jennings, the surgeon who's surgically converted 12,000 people. Right, an absolute
bloody monster. It's like, you want to look at that?
Well Michael told me when I started talking to Helen Joyce for example, who wrote a book
on the trans phenomena, he didn't want to look at it. He didn't believe. He couldn't
believe that could be happening. That was Michael Schellenberger. I mean Michael, he'll
look. He looked into the Twitter files. I mean, Michael's a great journalist. You know, what's his name? Bill, no, Mark Cuban came out the other day
on Lex Fridman's show and he said,
well, in order to believe that this sort of trans butchery
is happening, I'd have to believe that the nurses
and the physicians and the psychologists are all in on it.
Well, that's ridiculous.
It's like, have it your way.
You know, I can see why you don't wanna believe that.
People won't look.
We've given the marginal, the upper hand
in the social media networks, and that could be fatal.
Like, I really mean that.
We have no idea, we have no idea
how significant this transformation in communication is.
We have no idea the long-term consequence,
let's say, of Twitter.
I mean, Musk took it over because he hoped
he could make it into something good,
you know, on the free speech side.
And I think he's improved it a lot.
But it could be intrinsically evil.
It's highly probable.
Well, think about it this way. What's the probability
that a radical revolution in connectivity would only have positive consequences? Like
zero right? Because positive consequences, they're really... if you take any complex
system and you radically disturb it, the probability that the radical disturbance will be a net
good is
Infinitesimally low compared to all the ways it could fall apart
You can't throw a wrench into a military helicopter and improve it
so and What we've done is we've connected people. That's a major league technological transformation. Yeah, I
Mean, how do we how do we get through this?
I mean, it's...
Nobody holds themselves accountable anymore.
Everybody wants to pass the buck.
People not only are making excuses
not only for themselves, but they're making
excuses for their
political figures, parties,
candidates, whatever
you want to call it, and all I see is just bitching and moaning.
Why did you invite me onto this podcast?
Because I want to pick your brain about these things.
Okay, but obviously part of the reason is because you've observed the effects or the consequences of what I'm doing.
What do you think those consequences or effects are? observed the effects or the consequences of what I'm doing.
Okay, what do you think those consequences or effects are?
I think they're making people think.
Okay, okay, so is, and you think that's a good thing?
Absolutely.
Okay, so what in the manner in which I'm inviting people
to think, do you think, what part of that do you think
is good, what element of that is good?
I think that,
What element of that is good? I think that...
I think that people have lost the ability to...
think for themselves and they're being led around by the nose
by political candidates.
And I think when somebody like you gets a platform and speaks,
it forces them to get out of that hamster wheel.
Okay, okay. So, okay. So, so you asked what can be done about this? Well, what I've observed
is most effective is something like a call to adventure. This is why the work I've been
doing has resonated with, in particular, with young young men Because it's a call to adventure. It's a call to adventure through responsibility and no one's doing that
We haven't done that with young people for 60 years
And so there's a huge hole there and if you I see this wherever I go if I talk about the relationship between
responsibility
Adventure and meaning people get it right away
No, I mean you think when you're raking yourself over the coals of your
conscience and you're searching in your soul for something you've done that's
good so that you don't have to take yourself out on the despair and nihilism
front, you're going to be looking for times when you made real sacrifices on
behalf of something higher and that was
successful when you were of service to other people, when you were good for the people
that you loved, when you went out of your way to accomplish something difficult, you'll
be able to satisfy your conscience with those memories. Well, what if you just lived like
that? That's the Christian call. The Christian call is to bear
maximal responsibility. That's what the cross means. It means to pick up your cross and walk
uphill. What's the cross? Death, pain, malevolence. That's what it is. It's unjust death. That's the
cross. What does it mean to bear that?
Well, it means to bear the weight of life responsibly.
Why do that?
Because it's deeply...
Well, first of all, it's good.
And just that in and of itself might be sufficient.
But it's also...
It's in keeping with that.
It's deeply meaningful.
I tell young men, it's like,
find something difficult to do.
You need that.
You're not built for comfort or pleasure.
Like if that comes along, good.
You know, if you have a day where you're comfortable
and there's some things around you that give pleasure,
have some sense and enjoy it.
But don't be thinking that's what your life is aimed at.
That's contemptible.
Everyone knows that.
Everyone knows that.
And if they orient themselves in that hedonistic direction,
there's nothing in it but shame.
No one is proud of themselves for using pornography.
They might screech and bitch about their right to do it.
You know, I can live whatever lifestyle I want. It's like well first of all
No, you can't
That doesn't work. It won't work for you because you can't sell yourself out and it won't work for other people
We know for example
who engages in
Hedonistic short-term mating strategies. We know that from the psychological literature. So imagine on the one end of the
reproductive strategy distribution are people who commit to the long run and on the other end are the people who pursue
short-term hedonistic one-night stand relationships. Okay, now you can ask
Who are these people? Well the people who commit to the short-term responsibility
less sexual gratification relationship are psychopathic, narcissistic,
Machiavellian, and sadistic. And if they don't start out that way they train
themselves to become that with that lifestyle right, so like
Okay, you might ask like the marquee to sad you might ask
Well who the hell cares if I can gratify myself at your expense. Why the hell shouldn't I?
Who's to say that's wrong and my answer to that would be?
Go try it
See what happens well what, what will happen?
You will degenerate because you're exploiting other people and yourself.
And you can't exploit other people and yourself without degenerating.
You will never form a relationship because who the hell is going to hang around with you?
If it's all about you and all about you in the moment, you're the last person anyone wants to be around.
So that means that as you age,
you'll become increasingly isolated.
There's nothing more despicable
than a 50 year old hedonist,
oldest guy at the frat party.
Oh, that's a hell of a, that's a hell of a name.
You know, you know perfectly well at some,
maybe if you're 30 at a frat party,
even then, like the eyebrows are up, if you're 40, not only are their eyebrows up, you're 30 at a frat party even then like the eyebrows are up if you're 40
Not only their eyebrows up you're kind of a creep or maybe you're really a creep like a serious creep and
Creep can get pretty damn serious. So
Those lifestyles they don't work
They don't work for the person because they're not sustainable not within the context of the relationships that would make for a community and they don't work communally
Obviously because community is based on sacrifice. That's why societies civilized societies are monogamous
Well, why well because if you dispense with monogamy
What happens if you dispense with monogamy? what happens if you dispense with monogamy?
Well, we already know.
Here's what's happening on the college campuses.
So imagine now you have a college campus that's 65% female and 35% male.
So you think, well, that's pretty good for the men because they're making out like bandits.
It's like, no, a tiny fraction of the men are making out like bandits.
Like you know, maybe 10% of them, let's say.
It's probably more like 5%.
High status, high value males.
They sort of have the pick of the women.
And the women are all after those guys.
They don't care about the other guys.
They're after those guys.
And those guys have like 10 women.
So what are they learning?
Well, they're learning how to exploit 10 women.
So they're just turning into exploiters.
What happens with the women?
Well, they don't have a relationship.
They're all chasing the same high status guy.
And he has options.
So he doesn't have to make any sacrifices to formulate a long term relationship.
So the women who any of the decent women are, they're just what the hell's left for them?
They can sell themselves out, you know, to be an easy lay for the high status guy.
But that, women pay a massive price for that.
Women pay way more a price for sexual immorality than men do,
because the cost for them is obviously much greater.
The risk is much higher.
So the shame is greater in consequence.
You know, I don't think it's any better for a man to do that than for a woman. That's not my point, but
A promiscuous woman is selling herself out
Immediately at in the long run in a way that's more profound than a promiscuous man. They're equally morally reprehensible in some ways
Maybe
Would you say just about any men any man who was put in the top 5%?
Yeah.
Would they act the same?
Well, that's complicated, isn't it?
There's a reason Andrew Tate's popular.
Andrew Tate's popular because it's better to be Andrew Tate than to be an incel.
Right. because it's better to be Andrew Tate than to be an incel. Right, and so it's not surprising that a man
who has zero sexual value would admire someone
who has his pick and choice of hoes.
Because that's actually an improvement.
Right?
It's the improvement.
Someone who's peaceful because they're a coward
isn't an improvement over a gang member who will fight. He's worse. He's just pathetic. His goodness is all weakness. The gang member at least will fight.
Now is the gang member good? Well he's good compared to the coward. Is he good compared to what's good? No. And Andrew Tate's the same way in some ways or the people who let's say
the pathway that Tate
Represents
He had enough courage to go out there and get for himself. At least he isn't hiding in his basement
You know and he's a fighter and so you can see why people admire that too, because he actually does put himself on the line.
But he worked as an electronic pimp.
Well, if you have no women working as an electronic pimp,
that looks like a pretty damn good deal.
But it's not the right deal.
The right deal is to be attractive to women,
radically attractive to women.
Radically attractive enough to women
so that you have your pick of women.
And then to find one woman.
And society falls apart if that doesn't happen.
That's a sacrifice, obviously.
I mean, it's a funny sacrifice because
That's a sacrifice, obviously. I mean, it's a funny sacrifice because what you get from the sacrifice is your life.
Like I said, I've been married for 35 years. Okay, so what's the advantage to that?
Well, I've been through a lot with my wife. She understands me.
She understands in a deep way. She's been with me for decades, five decades.
She knows me in a way that no one else could possibly know me
We were kids together. We've gone through all these transformations together. We've had kids together
We've gone through a lot of adventures and trials
We know each other deeply
There's a huge there's huge
Significance in that there's huge reality in that and challenge to keep it working and dynamic.
Otherwise your life fragments.
I mean, it's an interesting conversation because everybody, I think that everybody has the
temptation to, and it's in all beings.
Well, if you don't have the temptation,
then you're lying or you're weak.
Yeah, it's in all beings that the male wants
to plant his seed in as many females as possible.
Yeah, well, that's a proclivity.
And so, I 100% agree with what you're saying, but it's just...
Well, that's... The female romantic fantasy, the female myth is Beauty and Beast.
Tamable Beast. In the Disney movie Beauty and the Beast the woman who's quite a
stellar character right she's beautiful and she's wise and she's intelligent she
has her choice she's got narcissist like she's got loser the villageman she's
got narcissist that's Gaston and she's got beast now you might think and the
stupid women like the narcissist.
They don't like the losers.
They don't like the dwarfs.
They like the narcissist.
Now stupid women like narcissists.
Naive women like narcissists because they confuse their narcissism with competence and confidence.
That's how narcissists exploit.
They look like they're confident.
They look like they're competent.
Beauty Gaston is after her,
wants to charm her. She goes for the beast. Well the beast is a monster. He's a traumatized monster
even. But she hopes that he's tameable, that she can bring him into relationship. And like a good beast has options, but he'll forego the
options for the relationship. That's the female sexual fantasy. So, tamable beast.
Now that's rough, right? Because how likely is it that you're going to be able
to tame a beast? Not that likely, but pretty damn useful if you can do it. Then you have someone who
can keep the real beasts at bay. Right? And it's a really, like women have to negotiate
a very tight line because they're looking for men who are disagreeable enough to be
able to tell the monsters to go to hell, but who are generous and productive enough to
share. That's a tight, that's a hard target to hit.
It's a hard target for a man to become too. You know, because you can imagine Tate would be a good
example of that. He's got all the temptations of success. Well, why not fall prey to them? Well,
compared to not having success or the temptations, it's better to have success in the temptations,
but it's actually better to have the success
and then not fall prey to the temptations.
Right, then that's a real mastery,
high order mastery that's truly admirable.
100% agreed.
I would like to move into,
you obviously study a lot about the Bible and I love a lot of the things that you say
about it on your podcast. You have all these, all these, you're digging, you're dig, you're
talking to religious figures, you're, you're discussing the Bible, you're all these things.
You're discussing the Bible, all these things. Yet, I researched you and I wanted to figure out
what you believe.
And I couldn't find it.
I found that a question that you despise
is do you believe in God?
And so I'd like to dig in and into what you're-
See, the thing about God is that God isn't something
you believe in.
This is the thing, or people, or you could say that God isn't something you believe in.
This is the thing, or people, or you could say that the way we conceptualize belief in
the modern world is shallow.
To believe in God is to commit your life.
That's what the belief is.
It isn't the statement, I believe in God.
You could, the statement can get in the way.
It does all the time.
It says in the gospels, Christ himself says,
not everyone who says Lord, Lord,
will enter the kingdom of heaven.
Just because you say you believe something,
it's like, people say all the time that they're Christians.
I'm a believing Christian.
It's like, that's hard there, buddy.
That's the most difficult possible commitment by definition.
It's the, because it's the hoisting of the cross, right?
Really, you're gonna commit to that, are you?
So here's what you're committing to.
Painful, painful, unjust death accompanied by betrayal,
the perfidy of the mob and the dominion of the tyrant.
And you're going to welcome that.
And that's not all because Christ harrows hell.
That's not all.
That's just where it starts.
Full confrontation with malevolence.
You're going to commit to that, are you?
Because that's what you're doing.
What do you mean you're going to commit to that?
You mean you're going to commit to believe that he went, that Christ went through that? No, you're doing. What do you mean? You're gonna commit to that You mean you're gonna commit to believe that he wants that you're gonna do it that you're gonna do it
In your own life
That's what Christ calls upon people to do. That's the imitation of Christ. That's at the core of a genuine
Christian commitment
now people will say
You can't get to heaven by works alone and that's true.
That's not what I mean.
That's not the point here.
The point is that the belief is a commitment to a pattern.
The pattern is full voluntary confrontation.
Full naked, crucified, voluntary confrontation accepted in good faith with joy and courageously.
Bring it on.
Military people understand this, or at least an aspect of it, right?
Because they put their lives on the line.
And not just their lives, their souls.
And so it's a hell of a thing to ask of people.
Christianity is not a comfort.
Look, Christ says his burden is light.
And what does that mean?
It means that there's really nothing that's more,
that can provide abundance and security like the truth. So that's the lightness part of it.
But the cross part of it is you have to decide not to shrink away from anything. You don't get to
live in a pumpkin shell anymore. That's the people. Christ comes back at the end of time and he doesn't reserve
his wrath for the sinners. He reserves his wrath for people who sit on the fence. And
you know, people who want normal, a normal secure life, I'm not pilloring that. I'd rather
have them than the radicals and the revolutionaries. But that's not what a human being is.
Like we're bounders over the stormy ocean.
We're built for a life of radical harness and adventure.
We're built for the maximum sacrifice.
That's what it means to believe to accept that
No holds barred away the hell we go
And so people say they're believing Christians. It's like really
Really you dare say that you have no idea what you're saying
Because it's a total commitment. It's a total commitment
To ride out to confront and ride out the worst. I'll give you an example. So in the story of Exodus, the Israelites are lost in the desert.
They're lost for like 45 years and they're always whining and bitching and complaining and acting
like, you know, privileged slaves and pining for the tyranny and hoping for the golden calf and
complaining that the heavenly food they have to eat isn't good enough because there's not enough variety
It's like they're really quite contemptible and near the end of their
voyage to the promised land really on the border they run out of water again and
They go to Moses they get all bitchy about it and
And they go to Moses. They get all bitchy about it.
And they're faithless and complaining.
And God gets sick of them again.
And he sends a bunch of poisonous serpents in
to bite them.
And you might think, well, no good God would do that.
It's like you're not paying attention to the story.
What's the story?
If you're lost and faithless and then you get whiny and resentful, it's just going to make it worse.
And so you're in the desert and you don't have enough to drink and there's all sorts of stupid things you can do that bring the snakes forward.
And so that's what happens, is that it's already bad and they make it worse.
So now there's all these poisonous snakes biting them and
they get tired of it eventually and they go to Moses and they say well we know that you can talk to God and
so do you want to see if he'll call off the snakes and
God go Moses goes and has a chat with God and
God says basically that he's pretty sick and tired of these relights and he thinks that some more snakes might be just thing
They need but he decides that maybe more snakes might be just thing they need
But he decides that maybe he'll listen to Moses because Moses is you know stored up a certain amount of goodwill
And so God says to Moses
Cast a serpent in bronze and put it on a bronze pole and
Put it in the midst of the Israelites so they can all look on it
And if they look at it, then the poison won't affect them.
He doesn't get rid of the snakes.
He calls upon the Israelites to face what they're avoiding.
To face what's poisoning them.
And because of that, they become stronger.
That's life, man.
And so Christ says later, much later, that he has to be lifted up like the snake in the desert.
Which is a very strange thing for anyone to say. And the Israelites have to look
on what they're terrified of in order to obtain resilience. That's the healing
motif. That snake on the staff is the symbol of Asclepius. It's the
symbol that physicians still use now to represent their healing enterprise.
A little of what poisons you makes you stronger.
That's the theory, right?
And that's the theory of voluntary confrontation.
Well, Christ, the crucifix is the same image,
except expanded.
It's like all possible snakes.
It's all the things that could happen to you if the worst possible things happen to you all at once.
And the Christian calling is to welcome that.
Right? To become the sort of person who could welcome that.
Job, for example, in the story of Job, Job is tortured by Satan himself.
Job's a good man and God's bragging about him in heaven about how good he is.
And Satan comes along and says, I don't think he's that good.
And God says, what do you mean?
And Satan says, he's just privileged.
Things are going well for him.
And so he's good.
Let me at him for a while and we'll see if he's good.
And God says, I think he's good.
Do your worst and so Job is
all his enterprises collapse his servants all die his wealth is demolished he ends up
extremely ill with a disfiguring disease he He's sitting in the ashes, demolished.
His wife tells him that all that's left for him
is to shake his fist at God and die.
And then his friends come and tell him
that it's all his fault.
And so that's Job.
And what does Job do?
Job says, these terrible things have happened to me,
but that's not because of some central flaw in me.
He maintains his faith in his integral humanity and he refuses to lose faith in God. And it's
kind of perverse in a way because Job has every bloody reason to shake his fist at God
and die, which is what his wife tells him to do. And Job's insistence is, no, no matter
what happens to you, you're called upon to maintain faith and move forward. And Job's insistence is, no, no matter what happens to you, you're called upon to maintain faith and move forward.
And that's expanded in the crucifix story, crucifixion story.
So with all your studies that you've done in the Bible, and I'm asking you because you have immersed yourself in it,
and you've studied it for so long.
Do you believe in it?
Well, I believe in it in the way that we just described.
Do I believe that the truth sets you free?
Absolutely.
It isn't that I believe it even.
I know it's true.
I know it's true.
And I try to live in that knowledge.
It's very difficult to only think or say things that are true, but you can practice it and
it's a great relief.
As you pointed out, you don't have to keep track of anything.
That's just that in and of itself is-
It's freeing. That's for sure. That's itself is... It's freeing.
That's for sure.
It's very freeing.
That's for sure.
Do I believe that Christ is the way and the life and that no one comes to the Father but
through Him?
Sure.
But I also know what that means.
It means that imagine that you want to have the Spirit of the Almighty dwell within you, say, in this Old Testament manner.
How do you do that?
By taking the burden of life on yourself voluntarily.
Why?
Because that causes the best within you to make itself manifest.
You know that.
Look, why did you push yourself on the military front?
Why did you go become a Navy SEAL?
That's a ridiculous thing to do, right?
They just torture you to death in the water.
Why'd you do it?
Because I wanted to serve my country
in the highest capacity possible.
Okay, so why did you think that,
so you believed that there was a highest capacity.
Yes.
Right, so that was an element of faith.
And you, and so personally, you put yourself through this
brutal transformative process.
What, how did that change you?
In a lot of ways, it changed me, it,
we've been talking about this off and on. There was a lot of ways it changed me. We've been talking about this off and on.
There was a lot of pride involved.
And when I graduated from that, I never felt more pride.
Another reason I did it was I always felt
that I had fallen short in childhood
and I wanted my parents to have something to be
proud of.
Okay, so let's separate pride from accomplishment.
Okay.
Right, because you can see pride would be unwarranted pride in your accomplishment, but
that doesn't mean that there's no such thing as accomplishment.
Okay, so do you feel that you accomplished something real when you went through the Navy
SEAL training program?
Absolutely. Okay, why was it real?
Because it's the, why was it real?
Because it was the hardest thing that I've done.
Right.
That's right.
Yeah, was it meaningful?
Absolutely.
Was it transformative?
Yes.
And it was the hardest thing you'd ever done.
Okay, well that's the pathway. The pathway to what's most real is through the hardest thing you'd ever done. Okay. Well, that's the that's the pathway the pathway to what's most real is through
The hardest things that you can do right and that's the path
Obviously, that's the path of adventure, you know, you go watch a James Bond movie, which everyone loves to do right a romantic adventure
Well, what's James Bond doing all the time impossible things?
And everybody thinks wow, that's so
Well, so what it's not fun exactly, right?
Because it's better than fun.
Fun is for kids, let's say.
This is that pathway of sacrificial adventure.
That's way better than just fun.
Even though, because it's difficult even the pathway of maximal
difficulty now I don't mean you should go out and play in traffic just because it's dangerous you
know but this is something and this is something that has been one of the things that's been great
about these continued tours is that I can see people's lights go on when I talk about this.
It's like no no you're going to put yourself together by
shouldering maximal responsibility no one's ever told me that it's like because you see the conservatives say you should and they finger wag but that's not the right it's not the optimal way
of presenting it it's like no you don't It's that the meaning that will sustain you in your life will be found in the shouldering, voluntary shouldering
of maximal responsibility.
And everyone knows that.
You know, if you go out of your way for your friends,
you have better friendships.
If you go out of your way for your wife,
you have a better marriage.
If you go out of your way for your kids,
you have better kids. I don't mean in this like resentful martyrdom. I don't mean resentful martyrdom. I mean generous
sacrificial productivity. If you give yourself away, you get more back. That's for sure. In the
universities, I always noticed this with professors, especially when I was a graduate student. There are
two kinds of professors you could work with if you were a graduate student,
which means you're kind of an apprentice scientist. There was the professor who had
the odd idea and was really zero sum about those ideas, always suspicious of his students because
maybe they're taking his ideas and not giving him credit
Not generous with publication name for example
always assuming that everything was in short supply and that his ideas were hyper valuable and that
He couldn't trust his students because he needed to get credit for what he was doing. And then there was the other kind of supervisor
My supervisor was like this. He just gave away all his ideas.
He really did what he could to foster
the development of the career of his students.
What happened?
Well, because he gave away all his ideas,
he was surrounded by enthusiastic students
who were really happy about him and what he was doing.
And that was rewarding.
And so the part of his brain that
was producing those ideas grew, because things grow if you reward them.
And so then he had even more ideas.
It's this inexhaustible well that
is replenished by its inconsequence of generosity.
That's that radical giving away.
That's a form of courage.
And that's also part of this sacrificial pathway forward.
Why does Christ call upon people to be radically generous?
Because that's the best,
there isn't a better strategy than that.
You know that, man, you know that.
If you're radically productive and generous,
people flock to work with you.
Well, that's a good deal for you.
You know, you could imagine a situation where if you're in a relationship with someone, it's 60% for them and 40% for you.
Just imagine that.
And you might say, well, that's not fair.
It's like, well, how about you have 20 relationships like that?
Because people are lining up.
And so with each, you only get 40% but
you got 20 of them or maybe a hundred or maybe a thousand now you know I'm not
sure those ratios are correct but you get my point if you're gonna err on the
side of generosity how could that do anything but work to your long-term
advantage I don't mean in that selfish and manipulative way.
It's the strategy of community per se.
We know among archaic people, hunters,
hunter-gatherer groups,
if you're a good hunter, you still fail most of the time.
So if you're going to be a good hunter for your family, you have to deal with the fact that some of the time. So if you're gonna be a good hunter for your family,
you have to deal with the fact that some of the time,
even though you're a good hunter,
you're not gonna produce any food.
So how do you deal with that?
Well, you go lead all your men on a hunt,
and you take down your mammoth, let's say,
and you give the best parts to everyone else,
and you downplay your role in the hunt.
Why?
Because the next time the fifth guy in the hunt. Why? Because the next time the like fifth guy in the hunting group
brings down a mammoth, he's pretty goddamn happy to share with you. Right. Absolutely,
man. Absolutely. And you know, I'm sure you understand that perfectly well in the military
context, right? The leaders that people will follow to their death aren't the tyrants.
Those are the guys that get shot in the back.
Or no, on the front lines when they've pushed their authority a little harder than would be wise.
We only have about five minutes left before you got to jump for your flight.
And I have one more question.
A lot of people think that we are in end times.
And as much as you've explored the Bible, are you seeing any symbolic, any symbolism
that we are in end times?
Especially today with the eclipse happening. I would say that
The end times in the book of Revelation are always with us
Life is characterized by apocalypse, right? It's built into the structure of life
No matter what you produce. It's going to come to an end right? There's cataclysmic. There's cataclysm everywhere always are we in end times
things are moving very quickly around us right quick in an unparalleled manner and so the
contours of the mythological world are becoming clearer are we in end times
there's no difference between end times and times of rapid technological transformation. Could that go terribly wrong?
Yes.
Could it go extremely well?
Yes.
How will it go extremely well?
If we become as wise as we are technologically proficient.
That's what I'm attempting to communicate.
We've got big toys. We better play the right game with them. What's the right game? Well,
that's the religious question. What's the right game? Well, that's the religious question. What's the right game?
The right game is certainly sacrificial. I think that's obvious just in consequence of definition.
Community is a sacrificial enterprise. That's why the altar is a place of sacrifice, right?
The altar is at the center of the church, and the church is at the center of the community.
Well, why? Because sacrifice is at the center of the community.
What do you sacrifice? Well, you sacrifice the present for the future.
That's maturity. Literally, that's what maturity is.
And you sacrifice the self for the community and so the most mature
sacrifice is the sacrifice of self for community and future that's as far as
I'm concerned that's just self all you have to think that through and it's
instantly self-evident you know if you have a father, a father you admire and love and are grateful for, all
of that will be in proportion to his sacrifice on behalf of the family.
Obviously my father did everything for us.
Tell the thing to say about someone.
It's at the core of what we admire.
It's obviously at the core of community.
You know, a monster who's a father sacrifices his sexual profligacy for his children.
It's a hell of an offer.
Well, Jordan, time is up.
I don't want you to miss your flight, so I just want to say thank you for the conversation
and thank you for coming on the show.
It was truly an honor to meet you.
Thank you, sir.
Feelings mutual.
Hope to do it again.
Cheers.
You bet.
Thanks a lot, man.
Yeah, thank you.
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