Jordan Peterson - Why study radical evil?
Jordan Peterson talks about the importance of studying radical evil, and how learning to detect it can form a basis for improving yourself and the world.
Jordan Peterson - If you regulate what people say, you regulate what they think
Jordan Peterson points out that regulating what people can say is to control what they can think because speaking is thinking. "Don't let people inside your head. It isn't obvious they know what they're doing."
Jordan Peterson - You are the one percent!
To discover that you are the one percent, all you need to do is compare your society with the rest of the world.
Jordan Peterson - Understanding the mindset of a mass murderer
Jordan Peterson explains what many people find inexplicable: How a human being could commit mass murder upon innocents. He points out that the innocence of the victims is an key part of the 'statement' behind the atrocity.
Jordan Peterson - To better discern truth, first stop lying
Sometimes you might do something and you don't know whether it's right or wrong. Let's say you're ignorant, and you might be making a mistake and you don't know it. But - and I think this is a universal human experience - people know sometimes that what they're saying isn't true. And people know sometimes that what they're doing is wrong. And they state the untruth and do what's wrong anyways. And one thing you can do is stop doing that. That isn't the same as telling the truth, exactly, it's ceasing to utter and enact falsehoods. And you can define the things; that's what's interesting about that. It's a game you play with yourself. "For some reason, I know that what I'm about to do is wrong." Stop doing that. You clean up your vision - that's a matter of taking the beam out of your eye. You clean up your vision. And as you do that progressively, your capacity to discern truth from falsehood grows. And that means your capacity to operate effectively in the world grows, because there's no real difference between those things. So I would say the place you start - this is why it's become an internet meme; I tell people to clean up their rooms. To put themselves in order. If you're in disorder, and you know that there are things that you could do that are even small that would improve things to some degree, do them! And keep doing them! And that works across time. It's also humble, in the sense of proper humility. Start where you are. Fix the things that you can fix. Quit saying things that you know make you weak and are lies. And if you do that for a reasonable period of time, it will transform you completely. And anyone can do that, I believe. You can start wherever you happen to be.
Jordan Peterson - Do not write things that you don't agree with.
One of the most ancient ideas that human beings have had is that, in some manner, our spirits speak being into existence. It's like the hallmark of consciousness; it's one of the reasons individuals are valuable. It's a very deep idea, and a very necessary idea, and I believe one that's fundamentally true. But it carries with it certain 'mortal perils', you might say. If you falsify your speech in the service of a proximal goal, you corrupt your soul. Or I could say more technically that you damage your psyche - those are very similar ideas. The evidence for that is crystal clear. Because what happens to people who say things they don't believe is that they come to believe the things they say.
We talked a little earlier about the fact that a lot of 'you' is unarticulated. So there are things you know, but you don't know that you know them, and you don't know how to talk about them. So then what you do is you decide that to reach a proximal goal - like getting a good grade - well, you have to say what the professor wants, so you write out an essay. There's no soul in it, and you feel sick while you're writing it, and you're not interested in it, and you feel small - which are all hints from your being that you shouldn't be doing that, but you do it anyway. And then at the end, you've got two choices: You're either a liar and a coward, or you believe what you wrote. And there's plenty of psychological evidence for this: what people do is decide that they believe what they wrote because it's less painful than noting that you're a liar and a coward.
And not only that, you've articulated a counter-argument! And so your original conviction remains unarticulated, and the counter-argument is articulated, so you've built yourself your own enemy, and you will pay for that. You pay for that with a diminishment of your character. And your character is what sustains you through life. In a fundamental sense, you don't have anything else, because that's the thing that enables you to master the continual onslaught of chaos and uncertainty that you'll be faced with for your entire life. You do not pollute your character! You pay for it, and so does everyone else! And if it goes far enough, then everyone else pays horribly for it! That's the lesson of the twentieth century.
So don't do that. And if you do that in university, it's like a mortal sin. It runs absolutely contrary to the spirit of the institution. It's the absolute polar opposite to why you're there. Do not do it!
And it's also a kind of second-rate cynicism. Because even though there is a fair bit of rot in the academic institutions, most of the time if you write an articulate essay that the professor doesn't agree with, you will not be punished with a failing grade. It's very rare that that actually happens. Now, there is the odd professor who's so damned corrupt that that's going to be the case, but I've talked to lots of students and counselled them to write down what they think, and their grade generally surprises them quite spectacularly. Because they're invested in the damned essay, and they do the work. They put a little passion into it, and they're not bored by it, or made sick by what they're producing. And then they end up with a grade that's far better than they think.
Often it "Well, I'm going to take the easy route out, but I'm going to justify it by relating it to my career progress." Really, guys? That's pretty pathetic! Seriously, it's pathetic, and I don't mean to be morally judgemental, I mean that it's pathetic in that what it will do is make you weak and craven. And probably you don't want that. Why would you want that when you could be strong and forthright instead? That's a way better choice.
So don't say things that you don't believe, and especially don't write things that you don't agree with. It's a bad idea! It's a terrible idea, so don't do that! Ever!
Victor Hanson - Trump is Re-establishing American Deterrence
Donald Trump is doing the only thing historically proven to prevent wider conflict: He's mowing the lawn.
Victor Davis Hanson - Disconnecting from pop culture
Fake news, biased news, bad music, bad movies, uppity movie stars, uppity sports stars... many people are disconnecting from popular culture and discovering they aren't alone in doing so.
Jordan Peterson - Sacrifice something valuable in order to develop
Sometimes the reason that you're suffering is because you just won't let go of the thing that's biting you.
Jordan Peterson - Responsibility is the Meaning of Life
Jordan Peterson discusses how the endless talk of rights and privileges for decades has left out what truly gives life meaning: Responsibility.
Jordan Peterson - DECIMATE the Provincial Liberals this Election!
Jordan Peterson speaks to a group of Conservatives on civic engagement and how to gain support among young Canadians. "No Liberals sitting after the 2018 election!"