There is a drought of authenticity and courage and Peterson has Found that hunger and he's tapped into it and I admire his ability to detect it and to speak to it plainly in a way that it resonates with.
We were on a panel together in Vancouver and I watched his talk And he described his own surprise at how effective his message had been.
And he basically said that if he had outlined his message as the core of a business model, that it would have looked laughable to him and that he was as shocked as anybody that people were resonating with it.
When you live in a world that is as full of crap as the world we live in, where people are advertising bullshit to you from the moment you get up to the moment you go to sleep, and then somebody finally tells you some truth that you need to hear, it's a relief.
It's a relief just to know that there's some channel that isn't compromised by nonsense.
And I don't think he's the only one speaking truthfully, but I think he is speaking from the heart and people know it.
I think that he grasps directly the fact that human beings can only actually make sense of the world by virtue of communication with other human beings.
And this is all about the notion of admixture, that one must have a mixture of He uses the mythopoetic to make sense.
The order and chaos.
The Taoist way is the alchemical admixture of order and chaos.
And that's it.
That's how you do it.
And so if you bias towards orderliness, you find yourself in a rigid, non-adaptive, non-creative, non-exploratory framework.
Which will die because the world changes.
If you bias towards chaos, you eat your young and evaporate, which also dies for obvious reasons.
And the key is to actually enable these things to be in relationship with each other, in vital healthy relationship with each other.
And I think that's in some sense the essence of what he's focusing on and it's sort of the core of what he's actually about.
He's very easy to work with as his voice as an instrument because he speaks very deliberately and sonorously and rhythmically anyway.
He actually speaks in a kind of form of rhythmic poetry.
Sometimes he is actually rapping.
Peterson's words plus lo-fi hip-hop equals JBP Wave.
Make friends with people who want the best for you.
At first it's like, oh, it's a novelty thing, and then I kind of listen to it and it's like, no, it's not a novelty thing, this is actually really good.
Yeah, that's been the reaction all over.
I think that was Peterson's reaction.
He was instantly like, thought this was going to be silly and was amused, and then was like, oh, this is actually artful.
And now it's actually proving useful.
And that's generally the reaction from people.
And if you don't have a noble aim, that's not good.
That's not good.
That's not good.
You have nothing but shallow-- Interesting that you say as well that Peterson has a very musical or a very performative aspect to his speech because he talks about performance or aligning yourself with the truth.
And if you're aligning yourself with the logos of the creative principle, you would expect For that to have an effect on your actual performance.
He feels like a very embodied speaker when he's on stage, like he's fully inhabiting the stories that he's telling, and that performative aspect of it seems to me at least also related to what he's talking about, the logos and incarnating it more in your life and incarnating it more in your being.
Yes, and watching him become that over the years, because he was not always as confident You know he freestyles, right?
His whole career has really reminded me of...
50 Cent, for example, got big off the back of drama.
There was creative drama, you know, beefs with other rappers and being shot 13 times and all this stuff, which draws people into the story.
But then he had this huge body of work and that kept people there.
Peterson did this.
Peterson had these public dramas and that brought people to him, but then when they got to him, there was this huge body of work for them to get sort of lost and immersed in.
Peterson has some kind of drama like every week at this point.
He's like the ultimate sort of contemporary battle rapper.
He's at war with all sorts of people at all times.
It's brilliant, very interesting.
And if you're a rap fan or if you're a What would you call it, if you're an intellectual dark web or whatever the hell it is, fan.
It's like, this guy's getting incredible beefs every week, right?
And there's a new sort of super villain to root against every week with regards to him or if you're on his side or not.
You know, the whole thing's very entertaining, but then it pulls you in and then there's all this meaning and this huge body of work.
Meaning is what you have to buttress yourself against the tragedy of life.
Despite the fact that you're a fragile, damaged, mortal creature.
But he's quite new on this, like if you watch him like 15 years ago, he was a bit awkward and sort of, he was very charming and he knew what he was talking about.
But the absolute fucking beast that he has become as a performance creature who can now just rock up at an amphitheatre and just like freestyle a new two-hour lecture off the top of his head and he's very into not repeating himself too much and is like, you go see a stand-up comedian, you'll see pretty much the same set every week for like a year or something, right?
He won't do that.
He's more like a very good DJ. He has like a fistful of things that you know his works together and they're linked and he can take you on these different journeys but depending on who's in the room and where he is he will create a new and transformative always experience.
I remember discovering Jordan Peterson last June and just immediately thinking this is The thing that is needed right now.
This is about the re-enchantment of the world, the assimilation of spirituality, the assimilation of religion.
This is the thing.
And I was kind of obsessed, like digesting, listening to all of his stuff and then pitched an interview to him and was lucky enough to get an interview with him in October that we then put out as the Truth in the Time of Chaos documentary in January.
At exactly the time that ironically he then kind of shot to fame with an interview with my ex-colleague Cathy Newman on Channel 4 News when a lot of what I had gone to talk to Jordan Peterson about was synchronicity.
And it was just uncanny.
That's when the synchronicity started to happen.
That's right.
That's when things start to line up.
And the more you're in that space, the more they line up.
And so the question is, if you're really in that space, how much do things line up?
All of this was happening, and I wondered what to make of this.
And for quite a while I was thinking, well I have this kind of link to Cathy and I have some kind of link to Jordan, so what I need to do is liaise between them and get them to go and do the second interview that I thought was necessary.
So for a while I was doing that, kind of trying to do stuff behind the scenes.
And then it was clear that Cathy wasn't interested, Channel 4 weren't interested.
Channel 4 News, sorry, weren't interested.
So in the end, I thought, well, okay.
And then it came to me, okay, I should make a documentary, Glitch in the Matrix, which then was a way of just downloading all the stuff that I'd been thinking about For quite a while, especially since the election of Trump, about the shadow side of liberalism and all of the blind spots of liberalism,
so Glitch in the Matrix was the title of it, and it came from a real flow state of being really aligned and feeling like, okay, this is what I'm meant to be doing, which is the essence of synchronicity and the essence of Jordan Peterson's deeper meaning is You know when you're aligned at the right place and then your sense of meaning tells you what to do.
And I think he's often misconstrued by people who can't get past the politics or have a reactivity to him, but to me he is doing nothing less than channeling and fully articulating the deep story of Western culture for the first time.
And, or certainly for the first time in the internet age, you could argue that Jung was doing the same thing back in the 50s, and that there are people who come along and do this at times in the past.
But effectively he's saying, we already know A lot of the answers.
We already know the way to live.
It's embodied in our actions.
It's embodied in mythologies.
It's embodied in our religions.
It's embodied in all of these things.
Look at this piece of art.
What is it saying?
We represented it in art.
We represented it in all these ways.
And now we can fully articulate it, tie it into neuroscience, tie it into...
It's an epic, epic project.
I get accused and it's very easy to say well you're obsessed with Jordan Peterson or you're a fanboy and all that stuff but for me the message that he's bringing forward is that deep.
It's that deep and therefore I want to continue to use his thought as a lens to link into other great thinkers like we just put out an interview with Rupert Sheldrake who I think is an amazing rebellious thinker.
He's been doing this stuff for a long time And I want to also continue to kind of expand that into other thinkers, make the conscious link to this sort of deeper worldview and help, yeah, just bring out great content, really.
Where is his insight coming from?
And so we talked, you know, when you were describing, hey, you almost sound a little bit like Jordan Pison.
I mean, in the sense of, yeah, I mean, if I had to describe My world view, in a nutshell, it would be sort of a neoplatonic, so there was a neoplatonic, stoic, mystic, Christic, Gnostic.
So the idea of neoplatonic, I have always just sort of felt like there is a realm of ideal forms.
Stoic, suck it up fat kid and do the hard thing, 100%.
Gnostic, there is a certain ineffable experience of being.
And then the mystic Christic is some reflection on the Judeo-Christian Western tradition, but nothing to do with 2000 years of bureaucratic administration and everything to do with what is nominally the metaphor of Kairos and Kronos, the intersection of kind of sacred and profane time in human form.
So in that respect, yeah, I would track with Peterson.
My sense is for me, my gnosis or understanding has come from ecstasis, has come from peak experiences.
And my sense for him, at least as he shares what he does of his life, has come from catharsis, has come from the suffering, has come from battling depression, has come from staring the abyss.
In the face versus the view from the summit.
And those are ideally come full circle and reinforce each other.
But if I had to sort of delineate maybe where is his transmission anchoring from, it's maybe a little bit more staring the abyss and surviving it than calling out coordinates from the mountaintop.
The most important thing for me, quite apart from his work with these stories of modern myths, was, as you say, his investigation into the Bible.
And I've always been fascinated, although I'm an atheist, I've always been fascinated by the power Of the biblical stories.
I often found myself looking at these huge cathedrals and churches that sprouted up all over Europe, you know, and asked myself, well, what's that about?
You know, why was this story so powerful?
I mean, yeah, it's a defense against death if you want to be cynical, but hey, you know, it could be lots of other stories, you know, and why is this one so unbelievably powerful?
And what does it mean for it to be so powerful?
And Peter, I think, brilliantly answers that question in the biblical lectures he's done.
And he really changed me, those lectures.
He genuinely did, I think, change the way I lived my life.
Because he came to this very, very important conclusion, which I'm pretty convinced by.
I don't think I'm ever 100% convinced by anything, but I'm very convinced by his idea, as I'm someone who's suffered depression, and depression is like a crisis of meaning.
It's the worst thing about depression, it's not about being miserable, it's having a life that seems utterly meaningless, and that's why it's such torment.
And Peterson, in a way, tries to answer the question, how do we as an individual That's a bit of a paradox.
How do I, as an individual, acquire meaning?
Because meaning is the most important thing any of us could have.
You know, meaning is it.
And yet no one can quite say what meaning is, which I think is interesting in itself.
Everyone says, well, I want a sense of meaning.
What is a sense of meaning?
What is meaning?
And Peterson, I think, acknowledges that mystery, but also says, well, you know, If you want a sense of meaning, it's not about just doing what you want.
It's not about just following your bliss, as Joseph Campbell would be, or having as much fun as possible, or even necessarily being happy.
No, absolutely.
Not necessarily being happy.
There are more important things than being happy.
And I've also found that to be true in my life.
I hadn't heard someone making a compelling case like this that was actually getting traction with people.
And it was clear Peterson was getting traction.
And so then I said, I've got to listen to this guy.
I've got to figure out what he's saying and why it's working and how I should respond to what's happening around him.
How has it been as well, because Peterson has obviously been getting more and more controversial, and I've kind of felt this as well, sort of like, you end up getting into conversations, no he didn't mean that, it wasn't about that.
How has that been, like if people started arguing with you or judging what you're saying, how's that been?
I deeply suspect there are a number of friends of mine that are deeply concerned for me because of this Jordan Peterson thing.
Because they hear, again, the soundbite world grabs a few things.
Jordan Peterson is a bigot.
He's transphobic.
He's homophobic.
He's, you know, the godfather of the patriarchy, whatever he is.
And so Paul, but the thing is they know me.
They know I'm not a bigot.
They know where I was raised.
They know who's in my church.
They know me by my actions.
So what to do with this?
I've given Jordan Peterson, in a sense, a year of my life.
What do you do with that?
Well, they don't know what to do with that.
So they're quiet and they watch and they wait.
When Adam and Matt invited me to do that podcast, we were all someone who, similar to the two of you, I believe, was starting to track Peterson and not just Jordan Peterson and what he was saying, but also the ripples he was having in culture, the absolute phenomenon and explosion of attention that was happening around him in the media and started kind of watching him, reading him with an open mind.
My experience was an open mind.
Like, oh, I resonate with that.
I love how he's bringing in Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell and archetypal dimensions to his thinking.
Like how he's kind of kicking the left a little bit and calling them on some of their problematic thinking.
And then watching this kind of phenomenon from the left or the far left where people just With extraordinary levels of anger and fear and distrust and kind of the difference in that experience of my own and some of our experiences of Peterson and then watching a lot of friends who are on the far left having radically different experience and perception of who he is and what he's bringing and was really just curious about that.
And it seems like similar to some of the stuff you've been doing with Rebel Wisdom.
You're training as a psychologist.
We do a lot of work with psychology as well.
When there's a huge reactivity to something, there's always something interesting going on behind it, and then it sort of makes you inquire.
It's like, okay, what are people reacting to?
Yes.
Whether you love them or hate them, it's like equal proportion of intensity, and whenever that's there, it's what's kind of called a complex.
Complex is a psychological, and I think Jung would say it, like it can be an autonomous, an autonomous complex that's not part of the ego, it's so deep-rooted, and it's, in my opinion, it's a collective complex, it's a collective unconscious.
It's like everyone on the right thinks everyone on the left is a Stalinist and everyone on the left thinks everyone on the right is a Nazi.
And there's this polarization happening where people like Peterson who are trying to carve out, I would say, Not non-political, but a kind of a position that's lateral to politics, that's more in the psychological domain to ask people to look at themselves as individuals, to question the extent to which they're projecting their shadow onto the other, which until we can resolve issues on that level, it's going to be very difficult to resolve these political disagreements.
And so that's one of the main reasons that I've found myself so interested in what Peterson is saying.
He's shifting the level of the conversation, or trying to at least.
I was so excited to see Jordan Peterson erupt onto the stage, and I know you had a particular part in that.
There is a culture war that is in Bright precedence.
I mean, we are in the middle of a culture war.
There's a polarization, and Jordan Peterson is standing in the middle as a lightning rod, taking all the projections from both sides.
He clearly sees the postmodern ideology, and it is an ideology.
It's a system of beliefs and values that will not lead us to the promised land.
It is problematic.
It leads us into a swamp with no exit.
It is not sustainable.
He sees it very clearly.
And in my opinion, he sees it from a modern perspective.
Very brilliant modern perspective.
And he has a depth because of his understanding of Carl Jung and his own work in psychology, the field of psychology, that is deeper than most people.
So people are drawn to that depth.
He sees something much deeper.
than other people are seeing right now.
We'd never met one another.
I knew actually very little about Jordan Peterson's written work.
He knew pretty little about mine.
And we were just told, sit down and shoot.
And we had no idea where we were going.
So he just started talking.
So why the master in his chemistry?
And it just went from there.
But what I felt was, here was a super intelligent man who had Wide-ranging interest in psychology, philosophy, and didn't rule out a spiritual angle to things.
And I don't think that I would...
And in the film, in that clip, I think it probably comes out that there are aspects of what Jordan was saying that I was going, well, yes, but...
So I don't entirely kind of...
I'm not a Petersonian, but I do have huge respect for him.
And we had a great conversation.
And we're proposing to do more.
What do you make of the criticisms?
Because often he's described as a fraud or a charlatan in some of the media coverage.
But when you watch the interview with yourself, that's a very high-level conversation.
The idea of him as a fraud or a charlatan just seems kind of bizarre.
It's outrageous.
It's disrespectful.
It's dismissive.
And it's entirely typical of blinkered liberalism.
You can disagree with him about many things, and I would disagree with him about a number of things.
But to say that is just to show how blinkered you are.
He's clearly an extraordinary man, and how dare they call him a charlatan?
What does that mean?
I think what strikes people is that he was relatively unknown and then he became known.
But that's what life is, and it doesn't prove we're a charlatan.
I mean, a lot of this sounds quite Jordan Peterson-esque.
What's your attitude to Jordan Peterson?
Yeah, I mean, I'm glad he's out there.
And I think there are, I mean, I think at a minimum there's sort of three different Jordan Petersons.
You know, there's Jordan Peterson, the analyst and academic, which virtually nobody ever heard of.
There's Jordan Peterson, the kind of contrarian public intellectual, which sort of, you know, kicked off in 2016.
And then there's sort of Jordan Peterson, sort of Rorschach blot, For the culture wars, of which both left and right wildly distort who he is, what he's saying, and what it means for them.
And so we get the second and the third ones completely mixed, although the first one, you know, University of Toronto and former Harvard professor is the one that gives the credibility and the weight to the other two dialogues.
So in that respect, I think what I imagine him to be as an actual man, He's a pretty high integrity, principled person who likes to think for himself and likes to speak not just truth to power, but also likes to remind his audience, whether it's students or broader than that, what is a good life well lived?
And now I think there are problems in how in the age of sound bites and hundreds of hours of footage and tons of speaking and those kind of things that become problematic and I'm not In any way convinced that if I sat down with him and said, hey mate, what about this bit, that he would actually stand and defend them.
But impressions I get would be that his, I think he sometimes over catastrophizes the slippery slope to Marxism in the sense of that all the, you know, this way lies Stalinist death camps, therefore we cannot give one inch.
On concessions to progressive ideals or agendas.
Although, having said that, I have also personally experienced the almost Chinese Communist like Tom Zing struggle sessions of political correctness in the academy and in kind of left wing, you know, left coast.
So it's not that I don't see the peril.
I do.
I just think sometimes he uses the slippery slope argument.
I think he pulls it out just sometimes a little early, is the bottom line, without necessarily enough conditions to justify it.
He sometimes, in my experience, I think I remember him on Joe Rogan, Doing the life is nasty, brutish and short, the kind of Hobbesian, it's always been this way, therefore any efforts to try and recalibrate or rebalance the scales are fundamentally flawed, delusional and, by the way, lead to the Stalinist death camps without any more nuanced socio-political critique of practices and policies.
So, for instance, concentration of wealth in the 1% and even the percent of the 1%.
Has been directly traceable, at least in the US, over tax and corporate law, various deliberate policies that are fundamentally different than the 70s and 80s and have now resulted in an incredible skewing, an aggregation of wealth in the hands of the few.
For him to skip over that and go to lobsters and serotonin feels like skipping some critical steps and also skipping some critical places of potential responsibility.
And what became real clear is that left and liberal were no longer the same.
The old original leftists were liberals.
But the new leftists were illiberals.
They were anti-liberal.
And that's a disaster.
You can't go forward with that kind of pathology.
And so if you're somebody like Jordan Peterson, who is thinking integrally, and you're looking around and seeing what the hell is going on, And you're starting to notice this.
And then the government comes along and says, oh, and by the way, I'm going to compel your speech.
That would send anybody with integrity and integral thinking over the wall.
So he was up all night.
He did those three videos forcing unconscious bias retraining and political correctness and what he saw happening with that and the nightmare of Bill C-16.
Threw him up on the net and went viral.
The main cause of that, in my opinion, is that it's these orange liberal values of equal opportunity that were getting crushed between the The extreme far left of green and the strong far right of ethnocentric amber.
And these liberal values in between were just getting left out of the picture.
And that was a disaster.
And that was the thing that at least put Jordan Peterson on the map.
And he was arguing against Bill C-16.
Because not only that it put into law a constructivist view of human identity.
That was his complaint.
It had nothing to do with transgender people and the people that attacked him for being anti-transgender had absolutely nothing to do with that.
And he's very clear about that.
What it was was putting into actual law A constructivist view of human nature, which, by the way, is pure green.
It's pure postmodern green viewpoint.
And that also is an attack on free speech in the worst possible way.
For me, his success signifies how much we're thirsting for this father energy in our culture.
What do you make of Jordan Peterson?
What do you make of the Jordan Peterson phenomena?
Yeah, I think, first of all, I would not have predicted it.
So I don't want to, I think maybe I'm often called, among my people who agree with me, I'm called a visionary, but I was not a visionary in foreseeing Jordan Peterson.
I think it's amazing that an intellectual, that is a Jungian, who speaks in terms of often a metaphor, And an allegory that he has risen to such extraordinary success.
And I think it is in part a result of our enormous hunger.
We've attached to two extremely unlikely figures because of our hunger.
Donald Trump on the one hand and Jordan Peterson on the other.
Two ends of the extreme in terms of somebody who's been willing to say, you know, fathers are important, families are important.
Jordan and I found ourselves in an hour and a half dialogue in which I would talk about fathers in roughhousing and he would talk about some intellectual Piaget or someone else who was in the literature or in Disney movies or something else that related to that.
It was just a fascinating hour and a half dialogue.
I think.
Usually when I'm being interviewed, I don't learn a great deal, but I certainly learned.
It was wonderful the way we learned from each other.
You're from Canada.
One of the biggest phenomenon of the last couple of years has been Jordan Peterson.
What have you made of him, his rise, and what it says about the culture that people are so thirsting for what he's talking about?
Peterson, first of all, he's very bright, extraordinary articulate, and in some ways a compelling speaker.
So he's an attractive figure in some ways.
When I read him, I sense a lot of suppressed rage in him.
In fact, I think his voice is choking with rage a lot of the time.
It's interesting because he talks about rage, that you have to deal with it.
I don't think he'll understand just how angry he is.
And if you look at his websites, the comments, Are full of rage by his young acolytes.
Now that's an energetic thing.
It's his energy that draws people as much as what he actually teaches.
Secondly, he teaches repression.
I mean, he very rightly takes an issue where somebody mandates a certain kind of language.
Very rightly and righteously, since the Bible will not be dictated to about what language I'm going to use.
Well, good for him.
I'm all in favor of not mandating language, on the one hand.
On the other hand, he basically advocates repression.
In his book, he talks about how an angry two-year-old child needs to be sit by themselves until they get over it.
Rather than understanding why a child would be angry at age two, what frustrations they're having, and what human contact they need to help them move through that anger, he says repress the anger.
So he's all about repress the anger as far as I'm concerned.
And it's very interesting how he talks about children.
He talks about little varmints and little monsters and so on.
I know that's meant to be humorous, but it's also a certain way of thinking of the young human child.
So fundamentally, I see him as an agent of repression.
He's posing as an agent of libertarianism.
Not to mention, he's got this bean in his bonnet about what he considers to be, seems to consider to be conspiracies by left-wing intellectuals.
They seem to be his bête noire.
Being a left-wing intellectual myself, I like to talk to him sometimes.
What are you so upset about, Jordan?
What are you so afraid of?
You know, he talks about these bloody Marxists.
And he points out very accurately all the horror that occurred under so-called Marxist regimes, particularly in the Soviet Union.
He's absolutely accurate about that.
But then he promotes Christianity.
Shall I tell him about the mass murders that occurred in the name of Christianity?
Shall I tell him about all the millions that were slaughtered in the name of the gentle Jesus?
In other words, let's be fair about it.
He seems to pick ideologies to attack and abhor And embrace other ideologies that are just as murderous, in practice sometimes.
It's a much more interesting question for me.
What happened in Eastern Europe?
How come, under an ideology that was meant to liberate people, so many people were oppressed?
I come from Eastern Europe.
I was born in Hungary.
He doesn't have to tell me about what it was like.
But how about asking, how come a religious philosophy that was meant to promote love and acceptance and compassion has become such an agent of two million of repression, oppression and killing?
So, can we be objective or we're going to be simply tribal about it?