496. Beyond Dawkins | Jonathan Pageau AI transcript and summary - episode of podcast The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
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Episode: 496. Beyond Dawkins | Jonathan Pageau
Author: Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
Duration: 01:41:05
Episode Shownotes
Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with podcaster, author, and icon carver Jonathan Pageau. They discuss Jonathan’s new book release, “Jack and the Fallen Giants,” the depth of fairy tales when they are not propagandized, Jordan’s recent conversation with Richard Dawkins, the hierarchies of being and their relation to goals,
and how the spirit of Adam is the best combatant against the spirit of Cain. Jonathan Pageau is a French-Canadian liturgical artist and icon carver, known for his work featured in museums across the world. He carves Eastern Orthodox and other traditional images and teaches an online carving class. He also runs a YouTube channel dedicated to the exploration of symbolism across history and religion. This episode was recorded on October 30th, 2024 | Links | For Jonathan Pageau: The Symbolic World (Website)https://www.thesymbolicworld.com/ Jonathan
Pageau on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@JonathanPageau
Jonathan Pageau on X https://twitter.com/PageauJonathan?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
Summary
In this episode of 'The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast,' Dr. Jordan B. Peterson converses with Jonathan Pageau about his book 'Jack and the Fallen Giants,' emphasizing the reclamation of fairy tales from ideological misinterpretations. They discuss the significance of narratives in shaping cognition, identity linked to higher-order structures, and the historical context embedded in these stories. The conversation also touches on the necessity of higher aims, the struggles with suffering, and the transformative power of sacrifice in pursuing meaningful life goals, all framed within the context of cultural symbolism and the Judeo-Christian narrative.
Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (496. Beyond Dawkins | Jonathan Pageau) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.
Full Transcript
00:00:02 Speaker_01
So today I have the pleasure of speaking with Jonathan Paggio.
00:00:19 Speaker_02
Jonathan is one of the primary architects of ARC, the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship, headquartered in London, with its next conference in February. We're trying to re-establish a narrative of promise, hope, and abundance
00:00:39 Speaker_02
for the international community. Preposterous as that might sound, that's still happening. He runs a website and YouTube channel called The Symbolic World, which has a very devoted following.
00:00:55 Speaker_02
We've spoken many times and I've always found the conversations extremely illuminating. He has a new book which is called Jack and the Fallen Giants and it's part of a series of traditional fairy tales told with a modern but not postmodern twist.
00:01:12 Speaker_02
And what did we talk about today? We assessed the Dawkins discussion in some detail, focusing really on the issues of perception and categorization.
00:01:26 Speaker_02
And that's very much worth understanding because it explains, at least to some degree, the fundamental role that stories play in not only human cognition, but in perception and in the unfolding of the world.
00:01:38 Speaker_02
It's extremely important to understand this, and I don't think I've delved into it more deeply with my guests than with Jonathan, with the possible exception of John Verveche.
00:01:49 Speaker_02
We've talked about identity and subsidiary participation, the notion that individual identity can't be conceptualized properly without reference to our embeddedness in higher order structures, family, marriage, family, community, nation. Well, what?
00:02:07 Speaker_02
One nation united under God. something like Jacob's ladder stretching up to the stars. And so, join us and hear what we have to say. Well, Mr. Pagiot, let's start by comparing books. All right. You've just published a new book. Yeah.
00:02:26 Speaker_02
Tell us about the book and tell us about what you're doing with this series and with your publishing arm in general.
00:02:33 Speaker_00
Yeah, and so we talk a lot about the problem with culture that we have now, and I really wanted to do something positive, which is if we're noticing that our stories are being captured, that they're being turned into ideological,
00:02:49 Speaker_00
weapons, you know, why not take them back and present them in a beautiful, celebratory way? And so that's the take that we're doing.
00:02:58 Speaker_00
And so we're making these books unapologetically beautiful, beautifully illustrated, you know, hopefully powerful storytelling, you know, beautiful cover, cloth binding. And so people can, we're publishing it ourselves.
00:03:12 Speaker_00
We want to keep total control over the quality and the beauty of the book. And so people can go to my website, symbolicworld.com, and go to the store. We're offering the books now. We're selling it out of our own Shopify.
00:03:24 Speaker_00
And also if people want, they can just sign up for a mailing list and we're giving out free PDFs of some of the books that we're publishing because we want to, in some ways, we want to have control over the narrative.
00:03:35 Speaker_00
And so we want to bring it together as much as possible so we can tell the stories we want to tell and not be subject to others.
00:03:42 Speaker_02
So you have published Snow White.
00:03:45 Speaker_00
Yeah, so this is the latest one, it's Jack and the Fallen Giants. We published Snow White, we're doing Jack, and then we're going to do Rapunzel, the valiant little Taylor.
00:03:54 Speaker_00
We're doing girl fairy tales, boy fairy tales, but in a way that will bring them together.
00:03:58 Speaker_02
Fluid identity fairy tales.
00:04:01 Speaker_00
Yeah, we could. I'm tempted to do Little Red Riding Hood, actually. I'm actually tempted to do that, maybe off-series, with a black cover or something, you know, to kind of talk about the problem of... The wolf?
00:04:14 Speaker_00
Of the wolf, and also the... In grandma's clothing? Yes. That wolf? Yes, that wolf. We might do something about that. But for now, it's mostly just celebrating. And these characters also will start to, as the series goes on, there's eight books.
00:04:26 Speaker_00
It's called Tales for Once and Ever. And the characters will start to cross over into the different fairy tales. And we're going to have like a kind of symphony of the fairy tales come together. Age range?
00:04:38 Speaker_00
I think like from four years old to all the way to adult, because one of the things we want to do is we notice that in the postmodern fairy tale, there's like a child reading and an adult reading, like in Shrek, for example.
00:04:49 Speaker_00
But the adult reading is mostly just dirty jokes and sexual illusions. And what we want to do is to have an adult level reading, but that's based on insight.
00:04:58 Speaker_00
which is, can we help the grown-up who heard these stories when they were young see something in them that they've never seen before? And so we connect them to ancient myth, to the Bible, in ways that's very subtle, a kid won't notice.
00:05:11 Speaker_00
They'll just enjoy the story, it's an adventure story. But hopefully the adult will be able to kind of get a glimpse of something more in the fairy tale.
00:05:20 Speaker_02
So how would you distinguish the approach that you're taking to these stories or to story in general from propagandization? My students used to ask me, it was an intelligent question too.
00:05:34 Speaker_02
And I was a postmodern question when I was teaching my maps of meaning course in particular. How do you know that what you're teaching isn't just another ideology? And that is a postmodern question because the postmodern assumption
00:05:51 Speaker_02
With a Marxist twist is that it's all ideology. It's ideology all the way down and everything's a power game. And so you can't Claim to step outside it.
00:06:01 Speaker_02
Let's say now you and I have talked about that a little bit because the one of the distinguishing features seems to be the willingness to tie the interpretive
00:06:11 Speaker_02
enterprise into the historical tradition, to the deeper historical tradition, maybe even into the biological tradition. But I'd like to hear your take on that so that you could explain what you're doing.
00:06:24 Speaker_00
So I think that the fairy tales themselves, they have in them a trace of human memory. In some ways, because these stories are old and because they've been told for who knows how long, over and over, refined.
00:06:37 Speaker_02
We have evidence since 15,000 years for some of them.
00:06:40 Speaker_00
And so I think that because of that, they contain in them a pattern of memory which is beyond ideology, which is something like the very pattern of human attention itself.
00:06:49 Speaker_00
The things that we care about without even knowing we care about them, which is why sometimes fairy tales are so strange at the outset. When you look at the surface of them, they're strange, but for some reason they're extremely captivating.
00:07:01 Speaker_00
You know, I think that by staying close to the fairy tale, you know, and doing it in a celebratory way, because the ideological fairy tales are often very cynical. They're very cynical in the way they approach the tale. Ironic.
00:07:14 Speaker_00
Yes, ironic and cynical and inverting.
00:07:17 Speaker_02
And holier-than-thou, intellectually superior, Luciferian, presumptuous, manipulative.
00:07:23 Speaker_00
Well and also you're right, in some ways the author is thinking that they're above the story. You bet. And that they are now commenting on the story.
00:07:30 Speaker_02
That's the sin of not honoring your father and mother.
00:07:33 Speaker_00
Yeah.
00:07:34 Speaker_02
Right?
00:07:34 Speaker_00
That makes everyone into the slaves of servants. And so in some ways what we want to do is more like the way the ancient stories were told, which is we dive into it and we celebrate it and then we also
00:07:45 Speaker_00
cast light on certain threads or certain insights that maybe people hadn't noticed before. That's how the ancients would tell it.
00:07:51 Speaker_00
You know, they would tell their version of, let's say, Ulysses crossing the waters, and then they would branch off a little bit from the main story in order to help you kind of seek more clearly what the story is about, and that's what we're doing.
00:08:04 Speaker_00
People will totally recognize these stories.
00:08:06 Speaker_02
Like, it's the story you heard when you were a child, but we hope that you- Right, so that's the first part of it not being propaganda, is that you're not deviating from the central tradition.
00:08:15 Speaker_00
Yeah, the person will recognize it, but then why would they read my version rather than the Grimm version, right? That's the question. And the answer is something like there are certain threads in the story which are more relevant at certain times.
00:08:29 Speaker_00
And so you can bring out those threads, kind of show them in a manner that maybe that are secretly hidden in the story because the story is so patterned on human attention.
00:08:40 Speaker_00
So like in Snow White, for example, right, the idea that this image of the witch looking into the mirror, right, that it's something like a cell phone, that it's something like social media looking back and telling you who's the- Narcissist's pool.
00:08:53 Speaker_02
Exactly, but you can- And that witch, that old woman, she's concerned about losing her attractiveness. And so what she's out to do essentially is destroy young female beauty and fertility, right? And that's the eternal witch that does that.
00:09:11 Speaker_02
The enemy of youthful, healthy femininity, right? That's a tale for our times, that's for sure.
00:09:20 Speaker_00
Yeah, in the name of this weird tack on beauty, or beauty as power, you could say.
00:09:25 Speaker_00
Yeah, and so that's the idea, is to take these stories that everybody already knows, but to just slightly, and to do it very subtly, so that for a child, like most of the children, will just see a beautiful story with wonderful characters that is adventurous.
00:09:39 Speaker_00
But nonetheless, it's just slightly bringing people into that awareness. And also, you know, I mean, obviously my insight into the Bible stories is something that I wanted to bring into the fairy tale.
00:09:51 Speaker_00
And so, for example, in this, obviously people who can recognize the fact that it's Jack and the Fallen Giants means that I'm slightly alluding to the Nephilim and the idea of the Giants in the story of Noah, for example.
00:10:02 Speaker_00
Nothing explicit, but some of the patterns and the tropes that I'm using have to do with this idea of the fallen angel or the, you know, these principalities that can be corrupted.
00:10:13 Speaker_02
So there's this idea that psychologists developed a long while back when they were trying to determine whether or not a psychological description was real. Like anxiety, for example, is that real? Well, it's not a physical quality like color or mass.
00:10:34 Speaker_02
How do you determine if it's real? And one of the answers to that famous answer, I think it was formulated by Paul Meele in the 1950s was, they described it as convergent validation.
00:10:46 Speaker_02
And so the idea would be that you use a number of different measurement techniques, and if they converge, then you have some, you can trust to some degree that the phenomena that you're dealing with the phenomenon that you're dealing with is real.
00:11:02 Speaker_02
Your senses do that, right? We have five senses, they're qualitatively different.
00:11:08 Speaker_02
And so evolutionarily, biologically, we've determined that in order to determine whether something is real, you need to triangulate on it, so to speak, but from five different positions.
00:11:20 Speaker_02
And then we do more than that because we also talk about what's real. But it seems to me too, and I did this in my Maps of Meaning book,
00:11:29 Speaker_02
And I wanted to make sure that the propositions that I put forward could be validated pharmacologically, neurologically, psychologically, and from the perspective of cybernetics and narrative, five dimensions of so-called triangulation.
00:11:49 Speaker_02
And that's another distinguishing, that's another factor that distinguishes such theorizing from ideology.
00:12:00 Speaker_02
It's also predicated on the idea that there is something like a reality outside the interpretation that has to be consulted when making truth claims.
00:12:12 Speaker_02
It's a tricky thing to get right because, of course, the line of reasoning that you and I have been pursuing does accept a certain degree of postmodern critique, even though the postmodernists weren't the only people that figured this out, because the postmodernists did figure out that we see the world through a story.
00:12:31 Speaker_02
In fact, that a story is, in fact, a description of the structure through which we see the world. And, you know, I made a mistake with that with Dawkins.
00:12:40 Speaker_02
You know, I didn't get the answer quite right because I was thinking about it mathematically later. So if you're building an equation to predict a certain outcome, imagine that you add four things together.
00:12:58 Speaker_02
Well, a question emerges, how do you weight each of those four things? The weighting is the multiplier. Right now, with the regression equation, the statistical, process will determine that for you. But whenever you make a judgment, you do a weighting.
00:13:14 Speaker_02
And it isn't obvious how you derive that weighting from the facts alone, right? There's a regress problem there. And so stories are a description of the manner in which we weight our attention. That's a good way of thinking about it.
00:13:32 Speaker_02
And there's patterns to that. And some of those patterns are ancient historically and biologically, and they're more trustworthy because they've stood the test of time, immense spans of time.
00:13:48 Speaker_02
They speak to us much more directly and you made an allusion to why that's a reasonable proposition earlier when you notice that there are things that are strange in fairy tales that we still accept.
00:14:01 Speaker_02
And so the Pinocchio story, especially the Disney version, has always struck me that way because there's a real narrative discontinuity in the story. when Geppetto ends up in a whale. And there's no explanation for that.
00:14:15 Speaker_02
We know that he's gone out to search for Pinocchio, because Pinocchio's lost, so the sun has gone missing, right? And you can read that both ways.
00:14:24 Speaker_02
And then the next thing that happens is Geppetto's in the abyss, in darkness, inside a whale, and no one in the audience mimes. It's like, well, of course, that's where you end up when you're a woodcutter looking for your lost puppet. inside a whale.
00:14:38 Speaker_02
That's right. Right, right. And then the whale turns into a fire-breathing dragon, just like in the Sleeping Beauty.
00:14:46 Speaker_02
story, the witch who traps the prince in the castle, she's the eatable mother and she's going to keep him there until he's too old to be good for anything, she turns into a fire-breathing dragon. And that's not a problem either, right?
00:15:00 Speaker_00
It's completely consistent, we completely associate it. It's because, like you tried to bring up with Dawkins, is that there are structures of attention and memory that are probably biologically encoded in us at this moment.
00:15:16 Speaker_02
Yeah, the weightings are biologically encoded. Yeah, well, I've been thinking about this from the large language model perspective. Like, I believe that large language models have given us an existence proof of this symbolic realm.
00:15:29 Speaker_02
Because all the large language models do is calculate statistical probabilities. And so, there's some probability that any given word will be associated with any other given word.
00:15:40 Speaker_02
And then you can think of a network of probabilities, not only of words, but of phrases and of senses. And the billions of calculations, the billions of mathematical What would you call them? They're elements in something like a regression equation.
00:16:00 Speaker_02
The billions of them map word to word, phrase to phrase, sentence to sentence, sentence to paragraph, like all those levels of mapping. And so they've mapped out the statistical relationship between Words.
00:16:15 Speaker_02
But there's no reason to assume this is, I think, a key to Jung's collective unconscious, or one key. There's no reason to assume that exactly the same isn't true of images, right?
00:16:25 Speaker_02
So you could imagine that human cognition has a propositional level, which is word, but under that, closer to action is an image level. And the words, like in a story, you get words describing images, right?
00:16:40 Speaker_02
Then you can capture that richness in the image. the fact that there's a statistical relationship between the words is replicated with regards to the images.
00:16:49 Speaker_02
There's statistical relationships between images, so that witch and cat go together, and witch, cat, and swamp go together, along with broom, right?
00:16:59 Speaker_02
And so if you see any of those in an animated production, they're evocative of the others, and that's the symbolic overtones. And so you can see that that image level of cognition is a little more foreign to us than the propositional.
00:17:18 Speaker_02
It seems like we're more at home with the word. Once you drop into the image realm, you're more into the realm of dreams, right? And dreams play with those symbolic those statistical association.
00:17:31 Speaker_02
It's so cool that we have something like a mathematical model of the symbolic world now.
00:17:36 Speaker_00
Yeah.
00:17:37 Speaker_02
And so it's indisputable that it exists.
00:17:41 Speaker_00
Yeah. And I think that, you know, one of the things that happened in the 20th century and you did it with maps of meaning is that if you when you do comparative
00:17:48 Speaker_00
storytelling or you do comparative religion, you can notice that there are certain patterns that vary to some extent, but there are certain patterns that actually converge quite astoundingly.
00:17:59 Speaker_00
And people always struggle to find some maybe historical connection, some actual influence, but you'd actually realize that maybe you don't actually need the historical.
00:18:10 Speaker_02
Well, it begs the question anyways, even if there is a historical connection, you have to explain why it lasted, right, in both cultures.
00:18:17 Speaker_02
So it doesn't really... I know that there is an endless argument about the movement of ideas versus their spontaneous generation, but it's a red herring in many ways.
00:18:26 Speaker_00
And there are so many examples, but you could take a simple example, like the idea that wearing something on your head, like a crown, some version of that, or horns, something that you have on the top of your head, you can see that appear like a headdress, that a headdress is a symbol of status.
00:18:45 Speaker_00
You think that that's obvious, but it's a pretty universal thing that happens in all these cultures that have nothing to do with each other, but it has to do with
00:18:53 Speaker_00
the manner in which human attention is structured, the fact that we look at people's eyes, the fact that we look at people's faces, the idea that if you add something to that, you know, an ornament to a person's head, that you are signifying something very specific.
00:19:07 Speaker_02
Yeah, attractiveness. And then the thing is, is that the attractiveness shares features with the sun and the moon because they're the most attractive features
00:19:16 Speaker_02
in the celestial sky and the high status headdress wearer whose head is also on the silver coin that's the moon or the gold coin that's the sun is high status so they dominate the social landscape like the sun and the moon dominate the skies, right?
00:19:32 Speaker_02
It's up and not down, right?
00:19:35 Speaker_00
It all makes sense just in terms of human experience and you can
00:19:38 Speaker_00
And I think that that's, you know, your effort with Dawkins to try to get him to see across and to understand that, you know, even the way that he thinks about, you know, replication, you know, the way that he thinks about how something replicates and then how something is conserved, you know, through time, that we can apply that structure to human memes, but he doesn't like the word memes or archetypes or human behaviors.
00:20:06 Speaker_02
One of the funny things about talking to Dawkins about memes was that he only invoked trivial examples, like the backwards hat.
00:20:13 Speaker_00
He saw them as parasitic. He really uses the word, you know, the idea that it's like a parasite. Yeah, yeah, right.
00:20:20 Speaker_00
But if you take the idea of a meme or like a human behavior that isn't biologically encoded, let's say shaking someone's hand, like shaking someone's hand is not wearing a backwards baseball cap.
00:20:34 Speaker_00
There are equivalents of shaking someone's hand or showing your hands, something like that in pretty much every single culture. It's like a universal gesture of showing your empty hands to someone or encountering the empty hand of someone.
00:20:47 Speaker_00
Or the welcoming hand. And you can completely explain it, why that symbol would have emerged universally through culture.
00:20:54 Speaker_02
Yes, and you could also explain why people who were good at doing it didn't get killed.
00:20:59 Speaker_00
Exactly.
00:20:59 Speaker_00
Yeah, and you can see how then, you know, through different phenomena, that it would then slowly become more closer and closer to biology, at least, or come very close to... Yeah, well, that's that Baldwin effect that we started to talk about when we actually found some common ground.
00:21:17 Speaker_02
And it looked to me like he hadn't conceptualized that before. I mean, and that's not surprising, because it's actually a very complicated idea.
00:21:27 Speaker_02
One of the things I really wanted to do with Dawkins, that I don't think I did that successfully, was to congratulate him on the depth of the realization of the importance of the meme. Right.
00:21:43 Speaker_02
And I mean, you'd expect that if a discovery of that sort is significant, that it wouldn't be unique, that there'd be echoes of that idea elsewhere. And there are definitely echoes of the meme idea in the idea of archetype.
00:21:55 Speaker_01
Yeah.
00:21:56 Speaker_02
But the thing, it's so radical, that idea, and he's right on the verge of grasping it, because
00:22:04 Speaker_02
Once you can produce an idea that lives in abstraction, which is the right way of thinking about it, that it lives, then those ideas can compete and they can undergo life and death.
00:22:16 Speaker_02
And so what you have is an abstract substitution of life and death and the testing that goes along with that for actual death. This is the thing I really believe.
00:22:28 Speaker_02
this might be key to the idea of the word theologically, is this is the thing that makes humans so absolutely distinct. This is also why the Malthusian types are completely wrong, right?
00:22:39 Speaker_02
Because the Malthusian types with their zero-sum game biology, they think the right biological model for a human being is like mold in a Petri dish.
00:22:48 Speaker_02
So the Petri dish is, it's got agar in it, let's say, one form of food, a finite supply, the mold being relatively mindless, devours all the food and then it expires because there's a finite resource.
00:23:02 Speaker_02
And that analogy does hold in various animal populations, maybe in all animal populations except the human. But the thing about human beings is Well, we can substitute a different food.
00:23:16 Speaker_02
And we can substitute a different approach to the resource management problem. And we can transform the nature of our being without dying. And that makes us an entirely different kind of creature.
00:23:29 Speaker_02
That Malthusian law, there's no evidence that that Malthusian law applies except when societies degenerate.
00:23:39 Speaker_00
So, and also, I mean, this is something I wanted to run by you after that discussion I was thinking of.
00:23:43 Speaker_00
And, you know, one of the things that I'm adamant about is the idea that different beings that we recognize as having coherence, you know, exist at different levels. This is the kind of a subsidiary vision of reality that you have
00:23:58 Speaker_00
cells in you that have a certain coherence, and you have systems in you that have certain coherences, and you have that also in your thinking, those systems join together to make Jordan Peterson or to make me, but that also continues up.
00:24:13 Speaker_00
Some of the meme-level structures, they're actually there to preserve what I could call higher-order beings. And so, for example, if you take a certain practice, which would be incarceration, for example, in our culture.
00:24:27 Speaker_00
So that incarceration is actually done in order to preserve the coherence of the social body. The body politics. That's the reason why it's done. But there is an analogy between that
00:24:38 Speaker_00
all the way down to the meme, because if you incarcerate someone, you obviously reduce their capacity to reproduce.
00:24:45 Speaker_00
And therefore you are, while you are trying to maintain the higher order being, you're also participating in the maintaining of the coherence. Also, if you put people who kill people in prison, then less people die at the individual level.
00:25:00 Speaker_02
That's actually one of the explanations for the relative Domesticity and tranquility of modern society is all the hyper aggressive men were killed.
00:25:10 Speaker_01
Yeah.
00:25:10 Speaker_02
Yeah, so we we tamed ourselves, right? Well and when Dawkins and I came together near the end Talking about the Baldwin effect.
00:25:20 Speaker_02
We were really referring to something very much like that it's like you establish a story that transforms the social landscape and Imagine now, it transforms the hierarchical arrangement of the people within the social landscape, right?
00:25:34 Speaker_02
So that once a story is accepted, the people who are better at acting it out get more social status. While men who are who accrue more social status are radically different in their reproductive capacity.
00:25:49 Speaker_02
Now, it's the case for women too, because the children of high-status women are more likely to live, but high-status men are likely to have way more offspring, and it's way more.
00:25:59 Speaker_02
And so, once a story dominates, it can shift the social hierarchy that transforms the reproductive landscape. Then you start selecting people for their Affinity to the story. Yeah, right.
00:26:11 Speaker_02
Well, that's the Baldwin effect and that's a really good Well, that's one of that's what that's the one thing that we discussed that Dawkins got really excited about it was Unfortunate that it was relatively near the end of the discussion but also there's a kind of sadness when I see that to me is the idea that his eyes just light up and
00:26:30 Speaker_00
when now he can talk about the reproducibility of the genes. It seems like it would be far more interesting to understand the analogical structures that reproduce themselves in the hierarchy of orders.
00:26:43 Speaker_02
Yeah, well we should definitely talk about that in more detail.
00:26:47 Speaker_02
One of the things that you and I were discussing today, and this was also emerged out of the Dawkins conversation, was the implicit assumption on the part of the materialist reductionists that there's a level of perception that sense data.
00:27:01 Speaker_02
And this is just not true. It's not true neurophysiologically, part first, because there is no perception independent of action, and there's no action independent of goal-directed motivation.
00:27:14 Speaker_02
So all perception, all perception, is associated with motivation, which is another thing that the postmodernists insisted on.
00:27:25 Speaker_02
It's more, it's even worse than that in a way, because all perceived unities are actually multiplicities in and of themselves, right? And we can go all the way down to the level of the proton. Like the proton is composed of parts.
00:27:38 Speaker_02
And so I suppose if you were the ultimate materialist reductionist, you'd say, well, there's no protons.
00:27:43 Speaker_00
There's just quarks.
00:27:45 Speaker_02
Well, there's no quarks, there's just a quantum field. There's just potential. Well, would that be the same potential that the spirit of God brooded on at the beginning of time? Oh, no, no, it wouldn't be that.
00:27:55 Speaker_00
Obviously not. Right, right. And I think that what you're saying is absolutely right. You know, one of the things that emerged during the conversation with him, you know, at some point, Alex O'Connor trying to mediate, doing a really good job.
00:28:07 Speaker_00
By the way, he said, you know, he said, we're talking about the reality of dragons and the reality of lions. And Dawkins was saying that the reality of dragons doesn't interest him.
00:28:17 Speaker_00
The reality of lions interests him because they're just literal beings, whereas dragons are metaphorical beings. And I was like, no. And then Alex O'Connor said, You know, the lion is the gene and the dragon is the meme.
00:28:34 Speaker_00
And I was like, no, that's absolutely wrong. Every category is a metacategory. Every single category is something which transcends the parts that make it, the examples that make it.
00:28:45 Speaker_02
This is also why the, so one of the definitions of postmodernism is acceptance of the insistence that there's no uniting metanarrative. And I've thought through that a lot. It's like all narratives are uniting metanarratives.
00:28:57 Speaker_02
That's the thing, it's like okay.
00:28:58 Speaker_00
How far do you go?
00:29:00 Speaker_02
Exactly, where does the uniting metanarrative end then? right? There's no muscles, there's just cells. There's no cells, there's just organelles. There's no organelles, there's just molecules.
00:29:10 Speaker_00
Yeah, and so it's like in the same, it's like there's no history, they're just like events, but you organize your day. Your day is a metanarrative. You know, every conversation is a metanarrative. When you sit down and have a meal, it's a metanarrative.
00:29:23 Speaker_02
Carl Friston, who's the world's most cited neuroscientist, I asked him at one point directly, is every perception a narrative? And he said, yeah, a micro narrative. He said, yes. Right.
00:29:35 Speaker_02
So this is so, so, you know, you can understand here too, why there is a culture war. There's a variety of reasons, but one reason is, is that something has been discovered in the last 60 years, which
00:29:49 Speaker_02
sounds the death knell, particularly for empiricism. It doesn't mean that there's no utility in empiricism, but it certainly indicates that the fundamental axiomatic presuppositions of the empiricists
00:30:04 Speaker_02
predicated on their idea of something like raw and basic sense data. That's just, it's not true. And it's not only not true, it's impossible. It can't, it can't work that, it can't and it doesn't work that way.
00:30:16 Speaker_02
And you know, some of the evidence for that too is the fact of the hyper-intelligence of these large language models, which actually learn the same way human beings learn. They learn through reinforcement rather than
00:30:30 Speaker_00
Yeah, that's because they really are. Large language models are derivative of humans. They're not intelligent. They're derivative of human intelligence because it is human care that has trained the large language.
00:30:43 Speaker_00
It's a human saying, good, bad, good, bad, or farms of humans.
00:30:48 Speaker_02
Actually, what the human beings say directly, and this is very much associated with the idea of sin, right? To miss the target. The human beings say, this is the target. This target is called cat. This deviation from cat is wrong. Right?
00:31:03 Speaker_02
And so, yeah, exactly, exactly that. And so then the question is, We talked about your book, we're gonna talk about my book for a minute. We just both got these today, eh? So that was fun. So yeah, so I just got this today.
00:31:14 Speaker_02
This is coming out November 19th, We Who Wrestle With God. One of the cases I make in this, and I'm interested to know what you think about this, is that these meta-narratives, this is one of the things that tangles up Sam Harris.
00:31:30 Speaker_02
These meta-narratives are still associated with the, the transpersonal world. I don't know if you can exactly call it objective, right? Because the patterns of attention that characterize our stories have to be functional in the actual world, right?
00:31:48 Speaker_02
So they're bounded by the material, they're bounded by the biological, they're bounded by the social, they're bounded by the psychological. They can only maintain their validity within all of that binding, so they're looking at
00:32:02 Speaker_00
Or else we don't care about them, and we don't remember them. And that's the idea.
00:32:07 Speaker_02
Yeah, that's how they're bounded by the, well, both the psychological and the biological.
00:32:11 Speaker_00
That's the immediate one, but then memory, obviously, and attention is completely bound in our biological, we care about the things that, you know, we care about the things that will threaten us, we care about the things that will feed us, we care about the relationship that we can bring, and that is, those are the things that we remember, for good or for ill.
00:32:29 Speaker_00
Yeah, so that Heideggerian
00:32:31 Speaker_02
That's right. That's right. What do you wait? What's important to you?
00:32:37 Speaker_00
And you can't have categories without that wait. You just can't avoid it. Sorry to bring back the Dawkins conversation. It just happened because it's still fresh in my mind. Dawkins at some point said something like, I don't care about these stories.
00:32:52 Speaker_00
I care about the kind of science and the kind of prediction that can help us land a spaceship on the moon. I know, I missed an opportunity there, man. I care more about why the hell would we want to land a spaceship on the moon?
00:33:05 Speaker_00
Why would humans do that? That's more interesting to me or more important than the fact that we're capable of doing it.
00:33:11 Speaker_02
Well it's also, there's two things there that are interesting. The first is, well we landed on the moon and for Dawkins the fact that that's remarkable is self-evident. It's like for a psychologist, it's like that's not self-evident buddy.
00:33:23 Speaker_02
There's lots of things we could have done and had been doing for a very long period of time before we landed on the moon. So it's something like Star Trek to boldly go where no one has gone before.
00:33:35 Speaker_00
It's the mariner's journey. It's the mariner's story. You know, you have all these stories, ancient stories, the story of Ulysses or the story of St. Brendan, who goes out into the ocean and, you know, goes in a land that nobody has been before.
00:33:48 Speaker_00
These are the stories that we care about. The idea of going out.
00:33:51 Speaker_02
And they plant a flag.
00:33:52 Speaker_00
Yeah.
00:33:52 Speaker_02
Well, that's what we did on the moon. And the flag, that's the staff of Moses. That signifies the new center, right? It's a center of identity.
00:34:00 Speaker_00
It's the joining of something with identity. That's why we plant flags or crosses when the explorers would encounter new lands, they would plant a vertical pole to say, this is an identity. This is the new center of the world. This is a new center.
00:34:14 Speaker_00
It's a tree, it's a pole, it's a marker, just like a street marker. It's Jack and the Beanstalk. Yeah, exactly.
00:34:18 Speaker_02
It's an identity. That's what it is. Well, and it's also the case, and I missed this, it's so foolish. There was so much going on. Well, there was, there was, but, He's interested in the technology that gets us to the moon.
00:34:30 Speaker_02
It's like, okay, the technology that gets us to the moon. How about the social, the nature of the social contract that produced the education system and the technology that made the moon voyage possible, right?
00:34:45 Speaker_02
I mean, one of the things I've learned, not least through analysis of the biblical narratives, which is partly what We Who Wrestle With God does is that The ethos that upon which a society is founded is the prime natural resource.
00:35:02 Speaker_02
And so there was a reason it was the Americans that got to the moon. And part of the reason for that was the nature of the American social contract. Then the question is, well, what's that social contract predicated on?
00:35:13 Speaker_02
It's like, well, we hold these truths to be self-evident. And what constitutes the self-evidence and what's underneath that? Well, the entire Judeo-Christian landscape is underneath that. And what's underneath that?
00:35:26 Speaker_02
Well, it's something like the social structure itself and the biological reality underneath that and the patterns in the material world. And well, God only knows what that's ultimately reflective of.
00:35:37 Speaker_02
I mean, the deepest narrative insistence is that there's a pattern that's fundamental, that's beyond the mere material. And I see no reason whatsoever to assume that that's an incorrect presumption.
00:35:53 Speaker_00
It's also true at every single level.
00:35:55 Speaker_00
Once you start to see it, once you start to see that every category is a metacategory, that every category is an agglomeration of parts towards a purpose, then you realize that all categories in some ways transcend its parts.
00:36:08 Speaker_00
It transcends its elements. And so they all are moving towards this transcendence.
00:36:13 Speaker_02
It's because they're related to something higher.
00:36:15 Speaker_00
Yeah, they keep pushing up higher. You know, Plato wasn't ridiculous in understanding the notion of forms.
00:36:22 Speaker_00
I think that one of the things that, let's say, contemporary thinking or even Cogsci can help the Platonic form problem with is that these forms, their purposes, They're reasons, right? Some of the saints, like St.
00:36:37 Speaker_00
Maximus the Confessor, collapses it together. He does talk about that. It's like the reason why we notice a form or an identity is because we're seeing a reason for it to exist. We're noticing a purpose.
00:36:48 Speaker_00
And that's in line with this whole perceptual mechanism that we bring to light. And so it's not that these ideas or that these forms exist in some weird, I don't know, like weird ethereal realm.
00:37:00 Speaker_00
Yeah, it's just that they are, because they bind multiplicity together, they're relatively invisible because you can't see the category, you're always seeing... Well, it also fades into the ineffable.
00:37:16 Speaker_02
So that's the structure of Jacob's Ladder. You could imagine that as you move down into the material,
00:37:22 Speaker_02
let's say you're taking things apart, you're taking metacategories apart into their subsidiary metacategories all the way down, well, you run into something like potential at the bottom.
00:37:33 Speaker_02
And then if you move up to the top, well, you run into something. Spirit. Yeah, exactly. Spirit. Exactly. Well, that's the Jacob's Ladder imagery, right? And it's so interesting too, because
00:37:44 Speaker_02
Jacob, just before he has the dream of Jacob's ladder, which is this spiral, it's often portrayed as a spiral, William Blake portrayed it as a spiral with angels moving up and down, right?
00:37:56 Speaker_02
So he sees this infinite upward movement that characterizes life with the ineffable divine at its pinnacle, right?
00:38:06 Speaker_02
And then, this is exactly at the time when Jacob decides to leave his pathological mother, right, who he's been conspiring with to... Yeah, to betray his brother. To betray his brother and his father, right?
00:38:19 Speaker_02
He leaves, and he decides he's gonna be a new person, right? So he reorients himself. Then he has this dream. Then he starts making sacrifices toward the dream, which is absolutely perfect, because that is exactly what you do.
00:38:32 Speaker_02
We could walk through that. It's like, well, why do you make sacrifices toward the dream? Well, it's because it's that dream and not some other one.
00:38:39 Speaker_02
So his previous dream was, how can I screw over my father and my brother and, you know, stay in a relationship with my mother that's a little bit too close? Okay, so that was his pinnacle.
00:38:53 Speaker_02
of aim, and then he understands, he comes to understand, I think, not least because of his brother's anger and the danger that that represents, and maybe some daunting sense of conscience, that that aim is inappropriate, and he decides he's going to transform, and then he has this vision of infinite potential, and then he makes sacrifices.
00:39:11 Speaker_02
Well, the first thing he sacrifices, obviously, is the previous pathological dream. And so every aim, well, you talked to me about this a bit, every aim requires a sacrifice. It requires the sacrifice of all other aims.
00:39:25 Speaker_00
Right? Two sacrifices. There's a good way to understand it. And we get this, I think, from the Yom Kippur sacrifice in scripture, which is there are two aspects of the Yom Kippur sacrifice, which is the sacrifice of atonement.
00:39:37 Speaker_00
That is that on the one hand, you remove that which is sinful. You remove that which doesn't fit. Right, which violates the aim. Which is something like a cutting away. Yeah. But then there's also a man in which you offer up the best part, right?
00:39:52 Speaker_00
And then that purifies the being. And so when you, if you think of any aim that you encounter, right? On the one hand, you have to reject the things that don't fit, right? It's like if you're playing basketball, you're not playing pinball.
00:40:04 Speaker_00
That's separating the weight from the chaff. Yeah, you have to, all the things that don't fit with the aim. If you're studying for a test, then you study for the test and you're not chatting on the phone.
00:40:13 Speaker_00
If you're doing other things, then you're mixing and you're, let's say, you're creating confusion in the aim. So that's, let's say, the scapegoat part. You cut out that which doesn't fit.
00:40:25 Speaker_00
And then you also offer up what you're doing to the aim, which is beyond you. And that's important. It's something that you're not gathering it into yourself. You're not giving it to you.
00:40:35 Speaker_02
Well, that's where the higher meaning emerges as well, right? So I used to ask my students why they would do a given piece of work, why they were taking an exam. I'm taking the exam because I need to pass the course. Why?
00:40:52 Speaker_02
Well, I'm passing the course because I have to finish the year, because I need to get a degree, because the degree is means to a job. Then after that, they often got incoherence like, well, why bother with the job?
00:41:06 Speaker_02
But there are answers to questions like that.
00:41:08 Speaker_02
It's like, well, to take up my responsible citizenship so that I can establish a family, so that I can build something lasting for the future, so that I can be a credit to myself, so that I can be a credit to other people.
00:41:20 Speaker_02
That's the covenant, by the way, that God offers Abraham, right? And so there is this participation in higher and higher purposes. And one of the things that's so cool about that is that
00:41:32 Speaker_02
if you're participating in the highest possible aim, say, towards the ineffable that caps this pyramidal structure, then the power of the divine ineffable saturates all the micro activities that you engage in because it's imbued with rich purpose.
00:41:48 Speaker_02
And you could say that that's- Makes everything glow.
00:41:51 Speaker_00
Like it makes things glow, not in a physical way, but it makes things glow. you know, it also infuses a kind of joy and a kind of peace, right?
00:41:59 Speaker_02
Because it's- That's why Christ says that his burden is light, which is a very weird thing to say.
00:42:03 Speaker_00
Yeah, because you realize that, you know, whatever it is that I'm paying for here, because I know it's embedded in the highest good or aiming towards a higher good, then I'm happy to do it.
00:42:14 Speaker_02
Well, because by definition, there isn't anything better you could do. That's the ineffable, transcendent unity that Jacob swears to serve, and he identifies that with the God of his ancestors, which is with the one true God of his ancestors.
00:42:33 Speaker_00
Yeah, and you can understand that you can miss aim, right?
00:42:36 Speaker_00
And so we see that, you know, for example, like take someone who's studying his tests or whatever is doing this, you know, you see it happen with people who become extremely wealthy, you know, maybe they have this idea that really what I want is to become rich, like that's the purpose.
00:42:49 Speaker_00
So they do all these things, they get there, but then once they get there, they've got a big choice to make because it turns out that that's not the highest aim. It turns out that it doesn't reach high enough.
00:42:59 Speaker_00
So you can see it when people reach a certain level, a certain threshold of being very, very wealthy, either they start to, you know, sacrifice, let's say, start to give that towards higher purposes, right, help others, you know, start to use their power and their wealth in order to help others reach these goals, or they fall into a kind of hedonism.
00:43:21 Speaker_00
Yeah, exactly. And then they just become a caricature of themselves.
00:43:24 Speaker_02
Right, then their wealth speeds their demise.
00:43:27 Speaker_00
Exactly. So you can see it. I think that even in a conversation with people like Dawkins, at some point we can start to help people see that the hierarchy of aims is something that you can, it's objective.
00:43:43 Speaker_00
We can argue about certain details about it, but it's also not arbitrary.
00:43:48 Speaker_02
No, it's not arbitrary. Well, okay. So we can continue expanding this hierarchy of upward aim. So you want to be a good, father, you want to be a good husband, you want to be a good person, well then that's nested inside the hero myth.
00:44:04 Speaker_02
by definition, fundamentally. And so you want to embody the hero myth. Then the question is, because you can keep expanding the terrain, what's the ultimate hero myth? And I think this will be the next book.
00:44:18 Speaker_02
I really do think that that's laid out properly in the story of the Christian passion. And I think that the classical Christian insistence that that pattern is implicit in the Old Testament writings is right. And so now,
00:44:33 Speaker_00
But it's also like we actually say, it's even crazier, because we say that it's implicit in the structure of being itself. That is something that people don't tend to think of that, that that's what we're saying.
00:44:44 Speaker_00
But when we say that the Logos created the world, that the Logos that was incarnate in Christ is the origin of the world,
00:44:53 Speaker_02
Right, that's John's presumption, a strange idea.
00:44:56 Speaker_00
And so we are intimating that this story is at the origin of the world in the sense that it contains the pattern of the highest form of being that yields all the other ones. Right, that kind of makes it possible for all these other ones to.
00:45:10 Speaker_02
Okay, so let's walk that through because I think it's possible to make a strictly conceptual case for that. Well, so one of the things that I read in Jung's work that really struck me when he was talking about archetypes.
00:45:27 Speaker_02
He talked about the passion story. And he was speaking, you could say technically, looking for patterns. He said, well, What you have to understand about the Christian passion is that it's the archetypal tragedy. Okay, so let's think that through.
00:45:41 Speaker_02
Okay, so now we know that there's a category of story that constitutes a tragedy. Now, I'm not saying it's only a tragedy, by the way.
00:45:50 Speaker_00
It's a comedy. But it does include tragedy in it, for sure.
00:45:54 Speaker_02
Yes, yes. Actually, it subsumes the tragedy within a comedy, exactly. But let's start with the tragic element, because I think it is easier to understand.
00:46:05 Speaker_02
Okay, so now imagine there's something in common among all narrative forms that we recognize as tragedy. So there's an ideal, there's a staff, around which all tragedies circulate, and they're better or worse examples of the ideal platonic tragedy.
00:46:22 Speaker_02
Okay, so how do you interpret the Christian passion in that regard? Well, obviously the most tragic possible outcome is the worst possible demise of the least deserving person, right? By definition. Okay, well, that's clearly played out in the
00:46:42 Speaker_02
Christian story because Christ is represented as sinless and ideal, and also as really universally regarded as good even by his enemies, even by the people that are going to kill him, right?
00:46:56 Speaker_02
And so there's tremendous insistence on his transcendent goodness, and then his mode of death is betrayal at multiple levels, a painful, disgusting, humiliating, and shameful death, because that's what the Romans designed crucifixion for, right?
00:47:16 Speaker_02
And young, young in front of his mother. Like all the things that could happen to you that are terrible in life are stacked up in that story. Okay, so what's the, so what, you might say? Well,
00:47:31 Speaker_02
The question is, that's going to be reflected in your life to some degree, because all of those terrible things, some of those terrible things are definitely going to happen to you.
00:47:39 Speaker_02
So then the question is, what attitude should you bring to bear on that reality? And the answer in that story is something like the answer in the book of Job, which is faith predicated, not only acceptance, but welcoming, right?
00:47:56 Speaker_02
Well, let's take the contrary position. Well, Bitter, resentful hatred of life because of its suffering. Well, first of all, that's not going to do you any good. It's just going to magnify your suffering.
00:48:10 Speaker_02
And then I've also kind of tracked where that goes. That's the story of Cain. If you're bitter and resentful and angry because of the unjust suffering that characterizes life, That isn't where it stops. It transforms into murderousness.
00:48:26 Speaker_02
It transforms into rejection of the ideal. It mutates into a genocidal proclivity and then a deicidal proclivity. Like it's, that's a hellish descent. And so obviously, unless that's what you want, that's not good.
00:48:41 Speaker_02
So there's this notion in the Christian passion that the deepest radical acceptance of the most painful preconditions for existence is the precondition for life more abundant and the descent of heaven.
00:48:55 Speaker_02
Well, I don't see an alternative to that viewpoint because the other viewpoint is the one I just laid out. You know, so in the book of Job, Job is tortured badly by God, bedding with Satan.
00:49:13 Speaker_02
who proclaims to God that he can shake Job's faith, that Job's courage and evident goodness is merely a consequence of his privilege, essentially. And God says, I don't think so. Have Adam.
00:49:28 Speaker_02
And Job's decision, it's so interesting, Job's decision is that
00:49:33 Speaker_02
Regardless of how the facts lay themselves out with regards to suffering at the moment, he will, on principle, refuse to lose faith in his essential goodness despite his inadequacies, like his mortal inadequacies, and refuse to lose faith in the essential goodness of being.
00:49:51 Speaker_02
And one of the ways he justifies that is by recourse to his own ignorance. He says, well, And he does this in the dialogue with God. I don't know all things. I'm in no position to be the final arbiter of the value of being.
00:50:04 Speaker_02
And so I accept it's on principle, it's essential goodness and strive upward regardless of catastrophic suffering. And I think, all you have to do is invert that because that would be the counter position.
00:50:20 Speaker_02
Nothing means anything, which is a foolish counter position or you aim down.
00:50:26 Speaker_00
Yeah, I mean, I agree, and it's a difficult, but I think what you're asking people to swallow, it's a hard pill to swallow for some people, because in some ways, what we're saying to people is that suffering is part of existence, right?
00:50:41 Speaker_00
So we have this story, for example, in Garden of Eden, we have a story that explains the origin of death, the origin of suffering. And the reason why we need that story is because of the fact that we can perceive the gap
00:50:55 Speaker_00
between the fact that we suffer and the notion that we have that in some ways this is wrong, that there's something off about the fact that we suffer.
00:51:04 Speaker_00
Because if you would imagine that this is just the way the world goes, then we wouldn't perceive a gap.
00:51:10 Speaker_00
The fact that we perceive a gap between the difficult suffering that we have in life and something else, like something that we think should be or that we could hope would be, that's accounted for in that story. complain about that.
00:51:25 Speaker_00
Like we can say, well, it's horrible. I hate that story. Like, I hate the fact that, you know, this Adam and Eve, they eat this apple, they fall, they fall into this separation, they deal with this separation.
00:51:35 Speaker_00
And now I have to, you know, we don't like the story, but everybody lives with that gap. Even the atheist, even the most angry atheist is usually an angry atheist because of that gap.
00:51:49 Speaker_00
Because they can perceive the difference between some ideal that they have of how things should be and the reality of what they're living.
00:51:59 Speaker_02
He was, you know, he got visibly outraged talking about bone cancer in children, that he would hold God accountable for that. And you can't have your cake and eat it too.
00:52:12 Speaker_02
The fact that you're outraged by that means that you have faith in a transcendent moral order.
00:52:18 Speaker_00
You think that children shouldn't have bone cancer, which is like, you know, Things happen.
00:52:24 Speaker_00
Like if the world has no meaning and that bone cancer scientifically is no more or less interesting as a healthy bone, it's just different phenomena that you're analyzing that lead to different predictable outcomes. You know, no. Value-free facts.
00:52:39 Speaker_00
Exactly, value-free facts. No, we do care. And we do find it difficult to see the suffering in humans.
00:52:47 Speaker_02
Okay, so I've got a question for you about that. patterned in the story of Adam and Eve. So in We Who Wrestle With God, I take apart the story of Adam and Eve in more depth than I've managed previously.
00:53:04 Speaker_02
Delving into the notion that the fundamental sin of both Adam and Eve is one of pride, right? That's their temptation by Lucifer, the serpent. Their temptation to become as gods, which is the temptation that's first offered to Eve, right?
00:53:19 Speaker_02
And she accepts that. Her desire is to establish the foundations of the moral order subjectively, which is happening everywhere in the world at the moment, by the way, and promoted not least by hyper-inclusive women. So that's very interesting to see.
00:53:36 Speaker_02
A sin of pride, she's going to take it to herself to establish the moral foundations. And then she attempts that, and then Adam, exceeds, which is his sign, the sign of his prideful weakness.
00:53:53 Speaker_02
And so, you have Adam and Eve as the archetypes of male and female.
00:53:59 Speaker_02
You have Adam as the namer and the subduer, and Eve as the helpmate, so to speak, the ezer kenegdo, I think is the phrase, who brings things to his attention that he's left outside of the ordered structure, right?
00:54:12 Speaker_02
And then each of those patterns has its associated sin. Now, in the story of Adam and Eve, suffering and death enters the world with sin.
00:54:22 Speaker_02
Now, I've really been trying to figure that out, because on the one hand, no, because everything dies and suffers. And on the other hand, well, wait a minute. A lot of suffering, especially the unbearable sort.
00:54:38 Speaker_02
is brought about by misaligned aim and pride and the desire to usurp, like a lot of it. Like, who knows? Well, that's the question. Who knows how much?
00:54:49 Speaker_02
And so then you might ask yourself, if we aimed upward unceasingly, if we were perfect, as Christ calls upon his followers to be in the gospel account, what would become of suffering? And what would become of death?
00:55:05 Speaker_02
Now, you have this interesting idea in the Gospels that Christ's radical exception of the terrible preconditions for being produced the victory over death and evil.
00:55:21 Speaker_02
Okay, so there's something about that that's right because the more you open yourself up to the realities of the dark side of life, death and malevolence, let's say, clearly the more capable you are of dealing with it.
00:55:36 Speaker_02
And we don't know the ultimate extent of that. And we don't know what it would mean to, this is where my knowledge just ends, as I tried to indicate to Dawkins, these texts, you know, move out into the ineffable.
00:55:49 Speaker_02
You know, I could ask you the same question he asked me, a variant of it. It's like, do you believe the resurrection happened?
00:55:58 Speaker_00
Yeah, we don't live in the same, I would say, this is, okay, we need to talk about this for sure. Like, we definitely need to talk about this because this is, I mean, I understand why it's the most difficult thing for secularists to kind of get to.
00:56:12 Speaker_00
But the reality is that at some point, you start to notice that the patterns that we're talking about, they are the patterns that inform the structure of reality.
00:56:23 Speaker_00
That they are the patterns by which we notice that we even identify things as having existence, that we can see their value, that we can weigh their value in the same way that you're talking about.
00:56:34 Speaker_00
So those patterns are, let's say, our perception of those patterns have been refined over time. We start to notice that these are the ones that actually hop down in some ways, constrain reality. In the end, the idea that those patterns would happen.
00:56:55 Speaker_00
I don't, it doesn't bother me one bit.
00:56:58 Speaker_00
Like it doesn't bother me to think that as the image of the resurrection, let's say, the image of the notion that you said exactly, like that, if you are willing to give up your prideful holding onto something and you're willing to die for all intents and purposes, that that is when you, that is when life becomes abundant.
00:57:20 Speaker_00
That is when life becomes real. And you can see that, right? all the tingling of that in the Old Testament, with Abraham offering up his son, all of these things happen. But the idea is that if that is the pattern of reality,
00:57:32 Speaker_00
then to me it doesn't bother me one bit that it just happened. I don't have an explanation for it from the bottom up, because that's not why I care for it.
00:57:41 Speaker_00
I care about it because I can see top down from constraining stories, I can see that it's the most affording story. So if someone says, finally, they say that this man that represents the pattern perfectly,
00:57:55 Speaker_00
that it happened in his life, that he resurrected. But I can't explain the physical reasons and the physical mechanical ways in which it happened. At that point, honestly, I don't care because because I know that it's real, because of what it affords.
00:58:12 Speaker_00
And the question is, like, and this is the big question is.
00:58:15 Speaker_02
Well, that's how Dawkins defined the reality of quantum mechanics, by what it affords.
00:58:20 Speaker_00
Yeah, well, there you go. And that's exactly the right way to think about it, is that it's just that it's not the same type of affordance. It's an affordance of everything.
00:58:28 Speaker_00
It's an affordance of everything that we find valuable, everything that we think is worth pursuing, everything that, you know, that binds our societies together, that's what it affords.
00:58:38 Speaker_02
The problem I'm having increasingly, so to speak, as a materialistic reductionist, let's say, as a scientist, is that it's becoming more preposterous for me to believe that it didn't happen than it is to believe that it did happen.
00:58:51 Speaker_00
Because there's also another one, which is because, you know, the insipid, you know, thing hiding behind the idea that, for example, the crucifixion, that the resurrection or the virgin birth didn't happen, is that someone lied.
00:59:08 Speaker_00
That's what's there underneath. And if you listen to someone like Dawkins for long enough, he'll say, right, that the disciples just made it up, George. They just made it up. The Jews didn't resurrect, they just lied.
00:59:21 Speaker_00
And so, I mean, and that's a big deal because, okay, so that means that our civilization is based on a lie. That's right, that's right, that's right. I mean, we have to take that into account.
00:59:33 Speaker_02
And I don't... What does a lie afford? And then you might say, let's assume that they lied for power and prestige. So we'll use the postmodern critique. Okay, so there are implications to the fact that our culture is based on a lie.
00:59:49 Speaker_02
that people told for power and prestige. That is exactly the postmodern Marxist critique. That's exactly it. And the cancer that's eating the universities that Richard Dawkins loves is predicated on exactly that viewpoint.
01:00:02 Speaker_00
And this Christian story handles that problem in its very structure, which is that it kind of sucks for them. but all of Jesus' disciples were killed. All of Jesus' disciples were imprisoned, tortured, and killed.
01:00:18 Speaker_00
And so, in the structure of the Christian story, the idea that they would have lied in order to gain for themselves any kind of prestige and power, and that they all died holding on to that story, and all of them tortured and killed,
01:00:35 Speaker_00
is a pretty interesting idea. And the Babylon Bee made a hilarious video about that, where the disciples are sitting there around the fire and they're like, we're gonna make it up. We're gonna steal his body and then pretend he's resurrected.
01:00:46 Speaker_00
And then they're like, and then we'll all be rich and famous. And the answer is no, and then we'll all be horribly tortured and killed. And everybody's cheering as if that's what they want.
01:00:56 Speaker_00
That is something that's encapsulated in the Christian story, which is that the fact that the very people who witnessed these events, that they didn't gain anything from that at all.
01:01:09 Speaker_02
Hey, I've thought of a lot about death recently. I mean, for all sorts of reasons. Both my parents died this year. But I've thought abstractly about death as a mechanism too. Death is actually a purification mechanism. Right?
01:01:26 Speaker_02
So for you to stay alive, you have to be dying optimally all the time. All the cells that are damaged have to go. Anything that might be carcinogenic has to go. Like, you occupy a knife's edge of life and death, and that's what keeps you alive.
01:01:44 Speaker_02
And so when the reparative process of death goes wrong, you die. You completely die. And so then the question might be, too, What would happen to you if you optimized your capacity for death? Now, this is a very serious issue. Fasting does that.
01:02:06 Speaker_02
There's some evidence that the carnivore diet does that, because it mimics fasting.
01:02:11 Speaker_02
There's good evidence that you only repair when you're in a fasting state, because your body scavenges damaged tissue then, which is exactly what you'd expect it to do. Any organism facing food deprivation,
01:02:28 Speaker_02
whose body scavenged its healthy tissue first would die. So that's not the solution, right? And cancer is a disease where death disappears, because cancer cells, hypothetically, they're immortal. They don't senesce the way normal cells do.
01:02:49 Speaker_02
And so then I wonder, well, if you got the process of death right, What would that mean in terms of your thriving and your wellbeing? And does that mean the attitude towards death?
01:03:02 Speaker_02
And if you got that right, what sort of effect would you have on people around you? And then what would be the cumulative consequence of everyone getting that right?
01:03:11 Speaker_02
I mean, I don't like, these are things that are, they're beyond me in the final analysis, but I've really become obsessed with that notion in the Adam and Eve story that,
01:03:23 Speaker_02
death enters the world with sin, because there's something about it that's right.
01:03:27 Speaker_00
It's important to notice that the curse that the serpent, that God puts on Adam and Eve and the serpent, they are actually iterations of some of the things that you talk about, which is that death is represented not only as the dissolution towards dust, indeed, but it's represented as a play, an excessive play between the tendency of the dust
01:03:52 Speaker_00
and the tendency of the imposition of unified order. And you see that in the curse. So you can see it. So for example, God starts with the serpent and he says, right, you will now crawl on your belly in the dust.
01:04:06 Speaker_02
He's the usurper, so he's trying to put himself in the highest position.
01:04:10 Speaker_00
And he says, you'll eat the dust, right? Right. And then you will try to bite at the heel of the son of man, and then the man will have to crush your head. So then he says the same thing to the woman, by the way.
01:04:25 Speaker_00
He says the same thing in a different guise. He says, you will now reproduce, you'll create multiplicity in pain.
01:04:31 Speaker_00
Right, so it's like your movement towards multiplicity will be in pain, and then you will- That's because of the prideful misalignment of her aim? Well, that's because you've broken the balance. Yeah. Exactly the balance that you're saying.
01:04:44 Speaker_00
By reaching up too high, now you're falling down too low. But if you fall down too low, then the reaction of the too high, well, it'll keep playing between the two. It'll be too much order, too much chaos. So you're reproducing in pain, you try to,
01:05:00 Speaker_00
aim for your husband, and now your husband will rule over you. And then he says the same to Adam. He says, you have to work the ground, it'll produce all these spikes, all this multiplicity, all this multiplication, and you will have to rule over it.
01:05:13 Speaker_00
And so it's like this, it's not saying that any of this is good. It's just that it's like cancer and dissolution, like those two excesses.
01:05:23 Speaker_02
So with regards to Adam, so one of the curses that God delivers to Adam is that he will now have to work that his efforts, his life won't be walking with God in the garden, his life will be effortful toil.
01:05:36 Speaker_02
Okay, so I've been thinking about that too and its relationship to pride and presumption.
01:05:40 Speaker_02
You know, it's been a frequent experience of mine in recent years that a young man will come up to me, often in a restaurant, this has happened many times in a restaurant, and he'll say something like,
01:05:54 Speaker_02
Well, you know, I took this job at this restaurant and I thought it was beneath me and I was pretty angry about it. And I didn't do a very good job. I was resentful. I didn't feel that I had been rewarded appropriately. It's a Cain argument.
01:06:07 Speaker_02
My sacrifices weren't accepted by God. And so I wasn't putting my best foot forward and I thought I was better than that. than the job. And since I read your book, I stopped doing that.
01:06:20 Speaker_02
I started coming to work early and I started throwing all my effort into it. And I've been promoted three times in the last six months. And they're like glowing away. And so why am I saying that?
01:06:36 Speaker_00
By the way, God, it's not a curse. It's a description. It's a description. I agree, I agree. I mean, I use the word curse myself, I know, but it's not, he's just saying, this is what's gonna happen.
01:06:44 Speaker_02
Because of what you did, this will be the consequences. Okay, so then you have to ask yourself if, so, The idea that we're made in the image of God is a reflection of the idea that our spirit hovers above the water of potential.
01:07:01 Speaker_02
That what we're surrounded by is a landscape of potential. Okay, so now you understand that you're surrounded by a landscape of potential, even if you're born in a manger with the animals. Right, right.
01:07:13 Speaker_02
Even in the conditions of your lowly and unprivileged birth, there's a landscape of potential. Okay, now you orient your aim upward and you, strive to extract from that potential the order that's good, well then your effort isn't toilsome.
01:07:29 Speaker_02
It doesn't matter what you're doing at that point. And there are no lowly jobs, right? Because being a waiter, being a dishwasher, Those aren't lowly jobs.
01:07:42 Speaker_00
It's so interesting, because that's what, in some ways, you've been saying from the beginning. And I think that it really does coordinate with the Christian message, which is that when Christ came, he didn't completely come to remove suffering.
01:07:56 Speaker_00
In some instances, he did remove suffering. he seems to point to the fact that the highest thing you can do is actually suffer for the right reason.
01:08:07 Speaker_00
That if you suffer for a purpose, that that suffering actually ceases to be suffering in the way that we understand it. And that's something that you see. You've described that as glory.
01:08:16 Speaker_02
Exactly, it seems to be this idea that- Well, yeah, well, the thing, look, if you go to a movie and you watch your favorite secret agent operating, it's not like he isn't carrying a burden. Right, no burden, no adventure. No adventure, no meaning.
01:08:33 Speaker_02
Right, so that, I don't know, the idea is something like God took death upon himself to make being possible. That's the sacrifice that's at the foundation of the world.
01:08:46 Speaker_00
And so then the surprising thing is that those types of stories, they become, sometimes in the Christian story, but you can kind of understand them, which is that this, the martyr, right?
01:08:58 Speaker_00
The person who's willing to die without compromising their highest aim. You know, it's like, most of us are not called to do that, but that becomes an image of what we're supposed to do at a small level, right?
01:09:09 Speaker_00
It's like, I am called to sacrifice my immediate pleasures or my life in the smallest way
01:09:17 Speaker_00
maintain my highest, and then I will gain my life, even if I lose it for all, it looks like I'm losing it for the outside world, like I'm not getting all the advantages that you could think, but because I am oriented properly, that's what, like being a father, that's what a father is.
01:09:31 Speaker_02
You know, because- Well, this is why the psychological literature indicates that People with children are less happy than people without children. Well, I look at that and I think, well, you should rethink your happiness measures there, buddy.
01:09:44 Speaker_00
That's what it is.
01:09:45 Speaker_02
Because you're a little on the shallow side. It's like, well, you're not tiptoeing through the tulips because the thing you're taking care of might die. It's like, well, there's a bit of a weight there, but you're not going to give that up.
01:09:57 Speaker_02
You're not going to give that up.
01:09:58 Speaker_00
No, and the levels of joys that you encounter in being a parent, for example, being a father, have nothing to do with the superficial pleasures.
01:10:08 Speaker_00
That's why you can see that the people who give themselves to those roles and give themselves into responsibility with the right perspective, they're less attracted to just going out and drinking with the buddies all the time.
01:10:21 Speaker_00
You might enjoy moments of frivolity sometimes, but you're not a slave to them because you're like, yeah, you know what? I got something better to do. Exactly. I got this better thing that is actually difficult, but it's exciting.
01:10:35 Speaker_02
Well, you know, in the alcoholism literature, one of the things that's quite striking, there's no evidence that treatment for alcoholism works, by the way. treatment centers. That doesn't mean people don't stop drinking.
01:10:49 Speaker_02
The most reliable cure for alcoholism is religious transformation. And the reason for that appears to be that If you love alcohol, it's a very good drug for you. It likely has opiate effects. It facilitates social bonding.
01:11:06 Speaker_02
It's a very effective anxiety-reducing agent, and it has psychomotor stimulant effects like cocaine. Plus, it's a major source of calories. Go alcohol, if you're genetically tilted in that direction.
01:11:19 Speaker_02
So then the issue becomes not so much why drink, because that's obvious, the question becomes why not drink? And the answer to that, for people who undergo a moral transformation, is because they have something better to do.
01:11:32 Speaker_02
And that actually works out psychopharmacologically, because, for example,
01:11:37 Speaker_02
If you're embedded within a hierarchy of meaning, first of all, the embeddedness of that, the fact that your existence moment to moment is related to these higher order constraints, that reduces anxiety.
01:11:50 Speaker_02
Because your aim is singular, you're not affected by the dust and the multiplicity, right? So anxiety declines.
01:11:56 Speaker_02
But then equally importantly, if each of your micro actions are related to the heavenly aim, so to speak, then each of those actions carries a more significant
01:12:07 Speaker_02
psychomotor kick, which is the same pharmacologically as the cocaine-like effect of alcohol. So the purpose that's established as a consequence of the reorientation of AIM actually constitutes a pharmacological substitute for the drug itself.
01:12:24 Speaker_00
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Because, I mean, you see it when you're raiding children. You can see it. It's like, you know, it's like I'm It's like I got my hands in poop. It's like, what am I doing? Why am I doing this? But it doesn't, you don't care.
01:12:36 Speaker_00
It doesn't bother you at all because there's something pulling that forward. And so the suffering, the difficulty, the sleepless nights, all of these things, they kind of vanish.
01:12:46 Speaker_00
They're difficult, but they kind of vanish in time as you are looking forward.
01:12:50 Speaker_02
Right, because while their significance transforms because they're related to a different aim.
01:12:55 Speaker_00
Yeah, exactly.
01:12:56 Speaker_02
Right, and the aim, we can talk about that aim, so I write about this in the story, in the chapter on Abraham, in this book. Abraham is promised a son forever, and through his son, the possibility of establishing a numberless.
01:13:11 Speaker_00
Yeah, as the stars.
01:13:13 Speaker_02
Destiny, right, right, right. And he finally gets his son, him and Sarai, and They're pretty thrilled about this. And then God flips the situation around and says, you know, that son I've been promising you.
01:13:27 Speaker_02
forever as part of our agreement, I think you need to offer them to me.
01:13:33 Speaker_02
Right, so why don't you take it from there and explain that, because see, this is one of those stories that the atheist types again point to when they're making reference to the cruelty of God in the Old Testament text.
01:13:45 Speaker_02
It's a funny thing, eh, because on the one hand, the authors of these stories are supposed to be naive and childlike, and on the other hand, they're capable of comprehending a deep malevolence and describing suffering.
01:13:59 Speaker_02
It's like, well, you could have one of those critiques, but you can't have both.
01:14:03 Speaker_02
So there's no doubt whatsoever that those Old Testament stories deal with human frailty and malevolence and suffering very, very, very, very straightforwardly and realistically. Okay, so now God calls on Abraham to sacrifice Isaac.
01:14:17 Speaker_00
I mean, it has to do with all the things we were talking about until now, which is that If you think that you completely own something, like a purpose or a goal, if you think it's only for you, no matter what it is, it will become infected.
01:14:33 Speaker_00
It won't be... affording of true purpose and true life. It always has to be given up. And you know that too, because you've talked about this so many times, which is that when you raise a child, you know that you're going to give that child away.
01:14:48 Speaker_00
To what? To what? And so you're raising the child for someone else than yourself. Especially the idea even that you will give your- Raising is the right word there. And so you raise your daughter up,
01:15:01 Speaker_00
let's say as a father, I raise my daughter, and then I give her in marriage to someone else.
01:15:07 Speaker_00
And it's like, that is, but that's actually the only way for that to be real to me, is if I understand that whatever it is that I have, I have to offer it up towards something beyond it, and then it becomes real. As soon as I try to hold on to it.
01:15:22 Speaker_00
Well, then you get it back too. That's right. You get it in the, this is what Jesus says. When Jesus says, those who try to save their life will lose it. And those who are willing to die, willing to lose their life, will gain it.
01:15:35 Speaker_00
And it's a structural argument. It's something that is true at every single level of being.
01:15:40 Speaker_00
Because even in the structure of any object or anything that you can understand, let's say you take a car, and it's like the steering wheel in the car has to offer itself to the purpose of the car.
01:15:56 Speaker_00
Right, as soon as he stops doing that, you hit the dish. Then it's like a completely ridiculous fetishized object. Like why would it, what's the point? All the parts of the car have to give themselves to the purpose of the car.
01:16:09 Speaker_00
But then even you, that car, you have to, when you buy it, you can fetishize it, but you can also use it for higher purposes. You visit your mother.
01:16:17 Speaker_02
That's the proper relationship with money, by the way.
01:16:19 Speaker_00
And then that's how all being is constituted. And so Abraham, God says, I'm gonna give you a son. And then Abraham has a son. And then God says, basically what he's saying, he doesn't say, Abraham has to go through it for real. It's not just play acting.
01:16:36 Speaker_00
He's basically telling Abraham, if you want your son, you first have to give him to me. You have to give him up towards something which transcends you and him and everything. And if you do that, then you'll get him back.
01:16:50 Speaker_00
But like I said, that's true of anything we do. If you're fixing the roads in the city, and the person fixing the roads is doing it just for their own interest, then they'll just be corrupt. And they won't fix them properly.
01:17:07 Speaker_00
We see that all the time in systems. What you would want... They'll avoid the labor whenever they can.
01:17:12 Speaker_00
It's someone who knows what they're doing and the reason why they're doing it and is willing to sacrifice their attention and energy towards the purpose.
01:17:20 Speaker_00
And then by doing that, they actually make a better road than if they just tried to hold on to what they're doing. And that's true, like I said, of every single thing that you do all the time.
01:17:31 Speaker_00
And so that's the sacrificial aspect of this idea of offering up.
01:17:34 Speaker_02
Yeah, well, it's very practical too. I mean, the psychoanalysts, I think it was Anna Freud, but maybe not, but I think it was Anna Freud who pointed out that the good mother necessarily fails. Okay, so one of Freud's unheralded
01:17:52 Speaker_02
moves of genius with that twist in it that Freud always had was his observation essentially that human beings have the longest dependency period of any creature. Let's say 18 years.
01:18:08 Speaker_02
And so what that means is that that bond, the bond that makes that dependency possible is an unbelievably powerful force. the maternal instinct, let's say, the paternal instinct as well, but we'll focus on the maternal for now.
01:18:21 Speaker_02
That also means it can go terribly wrong. Right, and that happens when a mother infantilizes her child because she doesn't want to let him go, to offer him up to some higher purpose, right?
01:18:35 Speaker_02
There's no purpose beyond the relationship between the mother and the son, let's say. Well, that's devouring. That's the Oedipal situation.
01:18:42 Speaker_02
That's sleeping in the same bed as your mother, which is something that literally happens in families that are particularly Oedipal. Right, too much closeness. And so that's a failure of the mother to offer the child to something beyond herself.
01:18:57 Speaker_02
That's also a form of female pride. There's no position for my son or daughter that's superordinate to their affiliation to me. And so that also stops them from, that's the evil queen in Snow White as well.
01:19:12 Speaker_02
That'll stop the daughter from being married or the son from being married. And like, I've seen this in my clinical practice where Spider-like mothers will cripple their children so they never leave.
01:19:23 Speaker_02
Yeah, and but then the thing is they don't have their children No, not least often because they end up suicide. Yeah, let's say but they live in these terrible dark households that make your soul ache when you walk into them, right?
01:19:38 Speaker_02
There's just catastrophe and chaos everywhere. And everyone is crippled in body and soul. And the children are in the house, not because they love the mother, who they would actually like to wreak horrible revenge upon. They're afraid to leave.
01:19:54 Speaker_02
And so what the mother ends up with instead of love is terrified, suicidal children who've crushed everything about them that should have been encouraged so that she can feed on their corpse, fundamentally. Brutal.
01:20:11 Speaker_00
And the structure of the sacrifice of Abraham and Isaac, of Isaac, is one that we experience all the time, just that people struggle to see it. We call it war. War is exactly that structure.
01:20:25 Speaker_00
We have a nation, we have a higher order structure, a higher order being, and that higher order being, at some point, asks the people to offer their children for the continuation of the existence of the higher order being.
01:20:38 Speaker_00
And sometimes, in that case, they don't get them back, right? Or they get their other children back, you could say. There's something of that going on.
01:20:47 Speaker_00
But the idea that the story of Abraham and Isaac, that it's some weird, completely freak thing that just shows the cruelty of God, we deal with that all the time when we have war. They ask,
01:21:02 Speaker_00
In World War II, we sacrificed our children because we believed that the higher order existence of our nations was worth preserving, and we're willing to give our children up to that purpose.
01:21:14 Speaker_02
Well, we would say, too, that the parent who makes that offering will be able to tolerate the fact of that sacrifice.
01:21:27 Speaker_02
of the child's demise, if the higher order structure above the nation is intact, so that the war is just, and it's just because it serves the eternal verities, and those are unified in something ineffable that sits at the top of the hierarchy.
01:21:41 Speaker_02
I mean, that's the story of World War II. I mean, there's many stories of World War II, but the fact that it was perceived and was arguably
01:21:54 Speaker_02
inarguably just war meant that that sacrificial offering was justified in a way that would stop it from being traumatic.
01:22:05 Speaker_00
Still terrible. You know, and the reality of human sacrifice, right, is one that has existed forever. And we have to be able to understand it. If we understand the mimetic structure, we can understand that human sacrifice is something
01:22:20 Speaker_00
that did in fact preserve groups. And I hate to say it, like it worked because you, you know.
01:22:26 Speaker_02
Well, you said, you said, you implied much earlier that every act we take is a sacrificial act.
01:22:31 Speaker_02
And some of that representation that emerges in the religious texts is actually the propositionalization of the fact that human beings learned that you could make sacrifices and that would stabilize the future. That's what you do when you work.
01:22:48 Speaker_00
But in the biblical story, then you have this weird situation where ancient cultures did practice human sacrifice.
01:22:55 Speaker_00
They would kill someone publicly, visibly, in order to bind the group together to show that we're willing, we're going to offer this thing up. And this is something that, by the way,
01:23:09 Speaker_00
Even in the Middle Ages, you had these stories, like if you know about the assassins, for example, in the Middle East, these Muslim jihadists, the leader would ask one to just jump off, just to show. It's like, you wanna see how tight we are?
01:23:24 Speaker_00
You up there, kill yourself. And they would just jump off into the pit and kill themselves, and it would bind everybody together. Everybody would be like, yeah, we're holding together towards this purpose.
01:23:34 Speaker_00
The idea that human sacrifice is just a ridiculous superstition, like it works. Now, how do you go beyond it? And I think that the story of Abraham starts to show that, right? Is that Abraham doesn't kill his son, right?
01:23:49 Speaker_00
That there's something that if you offer your, to the highest.
01:23:52 Speaker_02
That's part of that translation of action into abstraction. It's like, so imagine that there are,
01:23:58 Speaker_02
corporeal sacrifices that people act out, and then there's a realization at some point that that pattern of sacrifice can be duplicated psychologically, can be duplicated spiritually. So no longer, so that that,
01:24:12 Speaker_02
So the idea would be that if you sacrificed appropriately at the psychological level, you wouldn't have to sacrifice corporately. For sure, that's true.
01:24:21 Speaker_00
You could say, imagine that if we, let's say, if people all sacrifice to the very highest good, to the love that is the foundation of reality, the infinite goodness that is foundation of reality, then then we wouldn't have those other sacrifices.
01:24:38 Speaker_00
We wouldn't go to war. We wouldn't have to literally sacrifice our children's love. And so it's normal that the structure of that story looks that way.
01:24:49 Speaker_02
Okay, so then one of the things I'm trying to wrestle with in this book is, So I make the equation between work and sacrifice, and attention and sacrifice. Okay, so now we know that the world is founded on sacrifice.
01:25:03 Speaker_02
The community is founded on sacrifice. Why? Because you have to give up yourself to be part of a community.
01:25:08 Speaker_02
By definition, that's what constitutes maturity, is the giving up of yourself in relationship to your family and the broader community, and then all the way up Jacob's ladder. It's a sacrificial process.
01:25:19 Speaker_02
Then the question, once you understand that, another question emerges, which is, What is the form of sacrifice that's most pleasing to God, so to speak?
01:25:27 Speaker_02
Or you could put it a different way, which is, what's the pattern of sacrifice that has the most profound effect?
01:25:35 Speaker_02
And that's actually what the Bible explores, is that it's continually exploring the sacrificial pattern that establishes the proper covenant with what's highest. And you can say, well, there's nothing that's highest.
01:25:47 Speaker_02
It's like, well, then you're in the dust problem. It's like there's, so molecules aren't real, but atoms are, but atoms aren't real because like subatomic particles are real. It's like, you can't do that.
01:25:59 Speaker_02
You can't just dispense with the higher order structures.
01:26:03 Speaker_00
Yeah, because all structures are higher order structures.
01:26:05 Speaker_02
Right, right, right, right, right. And there's no reason to, there's no, canonical reason to put a limit on that upward pattern of organization.
01:26:16 Speaker_00
Yeah, and I think that that's the trick often that is posed by the secularists or the atheists, right, is to want to... they find some cap. I don't know where it is.
01:26:26 Speaker_02
Oh, I know where it is.
01:26:29 Speaker_00
I get my win now. Whatever permits me to just do whatever I want. Yeah, Michel Foucault, in a bloody nutshell.
01:26:37 Speaker_02
Right, he turned his entire intelligence, which was substantial, to solving exactly that problem. Where does the meta-narrative end? At the level of my desire. And then where does the need for power come from?
01:26:51 Speaker_02
Well, if the meta-narrative ends at the level of my desire, then I'm going to be quite the creature to play with because it's all about me. So what else do I need along with my hedonism?
01:27:00 Speaker_02
The capacity to use the force necessary to compel you to go along with my whim. And then Foucault would say, like the other postponers, there's nothing but whim anyways. There's nothing but whim and power anyways. Right?
01:27:12 Speaker_00
Yes, devastating, destructive.
01:27:15 Speaker_00
So I think that the things that you're intimating in your book and that you're intimating in the way you talk about it is that we start to notice that this very structure, the structures that bind reality together at every level, they don't stop at the human level.
01:27:31 Speaker_00
They go up and you can see them in the way that humans bind together that are analogous to even the human body.
01:27:39 Speaker_02
I think you should rephrase that and say that
01:27:42 Speaker_02
The idea that they stop at the human level is an indication of the pathological effect of a kind of Protestant, Enlightenment individualism that assumes that the human being is the capstone, the individual human being conceptualized as an alienated and isolated human being is the capstone.
01:28:01 Speaker_02
And the problem with that is that that's a It's not that the individual is subordinate to the higher order structures.
01:28:08 Speaker_02
It's that the individual property construed is the harmony that exists at all those levels simultaneously, all the way up to the highest aim. And so... Who I am, it's like I am a father. It's like there's an I that's playing that role.
01:28:25 Speaker_02
It's no, not in the least. Like that being a husband, being a father, being a citizen, those are parts of my identity. right? They're my extended identity, and the higher that extended identity becomes, the more solid it is as an identity.
01:28:45 Speaker_02
And it is definitely the case that as we've lost those superordinate identities, that we are collapsing into multiplicity and dust, right? Into the alphabet mob, for example, right? The never-ending multiplication of
01:29:00 Speaker_02
identity by whim, and then all that happens as a consequence of that is misery.
01:29:05 Speaker_00
So... Yeah, it's misery and tyranny. Exactly what Nietzsche predicted.
01:29:10 Speaker_00
Because just like the curse or the description of God in the fall, as you break the proper order and the proper relationship, then you fall towards chaos, and then you come up with these more and more tyrannical types of order in order to prevent that from happening.
01:29:27 Speaker_00
You have to.
01:29:28 Speaker_02
You have to, because if you're not serving an identity that I can partner with in my relationship with you, all we've got left is the Hobbesian state of nature or force. And then the postmodernists say, well, that's all there is.
01:29:41 Speaker_02
It's like, well, you can have that world. And they're also wrong about that.
01:29:45 Speaker_02
We even know from Franz de Waal's work with chimpanzees that higher order chimpanzee troop structures predicated on power are unstable and liable to end in absolute bloody chaos.
01:29:57 Speaker_02
The true alphas among the chimpanzees are the hospitable and reciprocal males. And they don't even have to be the largest. In fact, they're often not. They're the best at keeping the social contract.
01:30:10 Speaker_00
And so that's why you can understand this insistence on love as the pattern, right? Because the idea in the same way, the individual has the same reality, which is that for me to fully exist, as a person, I can't hold on to this individuality.
01:30:26 Speaker_00
I have to give it away to others. And so it's by binding in love with others, right, and joining in these higher order bodies that I come to exist more fully, right? So it's this paradox. Is that the mystical body of Christ?
01:30:40 Speaker_00
It's a mystical body of Christ, but then ultimately, of course, the Trinity is the absolute image of that, right? This notion that for something to be one, the one and the many are balanced in a paradoxical way.
01:30:56 Speaker_00
They don't contradict each other in the Trinity because it's infinite, but that the persons of the Trinity exist in infinite love, completely emptying themselves in each other, and that's what constitutes God.
01:31:07 Speaker_00
Of course, we can't do that, but as individuals, we can do it at a lower level where we realize.
01:31:12 Speaker_02
That love seems to me something like the desire that all things flourish. It's something like that.
01:31:18 Speaker_00
Yeah, or the desire that the other person flourishes. And in that other person's flourishing, that is the best way for me to actually find my flourishing.
01:31:28 Speaker_02
Yeah, well, there's actually no doubt about that, I would say technically too. Like if I want to make a covenant with you, what I should do, this is what we're trying to do with Ark, I should tell you a story that makes you think,
01:31:42 Speaker_02
If that could possibly be true, I could be in wholeheartedly. Well, if you're in wholeheartedly, Piaget figured this out with children. Piaget's claim was that, you can imagine a competition between two types of game.
01:31:57 Speaker_02
Okay, one game is predicated on you bloody well better do what I say or there's gonna be trouble. Now you can play a game like that. A bully will play a game like that. And then the other game will be,
01:32:07 Speaker_02
We are doing this because we're all aiming upward and we're bound together voluntarily, and each of us gives it full asset.
01:32:15 Speaker_02
Okay, so Piaget's first observation was this system will outcompete this system because the power-based system has to waste effort on enforcement, and this system doesn't. And that's great, but there's more to it than that, too, because
01:32:29 Speaker_02
People aren't bound together only by, say, manipulation of negative emotion, which is what bullies will do. They're bound together by hope. And hope is actually indistinguishable from psychomotor reward. That's incentive reward.
01:32:41 Speaker_02
That's the same system that cocaine activates. It's part of the exploratory system, right? So it's primary incentive reward pleasure. if you voluntarily assent to a structure, then positive emotion pushes you forward, right?
01:32:55 Speaker_02
And so then you're way more motivated. And so the best deal I can possibly make with you is one that you're thrilled with. And that's not a zero sum vision at all.
01:33:03 Speaker_00
No, exactly. And everybody's experienced that. Everybody has experienced moments when they're in, at least I've experienced moments where I'm in a team with people and I really want the best for that person.
01:33:14 Speaker_00
And I can do that because I also see that they want the best for me and we together want
01:33:18 Speaker_02
Do you think we're managing that at ARC? Oh, I think so. Okay, so talk a little bit, let's end with this.
01:33:25 Speaker_02
Talk a little bit about, we were just in Washington, you and I, at this wonderful old mansion with some great people and we brought together a variety of people who are on the advisory board of the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship.
01:33:39 Speaker_02
We had our first convention last year. So why don't you tell that story a little bit and tell me about your experiences at this advisory board meeting.
01:33:47 Speaker_00
Yeah, I think that It's actually quite surprising because there is very much a diversity of people in the group. And there are people that don't totally align on all the fields, but there is a sense in which
01:34:04 Speaker_00
People kind of understand that, even though they don't totally agree with the others, that to make you succeed and to make us succeed is what is going to help in the thing that I care about. And what it's done is it's created a surprising dance
01:34:21 Speaker_00
of people moving together. And so I'm very much impressed. There's discussion and there's some friction, but that friction is always released towards a kind of higher order purpose.
01:34:36 Speaker_02
I think it's because, well, one of the things we wanted to do with ARC was get the story right. So that's the first aim, is to get the story right.
01:34:45 Speaker_00
But it's also, it's helpful for us now because we're faced with such a dismal story.
01:34:50 Speaker_00
You know, the fact that there's such a horrible story, a sort of anti-human story that is being predicated in the environmental sphere, but then also in all these almost antinatal attitude towards families, all of this is the story that is being pushed on us from certain- The demolition of sex and relationships.
01:35:09 Speaker_00
And so what it does is it creates a darkness out of which now people, let's say people who believe
01:35:16 Speaker_00
in the goodness of, the possibility of the goodness of the world, the possibility of people coming together, a pro-human vision, are seeing each other across the aisle, are seeing each other through the darkness, and they're seeing these lights and they're thinking, okay, we can actually now join together towards something higher.
01:35:33 Speaker_00
It's great to be faced with a dragon sometimes because it, it pushes us to work together in a way that maybe wouldn't have been as obvious 20 or 30 years ago.
01:35:43 Speaker_02
Right, right, right, right. Yeah, well, and it seems to be, it's a difficult thing to pull together in a preposterous, a preposterous mission, but so far it seems to be working. Like our convention last year was very beautiful and it echoed nicely.
01:35:59 Speaker_02
And then we had an ARC meeting in Germany, in Bavaria, and that was the first time, there was about 200 Germans there, and a number of them told me that was the first time that they had heard anyone in Germany dare to broach the apocalyptic environmental narrative.
01:36:13 Speaker_02
You can't even talk about that in Germany, which is de-industrializing like mad and handing the bloody planet over to the Chinese, which, communists, which seems like a really bad idea. So we had a successful meeting in Bavaria,
01:36:26 Speaker_02
and replicated the beauty of the Ark mission, essentially, and then a really good meeting in Australia, which was about half the size of the London conference, and the Australians are like seriously on board.
01:36:38 Speaker_02
We have, what, three former Prime Ministers of Australia and well-regarded people who are pushing this along very diligently and and positively, and a group of Western Canadians are starting to emerge.
01:36:53 Speaker_02
And we've had discussions with people in Mexico and South America. We'll have 4,500 people in London in February. And you can see things starting to shift, even in the window of what's allowable discourse.
01:37:07 Speaker_02
I mean, the Democrats in this, I don't want to get political, but the Democrats in this election cycle said nothing about climate.
01:37:13 Speaker_00
Yeah, they didn't use the climate apocalypticism to scare people at all. Yeah. Which, I mean, I don't know. It's hard to tell whether ARC is directly responsible, but for sure we're dancing in the right place.
01:37:24 Speaker_02
Well, there's also many of the people who are associated with ARC are responsible.
01:37:28 Speaker_00
Yeah, for sure.
01:37:28 Speaker_02
Just like Bjorn Lomborg, for example. I mean, he's been a real breath of fresh air, let's say, on the human beings. We've got this faithful scouts of the future side instead of that terrible apocalyptic dread that's crippling young people.
01:37:47 Speaker_02
So, well, so, all right, well, we should wrap up on this side. So what did we cover? Well, we talked about our books and that brought us into the realm of category and story. And we talked about,
01:38:02 Speaker_02
the structure of categories, and that's the structure of perception itself, and the structure of reality, at least insofar as reality is perceived, and perhaps beyond that.
01:38:11 Speaker_00
And just one thing, because what's interesting is that in some ways, that's what your book is about. But that is also what Jack and the Beanstalk is about.
01:38:20 Speaker_00
It is about this Jacob's Ladder and the hierarchy of goods that someone climbs in order to acquire. And so it's like, I think we're at a moment where we can wake that up.
01:38:30 Speaker_02
You can walk through that a little bit. instead of feeding his family in the immediate present, decides to take a risk. with regards to something transcendent. And the consequence of that is the emergence of the liana that unites heaven with earth.
01:38:49 Speaker_00
Yeah, exactly. Right. Yeah, and it's the idea of the seed, right? Because the seed is already, it's not the milk, it's not the cow, it's the pattern already.
01:39:00 Speaker_00
You can perceive a glimmer of something that's more than just the brute fact, but it's actually the pattern.
01:39:05 Speaker_02
It's also the pattern upon which the provision of food ultimately depends.
01:39:08 Speaker_00
So what's more important, having food or knowing how to make food continue, right? And so that's what Jack does. Jack goes up and encounters first this bag of gold, which is riches, which is, that's nice to have.
01:39:20 Speaker_00
But then he encounters a chicken that lays golden eggs, which is, what's better, to have gold or to have the way that you make more gold, the way that you create more riches? And so finally he reaches the harp.
01:39:33 Speaker_00
which is basically the music of the spheres. Symbol of harmony. Yeah, the symbol of harmony and patterns themselves. Right. So it's very similar to the story.
01:39:41 Speaker_02
Right, definitely, definitely. So that's consequence of climbing up Jacob's ladder. Yeah, he's also Jack, like Jacob. Well, you can think about those as the substitution of meta-food for food, and then higher and higher forms of meta-food.
01:39:54 Speaker_02
Because like here's a paradoxical consequence of sacrifice. The best way to ensure the provision of food in the future is to share what you have now with your neighbors.
01:40:03 Speaker_01
Yeah.
01:40:03 Speaker_02
Right, right. And that's, well, that's the human pattern of adaptation for sure. The fact that we share food, human beings, that's very weird. That's a very unique thing. And that's definitely a sacrifice.
01:40:15 Speaker_00
So we're in there.
01:40:16 Speaker_02
That's what we're talking about. All right, sir. So everybody, you can join us for another half an hour on the Daily Wire side. I don't know what we're going to talk about. I usually do know, but I'm not sure what we're going to talk about.
01:40:30 Speaker_02
So if you're interested in finding out, because we'll definitely continue this conversation in some form, join us on the Daily Wire side. And thank you for your time and attention. Thanks to the film crew here in
01:40:42 Speaker_02
Scottsdale and to Jonathan for coming in today from Montreal. You came in from Montreal, eh? Yeah, yeah, so and yeah, thank you to everybody watching and listening for the sacrifice of your time and attention.