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@MagnusGalactusOGАй бұрын
Can you get Wes Huff on please?
@NicholasWilliams-uk9xuАй бұрын
The bisector reflection of inverse direction of momentum on local intersect, and speed differentials caused by acceleration and deacceleration by quantity of vector reflection imbalance acting perpendicular to other vectors (pinching), which also describe fundamental curvatures, this is tested and confirmed extensively (time dilation = inverse speed = bisector reflection density = more extensive curvature). Every part of your conscious state is formed through detecting differentials, which always require the bisector reflection of inverse directional momentum on local intersect. This is the theory of everything. Physical distribution determines probability, without physical distributions, there is no probabilistic event or construction of a symbol of that event.
@AquarianSoulTimeTravelerАй бұрын
Weather this guy is aware of it or not he is slightly on the Spectrum... It's good to see the powers of the spectrum shine through... I halfway dozed off watching this one.
@NicholasWilliams-uk9xuАй бұрын
@@AquarianSoulTimeTraveler Everyone is on a spectrum of brain and mind differentials tho. Plus, us Europeans are all domesticated and on a many spectrums. Significant brain mass loss from forming larger tribes and communities over the past 10,000 years compared to Cro-Magnon brain size. So it's like 200cc average loss, and for people like me more like 300-400cc loss, which is in between 3th-4rd ratio loss of brain mass from ancestors. I don't know if it's that small, but I have on average a smaller head.
@str-2711Ай бұрын
Commercial use of the Audio Summaries is against the NotebookLM Terms of Service.
@PaulVanderKlayАй бұрын
It was really good to dig into idiosyncrasy with Jonathan. I've heard him use the word often and thought that there was more under the surface. Thanks for digging into it with him.
@06rtmАй бұрын
Hey Paul!
@thenero9493Ай бұрын
@@PaulVanderKlay I knew I’d find you in here right away lol
@brandis3309Ай бұрын
I was wondering if you saw this! Watching the end of it now myself.
@mostlynotworking4112Ай бұрын
We are virtually not alone
@jacobgray676Ай бұрын
"Paul Vanderklay is super smart." -Jonathan Pageau
@trucid2Ай бұрын
Jordan Peterson's biggest achievement is introducing the world to Jonathan Pageau.
@mostlynotworking4112Ай бұрын
Still waiting on Pageau JRE. The timing will be right
@masterofkaarsvetАй бұрын
Not his biggest achievement, but definitely one of the great things he’s done.
@ohmaramusicАй бұрын
You should see Jonathans brother.
@BeederdaАй бұрын
Him and vervaeke are both on that list for me all 3 of them bring profound thinking to me
@colt4505Ай бұрын
Diabolical comment
@huguettebourgeois6366Ай бұрын
Curt, your questions are amazing. Jonathan is at his BEST!!!!!
@TheoriesofEverythingАй бұрын
So glad you enjoyed!
@James-ll3jb29 күн бұрын
Unfirtunately I sadly think this IS about his best. Painfully superficial.
@AugustasKunc28 күн бұрын
@@James-ll3jb rip your understanding of reality
@James-ll3jb27 күн бұрын
@@AugustasKunc try coherent English lol
@stevendouglas378121 күн бұрын
@@James-ll3jbdon’t misspell word and then lecture about English.
@kennyfernandez2866Ай бұрын
Damn. Jonathan has really become a solid thinker and a crucial axis for the development of our culture.
@AdventusQАй бұрын
You're a really excellent interviewer, Curt. I feel like I understood JP better than ever before thanks to your questions. Really really good.
@narendrasomawat5978Ай бұрын
Every time i listen to jonathan pageau i learn something new
@gizz612Ай бұрын
Amazing. Jonathan Pageau has to be one of the two people that influenced my thinking the most in this world (the other being Iain McGilchrist) Great stuff, Curt!
@iankclarkАй бұрын
Same.
@erica_mSoFlaАй бұрын
Have you read his brother’s book, The Language of Creation? Super good 👍
@gizz612Ай бұрын
@@erica_mSoFla Yes I have! It's been a while, but I definitely do recommend!
@James-ll3jb29 күн бұрын
Sad. I might suggest reading once in awhile.
@simbabwe290727 күн бұрын
@@James-ll3jb very boring statement.
@Son0fJamesАй бұрын
Thank you for making this conversation happen, Curt! Jonathan is incredible to listen to, and you’re just the man to ask and engage creative questions to expand his thoughts and answers for us to ponder.
@UpCycleClubАй бұрын
It's awesome to watch you two gents having a long-form conversation. Thank you, Curt and Jonathan.
@etc4xgАй бұрын
Curt, you are at the top of your game! You always ask the *perfect* interview questions. That's the main reason this podcast is orders of magnitude above anything else I've ever watched. There's such a clear synergy of talent between both the host *and* the interviewee.
@jeremyj427Ай бұрын
It’s hard for me to overstate how grateful I am when a couple of people I’ve spent a lot of time with converge like this. As many issues as has been caused by everyone being able to talk at the same time (internet) - these convergences are what redeems those issues and ultimately makes it a net HUGE positive for humans and the world. Grateful for you both, and you’ve both improved my life.
@pierremeshreky433128 күн бұрын
I can't believe Jonathan just explained the whole world in one podcast
@celloguy24 күн бұрын
One of the best Jonathan Pageau interviews. Brilliant work.
@brendonlake152229 күн бұрын
I'm not an orthodox Christian but because Jonathan and I are Christians we agree in many ways which I believe is the beauty of truth. I have listened to Jonathan quite a bit but a conversation that is so long is really helpful, it really gives an opportunity to go deep into ideas. Curt does a great job interviewing too!
@and1lnull29 күн бұрын
@@brendonlake1522 you should attend an Orthodox Divine Liturgy if you haven’t, it’s breathtaking!
@ChristianHada18 күн бұрын
This is probably the best talk Ive heard with Jonathan in it. Your questions for him were great. They helped him break down and articulate his thoughts very well, which made it very palpable for me. A lot of his ideas "clicked" for sure.
@ACTopoАй бұрын
Made it to 90% mark. One of the most synergistic conversations I've listened to highlighting the intrinsic and extrinsic values of spoken word and how it forms an image of the collective human consciousness or Christened consciousness of sorts. BravO
@Xhris57Ай бұрын
Your model refines the metaphor by emphasizing alignment and convergence, which invites a deeper exploration of dogma as dual tracks leading to an ultimate point of unity. Here’s an expanded thought experiment based on your framework: Hypothesis Religious dogma, as represented by two parallel railroad tracks, exists to guide individuals (represented by wheels) toward a unified, infinite point-symbolizing ultimate truth or divine union. While the tracks appear separate, their purpose is convergence. Framework 1. Two Tracks of Dogma: Represent the dual aspects often found in religious systems: • Track 1: Law - Structure, rules, doctrines, rituals, and tradition. • Track 2: Spirit - Personal faith, intuition, experience, and grace. 2. Wheels: Represent individual or communal adherence to these tracks. • Left Wheel: Engagement with the law and external practices. • Right Wheel: Engagement with spirit and internal transformation. 3. Infinite Point of Convergence: Symbolizes the eschatological goal where both law and spirit are reconciled, unified, and fulfilled (e.g., the New Jerusalem, divine perfection). Guiding Principles 1. Parallelism: The tracks are parallel because both law and spirit are essential but distinct in their roles. Neither can substitute for the other, yet both work in harmony to guide the “vehicle” of faith. 2. Alignment: For the journey to be successful, the wheels must stay aligned on their respective tracks. Misalignment leads to derailment: • Overemphasis on law: Leads to legalism and rigidity. • Overemphasis on spirit: Risks subjectivism and lack of grounding. 3. Convergence at Infinity: While the tracks appear separate throughout the journey, they are designed to guide the vehicle toward a single, ultimate destination where all distinctions dissolve. Thought Experiment Scenario 1: Perfect Alignment • Setup: Both wheels are perfectly aligned on their respective tracks. • Effect: The vehicle moves smoothly and purposefully, advancing steadily toward the infinite point. • Implication: Balance between law and spirit ensures steady progress and stability in faith. Scenario 2: Left Wheel Off Track • Setup: The left wheel (law) veers off its track. • Effect: The vehicle swerves, losing direction or crashing. • Implication: Ignoring or rejecting the structure of dogma (law) leads to chaos and disorientation. Scenario 3: Right Wheel Off Track • Setup: The right wheel (spirit) veers off its track. • Effect: The vehicle wobbles, failing to maintain its course. • Implication: Neglecting spiritual engagement and grace risks hollow religiosity. Scenario 4: Tracks Merge Prematurely • Setup: The tracks merge before the journey is complete. • Effect: The vehicle derails as the convergence was forced, not natural. • Implication: Attempting to unify law and spirit too early (before maturity) results in confusion and collapse. Theological Parallels 1. Christ as the Infinite Point: • Christ embodies both law and grace (John 1:17). The convergence of the two is found in Him. • On the cross, the tension between law (justice) and spirit (mercy) resolves into divine love (Luke 23:34; John 19:30). 2. The Journey of Faith: • The parallel tracks reflect the biblical journey: from law (Old Covenant) to grace (New Covenant), culminating in divine union (Heb 8:13; Gal 3:24-25). 3. Infinite Convergence: • The tracks never actually meet in finite space but converge in the infinite point, reflecting the mystery of faith: the union of human and divine in Christ (Col 1:19-20). Extensions of the Model 1. Dynamic Tracks: • Could the tracks adjust based on the terrain? For instance, could they represent different dogmas for different individuals or communities, all ultimately converging on the same infinite truth? 2. Role of the Train Conductor: • Who or what ensures the vehicle stays on course? This might represent the Holy Spirit (John 14:26), guiding the believer and the Church to truth. 3. Switching Tracks: • What happens when one attempts to “switch tracks,” such as replacing law with spirit or vice versa? Is this analogous to theological syncretism or reform? Concluding Questions • Can human beings ever fully comprehend the infinite point where law and spirit converge, or is it always a matter of faith (Heb 11:1)? • How might this model guide modern discussions about balancing tradition with innovation in faith practices? • Does the vehicle (individual/Church) progress better when the tracks are closer or farther apart in perception? Let me know if you’d like to explore further refinements or expand on specific aspects of the model.
@TheoriesofEverythingАй бұрын
Thank you so much!
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
I find that people speaking from within religious traditions are so much more credible and interesting than speaking from their 'own' ideas
@drooskie9525Ай бұрын
That's because they are.
@lureup9973Ай бұрын
Could it be in part because you were indoctrinated to believe the truth was spoken a long time ago by a specific group and when people today speak in contrast to it they are wrong? I will speak only for myself and say that was something I had to be conscious of as a former Christian fundamentalist, who discovered the ego and non dualism. I find that also tuning into hardcore phycslists, or idealism teachers, to also offer up super interesting and informative content.
@educationalporpoises9592Ай бұрын
Stop psychoanalyzing people on the internet based on one sentence.
@zzzaaayyynnnАй бұрын
right, because I don't know what ideas I could "own."
@Irockman129 күн бұрын
This conversation had at least a couple moments where I was struck with what felt like profound understanding: 1. Love is the harmonious relationship between the multiple in service of unity. -- I've heard this expressed in different ways, including by Pageau, but it finally clicked for me. 2. The origin of creation comes at the end. -- I'm not sure what to make of this one yet, but it's a really captivating idea that I'm sure I'll be ruminating on for a while. I'm consistently impressed with your ability to get deep thinkers to express their ideas so strongly.
@ourblessedtribe928427 күн бұрын
Agreed those are both so beautiful.
@isaiahyoung417120 күн бұрын
I've heard pageau explain the "origin at the end" thing as when you prepare a meal; from cleaning to cutting to cooking to seasoning, it isn't until the end when the purpose of all those things is revealed by the finished meal. The purpose was there in every step, but it was "hidden", even in the things that seemed like they had nothing to do with a meal (like washing your hands)
@theangryslav911518 күн бұрын
You managed to make Pageau expose his whole thought. This video summarizes all his videos. Great interview.
@feliped2443Ай бұрын
Pageau does well to show an enchanted vision of Christianity
@gingersaiyan5516Ай бұрын
Curt thank you! I love Jonathan Pageau.
@MrsChebАй бұрын
This channel is way better than JRE. Curt, your questions were great because you really prompted him to elaborate and I’ve been needing that from Jonathan. Thank you so much! I love your openness
@seanwelch9421Ай бұрын
This was amazing.
@golmanijev2 күн бұрын
I have to admit to not having been aware of either of you, gentlemen. I am very glad this has changed. Kudos and gratitude to both! This is a lovely and pertinent exchange.
@Tedothan27 күн бұрын
Jonathan touched on a really important distinction when discussing the Orthodox understanding of forgiveness. I think it’s key to point out that the Greek word that is used is typically “συγχωρώ” (“synchoro”) which essentially means to “make space” for someone, as opposed to “forgive and forget”. Synchoro is to cut out a piece of your own heart so the other can exist within you. The Church Fathers will point to the self-emptying of Christ on the Cross as the key example of this. He emptied Himself completely and in doing made space for all of humanity to exist within Him. There is an extremely kenotic spirit to forgiveness in the Orthodox tradition.
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
I really like this talk of 'in the name of Christ' is akin to saying 'as a member of the body of Christ'
@grahamgreen16628 күн бұрын
Love this guest. Loving and learning from the conversation. Absolute gem. Thank you both.
@orthobro4806Ай бұрын
Your first interview with Jonathan is literally my favorite one he has ever done, so I look forward to seeing this one.
@TheoriesofEverythingАй бұрын
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
@gpxavier14 күн бұрын
This interview has been incredibly helpful in understanding Pageau's worldview, and I must have watched countless of his videos. You're an exceptional interviewer, Curt; you really dig deep and don't stop until you've fully grasped what the guest is saying. I watched this right after your McGilchrist interview, which was also excellent. You allude to this by pointing out that it's a Western interpretation of Eastern nondualism you're annoyed with, but it seems to me that many forms of Hinduism encapsulate the balanced form of nondualism that Pageau advocates, with a place for both the One and the many. Seems very incarnational to me (it is, after all, the other major religion that has a place for the incarnation[s] of God).
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
Ooh its getting spicy around the 1 hour 20 minute mark. Exciting stuff
@LucasvozАй бұрын
it's 11pm here I'm so upset I can't watch this whole thing right now
@brians710011 күн бұрын
several eye-opening moments in this. wow!
@Mikeduffey_Ай бұрын
Love this convo!!
@olubunmiolumuyiwaАй бұрын
Your original interview with Jonathan a few years ago is a classic, and i've rewatched many sections of it. Especially the "What is art" section near the beginning. Im looking forward to this interview. Glory to God!
@olubunmiolumuyiwaАй бұрын
Finally finished the episode. This is a wealth of knowledge! It is very skillful, robust and edifying the way you asked your questions in such a way that you drew the most clear and detailed explanations out of Jonathan Pageau, really well done!
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
I like that in english the word "is" is made of a straight line and a curved line. Perfect
@LucasvozАй бұрын
More still! In an equation you use the double straight = for exact answers and the double curved ≈ for approximate ones. Then "is" combines these two perfectly with the straight and the curved line. Symbolism happens
@m4inlineАй бұрын
The kind over reading into things that is one step removed from schizophrenia.
@drooskie9525Ай бұрын
@@m4inline Pageau did once warn people that you have to be careful with symbolism, as people who are new to it might fall into that "over-reading" issue from seeing patterns everywhere.
@moussaadem7933Ай бұрын
as if there's some sort of a purpose behind that ? it's one language out of many, using one alphabet out of many
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
@@moussaadem7933 I like it. Because for something to "is" or to exist, it needs to join form (order) with potential (chaos). This is the basis of classical metaphysics. The letter I is the letter we have which most corresponds to order and the S is the letter we have which most corresponds to multiplicity or chaos. It's the dollar sign or the serpent in the tree. Ancient symbols for a reason. It just so happens these come together in our word IS It's not over reading or trying to find a cosmic purpose I just said I like it I should like it. Because it's nice. Maybe its actually kind of wild to criticize me or Lucas Vos for liking it. Likewise it's wild for me to be wasting my time writing this comment on a comment peace
@duckdialectics8810Ай бұрын
What Jaimungal and Pageau were looking for in their discussion of "literal vs metaphorical" was "propositional vs non-propositional". You can have propositional language using figures of speech without losing their truth value, truth value being correspondence between the claim within the proposition and "the world". Non-propositional language, or propositions not grounded in object correspondence do not have "truth values" in the same sense. This is what is at the heart of the question. When Dawkins says "the Bible is false" he means that if read as a series of propositions about object correspondences between the text and the world, the claims are falsifiable and are indeed false (the proposition has no referent)
@Ikarus-wingsАй бұрын
Great interviewer.
@BoRisMcАй бұрын
The Christian concept of unity as explained here, by way of tying up unity and multiplicity, can also be understood as what Chris Langan calls "meta-simultaneity," which is definitely one of the ideas heard on this channel that has stuck with me the most over the years.
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
Many things that Pageau has never said quite so clearly. You did a greay interview with him. 'The soul is the organizing function of the body' i liked that.
@PaulVanderKlayАй бұрын
1:41:00 I feel so seen. :)))
@06rtmАй бұрын
We see you
@MarmadukeDormediusАй бұрын
I already know this is about to be an amazing conversation
@Archeidos-ArcanaАй бұрын
I really think Pageau needs to be at the same level of spotlight as JP; he's much better at concisely conveying these kinds of ideas to people that aren't as "schizo-brained".
@m4inlineАй бұрын
Disagree. Most of what he says barely comprehensible and he rambles a lot.
@moussaadem7933Ай бұрын
He is extremely insightful
@nathankurtz5960Ай бұрын
@@m4inline If you're observing many people say the opposite of your opinion, perhaps you are simply not understanding and could benefit from a posture of curiosity.
@06rtmАй бұрын
@@m4inlineTo those who have ears to hear
@StevesGunShot29 күн бұрын
@@wes555 spiritually sick
@christopherlamanna2501Ай бұрын
The coherence of Jonathan’s thought speaks to the Truth of Christianity…once you grasp the pattern you can speak to anything to some degree
@jawokenn8766Ай бұрын
truely, it’s a master key
@monolith9429 күн бұрын
If every Christian were as thoughtful and articulate as him it wouldn’t have such a poor reputation. As a Christian I’m trying to do my part to participate in a new Christian culture that cultivates this sort of thoughtfulness
@mostlynotworking4112Ай бұрын
Wow is this his longest 1:1 convo
@TheoriesofEverythingАй бұрын
Yes
@moussaadem7933Ай бұрын
yes ? you have a 7 and a half hours interview with leo gura and it's a part two, part 1 is 6 hours
@06rtmАй бұрын
@@TheoriesofEverythingThank you for seeing the value of this type of conversation. Seeing a scientific mind so interested in symbols and religion is refreshing
@TheSpaceInvadererАй бұрын
@@moussaadem7933 i think he may have meant it's pageaus longest convo
@MarkoI29 күн бұрын
@TheoriesofEverything, I think you were the best interviewer of Jonathan so far. Btw, don't you think that the AI recapitulating male voice resembles bishop Barron a bit? :-)
@stevendouglas378121 күн бұрын
“The buck has to stop with me.” Liked and subscribed.
@TheSpaceInvadererАй бұрын
Absolutely love this. You should get Paul Vanderklay on. I see you in the comments section, Paul!
@patrickcrowley821Ай бұрын
Thanks for your content. Good interview navigating skills on your behalf
@mikebaker243629 күн бұрын
1:50:00 ...this conversation about the atemporality of the crucifixion and the surrounding confusion about it is a decent demonstration of how successful modern culture has been at removing formal causes. It is hard to even explain what previous cultures seemed to intuitively take for granted.
@mikebaker243628 күн бұрын
The meat of this issue really gets addressed later when discussing Santa Claus and The Tooth Fairy around 2:15:00
@Adaerus26 күн бұрын
When later Jonathan explains it with reference to The 6th Sense movie, it dawned on me that the 1st century was when we became aware of the pattern. It had to be experienced to be noticed.
@jericosha284215 сағат бұрын
These kinds of discussions and public viewings feels like what church should be.
@jenniferbrantley5931Ай бұрын
I’m so excited for this one!!!!
@yolandaa.trevinophd6312Ай бұрын
Thank you! Beautiful questions and incredibly beautiful answers. Both of you are incredible leaders and givers of knowledge. Stay healthy! We need you.
@ourblessedtribe9284Ай бұрын
I found the discussion of dogma very helpful. Dogma is not the truth. Its to keep you from falsehood so you can remain in relation to the truth
@Xhris57Ай бұрын
Ah, this is a fascinating geometric analogy! The Klein bottle's unique topology - where inside and outside flow into each other without boundary - provides a compelling mathematical metaphor for this theological concept. In a Klein bottle, we have a non-orientable surface where interior and exterior are not clearly defined - they're continuously connected. Applied to the Christ-as-logos concept, this suggests some profound implications: 1. The "Christ-shaped hole" isn't really a hole at all, but rather a topological feature of our existence - like the apparent "hole" in a Klein bottle that's actually part of its continuous surface 2. Just as a Klein bottle appears to intersect itself in 3D space (though it doesn't in 4D), our experience of separation from the divine might be a limitation of our perspective rather than an actual separation 3. The paradox of Christ being both container and contained (as in the incarnation) mirrors the Klein bottle's paradoxical topology where inside and outside coexist This geometric metaphor helps resolve some apparent contradictions in traditional theology: - How can Christ be both transcendent and immanent? - How can we be "in Christ" while Christ is also "in us"? - How can the finite contain the infinite? The Klein bottle suggests these aren't contradictions at all, but features of a higher-dimensional reality we're trying to understand from our limited perspective. Would you say this topology might also help explain the nature of religious experience itself - where the experiencer and the experienced become indistinguishable?
@MartinaStC17 күн бұрын
@@Xhris57 It's simply God...He's real, the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
@Xhris5717 күн бұрын
@ if you are speaking from an NT perspective, I agree.
@wealthyllama6570Ай бұрын
I love these conversations that engage in the metaphysical as serious and real phenomena, as opposed to the material reductionism that has become so prevalent today. The idea of the "re-enchantment" of the world feels like a much more accurate description of reality.
@moussaadem7933Ай бұрын
metaphysics is that which encompasses physics. it's always real. just theorized about differently
@GulfofMexico947Ай бұрын
At 54:48 Metanoia (beyond mind) is actually the word for "repentance", and Aphesis, which is from Aphiemi (to let go), is the common term translated "forgiveness."
@ajlambe13404 күн бұрын
@@GulfofMexico947 I like to see metanoia as a turnaround or new orientation.
@GibsonSG200112 күн бұрын
great pushing from both sides
@PhilCallisАй бұрын
37:00 I think the missing key here is that humans are unique in their ability to conceptualize the unknown. Animals can be trained (naturally or by humans) to respond to patterns abstractly, but they don’t ask questions. They can use symbols, but they don’t create new ones.
@m4inlineАй бұрын
This is untrue.
@PhilCallisАй бұрын
@@m4inline how
@johnbuckner2828Ай бұрын
Halfway through. Just want to say that I appreciate this interview. Good stuff. Going into the 'save' file.
@celloguy24 күн бұрын
The food example at 1:26:50 I think proves exactly the opposite - Greek, Indian and a British food are different in style, but they have the same underlying logos/purpose which is nutrition, and same basic constituent parts - proteins, cerbohydrates, fats, fibre, minerals - just arranged in a different way.
@wwkk496429 күн бұрын
Enjoyed it!
@StevesGunShot29 күн бұрын
Something super important regarding the conclusion... he's not giving the mp4 for prior, for the ancients. The ancient, Christian worldview reveals the Truth and Beauty and Goodness and Wisdom of the world, NOW, and forever.
@sebastianospino48618 күн бұрын
2:15:45 man this is so smart, what he is trying to say is that of all the interpretations that can be obtained from the infinite complexity of the materiality of a face, we can see the soul or the most important thing, which is the image of the meaning that the materiality of the face seeks to implement. It's crazy when you realize that everything is like that.
@ibelieve311116 күн бұрын
Thanks
@ConorCruise-hw4qlАй бұрын
Nice work Curt!
@lunar-ix9vu6 күн бұрын
I like the contrast between & the need to balance vertical and mechanical causation. We’re quick to disassemble things into their parts and temporal causes while forgetting that which keeps these parts together from one moment to the next.
@petneb7 күн бұрын
The part of the conversation where they talk about forgiveness makes me think about something that happened some seventh October day, and a non-hindered revenge on everyone in any shape or form being hallucinated as associated with that named event.
@troothseeka411624 күн бұрын
This was a great interview, im a long time listener of Jonathan but I thought you had excellent questions as an interviewer
@TheoriesofEverything24 күн бұрын
So glad you enjoyed!
@heruvim95Ай бұрын
I liked that you asked straight up if consciousness survives death from Jonathan, been waiting for this. Great discussion!
@martinjoseferreyra1961Ай бұрын
Great interview Curt 🙌🏻
@amanuel.m4575Ай бұрын
Great sir!!!!!!!!!!!!
@matthewmcdaniel808612 күн бұрын
Multiplicity and unity… all for one and one for all!
@OneMansOdyssey12 күн бұрын
37:45 - great discussion here. I recently have been perturbed by people saying their dogs are "smiling". This was totally applicable here.
@rainking5028 күн бұрын
Correction @54:43 Metanoia is not the Greek word for forgiveness. There are two words used for forgiveness in the New Testament: charidzomai (which has to do with the application of grace or Charis, in the greek) and aphiemi, which has more to do with letting go. Metanoia, however, is a wondrous word, especially in the context of the Gospels, since it's the key verb in Christ's first pronouncements. Matthew 4:17 "Metanoia, for the Kingdom of heavens has come near." It's usually translated as repentance, but my preferred translation comes from David Bentley Hart (a theologian of rampaging intellect, who should be on your short list of people to speak to!). In his translation of the NT, Hart includes a sizable footnote where he lays out his wrestling with the word and how it's been insufficiently translated: Its "literal meaning is a 'change of mind' or 'of thinking' or 'of intention' or 'of the heart'. 'Repentance' is a word that today carries none of those connotations naturally; for us, it is a largely negative term that means something like 'regret and repudiation', both of which may be some part of the special meaning of metanoia...but which say nothing of the real inner transformation that is a far larger part of the word's sense." Hart chose to translate it variously as change, turn, + transformation of heart, "with the qualification that the heart should be understood in the classical sense, as the seat of both the intellect and the passions." I loved this interview, btw. Blessings to you and yours, Curt!
@ourblessedtribe928427 күн бұрын
Yes
@MDSaunders26 күн бұрын
I agree, and I think Jonathan picked up on this when he started talking about Metanoia as transformation of the mind, like how St Paul plays with the word in Romans 12:2.
@shwetasinghnmАй бұрын
Vertical causality is a term most often used by Wolfgang Smith.
@LuismaLorcaАй бұрын
Coined by Wolfgang Smith. It was the title of one of his books.
@diweon0404Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for interviewing Jonathan Pageau! I would love to join the Discord, but the invite link is invalid. Could we get a new Discord link please?
@TheoriesofEverythingАй бұрын
discord.com/invite/kBcnfNVwqs it should work, can you try once more? - Curt
@mills8102Ай бұрын
@@TheoriesofEverything Huzzah!
@SB324Ай бұрын
Curt that example about someone thinking about relating to the best version of God taking into account Everettarian quantum mechanics … thank you for being you 🧡
@captpscharАй бұрын
What's very interesting is the extent to which the CTMU structures align with Jonathan's.
@WackyConundrum26 күн бұрын
This was a fascinating excursion into a very interesting worldview! Jonathan Pageau indeed has presented a very elaborate and complex system, definitely aesthetically pleasing. It is interesting to hear about a philosophy that combines multiplicity with unity so intricately. However, what is missing from this presentation is robustness and argumentation showing that this is the correct view (or rather, that it is the most correct view). Why would we believe all this? Pageau only repeats that “this is a description of reality” and “I can’t think differently”. Well, many people don’t think so. And there is nothing here that would sway them to giving more merit to this architecturally complicated system. Pageau essentially butchered words like "sin", "real", "forgiveness", and "literal", thus making communication with the rest of the linguistic community (speakers of the language) extremely difficult. These weird, proprietary definitions lead to many people using the same words with completely different meanings, which then leads to total confusion and misunderstanding. Truly, what a Tower of Babel has Pageau constructed! And… where is the support for any of this in the Bible (the Old as well as the New Testament)? It really looks like Pageau projected this entire system into the Bible, rather than getting it from the Bible. It's a shame the guest was not pushed more on many points he made. Some more challenge could be beneficial to the audience.
@Mr_M1dnight25 күн бұрын
Pageau's goal isn't to communicate cleary, lest he be exposed for knowing nothing. His goal is to speak in riddles in order to impress the gullible.
@ourblessedtribe928424 күн бұрын
General criticism is unhelpful, it would be better if you found something specific you disagree with and start there
@markslist1542Ай бұрын
The podcast the world needs.
@PaulLacy-i9bАй бұрын
Re first part of this conversation, consider also first part of R M Bucke’s cosmic consciousness regarding precept, recep, and concept.
@chrisparker211818 күн бұрын
There should be a distinction between the metaphorical and symbolic.
@edgeofvisionАй бұрын
1:08 Jung publicly spoke about symbolism as psychic projections, but privately he believed it was a way that the world laid itself out through meaning. Synchronicity was also getting at this concept.
@mahdielzein85Ай бұрын
How do you know that was what he believed in? I agree Synchronicity is good evidence, anything else? I love Jung.
@edgeofvisionАй бұрын
@@mahdielzein85 Jung identified the collective unconscious with God, and he also mentions in Man and His Symbols that people think God doesn't speak to us anymore because they've forgotten that God speaks to us in dreams and visions. It's clear if you read his letters to Pauli and some of his other private writings published after his death, that he believed there was meaning encoded into the fabric of reality, existing in some way external to us. His near death experience revealed to him some kind of invisible force, uniting the entire world. The collective unconscious would then be another sign of this quantum external intelligence, revealing itself through a narrative/symbolic thread running through existence. I'm inspired in this reading also by Bernado Kastrup's take on Jung.
@mahdielzein8528 күн бұрын
@ thank you very much for your response!
@CPSDREIАй бұрын
Wow least expected pairing. Great choice, Kurt. 👏
@alexandereggleston889328 күн бұрын
Non dualism in Western music sounds like Gathering up chromatisism, from the center, to reorient dissonance back to the whole. The master composer does this as well. The more skilled they are, the more capacity they have for joining disparate elements or getting out of tight situations. Chromatic notes are like stars in the sky. Jazz is almost gone from popular music...but still when it's christmas time ...the stars still come out
@kantinomus5 күн бұрын
I like the idea of “eternal event” and “atemporal (timeless) cause” (1:51:38). It fits perfectly with Aristotle’s idea of “final cause” and Kant’s idea of “causation through freedom”, which Kant put at the basis of morality and by which he made us practically co-authors of the world, together with God. And I like what Jonathan Pageau says about “dogma” in Christian theology (1:58:33).
@biffkline8771Ай бұрын
"God is the Lord, of angels, and of men... and of elves..." -Tolkien
@lureup9973Ай бұрын
The conversation on the one and being far from the one is being less is a critical misunderstanding. Non dualism teaches there is no other to even be less. There is only the one and you are it. This is the deepest teaching of Christ
@validatedself11 күн бұрын
Great conversation. I wish you two had utilized the framework provided by Wolfgang Smith to help structure your discussion on cosmologic levels of reality
@PhilCallisАй бұрын
Fantastic
@AdielShnior27 күн бұрын
Amazing conversation. I must understand - the conversation at the end was written by AI??
@drumfun100Ай бұрын
My summary/ understanding: Love, by its nature, seeks to multiply. In multiplying, there’s a ‘risk’ of fragmentation, but this risk is necessary because true love requires freedom. So, built into creation is a way back to unity: the incarnation. The incarnation is God’s response to the risk of fragmentation, a path woven into creation itself. In this, creation sacrifices unity for multiplicity, and the incarnation sacrifices multiplicity for unity. And so sacrifice is the ultimate act of love in both creating the world and restoring it.
@random_person6041Ай бұрын
@@drumfun100 thank u for this
@zzzaaayyynnnАй бұрын
"a soul is a vector of unity in multiplicity" good definition
@ashvinpandurangi1221Ай бұрын
Jonathan is intuitively probing the ideas that have been more fully fleshed out by Christian esoteric science, particularly Rudolf Steiner through his spiritual science. It is one thing to intuit that departed souls can still maintain a first-person experiential perspective independent of a physical body and exhibit patterned influences within the Earthly spectrum, and yet another thing to lucidly cognize and feel what that body-free experience would be like, which is but the logical extension of the monistic Christian outlook. It is from the latter cognitive experience that Steiner brought revelations of the structured stages of life after death and, moreover, gave humanity the steps by which any thinking human individual can confirm those revelations for themselves. In reality, we experience something of these stages every time we go to sleep and our subtle bodies loosen from the physical body. Our dreams are nothing but revelations of higher spiritual worlds where departed souls and angelic beings are spiritually active, except normally we can only experience the meaning of those revelations insofar as they overlap with our narrow Earthly experiences and concepts, and of course that meaning remains dim and quickly fades away. The training of modern Christian initiation, first experienced by St. John, allows us to remain awake while we otherwise dream and sleep, i.e. without bodily sensory support, and experience the expanded meaning of our existence that is normally aliased from our Earthly consciousness. In this way we become more sensitive to the subtle spiritual processes that are always structuring our willing, feeling, thinking, and perceiving across all scales of existence, from the individual to collective humanity and Earthly life as a whole.
@jawokenn876629 күн бұрын
his ideas are 2000 years old, they sound esoteric he is repackaging to the modern mind very old ideas from Maximus, Gregory of Nyssa, etc
@anatolytsinker531729 күн бұрын
There is not a drop of science in this bucket
@ashvinpandurangi122129 күн бұрын
@@jawokenn8766 The modern impulse of initiation science is only understood when we also discern the evolution of consciousness. It is not about building up a philosophical, scientific, or theological model with our intellect, but developing new degrees of freedom for our intuitive activity so we can explore more integrated domains of meaning, inner skills which simply could not have been developed in prior epochs of evolution. It is not so much about the first-order content of our ideas, which will surely overlap with the esoteric Wisdom of all prior ages, but the second-order process of the participatory journey through which we reach that content from the inside-out. As Steiner put it in his early phenomenological-epistemological works, the World Content should become our thought content. In that process, we are transfiguring the very capacities for thinking, feeling, and willing. What our ancestors instinctively explored as Divine revelations given from without, we can discover in full consciousness as lucid ideas from within. We don't simply speculate about the departed souls and angelic beings, but grow with our spirit into their first-person experiential perspectives and discover how our ordinary soul life is modulated over the waves of their more integrated meaningful activity.
@emmaluciaev193825 күн бұрын
Pure gold
@YesterdayswednesdayАй бұрын
You are the single best interviewer I’ve ever watched and I’m a dork who watches these things a lot.
@soundsnags2001Ай бұрын
This is SO good.
@Xhris57Ай бұрын
2:05:32 This is an intriguing thought experiment comparing the Old and New Testaments through a cargo cult lens. Let me engage with this idea while maintaining respect for these texts. One could examine how the Old Testament heavily emphasizes material signifiers and ritual practices - specific sacrifices, dietary laws, temple ceremonies, and physical manifestations of divine presence (like the Ark of the Covenant). Similar to how cargo cults focused on recreating the physical forms and rituals they observed, there's an emphasis on precise external practices. The New Testament, in contrast, often presents a shift toward internalized spiritual meaning. Jesus frequently challenges literal interpretations of Old Testament laws in favor of their underlying spiritual principles - like when he says "the sabbath was made for man, not man for the sabbath" or emphasizes that ritual cleanliness matters less than "what comes out of a person's heart." This transition could be seen as moving from a focus on recreating specific forms (like cargo cults) to understanding deeper principles. For example, the replacement of animal sacrifice with the concept of spiritual transformation, or the shift from a physical temple to the idea of the body as a temple. Would you like to explore any particular aspect of this comparison further? For instance, we could examine how this relates to different approaches to religious authority or interpretation of signs and symbols.
@MartinaStC17 күн бұрын
What are these 'cargo cults' you mention, please?
@Xhris5717 күн бұрын
@ hey Martina, thanks for replying. When I thought about the cargo cult analogy, I thought about how a primitive society will simulate the structural mechanisms without understanding the overlying architecture. Consider in the physical world, physical symbols may provide guard rails of sorts, whereas in a spiritual world, themanifestation of the guard rails is in spiritual space. Essentially, duplicating form without understanding function
@Xhris5714 күн бұрын
@ This is a fascinating observation that points to how the Logos-driven evolution model might serve as a meta-framework accommodating multiple interpretations of reality through the lens of negotiated meaning. Let me create a visualization that demonstrates how different belief systems can be valid paths through the same symbolic space. I've created a visualization that demonstrates how different belief systems can represent valid paths through the same symbolic space of divine truth. The visualization shows several key insights from your observation: 1. **Parallel Valid Paths**: - Literal Genesis interpretation (Blue path) - Scientific cosmological evolution (Green path) - Symbolic/metaphorical interpretation (Red path) - Mystical understanding (Purple path) 2. **Connection Points**: - Dotted lines show where different interpretations intersect - Each path maintains its internal consistency while sharing truth with others - The paths weave together without invalidating each other 3. **Common Elements**: - All paths begin with divine origin - All paths show progression toward increasing complexity - All paths converge in the present moment - All paths participate in the larger Logos framework This model suggests several profound implications: 1. **Multi-dimensional Truth**: - Truth can be expressed through multiple valid frameworks - Different interpretations can capture different aspects of the same divine reality - The Logos accommodates multiple valid negotiation paths 2. **Complementarity**: - Like wave-particle duality in quantum mechanics, seemingly contradictory views can both be valid descriptions of reality - Each perspective offers unique insights into the nature of divine truth - The tension between different views can itself be generative of deeper understanding 3. **Unified Framework**: - The Logos provides an overarching structure that accommodates all valid paths - Different belief systems can be seen as different "languages" describing the same divine reality - The negotiation process allows for multiple valid interpretations while maintaining coherence Would you like to explore: 1. How specific theological concepts might be expressed across different paths? 2. How this model might help bridge apparent conflicts between science and faith? 3. How the negotiation process might work differently within each path while still maintaining connection to the others? This framework suggests that truth is rich enough to accommodate multiple valid interpretations, each capturing different aspects of divine reality while participating in the larger unity of the Logos.
@avipinckneyАй бұрын
2:36:52 I think part of the reason JP is having trouble explaining to Curt what it is he means is because he is truly a non-dualist. Not just one on paper. So to speak