Theories of Everything with Curt Jaimungal - Bernardo Kastrup and John Vervaeke [Round 2] Theolocution on Mind Upload, Shadow Integration, and Consciousness
Episode Date: May 22, 2021YouTube: https://youtu.be/zw6BFDJ765wBernardo Kastrup and John Vervaeke become closer and closer, in this theolocution. Sponsors: https://brilliant.org/TOE for 20% off. http://algo.com for supply chai...n AI.Patreon for conversations on Theories of Everything, Consciousness, Free Will, and God: https://patreon.com/curtjaimungal Crypto (anonymous): https://tinyurl.com/cryptoTOE PayPal: https://tinyurl.com/paypalTOE Twitter: https://twitter.com/TOEwithCurt Discord Invite: https://discord.com/invite/kBcnfNVwqs iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/better-left-unsaid-with-curt-jaimungal/id1521758802 Pandora: https://pdora.co/33b9lfP Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4gL14b92xAErofYQA7bU4e Subreddit r/TheoriesOfEverything: https://reddit.com/r/theoriesofeverythingLINKS MENTIONED: John Vervaeke's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/johnvervaeke Bernardo Kastrup's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/bernardokastrup What I've Learned on Cows #1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGG-A80Tl5g What I've Learned on Cows #2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdrhpThqlCo THANK YOU: Jaran, who helped with compiling notes.TIMESTAMPS: 00:00:00 Introduction 00:02:32 Summary of Round 1 00:10:29 Best counter to John's and Bernardo's position 00:28:42 Vedanta, Brahma, and Lucid Dreaming 00:40:45 Local vs global consciousness, and meta-consciousness 00:43:40 Psychedelics and experiencing "mind at large" 00:46:10 Whitehead and prehension 00:51:40 John and Bernardo have moved closer (philosophically) to one another 00:55:39 On Karl Friston's "inference" 00:52:30 How to improve as an interviewer 00:57:46 Transjectivity, and rejecting both the blank slate and romanticism 01:02:42 Bernardo started out as an "objectivist" 01:08:15 Mind Uploading is nonsense 01:12:58 Joscha Bach knows nothing about consciousness 01:24:12 There's no "simulation" of consciousness. Who's the illusion occurring to? 01:29:56 Growth doesn't stop when you're 20. We need more than the propositional. 01:36:03 "Idolatry of the nerds" and how "thinking" is just one function of the psyche. 01:39:25 Respecting the elderly 01:41:52 Having mode vs. the Being mode 01:48:05 Love is a kind of knowing. On "agape" 01:58:30 Love is a part of nature, but not the only part. 02:05:54 How to integrate the Shadow 02:10:57 The processes that make us adaptive, make us self deceptive. 02:13:18 Internal family systems therapy 02:21:08 Curt's personal confession 02:28:12 We think we must "win" but we must surrender. Surrender to what you are. 02:34:40 Trying not to try 02:40:05 Personal stories of darkness, from John and Bernardo 02:50:50 Self knowledge, self acceptance, and "participating" in this world 02:54:34 Bernardo and John are the opposite of how they seem. John is more "woo" and Bernardo is anti-"woo" 02:58:37 Bernardo's shadow 03:01:35 We need to reintegrate humor in spirituality 03:05:28 How to build the modern religion? 03:33:44 Where you can find more about John and Bernardo 03:39:36 BONUS [MrChocolateCookie] The paradox of trying not to try 03:44:07 BONUS [Queerdo] Veganism and spiritual bypassing 03:57:03 BONUS [David] What did you enjoy most about this conversation? 03:59:33 BONUS John takes Curt through a breathing exercise 04:01:28 BONUS The theolocution process is vehement but filled with love* * *Just wrapped (April 2021) a documentary called Better Left Unsaid http://betterleftunsaidfilm.com on the topic of "when does the left go too far?" Visit that site if you'd like to watch it.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This channel is about investigating theories of everything.
Now that includes string theory, or m-theory, or some flavor of string theory,
E8, geometric unity, even Wolfram's model.
In fact, I'm speaking with Wolfram in about a week.
But also, broadly speaking, it encompasses Weltanschauungs,
that is, a philosophical comprehensive theory of everything.
Hence, the following two guests, Bernardo Kastrup and John Vervaeke. Bernardo
Kastrup holds a PhD in computer science and philosophy and is defending idealism, that is,
the ontology that all that exists is the mental, in fact we're all part of one mind, which he calls
mind at large. John Vervaeke, on the other hand, is an associate professor at the University of
Toronto near me in cognitive science, advocating
for naturalism. My name is Kurt Jaimungal. I'm a filmmaker and the host of this podcast with a
background in math and physics. This is a theolocution, which is rather than critiquing
and sparring, it's about constructing and building and understanding the other's position,
consonant with love, hopefully. Round one is linked below in the description, and it's imperative that you watch that first,
or at least look at the timestamps and skip around a few times,
in order to gain a bird's eye view of their respective philosophies and where they agree slash disagree.
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Welcome, John. Welcome, Bernardo.
Great pleasure to be here.
Great pleasure to be here. Great to see you again, Bernardo.
My pleasure, John.
Okay, so let's start firstly with a recapitulation of last time.
That is, let's see if, John, if you can state what Bernardo, what you think Bernardo says in a way
that's consonant with what he meant, and then vice versa. Yeah. Maybe one to five minutes,
and we'll start with you, John. Sure, I'll do my very best, and I will reserve any kind of critical
response to it later. I just want to make sure that I am understanding. First of all, I'll do my very best, and I will reserve any kind of critical response to it later.
I just want to make sure that I am understanding.
First of all, I want to comment on the fact that I thought Bernardo's presentation of his ideas was excellent and very clear.
So the main, I mean, there were many theses put forward by Bernardo,
I mean, there were many theses put forward by Bernardo, but I think the central one that it seems to me everything's hanging on is his claim for what's in the technical lingo is called absolute idealism, a strict form of mononism, in which ultimately all of reality is some modification or state within a unified consciousness,
unified at least at the substantial level.
And then Bernardo wants to deal with one of the crucial problems facing that,
which is, well, where does all this phenomenology,
because we're in the realm of consciousness,
about an external world and material objects that seem to exist independent of our consciousness come from. Bernardo made it very clear that he's not a solipsist, and he's in that sense not what you might call an individual
Berkeleyan idealist. Objects exist when we're not looking at them, and the deep past isn't a problem
for him, because the consciousness within which
reality is to be found, if that's the right way of putting it, is what he sometimes calls cosmic
mind, or mind at large, which is a consciousness. So the main argument he makes, and I don't want
to say that's the exclusive argument, he made many arguments and they're all connected, but the central argument is an argument in terms of
parsimony. So he argues that the main problem facing a naturalistic account, and I think,
just one small thing, I try to make clear that I think the real competitor with his view is a kind of
naturalism, that a naturalism has difficulty explaining the emergence and also the interact,
the emergence of something like consciousness understood as subjective qualitative experience,
qualia, and how that qualia could possibly causally interact with the material domain.
So those are two perennial problems. And he argues that parsimony says the way to avoid those
is just to posit that there's one underlying unified substance. Then he faces, as I said,
the difficulty of explaining how we get externality and materiality.
And the way he explains that is that there is a dissociation process,
somewhat analogous to the empirical evidence we have for dissociative states within the consciousness of human beings.
And that something analogous to that is going on in
cosmic mind, and that psychological, I think that's right, dissociation, helps to explain
the phenomenological externality and the phenomenological materiality. I think that's
the best I can do right now within one to five minutes.
think that's the best I can do right now within one to five minutes.
Bernardo?
I think John's main message is not necessarily metaphysics dependent. I think the import of what he has to say would still be there, whatever metaphysics turns
out to be true, wherever that argument goes.
whatever metaphysics turns out to be true,
wherever that argument goes.
His main message, as far as I understand,
which is, of course, filtered by my own interests,
has to do with meaning.
I think we in the West today are in a very peculiar historical situation,
and John points that out very well,
in which we've lost our sources of meaning.
We've lost contact with the fundamental driver of life, the will to meaning, as opposed to Nietzsche's will to power or Freud's will to pleasure.
In that sense, John is in the line that in the 20th century maybe was most visibly defended by Viktor Frankl, that
idea of the search for meaning. Metaphysically John is not prepared to
give up on some reality behind the concept of matter but he is not an
extreme reductionist in the sense that he is not saying that consciousness
can be completely accounted for purely by quantitative physical parameters. He appeals
to some forms of emergence, perhaps even to what Chalmers would call some form of strong emergence,
which basically means that the emergent phenomenon cannot be directly deduced from complete knowledge of the underlying dynamics.
In other words, something real with the reality of its own arises from or in a way related to brain processing.
And that's something that has reality is our
conscious lives and if i understood him if i correctly recall what he said he's even open to
some forms of downward causation he's open to some forms of the gestalt of our conscious experience
impinging downwards into brain processes and And of course, there is some degree
of empirical evidence for that.
It's difficult for me now to proceed and point out
in a critical way points where I disagree
with John's main message because, well, I largely don't.
I think the point where we don't see eye to eye is
on the details of the metaphysics I don't think however that that is really
relevant for the importance of what he has to say but I do think and now I'm
trying to do my best to be critical about something I think that if we appeal to things that are unknown such as some
form of strong emergence I think the burden is on the one who appeals to it
to try to close that somehow to try to make sense of that somehow and I think
that even has some degree of psychological bearing. I mean,
we did talk briefly about it last time. I posed the question, you know, for people to really find
meaning in their lives, would they be satisfied with the notion that they make their own meaning?
Or do they really have to have at least the belief
that there is inherent meaning out there,
that we are not making stuff up to sort of deceive ourselves.
And that's the point where I think John's message could benefit
from a more explicit, well-defined metaphysical position.
I think it would strengthen his main message,
the role, the main role he's playing in the culture right now.
That was excellent.
Very fair. Very fair.
Let's be recollective for a second. As for the last conversation,
I'm curious how you all think it went and
what points said by the other person
nettles you ever since and made you may perhaps even rethink a position of
yours. Maybe not a vital pillar, but it gives you pause at least.
So John, you first, please.
Well, first of all, the overall tenor again,
I think Bernardo succeeded in, I think, one of, there's goals that are preliminary to the goals
of conviction of truth, but they're necessary goals. I think Bernardo succeeded admirably in,
and I think this is important, by the way, this is not meant to be dismissive. I think he succeeded
admirably in making his position intellectually respectable. Bernardo knows as well as I do that there are many, many versions
of absolute idealism out there that are absolutely drecky and horrible and woo-woo, and they're
equivalent to postulating that leprechauns cause things. And it became very clear to me,
you know, because this is the first time I really seriously interacted with Bernardo,
that that is not what is happening with him. And he made his position intellectually
respectable. And he did it in a responsive and congenial manner. And I greatly enjoyed the
dialogue. A couple, I mean, I have been thinking about it. I go for walks in the morning and often
I'm talking to Bernardo in my head when I'm on the walk, which is not an unpleasant thing as well. And a couple of things for me came up. Well, one
was Matt Segal put out a commentary. I texted you the link, Kurt, about the discussion. And then I
had like a three-hour discussion with him yesterday,
or two and a half hours, about Whitehead and his version of pan-experientialism and the notion of
apprehension. And I found that I was coming a lot closer to that view. And then upon reflection,
I thought, well, when Bernardo was talking about consciousness,
he said it's at this instinctive level. It doesn't have intentionality. It doesn't have
reflective rationality, reflective self-awareness. I felt that the distance between us was growing
smaller in the positions I was willing to consider and take seriously. Because I did mention last
time that I take Whitehead's proposal very
seriously. I think Whitehead was one of the most significant philosophers who was contemporary
with the scientific revolution of the early 20th century. And I think he's an important
response to that. And so that happened for me. The thing that nettles me, I don't know if nettles me is the same. And this goes towards perhaps my larger metaphysical view, which I briefly talked about last time as being sort of a naturalistic Neoplatonism.
ideas. So in Plato, it's pretty much an emanation metaphysics with participation. And then Plotinus,
you have a two-way movement. There's emanation and then there's return. And that's because the Neoplatonists realized that there were sort of two problems that needed to be explained.
How does the one become many and how does the many become one? But Plotinus still gives emphasis.
By the time you get to Erringina, it's completely dialectical.
They're completely equally symmetrical. And I remember a really good book written by Katz
quite a while ago called The Metaphysics of Meaning, where he basically said that the
naturalist faces the problem of getting up to unity and explaining how normative normativity emerges.
And then he said that the plateness has the problem of how do we get the diversity and
how do we get down into causation?
So it's basically how do causes become reasons and how do reasons become causes?
And I tend to see Bernardo, he won't agree with this, but I do think it's a movement
towards our positions being closer.
I do see, I think, I see what I would, and what Katz has claimed.
I think there's a symmetry issue.
I acknowledge that, and I don't mean to imply that Bernardo isn't acknowledging things.
I'm just saying something straight out.
That the problem of emergence is a real problem and that all we have are weak analogies that fail fundamentally at the point where we need them to work.
I see it, and again, I foresee that Bernardo won't agree, but I see it that the problem of dissociation is an equally mysterious problem. All he has for it is a weak analogy, the analogy to psychological dissociation,
and it fails at precisely the point where we need it to work. All the empirical cases of
psychological dissociation don't produce material objects, don't produce independent external
existence, etc. So that dissociation doesn't actually supply the metaphysical move he makes. I see that symmetrical
to the way emergence relies on weak analogies. So if he'll allow me just at least a parallel in
terminology, I think he needs something like strong dissociation to produce the real differences
that we experience phenomenologically, because they're at least phenomenologically real. He never
denies that. He's not a soul obsessed. So I see them as symmetrical. And where that leads to me
more generally is, like I said, I think my metaphysics is very much about the idea that
there's a deep interpenetration of emergence and emanation.
That's why I'm attracted to Whitehead.
And for me, that's consonant with the increasing number of non-dualities
we are discovering about reality.
Matter and energy, time and space,
and waves and particles, etc. And so my metaphysics is in that sense
more of a Neoplatonic position. Now, what many people on the other side of the fence,
sort of the people who are much more perhaps scientific rather than scientific, but, oh,
but Neoplatonism is so anti-scientific. I argue
explicitly against that. We have very good historical argumentation that Neoplatonism
has been and continues to be a significant birthplace for scientific ideas. It comes to
the fore during scientific revolutions. John Spencer's book on the influence of Neoplatonism
in the scientific revolution of
the 20th century i think is very good uh the recent work by berman on platonism and the objects
of science saying that science presupposes intelligibility and then presupposes um something
like you know platonic forms in order to do what it does as science, I think that's a beautifully written and well-argued book.
And if you look at it, so for me, my starting place is a little bit different from Bernardo's.
And in that sense, perhaps it might be helpful if I just briefly said what it was.
They're not disconnected from each other, but I don't think they're identical. So I start from intelligibility.
So this is much more like ancient philosophy rather than sort of a Cartesian approach,
which is what has to be presupposed in your ontology in order for knowledge to exist.
So you take it as a fundamental presupposition that you reject absolute skepticism, absolute solipsism.
And then the idea is, well, the universe has to be comprehensible.
It has to be intelligible. And then what the Neoplatonist notes is there's this weird relations within
intelligibility. You need information in order to have knowledge. Information causes knowledge,
but knowledge can't be reductively explained in terms of information. And you need knowledge for
wisdom. Knowledge causes wisdom, but you can't reductively explain knowledge in
terms of wisdom. And so Neoplatonism has seen within intelligibility this causal emergence
upward and the normative constraining downward. And it tries to unfold a metaphysics that I think
best grounds our experience of intelligibility that is presupposed by our science. And I want,
and I think this is sincere, I want to see if this is ultimately reconcilable with that at least
smaller gap between Bernardo and I, between sort of the right-headian idea of prehension,
because he tries to lay that in as the ground both of causation and of intelligibility and what Bernardo is saying. So maybe there's something there. I don't know. And I'm happy to explore it. So that's my sort of summation and initial response.
What did John say in the previous round, or even now, that, like I said, either gives you pause or upends one of your pillars, or at least shakes it and has been corrupting you since?
Only on the negative side, because your original question was both the positive side and the negative side.
I want to talk about the positive first, if it's okay. It's difficult to say that it's because of our last
discussion, because I already knew John's material, so I already sort of have my favorite thing
amongst the many things he says, and he said it again in our last debate. So that's the thing
that is always with me, and I think that's one of the most critical things in our culture today,
And I think that's one of the most critical things in our culture today, which is to have a correct understanding of what wisdom means.
I think we've fumbled that idea so badly in the West that we've lost our guides.
We just do not know who to look up to for orientation.
And I like to call it the idolatry of nerds and the word nerd is appropriate because it means that somebody has chosen one amongst many psychic skills to center his entire life
and ignore all our other psychic functions and organs all the other things that are key constituents of wisdom. And we take our cue now from nerds who have an ax to grind,
as opposed to true wisdom.
And John takes this seriously.
He just doesn't say, well, our definition of wisdom is wrong.
This is the right definition.
No, he makes it a study area.
He invites you to explore that question.
He doesn't whitewash it.
He doesn't make it look simple.
He gives it the depth that it fundamentally has.
And he doesn't give you a ready answer, but he shows us the way to sort of revise our
exploration of that question.
I think this is pretty central.
I don't want to get across as too exaggerated, but it's
honest what I'm about to say. I think it's central to whether we will make it as a civilization or
not. It's central to whether we will survive. Look, the planet will survive if we screw up badly,
give it a million years, and the planet's a garden again, just without us. Not even without us,
because the Australian aboriginals,
the Inuits, the Bushmen in Africa,
they have the skills to survive that.
And the question is whether our culture,
our way of life, our accumulated knowledge,
our civilization will survive.
And I think that question rests to a large degree
on a better understanding of wisdom
and a better choice about who we take our directions from.
So that, I think, is pretty central.
Now, the thing that made me upset,
nothing made me upset, really.
So I'd rather choose one of the things that John said now.
I would take this as an opportunity to try to weave a defense
it's normal by the way that I am on the defense
because I make of my work a metaphysics question
John doesn't
so if the disagreement is on a metaphysics question
of course I am the one who will be on the defense
because I am the one who is trying to make an explicit case. John's case doesn't rest on metaphysics, so he doesn't need to be as explicit.
So, in a sense, it's natural that I have a much bigger target painted on my forehead than he has.
It's by construction. So, he said now that he sees that there is some symmetry between the analogy of dissociation, doing
what it needs to do to serve the purpose I want it to serve, and an appeal to emergence.
I will take the liberty to disagree.
I don't think the symmetry is there, but I recognize the point because I have heard this
made many times before.
And if the point is made very explicit, it goes something like this.
If I am a dissociated alter of universal consciousness and you too, I happen to be here looking at
you.
I can shake your hand, I can talk to you, I see you around, but the alters of a person
with dissociative identity disorder don't see each other.
They don't see each other.
They don't shake hands.
They are not inhabiting a common environment.
So the analogy doesn't work all the way.
It doesn't do what I want it to do.
I think that's not true because we are taking the analogy at the wrong level.
Remember, we as alters of universal consciousness, we are in a shared mental environment by my hypothesis.
And if you take my hypothesis to be true for the sake of argument, we share a mental environment.
And so we see each other within that mental environment. You cannot compare that to the alters in the mind of a person. You cannot expect those alters to see each other in the external world.
Because there is no external world from the point of view of a universal mind.
Everything is within that mind.
So if you want to make a comparison correctly,
you have to look at the world within the mind of a person with DID
and not expect that the alters will see each other in the external world.
So the correct analogy is to look at the dreams of a person with DID and compare that to this,
a dream of a universe that undergoes dissociation. Because in both cases, then it's within that
mental context. Then it's a correct comparison comparison so let's look at the dreams
with people with DID it turns out research from Harvard indicates that
twenty-five percent one quarter of people with the DID they have dreams in
which multiple alters partake in the same dream and they see each other in
the dream they hear each other in the dream, they hear each other in the dream, they interact with each other in the dream.
How do they know that?
Because when the person recalls the dream, afterwards, each alter recalls the dream from a different point of view,
and they identify the other alters as characters in the dream.
So if that's the correct comparison, I would say, well, 25% is a very statistically significant number, I would say the analogy does what
it's supposed to do if you look at it at the correct level for comparison.
Now, I will acknowledge that we don't have a full and explicit conceptual account of
dissociation.
It has to do with inferential isolation.
It has to do with inferential isolation. It has to do with pathways to memory
access. We know that. We have pieces of the puzzle, but we don't have a complete puzzle
assemble that tells us this is the conceptual account of what dissociation is and how it
happens. Well, mainly how it happens. We know what it is. But I would say, well, that is
secondary. It takes a second seat to the fact that it
empirically happens, and now there is no question about it from neuroimaging that it does happen,
there is something dissociation looks like, it can make you blind, literally.
So the fact that we don't have a conceptual account for it is not a detriment to one's ability to use dissociation in an explanatory framework,
because whether we conceptually understand it or not, it happens.
It's out there in nature.
Now, you can't say the same thing about strong emergence,
emergence because how do you have an empirical account of strong emergence that is independent of your theoretical assumptions? That's not possible because all you can say, well, this
phenomenon exists, but to say that it is an empirical instance of strong emergence, you have to say that there is something there that is physically
real and which fundamentally cannot be accounted for in terms of its constituent parts.
Now, that's impossible today and probably forever because, you know, the fastest computers
we have, if they were to run simulations of nature on the basis of first principles, the
laws and the standard model of particle physics, you could simulate maybe a hundred particles.
A thousand would already be on the edge.
You can't simulate a protein molecule, a complex one, starting from first principles,
from the laws of quantum mechanics and the standard model, because it's an explosion of complexity. So it is impossible to appeal to an empirical fact about strong emergence,
but it is entirely possible to do that for dissociation. So that's how I would wrap up
my defense. John, what do you think? Make sure from now on, we don't say he, we don't say John, you say you,
because you're speaking to Bernardo and Bernardo.
I am in the background. I am just an observer.
I did say Bernardo most of the time I was talking last night.
So I'll try to say you and Bernardo.
So I think you could strengthen your case by the work that's also been done on lucid dreaming.
think you could strengthen your case by the work that's also been done on lucid dreaming.
So I take, I mean, this sounds, and maybe that's relevant to the discussion we're going to have later about religion. This sounds very similar to sort of Vedanta ideas about Brahman and Brahman
dreaming. And in the dream, that's what, how the world, I mean, so the dream mechanism is ultimately the main mechanism by which the ontology unfolds.
And the problem that, again, arises for me is most of the empirical accounts of dreaming presuppose a distinction between conscious and unconscious processing to explain the phenomenology of the dream. So that, you know, I have a certain amount of consciousness, but I'm not aware of all the
unconscious processes that are then generating the alternatives. And it seems to me then,
if you're going to invoke dreaming, you're going to invoke the ontology that we currently use
empirically to explain it, which posits a very strong distinction between conscious processes
and unconscious processes, like in order to explain why dreams have the content they do and why they have the features
they do, et cetera. Like, why is this coming up? Well, because there's an unconscious process
that's doing memory compression, it's removing parasitic programs, and that's why these figures
come up, et cetera, et cetera. And so I think to invoke dreaming is perhaps problematic because it ultimately invokes the existence of an unconscious, which I don't think you can posit for consciousness at large.
There can't be an unconsciousness for consciousness at large, because then you do have at the substantial level of your fundamental metaphysics, you have a dualism, and I know you reject ultimately such dualism.
So that would be the issue I would have there about that, if that makes any sense.
It does, it does. We touched on it last time.
And I appealed to the difference between this phenomenally conscious and phenomenally unconscious divide.
And my point was, well, it's all phenomenally conscious, but there is still a divide.
There is a divide between the two sides of a dissociative boundary, and there is a divide
between metacognitive consciousness and non-metacognitive consciousness.
Processes that are conscious, you are experiencing, but you don't know that you are experiencing them, so you can't even report them to yourself.
Things like blindsight, for instance, that seem to be going in that direction. So, I am,
I just wrote a book about Jung's metaphysics, so this stuff is still very fresh in my mind.
physics, so this stuff is still very fresh in my mind. I don't have a problem with the idea of an unconscious as defined implicitly or explicitly by Jung, Freud, and Janney, because I think
they are very clear repeatedly about it throughout their corpuses, that what they are alluding to as
the unconscious is psychic but non-metacognitive. Jung goes beyond, Jung adds even more stuff
to make the definition even more specific. He says it has to be connected in a web of
associative meanings, so you have to place it into context for it to be conscious.
But the general idea is that they are not saying
that the unconscious is non-phenomenal.
They are just adding higher level mental functions
to what is psychic, which is phenomenal, I think,
to differentiate what consciousness means.
And even dissociation, I think, could be appealed to
to account for the, quote, unconscious,
in the sense that our ego is largely dissociated
from the totality of our being.
I mean, most of us, we identify with our adaptive selves,
not with our natural selves.
That natural self we were when we were five years old, and by
the time we are seven, it begins to slip away. By the time you go to college, it's gone. And
then it's a struggle later in life to sort of reconnect with your natural self. So I think
that speaks volumes. I mean, there's a lot of clinical evidence about this. And I think that
speaks volumes to the idea that not only are we not metacognitive of the vast majority of our phenomenal contents, our experiences,
but even the part of us that we identify with, that subset of phenomenal consciousness that we identify with,
seems to be, in the context of our culture, very, very largely dissociated, whatever dissociation conceptually is, seems to be very largely dissociated from the totality of what we are.
That's a good answer. But I guess the reply, and I don't know how much more we can go on this, because this is, well,
maybe going in this direction is also very, on its own, an interesting thing.
So, you know, Searle made this, a similar argument, and then he argued that the unconscious
ultimately has to be accessible to consciousness, and he did that in terms of, you know, anything that's cognitive is representational, representations are aspectual,
aspectual is dependent on a point of view, and ergo
he said he was willing to countenance something like a Jungian, he said Freudian,
but that doesn't matter, I think, for the point he's making. Unconscious,
and he would therefore say that even the
so-called unconscious processes,
insofar as they become genuinely cognitive processes, have to at least be accessible
to phenomenal consciousness. That's his argument. Now, the debate that swirled around that was
he seemed to be denying what people have sort of called the Chomsky unconscious,
which is an unconscious that is never accessible
to us. For example, the processing that's happening right now for you, whereby the sounds coming out
of my face hole are becoming ideas in your mind. You have no introspective and there's nothing,
I can put you through psychoanalysis for 30 years and you'll never access that. And so, I mean,
it seems plausible to conclude that that's, you conclude that the cognitive unconscious doesn't need to have access to phenomenal experience in order to operate and process.
And that's sort of the general view within a lot of cognitive psychology, that we, in fact, most of our explanations of human behavior require that Chomsky unconscious.
Why can you only hold four chunks in working memory?
You don't have any introspective access to that limitation.
It's functional.
You deeply depend on it, but you can't bring that into, you can't stand back and go, oh,
that, now I'm experiencing why working memory is constrained.
And so I guess, since we're in here, what do you think of the proposal of, if you'll allow me to call it as, we'll call it what Jung and Freud did just for purposes of distinction, the psychodynamic unconscious and what I'm talking about as the cognitive unconscious.
And what I was proposing, the connection was that I think a lot of dreaming, I'm not denying there isn't a psychodynamic unconscious for dreams.
That would be ridiculous.
I'm not claiming that at all. What I'm claiming, though, is that there's a psychodynamic unconscious for dreams. That would be ridiculous. I'm not claiming that at all.
What I'm claiming, though, is that there's also the cognitive unconscious for dreams.
And that seems to be something that's operating without ever needing to have access to phenomenal experience.
Yeah, I think what we call consciousness, which is better called metaconsciousness,
what we call consciousness,
which is better called metaconsciousness,
and this is metacognitive awareness,
which entails not only representation,
but internal re-representation of mental contents.
It's, evolutionarily speaking, a recent acquisition, right? It came hand-in-hand with symbolic thinking and language.
So we are talking, what, 30, 50 thousand years? I mean, to say that it's the blink of an eye in the
three and a half billion years of the existence of life on this planet is a major exaggeration.
It's much less than the blink of an eye. It popped up yesterday. Now, why should it be comprehensive enough to encompass
everything about the psyche? Why would evolution favor that? Evolution will
favor re-representation of things that would give us a survival advantage to
ponder about, but processes that need to have very quick reaction time or which never need to be
re-represented in order to be effective, why would we develop the ability to re-represent those?
Why should the scope of metaconsciousness be all-encompassing? There's no reason for that.
For Freud, I think the idea of a cognitive unconscious is much more palatable because
for Freud, the unconscious is made of former contents of consciousness. So it is consciousness
that is the mother of the unconscious. The unconscious is just repressed, forgotten,
former contents of consciousness. So it's much more friendly to this idea
that for something to be psychic,
it has to be at least in principle
cognitively accessible.
But for Jung, it's totally different
because for Jung, consciousness is a growth
out of the unconscious.
The unconscious is creative.
It's the matrix of being.
And I would think that Jung's position is more consistent with what we now know about the phylogenetics of the human psyche. human creature 200,000 years ago devoid
of the ability to think
symbolically, which of course
preempts metacognition, because what is
a re-representation but an internal
symbol?
And only 30 or
50,000 years ago we've developed
this ability to explicitly
introspect into the
contents of our psyche, I think that's
more in line with the Jungian hypothesis that the unconscious is the matrix.
And if that's the case, then I would say we have absolutely no reason to demand from evolution
an all-encompassing consciousness in the sense that the depth psychologists defined it
in other words metaconsciousness why should metaconsciousness be all
encompassing that there seems to be no evolutionary advantage for that on the
contrary even a disadvantage because pondering entails delay and and some
reactions need to be immediate and quick. So I appreciate that answer. I wasn't trying to give an ontological
priority or a causal history. I was trying to say that our own consciousness in the argument
about consciousness has an epistemological priority. And it seems to me that you're saying
that our metacognitive, our introspective aspect of consciousness is actually fundamentally ontologically inaccurate.
It doesn't grasp it as it truly is.
And then my problem is it's sort of a Kantian argument.
Then the consciousness you're talking about is kind of a thing in itself for which I don't have any experiential evidence.
And again, it seems to me that then epistemologically, we're back to a
symmetrical argument again. I think you could say that whatever is metaconscious is perforce
phenomenally conscious. In other words, it entails qualities, it entails experience, some experiencing of some form.
So the jump from what is metacognitively conscious to what is only phenomenally conscious,
but not metacognitively so,
is an extrapolation in degree, but not in kind.
Because it is still phenomenal phenomenal it's still phenomenal
conscious of the same kind that you can become explicitly aware of when you introspect and in
addition to that there are things that i mean most people i think who who pay attention to
introspection have had that experience you may become only later in life explicitly or
that experience, you may become only later in life explicitly or metacognitively aware of something that retroactively you know you were experiencing all along.
You just didn't know that you were experiencing those.
I don't deny that.
I don't deny that we can retrospectively have metacognitive access.
But it seems to me that the way, I mean, the phenomenality of my consciousness is of a here
and now localized consciousness, right? The idea that is consciousness at large is not
phenomenologically accessible to me, right? And so I was trying to point out that my only instance,
my only, sorry, I want to say this very correct,
not my only theoretical, my only phenomenal instance of consciousness is my own. I agree with you that that doesn't license solipsism, but that seems to indicate to me that you are
like positing a kind of consciousness for which I have no phenomenological evidence.
And that's why in the discussion I wanted to say,
well, I don't have phenomenological introspective evidence for it.
And you're nodding, so thank you.
And so I need some independent argument from it at large
that doesn't just presuppose consciousness at large in order to make that move.
You always need to extrapolate somehow, unless you're a solipsist.
Then you say, all that exists is my personal experience,
and everything else is a story I'm making up.
So you always need to extrapolate.
We agree on that. We agree on that. So take that as a given.
Like I said, at that level, I'm a neoplatonist.
And the intelligibility
of the, of the, you know, we, we, at least whatever, but we both call it the external world.
We have different reference for it, but I take that for granted. And I take that as something
that I take, I'm a realist about reason in that sense.
Can you not get to mind at large via experience from psychedelics or a deep
meditative state, Bernardo? If I follow John's argument line, you could say, well, in a sense,
yes, but then that already becomes your personal experience. So to say that that's not your personal experience becomes a theoretical move
based on what you identify yourself with, what you believe is information you could have access to
as a person. So you can make that inference, but it's immediately a theoretical inference,
which doesn't mean that it's invalid. I think it's valid. Not at all. But in John's argument line, he can maintain his argument despite this, because he can
say, well, yes, you can make that inference, but that inference is still based on your
personal experience, your personal experience of something impersonal or transpersonal.
However, in response to you, Kurt, and directed back to you, Bernardo, when we did
discuss these experiences, and I've had them, like of the pre-consciousness event or profound
experiences of non-dual oneness, they gave me, and if I remember correctly, and I may be remembering incorrectly because memory
isn't reconstructive, one of the things I was just alluding to a few minutes ago,
and I don't know how or why that happens. I mean, it's phenomenologically. But it gave me
something that at least sort of in a Kantian sense, I could give what Kant would call an intuition. There was some empirical
experience that I could use to give content to the proposal you were making of cosmic mind.
So although I agree with you, and thank you for defending me, that was gracious on your part,
was gracious on your part, that it doesn't get, I think, beyond the symmetry issue. I do think that your acknowledgement about that that might be a better place to look
for making the extrapolation, I found that personally helpful. I found that helpful in
the discussion because I got a better sense of, ah, and that brings me back to the point where now maybe we can move. This is how we're apart. And I really do want to try and close the gap. I don't think we'll close it all the way. of what perhaps Whitehead is meeting by prehension. Because there isn't, there aren't objects,
right? There's just, there's this oneness where everything is prehending everything else.
Do you mind defining prehension for the audience?
Yeah. So for Whitehead, he's trying to get a word other than experience or feeling, which he's also
willing to use. And that would be, I know you're not a panpsychist, Bernardo, but like I said,
I'm sincerely trying to do bridge building here. And I did talk about that with Matt.
So he came up with the term because he wanted to get away from the term's experience and feeling because they were laden with our egocentric sense of these terms.
And that would make him guilty of kind of a lazy anthropomorphism, for example.
And he was very worried about that.
I think legitimately so.
for example. And he was very worried about that. I think legitimately so. And to be fair to him,
you know, the people, you know, you've got Heisenberg and other people talking about these connections that seem to be going on between consciousness and, you know, you know,
the emergence of quantum particles and things like that. And I don't want to get into all the
around that. I'm just trying to give a bit of background for explanation. And I know Bernardo
does not rely on that. And so I'm not accusing anybody of anything here. I'm just trying to give a bit of background for explanation. And I know Bernardo does not rely on that woo, and so I'm not accusing anybody of anything here. I'm just
trying to... But so Jung was very interested in, and then, not Jung, Whitehead was very interested
in, and he was trying to get at, okay, again, if we take the root of ancient epistemology rather
than Cartesian epistemology, Gerson does a good job of it, right? The Cartesian project, which I think is prototypical
for modernity's understanding of epistemology,
is you start from first-person experience
and you try to build the world out from that.
And that has become extremely problematic.
Ancient epistemology says, no, assume that knowledge is real
and then what kind of ontology must there be
in order for there to be knowledge?
And it works outward in rather
than inward out. And I think Gearson makes a good case for we should go back and really look at that
as a serious alternative because of the deep binds epistemology is now in. I think all the
attempts to build foundations have basically crumbled. Okay. All of that said, Whitehead said, I'm going to
presuppose that there's intelligibility and there's causation. And he's very well aware of the
Humean problem, you know, about causation. And then he's very well aware of Kant and he's trying
to get beyond both of those. So what he's saying is what we need to understand is how the past
is real in the present. Right? So instead of thinking of the events as billiard
balls that are isolated from each other and somehow have some specious present content,
what we have to see is how the past is realized, and I'm using that in both senses, in the present.
So the idea is, his idea is, and if you think about it, let me do a little bit of a thought
experience to help make this plausible.
I'm just arguing for its plausibility right now, right?
So if I ask you, you know, what caused the sinking of the Titanic, notice that your answer
is dependent on the event you want explained.
Like, well, it hit an iceberg.
But why did it sink in the North Atlantic?
Oh, well, because they were competing with the Americans.
Why did it sink on April whatever? Well, because the iceberg broke off
then. Why is there ice there? Well, here's the previous period of glaciation. And eventually,
what you get is the entire previous history of the universe, which is the actual, and this is
sort of a Hegelian point, which is the actual explanation of any event. And then Whitehead
said, well, all of these events are somehow prehending each other
insofar as they come into this event. So things are prehending each other insofar as the past
comes into the present, and also insofar as the present affords the future. And so
you can think of all of the universe coming into
this event, but also that event over there. And then all of these events are also being drawn
together. All these new emergent events are being drawn together into the new events that are
happening. And so things have this prehensive relationship to each other. They are realizing,
and I'm really playing on that word, they are realizing and being realized
in each other. And then Whitehead said, and this is also why he used the word prehension,
because it's at the root of our word apprehension, comprehension, a fundamental sort of intelligibility
process. And his idea is that realization within things, very similar to Plotinus' idea that
everything is contemplating, but it's not like how we contemplate, right? It's of the same kind
as the cognitive realizations that we're having when we are comprehending or apprehending things.
And so there's a deep continuity between the way reality is realizing itself and the way we come to moments of realization of reality.
Did that work at all or was that really confusing?
Ian McEwgurst is making this point now recently.
It's his latest.
It's new to me.
And so, I mean, I had a conversation with jonathan pageau who should
definitely appear on this channel by the way kurt um and i'm happy to come on and have a
discussion with him at some point there is a conversation between me and jonathan no no
yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah that's what i meant i mean one of these um and because i was i was in
debate again this kind of debate.
Sorry, Bernardo, I'm talking quite a bit.
It's okay. Go ahead. It's very enjoyable.
So I was having one of these fellowship debates,
theologos with him, about this.
And he said to me, he said,
well, John, don't you think there's something like relevance realization
going on in reality at large?
He was proposing, of course, the platonic idea of the logos.
He's a Christian Platonist because he's an Orthodox in the sense of Eastern Orthodox Christian.
And I said, what do you mean?
And he said, well, and we sort of had to tease it out because it was sort of an unclear idea.
But we worked it out together.
And then I realized he was proposing something like Whitehead.
You know, here's all the possibilities that are metaphysically available.
And then there's something that constrains them, the probabilities that constrains them to actual events.
And he said, and then that affords and makes possible and it rules out certain things.
And he says, isn't there something analogous?
And then I thought, hmm, that's a very interesting proposal, that there's something analogous to intelligence going on in the universe, and there's something analogous to how relevance realization works.
And that would help to metaphysically ground the intelligibility of the universe, because there would be a participatory conformity, a shared kind of identity between the way reality is realizing itself and the way cognition realizes itself.
And then for me, that came together in the Shetani's proposal,
that religion is the real self-realization of reality.
So when you get to these states of pure consciousness, enlightenment,
there's no deep difference between the relevance realization going on here,
and if you'll allow me, the intelligibility realization going on out there.
And that actually, because I think without genuine participation, and I think this is where Bernardo
and I perhaps agree, you don't have a real response to absolute skepticism. There has to be some way
in which the mind and the world are fundamentally the same in order for knowledge to be possible
between them. And so I know this isn't your position, Bernardo,
but I hope you could see how, you know,
in the last two weeks in reflection,
I feel like it's closer to your position at least.
It's probably closer than you think.
I mean, I wouldn't go as far as to give
complete ontological power to cognition or to the epistemic side of things.
But there are many lines of evidence indicating that how the world is cognized plays an enormous role in what the world can be said to be.
There is a physicist from the Austrian Academy of Sciences, I quote him a lot recently,
Marcus Miller, and he tries to develop a physics of first-person perspective. So his idea is that
what we call the objective outside world is constructed by an inferential process that we
make. We ask ourselves questions like,
what does the world need to be in order for me to account for this observation?
And he claims that if we construct our world inferentially like that,
then statistically you can prove that your world will be consistent with mine
and with everybody else's, even though it's not an objective world.
It's constructed by our own inferences.
It emerges from a first-person perspective.
We also have evidence now,
well, evidence, there's mathematics sort of showing that.
What's his name?
It's a British neuroscientist.
I forgot his name.
But he shows that unless perception would be largely inferential,
in other words, instead of mirroring the states of the world as it is in itself,
we sort of construct it by inference.
Unless that is the case, we couldn't maintain our structural and dynamical integrity.
Carl Friston?
Carl Friston, exactly.
Right, in predictive processing.
Yes, yes.
There's a lot of work going on right now, and if people are interested,
there's a video I recently had with Brett Anderson about the need to integrate
predictive processing and relevance realization models together.
I won't go into the argument in detail, but the main argument is,
and Friston, by the way, has moved and said
when he's using the word inference, he's using it like not necessarily representationally. He's
embodied inactive senses of that. So I'm not pinning him to any kind of propositional tyranny.
He has explicitly moved away from that, as has Andy Clark. So when we say inference,
they always do this now, which is fine. I'm happy with
that. I want to make clear that they're not falling into some sort of simplistic Cartesian
thing. But the idea is you need something, what's called precision weighting within predictive
processing. It's basically the attentional function. And the main argument is what you can
see is the relevance realization machinery work and the precision weighting that's at the core
of predictive processing actually integrate really, really nicely together. And so, yeah, I do think,
you know, Princeton's idea that the brain is predicting itself proximately. And as it gets
really good at predicting itself proximately, it distally ends up predicting the world quite well.
And like I said, I'm a realist about this because I think, and again, the evidence that most of our
perception is accurate prediction rather than accurate detection. I don't like when people
say it's a hallucination because hallucinations are by definition not true. What we have is accurate prediction, right? So it
looks like I'm seeing the whole wall over there is white. Actually, I'm subtending a few pieces,
sampling, and I'm doing really, really good theorizing, again, in scare quotes, right?
That's giving me accurate prediction, right? And so I take it. So again, for quotes right that's giving me accurate prediction right yeah and and and so
i take it so again for me there's there but i i take it that there's something about the way the
world is such that that works right um and and there there that there's an intelligibility
i so like for example what ep epistemologies am I rejecting?
Just to be clear by contrast.
I'm rejecting a very romantic epistemology that says the world out there is a blank canvas on which I project.
And the construction is arbitrary and subjective on my part.
And I'm also rejecting the empiricist position.
No, no, I'm just a blank slate that receives the truth from the world. I think both of those are deeply undermined. I agree with you on both accounts.
Yes. And so that's why I've tried to coin this idea of transjectivity, the idea that the world's
intelligibility and my relevance realization machinery together are co-creating the knowledge.
You have to talk to Jan Magogorst.
I have.
I talked to him once.
We had a beautiful conversation.
We do want to talk again.
It's just a matter of us.
And what we agreed is I would wait until his book on wisdom was done, which it now is.
So I'm going to reach out.
I think he finished.
He finished this week.
You're supposed to finish mid-May.
So I'm going to reach out to him and, yeah, we'll have another discussion with him.
It was a wonderful discussion.
So for me, and I don't know if we want to segue now.
I don't want to bully the conversation.
But for me, that, and Bernardo's right.
I mean, sort of the deepest ontology for me doesn't have to be resolved one way or the other.
Although I am, like I said, I'm have to be resolved one way or the other. Although I am,
like I said, I'm trying to show that I take his work seriously and I'm trying to respond by moving my position. And because I think we should be, the Socratic ideal is we should be
responsible to well-presented arguments. So I'm not denying that, but this notion of transactivity and the co-determination,
co-creation between intelligibility, which I call a participatory knowing, for me, that's the
ultimate grounding relationship for meaning in life. And I think one of the reasons why I kept hesitating around the Cartesian proposal is I think our,
and Bernardo, I think, said something very consonant with it, our reduction of our sense
of who we are as cognitive agents to proposers of propositions has disconnected us from procedural,
respectival, and ultimately this participatory kind of knowing that grounds and grounds in depth
our capacity for being connected to ourselves to each other in the world and that for me is the
most significant contributor of the meaning crisis not independent of all the historical reasons but
i think the historical reasons ultimately bite into us existentially at that deep kind of
forgetting we are having. Now, we're not forgetting it functionally, and this is where Bernardo's
distinction between, you know, it being realized and it being metacognitively appreciated comes
to the fore. Although we've lost our metacognitive access to all these kinds of knowing, they're,
of course, still operating in us, or else I wouldn't see this floor as walkable.
I'm not doing that.
Right.
It's the world.
This is Gibson's idea.
The affordance emerges in the co-shaping of the world and me together, etc. But that metacognitive loss, which I think translates into a spiritual loss, I would say grounds out in an ontological issue, namely the issue of what is it about
the meaning making that, what makes that possible, what affords that.
And so what, I'll say two sentences, hopefully, or three, and then I'll turn it back over
to Bernardo.
I mean, I'm trying, and it's sincere.
I'm trying to move and get closer because I think that at least the movement that I'm capable of making right now, maybe I'm still resistant, but I'm trying to be responsible, right, helps to strengthen this account, this ancient epistemological account of the deep
participation between intelligence and intelligibility that makes meaning in life
possible for us. And that shouldn't be understood as the semantic content of our propositions.
And I think even though he may go deeper than I do, we at least converge below that propositional level of meaning making. At
least it seems to me. If the goal was for us to get closer to each other, I think we can high five
right now. We've met at a place where I'm entirely comfortable to be with you. I'm more and more
open to this idea of co-creation. Although I'll be honest with you, I started out as an objective idealist.
The world is really out there.
It is whatever it is.
And it happens to be mental.
And it presents itself to my dashboard of perceptual instruments as what I call the physical world.
But more and more as I keep studying the work of people like ian marcus miller
yourself uh it's becoming clear to me that i think even at an ontological level this participatory
co-creation is deeper than just at at the story level it's not just a nice story that there is there is ontological teeth to this
you know what i mean and for me what is important is that if we have empirical and rational reasons
to contemplate a theory of reality seriously that does give this participatory co-creation
ontological teeth then we should leverage that
because otherwise it becomes just psychology
and not real.
And I think that's where the search for meaning
can flounder because people like me
who are always critically questioning everything,
you know, if this story reinvests my life with meaning and it intuitively resonates profoundly with me,
but I don't have a coherent, explicit, and well-constructed conceptual theory of reality that gives it plausible ontological teeth,
then I run away from it driven by this need to not deceive myself, which for me is instinctual.
You know what I mean?
I agree.
And so I think it's fair and honest to say that I'm trying to do that.
And, you know, and part of that process is, I have explicitly argued that I think, in
fact, it should be, is a dialogical process. I'm aware of my side bias and confirmation bias and things like that.
And I'm also aware that the Neoplatonic tradition talked about both the dialectic within the
individual and between individuals, and then between individuals and reality. And coordinating
those three dialectics is something that I think is going to be needed for doing this. So I appreciate what you said.
I had understood that.
How do I want to put this?
I didn't do enough.
I'll be more self-critical. I didn't do enough about trying to bring together
what you might call the cognitive scientific machinery and what I'll call for my sake,
the neoplatonic ontology. I talked about it, but I did not foreground that in Awakening from the
Meaning Crisis. I've been trying to do that more recently in conversations like with you, like with Matt, like with Sam Adams, and like with Jonathan Pajot.
So that is very much, and this is not to, I mean, I think I'm pursuing them reliably and rigorously.
I'm not claiming to be anywhere near finished.
That would just be ridiculous and hubristic.
I'm not claiming to be anywhere near finished.
That would just be ridiculous and hubristic.
So I take your point seriously is what I'm trying to say. And I see myself as trying to address that lacuna in previous work,
which is one of the reasons why I want to be here and do this,
what's happening right now.
I don't like versions of idealism. And I've made it clear that I'm not putting this on you,
Bernardo. I don't like versions of idealism that afford spiritual bypassing, that afford
not taking seriously science. One of the things that continually impressed me is both your
knowledge of and your respect for empirical and theoretical science.
You should know, maybe you move in different circles than I do. That's not the norm
for the people that I interact with when I'm largely up against people who propose
cosmic consciousness and things like that. And so to the degree to which that's being used to do spiritual bypassing, I will remain opposed to it.
Because like you, I think if we make it purely a psychological project, we're ultimately still
being romantics. We're ultimately still saying, I'm making, and even the favorite word of the
romantics, I'm expressing it. I'm expressing it onto the world, right? And
so I'm deeply critical of that. So I do think, and I think we agreed on this last time, but just to
bring it foregrounded again, I do think that there's an inescapable ontological dimension
and a needed reconstruction of our ontology in order to finally address the meaning
crisis. Now, the one concern I have, and this is not a philosophical concern between you and I,
is the issue of how do we do that without making it a requirement that everybody who wants to respond to the
crisis engage in the education that's required to undertake this kind of ontological discussion?
So do you understand what I'm trying to say?
It definitely has epistemological priority, but we don't want to hijack the existential
project by giving it existential priority.
Exactly.
That's the key question.
Yeah. What would be useful would be to get your views on mind uploading, because I think this
will further the distinction between you both. So Bernardo, what are your thoughts on mind
uploading? Is it possible? Is it ridiculous? So could you be more specific, Kurt? Because
there's different, I mean, mind uploading is we're being uploaded into some universal simulation.
That's very different from I could upload my mind
into some computational device.
They carry all kinds of different ontological
commitments, etc.
The Ray Kurzweilian one.
You want
to ask me what I think about it?
Complete and utter nonsense.
Rubbish, not deserving of
academic credibility
because it's
a category confusion
we are
basically pre-assuming
that a description of
our minds is our
minds because what you upload
is a description, what you upload
is a copy of states,
at least relative to one another. Not even absolutely, because the substrate is different.
One is an organic substrate, the other one is a silicon substrate. But even if you ignore this
glaring, absolutely significant difference, and you fall into the sea of abstraction that today is plaguing academia
to the point that we have achieved liftoff from the terra firma of reality and we now engage
in endless pure abstraction even if I concede which I don't but even if I were to concede
that the substrate has no significance which of course it has, but even then, to upload a copy of the states
from one substrate to another doesn't necessarily mean that you've transferred the thing in itself
which is described. I will use this metaphor again. I use it all the time, but I don't want to overuse it, but it brings it to life.
I can simulate kidney function on my computer accurately down to the molecular detail, but that doesn't mean my computer will be on my desk.
So mind uploading is something that you could see the same way. You can upload a very accurate description of the states of my mind, the dynamisms of my mind,
into a silicon substrate and replicate those dynamisms in that other substrate with complete
accuracy. That doesn't mean that my mind has moved to that silicon substrate or that the silicon substrate has a conscious copy of me. To assume that it is entails so many assumptions
about the nature of mind, the nature of metabolism, the nature of silicon, the nature of information.
I mean, it's a hidden pile of arbitrary unjustified assumptions that one needs to overlook to take this idea even seriously to begin with.
So I think this is just an expression of the profound confusion
that faces our culture today and which affects the most intelligent,
intelligence defined in a very restricted, old-fashioned way,
but it unfairly affects the most intelligent segments of our culture
more than people who are, quote,
less intelligent, between air quotes,
but are much more grounded in reality.
Look, I am, by original education, a computer engineer.
I emphasize the engineering over computer science, which I could also say I was.
But engineering is grounded in the sense that, you know, whatever theories are, engineering is about what works.
That's how I started.
And we had, at least the people I was involved with, we had physical intuition about what computation is.
But today I see computer scientists out there, some of which you have interviewed, I found out a couple of days ago, who are waving a PhD around and get a lot of airtime.
and get a lot of airtime.
But these guys don't have anything more than a fake conceptual intuition
about what real computing is.
They operate on 20 levels of abstraction,
pre-assuming the existence of all kinds of tools,
all kinds of APIs, all kinds of things.
And they live in that world of pure abstraction,
so disconnected from reality
that some of them will, so disconnected from reality that
some of them will tell you, well, I built a conscious machine the other day. Oh, really?
Okay. So what do you think of Josje Bok's idea of consciousness is a simulated property of
computation? It's totally nonsensical, spout out by somebody who has no clue what he's talking about.
Okay. Do you mind telling the audience audience because what i said was one sentence
description do you mind giving them a better sense as to what yosha's point of view is and then
telling us why you think it's nonsense and then john i imagine you agree but i imagine you agree
perhaps for a different reason so that at that point i'd like you to come in yeah i agree for
those reasons and convergent reasons but i'll be quiet quiet. So, Bernardo, explain Josje Bak's point of view.
Well, I don't know.
I'm not a specialist on his particular point of view.
I recall that I have had an interaction with him,
but many years ago, he came to my website,
and ultimately, I think I had to block him
because he was, how do you call it,
trolling me online at some point.
The beginning of our exchanges were objective, were based on argument, but
it got to a point where he just sort of went down the deep end.
I don't know what motivated that change.
I'm not a specialist in his particular content.
I have seen snapshots here and there.
So I'd rather speak more generally of this notion that consciousness is a simulation. This is one
instance of a trick that is very tempting to apply in our culture. It's a trick against your
own self, which is to explain what is fundamentally not explainable in terms
of the assumptions we make by redefining that which we want to explain.
You see, for instance, we have no idea what consciousness is, right?
There is a hard problem of consciousness.
So if we make reductionist, physicalist assumptions, and I'm using the word reductionist here to differentiate that from John's position.
If we start from reductionist, physicalist assumptions, you have an impossible problem to deduce the qualities of experience from physical parameters alone.
That's called the hard problem of consciousness.
So consciousness becomes unexplainable.
So what's the move that a lot of people do?
They define consciousness as opposed to explaining it.
So some people will say, well, I solved the heart problem.
Consciousness is the electromagnetic field dynamics surrounding your neocortex.
That's not an explanation.
That's a redefinition.
I can do the same thing.
I can say consciousness is the involuntary wiggling of my left big toe.
Hard problem solved.
I have a friend who calls it the Pinocchio theories of consciousness, which are explanations by redefinition.
And it's not entirely arbitrary because they are usually leveraging some empirical correlations.
Like there is a correlation between electromagnetic field dynamics surrounding the neocortex and reported experience.
Or there is a correlation between electrochemical neuronal firings and reported experience.
So it leverages those correlations loosely and then explains by redefining the term. Now, we only get away with
this with the one profound mystery that seems inaccessible to our reductionist physicalist
assumptions, which is consciousness. For everything else, it would be immediately perceived as a clown
if you tried to do something like that to explain anything else. But our intuitions of plausibility fail when it comes to consciousness.
We sort of become gullible, collectively gullible to all kinds of nonsense because it's such
a mysterious thing that you sort of give yourself freedom to entertain stupidity, validated
by the notion that you need to entertain something far out in order to sort of
squeeze this into the parameters of reductionist physicalism. There is no other way. Therefore,
it becomes plausible by construction. But that plausibility is an artifact of the assumptions
you make. It has nothing to do with reason and empirical evidence. So to say consciousness is
just a simulation is as arbitrary as to say consciousness is just a simulation is as
arbitrary as to say consciousness is the wiggling of my left big toe. Are you explaining anything by
saying this? No, you're explaining nothing. You are just engaging into an orgy of conceptual fantasies
and losing ground with the concreteness of the world, with the concreteness of our own being as organic beings, metabolizing beings.
I find this approach to things no better than fantastical fantasizing, just as stupid as
fantastic fantasizing. John, your thoughts? Well, first of all, that was beautiful, and I enjoyed
being present to that. You know, I also object to, you know, explaining woo with goo, which a lot of these things are, you know, like, you know, this is weird and this is weird.
Oh, therefore.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
OK, so I agree with a lot of what Bernardo said.
I think it's a ridiculous proposal.
And I think the fact that we're taking it seriously
flies in the face of good theoretical argument,
like Bernardo just said,
and even our accumulating empirical evidence.
I'll talk a bit about the second first,
because I want to give more emphasis
to the theoretical points.
I mean, what was giving this some initial plausibility
was computer-human interface.
And initially, what's surprising
is two things. So, for example, notice how this doesn't get as much press as the other.
So, we're getting machines that can look, do significant EEG and tell what you're thinking,
tell if you're thinking of Apple or Pear, never anything abstract, by the way. Well,
it turns out that now we've realized that all of
those experiments were bullshit. They all suffer from failure of replication if you control for
confounds within the data. So it all goes away, right? So it's initially, wait, right? Maybe,
you know, finding one-to-one neural correlates between our shared concepts and what's happening in our brains
is, you know, not, maybe that's something we should challenge. Michael Anderson, for example,
in his book, After Phrenology, has said, we should be giving up the idea of like strictly localized
functions, et cetera, in the brain. So even that kind of reading idea that I can somehow do that,
so I'm not saying it's been falsified. I'm saying the stuff that gave it empirical plausibility
has vanished. And so the historical inability to find the neural correlate of consciousness,
right, which everybody sort of grudgingly agrees to right now,
points out that this is actually a really, really hard problem, just at an empirical level.
So the claims that, like the idea that, wow, given our current empirical success, I can plot this
graph, and in 2040, that's bullshit. That is just not paying attention. We are not having that kind
of empirical success. Now, that's not the more important argument, but I wanted to make that argument because that argument undermines the graphs that seem to lend the air of predictability and science to this. empirically extrapolated from. Okay. Now, notice what I'm going to say one more time.
That wasn't an empirical, you know, falsification, but it means don't take that seriously,
because it's not extrapolation. Okay. Now, the theoretical point. I agree with everything
Bernardo said, and let me try and say something that I think is convergent. So, I mean, first of
all, you know, the work of my colleague, Brian Cantwell-Smith, at the University of Toronto, in the philosophy of computation shows that the model of computation that's being presupposed by these people is very inadequate.
What is that model, by the way?
And so that model, as far as I can tell when I look at it, is the proposal, which was taken very seriously in first wave cognitive science.
I'm very familiar with it, that cognition is a formal system that we can capture, that the mind is very much like the game of chess.
What do I mean by that?
Well, chess is a formal system in that it doesn't depend on the matter that it's made out of.
I can play chess with pieces of wood.
I can play chess with pieces of stone.
I can play chess with helicopters with stone. I can play chess with helicopters
with flags on them, a building top, right? And what's really interesting is I can start playing
chess in wood, move to metal, move to stone, move to helicopter, and it's all the same game.
And so, and I can do the same thing with computer files. See how I can move them around? Because
they're purely formal systems. The problem you face with formal systems is there are knockdown arguments that they
cannot, they render qualitative experience causally inert. They have to. And also that they cannot,
formal systems are formal systems precisely because they are completely internally defined.
And therefore, they cannot grasp the meaning relation. The problem of
how to get the computer to find its processing meaningful to the computer cannot be answered
within formal systems. Formal systems can't explain development. If your formal system,
if your cognition is ultimately a formal system, it is bound by a logic, a system of axioms and
functions. You know what you can't do? You can't compute
within a formal system and get to a stronger formal system. You can't work within predicate
logic and if I just manipulate it fast enough, I'll get modal logic. That can't happen. But human
beings go through qualitative development. I am capable of cognition now that I would never be
capable no matter how much information you gave me that I would never be capable to watch how
much information you gave me that I was as a five-year-old. So formal systems can't deal
with the inherently developmental nature of cognition. They can't deal with the inherently
non-propositional aspects of cognition, like procedural knowing, perspectival knowing,
participatory knowing. Also, and I think Bernardo made this
point, I want to reinforce it. I argue, and this is a, it's not consensus, but it is a prominent
and increasing position within 4E cognitive science, that cognition is deeply continuous
with the principles of life. So that cognition is like, not like chess, it's more like football.
so that cognition is not like chess.
It's more like football.
The actual causal properties of the thing doing it are relevant to its functionality.
So there is no cognition without life,
biologic, autopoetic life.
And so I think everything I've said
is consistent with what Bernardo said,
but I think of all of these arguments
converging with the ones he said.
And so that is not common sense plausibility. That's normative plausibility. There's a lot
of convergence of independent lines of argument and evidence. There's a paucity of empirical
evidence for it. So the position is radically implausible to my mind. I think that that's
very close to what Bernardo was saying when he thinks it's bullshit. And I think that we're pinning our hopes on some kind of silicon rapture into simulated heaven,
I think is a ridiculous response to the meaning crisis.
And just the idea, like what is the ontology of a simulation?
You're ultimately relying on the idea that somehow it's an illusion.
What is having the illusion of consciousness?
Where's the ontological basis of that?
Okay, Bernardo, what are your responses to this?
And please do so with the same intensity yelling at the camera.
It was beautiful to sit here and watch John do this.
I wish it had gone on a little longer.
I was not ready to have it finished yet.
John's looking clean.
I don't know if that's the same person that he said clean in all caps.
John's looking clean.
I don't know if that's the same person that said John is sexy from before.
I'm clean shaven now.
I had a beard last time.
Maybe that's what they were referring to.
Okay.
All right.
Bernardo.
Look, I think this ties back to my favorite part of John's message,
which is, who are we looking up to for wisdom?
What do we consider wisdom?
we consider wisdom? Is this the arbitrary, implausible fantasizing of Joshua Bach? Is that what we call wisdom today? Or is it just a fancy flight from reality, which we give
us license to do because we are facing problems that our assumptions do
not allow us to solve, and which is quickly going towards a religious direction. And John hinted on
it, didn't elaborate on it. I was hoping he would continue on that path. But singulatarianism,
a la Ray Kurzweil, is a distorted expression of the religious impulse in all of us. It's part of being human.
I agree.
That you sort of, you aspire for a greater power, a power that would be or is in control,
a power that is aligned with yourself in terms of shared values.
So you sort of, you exert control by proxy.
You do not have control over nature,
but that greater power,
which does have control over nature,
shares your values.
So it's controlled by proxy
in the psychology of the situation.
And with a very restricted and poor
set of assumptions,
like reductionist physicalism, that instinct,
that aspiration towards, you know, luminosity, religious luminosity, has to find a way to express itself through the restricted channels it's given.
And what happens then?
Well, it's singulatarianism.
It's computers will be conscious. Not only that, you will be able to upload your consciousness into computers, thereby becoming immortal, which is one of the key religious ideas. You become immortal, achieving immortality.
machines will be able to construct ever more intelligent machines with an exponential growth. And at some point, there will be a machine
that is effectively God, the Almighty,
which controls everything and would keep us fed,
healthy, and entertained like in a Disneyland-type zoo
as inferior animals having a great life.
And we could look upon this great singularity machine
as the almighty father.
So what you see there is the religious impulse
expressing itself in profoundly distorted ways,
which are outright contradictory to reason.
And in that sense, you might say,
well, as contradictory with reason as
any other religion. Okay, I take that. But it is much more deficient of meaning than all the other
religions, because it aims at satisfying only sort of the base level of religious aspirations,
meaning immortality and the Almighty God, but it fails to address
what is the meaning and purpose of our lives.
It gives you sort of a way out of our deepest anxieties,
which is the anxiety of death
and the anxiety of not being in control.
Now you can upload yourself and live forever
and exert control by proxy
because this supercomputer will share your values since you made it.
But it doesn't give us, you know,
Viktor Frankl's or John Vervaeke's will to meaning.
It doesn't give us a path towards that.
It may buy us the sense that we have then time,
infinite time to figure out the question of meaning later.
But it doesn't give us a path towards
that, unlike the other religions.
All the world's main religions give you some kind of path to a realization of meaning.
So, yeah, I think that's what's going on.
I think these movements like Singulatarianism and Consciousness Uploading. They are just an expression of the religious impulse
and as, at least, as irrational
and as devoid of empirical foundations,
as devoid of internal logical coherence
as the better-known religious myths going on around.
I thought...
I was just going to say, that was beautiful.
I don't know if you've heard it, Bernardo,
but it goes back to your point about, you know,
the elevation of the nerds.
I've heard Kurzweil described as the rapture of the nerds
from the sort of Christian evangelical idea
of the rapture of the saved.
Yeah, so the rapture of the nerds.
I don't know if you've heard that.
I just thought I'd throw that out for you. Yeah. I do want, at some point, Kurt, to, I want to, like,
respond. Sure, sure, sure. Respond quickly, if you don't mind. Well, I'll just lay down a
foreshadowing. I would really like to discuss more, I mean, complete agreement, but I think
this is symptomatic. It's not an isolated thing.
I think we see throughout our culture, many attempts to create ersatz religions to try and
give expression to this impulse, which tells me two things. As a psychologist tells me,
we should be paying attention to this impulse. If it can't be repressed, it ultimately comes out in frustrated
forms. And besides, you know, the scientific, you know, fantasies, we, of course, have pseudo
religious political ideologies that are doing similar things. So what is that impulse? And
why is it there? I think is a very important question we should ask. Secondly, and in connection with that, and I'll just lay this down, I want to come back and say more about this.
One of the deep differences is the offloading of the requirement for transformation.
So one of the big things that happens in the Middle Ages with the advent of normalism, and then it gets taken up much later and extended,
and it's part of the loss to the will to meaning, I would say, is the idea, and you can
see quotes of this, like I could get your quotes just from Descartes saying this, that we can
access the deepest truths without undergoing even the most superficial of transformations.
Before that turning point, there was the idea that deep truths required substantial, right,
that you couldn't separate the knowledge project
from the wisdom project.
That deep truths required deep transformation.
Even in the way people read the Bible, for example,
was fundamentally different.
I can talk about that later.
I'm not proselytizing for Christianity.
I'm just pointing to that as an example.
And so what you see with the rapture
of the nerds is I don't have to do any transformation. I can get the deep truths
just by doing some abstract theorizing. And then I can then realize the existential change,
also just in term. And so I'm just expanding, I think, Bernardo, on what you talked about when
you're saying there's no path. There's no path for transformation. There's no path, right? And I, think about how ridiculous this claim is. We believe
very deeply for everybody until we're out, like, I believe that kids have to go through
fundamental transformations before they're capable of accessing certain ontological
aspects of reality. And I think most people, if, right, would agree with that. It's like, no, no, the kid
needs to mature more. They need to grow more.
Right? Before they
can... So don't explain Heidegger
to a five-year-old for something like that.
Right?
But we've got this fictional
myth that when we're 20, that stops.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You don't need to go through any more cognitive transformation
or development in order to access deeper ontological commitments. Now, Plato, for my
primary example, held exactly the opposite view, right? As the child is to the adult, the adult is
to the sage. Just like you had to go through a lot of transformation to be able to see through
self-deception and self-illusion to get deeper ontological purchase. You still have to do it now.
There is no spiritual bypassing. You can't just adopt a bunch of beliefs.
So the path, I'm trying to really deepen the path.
I'm trying to really say, like, we have got to give up this fiction that we're finished
in terms of our cognitive access to reality when we're 20 or 25 years of age.
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this is so cathartic to listen to this go on go on well i was gonna say i mean even if everything
else wasn't bullshit which i think it is about kurt's file at what age do you want to be uploaded
when you're 20 man i don't want to be a 20 year old forever how about 30 i don't want to be a 30
i'm 60 now so i can talk do I even want to be 50 years old forever?
Nope.
It has become, I don't know,
it probably has to do with the computer revolution
of the 70s and the early 80s,
that the notion of nerdiness
has become elevated to an ideal.
It's like, it's okay, it's good to be a nerd. It counts
in your favor because
we are so focused on propositional
knowledge and, you know,
the nerdish things,
factual and propositional knowledge.
And we lost sight of, look,
it's not okay to be
a nerd. A nerd is, by
definition, somebody who has a profound
imbalance in the development
of a number of psychic
functions by focusing
on only one.
It's a jack of one trade.
Bernardo comes from a more continental position
just because of listeners.
Psychic doesn't mean anything
to have to do with ESP.
He's using the term, right?
We in North America typically say
psychological, just so people aren't misunderstanding
him here. I don't want him to make certain
people in California happy by the indication
of that term. So go ahead,
please, Bernardo. I just thought that was important to interject.
Thank you for that. I don't mean
that. I mean psychic in the psychological
sense. We have many psychological
functions,
emotional functions, feeling functions, intuitive functions, sense
functions, people who really can perceive the world with the richness
of the world, which I can't, for instance. And the ability
to think according to
axioms and rules of derivation, which is the nerd
way of thinking,
that's one psychic function,
a sort of human computer,
a human calculator,
who is able to write code.
Look, I know that.
It was my life.
I used to do that.
But to focus on that
at the expense of maturity
on all the other aspects of the psyche,
of the mind, the human
mind, is not
okay. This should not
be elevated
by our culture into a
sort of goal, a sort of ideal.
It's like...
You're talking about the veneration of intellect?
Only the modern sense
of it, not the ancient sense of it, not the ancient sense of intellect,
not the ancient sense at all.
Exactly.
Exactly.
It's a veneration
of a particular form of intellect,
which we now think it's okay.
I mean, before we knew
it was not okay.
It was an offense
to be called a nerd.
Somehow it has become okay.
Where did we take this wrong turn? It's not okay to be called a nerd. Somehow it has become okay. Where did we take this wrong turn?
It's not okay to be a nerd.
It's okay to be a complete, mature, ever-evolving human being,
ever-learning human being who has emotional intelligence,
who pays attention to intuition, who has empathy,
who can share in the feelings of other people
and therefore can know what other people are going through in their own minds,
who has sensory skills, who is able to taste the flavor,
the subtleties of the flavor of food and wine.
How many of us can't do that?
Who has maturity about life, which in the US, I think I am with James Hillman
on this.
Hillman used to say that the US is in love with innocence, which is precisely this notion
that the innocence of dividing the world into good and bad, black and white, that's something
that's a childish way of looking upon the world
because there is evil in all of us.
Things are more subtle and complicated
than just this division between two polarities.
But in the US, according to Jim Hillman,
this has become an ideal, this cult of innocence,
which is a sort of a denial of the process of maturation.
It's unfortunate.
So somehow we are no longer elevating maturity,
which goes hand in hand with wisdom,
to its rightful place.
We now think of old people as burdensome and old-fashioned,
people not in tune with the times, as opposed
to mature people who have a lot to teach and share.
We have this cult of innocence that Jim Hillman
used to talk about. We have this
idolatry of nerds, which is
my way of talking about it.
Sorry to interrupt. I've been thinking about for quite some time,
which is the way that we view the elderly in our culture.
I wonder if the quality of a culture is how you view the elderly.
And in our culture, in the West, we view them as...
Well, we barely view them.
We barely look up to them.
And if we do, it's only as a repository of stories of the past.
How is it that we should be viewing them?
Well, look, I think you can make the mistake both ways.
If you look at an old person, and by definition, you expect wisdom from that person.
Yeah, you're going too far.
Because an old person, old people have the same variability that non-old people have.
that non-old people have.
But I think what happened is that we've missed... We are no longer developing our sense for subtlety and nuance.
We have become incapable to recognize subtlety and nuance.
We want to divide everything into neat drawers with a clear label, because that's how we compartmentalize things, and that's how we give ourselves intellectual justification for not thinking things through.
We just label it quickly, put it in a drawer, and we say, this is A, this is B, this is black, this is white.
And that means that all the subtlety and nuance where the core of the message is
flies over our heads. And because we've lost this sense for subtlety and nuance,
we don't recognize the wisdom in old people because that wisdom expresses itself in subtlety
and nuance, not in clear-cut recipes. And everybody wants an easy ride now, a clear-cut recipe. Just give me the seven steps to happiness.
You know, that's what people want.
And guess what?
The treasure is just underneath
a few layers of subtlety and nuance.
You cannot bypass those.
But we've lost our ability to see that.
Therefore, we've lost our ability
to recognize true wisdom,
including true wisdom in other people.
We live in a falsified, in an arbitrarily simplified world, so to say.
And we make enormous efforts to confirm to ourselves that that's how the world is, because it makes life more easier.
So I want to follow up on that, because first of all, the last point that Bernardo made,
I want to give it some experimental empirical teeth because
so, and this is work from
one of my colleagues at the University of Toronto, Lynn Hasher, which does work on working
memory. So one of the things that Hasher made clear is
we've gone from sort of a simplistic working memory. So one of the things that Hasher made clear is we've gone from
sort of a simplistic working memory is just a holding to working memory is a higher order
relevance filter. That's why things like chunking work for working memory. Anyways, there's just a
lot of good evidence for that. Now, why am I bringing that up? Just give me a sec, because
there's very important correlations between measures of working memory, especially its ability to filter out irrelevant information,
and measures of general intelligence. They at times approach a parity. So there's something
deeply connected there. Okay, what does this all have to do with wisdom and old age? Okay,
so when you take old people and young people and you give them standard IQ measures,
the young people crush the older people.
Why? Because almost all the problems on a standard IQ test are well-defined problems,
like mathematical problems, a pattern completion where one of the answers is available and you
have to choose it. These are all well-defined problems. So old people, you know,
they don't do very well because the young people get the answers faster. Well, why?
Well, the older people, the negative view is, well, they're more distracted. And so, you know,
let's put the old people away. They're distracted. We can get to the bottom line. We're younger,
we're fast. You are. You're younger, you're fast, and for well-defined problems, you outperform. But Lynn Hasher did some work, and she's even got a thing called
Older Brains Are Wiser Brains. It's in the title, right? Who? Yeah, Lynn Hasher at U of T,
University of Toronto. And so what happens with, you can give people, there's all kinds of ways of
establishing this empirically. What happens with older people, for example, when they're reading a text,
they will keep more of the possible meanings of a term active than young people.
So that looks like if the point is to get through, the older people are distracted.
And if you give them a well-defined problem, they're over here,
and young people are zeroing in on the correct answer that
there is to be found.
But what if you switched to an ill-defined problem?
An ill-defined problem which we don't know, you know, we don't know what the important
representation of our initial state is, the goal state.
What are the relevant operations?
What are the relevant patterns to pay attention to?
Now when you do that, older brains out outcompete younger brains because they keep more options
alive, which makes them better at dealing with the multivariate dynamics of situations like messy,
emotionally laden, interpersonal situations, which are, by the way, prototypical situations
where we look for people's wisdom. So I'm not claiming, Bernardo's right,
that there's no simple correlation, old age wisdom,
but we ignore the potential for being more wise
with or poor old people
because we have this seriously algorithmic notion
of what intelligence is that blocks us
from seeing this defect as something that actually affords wise response
to ill-defined problems. Now, I think that gives a lot of teeth about what Bernardo was saying about
losing nuance, losing nuance. I think for me, and the, I mean, there's a lot here about propositional tyranny and that,
but I think what, I like to put this within the Frommian perspective, that I think we have
confused the having of propositions with the becoming of wise, the becoming of mature. So
Fromm famously, he's an existential psychologist, he divided human motivations up into two broad
camps.
There's the having needs.
These are needs met by having something, having water, having oxygen, having food.
And it's very important that we be able to categorize that, manipulate those objects,
secure control over them.
We have what Buber would call an ayat relationship to them.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
If you don't have an ayat relationship with water, if you treated water as an important individual that you shouldn't trespass on for
moral reasons, you're going to die, right? So you need to have that. Then he said there is what he
called the being mode. I'm not quite happy with that term, but what he meant is that there are
needs that are met by becoming being. Like, I have a need to become mature. So these are
developmental needs. And these are needs that
are not met by categorically manipulating things. These are needs that are met by the project,
the Viktor Frankl type project of meaning making. Because what I'm doing with becoming mature is
I'm trying to construct an identity that is responsible to the meanings in the world. Neither one of these
is good or bad, but what Fromm argued is we get into modal confusion. We try to satisfy being
needs within the having mode. So then instead of becoming mature, I buy a car. Instead of being in
love, notice we even use this word, I have a lot of sex.
And the point is, we're not satisfying the developmental needs. Because again, my point,
we're not going through any significant transformation. We're just acquiring stuff.
And we do this epistemically. We acquire propositions as opposed to going through fundamental transformations. So we're locked in modal confusion. And so we spin this faster and faster because it doesn't meet the needs. And what we're told by our culture is because you need more,
and you need it more frequently and more often. And so we spin faster and faster and faster
as our being needs atrophy, and we fall into addictions around our having needs.
And I think that's not just in the marketplace of mercantile products.
I think it's in the epistemic marketplace. We are doing the same thing. We are confusing
the having of propositions with the transformation that's required to become wise and virtuous.
Okay. You said many interesting points.
This has been fantastic.
John, what you just mentioned reminds me of addiction and the reciprocal narrowing.
Yeah.
At one point, I would like you to talk about love, which is the opposite of that reciprocal opening or some positive feedback effect there.
And the reason why is because in many religions, God is tantamount to love.
And in Bernardo's view, many people would
see mind at large as synonymous with God, which means there may be some relationship there that
I'd like you all to explore. Well, I mean, and this goes from one of, I have a couple of slogans
on my, in my signature in Gmail. And one of them is love is, it's a classical slogan from the
Christian Neoplatonism, love is its own kind of knowing. And I'll try and work towards that in importance. So it's not just
that God is love, it's that love is a kind of knowing. And John in the epistles says God is
agape, right? And he's trying to bring both of those sides together.
I think there are similar things in Sikh, not Sikhism, Sufism, because it's basically an
integration of agape kind of love with Neoplatonism. But I'm just trying to make clear that I'm not
making an exclusivity imperialistic claim on Christianity's behalf. Neither am I dismissing it.
But I think we do well to pay attention to that tradition, because I think of Jesus as the sage
of agape. I think that's a way of trying to understand him. I think there's similar ideas
in the Buddha with Karuna. And you want to talk about Jesus and the Buddha, maybe we can do that
also. Yeah, we will. We will. Either way, go through the explication on love.
So the idea, this came to me, right, there was a bunch of pieces, but I have the great good
fortune to be friends and colleagues with Mark Lewis, who's one of the premier neuroscientists
and cognitive scientists doing work on addiction. And he's doing it, he did it also from the inside
because he was also himself
an addict. And you're always an addict in some sense. So if you want to read the autobiography,
you can read Memoirs of an Addicted Brain. Part of the reason why he went into neuroscience was to
understand addiction. I have a friend of mine who said people go into psychology to study their
defects.
And since mine is relevance realization, again, I guess I'm worried about being irrelevant.
But the point is that...
Are you being facetious or are you being honest?
Both.
My intent was there's some truth to it, but hopefully there's also some humor in it.
So what's Mark's model? You know,
Mark was, you know, one of the first people to propose a dynamical system interpretation
of emotions. He's a forerunner in a lot of ways. He's also, you know, he's also a gifted therapist.
He's kind of polymath in this important way. And so I was also, I was at a conference, and it was not just him, but a bunch of psychologists and neuroscientists where it was, you know, a mini, it was a symposium within the conference on basically challenging the disease model of addiction.
And the disease model of addiction is the idea that, you know, you ingest the substance and it's like a disease and you have to get rid of the disease.
substance and it's like a disease and we have to get rid of the disease. And that aligns with a lot of sort of governmental policies and the way governments like to deal with things. Even though
the evidence that prohibition is a completely failed strategy with dealing with addiction.
So what they, and it doesn't account for the data well. So you have weird phenomena like this. You have Vietnam soldiers using opiates in Vietnam.
Opiates, opioid prices, right?
And then they come back to the United States,
and without any therapy or anything else,
the vast majority of them stop using.
They're in highly stressful situations.
They're taking opioids to escape trauma.
They're ingesting this substance that's inherently addictive. They come back and
they don't. That's just one among many facts, empirical facts. It's like the disease model
isn't fitting well. I have this substance, it infects me and it compels me. So instead,
Mark proposes a learning model of addiction. And he calls it reciprocal narrowing. It goes like
this. So I'll use alcohol just
because I can presume that most people are familiar with that intoxicant. So I face some
stressful situations. So I drink some alcohol to reduce the stress. The problem with that is it
reduces my cognitive flexibility, makes me much more susceptible to impulsivity, hyperbolic
discounting. It basically shrinks.
And what happens there is my world, my world, I don't mean physically, but the options available to me in my world shrink. Now that means that my problems become more exigent and pressing on me,
right? And I've lost the ability to manipulate and get to alternatives. So now I'm more stressed.
So I'm going to drink more alcohol and I'm going to reduce my cognitive flexibility even more. And then the world's going to shrink
down, and then I'm going to shrink down. And I use this idea from Clifford Geertz about an agent
arena relationship. Our agency is always co-defined by how we turn the world into an arena for action,
and the arena is always co-defined with the type of agency we're assuming. And so what happens is your agency is shrinking and the world's
optionality is shrinking until the world can't be any other than it is right now. And you can't be
any other than you are right now. And that's when you're addicted. That's addiction. And this fits the data way, way better.
But governments don't like this because the kind of changes you have to bring aren't changes
where you can simply prohibit a substance.
So what I was having, literally having lunch with Mark, and I've done a lot of work on
Plato and the Platonic notion of anagage.
And I said to Mark, I said, but if there's reciprocal
narrowing, isn't there reciprocal opening? And he went like that. It was like, yes, of course,
there has to be. And then I thought about this, and this is clearly what Plato advocates for.
You can see it very clearly in the Republic. You know, I get, I bring about a sort of
intra-psychic harmony, and that reduces my impulsivity, my self-deception.
I see more real patterns in the world.
I then get better at detecting real patterns.
I internalize that, and I better afford my inner justice.
And then that allows me to connect better.
And so I reciprocally open.
And Plato, I think, rightly describes that as love. Now, he thinks of it as
eros, but Socratic eros is very different than our meaning of eros. I'll put that aside. Let's
just say it's love for now. Well, why might that be the case? Well, if you look at the work of
Aaron, that's a last name, not a first name, how do you get people to sort of fall in love with
each other? You get them to do mutually accelerating disclosure. You get them to be on theolocutions.
get them to do mutually accelerating disclosure. You get them to be on theolocutions.
Yeah, sort of. So what it is, is if I open up a bit about me and you reciprocate by opening up a bit about me, first of all, I start to see you better and you start to see me better. So we're
doing mind-sight resonance. And that allows me to, not only can I open up more, I can open up
better because I can open up more, but I have a better sense of
how you're seeing things because you've opened up to me. So I start to open up more and better,
and then you reciprocate by opening up more and better. And we do this. We reciprocally open,
and that will make people fall in love. Now, not necessarily erotic love. It can be phileic love.
It can be agapic, right? But that reciprocal opening, we know it as love. It is a way of knowing by
which we bind ourselves to, right? We bind our being needs to another being, and we reciprocally
go through transformation and open up to each other. And I think we can fall in love. This is,
I think, a platonic claim that we should think about taking seriously again. We can fall in love with reality.
We can fall in love with the world in a profound way.
And I think part of the meaning crisis is getting people so they can fall in love again
with reality and with the depths of reality.
And so the reciprocal opening and the love and the anagoge, I think, all converge in
sort of a coherent manner.
And I think reciprocal opening is also what's happening in therapy.
People come in with the propositional knowledge of what needs to change. It does almost shit.
So there's almost nothing for them. What a good therapist does is take them through
a process of reciprocal opening until they get to be a different person living
in a different kind of world that is now viable to them. They want to be that person over there
living in that world, but they don't know how to get there because they don't have the religious
and wisdom traditions that afford people the serious play, the developmental play
in reciprocal opening that affords that kind of transformation. So I hope that answered your question. you may think that this is beyond you, but that's false. Brilliant provides pellucid explanations of abstruse phenomenons such as quantum computing,
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Try four of the lessons at least, don't stop before four.
And I think you'll be greatly surprised at the ease at which you comprehend subjects you previously had trouble grokking. Links are in the description. This notion of reciprocal opening,
so that's agape, that's love, is synonymous in many religions, especially Christianity,
with God in terms of John mentioned in John's epistle. And your theory has mind at large,
which is similar to God. So is there any link between reciprocal opening and mind at large, which is similar to God. So is there any link between reciprocal opening and
mind at large? And then we're going to get to religion without a religion, or what do we do
to solve our current meaning crisis? Well, let me start by saying what John just said makes all
kinds of sense to me from a first-person experience perspective. This idea of love as this reciprocal opening,
as becoming more than you thought you were
in that dance of love.
It makes all kinds of sense to me,
and I think it's a beautiful way to visualize it
and communicate it.
It's a very hard act to follow after that.
So I will make a comment, Kurt, on your question,
but restricted to a point I think is important too,
not meant as a complete answer.
I can't follow what we've just had,
and I'm completely in peace
for not being able to follow what we've just seen.
But I'll make a comment that I think is important.
Would love be part of mind at large?
Surely, love is clearly a part of nature.
It's a kind of...
a force that binds things together.
Maybe the correlate of love on the screen of perception is gravity.
But we also know that the universe's expansion is accelerating.
So there is this other thing we call dark energy right now, which seems to have the opposite effect.
To deny that what we call evil is also part of nature would be naive, I think. And I think it's not only naive, it's dangerous
because it has led to a sort of an extreme attempt to spiritualize reality.
And I'm going to use the words spirit and soul,
not in the religious sense, but in the psychological sense.
So, spirit is sky, air, sunlight, abstractions, single-sidedness, sumum bonum, the sumum bonum of the New Testament, the pure good.
That's spirit.
There's this flights of abstraction and spiritualization.
And soul is on the other hand.
Soul is earthly.
It's moist. It's dark. It's where the roots suck their life energy from.
It's Hades, the mythical hell, but also the place where the goddess of spring emerges from every year to renew life.
So this is all soul, it's the ground of reality and it's morally ambiguous.
soul. It's the ground of reality. And it's morally ambiguous. It's a place where
psychologists know that there comes insight and profound deception.
Good and evil. It's where
the human shadow resides. And we
have this tendency, probably started already with Christianity
because the God of the Old Testament was morally very ambiguous.
A tribal God, very morally ambiguous.
And with the New Testament, God was pure good.
And to this day, our culture seems to have this notion that we have to go always only towards spirit.
to go always only towards spirit,
this single-sidedness of light and goodness and abstraction and lightness, not only light, but lightness,
this airy, floating quality of spirit.
And what happens is that because this has become our ideal,
we close our eyes to the soul side of ourselves,
to our shadows, to the earthly, to the dark, moist,
womb-like, cave-like aspect of ourselves,
which is the place in nature that is pregnant with all potentialities,
all unrealized potentials.
And where growth ultimately comes from,
where the energy of the spring comes from,
the energy of the spring comes from, the energy of transformation.
There is a kind of self-honesty that is required to be in contact with that soul side of life.
And we have a culture that does its best to eliminate it from existence, to deny it,
to become completely single-sided. And then what happens, and that's the dangerous thing,
to become completely single-sided.
And then what happens, and that's the dangerous thing,
what do you do with a part of yourself that is intrinsic to you,
but which you do not recognize?
You project it.
So where does the evil go?
It goes to the criminals in prison. It goes to the Palestinians in Gaza,
or the Israelis across the world, depending on which side you are.
It goes to the Jews during the time preceding
the Second World War, since the late 19th century.
You project that, and the moment you project it, that's when you get into conflict.
That's where war comes from. That's where civil unrest comes from.
That's where all the crap, all the shit that's happening comes from.
And that's why we become unable to deal with it with maturity.
It's because we've become unable to see that in ourselves, to empathize with that,
and therefore have a subtle, nuanced approach to how we deal with it, a mature approach to how we deal with the dark side, how we deal with the evil forces.
approach to how we deal with the dark side, how we deal with the evil forces. We are totally innocent about how to deal with it because we are so focused on love as opposed to the dark energy.
We are so focused on air and clouds and light and abstraction as opposed to the humid, dark,
earthly ground of our being where we are rooted.
And this lack of sophistication, this lack of self-awareness is what makes it impossible for us to have empathy and to understand the other side.
And if you cannot understand the other side, you don't need to agree.
You don't need to give it free reign.
That's not what I'm saying.
I'm not saying let's give free reign to the shadow side. No. But if you don't want to give free reign to the shadow side,
you have to know it. You have to know what it is. You have to know what it's doing. But if you
repress and deny it, you don't see what it's doing. And that's when it gets free reign. You see,
it gets free reign precisely by being ignored, by not being legitimized, by our not giving it, not telling
it the following words.
I see you.
I recognize your right to exist within me, but I shall not give you free reign.
Our inability to do that is what sets off this madhouse that we are seeing right now.
It's right now popping up in the Middle East, but it's always popping up somewhere.
So that's what I wanted to say.
Every time we talk about love,
and I'll link back to your question finally,
every time we talk about love and we want to say,
well, mine at large is love, it's God, it's the sumum bonum,
it's all true, but it's half of the truth.
And ignoring, denying the right of the other half to exist, to be there, is immature and dangerous.
So, with the same conviction that I would say, yes, love is mind at large, it is God,
I would also say, and so is the energy that expressed itself through Hitler.
And it's intrinsic to nature and to humanity I mean your backyard is a bloodbath right
now I think I mentioned to you last time you know ants cutting up earthworms in
pieces while they are wiggling alive I mean it's a it's a disaster look at
nature nature is a bloodbath what What's happening? And to deny it, to deny its existence, to not grant it the right to exist is a very mature, very dangerous move. And today, an extraordinarily unpopular move. I mean, you run the risk of being culture cancelled very swiftly, if you say what I just said.
very swiftly if you say what I just said. Now, why do I say that? Because I don't give a damn if I'm culture cancelled, you know. I don't need anymore this, you know, recognition from the outside.
It's fine, whatever way it goes. But I think it's very dangerous. It's a degree of psychological
unsophistication and immaturity that sits at the source of the evil we see in the world.
Because to control the shadow, you need to grant it the right to exist and to be there,
and only then can you police it.
What does it mean to understand the shadow part of you, the evil part of you?
Does it mean to, in John's words, see its point of views or goals as plausible?
What does it mean?
And how does one practically do it?
Recognize that it exists. Recognize how it feels. Before you rush to judgment and you say,
well, my shadow side is wrong. Fine, you will get there. But first, I will speak metaphorically
because there's no other way to speak about it. First, look at it and say, I see you. You exist in me. And it is okay that you exist in me. I am not going to try to weed
you out or cut off your head. I'm not going to deny your rights to be. You are there. It's all
right. However, I have a different point of view. I am metacacognitive I can process things in a way that you cannot
and I will not give you free reign
now you may even
to the degree
that is safe
and conducive to health and harmony
you may even
throw some breadcrumbs to it
every now and then
indulge your shadow side in a safe, controlled way,
so it can also express itself as part of nature. Because if you shut the door on it and you say,
not only do I not see you, I don't grant you the right to exist, I don't even recognize that you
exist, that's where it's going to undermine you from the ground up, from the roots up. If you go all towards the sun and you forget where you were rooted,
you know, you will be able to do photosynthesis,
but you will not have the minerals and the water that sustain your life.
Trees are a great metaphor for this.
They need the sun, they need the spirit, but they are rooted in soul.
They are rooted in the darkness, moist realm of moral ambiguity
where the shadow is.
So I think for lacking this degree of sophistication,
not only lacking it,
but elevating it as a positive cultural value,
to lack that sophistication
is extraordinarily dangerous
because it decreases the end of empathy it turns the world
into a dance of projections that have very little to do with reality there is more in common between
me and my enemy than the bernardo who was 30 years old would ever dare contemplate as possible
and the moment you see this you may think, I don't want to get to that realization
because I would hate myself.
No, you would not, because that comes with a degree of kindness and acceptance towards
yourself that you wouldn't be capable of before.
And that same kindness then just gets extended to the world at large that ability and i think
old people have this ability they've gone through enough shit that they know that things are never
quite black and white that behind that evil there is something you share you see to understand
something doesn't mean that you need to agree to understand an evil act doesn't mean that you condone it, but we've come to
associate understanding with approval. We conflate these two things and this is a disaster. Look,
I don't need to approve of what the SS did to understand what Austrians from Austrian villages,
what motivated them to join the SS.
I can understand that.
And I do understand that.
Do I condone it?
Do I approve of it?
Absolutely not.
But that doesn't mean that I shouldn't make an effort to understand, that I shouldn't
make an effort to empathize in some way, because it's only through that understanding
and empathy that we will solve our problems, that we'll solve our conflicts. There's a lot I want to say in response to that. First of all,
yeah, I agree with that critique of sort of pure airy spirituality. I try to make the case
that the very, you know, the very same processes that make us
adaptively intelligent also make us permanently susceptible to self-deception, that you can't
extricate one from another. The heuristics that allow us to avoid combinatorial explosion
are the same heuristics that bias us and prejudice, and trying to separate and trying to somehow get the one without the other is a
farcical endeavor. It's a futile endeavor. And now it doesn't mean we can't ameliorate the way
Bernardo was saying, but trying to get some sort of ontological separation, I think that's a
fundamental misunderstanding about how intelligence and adaptivity and meaning making work.
And so what I'm proposing now is much more like the Buddhist perspective.
You know, realize that everything is threatened by dukkha.
Realize that everything you do, every domain, no matter what domain you're in, you can fall
prey to self-deceptive, self-destructive behavior, because that's what dukkha is.
And that's one of the noble truths. And I think that actually lines up with how we're increasingly
understanding the functionality of cognition. Second riff point, and these are all related,
I see there's another point where I'm maybe now a little bit closer, because I see
Bernardo's mind at large much more like the Tao
than like God. I'm a Tai Chi player. I have been for, you know, three decades. And so,
this is not just something I think about propositionally. I mean, in fact, you don't
really know that, you don't know the Tao until you're doing the Tao. You can't just, like,
read about it. And the idea that the Tao is disclosed
between... You all know the famous yin-yang, and notice that there's the little dot of black within
the white, and white within the black, and the line between them is sinewy. And there's a dynamic
interpenetration, an inter-co-creation between the yang, which is the expansive airy, and the yin, which is the earthy
grounding. And so, if mind at large is more like the Tao, and that our primary relationship to it
is one of ongoing maturation. So you do Tai Chi in order to become more mature in your capacity
to deal with the yin and the yang.
And you hope that it percolates through your psyche and permeates through your life. And
that's what you're actually, and that's how to love it. So, I mean, I would suggest that there,
that there's a way of, there is, and Bernardo expressed, there's a kind of love that is not trying to exclude the shadow.
There is even the reciprocal opening to the shadow.
And I want to point out something else.
This is right out of the Neoplatonic tradition.
Now, Bernardo was speaking, and perhaps he was speaking metaphorically, but I practice and I'm involved in, like, IFS and other things like that, emotion-focused therapy, in which you don't just sort of describe it to yourself. You actually enact these inner dialogues. You actually go into
an imaginative space. You'll have a part come up. And instead of trying to exclude it,
you try and mature it. You try and, first of all, appreciate its adaptive functionality
and then get it to realize that that functionality is now maladaptive and it needs to grow.
And this is why IFS, Mark Lewis, by the way, recommend.
Can you give a specific example?
Sure.
So internal family systems therapy is, I'll try not to spill my own guts too much on this.
But so I have a part of me that when sort of feels threatened by overwhelming experience, it's kind of like it wants to smash.
It sort of smashes things.
It wants to sort of, you know, just disrupt whatever is happening now so that this situation cannot unfold anymore. And so you sort of, well,
what's that for? And then you start to appreciate, oh, well, that ability to smash things, that's
adaptive. When properly aligned, it allows me to criticize and escape from oppressive things that
are trying to hold me back. And so you get into dialogue with this part and you try to say,
well, you're just smashing everything. Do you need to smash everything all the time? And first of all, it
says, yes, because if I don't, you're going to get overwhelmed. And then you say, but can you
step back and you sort of become aware of me, right? As Bernardo said, the metacognitive me
and this wider scope. And you see all the skills that are available to us now. It's like the Tai
Chi. I've developed a finesse. I don't just have to smash things. We can carry out that function, but could we do it more like a martial
artist? So I even offer my part when it starts to run. I said, hey, why don't we just sort of do
almost enact Tai Chi internally? And it starts to get into a different framing,
and it starts to think, oh, wait, I can discharge this function, but in more sort of finesse
interaction rather than just going in and smashing it.
And then what happens is the wanton impulsive aspect of this that's confusing urgency and
intensity with legitimacy, it starts to become less confused.
It starts to realize, oh, wait, I can meet the goal.
First of all, the goal doesn't have to be met the way I thought it has to be met.
And I can meet the goal by First of all, the goal doesn't have to be met the way I thought it has to be met. And I can meet the goal by, you know, doing this other thing. And it's a process of basically
internal dialogue. Sometimes you're imagining the part and you're talking to it. Sometimes it's more
like a direct just intuition. Sometimes you get imagery that comes up, but you learn. It's a skill.
You learn to enter into dialogue with this.
It's very similar to something that's convergent in EFT,
motion focus therapy, the empty chair technique,
which is you feel an inner conflict,
and what you do is you move between the chairs,
and you'll have this part.
Go to that part.
Take its perspective.
Take its identity.
Say what it wants to say.
Now go to this other part.
Take its perspective.
And I've done this.
I've done emotion-focused therapy with Les Greenberg and stuff like that.
And what happens is the two parts start talking to each other.
They start realizing that they're there.
I don't want to be too anthropomorphic.
But what happens, the point I'm making is this, what's happening is a revolution right
now within the psychotherapeutic world of all these independent lines of convergence
on inner dialogue being an effective thing. Now, one of the things that's helped is
the Jungian version of this was too tied to visual imagery, speaking therapeutically. And
there's a wide variation, including no capacity for visual imagery in the populace. We have at
least 5% to 10% of the people that
can't do visual imagery. So active imagination is not available to them. So what's happened is
people have tried to say, well, can we save the baby from the bathwater? And can we get
other forms? And they've moved into more discourse, dialogic ways of carrying on these inner dialogues. And they're sort of gaining a lot of traction
within the psychotherapeutic world. And I find that very interesting, because for me,
that's just the Neoplatonic tradition brought back. Because it's very clear that with things
like theurgia, the Neoplatonists were doing this inner kind of dialectic dialogue, and then they were
doing it between each other in philosophia, and then they were doing it contemplatively with
reality, and they were coordinating these three together. And I feel like, and this is just an
intuition, so don't give it too much, but I feel what these different fields are all starting to
converge towards each other to potentially give us a set of abilities that would give us a very
powerful kind of way of... Notice what Bernardo was doing. We're going through a transformation
so that we can realize, not just in thought, but in our being, some fundamental patterns within
ontology. But I do think that all of that is also still a kind of love. But again, not the
spiritualized airy. It's the ability, like you
say, there's a love, right? It's like what Plato talks about when he compares Philea Sophia to
Philea Noachia. I'm not trying to destroy the shadow. I'm also not condoning it. I'm trying
to understand. I'm trying to open it up and open myself up to it in the right way. At least that's
how I understand it. And I don't know if that's consonant with everything you're saying, Bernardo, but those are some of the riffs I wanted to get
on. I'm very excited about all of this happening right now because I participate a lot in these
emerging communities of interpersonal dialogue and man, do they become religious for people
almost automatically. I'm very much, like I said, really trying to understand the dialectic
within ontology. I think, by the way, that that separation from soul and spirit is, again,
we get both in our culture. We get, you know, just a sort of giving into raw emergence,
a kind of, you know, which is, you know, to take the soil but not try to grow from it, right?
And then you have like the tree just receptive to the sunlight of emanation.
And, you know, even Plato was critical of that.
He said, no, no, look at the sun and then go back down into the cave.
Because if you don't go back into the cave, you haven't really understood the sun, right?
You didn't get it.
You didn't get it, right?
And so I'm really trying to bring all these things together in my work. So I was just, I'm sorry, it's not a counter argument. I'm just expressing sort of convergence and excitement with what you were talking about. I see these symptoms as positive symptoms rather than the generation of ersatz religions to the meaning crisis.
So I'm interested how, I agree with Bruno, you see all of this stuff, the Kurtzweilian and all this crap going on over here.
But there's also this, is on these emerging communities of practice and how they're also converging with each other.
Sorry, that was a lot, but I was just really inspired by what Bernardo had to say.
To speak personally, I try to go by this screenwriting adage which says that the more personal the pain,
the more general.
So if you try to speak in platitudes, no one relates.
But if you're more honest, then people tend to relate.
I get this distinct feeling that I don't love myself.
And I'm unsure how to do shadow integration with one particular aspect of myself, that'll
say. Now there's probably 20. But one is laziness. I'm unsure how to do shadow integration with one particular aspect of myself, that'll say another
probably 20. But one is laziness. So I work hard, hard, hard, hard, hard, hard, hard. And I feel
like some well, one, I need to work hard, because to prep for some of these podcasts requires quite
a bit of work. But every minute, almost every minute that I spend that I'm not working,
I'm unconsciously beating myself up saying that I'm wasting time.
I'm wasting time.
I need to get back to work.
And when I'm spending time with my wife,
which I love,
that's like,
all I love to do is work and to spend time with my wife.
If I'm honest,
when I'm spending time with my wife,
I'm thinking,
why aren't I working right now?
And I,
so I,
I have a feeling that comes from me not loving myself do you think what interjection
what do you do do you do you do the opposite when you're working do you think why am i not
spending time with my wife sometimes sometimes oh but i would say it happens more often okay
but it does happen that i when i'm working, I'm always looking forward to spending time with my wife. I actually, I'm so happy that the two aspects of my life that I get to do almost 100% of the time is work intensely and spend time with my wife intensely.
And when I'm spending time with my wife, I'm not working.
It's like watching a movie, going for a walk and so on.
I'm trying to point out something to you.
Very frequently, and this goes back to what I said a few minutes ago, very frequently the reason why we can't integrate with something is because of aspect disguise.
Let's first give, I'll give a description that's not pertinent to your case, and then let's try and apply it here.
So somebody will come into therapy and they'll say, why are you here? And they'll say, I'm stubborn. Like, I'm stubborn. I'm inflexible.
And you don't tackle that directly. You talk to them for a while and you get them off
somewhere and you say, tell me something you really like about yourself. And they'll say,
I'm perseverant. I really keep going. And they don't realize that those are two different aspects
of the same function. And I'm trying to get you to realize if your laziness is also the positive
function of taking you into relationship with your wife, then you can see that it's not just
a drag on your work. There's also a positive aspect to it.
And you've got to bring the two aspects back together.
If they're disintegrated from each other, you can't integrate with them.
They have to come back together because you can't properly appreciate, in all the meanings
of the word appreciate, that reality and that function and integrate with it unless it has been properly reintegrated back
together. You leave it like this and you try to integrate with this and this is going to kick in
the ass. Or you try to integrate with this and this is going to pull you into, right? And if
you don't put them back together, you can't integrate with it. That's what I'm trying to
get you to see is your laziness. Also the thing, maybe that's also, Hey, I want to connect with my wife.
I want to do, there are things other than my work that are important.
That was just a suggestion.
I mean, you need to do therapy to do, do this, but I'm trying to get you to see like that,
like you have, it's a Bernardo, it's a much more nuanced thing.
Part of the problem with the current discourse around shadow integration is it's very simplistic.
It's almost like there's a black figure there, and what I'm going to do is just sort of bind to him, right?
Exactly.
That is not helpful.
That is not therapeutically helpful.
And that failure to deal with aspect disguise is what blocks people.
failure to deal with aspect disguise is what blocks people. And one of the things about IFS and other therapies is they're trying to get people to see both aspects of any function.
Sorry, I was just trying to be helpful there.
Definitely are. And Bernardo, one time you told me that I take myself too seriously, and I do.
And I think I've taken myself less seriously since you've told me that but not drastically it's difficult for me because I'm in many ways I'm extremely insecure I don't feel like
I know anywhere near as much as I need to know when I look at what I have to learn not just for
these podcasts but what I would like to learn from my life these theories of everything's 200 of them
man I know one percent of what i should know and i'm constantly
beating myself up like i should be farther along i felt like i wasted five to eight years of my
life in depression and i'm so far behind where i should be and i look at other people and think
at how much i'd admire how much they know and then it pushes me to go even harder, but sometimes it exhausts me.
And I have a feeling that this and a lack of shadow integration is, well, many other aspects are the reason why I feel the way that I feel.
And, well, I'll just say that.
Well, you sound like Socrates.
I'm trying to be both funny.
I'm trying to be a little bit therapeutic here.
I'm trying to be funny because humor gets around defenses, but I'm also trying to challenge you.
I'm trying to say,
well,
you know,
really knowing that you don't know is,
first of all,
that's,
that's the Socratic,
that's the central Socratic insight because only,
and not, not knowing it the way, you know, two plus two equals Socratic insight, because only, and not knowing it the way you know
two plus two equals four, but like, you know, Ivan Illich knew he was going to die, right? Knowing
that is the thing that grounds and makes possible Socratic humility. It makes possible wonder,
and wisdom begins in wonder. So the gift you have out of this, the positive aspect of not knowing is your capacity
to find this wondrous and to find it that it calls to you and calls you beyond yourself.
If you knew all of this, you'd be static and dead. But you are capable of awe and wonder precisely
because you recognize that you don't know and you know it and you take it seriously. But that's,
again, I'm trying to
get you to see, right? You have to put the two aspects together. Yes, there's times when I feel
that too, you know, like, you know, I wish I was as well-read as that person. I wish I was as mature
as that person. And you can get down. But then I realize, but the part of me that's making me down,
I can aspect shift it. And that's the part of me that can be transformed. Oh, I don't know.
And that's good.
Because not knowing makes me responsive to other people.
Makes me responsive to the world.
Makes me capable of falling in love with other people
and falling in love with the world.
Because if I can't find them wondrous,
I'm not going to fall in love with them.
Yeah. yeah i will speak out of my own experience and intuition it's not an area where i have expertise unlike john so i i will speak as if what i am saying were facts but it's just how i see it okay
it's grammatically it's easier to just make statements and not keep on adding
disclaimers all the time. So what I think is this, you will always try to get out of this situation
through a paradigm of victory. So you will achieve victory in some kind of conceptual
wrestling match against yourself.
But you will get out of this, in fact, through a completely different paradigm, a paradigm of surrender to what you are, to what is the case about you.
Now, this may sound as bad news, but it's not, because that surrender, when it's authentic,
that surrender, when it's authentic, it comes hand in hand with a lot of loving kindness and acceptance towards yourself. The judgments you pass on yourself sort of dissipate, not because
they are resolved by choice, but because those values are seen through. It's like Nietzsche's transvaluation of all values.
So it's not like one side of the equation will achieve victory.
It's the very fight will be seen through.
And that seeing through has the quality of a kind of an exhalation,
a surrender with a lot of comprehension, understanding,
and loving kindness towards
yourself, which sort of transcends those paradigmatic values of what you should be as
opposed to what you think you are, how you should behave as opposed to how you think you behave.
You come to a place where you are what you are. You're lazy? That's okay.
Laziness is part of you. It doesn't need to be judged constantly. It may surprise you because
of what people perceive as my production. I'm an extraordinarily lazy person. But I stopped fighting my laziness.
I kid you not.
This is factually true.
I am a very lazy person.
Today, for instance, I had a whole lot of things to do.
But I gave me the excuse that I had a long debate at six.
So I did absolutely nothing today.
The difference between you and me is that,
although I used to be very much like you,
I'm not saying that I'm ahead of you. I'm in a different place. The place where I am now is,
okay, I've been very lazy today. It's fine. It's just the truth of the moment. It's what happened
at that point in time. I'm not going to drive myself nuts by judging myself. There was a time I caused
myself tremendous agony. I made a 30-second stupid mistake. I tried to
remove a siren from an alarm system in my house knowing that it was not
deactivated. Knowing full well it had a safety mode and it would go off.
But I thought, well, it goes off, I only need 10 seconds to pull the batteries out, it's okay.
Well, it went off and gave me terrible tinnitus.
I have tinnitus in both ears that sound like a dentist's drill at 3 meters distance, day and night.
And it has driven me to the point of planning my suicide twice for 30 minutes or so now i went nuts against myself when that happened you know i looked at the mirror and you were so
bloody stupid you know that was going to happen look at what you did, you asshole. Now, that dissipated too.
It doesn't come as a victory.
It's like you transit into another way of being that you don't achieve,
you don't secure through a paradigm of conflict and fight.
You sort of just allow yourself to slide into it.
It's very hard to describe.
But the good news is there is a place of peace that is almost inevitable to arrive at, even if you
arrive at it 30 seconds before you die and you are already in your deathbed.
Usually people are forced into that place through major life dramas, a job
loss, a divorce, a death of a loved one, some major thing that sort of shakes the
edifice of your narratives, which sort of overwhelms your ego, your ability to try to be
in control or to pretend that you are in control. And once that ability is taken out and you stop
fighting, you sort of slide into this place of acceptance, this transvaluation of all values
in which, you know, the judgment of yourself sort of goes away and you are just living in service
of your daimon. And my daimon is not a Socratic daimon. It doesn't tell me what not to do.
It tells me pretty explicitly what to do. So I have a particularly severe diamond. And I live in peace with this paradigm of surrender and slavery.
My coat of arms has a chain.
And I added that to symbolize the fact that my life is in a wonderful condition of permanent slavery.
Slavery towards what nature wants to do through me.
A sort of complete giving up of the paradigm of control.
I'm not in control.
I have never been in control, by the way.
And it's all right.
And there is no point in judging me.
Who am I to judge me?
There is a form of arrogance built into self-judgment.
What's happening is what's happening.
What you are is what you are.
Laziness has its place.
If it becomes compulsive and addictive, then it's something else. What's happening is what's happening. What you are is what you are. Laziness has its place.
If it becomes compulsive and addictive, then it's something else.
And then John can tell us what happens there.
But this shadow side, the shadow of laziness, the shadow of anger that we try to repress,
they have their moment. They have their moment of expression so long as they don't become dysfunctional.
That paradigm of acceptance makes space for all that.
And at some point you look back and you see, you know, my life went just like the way it
went.
And that was nature.
And it couldn't have been any other way.
And the proof of it is that it was the way it was.
I mean, Bernardo, you're sounding more and more like a Tai Chi player to me all the time.
Slingerland has a good book around this
entitled Trying Not to Try
about how you see this thing
within Taoism, Buddhism,
I think perhaps also within Islam,
properly understood its notion of surrender too,
because that's what Islam literally means.
But, yeah, this idea of, and I've tried to,
because what you're trying to, yeah, it's interesting,
because you're both trying and not trying.
I mean, if I just sit on the couch, I'm not doing Tai Chi.
But if I get up and I say, I'm going to make myself get into the flow state,
I'll never get there.
So you have to do this finesse thing where you open yourself up,
but you have to let something take shape within you.
But you don't just let it impulsively.
That's why I keep using Pascal's term.
Instead of the spirit of geometry, the spirit of finesse, like it's a finessing kind of thing in which you really have to, in Iris Murdoch's things, you really have to give things their just attention, the attention that they properly deserve.
And figuring out the wisdom of how much attention to give something and finesse it. I think that's a big
part of maturity and wisdom. And that's what I meant by when I talked about Philea Sophia rather
than Philea Nikea. Plato consistently contrasts them, you know, and the people that are lovers
of wisdom as opposed to the people that are lovers of victory, even over themselves. And so I just think that that was beautifully well said.
And I don't know if you do anything from the Taoist tradition,
but you certainly have a sensibility that would open you up to those practices,
I think, very readily.
Probably. I have no background in this thing so i'm just speaking from from where i am
the quality i sense in it is the quality of tuning it's more attuning to to the flow frequency and
energy of the moment without judging the energy of the moment so if the energy of the moment is
like it was for me earlier today laziness sit on the on the living room and
watch electronics videos all afternoon then i tuned into that without that energy of judgment
that energy of control trying to make it be different uh but it works the other way around
as well sometimes the energy of the moment is compulsive work and and i tuned into that too
it was the case a couple of days ago. So,
that was the energy of the moment. That's what the diamond wanted to do through me.
So, on we go. Let's go with it. Transvaluating all values. In other words, without passing the
judgment, whether it's good or bad, within reason, of course. I mean, I'm not going to surrender to
the energy of anger, which happens often enough, but I'm not going to give it free reign. The other day I wanted to do something
physically bad to a neighbor, but okay, I put limits on that. You know, it got close, it came
until he gave it, oh, no, no, no, no, you're not going to have free reign. You are there, I recognize
you exist, there is this anger inside me, but I will stop you here, and I will, no, you're not going to have free reign. You are there. I recognize you exist.
There is this anger inside me, but I will stop you here and I will go in and I will punch a dust bag.
I'll give it another outlet.
But I was still in tune with it.
I didn't repress that.
So I don't know.
It has happened naturally to me after my 45th year,
this sort of sliding into the energy of the moment and
not fighting it, you know, giving up the illusion that I was ever in control and just tune in to
the radio of nature within reason because I'm a reflective being after all. I will use my reflection
to establish the limits. I know you both have to go soon, but I just want to respond to that, please.
Yeah, sure, sure. There's just so much. I mean, if you heard me a minute ago, you're not a Tai Chi
doer. You're a Tai Chi player where the verb is to play music. And so getting into attunement and
playing music and achieving harmony between the different tunes that you're attuning to is very much the central Taoist metaphor.
So I think you might be a Taoist without knowing it, Bernardo,
but that's meant in affection.
Schopenhauer said that the closest thing,
the closest human activity to the intrinsic rhythms
and characteristics of the wheel was music.
The rhythm and flow, the ebb and flow of music
was the clearest representation, the closest representation
to the will as it is in itself,
as opposed to how it presents to us as representation.
So that has to do with that as well,
tuning yourself to the flow of nature that is expressing itself through you.
And your only choice is you either fight that or you let it happen.
I just choose now to not fight that.
I want to get to religion without a religion.
But before we do that, John, what age or what moment in your life was it that precipitated you feeling more at peace or surrendering to a part of yourself that you resisted?
Because right now, when I look at both of you, you're calm.
You seem to have a well-developed Weltanschauung.
Otherwise, I wouldn't have asked you on to this program.
And I think I lack almost all of those now. I'm also being a bit
harsh on myself when I say that, but I'm definitely not to the degree of peace that you are, you both
are. And I'm curious. So John, what age or what moment, what happened to lead you to where you
are now? Well, that's a different question from the question of where did i realize peace because i don't think peace is something i have going back to from i think peace is something that i
like maturity i should always be realizing um i mean that's the i mean this is similar to
uh the point that mcgee and barber make that one of the surest signs that somebody isn't wise is
if they say to you i am wise um and that has nothing to do with the semantics or the syntax of the proposition, right? And I think
the similar thing, you know, I almost think somebody who says that, you know, I'm perpetually
at peace, I'd be a little bit worried about that. I mean, the Buddha, for example, classically
warned against people who pursue meditation to get that sort of spiritually bypassed contentedness, because then they're useless. They're useless for other people.
They're useless for trying to reduce suffering, enhancing agency, improving connectedness,
meaning in life. So I just want to say that I don't want to put it into the having mode
way of understanding it. What put me on the path to trying to realize peace within and peace without,
if you'll allow me that, sort of the Jewish notion of shalom,
or Plato's notion of justice, which has a lot to do with that kind of peace and harmony,
not with our notion today so much.
What put me on that path was a loss and an encounter.
I was in a fundamentalist Christianity that now upon reflection traumatized me.
I'm grateful for it, though.
I've learned with therapy and time to be grateful to it because you know how you have a mother tongue language?
That Christianity was my mother religion.
that Christianity was my mother religion. It gave me the taste for meaning and wisdom and self-transcendence and fellowship and trying to get to a deeper aspect and the sacred
that I'm grateful for. But nevertheless, it seriously traumatized me. And then there was
experiences that brought me out of that. And I'm glad that that happened, but because it was my mother religion, it left a kind of hole in me, a gap.
And I did a lot of thrashing around and, you know, became sort of a very antagonistic atheist and, you know, that kind of thing.
But, and I don't want to make it sound like there's stages.
That kept going for a while, but I'm talking about sort of attenuation on a graph.
But in university, I encountered the figure of Socrates in Plato's work.
And it gave me an alternative way of thinking about how to cultivate wisdom, self-transcendence, fellowship, a relationship to what's sacred, moving into the depths.
fellowship, a relationship to what's sacred, moving into the depths. And that, for me,
put me on a course of seeking. Now, what happens in academic philosophy,
I think Bernardo will back me up on it, until very recently, the topic of wisdom drops off the table,
and you get into epistemology and metaphysics. And, you know, and I think Bernardo and I have shown that's valuable. And so I pursued it for its own sake,
but the hunger for what I saw in Socrates, and then later, as I just alluded to in Spinoza,
wasn't being met in academic philosophy. So I undertook Tai Chi, Vipassana meditation, metacontemplation practices, and I started to get a sense of the perspectival, participatory, procedural transformations of wisdom. And then,
lo and behold, fourth generation cognitive science was emerging, and people were starting
in psychology to talk about wisdom before they talked about it in philosophy, by the way.
And these two streams just started to, it was like a Kairos in the world.
The world was bringing these two together
and I needed them to come together.
And I just happened to be there at the right place
and the right time for that convergence without,
the convergence without and the convergence within met.
And that was for me, the Kairos, the turning point.
And that's the point from which I have not looked back.
I hope that answers your question.
Bernardo, what about you?
I don't think there was a specific point where a major transition happened.
I think it was a progressive sort of giving in to what is.
I still suffer from a lot of anxiety. So taking my cue from John,
let me highlight this. I take it for granted that we all suffer. So sometimes I don't emphasize
this, but I don't want to come across as somebody spiritually enlightened because I'm anything but. And I mean it when I say it.
I suffer from anxiety, but the difference is I don't fight with it anymore that much.
When anxiety is there, anxiety is there.
And before, there would be multiple layers of fights and meta-fights
and meta-meta-fights against the anxiety.
Should I be anxious or not?
I'm wasting my time by being anxious.
I don't have a reason to be anxious.
So how do I make myself not be anxious?
Oh, that thing, you know, it's mushrooms.
That didn't stop completely,
but it's a lot less present.
There is an easier sort of, okay, this is the energy of the moment, I'm anxious,
okay, I'm anxious. How did that happen? I think suffering has a lot to do with it. Suffering has
a lot to do with insight, with becoming more mature, because it's the one thing in nature
that makes you stop and re and reevaluate your narratives.
Because if you're not suffering, then you're living an Epicurean life, which is irresistibly unexamined.
Why would you stop and examine it? You're having fun.
You're having a ball.
So there is something about suffering that is directly tied.
something about suffering that is directly tied, I would say even an enabler of insight and maturation, because it forces you to stop and think, because your game is not working.
Something is going wrong in the game you're playing. Something is wrong in your narratives,
in your values, somewhere. Something is not right. And it's that consistent undermining that suffer puts you through, like water against
a rock. You know, it doesn't kick the door open in one go, but over the years, it softens you,
like it softens a rock. It makes you less angular, more roundish. There is more nuance,
more roundish um there is more nuance more more subtlety more finesse as as as john put it and less internal fight um i wouldn't be able to tell you a precise moment but uh it happened
happened through suffering yeah for sure yeah and and it and it is happening it it's a verb it's it's not a noun
it's not a place you arrive at it's a path that uh that you accept to to allow nature to pursue
through you um and i say this more or less metaphorically i don't say this in a religious
sense i'm not saying that i'm controlled or some spirit incarnated in me. I'm trying to convey the feeling of it through metaphor.
And the feeling of it is the feeling that you are not in control.
It's just that you are not fighting with the rhythm and flow of nature
as it wants to go through you at that moment.
What I could tell you is that until I was when I was 32
I was promoted to
director position in the company I was working for
which is a major company
it's Europe's top 50
it's in the footsie
major major company
if that company stopped existing today
there would be no new electronics
for five to ten years.
And at 33, I was director,
probably the youngest at the company at that time.
And that was the peak of my adaptive self.
The adaptive self is that personality
that has found a way
to secure a place in the world for themselves
despite all the shit that you go through like losing my father when i was 12 and you adapt
to the circumstances and you create a way for you in the world the adaptive self is a tool to get
there and it reached the peak when i was 32 towards 33. And it was at that moment when something
happened, I thought I had found, well, I found a growth in the person who was then my wife. I found
a growth in her breast. And it took two weeks for doctors to rule out cancer. But in those two weeks,
I was confronted with the reality that although my
adaptive self ticked every box that it had set for itself when I was 12, like these are all the
goals I achieved in my life. Although it was extraordinarily successful, at the end, I was
not in control of anything and the carpet could be pulled out of my feet the next moment and it can happen now i
can get i think i mentioned to you last time we can get a phone call in the next 30 seconds that
will destroy my life as i know it now so that happened and that was the moment of awakening
that was the first oh shit you know and from that point 33 until until 43, 44, say, thick 10 years, that's when this transition happened.
And in that process, there was a lot of anxiety, a lot of inner fight.
But recently, it has gotten a lot better for some reason.
But all I can tell you is that it's an ongoing process that I didn't achieve.
I slid into.
And I would probably have slided into it kicking and screaming.
The difference is once I was sliding, I figured I can't stop the slide anyway.
So let's see where it goes.
Bernardo, can I ask you a question?
Sure. Because like one of the reasons why I've been trying to come up with this,
work out this notion of participatory knowing is again, to try and get out from a purely active
or a purely passive epistemic and ontologic existential stance, right? You know, the romantic,
I just make it, the empiricist, I just receive it. And my experience is these processes,
we have, you know, there's similarities. That's what I try to get at with the idea that I
participate in it. I'm not just sort of passively receiving, and I'm not making it happen. It's,
again, this trying not to try. I'm trying to, like, the metaphor I use is like becoming someone's
friend. I can't make it happen.
I can't, you're my friend, right?
I can't just sort of like, okay, be my friend, right?
But, right, I have to participate in it, right?
And so I'm trying to not, I'm not only trying to make an epistemological point about participatory
knowing, I'm trying to give people a concept by which they can understand how to get into
right relationship
with these kinds of pathways.
Does that land for you?
Does that resonate for you?
Absolutely.
Look, I don't have a recipe, as I'm sure you're not asking for one either, because it's a
naive way to go about it.
But to me, it went hand in hand with a form of self-knowledge and self-acceptance, which
was intimately tied to my view of what reality is.
These two things were not separate from me.
So that's why I keep on insisting on the importance
of a plausible ontology that's conducive to this.
Because for me, it was indispensable.
Because the way I'm put together,
my intellect is the bouncer of my heart.
If I do not have a plausible intellectual hypothesis to ground whatever I'm pursuing, I shut myself off from it.
And there was a lot of shadow acceptance.
Look, I never said this because I was never asked, but I will volunteer this now to probably surprise the vast majority of the audience.
volunteered is now it'll probably surprise the vast majority of the audience a big part of my shadow was vitriolic criticism of woo woo paranormal new age cosmic mind all that stuff
i was so caustic about that i would jump to criticism so quickly i would be so critical of all this stuff in my
20s and 30s um it required a sort of involved years-long intellectual process for me to accept
this because i needed the intellectual plausibility but it was not the only game there was an emotional opening to that softer side of myself
that i'm giving expression to right now if you met me 10 years ago i would have very little empathy
i would be very black and white my imtp score in a personality test my T score was the maximum possible score.
I've answered every question in a way that tilted me to T.
The evaluator, I was doing that for a company,
the evaluator looked at that and thought,
you are the first perfect T, perfect thinker.
Thinking over values everything for you.
He said, I was the first to score a perfect score on the T,
could not have been a higher um
and so that was my conscious self uh my my adaptive self everything was thinking because
you know it helped helped shut away the trauma of my father's loss it helped so much it was such a
brilliant adaptive move that had its place but then it no longer had its place.
And opening up to those other psychological functions was a process of shadow acceptance for me.
A very difficult process of shadow acceptance because suddenly I was becoming everything I was critical of
yeah not to an extreme but you know to to even dip my toe in those waters was like
what am I doing and I still have it I still have it secretly I still am invited to and last week
I was invited to to an online conference and I I really had to hold myself back
because my shadow side was screaming
about the style, the language
that other people were using.
I was like, come on, get a grip.
Stop this.
Stop this bullshit.
Which, of course, is not the fact of the matter.
Those people have their perspective.
They have their journey.
They have their path. but integrating this in a way that doesn't go
to extremes either way uh was was was difficult it's a it's like an onion it never ends and there
is always a new layer of acceptance of yourself acceptance of the world i call it the ball of
string the ball of string. The ball of string.
You're always unwinding it
and it seems like it's never going to change.
It's endless.
When you think you got there,
then, oh, no,
then comes the next thing.
Look at this now.
And you go, oh, shit,
it's even worse than I thought.
There's so much convergence
between your story and mine on that point.
I mean, I specifically took up,
I only described the light side of it. I
didn't describe the shadow side of it. I specifically took up the Tai Chi and the
Buddhism and everything because that was me opening myself up to the woo-woo and to kinds
of knowing that weren't computational thought and argumentation for very similar reasons.
And it changed me from behind.
It changed me from my blind side.
I didn't put it folkily present,
but that's what happened in the process.
I think that's always how it happens.
It doesn't happen under your control.
No, no.
So I just wanted to share with you that I resonated with what you said about that because it's something very similar for me.
And I now have garnered the reputation of the person.
I suppose in this channel, I seem much more the positivist, but I'm often in other things.
I'm the person who talks about all the woo that other people don't want to talk about.
So, yeah, I wrestle with that. I wrestle with something similar. And I wrestle with how to,
you know, how to separate, you know, critique, which, you know, anybody who's advocating position
should be open to critique and discussion from, you know, that destructive smasher that wants to just smash it down. It's like, okay,
here's how I respond. But part of responding is to try and genuinely listen, which is often very
challenging for me because I grew up having to listen to the word of God and the word of my
parents. And so my reactance to that is I'm going to speak
and I'm going to speak monologically
and I'm going to overwhelm people with my speaking.
And one of the shadow reasons why I'm taking up
this whole Dialogos project is to learn,
no, no, no, you don't want to be a monologue.
The Cartesian monologue monadic mind
is what got us into this problem.
You want to, and if you're going to really enter into a
dialogical mind, then listening matters as much as speaking. But that's been very challenging for me
because listening is often triggering a sense of vulnerability to authority and to dictation.
And I'm playing on both senses of the word dictation there.
both senses of the word dictation there.
Yeah, I recognize that.
And it never ends in the sense that to this day,
if you look at how I articulate my own views,
I articulate them purely on the basis of reason and empirical evidence.
So you still see that my shadow, although I accept it, it's there.
And that's what I think is important that people who are in the paradigm of fight, they don't understand.
To incorporate the shadow doesn't mean that you killed the shadow.
No.
You sort of accept its expression.
And a big expression of my schedule, you see my work. My work is purely
on the, everything I do, I argue on the basis of reason and evidence, 100%. And I am fully
aware that that's not the whole story. I'm fully aware that there is a lot of intuition,
that there are aspects of reality that do not comply to Aristotelian logic. Why
should they? Why should the set of natural axiomatic statements of a monkey be such that
they encompass the whole of reality, right? Of course not. So I'm keenly aware that introspective
insight, intuition, feeling, these count as much to build up one's worldview
or more, maybe they count more than reason and evidence, but I am the way I am. I have my shadow
and my shadow needs to go through this purely on the basis of reason and evidence. I had private
exercises about integrating my shadow. One paper i published in a in a technical journal
the journal of consciousness studies one of the main philosophy journals
in the world today you got the paper there you have a phd um i made a point i usually use the
words extended mind or universal subjectivity something academic and neutral in that paper i thought i'm
going to do an exercise here i'm going to use the words cosmic consciousness which were the words
that used to give me shock like oh yeah yeah yeah yeah i made a point of putting it there um yeah
and it was accepted uh the rest is history but I sort of on purpose made my life more difficult to sort of, you know, embrace the process I was in.
So I wrote about cosmic consciousness.
I had to look in the mirror and say, I published a paper in which I talk about cosmic consciousness.
What are you going to do now?
Are you going to shoot yourself in the head?
No, it's done.
It has happened.
So that was part of my own exercise.
That's such a great story.
Thank you for sharing that.
I've done similar things, but that's really precious.
Thank you.
That's really wonderful.
I'm happy that you can now, like, apprehend it mostly through a humorous lens
rather than, you know, the tension that was at the time, no doubt, when you were doing it.
There's two tensions.
There's two tensions.
There's always a new layer.
Yeah, there's the humor, which also helps a lot, I think.
I mean, it's really conducive to cognitive flexibility and insight.
That's another thing that the West needs to, just to throw out a random, not totally random thought, and this aligns with the stuff I talk about in Loserios play.
We need to figure out how to reintegrate humor back into spirituality.
That's part, again, of that separating the air from the earth.
And the fact that, you know, somebody once pointed out, you know, there's no humor in the Bible.
That's a very odd thing.
I asked someone this. did Jesus make any jokes?
So not that we're recorded. Now, I doubt that he didn't, because I mean, when you actually get
closer, you know, approaches to stage figures, they are, I mean, Socrates has a lot of humor
running through him. And there's all this stuff going on. And he does wordplay and all kinds of
humor. He could be more funny, but nevertheless, but I think of somebody like Kierkegaard and the humor running
through his work is just, you can't separate the philosophical and the spiritual project from the
humor in Kierkegaard. And Kierkegaard said something really interesting about these two
figures. He said, I follow Jesus, but Socrates is my teacher.
And so, and I really resonate with that in some important ways. But I think, you know,
I want to, I'm commending Bernardo, and I'm recommending, and myself included, that we try to reintegrate the spirit of humor into our spirituality, because of all of the work about how
much humor, right, how much it integrates
different kinds of knowing, how much it facilitates cognitive flexibility, how much it opens you up to
other person's perspective, affords insight. The fact that we've kept that out of our spirituality
is only detrimental, is only detrimental. And if you remember in the name of the rose,
this was actually one of the central topics. Remember, the document that was being kept hidden and people were being killed about was Aristotle's treatise on laughter.
Right. And that's what had to be kept out at all costs.
And I think Echo was pointing to something really important there, that until we can properly reintegrate the spirit of humor with our spirituality, I think we're still seriously
truncated in our ability to develop a sensibility that is properly, or at least maybe even optimally
responsive to the meeting crisis. So that's why I was glad to see the humor mixed with that.
Because people can relate those events and they can go back into that.
Yeah, exactly.
Your eyes did that.
They can go back into that moment of like, ah, right?
But the fact that it was so spontaneously woven with humor, I just wanted to commend
that and recommend that to other people.
And humor is also something you have to participate in.
You can't make it and you can't just wait for it to happen, right? You have to participate in you can't make it and you can't just wait for
it to happen right like you have to participate in it you have to slide into it the way uh bernardo
says yeah at some point you go through this so many times that uh you know your your self-opinions
and your your opinions in general get shattered so many times that it becomes very difficult to take yourself without humor.
That's what I meant when I told you last time, Kurt, to don't take yourself too seriously.
Take life seriously, but yourself less so.
It has to do with that.
If we take ourselves too seriously, it becomes too tight.
You know, the process becomes too hard.
There's no point doing that john you mentioned the meaning crisis and the way i wanted to end this was to talk about a religion
without a religion which is your term john but what i mean is that it seems like we've lost
when i say we i mean modern people modern people who value the intellect tend to disparage God and disparage traditional religion.
But then there's this whole.
And then even Richard Feynman said that one of the most important questions, if not the most important question, is where do we go?
What's the modern church?
We can't just go back to church.
You can't simply believe.
You can't just pray to a statue of Mary.
I don't even think you should because that's like an idol.
So I don't know how Catholics get around that.
It's another issue.
But either way, what do we do?
So, John, do you mind talking about that a bit?
And then, Bernardo, I'd like to hear your thoughts.
This is more about speculation.
There's no disagreement.
It's almost like you're building something together.
This is more about speculation rather than there's no disagreement.
It's almost like you're building something together.
Well, I wanted to say that a significant aspect of what I mean, a dimension of what I mean by the religion that's not a religion is what has been happening here.
The kind of dialogue that is not just debate, the kind of dialogue that's, you know, that has poesis in it and logos in it and not just logic in it.
And so that's important. So when I'm talking about the religion, so the reason I use a contradiction is because I'm trying to break out of the way in which we've locked ourselves into
an inappropriate sort of exclusivity. But I want to say one caveat that's really important.
I think it's completely empirically justified in terms of the demographic to talk about
the nuns, N-O-N-E-S.
These are people who officially, who say on census, and apparently sincerely, that they
have no, they do not belong to any religion.
Okay?
Now, it's a growing group and it will soon be the majority.
That's the demographic fact.
Now, it's a growing group and it will soon be the majority. That's the demographic fact. I do not want to simply dismiss, because I get into good faith in both senses of the word, discussions, even dialogos, the attempt to get inner peace and to see, to get ontological depth perception. And so I, I, I, I never intended the claim to be everybody's in this. Okay. I want it. I want that very clear. I think if people are,
you know, be able to cultivate wisdom and virtue and sensibility, you know, transcend all the stuff we've been talking about
within their religion. I don't want to in any way throw a stumbling block in front of them.
But back to the point, there is the demographic fact that church allegiance is even now starting
to decline in the United States of America. That's undeniable. And Europe is predominantly non-religious
by demographic and things like this. Okay, so there is a group of people, and this has been
growing, and that's the people I'm trying to address. I also hope, and I've told that this
is the case, that the work I do helps people who are within a religious tradition find more meaning and wisdom within it. But I think it's the case that
the nuns are a large and growing demographic, especially in the developing world. Okay.
Now, the thing we shouldn't think, still speaking demographically, is they're all Sam Harris
atheists.
That's not.
That's not what's going on.
Are some of them that?
And I say that because I want to challenge the idea that it's primarily just intellect
that makes people go into the nuns.
It's not intellect in our narrow, truncated, suffocated sense of intellect right now.
Some of it is.
But most of these people
readily and reliably and enthusiastically describe themselves as spiritual but not religious.
And the thing about that is the fact that that is so pervasively said and so pervasively valorized
and so little thought is given to what the hell does that actually mean, right?
In any kind of coherent fashion indicates what's going on with these people.
So what does that mean?
Well, that's the point.
It means something like an inchoate sense that they want to deal with self-deceptive,
self-destructive patterns.
They want to come to a more inner alignment. They
want to be more in touch with reality. They want to be more connected to other people. They want
more meaning in life. They want more wisdom. They want to be able to see, and they don't use this
word, but I would make the case that that's what they're talking about. They want to see virtue in
themselves and in the world, right? And I think that's why we have the issue, and I'm not taking
a stance on this politically, but we have the issue. And I'm not taking a stance on this
politically, but we have the whole phenomena of virtue signaling that expresses a hunger in our
culture. Wherever you stand on the woke pseudo-religion, there is a hunger that's being
expressed there. Why do we need virtue signaling? Because we're hungry for it. We want to see it
in ourselves and other people, but we don't want to go through the transformations, the suffering that's required.
So these people are, that's what they mean.
They want to do this, but they don't find, and this I think is much more important than disbelief.
They don't find for political reasons, for experiential reasons, for idiosyncratic reasons, for reasons of trauma,
for moral reasons. They don't find the religions relevant. That's the main judgment. It's not falsity. It's irrelevance. I want to use a Jamesian idea here, right? The religions aren't
viable for them. And simply trying to convince them that religion is belief is often, it's extremely clumsy
because that's not the basis of the rejection.
And so what they mean is, I find those things irrelevant to satisfying this need, but this
need needs to be satisfied.
And I'm not clear what this need is. So what I'm going to
do is I'm going to do this autodidactic eclectic search for practices and beliefs and images and
groups of people and what they basically do, what spirituality means in practice, even though they
won't say this, and there was a very good argument essay about this, is spirituality means the
religion of me. It means my religion.
It means what I've done. Remember, not all religions are worship-based. So you have to
give up that Abrahamic, right, ethnocentricity. What they're doing is they're cultivating an
ecology of practice that's trying to help them engage in self-transcendence, enhance connectedness,
more inner peace, more contact with what's real,
including the reality of other people, right?
Get some kind of virtue into their life.
But they suffer from the fact that,
they suffer from any project that is driven primarily
in an autodidactic, fragmented fashion.
And so they are easily prey to both internal and external
compulsive manipulation. Because, you know, my student, my RA, he's not my colleague,
Jensung Kim, he's done research, you know, that, and let me say the whole thing,
because the whole thing is important.
If you compare people who are within a religious tradition to people that are outside a religious
tradition, and you compare them by our best sort of measures on wisdom, and we are developing such
measures, by the way, the people within the religious traditions do better. That's an
empirical thing. However, however, there's no difference between the various traditions.
It just matters that you belong to one.
Right. So that's why I keep saying, and this goes with arguments made by Stephen Batchelor,
right, when he talks about Buddhism, what's called belief. Because we have reduced
religio, that sense of connectedness to belief, and even belief originally meant to give your
heart to something, but we've reduced it to the insertion of beliefs. We think, well, all of these
systems, look at how much they're in conflict at the belief level. But it turns out, I don't want
to say that not having beliefs, it would be functional. I'm not saying that. But what I'm
saying is, it's clear that the functionality for the cultivation of wisdom isn't found in the
semantic content of the propositions.
And I agree, and I'm going to reinforce it.
I agree with Bernardo's point that you can't situate a wisdom ecology in a vacuum.
It has to be situated in an affording worldview.
And I totally acknowledge that.
But what I'm trying to say here is, right, they're trying to do this, back to the nuns,
in a, you know, you're reinforcing the very Cartesian, monologic, monadic, individualistic
frame and the propositional tyranny, right, and all the proclivities we all, myself included,
share for self-deception.
All of that's just
getting reinforced by that religion of me. And of course, one of the pervasive kinds of things it
leads to is spiritual bypassing and narcissism. And those are, I mean, Trungpa wrote a good book
about this. Spiritual materialists in the socioeconomic virtue sense of materialism, not in the ontological sense.
Spiritual materialists are the worst. I mean, they're the worst of all. They're, right? I mean,
elite, right? Because all they want to do is show you their trophy shelf of all their wonderful
experiences that show how unique they are and how the universe is uniquely caring about them. And it's like, wow, that's harder to
get through than somebody who's, you know, buying the car to become mature, because at least that
person, right, is confronting some frustration and suffering. You can get to them, but this
person over here can have the Buddha talks about, you know, the contentedness of the cabbage
that would just prevent them from the, you know, the cabbage that just prevents them
from the Kierkegaardian realization
of that they are always one step away
from the precipice of despair.
And I thought it was...
Bernardo jumped in at some point soon.
Well, I just wanted to commend Bernardo
on something that I forgot to commend him on,
which is I have also been in that place
where suicide seemed the alternative for me.
I also suffer from an ears in my left ear. So I also have not heard silence in decades. And it
also comes with attacks of vertigo. So I just wanted to express camaraderie with you,
share it on that.
Thank you, Joe.
So Bernardo, about religion without a religion,
what do you see as the desiderata of it
or the criteria or the checks that need to be ticked?
I think our loss of religion goes hand in hand
with our loss of the meaning of certain words.
Because, you see, we don't experience reality directly.
We sort of tile the world around us with a mosaic of conceptual signs, right?
Words.
We leave the narrative that we tell ourselves about what we are living.
So words, in a sense, are important.
And we've lost the meaning of so many words. We've lost the meaning and this, I'm not taking a
cheap shot at homosexuals by saying this, I'm certainly, I'm a defender of
homosexuals if you read my site, but we've lost the full meaning of the word
gay for instance. The meaning, the original meaning of the word gay is spontaneous
joy. But now, sort of linguistically, only homosexuals have spontaneous joy. Is that fair?
No. We lost something. We lost the meaning of the word metaphysics. That which is more primary is
behind and precedes physics. Now it has become synonym for spiritual woo-woo.
And we've lost the meaning of the word religion.
Religion comes from the Latin religare,
to reconnect with the source or with transcendence,
with the ground level of reality from which the life force arises.
But because of institutionalized religion,
now religion has become synonym with morals,
a moral code, dogmas, and beliefs.
Where is the rejoining?
Where is the relinking?
Where is the religare?
Where is the religion? And the religion sort of got washed away.
I mean, look at the Vatican.
They can get, and I say this with some despair because I care about the total collapse of Christianity in the West.
And I've been to the Vatican, invited for events at the Vatican.
And I was growing hopeful over the last couple of years.
But now look at what they are doing.
They use their airtime to talk about arbitrary morals
and to insist on a, how to say,
calcified interpretation of scripture.
So they contribute to this loss of the meaning of the word religion. Religion is about
liturgy. It's about the symbolic ritual that points at a truth that cannot be captured in a
conceptual framework. Because why would the cognitive apparatus of a primate evolved on
planet Earth be broad enough to capture every salient truth about
reality in its own closed conceptual system? Why would that be the case? Of
course it's not the case. There are relevant salient truths that cannot be
said, it cannot be worded, that cannot be expressed through a closed semantic and
syntactical system. And I think what religion does is to use an arsenal of symbols of liturgy
to sort of point at that, such that you can have a direct experience of it once you're shown the
way, once you're given a hint, a set of rituals that sort of puts you in the suitable frame of
mind that is conducive to making that final leap yourself. But that's not
what we see. That's not what we see being done by institutionalized, by the
religious institutions that are supposed to nurture religion. Especially after
the Reformation, you know, you go to a Protestant church, it's fashioned exactly like a tribunal.
The preacher dresses like a judge.
And even Catholicism, which still holds on to symbolism,
especially Eastern Christianity, which is not Catholic,
but they hold on to those symbols. But even they, the sermon is almost invariably a moral discourse, telling you how to live and telling God what to do.
Prayer has become, you know, we tell God what God should do.
I mean, where is the religare?
We've lost religion.
religion. So, in an effort to sort of recover that word, I would say, no, what we miss is religion,
not spirituality. We need religion. And I say this, I mean, I don't have the past you've had,
John, so I don't have that trauma or that code. Sure, sure. So I speak more freely about it.
Yeah, yeah, that's fine.
But notice that what I mean by religion is not what religion has de facto become,
because of the way it was institutionalized
for power reasons,
but what the word originally meant,
what the Latin word originally meant.
And I think we are in a tremendous lack of that in the West.
And I think that has a lot to do with the meaning crisis.
Because if you are relinked with that transconceptual source,
your relationship with yourself and reality is immediately influenced
and transformed by that link.
If you open that valve again.
It's a non-conceptual thing.
It's not something that you can put in words and explain rationally in a closed system.
You can't do that.
But it's life-changing, which conceptual systems are not.
And because we have such a long history of Christianity in the West, because
that's sort of built into, and I'll be a Jungian now, it's sort of built into the collective
unconscious now. I think the shortest path back to transcendence, back to that religare with
meaning, is through Christianity. But it has to be a Christianity of liturgy, not a Christianity of morals and beliefs and judgments.
Nobody is going to go to Sunday Mass to be judged,
to be told everything you're doing wrong,
and to hit the chest and say,
mea culpa, mea culpa, mea culpa, three times.
As Jung said, myths are living things.
They have to constantly be reinterpreted.
They have to grow. Andinterpreted, they have to
grow. And there are many departure points in Christianity for a sort of refreshing
of the Christian myth. So many, I mean Jung pointed out one that was very
recent to him, he died in 61 and this this point of departure was in 1950, in 1550, Pius XVI's elevation of the Virgin Mary to the Mother of God.
She was elevated to the position of sort of the fourth member of the Trinity, so to say.
And that brings in the feminine aspect.
There's something to be said about that.
There is a new departure point.
What happened to Job?
be said about that there is a new departure point what happened to job what god is that that is so unreflective that does does what he what he did to job when what does he tell us about the divinity
about mind at large whatever you want to call it about the what is that reflectiveness and what is our role as reflective beings towards God?
What are we supposed to do for the divinity as opposed to keep telling the divinity what to do for us?
You know what I mean?
That's another departure point.
How do we help God?
What is the meaning of our life in helping that which is transcendent to get to somewhere it apparently is desperate to get to.
These are all points of departure to refresh the myth and turn it plausible.
Because a myth, although it's never literal,
it has to be vaguely plausible in order to pass through the filter of the intellect.
And Christianity, because it has been frozen for 2,000 years, deliberately, since Constantine,
it doesn't refresh itself.
This is policy in the Vatican.
And if you talk to the authorities, to the powers that be in the Vatican,
it is their policy that it's the reliability of the tradition that makes Christianity unique.
That's their point of view.
But the consequence of that is that you ossify the myth.
You don't let it evolve and maintain its plausibility, maintain its life,
maintain its relevance to everyday life as a symbol pointing somewhere.
It has become so implausible, so ossified,
that it then turned into judgment,
morals, beliefs, and dogmas. And nobody goes to church for that. Nobody in their sane mind will go to church for being judged against ossified moral codes, arbitrarily defined
by a selective read of the scripture. Because you can read Scripture in a way that justifies nearly anything.
You just choose the book you read, and you can basically go in here,
read the Apocalypse, and have a sense about the Summum Bonum.
Let's have a look whether it's really pure goodness when you read that book.
And it was not for nothing that it was the most polemical book to be inserted in the Bible.
It was not for nothing that it was the most polemical book to be inserted in the Bible.
So I, to be honest, I sort of despair a little bit about the end of religion.
I think we need religion desperately.
What we don't need is a moral code, judgment, and a set of ossified beliefs. We need something dynamic that has life in it, that's not only outside, but sort of courses through us and informs our relationship
with ourselves and with that which is transcendent and imminent in the world,
that which is beyond Aristotelian logic, beyond language, beyond conceptual schemes.
logic, beyond language, beyond conceptual schemes.
So I think that was a beautiful point.
There's religare and religio, they're both contenders for the etymology, but they converge on the idea of binding back or binding together.
And so I just wanted to make it clear that there isn't a conflict in that, that I tend to use the term religio as opposed to religare,
but they converge anyway. So that's not a big issue.
The I was trying to capture that with,
I think with the notion of the religion, that's not a religion.
Cause I think religion has, has come to mean, you know, the set of beliefs,
the judgment and, and, and worship is understood as acquiescence in some sort of supernatural authority, etc.
Basically, all the things you were saying have ossified.
I think that is, and I try to trace out, there's a long history of how we got to that point,
where religion has come to mean that. And so, what I'm talking about is not religion in that sense,
but it's still religion. And the liturgy for me, the liturgy is, what I talk about is an ecology
of practices, a whole bunch of practices that are like an ecology.
They counterbalance, they coordinate, they constrain and afford each other to intervene
in our psyche in a dynamical and parallel fashion. Because, you know, one of the great lessons we've
learned from both pedagogy and from therapy is one-shot interventions into humans don't work
because they're so complex, self-adaptive that the system
will just readapt. And this is, I think, the great insight of Buddhism with the Eightfold Path.
No, no, no. What you have to do, and it's the reason why it's represented by a wheel
with shared spokes, there's a deep symbolism there. It's a self-rolling, it's a self-organizing thing.
And what you want is you want an ecology of practices that is as dynamically self-organizing
as the thing that it's being applied to, so that you have a shot, a hope of actually transforming
that really complex, recursive, multi-layered dynamical system that a human being is.
So what I'm doing is I'm trying to really expand the notion of what you meant by the liturgy,
a liturgical. There's a set of practices, and most of the symbols, here's why I use Corbin's notion, are not imaginary, they're imaginal. They're not pictures in our mind, they're ways
in which we enact and seriously play with the world. Just so readers, sorry, not readers,
listeners get a distinction. The imaginary is when I say picture a sailboat in your mind. That's different from
when a child picks up a stick and starts walking in a certain way and pretends that they're a Roman
centurion. They're not forming a picture in their mind. What they're doing is they're adopting a
certain way of configuring their agency and a
certain way of seeing the world so that they can train skills. Why do mammals seriously play?
Because that is the primary place in which we undergo development. And so what I think what
religions are often doing at the level of ritual, when they're creating ecology of practices,
is they're doing sort of imaginatively augmented
reality. You know what augmented reality is? When you project virtual reality onto reality in order
to see things like a heads-up display for a jet pilot or something like that. I think religions
do that. And I mean this as a cognitive scientific proposal. They do imaginal enactments so that they
can do imaginal augmentation of reality
so that they can, like the child, go through serious, we can go through serious,
both individually and collectively, and I think that's important, you know, development.
And again, I think this is part of the Frommian critique. Religion has degenerated into the
having of dogma rather than the developing of wise, virtuous people.
And they've confused that project, I agree with you, Bernardo, with moral pronouncements.
It's like, no, no, no.
Telling me over and over again that something is wrong.
That's like telling somebody in therapy, you don't want to do that anymore?
Stop it.
Stop it.
That's not therapy.
That doesn't help anybody.
Right?
Stop thinking these thoughts.
Yeah, yeah.
Stop doing that.
Right?
And so what I meant by religion by religion is trying to get all of that, if you'll allow me the metaphor,
all of that machinery of an ecology of practices and
imaginatively augmented serious play, right, homed in something that is free from all of
the dichotomies that struck back to the Axial Revolution, all the dualisms that I think not
only cut us off from each other, but cut us off
from the world and even from ourselves, and in a way that is also simultaneously responsive to
the fact that many of the mythological forms of the dualism have been undermined by the advancement
of science, right? We had the Copernican Revolution,
and then we had Darwin. We are being re-embedded. We are no longer pilgrims from a supernatural
realm. That's no longer a viable, and I mean it in James's sense, that's not viable for us.
Now, you can pretend all that science doesn't exist, and that's just, to my mind, spiritual
bypassing, and I think that'll translate into spiritual bypassing in the rest of your life. And I grew up with people that did that, and the
claims of certainty that just put the lie to, right, that had the lie put to them by the anxiety
riven nature of their lives, it's like, ah, right? We need to somehow come up, and this is part of why I'm talking to
you, right? We need to come up with a worldview, and I want to use this next word very carefully,
that properly homes our ecology of practices and our enacted imaginal augmentations of individual
social and ontological reality in a way that properly homes them,
that validates them, that gives them, as you said, that we can reliably point to,
there's a wise exemplar, right? There's a path that seems reasonable. And like you said,
it doesn't have to be any kind of equivalent to a scientific theory, but I agree with you. If it doesn't pass
the prima facie filter of plausibility, people are going to be, again, cut into this horrible
dualistic dichotomy against themselves, and therefore they're not going to get the inner
peace, the religio within and without that they are seeking.
100% agree.
Thank you both.
Honestly, thank you so much.
It was a pleasure for me.
I'm honored to have you both on.
And the audience, if you could see the live chat, the audience is overwhelmingly positive. I don't see a single negative comment thank you and where can the audience find out more about you john and then bernardo
john where can the audience find out more about you oh sorry i was just trying to take a look at the live feed. I don't have it up. I mean, the best place to get to what I think is my apex or most important project is Awakening from the Meaning Crisis.
And there'll be links to that.
I think if you took seriously what I just said about the exemplification of the logos,
I also have an ongoing series called Vo with Reveki where I try to do
this with people.
And then if you want to see the attempt to integrate the logos with
cognitive science directed towards a lot of these issues,
I have two series out there.
One's complete called untangling the world,
not that I unfold dialogically with Greg and Enriquez. And then a current one, which is on the nature of consciousness.
And so it's relevant to both of these discussions. And then there's one that's being released right
now called The Elusive Eye, capital I, with Greg Enriquez and Christopher Mastrofietro. Again,
a dialogical presentation of the cognitive science and the psychology and the existential philosophy
around this thing we invoke so much and we know so little about, which is the self. Well, what is
the self? What kind of entity is it? And how should we properly know thyself,
as Socrates would say.
He doesn't really mean your autobiography.
He means know what kind of thing a self is,
and that's why he often calls it also being a mortal,
a mortal, by the way.
So that's how people can reach me.
If you want to know my academic work,
just go on Google Scholar and put in my name,
and you'll get the stuff I published.
If you want, if you're interested in the meaning crisis and mythology interacting, I also have a book free online called Zombies in Western Culture, a 21st Century Crisis, which is how the zombie mythology, as Lou said, is the mythology of our time.
Because we argue that it's the mythology.
I did it with Chris Mastropietro and Philip Misovic.
It's the mythology by which the culture is expressing, not resolving, but expressing the meaning crisis right now.
Bernardo, where can they find out more about you?
What are you working on next?
I'm working for Essentia Foundation now, which is sort of a new platform in which I'm basically working to promote other people's work, not my own, but in this direction of a ontology of idealism and some form of objective idealism.
That's what I would point people to.
Go to EssentiaFoundation.org.
One word, EssentiaFfoundation.org one word essentiafoundation.org and about me just type my
name on google or go to bernardocastroop.com one word as well and bernardo i hope that there's an
opportunity for you and i to hang out in person at some point in in the future i would enjoy that
greatly i'd really enjoy that as well and talk about our favorite philosophers because you dropped a few names today and I was like, oh, I was itchy to talk with you about
Kikugo and a few others.
Okay.
Have a great night, both of you.
Oh, and for the people watching, if you would like to see more conversations
like this, please do consider going to patreon.com slash Kurt Jaimungal.
Every dollar helps. And there are many other theolocutions I'd like to have. So for example, what's coming up is Josje
Bach. Kastrup mentioned him. Josje Bach and Donald Hoffman. That's in the end of August.
And at some point, John, I would like to get you and I don't know if I can announce it because we're still working on it, but a special person.
Everybody knows now.
Okay.
What did it say?
Three hours and 40?
Four hours, two minutes, 49 seconds.
I don't know.
I've got six, nine, six, 3, 6, 3, 5.
Oh, that's fine.
Don't worry about that.
Don't worry about that.
Okay.
Okay.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks for doing this, Kurt.
Appreciate it.
Yeah, thank you very much, Kurt.
Thank you for staying up, Bernardo.
I know it's probably 10 p.m. there.
10 o'clock.
I have to have dinner.
Yeah, go eat, go eat.
I'm going to email you, Bernardo, and ask you some advice as to how i should speak
to rupert spiro because apparently it's a different mode to speak to him you mentioned that he's not
interested in analytical conversation so i'm gonna email you and ask you about that but but
contrary to a lot of the other spiritual teachers he can engage with it uh but it's not his he will try to
have you have the insights directly
as opposed to telling you what the
insight is
I'm looking forward to it
thank you
John many thanks
appreciate it again
you too Bernardo wonderful and I meant what I said
I hope at some point we can hang out together
in person that'd be wonderful.
It shall happen. It shall happen. I see it happening.
Good. Bye-bye.
All right, guys. Take care. Bye.
Bye-bye.
Just a second. It's not over. There's a bonus section of audience questions.
Could you ask about the paradox inherent in the trying not to do? In some states of being, you might be tone deaf. I feel sometimes
force is needed. I think the person is referring to Slingerlin's phrase, trying not to try,
which is not the same thing as trying not to do. There's a very important distinction there.
The idea is very, like, let me give you the example of, you can't just,
I'm going to go into the flow state right now. There we go. No, no, no, right? But that doesn't
mean you can just sit here and wait for the flow state to happen. What do you have to do? You have
to cultivate the finesse of learning how to get into the right relationship, and that means also
attitudinal and sensibility, so that there's a real possibility that flow will take shape.
This is why I try to use the notion of participation.
And repeatedly, it's, you know, and I understand it.
Like when you're sparring with people, like you're trying not to force it, right?
You're trying to actually flow with the person.
One of the best things to, if you're sparring with a it, right? You're trying to actually flow with the person. One of the best things to,
if you're sparring with a person,
is to compliment them.
That was a really good block
because what they then do is they monitor their blocking
and then they lose flow, right?
So, yeah, I get what you're saying
that the point about, you know,
sometimes you need force.
There's this notion in Tai Chi Chuan of Peng, which is I want to hold my arm as if water was flowing through it.
It's not rigid like this, and it's not limp like that.
It's like water's flowing through it, because what that does is it coordinates all the small muscles and the large muscles and brain-body coordination so that I can flow any inertial
force through it very, very effectively. And by the way, you enhance that through imaginal
augmentation. Actually practice imagining having water flow through your hand and then having
somebody press on your arm and know what the difference between resisting it with force
and resisting it with flow. Because there's a real felt difference and there's a difference in the functionality. So I understand, I think, I hope, I'm trying to be open, I'm trying to be
responsible. Sometimes you have to just keep going and I get that. But what I want to say is
one of the things, you have to give up the notion even of keep going as a willpower.
One of the most disconfirmed notions in empirical
psychology is the notion of willpower. It was actually seriously proposed by Bowen-Weister.
They initially saw, you know, there's sort of mental energy that we, like the ego depletion
that we have at reserve to just push ourselves through things. And then it turned out that
there's been just massive failures to replicate that. It doesn't look like that's the case. What seems
to be the case is what you want to do is develop a capacity to get more flexibility in your framing
of situations. So options open up to you. So that's the effort. The effort is in making yourself more
flexible and responsive, more liable to catch the flow. And the more frequently you do that,
the more frequently you will do it.
And that's the way you sort of persist. I'm sorry, I'm trying to speak almost as I would within a Tai Chi Chuan instruction. But it's very predictive of people who are trying to deal
with re-evaluate. It's predicted that those people will fail,
that they will fall into recidivism, right?
Let me give you an example.
I'm going to lose weight.
My willpower, you'll fail, right?
And in fact, I've lost 20 pounds on this diet.
Within five years, you'll be back to where you were, 95%.
I'm really confident in that prediction.
What is one of the things that tends to put people in the 5%? Joining a group of people who are also trying to lose
weight. That is a much more powerful predictor than you, right? And I'm not trying to insult
anybody. I was insulting myself there because I remember doing that kind of thing, right?
insulting myself there because I remember doing that kind of thing. Right. And so, yeah, you have to persist sometimes, but try to think of the persistence as flexibility and finesse and putting
yourself into right relationship with others as a way of keeping you going rather than you being
like Sisyphus pushing the rock up the hill. That's how I try to answer that question.
Okay, Bernard, i'll repeat the
question and by the way it wasn't queer dough it was mr chocolate cookie i can't add to what john
has just said all right okay so queer dough now this is actually queer dough's question
is the move toward veganism in our society an example of shedding of spiritual bypass
of thinking humans are special and supreme so bernardo look i think if we are to have a viable civilization
consuming a lot less meat and a lot more vegetables is a
indispensable element of the way out and there are a million reasons for this agriculture of animals is extremely inefficient you need a whole lot of water a whole lot of space
so it's a very inefficient way to produce proteins and calories it's a planet-wrecking way of doing
that not to mention the incredible amount of suffering that is inflicted
on higher animals with complete nervous systems because we treat them as products. So I think
the consumption of meat we engage in today is preposterous, it's outrageous, morally it's an
affront to our responsibility towards future generations and it is literally carcinogenic
towards us it's also unhealthy it's an indulgement of a a addiction that we do not want to give up
so i think something in the direction of veganism is indispensable. But can you remind me of the context of the
question again? Because that's not what he actually asked. Sure, yeah, sure. And just as an aside,
there's a great video by this YouTuber called What I've Learned that demonstrates that much
of the environmental claims against meat eating has been debunked. And I'll send you that after because it's surprising.
So is the move toward veganism in our society
an example of shedding of spiritual bypass,
of thinking humans are special and supreme?
No, I don't think so.
I don't even see,
I don't even quite see the motivation for the question.
I don't think reducing
the amount of meat we consume
is a sign
of any spiritual transformation. I think
it's a sign of reason. Good, old,
plain reason. If you want to do something good
to yourself, to others, to animals and the planet, you will consume
less meat. It's as clear- others, to animals and the planet, you will consume less meat.
It's as clear-cut, banal and unavoidable as that, I think.
John, do you have any thoughts to add to that?
Well, I'd like to see the debunking video. will have a lot of critical responses to it because I think the biomechanics of how many
people you can feed with wheat versus how many people you can feed with the cows that you fed
the wheat to is just like the cow has to use most of that energy to be a cow. So I'm not clear how
you can get out. That seems to me just to be a rock bottom, you know, bioeconomic fact that you're not going to be able to debunk.
So I want to say one of them is that most of the land that cows are on are in the land
that food cannot be grown on anyway.
And much of the time when they talk about the water that's used for a pound of meat,
that's rainwater, which would have come onto that land anyway.
And so there's many other there's many ways that the statistics that we know about that are alarming with regard
to meat production, speaking purely of ruminant animals, that has been debunked, or at least
highly contested. And I didn't know about this until just a month ago. Now that doesn't at all
cover the suffering of the animals,
which to me is the main point.
I don't like how they're treated.
I can speak from a personal experience.
We have a vegetable garden here at home.
The main patch is about 35 square meters.
We have different patches,
but the main patch is 35 square meters.
And every year we produce a lot more vegetables than we can eat.
I and my girlfriend.
And we distribute to our neighbors.
We are well known for this.
Around July, the food distribution begins here.
Now, in that same space, I perhaps could keep three chickens and eat their eggs.
There's no comparison.
When it comes to pound for pound, what I can use
that space for to produce vegetables is just incomparable to the equivalent using a lower
animal. I certainly could not have a cow in that space. The difference would be that you wouldn't
be growing a cow or a sheep or a chicken in that place where you could grow vegetables, but instead to do both.
But I'll send you the video.
Well, but, you know, look at Brazil.
Where are they growing cows?
Where there was a virgin rainforest before.
So to claim that that space cannot be used for anything else is a self-affirming question.
Because once you've destroyed the forest.
It's the idea that it's sort of unproductive because it's just laying there and we're not growing wheat on it.
We couldn't grow wheat on it.
That's to fail to see the whole intricate way in which the ecology works that supports the areas of land upon which we grow the wheat.
That's just a very atomistic appraisal.
Anyways, we're arguing in absentia.
We need to see the video.
And, you know, Bernardo and I are both,
we have our knives out.
And perhaps we should stop.
I do want to respond to the other part of the question.
Sure.
If I could be allowed.
Please.
I agree with Bernardo.
I think you can make a completely justifiable justification of veganism in some way along mammals. I don't eat octopus because they have the complex nervous
systems. They probably have the metacognition and the fluid intelligence that is similar enough to
mine that they, in some, I don't mean metacognitively, but they value their existence
in a way that's comparable to mine. And the mammals tend to be the most egregious for the
socioeconomic and ecological. And there's also the methane issues around the cows and stuff like
that. So I think you can make that move totally that way. And I agree with Bernardo. I think a
lot of people do make the move that way. I do think it's possible that there are people who also take up veganism as a transformative practice in which they are trying to get out of an anthropocentric way of being. I have interacted with those people.
people. I agree with Bernardo. I do not think that that is a requirement in order to be a vegan.
But do I think it's possible that people take it up as something, and I don't mean an insult either way, something analogous to kosher. Human beings have traditionally managed their diet as
a way of bringing around fundamental transformations. And one of the transformations that I think does
need to be, you know, realized today is getting out of a kind of, you know, unquestioned
anthropocentric worldview. And veganism, I know individuals in which they live veganism,
I think that's the right verb. They live veganism as a way of trying
to do something, in that sense, religious, afford a transformation of kind of a fundamental
transformation of their cognitive cultural grammar. They want to get out of an anthropocentric way of
being. And I think if people are doing it, I think that's also also justifiable um i think that's a justifiable
reason for taking up veganism and i would think of that as a i think you could make a good case
i'm trying to that that's a religious act as opposed to an act of socioeconomic or moral prudence
i don't know if bernardo wants to say anything that, but that's... I can see where you're coming from.
I'm not sure I agree, but I can clearly see.
Just to give you some background for why I said I'm not sure I agree.
I think the productization of life is a very serious problem.
Yeah, yeah.
But if you look at ancient cultures, they would kill a bison and eat the
bison. That could also be a form of religious expression if you respect the animal you killed
as a sacrifice to give you sustenance. So I think historically, you know, Abraham was asked to kill his son. The idea of sacrifice has been embedded historically as far as we can go.
So I wouldn't, my tendency is not to make anything fundamental about meat at a religious level.
What I think is fundamentally wrong is the productization of life
that I think is an affront
it's a disaster
that we should never have allowed to start
but now we've allowed it not only to start
but to develop and to become addicted to it
yeah I see that
I think you know the product
I think you call it the productification of life,
the commoditization of everything. I think that's part of the frommy and modal confusion.
I don't know if we're disagreeing. I think there is something to speak about
killing what you're going to eat. I think it has become too easy. And also the reverse,
eating what you kill. And eating what you kill. Exactly. It has become too easy. And also the reverse, eating what you kill. And eating what you kill, exactly.
It has become too easy to go to the supermarket and buy a slice of beef and think of it as a steak,
not as the muscle, bloody muscle of a living, breathing creature that had a high-level nervous system.
I think there is something to be said to the idea that if you want to eat meat, one,
you have to pay the integral cost. And the integral cost is many, many, many times higher
than what we are paying today. And two, if you really want it, then kill what you're going to
eat. Because killing is something that tie you up to that life you've taken forever, for all eternity.
And there is a form of respect, a form of anti-banalization when you are forced to kill what you're going to eat.
And in the old times, like 100 years ago, Europe of the 1920s, you know, to the chicken pan, take a chicken and kill that chicken.
And that process would be witnessed by the kids or kill a pig.
Have you ever seen a pig being killed?
It's a very, very noisy, very bloody, very long drawn out affair.
I think if you were forced to have to pay that price for your sustenance, I think it's valid
in principle to take a life, a hunter taking a life to sustain his family, because it forces
you a level of respect. It forces you an awareness of the cost for that life, of being robbed of it for for sustaining yours that i think makes the whole thing
harmonious again nature is not all a sea of roses and nature entails enormous sacrifices
the problem is that we get the benefit and we hide the sacrifice away from ourselves
and that is what i think is dysfunctional and we cannot feed 7.5 billion people
with meat
in a way that would do justice
to what I'm saying
you cannot have 7.5 billion people
go hunt a wild boar
there aren't enough wild places
and wild boars around
so I think because we have become so many
the only way
the only decent way out of it
is something very close to veganism.
Perhaps we can allow ourselves
the luxury of meat now and then
if we pay the actual price of it
instead of this fictitious price
we pay today,
which is not the integral price of meat.
That was very good.
Last question is from David.
What did you guys enjoy most about this conversation? That was very good. Last question is from David.
What did you guys enjoy most about this conversation?
Conversing, being in the presence of John and being in this dance.
Yeah. I mean, yeah, the appreciating, the real capacity to appreciate,
both in the sense of, you know, understand value and the increase in value. We use appreciate to mean all of those.
To appreciate the dance of theologos as an inherently valuable aesthetic,
independent from the victory of a debate.
I really enjoy that.
I genuinely enjoy that with Bernardo.
I share it with you completely.
Yeah.
For me, it's like sparring in martial arts.
I mean, the asshole is the person who, in sparring, tries to knock knock you out all the time because it's like, no, no, no.
That's not what we're doing here.
We're trying to help each other get better at something, right?
And you get into the flow state when that happens, and that's wonderful for both people.
And you grow, and the other person grows, and you grow through each other.
And all of that has so much value. And I think the value of that has been lost by the advers to exemplify the joy of participating in the flow of the dance of Dialogos, that's really important to me.
Exemplifying it more and more to people.
Right now, to my mind, I'm not saying this will go for all of eternity,
but right now, we can't get enough of that right now. We can't get enough of the aesthetically pleasing, this is Plato in me making it beautiful, the aesthetically pleasing presentation of the
dance of Diologos. We can't get enough of that right now. We need more and more of it all the
time. So I thank you, Kurt, for affording this and making it possible.
And lastly, before we recorded the podcast, I was feeling extremely nervous.
And so I asked John, who is an expert meditator, for some advice.
After this, I'm including an extra bit which happened directly before we went live,
particularly because people have already commented that this isn't a live stream. This is a love stream. And I thought you might get a kick out of seeing
the interactions between John and Bernardo. John, you may need to help me out right now
for one minute with some breathing exercises to calm me down. Can you take me through? I'm
honest for 30 seconds. Okay, so close your eyes. And what I want you to do is move forward a little
bit. So you feel off center forward forward and then a little bit back so
you feel off-center backwards. Now keep going back and forth slowly, a little less each time,
slowly zeroing in where you feel centered front to back.
Once you feel centered back and forth, now do the same thing side to side. Move to your left, then to your right.
Again, a little less each time until you zero in where you feel centered side to side.
Okay, now repeat the same thing with your head.
Back and forth, side to side.
so now when you feel centered just feel as everything's dropping down into your lower belly okay
thank you my friend you're welcome my friend critique was that well there are two critiques
one was from people who are unfamiliar with you john they're more bernardo fans they're like look
at john getting all worked up that's fine and another i personally like that i think that's
what made it engaging and the number two is yeah exactly i hope i hope i hope that i mean i aspire
that even if i get passionate or worked up, I'm never in any way insulting or disrespectful.
Not at all.
Nowhere near.
Oh, no, you can get a lot harder than that.
I come from the corporate world, 20 years.
I mean, my skin is thicker than a crocodile.
It's no problem.
It's important that we restate that.
I also feel affection for you, Bernardo.
So do I, John.
Yeah, so I want to make sure that's conveyed as well.
Yeah, but you don't need to pay special attention to it
or walk on eggshells.
No, just be yourself. It's fine. you