Ellie Anderson streams an infectious enthusiasm which always makes me feel better.
@005Turk4 ай бұрын
she seems so excited to talk with him!
@billmiller91454 ай бұрын
Pure gold! As a childhood trauma survivor, this was ingrained in me from the time I started elementary school. Now at age 64, I'm learning to feel my feelings AND be able to identify them. I feel like I'm finally getting into that functioning male mindset. Thank you for a very informative discussion!
@jimesalinas45804 ай бұрын
Overthink raised my bar too high and now I cant listen to other podcasts without thinking about how you would have approached the topic ❤
@valerianrapillard-wo9fw4 ай бұрын
This channel is a gold mine
@ercano47994 ай бұрын
Sincerity spontaneity and sophistication all together have made me watch the conversation with full of surprise and joy. Thanks a lot.
@billmiller91454 ай бұрын
Thank you for clarifying Stoicism, it's NOT about shoving one emotions down, but more about managing one's emotions despite people, places and things.
@jerrypeters11574 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this interview. I'm in my fifties and still processing my traditional, conservative upbringing. I innately wasn't interested in group sports or machinery. This automatically put me on the social periphery. I was creative, and music seemed to be the most allowable public expression of deep emotion within my religious community. I also learned to channel my most personal emotions in prayer, mostly at night. So, i was use to living without a listening response to my greatest heart-felt expressions as a human being. I was jealous of kids in 80s TV shows with Dads who basically counselled their kids. I felt like i was in a black and white tv show working jobs with mostly men and in a color TV show working jobs with mostly women. After journaling through depression i've felt, i realized i struggled to articulate my emotions. I looked up the emotion wheel and forced my self to come up with personal experiences of each emotion listed. When I started therapy after a devastating loss in my personal life, i warned my therapist in our first session that i struggle to communicate emotionally - because i feared i would be misrepresented when evaluated. All this to say, I'm working through my own growing resentment as i learn about how my environment/society stunted my emotional/relational life just because i happen to be male. And when pronouns became a prevalent matter on social media, i thought, I'm "he/him" among my liberal-minded friends, but i'd consider "they/them" in public just to not be associated with toxic masculinity. So, my relationship with myself has become complicated. Lol.
@ulus210921 күн бұрын
This was an amazing video thank-you Ellie and the guest!
@SnarkyOverload4 ай бұрын
Loved Dr Levant's point that whilst women have been forced to change, perhaps standard social rhetoric has suggested men should NOT change, which is a really interesting point to consider when thinking about gender equality in general. Fascinating discussion as usual!
@AS-iu8hr6 күн бұрын
I've watched this interview a bunch of times and I've learned so much from it.
@DavidJohnson-vd7cu4 ай бұрын
In your 2023 podcast on Continental philosophy, you mentioned that you read 60 philosophy books in the process of getting your Ph.D at Emory. A video or two outlining the 60 works would be informative. A list of the works should be offered in the notes and/or transcript. Preferred translations/editions would be helpful as well. Thank you.
@robertalenrichter4 ай бұрын
Perhaps a bit too much to ask for a detailed list, but I've also often wondered what is considered indispensable in the infinity of material and the shortage of time. Which, of course, would vary a bit according to college and country. How much does a philosopher have to know about Spinoza? Does basic knowledge really imply understanding? Where is the cut-off point of commonality? I guess the only way to get a sense of it would be to go through the process oneself.
@PlixlyPrincess4 ай бұрын
This was such an interesting topic and conversation! Thank you for sharing the intervju, love the mutual enthusiasm!
@sapien190Ай бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing this conversation! I hope it doesn't look too much like a bot comment, I feel like I need to talk to my therapist about practicing a more conversational, day to day emotionnal expression. If I am learning to express my emotions more I feel like I need to do it with swagger and game. I had a glance at your paper and got sidetracked discovering hermeneutic. I would like to learn more about it. For now, the concept neighbours how I experience anxiety. Really stoked I discovered the channel recently
@Mika-ld9fl4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this interesting conversation! Perfect for me, as my undergrad consisted for a large part of philosophy and as I'm doing a master's in social psychology now. Dr. Levant writes truly valuable papers and your interview was a great opportunity to hear a bit more about the story behind his research. 😊
@isakmloyeni9204 ай бұрын
I wish i could glimpse the inner psychological and emotional life of people living in the future.
@ThinkerNinja2 ай бұрын
Loved this discussion! Very relevant and insightful. Unfortunately those who need to hear it are unlikely to, but maybe some will open their minds to it!
@saturdaysequalsyouth4 ай бұрын
When I was growing up sports was the only place where it was even remotely acceptable for boys to cry.
@ulysseh45984 ай бұрын
What a fascinating conversation. It really hit home! I didn't know the guest but he was great and his work seems very important, loved the anecdotes. Using men's competitive "nature" to have them find more words for emotions lol, I would have fallen right in 😭 And it seems so obvious but I never heard put quite this plainly that while women gender expectations progressed tremendously in decades, men's have pretty much remained the same.
@madzjelly5004 ай бұрын
Thankyou, this helped me understand my male relative who has aspergers better
@richarddehn45524 ай бұрын
I appreciate you
@jimesalinas45804 ай бұрын
😂
@morqesahar4 ай бұрын
So useful, thank you.
@yclept94 ай бұрын
Women's place is covered nicely in Choreographies an interview of Christie MacDonald and Derrida, look at the first 5 pages or so. Feminism has been marching in place for 100 years for a reason. Showed up in Diacritics long ago and has been republished in various places, and is somewhere on the web as a pdf.
@charowarhussain3012Ай бұрын
Magical thinking on the part of the guest is just too charming. One severely limiting fact about being a scholar is they are all about words and their belief that description and prescription are connected.
@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophyАй бұрын
? He is not only a scholar but also a practicing therapist
@Noname-ok4tf2 ай бұрын
Literally my dad. He's so numb he doesn’t even recognize when he’s being offensive. It’s taken me growing older (24 now) to realize there’s something not right in his head.
@Anson1204 ай бұрын
Severe clinical depression/multiple mental health conditions (neuro divergent), and my potent SNRI kinda gives me Alexithymia. But , if you get me around animals and nature I a bowl of mush. I think I am tired of how society (and people) works too.
@robertalenrichter4 ай бұрын
An interesting conversation which couldn't help but make me think about my father, who clearly had difficulty articulating his emotions; my mother was certainly an extreme example of a "hermeneutic worker", though I think it was a little more complicated than that. Life is always a bit more complicated than that. Anyway, aside from wartime trauma suffered on the German side, which is easy to make out as a contributing factor, there was another aspect to his character which I wonder about. Namely, that he was highly creative and definitely smart, yet this didn't extend to language. There was a kind of anti-intellectualism. Perhaps there are two different modalities to this male alexithymia -- one is to become hyper-rational and use words as a kind of defensive weapon; the other, an inner rejection of the notion of articulation itself. Words can be dangerous.
@TurkAllah4 ай бұрын
Interesting topic
@aosidh4 ай бұрын
Excited to listen to this! My first (perhaps unfair) thought is that Ohio is a great place to study depression 😹
@sharpsheep41484 ай бұрын
I feel like I am really good at expressing my emotions. Happy: Mmmm Sad: Hmm Scared: mmmmm Angry: MMMmm Confused: Mmm? I might be the exception I suppose.
@nathanrohde34404 ай бұрын
Expressing vulnerability makes you a target.
@juanmontoya98904 ай бұрын
you both are great? are you taking phd mentees?
@williamkauffman-j9i2 ай бұрын
I think it is widespread
@larss41194 ай бұрын
This is why we can’t have nice things.
@76Terrell4 ай бұрын
The philosopher Erin Manning who is focused on valuing Neurodiverse modes of knowledge production would argue that neurotypicality and whiteness are also mediums of normative alexithymia, I would be interested in a more intersectional account of this phenomena
@IsomerSoma4 ай бұрын
What a salad of words only to express nonesensical identitarian political beliefs. What a sad state - wokes versus manosphere. Both idiots.
@infra-cyan3 ай бұрын
I don't accept his thesis. Men are no less emotional than women. Men don't learn to be less emotional than women. The problem is that we have become culturally inept at recognizing diverse emotional expression. We think emotional states are expressed only through words and facial expressions, but this is just a female stereotype. This simplistic understanding of self expression ultimately imprisons us all.
@2009Artteacher2 ай бұрын
I think as clinical psychologist he wrongly assessed Peterson. More so out of biases. Peterson, of the many on KZbin, shows a lot of honest emotion that others, like the atheist army of Sam Harris, are too mescaline to show. Today's culture has much more to do with a lack of emotion than the usual go-to problems of childhood.
@dilbyjones4 ай бұрын
Fastest hour !
@pipersolanas33224 ай бұрын
I lowkey think this stuff about "men can't express emotion that's so sad for them" is equivocating to women's historic oppression like its MRA nonsense
@Jack-ns9sz4 ай бұрын
I lowkey think you're the only one equivocating that and you're too intellectually dishonest to just own it.
@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophy4 ай бұрын
I don't take this to be Dr. Levant's point--it's much more nuanced than this
@jimesalinas45804 ай бұрын
But at the end of the interview he talks about tradicional masculinity being unadaptative -not sad- for men in a context in which gender roles having shifted for women.
@LoneWulf2784 ай бұрын
I understand how it can appear that way. But most of the time, people are talking about this issue in good faith and out of genuine desire to help society. But I definitely know of instances that gave me that impression, so I won’t fault you for seeing it in other conversations.
@DemetriosKongas4 ай бұрын
As a result of their socialisation to be tough, men have a difficulty in expressing their soft feelings rather feelings in general. E.g. they express their anger quite easily. So is alexithymia the proper term?
@TheCALMInstitute4 ай бұрын
There’s an inherent bias in how we’re talking about this topic - and it’s the idea that normative “female” emotional expression is the right one, but normative “male” ways are not. To translate emotions to actions or behaviors is a much more integrative perspective on them, and I feel like we could just as easily be telling the story about how women have problems DOING anything with or about their feelings, and get stuck only talking. I say this as an emotionally expressive man who spent twenty years married to a woman who cannot articulate her feelings.
@ethangroat83333 ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson is nothing like Tate. Peterson doesn't advicate for non-negotiable fixed gender norms. His advice is far more nuanced than that.
@rogerz36244 ай бұрын
My primary issue with this video is that it actually reinforces Normative Male Alexithymia rather than helping men past it. The core social problem driving this is the empathy gap! I see lots of families raising their sons to be expressive and then they get out into the world and every social message given to them is that nobody cares and they need to just deal with it. If a problem affects women then it's considered a social problem and everyone needs to bend over backwards to fix it. If a problem affects men, then it's a personal problem that they need to deal with on their own. This is the exact emotional framework in which they use to discuss this topic... and most of the men out there who don't feel comfortable expressing emotion feel uncomfortable because they know deep in their bones that society at large doesn't cares about them. Even when they start talking about the issue in depth... Dr. Anderson only seems to care how this affects women by forcing them to do "emotional labor". The reason all these boys are moving towards men who champion negative aspects of masculinity is because of this issue. You cannot just point your finger and these boys and tell them how bad they are... you have to start by showing them that you actually care.
@michaelsteven10904 ай бұрын
Stoics will be not watching..
@amellirizarry95034 ай бұрын
Nobody cares about their opinion anyway 🤷🏽♂️
@grreeeeee4 ай бұрын
you mean men who have internalized the capitalist's wet dream of a self-driven working individual cog, protestant to the core, as ascetic whipping boys to themselves? QQ
@tonegoober4 ай бұрын
@@amellirizarry9503i hope they can manage to accept that 🙏
@jamoyky14 ай бұрын
Wait, am I missing something? What’s wrong with stoicism?
@grreeeeee4 ай бұрын
@@jamoyky1 it's very popular in the productivity-idiot-space, bro stuff. like a joe rogan type that has fundamentally misunderstood it and enjoys just the tip of casual racism.
@chooseadventure4 ай бұрын
“Is it ok if I call you, Ron?” - How do you expect him to answer that question other than a “sure”? I would have addressed him as Dr Levant unless and until he specially asked me to use his first name.
@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophy4 ай бұрын
We'd already communicated using first names via email--this was a formality. Also, in that case he should also refer to his interlocutor as Dr. Anderson instead of Ellie? :)
@chooseadventure4 ай бұрын
Seniority matters IMHO. You’re talking to professor emeritus. Anyway, I’m just saying what I’d have done. You do you.
@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophy4 ай бұрын
it would be very weird for one college professor to refer to another as Dr. or Professor while the other one refers to them by their first name, at least in an American academic context. Regardless of rank within the professorship, professors are colleagues.
@TheWay-u1n4 ай бұрын
The problem with "traditional masculinity" is that it was wrapped up in Christian morality in providing boundaries for those who dont deserve.. Let the Khan and his lack of feelings enter
@ggauche34654 ай бұрын
I was disappointed Ellie to see you being so fawning and obsequious.
@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophy4 ай бұрын
admiration and respect ≠ fawning
@ggauche34654 ай бұрын
@@OverthinkPodcastPhilosophy I completely agree. You reminded me of someone at a Taytay concert. I don't know you except from these vids but never expect that.