Exploring the Philosophical and Scientific | Dr. Daniel Dennett | EP 438

  Рет қаралды 263,587

Jordan B Peterson

Jordan B Peterson

Күн бұрын

Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with writer, philosopher, and cognitive scientist Dr. Daniel Dennett. They discuss the concepts of aboutness, intention, and the highest good as they relate to the religious and secular worlds, the establishment of trust and ethics outside of transcendent presupposition, and the loss of academic freedom at the misapprehension of postmodernism.
Dr. Daniel Dennett is an American philosopher, writer, and cognitive scientist. He has published dozens of books, such as “Consciousness Explained" (1992), “Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Evolution and the Meanings of Life” (1996), and “Breaking the Spell: Religion as Natural Phenomena” (2007).
This episode was recorded on March 9th, 2024.
Dr. Peterson's extensive catalog is available now on DailyWire+: bit.ly/3KrWbS8
- Sponsors -
Birch Gold: Text "JORDAN" to 989898 for your no-cost, no-obligation, FREE information kit.
Beam: Get 40% off for a limited time! www.ShopBeam.com/Peterson
Shopify: Get a $1/ month FREE trial with full access to Shopify's entire suite of features: shopify.com/jbp
- Links -
2024 tour details can be found here jordanbpeterson.com/events
Peterson Academy petersonacademy.com/
For Dr. Daniel Dennett:
On X danieldennett?lan...
The Problem with Counterfeit People (Article on AI, the Atlantic) www.theatlantic.com/technolog...
Consciousness Explained (Book) www.amazon.com/Consciousness-...
I’ve Been Thinking (Book) www.amazon.com/Ive-Been-Think...
Breaking the Spell: Religion as Natural Phenomena (Book) www.amazon.com/Breaking-Spell...
- Chapters -
(0:00) Tour Update: Konstantin Kisin
(0:59) Coming up
(1:31) Intro
(3:23) Defining religion, aboutness, and intention
(9:10) Is the “highest good” a religious or natural concept?
(14:35) Dr. Dennett’s pragmatic conception of the “highest good”
(17:39) Andrew Gibson, affordances and agents of transformation
(21:27) The relationship of anxiety to entropy computation
(24:43) Cognitive and emotional conflict is mirrored across theology
(28:44) Conceptualizing what’s highest as a relationship, the Cartesian Theater
(36:35) Thought as secularized prayer, Plato’s Aviary
(44:46) What allows for trust in a secular world?
(48:09) Free will is an achievement, not an endowment
(51:09) The conception of God in the biblical corpus, a dialogue among equals
(59:14) Do these working presumptions exist outside the purview of science?
(1:02:22) When you make a tool you also make a weapon
(1:05:46) Where Gould went wrong, foundational principles, and dynamism
(1:08:44) The hierarchy of DNA repair, Osiris and Seth
(1:14:15) The secularization of ethics, how to validate moral claims without religion
(1:21:36) “It was a wonderful taming force,” religion as a nurse crop for science
(1:24:41) The evolution of human fears into governing religions
(1:27:57) The loss of academic freedom at the misapprehension of postmodernism
(1:36:28) Dr. Dennett’s latest work: “The Problem of Counterfeit People”
// LINKS //
All links: linktr.ee/drjordanbpeterson
Website: jordanbpeterson.com
Tour Locations: jordanbpeterson.com/events
X: / jordanbpeterson
Instagram: / jordan.b.peterson
Facebook: / drjordanpeterson
Telegram: t.me/DrJordanPeterson
Newsletter: mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.co...
// COURSES //
Discovering Personality: jordanbpeterson.com/personality
Self Authoring Suite: selfauthoring.com
Understand Myself (personality test): understandmyself.com
// BOOKS //
Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life: jordanbpeterson.com/Beyond-Order
12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: jordanbpeterson.com/12-rules-...
Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-m...
#JordanPeterson #JordanBPeterson #DrJordanPeterson #DrJordanBPeterson #DailyWirePlus

Пікірлер: 2 000
@martialartsnerd3253
@martialartsnerd3253 17 күн бұрын
This was Daniel’s final public appearance. Thank you for uploading this, Jordan.
@awakeosho
@awakeosho 17 күн бұрын
This video was uploaded a day earlier than the one uploaded at the Channel Big Think. So probably this is not the last, the other one is. There might also be other ones that we haven't yet seen.
@lucyweir5923
@lucyweir5923 17 күн бұрын
@@awakeosho thank God the last conversation he had in public wasn't with Jordan. And I'm an atheist.
@coahuiltejano
@coahuiltejano 17 күн бұрын
@@awakeosho Wrong. That was not a podcast, but more like a commercial or short documentary. This is OFFICIALLY the Final Public Appearance of Dennett...and I heard alot of agreement and commonality between these two men....
@coahuiltejano
@coahuiltejano 17 күн бұрын
@@lucyweir5923 Wrong. That was not a podcast, but more like a commercial or short documentary. This is OFFICIALLY the Final Public Appearance of Dennett...and I heard alot of agreement and commonality between these two men....
@martialartsnerd3253
@martialartsnerd3253 17 күн бұрын
@@awakeosho thank you!
@LennonZA
@LennonZA 16 күн бұрын
Rest in peace 🕊 Dr. Daniel Dennett (1942-2024)
@brielslovak2649
@brielslovak2649 15 күн бұрын
Rest in peace. And God bless him and his family.
@3lake_
@3lake_ 15 күн бұрын
A religious concept. He didn’t believe in a peaceful rest after death. To him we say goodbye. He only knows now if he were wrong, which rest assured would not be peaceful
@LennonZA
@LennonZA 15 күн бұрын
​@@3lake_ "RIP" is a widely used term to respectfully bid farewell to the deceased, as you're aware. Despite any differences I may have had with his religious views, I deeply respected his academic contributions. I wish him safe passage, whatever may come next. Before condemning others to hell, it would be wise to examine the intentions of your own heart.
@adamgates1142
@adamgates1142 14 күн бұрын
@3lake_ Your sadism is showing
@3lake_
@3lake_ 14 күн бұрын
⁠@@adamgates1142would love to know why you think so. I’m appealing to his reasoning. Rest in peace is a religious aphorism, in which language implies there is something after this. Therefore, he should not be resting in peace (nor would he if he denied the presence of a spiritual authority). Instead his ultimate goal, would be the empty oblivion of nonexistence. What I have done, rather than be spiteful, is point out how contradictory and nonsensical it is to hope that someone who believes in nothing can have peace.
@axe-z8316
@axe-z8316 17 күн бұрын
Mr Dennett, what a legend, you will be missed.
@Richie_Godsil
@Richie_Godsil 16 күн бұрын
I just read that Dr. Dennett passed away. This conversation is an excellent final interview and conversation I'm very sad to learn of his passing. RIP
@tylerraabe7329
@tylerraabe7329 28 күн бұрын
The value of watching two men with fundamentally different points of view of life having a conversation cannot be overstated. We get to watch it for free.
@b-m605
@b-m605 27 күн бұрын
excellent point. Good to see some one modelling this.
@marleyjanim5033
@marleyjanim5033 27 күн бұрын
Time is not a fee, it’s a trade off
@xxnetravenxx6965
@xxnetravenxx6965 27 күн бұрын
Peterson is very good at taking in clearly opposing (to the point of contempt) ideas and sitting with them and then responding in a way that tries to find a common understanding.
@BenBass00
@BenBass00 27 күн бұрын
​@@shmosel_ you know they mean free of 'fee for service'
@Michael-hb3ip
@Michael-hb3ip 27 күн бұрын
Yes it is..... Ridiculous to think otherwise. ​@@shmosel_
@MumblesMumbled
@MumblesMumbled 16 күн бұрын
Rest easy, Dr. Dennett. A most brilliant thinker of our time.
@Andrejdrapal
@Andrejdrapal 16 күн бұрын
Dan Dennett, who provoked me to rethink philosophy and evolution and forced me to challenge his ideas, passed away yesterday. There are not many philosophers that provoke you constantly despite not agreeing with them constantly. I'm so sorry I could not meet him three years ago talking with Dawkins (whom I disagree with even more, but started with memes) and Susan Blackmore, my mother in memetics. The discussion at Tufts was canceled due to Corona. What I can do besides mourning and wishing him all the best in the realm he did not believe in is to praise his latest discussion with Jordan Peterson. It is such an intellectual pleasure to listen to two great thinkers of our age who could not disagree more.
@Evolushaun
@Evolushaun 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for everything Dr. Daniel Dennett. You are one of my intellectual heroes.
@matthewparlato5626
@matthewparlato5626 16 күн бұрын
R.i.p. but yeeesh I don't see the world as he did since years and years ago
@gfxpimp
@gfxpimp 6 күн бұрын
⁠@@matthewparlato5626 You used to be a compatibilist? What did you move on to?
@matthewparlato5626
@matthewparlato5626 6 күн бұрын
@gfxpimp indeed I did. I no longer articulate a Compatiblist view.. but I also no longer even entertain "the free will debate" I find the synthesizing of these 3 arguments liberating... 1) degrees of freedom 2) complex dynamical systems affordances via an agent arena continuous relating & 3) (the phenomenological experience as) Agent coupled to the continual evolving Arena as goes co-identification That distillation freed me from the silly debate... as well as Jon Pageaus jiu-jitsu move of, "if it's beyond and irrelevant to the human experience, I need not waste my Dasein on it" Officially, I landed at Christian Neoplatonism (a pinch of perrenialism, see Dugin, heavily influenced by Zen, see my hero Dr. John Vervaeke) The simultaneously Emanating One thru the Cosmic fulcrum/nexus of Man into the World's Collective of Symbolic Structures Emerging and interpenetating recursively and eternally... (We don't understand much) (Keep your periphery blurry... The Saced Mysteries) 🙏 God Bless you
@matthewparlato5626
@matthewparlato5626 6 күн бұрын
@@gfxpimp thx for the question
@ClearlyCero
@ClearlyCero 28 күн бұрын
I deeply appreciate Dr. Dennett for coming on. Thank you both!
@barbaracholak5204
@barbaracholak5204 27 күн бұрын
Two distinguish gentleman having a civil conversation ... What a treat!!!
@IIIIIIPETEIIIIII
@IIIIIIPETEIIIIII 27 күн бұрын
Distinguished!
@denroy3
@denroy3 27 күн бұрын
Lol, easily pleased by an atheist "rationalizing" his contempt for his fellow man.
@hurrrdurr
@hurrrdurr 27 күн бұрын
@@denroy3 cry more
@denroy3
@denroy3 27 күн бұрын
@@hurrrdurr I can see you are too intelligent for me....cry more is the response of a child.
@hurrrdurr
@hurrrdurr 27 күн бұрын
@@denroy3 keep crying
@ConspiracyAnalyst
@ConspiracyAnalyst 16 күн бұрын
Rest in peace, Dr. Daniel Dennett.
@christemple8523
@christemple8523 28 күн бұрын
The moment when Jordan used the term "revelation" (at roughly 53 minutes into the video) he instantly, and maybe even subconsciously, had to clarify and rephrase because he could see that using that word had created a riff between he and Dr. Dennett. You could see it in Dr. Dennett's face. It was an on-the-spot demonstration of exactly the hypothetical he was talking about, how to reconcile a relationship that was falling into distrust. That was amazing. Did anybody else see that?
@ricardokowalski1579
@ricardokowalski1579 28 күн бұрын
Good catch. Dr Jordan realized that "revelation" was too loaded a word.
@anthonyhardisky1471
@anthonyhardisky1471 27 күн бұрын
Hell ya. That is called a fractal. When the part is like the whole. I love when I notice it happening.. although I know it's happening in many ways at all times.
@spoonerreligionandpolitics
@spoonerreligionandpolitics 27 күн бұрын
You mean "rift" as a riff would be a musical fragment they could both play off of.
@mitchellclark3070
@mitchellclark3070 27 күн бұрын
@@spoonerreligionandpolitics and yet you still understood what they meant
@justinrhea9432
@justinrhea9432 27 күн бұрын
Now that you mentioned it, yes. Thank you for highlighting that!
@autumnleaves2766
@autumnleaves2766 28 күн бұрын
Always look forward to Mondays and Thursdays, when Dr Peterson's latest interviews come on here for a wider audience to enjoy. Who needs a television when you can find podcasts of this quality ? Thanks to Dr Peterson and his guest.
@brianstewart2138
@brianstewart2138 27 күн бұрын
Honestly, it's high-quality debate that people pay thousands for at ive-leage schools for.
@et_bell
@et_bell 27 күн бұрын
​@@brianstewart2138Nobody even cares if they're extracting any value from such debates at University... They just want the logo... It's a signal that we are very smart and you better hire us
@juliaogara8794
@juliaogara8794 27 күн бұрын
Definitely 😍😀
@MikeFuller-ok6ok
@MikeFuller-ok6ok 27 күн бұрын
I have a brain about the size of a pea, and Jordan Peterson and Daniel Dennett have brains the size of Jupiter!
@afringedgentian5426
@afringedgentian5426 27 күн бұрын
I don’t even watch television these days- I just watch podcasts like Dr. Peterson’s and learn something!
@Dismal-future
@Dismal-future 4 күн бұрын
Such a shame that this conversation will not be picked back up. Rest in Power Dr Dennett
@TwoKnowingRavens
@TwoKnowingRavens 4 күн бұрын
I learned a great deal Daniel Dennet. He very ironically led me to faith through a process almost too complicated to describe here. If he were still alive to hear my explanation I would say that he didn't fail in any way, but he did expose me to even deeper questions. Skepticism is an extremely useful tool, but one shouldn't stop using it when they find an answer they like. I was searching for true justification for my atheism and what I ended up finding was God. Not by avoiding information, but by turning over absolutely every stone possible. I hope that it honors Dr. Dennet's memory and those who survive him that he challenged me to challenge myself and he gave me a great deal of tools that helped me to help myself and others. I honor his memory. But I would not mock him by praying for him. I suspect he has had all of the conversations he has needed to with God and himself even if he remained honestly unaware. Thank you Dr. Dennet and rest in peace.
@nicolamustard7232
@nicolamustard7232 3 күн бұрын
God bless you and thanks for telling us about your fervent search for Truth. 🙏🏼
@alexanderfailoni1716
@alexanderfailoni1716 28 күн бұрын
Dr. Dennett was the most balanced of the horsemen, even if it didn't garner him as much fame for it. Firm but fair and not belittling.
@dirtymikentheboys5817
@dirtymikentheboys5817 28 күн бұрын
Don't give him any supernatural embodiment, he's a weak materialist shouting out drivel.
@johnzhou4877
@johnzhou4877 27 күн бұрын
Nah he's a stupid compatiblist.
@anthonyhardisky1471
@anthonyhardisky1471 27 күн бұрын
​@@dirtymikentheboys5817you sound like what you're complaining about
@ericcouch
@ericcouch 27 күн бұрын
Bullshit. Go watch his debate with Desouza. He wants to teach your children the John From religion as a mockery to Christianity. He's not reasonable at all. Also, he utterly lost that debate.
@robyourtime
@robyourtime 27 күн бұрын
He’s as bad as the others. Very lost
@temmaxtemma9570
@temmaxtemma9570 16 күн бұрын
RIP Dr. Denett. You made a great positive impact on my life. The world is much more beatiful than superstitions.
@Cinderella227
@Cinderella227 28 күн бұрын
My brother Pitin (childhood nickname) and I have been having deep religious and philosophical conversations along with a lot of childhood reminiscing. My brother is dying. The doctor gave him less than 30 days to live. Unless God has other plans that’s the prognosis. My brother is taking 750 mg hemorrhage meds, 250mg in the am and 250 in the pm. He had surgery last year and now there is nothing more the doctors can do for him. We are celebrating his life and I’m spending a lot of time with him before he enters hospice. Life is such a precious gift. My brother has lived a very adventurous life. He’s a phenomenal artist, sings like many angels, was a martial arts expert, and an ordained minister. Anyway, we are very close and it’s difficult losing my brother. He is ready to meet Almighty God. Thank you Jordan ✝️🙏🏻❤️😔
@mills8102
@mills8102 28 күн бұрын
I will pray for him and for his soul.
@tim23ification
@tim23ification 27 күн бұрын
Much love brother! It's not an easy journey.
@Lollipop_Lexi
@Lollipop_Lexi 27 күн бұрын
How lovely and deeply moving that you get to spend this time with your brother. Much love to you both and hoping that having this special time together eases your suffering as much as possible.
@afringedgentian5426
@afringedgentian5426 27 күн бұрын
May the love of Christ and the sure and certain hope of the Resurrection keep your minds and hearts as you say “Goodnight, until the day break, and the shadows flee away.”
@BottlegardenUK
@BottlegardenUK 27 күн бұрын
@Cinderella227 soak up these days, moments with your loved one. Thank you for sharing your life and reminding us all again of our impermanence and how precious life is. My prayers are with you all.
@robertisaac1286
@robertisaac1286 16 күн бұрын
RIP Daniel Dannett.
@frankiemiller5364
@frankiemiller5364 28 күн бұрын
Absolutely love and appreciate you having Daniel Dennett on the show. An all time favorite 😊
@pauliewalsh6875
@pauliewalsh6875 28 күн бұрын
I've been privalaged to have been a subscriber to Petersons channel when it numbered in the thousands. Everytime I get a notification to watch a new video, I smile as I watch his followers grow monthly by the thousands. At almost 8 million subscribers and billions of views, it is nothing short of glorious that his philosophy is reaching a mass that so badly craves the guidance of such a warm father figure. Long may his audience grow and may his important message resound long after essence of this wonderful soul is called home🙏🏼
@baalstone675
@baalstone675 26 күн бұрын
I was there with you brother
@JakeTiesler
@JakeTiesler 19 күн бұрын
Same, been a subscriber since the beginning - got a signed book from his patreon back in 2016, great arc
@merlinheitkemper8150
@merlinheitkemper8150 28 күн бұрын
It's so cool that they agree on so much, even though one is "religious" and one is "atheistic". Really highlights Jordan Peterson's definition of being religious as something that you 'act out' instead of something you represent abstractly and linguistically.
@dnbjedi
@dnbjedi 27 күн бұрын
‘You should act as though you believe in God’ he once said. (‘to secularists, like Harris)?
@siggyincr7447
@siggyincr7447 27 күн бұрын
Yeah, I'm not convinced most religious people would consider Peterson religious if he were honest and clear about his beliefs. His conception of God is of an idea that has been distilled and improved upon over millennia of human thought. He'll never say it out loud, but he's an atheist that thinks that religion is indispensable for human civilization. So much so that he obsesses over ways to make the mythical literature of the bible make sense enough so he can say he believes and say others should as well.
@williamadams4855
@williamadams4855 27 күн бұрын
​@@siggyincr7447 It's beautiful
@mattinhat1113
@mattinhat1113 27 күн бұрын
​@@siggyincr7447yes. That is from the bookThe Brothers Karamazov part: The Grand Inquisitor. Also In the gospel of Thomas. So far I think that is what Jordan concludes in, but doesn't want to admit it.
@jimj9040
@jimj9040 27 күн бұрын
@@siggyincr7447I think it’s just the opposite. He believes in God but knows it’s an indefensible position. He finds ways to defend it with fence-straddling prattle.
@yurypal
@yurypal 27 күн бұрын
This was an intense conversation. I am impressed with JBP’s courage to face counter arguments to his long-standing beliefs. Thanks for doing this!
@the300XM8
@the300XM8 26 күн бұрын
My thoughts exactly
@daanmollema6366
@daanmollema6366 16 күн бұрын
Rest in peace, Dan. Thank you for everything.
@mobinmobaseri
@mobinmobaseri 28 күн бұрын
You cannot put a value on these enlightening talks. Thank you Jordan!
@denroy3
@denroy3 27 күн бұрын
Listening to atheist rationalize immorality has little value.
@TheGringoSalado
@TheGringoSalado 27 күн бұрын
@@denroy3understanding other perspectives (not to adopt) is essential to Loving them.
@czerwo5805
@czerwo5805 27 күн бұрын
@@denroy3 did we listen to the same conversation?
@Charles-ij1ow
@Charles-ij1ow 26 күн бұрын
@@denroy3 Looks like Jordan's religious train of the last 5 years has come to an abrupt stop with 2 words, Secular ethics.
@nicolasbascunan4013
@nicolasbascunan4013 24 күн бұрын
@@Charles-ij1ow Secular ethics = wokism
@paulomorais6319
@paulomorais6319 17 күн бұрын
RIP Daniel Dennett (1942-2024)
@libertasinfinitum6657
@libertasinfinitum6657 6 күн бұрын
Whoa!! I came to the comments to find out if there was a forum for open discussion on these topics. I'm saddened to find Dr. Dennett is no longer with us. Thank you for your contributions, and I hope you've found all the answers needed to rest in peace.
@mach7479
@mach7479 8 күн бұрын
The toughest part of this talk is waiting during the needless analytic theatrics to get to Dennett’s refreshing, concise, responses
@gamechannelminecraft6583
@gamechannelminecraft6583 28 күн бұрын
Hello everyone, good viewing🐼
@Raydensheraj
@Raydensheraj 17 күн бұрын
Rest in peace you legendary Man. RIP Daniel Dannett 😢
@neoepicurean3772
@neoepicurean3772 7 күн бұрын
As a close follower of Dennett's work, I don't know how I only just found out about his passing. His work on memetics, compatibilism and consciousness (obviously) have really enriched my thinking. RIP and thank you.
@joserangel6801
@joserangel6801 26 күн бұрын
Jordan has evolved from arguing with people to maintaining an open conversation. Masterful communication skills. I’m taking notes
@mikekane2492
@mikekane2492 25 күн бұрын
Not sure what you mean, he’s always had open dialogues when it’s respectful and has more of an argumentative attitude when people are trying to get one up on him.
@fra-kolpanzer
@fra-kolpanzer 24 күн бұрын
I don't think such a thing has occurred. You can watch him argue vehemently with Destiny in a podcast from the recent weeks. Not that it subtracts from his sophistication. You can also watch interviews from the last 10 years where he speaks very calmly - most of them really. Including when he talks to his protesters. I don't think he gets carried away often, maybe almost never (apart from Twitter perhaps).
@alibabaschultz352
@alibabaschultz352 17 күн бұрын
Quite the opposite. His devolution is astounding. Remember that Cathy Newman interview? That was when Peterson was great. He was sharp, calm, polite, empathetic, and firm. If you watch his interview with Destiny, he basically became Cathy Newman. He was angry, argumentative, arrogant, condescending, and pretty damn illogical.
@fra-kolpanzer
@fra-kolpanzer 16 күн бұрын
@@alibabaschultz352 I think this assessment is also completely wrong. Firstly, you seem to base your views on two interviews 7 years apart as if they were representative of a steady trend in Peterson's interactions. But there were thousands of interviews, debates and lectures in between. If you had seen them, you'd notice that Peterson is quite often aggressive in the dispute, and it's been like this since he became popular really. You could see that in his interview with Helen Lewis, which was very close in time to Cathy Newman's interview. In other interviews he's very calm and controlled, and that still remains the case. Not so rarely, you can see his soft an emotional side. To be fair, I don't remember him shouting at someone as he did at Destiny. But the comparison of him to Newman doesn't hold at all - he wasn't looking to trap and manipulate Destiny in the least. My understanding is that the topics they talked about were very grave. Like potential hundreds of millions of deaths in Africa resulting from raising energy prices and abolishing fossil fuels. If you believe that this is what is happening, and you're talking to a person who doesn't, and you think they are doing something inexcusably stupid for not noticing and condoning that, and you think these reasons are not valid - maybe you would match your emotional tone to the importance of the matter in question. What do you think about this?
@alibabaschultz352
@alibabaschultz352 16 күн бұрын
@@fra-kolpanzer I think that its easy to become emotionally attached to public figures like Peterson, who is smart, and definitely seems to care deeply about people.
@shillout
@shillout 28 күн бұрын
I can not hear him talk about these topics enough in my lifetime! 🙏🙏
@lovelightfreedomtruth
@lovelightfreedomtruth 27 күн бұрын
Thank you both. Thank you Jordan Peterson for helping society deeply even when its so difficult I think and helping society which is so badly needed with corrupt governments and corrupt institutions in the world.Thank you for all your work and thank you to your family and all who stand with you. God bless 💗
@SbonisoMMDlamini
@SbonisoMMDlamini 28 күн бұрын
I don't know for the life of me where I would possibly get another KZbin channel with such quality conversations between people from different of such different perspectives. I am truly taking notes JP. I found Daniel Dennett to be truly insightful as always and it's a gift to be able to see it.
@Gibbynotaguitar
@Gibbynotaguitar 21 күн бұрын
Dr. Peterson, you gave this conversation so much appropriateness. Dr. Dennett is a foundation stone of societal norms for the Four Horsemen. You treaded this territory cautiously and respectfully. As a former consumer of the Horsemen's every word, and someone who switched beliefs, I wanted full respect afforded to Dr. Dennett. Just like when Dr. Peterson speaks to Dr. Dawkins.
@Communist-Doge
@Communist-Doge 17 күн бұрын
It's so sad that Dennett passed away. I loved this conversation and I'm glad they managed to have it.
@balancedboy5085
@balancedboy5085 27 күн бұрын
Hey Dr Peterson. I hold you a man of great Honor, it is a honor for a man like me to be alive on this age witnessing your work and kind heart. YHWH bless you.
@chandlerangol6718
@chandlerangol6718 13 күн бұрын
Dr. Dennet’s point of view becomes abundantly sympathetic when you realize that he was on his death bed. In this conversation he was not only having an exchange of ideas, but also coping with the reality of his death. What this man needed was not god, but medicine and a cure. His view is one that most of us will come to when meeting death.
@m3po22
@m3po22 19 күн бұрын
I love that after 7 years I can still hear stuff from Jordan that blows my mind. 40:45
@fletchdeeptv1958
@fletchdeeptv1958 27 күн бұрын
It was a brilliant move by Jordan to question the failure of secular universities after Dennett got through claiming "we don't need religion any more our secular ways are good enough now and moral, etc..." who then had to also agree the universities have "gone off the rails".
@Charles-ij1ow
@Charles-ij1ow 26 күн бұрын
But then DD used a combo breaker saying the religious institutions have not shown to be any better. He did agree secular universities are not in a good spot and that correcting it's path is not an easy solution but, is still is a better system.
@steveymoon
@steveymoon 24 күн бұрын
How on earth was that a brilliant move? Whether or not religious universities out-perform secular universities is completely unrelated to whether religious claims are true. A religious university could be the best in the world but that still doesn't mean god is real. It's a nonsense argument.
@nicolasbascunan4013
@nicolasbascunan4013 24 күн бұрын
@@Charles-ij1ow Ancient egyptian, greek and christian "academias" were religious. Modern universities are lame in comparison to their wisdom. Secular ethics = Wokeism (it's indistinguible in Dennet's own terms: all grounded in "science and politics" - relativism -).
@jimluebke3869
@jimluebke3869 24 күн бұрын
@@Charles-ij1ow Religious institutions have been under sustained attack for the last century, by atheistic regimes hostile to not only Christianity but to America as well. The game changed a bit when Moscow fell silent in 1989, but Beijing has picked up the slack very handily.
@Charles-ij1ow
@Charles-ij1ow 24 күн бұрын
@@jimluebke3869 When is Notre Dame going to win a national championship again?
@FigmentHF
@FigmentHF 17 күн бұрын
RIP, Dan, Beautiful mind.
@franklyanogre00000
@franklyanogre00000 28 күн бұрын
I'm looking forward to this conversation.Thank you so much for putting it together. 2:44
@Brenthias
@Brenthias 15 күн бұрын
Rest in peace, Dan. Thanks for the lessons, and thank you, Jordan, for having Dan, one last time.
@Hiroprotagonist253
@Hiroprotagonist253 11 күн бұрын
Cant believe Dennett had to put up with this in his last days. Incredibly patient and great hearted man.
@YashArya01
@YashArya01 27 күн бұрын
What an excellent conversation. Thank you for making it accessible for all of us!
@markaubuchon2227
@markaubuchon2227 26 күн бұрын
I like how many things JP can say “I’ve been thinking about that for about 10 years…”. He truly has a marvelous mind.
@VoloBonja
@VoloBonja 11 күн бұрын
He says that as „parasitic phrase”. Doesn’t add anything to discussion…
@allenandrews2380
@allenandrews2380 27 күн бұрын
Thanks for grappling with and acknowledging the sophistication of our ancestors and some of their insights and arguments. I pray we stay humble through all of our " progress" ❤
@andrewvandyk
@andrewvandyk 27 күн бұрын
Amen :) ❤
@marcbruillon7104
@marcbruillon7104 15 күн бұрын
You will be dearly missed Dr. Dennett. Thank you for your brilliant mind.
@cecilcharlesofficial
@cecilcharlesofficial 25 күн бұрын
I drop some version of this on a lot of Alan Watts videos, because the thought process (which hit me about a year ago now) feels great to write out each time, and it's pertinent here: because Peterson and Dennet are talking about emotions and free will. And because I’ve come to the realization that we’re not in conscious control - nothing is. It seems to me that it's easily provable once you've been walked through it, and it leads to the faith we all hear about, but which very few actually have. Basically, the secret is this: "We don't control our thoughts. We don't control our feelings." Alan Watts says it numerous times, and a look at one's own life and consciousness proves it to be true. Thoughts just pop into our minds. Desires (or distastes) just pop into our awareness. We learn, surely. But we're not in charge of when we learn. We don't go and rearrange our neurons to finally 'get it.' No, it just happens. Just like you can't force or trick yourself to love someone just by saying "I love you," nor can you have faith on purpose. Again - we don't choose thoughts, and even if we did, what would that be? Looking in a bag of thoughts and picking which one you wanted? Well, how would you know which one you wanted? By how they feel, or the presence of some other unchosen thought going "That's the one I want." Except we don't choose how we feel. We just feel. What does this mean? We're not in control. Of anything. Yes there are always options, and a wise person sees more options and longer-reaching implications. But no choice. Just the doing. "Neither fate nor free will," says Watts to Elliott Mintz on a great YT interview if you haven't heard it yet. Nothing is in control, because consciousness is the AWARENESS of will, not the choosing of it. So, perhaps we do have free will, but what that will is (your set of personal desires and personality characteristics) is not up to conscious awareness. You don't choose what you want. You just want it. And perhaps your desire palate changes over time - fair enough - but you don't choose to change. You just change. And so you can really let go, since what thought pops into your head next is truly not up to you, even if it's the most logical, useful, necessary thought. It's simply not up to you. I'm not saying things are chaos, or meaningless: no, you always feel something about life and its meaning at every moment. Some version (simplistic or nuanced) of "This is good," or "This won't do." You conscience is always there, too. Even if it's not always right, it's always there. So begone moral relativists and nihilists: you're STUCK WITH YOUR CONSCIENCE, in whatever form it is in that moment. So where does this leave us in our journey of letting go / satori / enlightenment? You're totally not in charge and thus it's not up to you IF you let go, so you can finally let go of worrying about letting go. And thus you start to let go. The second half of the trick is this: teach yourself to feel your body. Basically anxiety is an icky feeling in our bodies telling us we don't like XYZ. It's the feeling of "I can't take this anymore" that makes us lash out and act in ways we regret. But instead of masking it (with pleasure or drugs), or ignoring it (by clenching our muscles inside and soldiering on), there's a third option: teach yourself to feel, in every moment you can remember, the subtle vague feelings of fear that are somewhere in your body at nearly all times. They're little clenched muscles. Go feel them. Put your mind on them (around your heart, in your face, around your voice box, in your abdomen) whenever you feel anxious about anything. You're not admonishing yourself for having fear: rather, try something you haven't ever tried before: put your mind on the icky feeling of fear that's in a physical location in your body (tensed muscles and fascia) and hold it there. Over and over and over and over and over. Try. Hold it there. Watch as your muscles finally begin to relent (if only momentarily) just because you LOOKED at them long enough. Watch how you feel when you realize you’re able to hold in your mind that nagging discomfort that’s been there for a long time. Watch how you feel when your little muscles/pains finally do relent. In those moments of paying attention you start to handle situations with grace. No longer are you feeling like "I've had it up to here," because you're teaching yourself that yes, you CAN feel a much wider range of things than you thought. That's real courage. And all based on the final reminder that we're absolutely not in control. But we can learn. This version of you that arises in these moments that you remember: it’s as the Tao describes: “Kindhearted as a grandmother, dignified as a king.” It’s a better version of you, in those moments. And so we simply keep positioning our brain to feel, and to hope we learn while knowing the learning isn't up to us. It's faith. It's why the entire Bible is full of stories about faith in God. It's why Jesus tells us not to worry, and not even to ask God for things since he knows what we need already. It's real faith. It's just sad that faith, to Christians, has become the fervent 'professing of belief,' rather than actually believing that you're not in control, and thus that, in some large way, God must have it covered. You don't have to feel the latter (that it's gonna be ok), but the more you realize you have zero control, the more the "it's gonna be ok" faith starts to bloom. You're not in control. But there's still meaning. Faith.
@VaughanMcCue
@VaughanMcCue 11 күн бұрын
I stopped reading your story because I found it hard to concentrate. You do control your thoughts, and here is a silly example. I am sure you were not thinking of a green monkey wearing orange socks and gloves. Until you visualize it, it will not exist. You will forget that image in a couple of days because you are in charge of your thinking. You will return to thinking about the monkey if you write 'green monkey' at the top of your diary every Monday for the next three weeks. Look on ytube for Mara Gleason regarding the control we have over thoughts.
@PaulVanderKlay
@PaulVanderKlay 28 күн бұрын
Oh boy, DD and JBP. This should be interesting.
@soulfuzz368
@soulfuzz368 28 күн бұрын
Some of us are more interested in your take afterwards Paul. I can’t wait
@SpiritualPsychotherapyServices
@SpiritualPsychotherapyServices 28 күн бұрын
philosophy: the love of wisdom, normally encapsulated within a formal academic discipline. Wisdom is the soundness of an action or decision with regard to the application of experience, knowledge, insight, and good judgment. Wisdom may also be described as the body of knowledge and principles that develops within a specified society or period. E.g. “The wisdom of the Tibetan lamas.” Unfortunately, in most cases in which this term is used, particularly outside India, it tacitly or implicitly refers to ideas and ideologies that are quite far-removed from genuine wisdom. For instance, the typical academic philosopher, especially in the Western tradition, is not a lover of actual wisdom, but a believer in, or at least a practitioner of, adharma, which is the ANTITHESIS of genuine wisdom. Many Western academic (so-called) “philosophers” are notorious for using laborious sophistry, abstruse semantics, gobbledygook, and pseudo-intellectual word-play, in an attempt to justify their blatantly-immoral ideologies and practices, and in many cases, fooling the ignorant layman into accepting the most horrendous crimes as not only normal and natural, but holy and righteous! An ideal philosopher, on the other hand, is one who is sufficiently intelligent to understand that morality is, of necessity, based on the law of non-violence (“ahiṃsā”, in Sanskrit), and sufficiently wise to live his or her life in such a harmless manner. Cf. “dharma”. One of the greatest misconceptions of modern times is the belief that philosophers (and psychologists, especially) are, effectively, the substitutes for the priesthood of old. It is perhaps understandable that this misconception has taken place, because the typical priest/monk/rabbi/mullah seems to be an uneducated buffoon compared with those highly-educated gentlemen who have attained doctorates in philosophy, psychology and psychiatry. However, as mentioned in more than a few places in this book, it is imperative to understand that only an infinitesimal percentage of all those who claim to be spiritual teachers are ACTUAL “brāhmaṇa” (as defined in Chapter 20). Therefore, the wisest philosophers of the present age are still those exceptionally rare members of the Holy Priesthood! At the very moment these words of mine are being typed on my laptop computer, there are probably hundreds of essay papers, as well as books and articles, being composed by professional philosophers and theologians, both within and without academia. None of these papers, and almost none of the papers written in the past, will have any noticeable impact on human society, at least not in the realm of morals and ethics, which is obviously the most vital component of civilization. And, as mentioned in a previous paragraph, since such “lovers-of-wisdom” are almost exclusively adharmic (irreligious and corrupt) it is indeed FORTUITOUS that this is the case. The only (so-called) philosophers who seem to have any perceptible influence in the public arena are “pop” or “armchair” philosophers, such as Mrs. Alisa “Alice” O’Connor (known more popularly by her pen name, Ayn Rand), almost definitely due to the fact that they have published well-liked books and/or promulgate their ideas in the mass media, especially on the World Wide Web.
@thenero9493
@thenero9493 28 күн бұрын
Yup 👀👀
@WhiteStoneName
@WhiteStoneName 28 күн бұрын
Hi. Neal told me about this... He said it really takes off at one hour in...TGrogan death blow.
@mcmosav
@mcmosav 28 күн бұрын
Well well well if it isn’t the goodly pastor
@alanarcher
@alanarcher 26 күн бұрын
"Free will is an achievement, not a metaphysical endowment" - Dr. Dan Dennett Well, this is revolutionary to my mind
@joecurran2811
@joecurran2811 16 күн бұрын
Is this Dennett's last interview? Bit ironic it's with religion's most prominent academic proponent. He will surely be missed. RIP Dan.
@omgitsatree4503
@omgitsatree4503 16 күн бұрын
​@@billyb6001Failed attempt
@EtherealSpoon
@EtherealSpoon 28 күн бұрын
Keep it up Dr. Jordan!
@rawgasmiclove
@rawgasmiclove 26 күн бұрын
THOROUGHLY enjoyed this conversation. Thankyou 🙏🏼💫💞
@Breathoffreshair88
@Breathoffreshair88 28 күн бұрын
Thankyou for this. Always eye opening and Motivating learning for me with your conversations
@carolspencer6915
@carolspencer6915 27 күн бұрын
Good evening Jordan and Daniel Exactly all of this. Truly grateful. 💜
@juanmiguelgarridogil3396
@juanmiguelgarridogil3396 17 күн бұрын
DANIEL DENNET, EL MAS GRANDE. TE VOY A EXTRAÑAR MUCHISIMO , INFINITAS GRACIAS POR TU CONTRIBUCION, INMENSA RACIONALIDAD, EMPATIA Y SENTIDO DEL HUMOR. UN GAME CHANGER UN ICONO
@francisguevara1688
@francisguevara1688 15 күн бұрын
Así se habla😢
@Ashley.Ramsey
@Ashley.Ramsey 26 күн бұрын
After so many struggles I now own a new house and my family is happy once again everything is finally falling into place!!
@gedde5703
@gedde5703 23 күн бұрын
Dennett seems to have have gotten a lot more humble and receptive over the years. Guess it's the wisdom of age making itself manifest.
@lxvleygxcha1004
@lxvleygxcha1004 27 күн бұрын
This was an awesome conversation, in my opinion.. I can't wait to watch these two masters continue.
@legalgig3480
@legalgig3480 25 күн бұрын
My man, I love you. I love the light you shed on this world. Much needed
@EccleezyAvicii
@EccleezyAvicii 27 күн бұрын
In the debate, a pivotal moment unfolds around the 1:03:40 timestamp, marking what appears to be Dennett's tacit acknowledgment of defeat, as betrayed by his body language. Subsequently, the dialogue takes on a different tone. Peterson adopts the role of an analyst performing a post-mortem of the discussion, while Dennett seems to engage in an effort to reconstruct his stance, a dynamic that becomes particularly evident at 1:14:10. The debate centers on the role of religion in preserving fundamental truths and shaping culture within a dynamic landscape of varying truths, a concept Peterson advocates. He posits that society is underpinned by a robust core of enduring truths, supported by a more adaptable cultural framework, contributions to which Dennett also acknowledges. This is what religions points at according to Peterson 1:13:44. Dennett, on the other hand, argues against the necessity of religion in contemporary society, suggesting that secular ethics alone are sufficient. Peterson counters this by suggesting that secular ethics and the scientific community are part of a broader, religiously founded civilization that safeguards essential truths and adapts over time. Peterson's exceptional debating prowess is undeniable, giving him a significant edge in this discussion. His ability to deftly traverse both secular and religious domains contrasts sharply with Dennett's performance, which, possibly due to the limitations of the debate format, may not fully convey the breadth of his understanding. One could speculate that Dennett might present a more persuasive case in writing, where the constraints of real-time dialogue do not apply. However, whether such an argument would surpass or even match the coherence and appeal of Peterson's viewpoints remains a matter of skepticism for me. This debate highlights a stark disconnect in our modern world from the deep truths and beauty of religious teachings, as shown when Dennett seems surprised by Peterson's scriptural insights at the 39:00 mark. It also points to a failure in contemporary religion to pass on its ancient wisdom. Additionally, Dennett himself has expressed concerns over the dangers posed by advancements in science, like AI, critiquing the AI community in The Atlantic: "Many in the AI community these days are so eager to explore their new powers that they have lost track of their moral obligations." This raises a question: If Dennett believes secular ethics alone are adequate, he needs to explain why these ethics have not prevented, and perhaps have even contributed to, the very existential threats he identifies, despite the potential of science he critiques.
@musicaltakes
@musicaltakes 27 күн бұрын
The problem I see with Peterson's perspective is that religion can always be invoked as the ultimate framework. It doesn't matter if you start with science or any other perspective; Peterson tends to conclude with religion. It's akin to the creation of the universe: starting with the big bang, then considering other theories, but ultimately, individuals like Peterson tend to wrap everything up with religion. Religion becomes the overarching framework, like the wrapping paper atop layers of other concepts. It presents a challenge because it's difficult to argue against this approach; religion remains central to the discourse, serving as the foundation upon which other ideas are built. Any new ideas are just engulfed by the religion, ad infinitum.
@EccleezyAvicii
@EccleezyAvicii 27 күн бұрын
@@musicaltakes Positioning religion as foundational doesn't preclude critical engagement or debate. On the contrary, it invites a deeper examination of how religious and secular ethics can coexist and inform each other-this is Peterson’s approach and its resonates deeply with people right now. It’s an approach that can foster a more nuanced understanding of complex issues, rather than constraining discourse within a purely secular or scientific framework, where there’s a comparatively more shallow reservoir of experience to pull from.
@cjmascoveto9357
@cjmascoveto9357 27 күн бұрын
I wish that Peterson pressed more on the conceptual model he was constructing including science, civilization, and the foundational elements. It seems that they both agreed on this model but Dr. D insisted that the “politics” or “secular ethics” that direct the science towards the high good were non-religious in nature. In fact to me it sounded like he was describing a science as he mentioned game theory and the other factors that contribute to the “politics”. You seem smart so I’m curious about your take on this and if Dr. D’s analysis appears circular in the sense that the model he proposes has science nestled in science or at least has shortcomings as I perceive it.
@musicaltakes
@musicaltakes 27 күн бұрын
@@EccleezyAvicii It does prevent societies from adopting Dr. Dennett's perspective, wouldn't you agree? Because even within this conversation, which I found great, Dr. Peterson is endlessly wrapping everything up with religious wrapping paper. They both agree, to some extent, on the importance and evolution of science, but whereas Dr. Dennett is showing how science is growing and expanding, asserting that phenomena like the sound of thunder aren't caused by gods (he doesn't mention this, but you get my point), Dr. Peterson continues to contain scientific expansion within the framework of religion. It doesn't matter how much progress we make with science; religion, in Dr. Peterson's views, will always contain it. Dr. Dennett is asking, can it ever break free? This is the fundamental disagreement between the two, isn't it? Or am I mistaken?
@EccleezyAvicii
@EccleezyAvicii 27 күн бұрын
@@cjmascoveto9357 Peterson posits that at its core, civilization is underpinned by a religious foundation, essential for fostering good science. This foundation blends universal truths with an evolving moral framework, akin to religions that adapt over time to societal needs. He highlights the corrective role of religion, as seen in the Old Testament where divine intervention occurs when society strays, underscoring religion's pivotal role in maintaining civilization's integrity. Conversely, Dennett argues that civilization, the bedrock for science, can now be sustained by normative disciplines 1:19:10 such as logic, game theory, probability theory, and mathematics, which are universally understood. He contends 1:20:20 that religion has either been irrelevant or detrimental to the development of these rational inquiries, viewing it as a control mechanism historically exploited by rulers to enforce order. Peterson, at 1:23:02, probes what was the religious enterprise doing in terms of Dennett’s formulation that allowed it to play its role as a precondition or ‘nurse crop’. The ensuing discussion veers towards contemporary issues, including the moral quandaries on college campuses and briefly the existential topic of counterfeit AI people. I don’t think Dennett’s view is circular or wrong, just incomplete. I think Peterson’s intuition and intention in steering the discussion towards current issues is to shine a light on consequences where a lack of deep moral insight has led to crisis, and the implication there is that these issues are the fruit of secular ethics. I’ll leave you with an interesting quote by Vladimir Solovyov: …if Western civilization had as its task, its world mission, to accomplish the negative transition from the religious past to the religious future, then it is destined for another historical force to lay the foundations for this religious future itself. (Translated) Lecture I on Godmanhood. Vol. III, p. 14.
@amandajephson9964
@amandajephson9964 27 күн бұрын
Absolutely loved this conversation, thank you so very much!
@ryugo7713
@ryugo7713 27 күн бұрын
Thanks for this enlightening conversation! It's fascinating to see how different individuals approach tasks and planning. Some seem to excel at critical thinking, mapping out multiple accomplishments before even starting, while others dive into one task at a time, driven by the need to avoid overwhelming options. It's a reminder that curiosity knows no bounds. Good show!
@deliverychain6050
@deliverychain6050 21 күн бұрын
I’ve been a fan of Jordan Peterson a long time. I’ve listened to hundreds of hours of his lectures and podcasts. One issue I have, as much as I enjoy hearing Jordan speak, he struggles with shutting his mouth many times with his guests. He always needs to interject long diatribes. I’d be interested in knowing the percentage of time he is talking versus active listening.
@SuperHamsters777
@SuperHamsters777 27 күн бұрын
Finally more Dr. Dennett content! He's the brightest flame from the four horsemen, but the least visible!
@adamsmith307
@adamsmith307 27 күн бұрын
He clearly has a prejudice against religion.
@denroy3
@denroy3 27 күн бұрын
Oxymoron. He's the flame alright...from the darkest pit.
@denroy3
@denroy3 27 күн бұрын
​@@adamsmith307he thinks himself a god...rationalized his contempt of his fellow man.
@SuperHamsters777
@SuperHamsters777 27 күн бұрын
@@denroy3 he doesn't speak in those terms and its silly to put those words in his mouth. Him and Jordan didn't disagree about anything.
@domepuncher
@domepuncher 27 күн бұрын
@@adamsmith307 No duh, Sherlock. If you think something does more bad than good, you are going to be prejudice against it on a personal level. If the simple fact that he expresses this sentiment offends you, you have extremely delicate sensibilities. I'm religious myself but can at least acknowledge he is not intentionally belittling about his views.
@shisuiuchiha666
@shisuiuchiha666 27 күн бұрын
This was the greatest covnersation I've seen on your podcast thus far Jordan .. absolutely magnificent
@melrosedowdyart
@melrosedowdyart 15 күн бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Dennett. Rest in peace.
@dandimit8463
@dandimit8463 28 күн бұрын
I had kinda stopped watching this channel because of too many ads. The name Daniel Dennett brought back memories of my atheist podcast days 10+ years ago, so decided to give this one a shot. Brilliant and worth getting thru the commercials, which seem to be less than I remember. Thanks for putting this together. I may listen to this one a few times.
@alaron5698
@alaron5698 27 күн бұрын
You can just fast forward past them, so I don't really see the issue.
@NathanGuerraTV
@NathanGuerraTV 27 күн бұрын
Interesting take on the trades being made with your time and theirs...
@dandimit8463
@dandimit8463 27 күн бұрын
@@alaron5698 I listen to videos on my phone while I work. Fast forwarding is inconvenient. I pay for KZbin premium to avoid ads.
@Mevlinous
@Mevlinous 28 күн бұрын
1:19:55 the current production of moral excellence for the secular is secular humanism, however, it tends to value the collective over the individual and therefore makes terrible decisions based on some kind of calculus of “greater good”. THAT is the problem we face with secular backed morality, it has lost sight of the individual, and therefore justifies tyranny for some greater good. Thanks but I’ll stick with my individual freedoms.
@thomabow8949
@thomabow8949 26 күн бұрын
This seems somewhat like a generalization of "secular humanism" - what examples are you considering when you say it makes terrible decisions on greater scales than the individual?
@enidmarsh9142
@enidmarsh9142 25 күн бұрын
"Collective" and "greater good" come from the totalitarian side of things.
@jg6972
@jg6972 7 күн бұрын
@@thomabow8949 People from the eastern block will understand better what it means, when secular enterprise takes morality as a hostage and claims to know what is good and what is bad. If morality is completely secular, and thus, not in tact with any objective ideal, that's above everyone and no matter what, it's just relativistic. It can play with what is good and what is bad, it can redefine everything. If this isn't the case, we end up with an absolute and end up within a religious realm.
@mitchellaitcheson4557
@mitchellaitcheson4557 24 күн бұрын
One of the best conversations I've seen from you yet! Thanks for your work, Jordan.
@stratosstathakis3809
@stratosstathakis3809 26 күн бұрын
Awesome! I've been waiting for a Peterson - Dennett conversation for years now. Thank you
@tttrrrification
@tttrrrification 28 күн бұрын
Love this conversation
@mischake
@mischake 28 күн бұрын
Awesome Dannett is still kicking. Gonna enjoy this
@danielm5161
@danielm5161 28 күн бұрын
Yeah it's good to see Jordan talking to people like Dennett, he is one of the bets philosophers of our time
@AndrewBrownK
@AndrewBrownK 27 күн бұрын
he's OLD but I hope he feels proud of his life because he deserves it
@shanerogowski
@shanerogowski 25 күн бұрын
@@AndrewBrownK 82 is the new 60
@ondrejdalik6221
@ondrejdalik6221 17 күн бұрын
Didn't age well
@drose91
@drose91 17 күн бұрын
Damn that joke didn't last long
@Sisyphus40
@Sisyphus40 17 күн бұрын
I just finished watching this today. Dennett was a formidable thinker.
@szilardoberritter4135
@szilardoberritter4135 27 күн бұрын
We must be grateful that we live in a world where we can listen to minds like this! Brings me to smile when I think of this while watching such conversations!
@szilardoberritter4135
@szilardoberritter4135 14 күн бұрын
the timing of this comments makes me sad
@tmerk4292
@tmerk4292 28 күн бұрын
Wow! I love the idea of the Egyptians putting "attention to error" on the most high. That explains so much about their culture and makes my mind spin with ideas about how much we are missing in translation.
@ihussain1011
@ihussain1011 28 күн бұрын
A conversation with Hitchens would have been on a different level. However with Dennett, I didn't think this was going to take place, kudos to making this happen. Blessed for this high level intellectual talks.
@johnsmithy7918
@johnsmithy7918 10 күн бұрын
I really wish there would have been a second conversations 😔 May he rest in peace.
@philwalkercounselling
@philwalkercounselling 27 күн бұрын
So respect these two speaking. I hope for more.
@vancamerawoman7399
@vancamerawoman7399 27 күн бұрын
What a great discussion. Jordan is always both professor and student simultaneously.
@markb4021
@markb4021 27 күн бұрын
Thank you for this challenging talk. I always find it interesting how a religious people will often accept the thoughts of science, but yet scientific people don't often accept thoughts of the religious. Logically nether should be written out of any goodwill conversation on the basis of personal bias, yet sadly the "logical" often do. My bias I struggle with is that I think we are seeing the fruits of scientific goodwill alone of the experts in large metro areas and the education system. Even so, I would remind Dr. Dennett that the Universities where born from the Church and that AI was born from Science-one must logically look at the offspring of each parent on the whole and decide in which is more worthy of moral acceptance and practice.
@markb4021
@markb4021 26 күн бұрын
@@dafunkmonster Agreed, I hope that they get another chance to talk and that Dr. Peterson presses him a bit further on human history. Also perhaps explore Dr. Dennet's bias of not being to use/accept words like "revelation". As well as the "fairy tales" that science has spun like eugenics and more recently the safety of mRNA as preached by his bishop Dr. Fauci.
@thomabow8949
@thomabow8949 26 күн бұрын
@@dafunkmonster Christianity did not "birth" science; yes, you can argue Christian, Islamic, and Greek scholars who were theistic helped pioneer the empirical processes that would form into the current "scientific philosophy" we use - but it is not an inherently religious process nor attributable to one specific philosopher. I would say pre-Socratics perhaps had the greatest influence on pioneering empiricism.
@Si_Mondo
@Si_Mondo 26 күн бұрын
​@@thomabow8949The scientific method, as we know it, came from Francis Bacon; a Christian, who's Christianity *was* his motivation. Your assertion is woefully incorrect.
@thomabow8949
@thomabow8949 26 күн бұрын
@@Si_Mondo No, read what was written: "but it is not an inherently religious process nor attributable to one specific philosopher". When we sit down and "do" science, do we reference Bacon's Christian motivations any more so than we do pre-Socratic Greek deism or Islam's Allah? Do we gag on his theological cock every time we explore a physical phenomenon? I will counter you with this - Christianity owes all of its principles and its worship and miracles to Zoroaster and other religious figures of pre-Hebrew Middle Eastern religions. Every time you sit down and pray to the Christian God, you must pay veneration for the religions that gave birth to you and the Gods that gave birth to your God.
@patrickwoods2213
@patrickwoods2213 25 күн бұрын
@@Si_Mondo The scientific method started way before that - back to the ancient Greeks. The Christians only evolved it.
@09bamasky
@09bamasky 25 күн бұрын
“Human beings are the measure of what’s good.” Well, Dr. Dennett, that is setting a pretty low and subjective bar. As a philosophy student in my 20s during the early 2000s, I loved Dennett’s and other “new atheist” writings. Training and practicing in psychoanalysis has led me to the Catholic Church, which explicates the True, the Good, and the Beautiful better than any and all secular philosophical attempts.
@KG-gv7qy
@KG-gv7qy 24 күн бұрын
The Catholic church is Pharisees and Sadduccees combined into one
@VoloBonja
@VoloBonja 11 күн бұрын
How does church explicate Truth? Truth must be what’s in the holy scriptures, no? Is that idea of truth even useful for science?
@jasonking9984
@jasonking9984 26 күн бұрын
spectacular conversation thank you both
@gailivey2015
@gailivey2015 27 күн бұрын
Very interesting, although Dr. Dennett seems to have a lot of contradictions I don't seem to be able to understand. It's pretty obvious his understanding of religion about the physicality of religion, not the spirituality of it. I'd love for him to debate with Dr. Lennox.
@steverieske2027
@steverieske2027 27 күн бұрын
I think you understood him perfectly. He says that Meyer is wrong, but Meyer points out his circular reasoning over and over and it does not take a brilliant mind to see that Meyer's critique is spot on.
@Si_Mondo
@Si_Mondo 26 күн бұрын
He'll stay away from Lennox; he saw how Lennox dealt with Dawkins.
@gailivey2015
@gailivey2015 26 күн бұрын
@@steverieske2027 Do you think Peterson doesn't push back because he wants to investigate the thought process further, or because he himself is still unsure? Those arguments Meyer made must be obvious to him, too.
@patrickwoods2213
@patrickwoods2213 25 күн бұрын
@@Si_Mondo Lennox is overrated. Nothing to get excited about. Anyone who knows how to see the absurdities in Christian apologetics can debate Lennox.
@tjm1015
@tjm1015 25 күн бұрын
I'm thinking the same way
@michaelz6555
@michaelz6555 16 күн бұрын
Rest In Peace, Dr. Dennett.
@darrengagliardi1540
@darrengagliardi1540 27 күн бұрын
Unfortunately this wasn’t long enough. They only had time to basically agree upon definitions and concepts, and then it ended. We definitely need a follow up discussion.
@trolley2327
@trolley2327 9 күн бұрын
It's hard to watch this now .. RIP Dennett .... what a great philosopher and thanks Jordan Peterson for this fantastic interview ... I always liked to see this side of Dennett more and no one like Jordan Peterson could bring it out.
@catholicnewsworld
@catholicnewsworld 28 күн бұрын
Thanks for this conversation - Prayers for your family - Blessed Solemnity of the Annunciation - “Pascal’s Wager" is good to think about here. Blessings! 🙏
@MyPoptART
@MyPoptART 28 күн бұрын
I’m thoroughly enjoying this conversation. Thank you! ❤
@flamechick6
@flamechick6 14 күн бұрын
Loved this talk, but like all things, it must come to an end. Rest in Peace Dan Dennett 🕊️
@thomasgill223
@thomasgill223 26 күн бұрын
Notice Dennett completely did not answer the (vital) question: What is the highest Good? Unless you think the highest good is a perfectly constructed machine gun, you will be disappointed with his non-answer. In essence he said I don't know what it is exactly because it is ineffable, and the only thing I can tell you is that it is evolving, because we wouldn't want to live in old testament times now, would we? The implicit suggestion is that human morality is evolving in a positive direction of which Dennet cannot describe any single feature of, or what this human morality is evolving towards, but it is a real thing, and it is the Good. This sounds fairly religious to me, but hopelessly muddled and vague (like I find most of his "philosophizing").
@rndyh77
@rndyh77 18 күн бұрын
Agreed. But still, conversations like these help me analyze, rationalize, refine, and formalize my own ideas.
@ThePenitentChannel
@ThePenitentChannel 18 күн бұрын
I appreciate your comments. This conversation, for me, put on display two different dimensions of perception capacity. Interestingly, Dennet referred to light, and how does that light get into us and do its work which seems to connect with his observation or perception that mankind seems to be getting better, although he didn’t explain the reason(s) why mankind, fundamentally, needs to “improve” morally to begin with, which is what I wanted to highlight as part of the differences in perception capacity between the two men I.e., one who has as eaten from Life and one who has eaten from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil which by default results in a different capacity of perception. To begin with, it limits Man’s perception capacity solely to the 5 senses blocking out or cutting off the spiritual capacity of perception which is to perceive of & by the knowledge of God. This is why mankind from birth can look at creation and out into the vastness of space, and instantly feel a soul level emptiness, with no perception of God, because he is now outside of a their perception capacity. The light he referred to, unknowingly, is the light of the life of God in Christ as Jesus mentioned directly in the gospel of John. The dynamics of perception that Peterson & Dennet referred to impacting physiology and intellectually, with about this and intention, or all packed into the words of life himself that is Jesus Christ The dynamics of perception that Peterson & Dennet referred to impacting physiology, about-ness, intention, are all packed into the words of life Himself that is Jesus Christ who is the “target” Peterson alluded to. I can hear Dennet’s desire to experience what is in the light and pray for this for him. What do you think? 🤔
@Neal_Daedalus
@Neal_Daedalus 28 күн бұрын
It’s like time traveling and seeing how far we’ve come.
@mcmosav
@mcmosav 28 күн бұрын
Look at us…
@Neal_Daedalus
@Neal_Daedalus 27 күн бұрын
@@mcmosav amen brother. Missed you this evening
@jimluebke3869
@jimluebke3869 26 күн бұрын
History has not ended, imagine my shock. =)
@Ingurita
@Ingurita 6 күн бұрын
I'm sad to realize that future conversations about AI and counterfeit people won't happen with Daniel Dennett now. I hope he rests in peace. Thank you for this conversation; I enjoyed it very much, especially because of the amount of stories and even jokes shared, which put clear images in my head for a better understanding of each other's points.
@gerryiannuzzi5122
@gerryiannuzzi5122 26 күн бұрын
Jordan, these discussions are a much better format. I was in NYC Radio City for your talk. Little disappointing I give it a C+ and that’s because I like you.
@ourblessedtribe9284
@ourblessedtribe9284 27 күн бұрын
This is really good. Peterson at his best. Thank you both
@VoloBonja
@VoloBonja 11 күн бұрын
Talking three times more than guest is his best? Using simple ideas wrapped in fancy words is best? I wonder what worse version could there be. Weakest Dennett interview I’ve heard, considering Dennetts books, ideas and the amount of topics touched by him
@mattayoubi9829
@mattayoubi9829 25 күн бұрын
Peterson is sharp. Great questions at the end.
@EvertVorster
@EvertVorster 27 күн бұрын
Really nice converstation between two people who has had a massive formative influence on my thinking.
@xCONDOGZz
@xCONDOGZz 27 күн бұрын
This is one of the best interviews I've ever seen.
@joryiansmith
@joryiansmith 28 күн бұрын
Secular science, ethics, politics, and technology have led to the biggest increases in loneliness, depression, and societal suicide in human history right now. To be supportive of that is to reveal a deep blindness and ignorance. That's not to say throw out science. That is to say not to throw out religious communities, connectedness, and stories.
@andyomega27
@andyomega27 27 күн бұрын
He is not saying that there is no wisdom in the bible. He suggested that goodwill and ethics is a learned trait, Something that must be taught. There are many teachings from the bible that are still very relevant to modern ethical education.
@thomabow8949
@thomabow8949 26 күн бұрын
@@dafunkmonster The entire paraphrasing that you have written is coherent, and his definitions are not inherently religious, unless you operate under a different definition of that word than most. Utterly coherent.
Do We Have Freewill? / Daniel Dennett VS Robert Sapolsky
1:07:42
How To Academy Mindset
Рет қаралды 188 М.
Daniel Dennett: Breaking the Spell - Religion as a Natural Phenomenon
58:44
The University of Edinburgh
Рет қаралды 175 М.
Useful Gadget for Smart Parents 🌟
00:29
Meow-some! Reacts
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН
Зомби Апокалипсис  часть 1 🤯#shorts
00:29
INNA SERG
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
Não pode Comprar Tudo 5
00:29
DUDU e CAROL
Рет қаралды 82 МЛН
Jordan Peterson | This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von #460
2:20:04
Theo Von
Рет қаралды 3,7 МЛН
War, PTSD, & Psychedelics | Kelsi Sheren | EP 446
1:38:37
Jordan B Peterson
Рет қаралды 16 М.
Dan Dennett: Responding to Pastor Rick Warren
25:31
TED
Рет қаралды 2 МЛН
Women, Porn, and Sadists | Dr. Del Paulhus | EP 327
1:48:59
Jordan B Peterson
Рет қаралды 2,7 МЛН
Jordan Peterson: STOP LYING TO YOURSELF! How To Turn Your Life Around In 2024!
1:30:12
The illusion of consciousness | Dan Dennett
23:46
TED
Рет қаралды 1,7 МЛН
Daniel Dennett - Can Religion Be Explained Without God?
19:49
Closer To Truth
Рет қаралды 25 М.
Useful Gadget for Smart Parents 🌟
00:29
Meow-some! Reacts
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН