Dr. Peterson and John Vervaeke Discuss the Meaning Crisis | EP 414
18 Jan 2024 (8 months ago)
- Peterson's faith is a faithfulness to a process of self-correction, not to any one faculty as the voice of the Divine.
- He believes that the capacity for self-correction can take on a life of its own and plug into transpersonal and transcendent aspects of his being.
- Peterson and Vervaeke discuss the counter-Enlightenment, which aims to rectify the meaning crisis by rediscovering the sacred and what's deep and meaningful.
- Peterson proposes a dependency structure among thinkers, with more seminal thinkers having more thinkers dependent on them.
- The biblical Corpus stands at the bottom of the western Canon, with thinkers like Dante, Milton, and Shakespeare building on it.
- The depth of a thought is dependent on how many other thoughts are dependent on it for its validity.
- This dependency structure also works neuropsychologically, with deeper assumptions producing more entropy when violated.
- The degree to which one can handle entropy is proportionate to their social status, as indicated by serotonin system index.
- Peterson discusses his book "We Who Wrestle with God" and his attempt to define the sacred.
- He proposes that the deeper one goes down the assumption hierarchy, the closer one gets to the sacred.
- Encounters that shift one's hyper priors in a positive way produce a corresponding sensation of awe, which is a dopaminergically mediated revelation of possibility.
- Peterson conceptualizes the sacred as a process, with a spirit in the Old Testament characterized as Yahweh.
- This spirit manifests itself in different guises, with each story shedding a different light on it.
- The underlying Unity of this spirit is reflected in the monotheistic hypothesis of one God beneath all the gods.
- Peterson discusses the call of the sacred as spontaneous interest or calling, which is equivalent to the traditional notion of call.
- He also identifies conscience as the corresponding element of the Divine, which acts as an internalized voice of conscience or source of the super ego.
- The dynamic relationship between calling and conscience is conceptualized as the holy spirit.
- Vervaeke discusses three dimensions of the sacred: ultimacy, axiological, and relational.
- Ultimacy refers to what everything is asymmetrically dependent on, which is the source of explanation and understanding.
- Axiological refers to the valuing and loving of the ultimate, which is expressed in the Old Testament Corpus as part of the covenantal relationship.
- Relational refers to the commitment of the whole self in love, which calls one as a complete person and involves the transmutation of the image of God within.
- The sacred can be found in non-theistic traditions like Buddhism and Taoism.
- The neoplatonic proposal suggests that to understand what is most real, we must find the ground of intelligibility through asymmetric dependence.
- If there's a plurality, there are in-built contradictions and divisiveness, while an ultimate unity, though mysterious, indicates that all things can be brought together harmoniously.
- Confusion and anxiety mark a plurality, while purity of heart is to will one thing.
- Understanding something involves finding a unifying principle, which leads to ineffability.
- Nicholas of Cusa's idea of God as an intelligible sphere whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.
- Nicholas of Cusa's quote: "God is within everything but not enclosed and Beyond everything but not excluded."
- People who come into a relationship with what they consider more real take on a loving relationship and seek to transform their identities and lives.
- This can be a marker for the validity of the encounter.
- There are links between attitude and underlying thriving, and it's reasonable to assume that contact with the archetypal ideal would have a healing effect.
- Systematicity of error can point to intrinsic constraints and developmental arcs.
- Systematicity of insight can lead to a systematic transformation of one's orientation and grip on the world.
- Baptism, shamanic death and rebirth, and the great doubt in zazen are examples of such transformations.
- Descartes' contact epistemology and the separation of mind and world after the Scientific Revolution.
- Descartes' emphasis on logic and insight.
- Thought is a form of secularized prayer.
- The steps of thought:
- Confession (admission of insufficiency)
- Positing a question
- Revelation (appearance of a solution)
- Testing the thought (attacking it from different sides, understanding its implications)
- This process is similar to the practice of prayer.
- Deep Revelation is a systemic Insight.
- The work on sabbatical involves exploring these ideas further.
- Neoplatonic and Zen traditions have practices that involve asking questions and listening to the answers to get a sense of the ineffable.
- The goal is to achieve a state of "learned ignorance" or "aporetic aperture" where one becomes aware of their own lack of knowledge and connects with the depths of reality.
- This practice helps circumvent self-serving biases in questioning and answering by establishing a relationship with the ineffable.
- The ineffable is not something that can be possessed or controlled, but rather something that can be participated in and experienced.
- It is a falling away of representational reification and a realization that nothing is excluded or enclosed within the self.
- The practice of connecting with the ineffable has led to a sense of humility, hope, and resignation in the speaker.
- Baptism is seen as an opening to possession by the ineffable, and the descent of the Holy Spirit is a consequence of this opening.
- Christ's baptism is followed by a radical transformation of personality, symbolized by his going into the desert.
- The temptations in the desert represent a colloquy with conscience and a journey to the bottom of things to understand the source of evil.
- The descent into the depths of the soul can reveal profound indications of error and presumption.
- Spiritual alchemy practices involve recalling moments of hurt and humiliation to uncover pretentious projections and gain revelation.
- This process is similar to the father who is trapped in the belly of the Beast and Jonah's descent into the depths, leading to a revaluation of ethical stance.
- The Bible contains powerful moments of humanity in the mix of wrestling with the numinous.
- The story of Jonah and the sailors highlights the human capacity for compassion and selflessness.
- The voice of conscience and the voice of the ineffable are related, as conscience can be seen as a sign of transgression against the ineffable.
- However, distinguishing between psychological and logical indubitability is a challenge, as our inability to doubt can be driven by various factors beyond metaphysical necessity.
- Peterson does not idolize any of his faculties, including his conscience, as he believes it can be influenced by his culture, parents, or a sadistic super ego.
- He sees the conscience as something that can be transformed through dialogue and relationship-building.
- Peterson draws parallels between the conscience and the Socratic demonium, which Socrates relied on for guidance.
- Socrates saw his demonium and rational arguments as deeply dialogical and convergent, rather than oppositional.
- Peterson describes his experience with Internal Family Systems (IFS) therapy, where he engaged in "Parts work" to dialogue with different aspects of himself.
- He emphasizes the importance of approaching these parts with humility and curiosity, rather than demonizing them.
- By engaging in dialogue with these parts, Peterson aims to understand their underlying motivations and help them develop in a healthy way.
- During an IFS session, Peterson encountered an archetypal presence that he identified as Hermes, the god of interpretation and meaning-making.
- He describes the phenomenology of this experience as a sense of presence and mindsight into another's awareness.
- Peterson views these entities as neither subjective nor objective, but existing in the domain of relevance that binds together the inner and outer aspects of the self.
- He engages in ongoing dialogue with Hermes, considering him a superordinate spirit that helps cultivate a relationship analogous to Socrates' demonium.
- Peterson emphasizes the importance of developing a dialogical relationship with this superordinate spirit to avoid idolatry and cultivate a balance between finitude and transcendence.
- He draws on the Platonic proposal that humans should hold in tonos Creative tension between their finitude and transcendence to avoid falling prey to servitude, despair, hubris, or inflation.
- Peterson sees Socrates as embodying this balance and portrays him as a maxu between the human and the Divine.
- Peterson integrates the Socratic spirit with Hermes as a psychological and biological presence, viewing them as deeply Allied to each other.
- He compares this process to a conscious equivalent of a dream, filled with both logos and Mythos.
- Peterson acknowledges the mysterious and ineffable aspects of this discourse, emphasizing the need for constant openness to self-correction and avoiding idolatry of any one faculty as the voice of the Divine.
- He suggests that the opposite of self-deception is a continual process of self-correction and faithfulness to that process, rather than a fixed stance on truth.
- Vervaeke's daemons prioritize attention towards the highest ineffable good.
- Conscience and calling are part of the dynamic process of attention that allows true attention to rise.
- Moses' encounter with the burning bush can be seen as an example of a calling.
- Calling can emerge from possession by an ideological spirit or as a manifestation of the real thing, and it requires careful discernment.
- The interplay of conscience and calling is more reliable, especially when shared with others.
- The fire in the Exodus story burns but does not burn up, representing an inexhaustible fountain of intelligibility.
- Plato's Republic is an example of a sacred text that offers an inexhaustible fountain of intelligibility and transformation.
- The sacred is associated with the neoplatonic notion of an inexhaustible fountain of intelligibility.
- Reading sacred texts can be transformative and nourishing, providing a reciprocal opening between the text and the reader.
- The sacred can be found in relationships, such as the commitment between partners, which is sacred but not the ultimate.
- Idolatry is a concern when experiencing the sacred, and a careful usage of terms like "the one" or "God" is necessary to avoid it.
- The commitment to representation while pushing towards that which is below representation is important in understanding meaning.
- Meaning can be understood as religio, connecting to something with reality and value beyond one's existence.
- As we receive nourishment from the sacred, we become more capable of turning the arrow of relevance outward, focusing on how we can be relevant to others.
- The speaker discusses the importance of having a sense of meaning in life and how it can be found through a connection to something greater than oneself.
- The speaker shares their personal experiences of finding meaning through their work and their religious beliefs.
- The speaker emphasizes the importance of finding what is truly meaningful and not just what brings immediate pleasure or satisfaction.
- The speaker discusses the importance of involving the whole psyche in the pursuit of meaning and avoiding self-involvement and suffering.
- The speaker highlights the importance of establishing harmony in existence and relationships as a source of meaning.
- The speaker uses the example of parenthood to illustrate how transformative experiences can lead to a deeper sense of meaning and purpose.
- The speaker emphasizes the importance of maintaining faith and allegiance to what is highest, even in the face of adversity.
- The speaker discusses the Book of Job and the moral proposition that one should maintain faith in the essential goodness of existence regardless of immediate circumstances.
- The speaker shares a personal interpretation of the movie "Joe Versus the Volcano" and how it illustrates the power of gratitude and the numinous in finding meaning.
- The speaker discusses the relationship between the transcendentals (the true, the good, and the beautiful) and how they contribute to a sense of meaning in life.
- The speaker highlights the importance of sensory-motor mastery and the distinction between morality and meaning in life.
- Morality is not reducible to emotional state.
- Meaning in life cannot be satisfied just by being a highly moral person.
- Connectedness has three dimensions: sensory-motor mastery, production/promotion/protection of personhood, and a connection to something meaningful.
- Morality and meaning can come apart.
- Seminars in the gag archipelago were a meaning endeavor, not a moral one.
- Morality is a commitment to a sense of duty born from something like the categorical imperative.
- Kant argues that doing something out of love is not a moral act because it is not done for the sense of duty.
- Christ's ethical striving exceeds that of the Pharisees and is not dissociable from meaning.
- Paul wrestles with the difference between law and love.
- Job recovers a gratitude for his life through a connection with the numinous, not through moral reasoning.
- Post-traumatic stress disorder may be a violation of the hyper prior of a just world hypothesis.
- Meaning-generating practices can help heal trauma by restoring people's sense of religio connectedness.
- Depression can be a result of a terrible life, not a failure of embedded structures of meaning.
- Anti-depressants may be effective for people whose depression is not a consequence of the failure of embedded structures.
- Treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder may involve expanding the person's explicit representation of the world.