The Most Important Question You Can Ask

Watch the full video - • 2017 Personality 02/03...
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Пікірлер: 49

  • @ThatwasAsian
    @ThatwasAsian23 күн бұрын

    Listening to these lectures while working my dead end job 3 years ago changed my life

  • @Garhkumaon_official

    @Garhkumaon_official

    23 күн бұрын

    What changed

  • @dero5466

    @dero5466

    20 күн бұрын

    What changed

  • @ThatwasAsian

    @ThatwasAsian

    20 күн бұрын

    @@dero5466 i became homeless and hooked on opiates!

  • @Freer07

    @Freer07

    20 күн бұрын

    Totally understandable. He’s changing my life now, and learn to love my job because of how responsibility transforms oneself, empowers and increases resources

  • @FoundingStockNZ
    @FoundingStockNZ23 күн бұрын

    I'm glad to see my tribe is slowly finding itself. Thanks.

  • @jesse6468

    @jesse6468

    23 күн бұрын

    Your 'tribe'?

  • @bobSeigar

    @bobSeigar

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@jesse6468definitely not yours.

  • @mercury6484

    @mercury6484

    23 күн бұрын

    @@jesse6468perhaps in reference to the honest people of the world out for the truth and betterment of others not simply oneself.

  • @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb

    @NicholasWilliams-kd3eb

    23 күн бұрын

    Jordans white hairs are transcending known white contrast ratios.

  • @TheWysardBrian

    @TheWysardBrian

    22 күн бұрын

    What a wonderful feeling that must be

  • @willyphallicus9958
    @willyphallicus995823 күн бұрын

    Back when he was just a frumpy college professor. Really upped his fashion game over the years.

  • @Emmalynrosie
    @Emmalynrosie23 күн бұрын

    I like these type of videos

  • @EbbandFlow1234
    @EbbandFlow123423 күн бұрын

    To Err is human To forgive is Divine. A.P. We all make mistakes, and we all have acted unconsciously.

  • @Razear
    @Razear23 күн бұрын

    Hence why philosophy is the oldest academic discipline. It's also why the precursor to contemporary science is called "natural philosophy." Most scientific pioneers were primarily philosophers.

  • @arthurwieczorek4894
    @arthurwieczorek48948 күн бұрын

    A Transcendent Truth is one you shouldn't have to explain.

  • @EcomCarl
    @EcomCarl22 күн бұрын

    Embracing these narratives can help us understand deeper values and foster a sense of unity across diverse communities 🔑

  • @isaacstevens6278
    @isaacstevens627823 күн бұрын

    Jordan how can we have a conversation?

  • @BUNJI82
    @BUNJI8223 күн бұрын

    Seems like he's leaning towards saying that there is intrinsic and transcendent value in the individual and that civilisations succeed as they come to this realization and adopt it as their core value, but then it sounds as if he changes to saying that these values are not in fact anything more than creations or societal constructs made for the purpose of community and collective/self preservation. Tom Holland makes the point in some of his lectures on ancient historical society, that in fact history shows that all ancient civilisations, while reaching for transcendent goals, consistently fell far short and by today's standards the morality of the ancients was reprehensible, even repulsive. They constantly sought for what eluded them and the natural tendency of human selfishness was rarely improved upon.... Until the advent of Christianity which so drastically altered the world and the human psyche that we are no longer able to truly detach ourselves from it's effects and reason without the morality it provided. This is of course very similar to the pervasive way in which science has altered our human perceptions as mentioned in this lecture. But the question must be asked, if this is true and all the best efforts of humanity resulted in no great improvement until the (of the day) totally counter culture morality of Christianity arrived, then why were the teachings of Christ so different to anything the world had ever seen before... Could it be that as Jesus claimed, He was carrying a message, that He was the interjection of a Creator seeking to guide the world by providing them with the transcendent truth that had thus far always eluded them?

  • @bradfordbrucker

    @bradfordbrucker

    19 күн бұрын

    Today, I think we are watching Jordan slowing coming to the realization that there really is a God. With that said, this lecture is earlier in his journey. It is fun to see him (a Canadian) quote the US founding fathers about inalienable rights... I will counter your question with another one. Did Jesus actually say anything new or was it all buried in the Old Testament, and He just cleared it up for the people who didn't understand and then He fulfilled the Messianic prophecies? Moses had to keep explaining things to the x-Egyptian slaves, who complained and wanted to be slaves again and renounce their freedom. Seems like we are doing this today as well, "Please big government feed me and enslave me with your laws."

  • @Mike_Lennox
    @Mike_Lennox16 күн бұрын

    Authentic rights and all higher levels of consciousness are predicated on homeostasis, integration, self-regulation, boundaries, and what's so. Everything related to human behavior rests on the fulfillment or deprivation of these fundamental principles. Jordan's questions and answers are entirely predicated on a dependent boy's preoccupation with honoring his father's "bitterness, resentment and malevolence" about his father. A father who brutally deprived him of homeostasis, integration, self-regulation, boundaries, and what's so.

  • @livliv184
    @livliv18423 күн бұрын

    Was this sheen Peterson taught at UOT or Harvard?

  • @efegokselkisioglu8218

    @efegokselkisioglu8218

    18 күн бұрын

    I believe so

  • @reversetransistor4129
    @reversetransistor412923 күн бұрын

    That's the problem, cooperation, noone wants to do that, in the selfish jungle everyone wants control, even if this means destruction.

  • @soadscars4527
    @soadscars452719 күн бұрын

    Thank you Mr. Peterson

  • @hawkeye9382
    @hawkeye938223 күн бұрын

    The soul is the spirit!

  • @efegokselkisioglu8218

    @efegokselkisioglu8218

    18 күн бұрын

    @@Matt-em1xg The soul is the spirit!

  • @efegokselkisioglu8218

    @efegokselkisioglu8218

    17 күн бұрын

    @@Matt-em1xg The soul is the spirit!

  • @giseokim1488
    @giseokim148823 күн бұрын

    people say of the script of the world, any idea?

  • @FoundingStockNZ

    @FoundingStockNZ

    23 күн бұрын

    Truthvids

  • @giseokim1488

    @giseokim1488

    23 күн бұрын

    where?

  • @EbbandFlow1234

    @EbbandFlow1234

    23 күн бұрын

    Zeitgeist

  • @giseokim1488

    @giseokim1488

    23 күн бұрын

    i am just f curious

  • @martinc6987
    @martinc698717 күн бұрын

    Thats why deceptions fights the concept of humans consisting of men and women .Its the all inclusive and largest tribe on earth.

  • @monaiannucci9434
    @monaiannucci943423 күн бұрын

    Marshmwllow

  • @aasja7739
    @aasja773923 күн бұрын

    A soul is your life force. When you die no more soul. Your spirit is eternal. It never dies.

  • @junevandermark952
    @junevandermark95223 күн бұрын

    Thanks for honoring my freedom of speech. If you are "certain" that you have a soul that will fly away to eternal suffering or eternal bliss in a supposed hereafter ... I suggest that you are a deluded dreamer. From the book Suicidal: Why We Kill Ourselves … author Jesse Bering. "Unless you’ve been there yourself, you’ve no idea the balm such a thing can offer to a secretly suicidal soul who, his whole life long had been laboring under the unlikely premise that he had a soul to begin with. What a burden! Without a soul, there’s no afterlife, there’s only the theater of the now."

  • @bobSeigar

    @bobSeigar

    23 күн бұрын

    Good quote, did Jesse write that before or after they committed the act? Surely you see the hypocrisy in that entire sentiment.

  • @asherpikesgoldenmoralcinem5770

    @asherpikesgoldenmoralcinem5770

    23 күн бұрын

    @@bobSeigarabsolutely agreed

  • @JakobusMaximus

    @JakobusMaximus

    20 күн бұрын

    A question, would a deluded dreamer be happier than a realist? I never can comprehend this desire to bash down the ideas that give people strength and hope. Does it help you, the realist, to destroy the well being of a deluded dreamer? Does it give you some psychopathic joy? If not, why do it? I hope my questions can help you be either a: less of a psychopath, or b: less of a plain asshole who wants to ruin people's beliefs. Because those are really the two options.

  • @junevandermark952

    @junevandermark952

    20 күн бұрын

    @@JakobusMaximus Religion teaches people to be snobs. It's divisive ... and what divides can't unite. Every religion teaches that it owns the one and only truth ... and that can't BE possible. "The doctrine of eternal punishment is in perfect harmony with the savagery of the men who made the orthodox creeds. It is in harmony with torture, with flaying alive, and with burnings. The men who burned their fellow men for a moment, believed that God would burn his enemies forever.” Robert G. Ingersoll Thankfully … now that hundreds of members of clergy of various religions are leaving their indoctrinations behind ... there is hope for everyone. From the book ... Apostle to Apostate: The Story of the Clergy Project … authors … Catherine Dunphy, Richard Dawkins When you are reared to think of your faith and its leaders as infallible, dissent can be an unsettling thing. This is particularly true for clergy, who have devoted their lives to the subject of faith. I therefore especially hope that this story reaches those clergy who have yet to articulate their doubts. As they struggle through this process, I am thankful that they can look to the Clergy Project as an example of community and humanism as an example of good. As former clergy who have left churches of every denomination, synagogues, mosques, convents, monasteries, and theological institutions, we stand as examples of the reasonableness of doubt and its thoughtful conclusions. I cannot help but think that we offer a compelling voice for why science and secularism do a better job than religion and superstition of answering the so-called ultimate questions.

  • @junevandermark952

    @junevandermark952

    20 күн бұрын

    @@JakobusMaximus This is what occurred among the deluded dreamers that thought "gods" were giving them personal messages. Imagine how different the world would be … if men of ancient times, rather than claiming the lofty title of theologian … had said … “We don’t have any answers. All we have are questions.” From the book … Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable by Ivor H. Evans … First published 1817. … Odium theologicum (o di um the o loj ikim) (Lat.). The bitter hatred of rival theologians. No wars so sanguinary as holy wars; no persecutions so relentless as religious persecutions; no hatred so bitter as theological hatred.