This man has been solid for years! way before his fame. Goose bumps for the last 10 minutes. Inspirational AF
@plekkchand7 жыл бұрын
This man is rare among his peers for genuinely trying to be what a professor should be, and largely succeeding.
@leefithian37043 жыл бұрын
Perfect professor
@joek92356 жыл бұрын
Out of all my years in private school and all my family that went to private school, I have neither seen nor heard a class that goes into the depths of biblical meaning. It has always been treated more like a history lesson. Thank you Dr. Peterson for everything you have done, do, and will do.
@sevillaking66778 жыл бұрын
It is really worth watching these several times if you can - or at least the points that one has trouble comprehending. Just when I think I am deeply confused, I watch it again and the clarity shines forth.
@libraryofthemind8 жыл бұрын
excellent :-)
@GorillaChad7 ай бұрын
Thank you, Dr. Peterson, for allowing all of us to watch you wrestle with everything discuss in these lecture videos. Hearing the pitch change in your voice as you become more passionate about our individual responsibility to bring forth the highest possible good in this world is revitalizing.
@Drew150009 жыл бұрын
Dr. Peterson thank you so much for posting these videos on youtube I'm sure someone as smart as you knows how important this all is and if nothing else these videos helped me greatly in my life and I am sincerely grateful that you were able to organize and explain these ideas so well. Please release more content please keep thinking!
@vardankhachatryan55036 жыл бұрын
I just finished this course. It took me a while. Probably 2 months. There is so much to get from these lectures. I certainly will keep watching his lectures. Even though it might be the same topic, the number of ideas he delivers is so big, that I could not possibly get it from just one course. And I can feel how my life changes. Even though slowly. But I don't only have hope now, I believe. Thank you!
@leefithian37043 жыл бұрын
Repetition, only way
@budnrobots2968 Жыл бұрын
these past couple genesis lectures have been profound to listen to!! imagine how many professors have been so great and lost to history. this is history right here!
@harkyo3 жыл бұрын
I challenge one to find a more lucid elocutor of any argument in one breath. This is a testament to the integrity of the arguer and argument itself.
@nathanchoi37634 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your Cain and Abel sharing Dr. Peterson. It's relieving to hear such description of purposeful harm in my current difficult situation. I think my family and friends actually have been gaining their sense of powerfulness by hurting me and limiting my development. Perhaps I just hope that someone around me can anticipate me to succeed and to live the life which I want to live. I still get no one after years of struggling, this support in this right timing really helped me.
@JeffMTX10 ай бұрын
Sometimes you have to step forward from among them. Thenceforth, you can always go back and visit, but your abode is elsewhere :)
@harkyo3 жыл бұрын
This man is a gift. USE HIS WISDOM. 🖖🏼
@meilei87163 жыл бұрын
Bought the book and it includes the graphics we can’t see here on Audible… great series, bravo and thank you on behalf of all of us fortunate enough to hear it.
@daviszollars33568 жыл бұрын
dang i love this guy. he showed me my fucked up ways of thinking.. droped some serious knowledge
@Matheus169053 жыл бұрын
The myth of Can't and Able is the fundamental archetype
@mohammedalattar55464 жыл бұрын
A wonderful journey i have taken throughout this course. Thanks a lot Dr Peterson 💓💓💓
@rostislav29394 жыл бұрын
What a great course - and completely for free. I see a valuable message although I couldn't comprehend it all in the first run, so now I'm going to watch the same course but from 2017. It's interesting to see how the view count significantly declined from the first video to the last
@LifePrinciples_3 жыл бұрын
Just, WOW. I needed to hear this so badly, thank you Dr. Peterson.
@jeffilli16637 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the lectures! I learned a lot. Wish I had discovered this stuff at an earlier age. Thanks again!
@LifeHacksMP6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting these, just completed. Off to my next JBP playlist!
@jaybird60347 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr.Peterson
@jevotepour3 жыл бұрын
so good, thanks a lot Pr Peterson, you are my binge watching series now, so good to see how you embodied your own philosophy the past years, a great model that many needed. Take care and be well, and thanks again for not giving up on Being
@jo-ma4507 жыл бұрын
Wow, that is an impressive Conclusion! I am inspired, touched and surprised about how you connected these vast fields of knowledge (mythology, psychometrics, depth psychology...) and also derived a moral imperative from it that is as practical as it gets!!! Thank You, Dr. Peterson for your great work!
@OmarDelawar5 жыл бұрын
Holyshit how many teachers do you know that get a round of applause at the end of the class by their students? 42:44
@harkyo3 жыл бұрын
Truth, son!
@elisteele5743 күн бұрын
I love this channel. Limitless valuable information.
@bijanshadnia36206 жыл бұрын
Philosopher Dr. JBP
@sam0var8438 жыл бұрын
Brilliant course. Professor Peterson is a valuable resource. Does anyone know of any other 3rd- or 4th-year psych courses that appear unadulterated on youtube?
@JonathanLaliberte19 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. Thank you. Will be binging on all these videos.
@harkyo3 жыл бұрын
Speak and act out the truth!
@AliMohammed-bg9ju3 жыл бұрын
Another playlist of lectures done ✅
@OnceAJay3 жыл бұрын
There we go
@Andobando1118 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@stannone72724 жыл бұрын
IM DONE! I HAVE FINISHED ALL OF IT! YEAHHH!
@gmaharriet6 жыл бұрын
It seems like what you said at 42:26 about setting things right was extremely prophetic. At that point you couldn't have had any idea how famous and successful you'd be now. :)
@budnrobots2968 Жыл бұрын
This is historical itself
@BlindEyeJones7 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't bring up Pinocchio as a being transformed by death, choosing death for the better as a conscious choice. Death is also the change card in the Tarot deck. Thanks for the lecture series. There is a lot that I agree with you and you have clarified certain ideas for me. I wish you luck with your war for free speech, against the SJWs who are corrupting the university with their PC codes. All the best!
@tortriks8 жыл бұрын
Ahh Brillant! So good man. So good
@rebecka24223 жыл бұрын
Thank you! There is always good stuff here :-)
@crogers74004 ай бұрын
Like a seed from fruit in a tree 27:17
@BigRed42319 жыл бұрын
"If you do follow the path you find the most meaningful it´s likely to take you to the place your most afraid of" Jung is likely right about that. Confrontation with all the aspects of self that has been limiting your potential will come up. And thern there is the sticky situation where you actually have to confront your old self and love it, but not doing so is "selling your soul", "soul" being the highest potential. Cause the old "faulty" self is what has brought you to the discovery of a new better self. There is always a virus on the computer before one bothers to take it to the repairman, the virus has initiated a stage of metamorphosis, and should be respected. That´s maybe why it is near impossible, or atlas very hard to progress after having done something fatally wrong - like murder - it´s a sin. How are one gonna have accept your previous self after doing something like that and be able to move onwards? Moral and ethics are essential for human development.
@revhthboma70874 жыл бұрын
I want to say so many things, but I am afraid that I will lose myself along the way and hide in a dead personality. The only solution, therefore is to continue to speak, acknowledge my error, and march forth. Honesty and humility will carry you farther than you can imagine. At least that's the belief. My belief.
@angelvollant86411 ай бұрын
@@revhthboma7087 Absolutely. As JP said in this episode about Jesus' speech, "The first thing you need to understand is that you don't know what you're doing. The second thing is to understant that you want good in your life, or in the world (unless you're Cain, in which case you want the bad) . The third is that you should navigate/orient yourself towards "good", whatever that means".
@revhthboma708711 ай бұрын
@@angelvollant864 it's been three years since I wrote that comment, and during that time I was able to begin working in state government, receive three promotions, and now be offered a job at a Federal agency. I am so very thankful for choosing to pursue honesty with courage and faith. I hope that, should I happen across this comment thread again later again in life, I will be able to leave another note with an even greater story to tell. Choosing honestly and humility almost killed me at first, but it was simultaneously the restorative spirit that brought me where I am today. I am so incredibly thankful!
@JeffMTX10 ай бұрын
Thank goodness for repentance!
@Bozothcow Жыл бұрын
Did you ever have a professor for whom you guys clapped at the end of the year? I never have.
@faustianrevival38164 жыл бұрын
38:33 "I think that paradise is something that people have to build. I think if we built it properly it would justify everything that happened on the way to building it" - yes JBP said that lol. A statement that any Communist or Nazi would have whole heartedly agreed with. A dangerous idea. I can't believe it came out of his lips. I'm a big fan and I'm sure he would add many caveats if he heard himself say it. I hope so anyway.
@labornurse4 жыл бұрын
I like to think he means the paradise we can build with our moral actions can justify the suffering of existence we all experience. That all the malevolence and tragedy can be ultimately worth it to experience a life of transcendence.
@faustianrevival38164 жыл бұрын
T M H yes I'm sure he does just mean that. The "justify anything" bit stuck out to me as being alarming though. I'm sure he didn't mean it literally like any action is justified in order to get to utopia like what communists believe to justify mass murder.
@sangmadewira4726Ай бұрын
I assume the key difference in JP's statement vs if it were said by ideologues is what he defined as "built properly" and "justify everything". 'Proper' would roughly mean paying attention, especially to your enemy/farthest unknown, and justify "everything" would refer mostly to justifying your existential burden. I also think that when he mentioned people, he meant it as individuals, not a whole singular collective, since he once mentioned elsewhere he's more of a psychologue rather than a sociologue when he referred to Leo Tolstoy (i think). But i think this single quote can't really be taken outside of context by woke liberals, or even far-right folks for that matter, as fuel to be used for political/debauched motivations, since, as JP mentions as a principle before as well, this kind of statement is missing key depth of details and can be interpreted to fit whatever definition the reader wants to see. Unless, of course, the people listening to someone's intentionally or unintentionally distorted explanation of this quote are gullible NPCs, which unfortunately describes most of the population right now.
@johnbaesv4776 Жыл бұрын
thx
@lapuertadelosmuertos6 жыл бұрын
The face of demons that will not be confronted are cast upon the face of the Lord and the Lord is all that is good. So as there is good in you expect to be clothed in the deceit of the fallen, though we are the fallen as well. We will be in this way Until that time when mankind can be whole and holy individual. As only therein can we be assimilated back to the first man and our great Mother. There we can withstand the face of God again and speak, Thankyou Father for we have learned of good and evil. Lucifer will turn back to heaven and the gates of Eden will open back to us. Past the burning cherubim our death will be cleansed leaving us clean to eat of the tree of life and the tree of good and evil will stand having served its fruit excellently. Because the final perfection of mankind is not through mankind but through God and the dead are not forsaken.
@1stein237 жыл бұрын
THANKS!!!
@christianhorvath7913 жыл бұрын
I’m linking this to social games. Am I insane?
@jeremiahkatz72186 жыл бұрын
Nooooo, Thats the end?
@BudFuddlacker3 жыл бұрын
How would Cain even know what anger was?
@xDELFYonceagain3 жыл бұрын
👏
@harkyo3 жыл бұрын
3:56
@hamlettglobal39863 жыл бұрын
I love JP! But I’d love to talk with him on the errors of his misinterpretations of the Genesis story. I love many of his interpretations however there are obvious and blaring points that he overlooks in the first two chapters alone that change the entire meaning of the book and the word “Genesis”. For example, yes, Cane does represent the inadequate past tradition, which here is a vegetarian diet. The sacrifices to “God” aren’t external because God lives within man. Sacrifices to God are prepared meals that one consecrates and eats because God lives in the gut (the word god comes from the word good which comes from the German word güt and thus God is Gut). And so, Able is the first meat eater (or cooked meat eater) which pleased God/gut, while the strictly vegan diet no longer pleased The gut/God (the bacteria/microbiome of the gut Which is God). The garden of Eden (enclosed watery place) is the Gut/intestines within the body. The serpent in the garden is a parasite, tempting man to eat the sweet/sugary forbidden fruit, as parasites/fungus/and bad bacteria still don’t us today. The chemical reaction within the body after eating said fruit, much like Cocain, transformed the brain circuitry and later, mans physiology. But it all started with the DIET. Notice: God = Gut and Deity = Diet. Able symbolizes the beginning of eating cooked meat and the effect It had on mans evolution and also the clear hesitation or resentment, or even war by those who would not or could not bring themselves to eat meat. The fact that God was pleased” with the cooked meat must’ve been proven by the meat eaters showing more optimal signs of physical and mental attributes over their vegan brothers and sisters.
@TLMS6546 жыл бұрын
Aaron the moor in Titus andronicus not Richard |||