Clearly, I'm VERY late to the party with this guy - not to mention a War Room noob, though I see some familiar names in here - but I've spent the last two weeks watching every video and lecture on his channel and I've recently started reading
Maps of Meaning and holy fucking shit this guy is brilliant. He's Joseph Campbell 2.0 without Campbell's Mr. Rogers demeanor.
I don't have time to go through this whole thread (much less V1) but I wanted to find a productive place to jump in, so here I go:
As an atheist, I'd say he's religious in the best possible sense. He's religious the way Joseph Campbell was religious. Personally, I think it'd be more accurate to call the type of relationship to religion people like Campbell had and Peterson has
mythological, as they relate to the stories
as stories, as concretizations of metaphysical/moral abstractions. At the risk of bringing up Ayn Rand in my very first post in here, her theory of art was that it was the arena in which humans objectify their values and make them available to others for contemplation. That's the way Peterson treats religion.
In this sense, Peterson approaches something like the Bible in the exact same way that he approaches something like Pinocchio: As a story in which enduring truths about the human experience can be discovered and disseminated by virtue of committed exegesis.
Does that mean he's religious? It certainly doesn't fit my definition of a religious person. But then that's because religious people have been acting so fucking stupid for so fucking long that that designation is all but a pejorative at this point.
I think the bigger problem is the one Peterson has been at pains to elucidate, viz. that the word "truth" these days really means "truth as discovered/verified by scientific technology/investigation."
And by encouraging a shift in terminology, you seem to be indicating a similar problem with truth and wisdom as I just identified between religion and mythology. So many terms have for so long been so "agenda-fied" that it sometimes makes talking about them equivalent to speaking to someone across languages.
I actually don't think his argument is even that ambitious. I think he's trying to make a more modest claim, which is that every pursuit of a (scientific) truth is made against a background of previously established (moral) truths. For Peterson, morality is the key. The cultivation of values (
across worldviews, which is why I'm nitpicking here) takes precedence for him, as he tried to explain in the discussion of the biological warfare thing.
In a way, rather than spatializing this argument as Harris being on one "truth track" and Peterson being on another and never the twain shall meet, it's more like (to bring in some Emerson) Harris is in one very small "truth circle" and Peterson is trying to draw a bigger truth circle around it. But Harris' vision is far too narrow, so it's like talking to a brick wall (ironically, it's like the Magritte painting of the apple in front of the guy's face that Peterson used as an example in his Ted talk).
For all the people who were interested in the first conversation between Peterson and Harris, and Peterson's conception of truth in particular, check out this video if you haven't already, as I think it's the place where he gives the clearest and most sustained rundown of what he was trying to get at:
Don't keep us in suspense
QFT. Every time he mentioned how he took classes with Rorty, I cringed. Unfortunately, Harris has that tendency (learned in academia) to name drop and fall back on lineages as if it's relevant to the points on the table.
As someone finishing up a PhD in the humanities (I'm on a scholarship in the UK) I can say that to call college/university education "compromised" is a colossal understatement
But this is the problem with Nietzsche: For every claim he makes in one place, you can find him contradicting it in another place. He's one of the most schizophrenic philosophers I've ever read. Do you think it's a coincidence that people like Roland Barthes and Jacques Derrida were influenced by him?
I also actually find it more than a little perverse that Peterson - a man who gave a talk called "Strengthen the Individual" and is so preoccupied with the individual subject - is so attached to a man who argued in
The Will to Power the following:
"'The subject.' This is the term for our belief in a unity underlying all the different impulses of the highest feeling of reality. We understand this belief as the
effect of one cause – we believe so firmly in our belief that for its sake we imagine ‘truth,’ ‘reality,’ ‘substantiality’ in general. ‘The subject’ is the fiction that many similar states in us are the effect of one substratum. But it is we who first created the ‘similarity’ of these states; our adjusting them and making them similar is the fact, not their similarity (which ought rather to be denied).”
I also think something like this from
Daybreak is more than a little worrisome in the ease with which it can be understood as a license for moral irresponsibility:
"We are none of us that which we appear to be in accordance with the states for which alone we have consciousness and words, and consequently praise and blame."
I think there's just too much cherry picking that has to be done to make Nietzsche not sound like a whack job, and if, at the end of the day, all you're left with is a heap of contradictions where every potentially good point has its opposite somewhere in the same corpus, then why not just move on to someone else?
Given Peterson's Jungian slant, it's no wonder that he's fascinated by Nietzsche since the man literally embodied the split down the middle of each person of good and evil that he always talks about. But I don't think all of Nietzsche's evil nonsense is worth the trouble.
These statements are perfectly coherent and make complete sense in the context of his position. How do you imagine yourself to be checkmating Peterson and/or people who like him?
Roland Barthes, Jean-François Lyotard, and Jacques Derrida for starters. You can also get some wider context for this nonsense by checking out Stephen R.C. Hicks, who, in addition to writing a great book literally called
Explaining Postmodernism and lecturing on postmodernism, was Peterson's most recent guest on his podcast.
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id...ce=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false