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  • [Music] all right so I suggested to you last

  • class that human beings world as a place of action through the lens of their

  • social cognitive biological sub structure and I made that argument on

  • the basis of the supposition that our primary environment was actually other

  • people and I mentioned to you I believe that those other people are arranged in

  • hierarchies of influence and authority or power or dominance which is often how

  • its construed and that the dominance hierarchy as a structure is at least 300

  • million years old which makes it older than trees and it's

  • for that reason that you share the same neural biology to govern your

  • observations of your position in the hierarchy as lobsters do which is a

  • remarkable fact you know it's a remarkable that the lobster uses

  • serotonin as the mechanism to adjudicate its status position and that modifying

  • the serotonin function in the lobster can produce changes in its behavior can

  • can / help the logs to overcome defeat for example which is very much

  • equivalent to what happens to a human being when they take antidepressants you

  • know it's it's it's a good example of the conservation of biological structure

  • by evolution and another a good illustration of the continuity of life

  • on Earth it's really amazing but the other thing it is a testament to is the

  • ancient nature of the social structure now we tend to think of the social

  • structure as something other than nature right because society is I suppose

  • mythologically opposed it's opposed in a narrative way cultures opposed to nature

  • it's the town in the forest but the town has been around a long time so to speak

  • and the structure of the town is also part of nature in that the dominance

  • hierarchy is part of and because it's so ancient you have to

  • consider it as part of the mechanism that has played the role of selection in

  • the process of natural selection and so roughly seem what seems to happen is

  • that there is a plethora of dominance hierarchies especially in complex human

  • communities and many of them are masculine in structure in that their

  • dominance are keys that primarily men compete in or that has been the

  • historical norm and that some men rise to the top based on whatever the

  • dominance hierarchy is based on and they make their preferential mates and it's a

  • good strategy for women to engage in because why and many sorts of female

  • animals do precisely this is they let the male's battle it out and then pick

  • from the top and or often the dominant males there's no choice on the part of

  • the females it's the dominant males just chasing away the subordinate males but

  • with humans it's usually the case that the females have the opportunity to do

  • at least some choosing and so we have if you think about that what that implies

  • is that we have evolved to climb up dominance hierarchies and then I would

  • say it's not exactly that even because there are many different dominance

  • hierarchies and so the skills that you might use to climb up one might not be

  • necessarily the same skills that you would use to climb up another and so

  • then I would say what we have all evolved for instead and I'm still

  • speaking mostly on the masculine edge of things historically speaking is the

  • ability to climb up the set of all possible dominance hierarchies right and

  • that's that's a whole different idea it's like the averaged hierarchy across

  • vast spans of time and I think it's for that reason that we among others that we

  • evolve general intelligence because general intelligence is a general

  • problem-solving mechanism and it seems to be situation in depend

  • so to speak and of course there's been an arms race for the development of

  • intelligence between men and women because each gender has to keep up with

  • the other and women have their own dominance hierarchies there's certainly

  • no doubt about that and of course now men and women more

  • increasingly compete within the same hierarchies and we don't exactly know

  • how to sort that out yet because it's an extraordinarily new phenomena but in any

  • case because of the the permanence of the dominance hierarchy it has come to

  • be represented in fundamental narratives because human beings and this is

  • something that we share everywhere it's the thing the Wall Street bankers shares

  • with with the kalahari Kung Bushmen who are among the genetically speaking they

  • seem to be very close to what the original most original human beings were

  • like in Africa before the Diaspora about fifty thousand years ago but you know

  • both of those people despite their vast differences live in

  • communities that have a hierarchical structure that are composed of

  • individuals that are embedded in a natural world you know the world outside

  • of the dominant Sarki and so that's the standard human environment I would say

  • and so stories that rely on the representations of those environments

  • and their interactions are what you might describe as universal stories and

  • that's why people can understand them and I would say further and this is

  • drawing substantially on say derivation of the work of Carl Jung because I think

  • he delved into this more deeply than anyone else so a lot of this stuff is

  • quite Union in its in its origins we the commonality between human beings so you

  • know you have to have commonalities in order to communicate right axiomatic

  • commonalities because otherwise you have to explain everything and so there's

  • many things that human beings don't have to explain to one another we don't have

  • to explain anger we do have to explain jealousy we don't have

  • to explain fear we don't have to explain pain we don't have to explain joy we

  • don't have to explain love etc those are built into us and so there are

  • predicates of being human and you could say that those human predicates and the

  • standard human environment produce standard narratives and then you could

  • say even further and this is more of a leap I would say is that those who act

  • out the role of the victor in those standard narratives are precisely the

  • people who attain victory in life and I would say biologically defined in that

  • they make more attractive partners but also I believe that there's an alignment

  • between human well-being which is a very weak word and participation in these

  • meta narratives that drive success because well do you want to be a failure

  • or a success well you know it's hard to be a success you have to adopt a lot of

  • responsibility and so you might be willing to take your chances as a

  • failure but I can't exactly I'm not going to make the presumption that

  • that's going to put you in a situation other than one where you experienced a

  • lot of frustration anger disappointment depression pain and anxiety at the

  • bottom of the heap and so generally that's not what people are aiming for

  • although under certain circumstances if people don't like responsibility and are

  • willing to take their chances they might take the irresponsibility and it's

  • apparent freedoms over the necessity of thinking things through the medium and

  • long run anyways we stop here I suggested to you that one of the primary

  • narrative representations was the known or culture or order I think those or the

  • explored territory or the dominance arc I think those things are basically

  • interchangeable from from a representational perspective and you

  • know in the movie The Lion King that's represented by Pride Rock which is the

  • central place of orientation founded on Raw

  • which is the sort of thing that people embed their memories in that's why we

  • make sculptures and gravestones and that sort of things rock stands for permanent

  • and to have rock under your feet as to be on a solid foundation and that's a

  • pyramid in some sense in that movie and the pyramid has topped by you know the

  • king and queen and they're their offspring so that's that's the divine

  • couple that's one way of thinking about it and Simba of course is the newborn

  • hero and you know you extend that even though it's lions and drawings of lions

  • at that and animals are acting it out it's completely irrelevant to you that

  • those characters happen to be animated and that what you're watching is a

  • fiction so and I would say to you with regards to fiction you know you might

  • say well is fiction true or not and the answer to that is yes and no it's not

  • true in that the events portrayed in fiction occurred in the world they

  • didn't but they're fiction is true the same way numbers are true I would say

  • like you know if you have one apple and one orange and one banana the common

  • analogy between all of those three is one and you might say well is one as

  • real as one fruit is the abstraction one as real as one fruit and I would say it

  • depends on what you mean by real but representing things mathematically and

  • abstractly gives you incredible power and you could make the case that the

  • abstraction is actually more real than the phenomena that it represents and

  • certainly mathematicians would make that case they would say that mathematics is

  • in some sense more real than the phenomenal world and you know you don't

  • have to believe that mostly it's a matter of choice in some sense but you

  • can't deny the fact that an abstraction has enough reality so that if you're

  • proficient in using it you can really you can change the world and in and in

  • insanely powerful ways you know I mean all the computational equipment you

  • people are using or depending on the abstractions one and zero

  • essentially and I mean look at what emerges from that and so I would say

  • with regards to fiction if you take someone like Dostoyevsky oh I think it's

  • a favorite of mine by the way I would highly recommend that you read all five

  • of his great novels because they are unparalleled in their psychological

  • depth and so if you're interested in psychology Dostoyevsky's the person for

  • you Tolstoy is more of a sociologist but

  • Dostoyevsky man he gets right down into the bottom of the questions and messes

  • around transformative reading anyways Dostoyevsky's characters this character

  • named her skull in the Cobb is a character in crime and punishment and

  • Raskolnikov is a materialist rationalist I would say which was a rather new type

  • of person back in the 1880s and he was sort of taken by the idea that God was

  • dead and took and convinced himself that the only reason that he that anyone

  • acted in a moral way in a traditional way was because of cowardice they were

  • unable to remove from them the restrictions of mere convention and act

  • in the manner of someone who rose above the norm and so he's tortured by these

  • ideas he's half starving he's a law student he doesn't have enough to eat he

  • doesn't have much money and so you know he's not thinking all that clearly

  • either and he's got a lot of family problems his mother's sick and she can't

  • spend him send a much money and his sister is planning to engage in a

  • marriage that's loveless to someone who's rather tyrannical who he hopes

  • will provide the family with enough money so that he can continue in law

  • school and they write him brave letters telling him that she's very much in love

  • with this guy but he is smart enough to read between the lines and realizes that

  • his sister is just planning to prostitute herself in you know in an

  • altruistic manner he's not very happy with that and then at the same time as

  • all this is happening he becomes aware of this pawnbroker who he's you know

  • pawning his last possessions to and she's a horrible

  • person and not only by his estimation she pawns a lot of things for the

  • neighborhood and people really don't like her she's grasping and cruel and

  • deceitful and and resentful and like and she has this niece who's not very bright

  • intellectually impaired whom she basically treats as a slave and beats

  • all the time and so Raskolnikov you know involved in this mess and half starved

  • and a bit delirious and possessed of these strange new nihilistic ideas

  • decides that the best way out of this situation would be just to kill the land

  • let the pawnbroker take her wealth which he all she does is keep it in a chest

  • free the niece so that seems like a good idea so remove one apparently horrible

  • and useless person from the world free his sister from the necessity of this

  • loveless marriage and allow him to go to law school where he can become educated

  • and do some good for the world you know so one of the things that's lovely about

  • Dostoyevsky is that he you know when sometimes when one person is arguing

  • against another or when they're having an argument in their head they make

  • their opponent into a straw man which is basically they take their opponent and

  • curricular their perspective and try to make it as weak as possible and and

  • laugh about it and and then they come up with their argument and destroy this

  • straw man and feel that they've obtained victory but it's a very pathetic way of

  • thinking it's not thinking at all what thinking is is when you adopt the

  • opposite position from your suppositions and you make that argument as strong as

  • you can possibly make it and then you pit your perspective

  • against that that strong iron man not the straw man and you argue it out you

  • battle it out and that's what Dostoevsky does in his novels I mean he's the

  • people who stand for the antithesis of what dust is dust is he actually

  • believes are often the strongest smartest and sometimes most admirable

  • people in the book and so takes great moral courage to do that and

  • you know in risk Olenick oov what he wanted to do was set up a character who

  • had every reason to commit murder every reasonable reason philosophically

  • practically ethically even well so risk Olenick off goes and he kills the old

  • lady with an axe and it doesn't go the way he expects it will because what he

  • finds out is that post murder Raskolnikov and pre murder Raskolnikov

  • are not the same people at all they're not even close to the same people he's

  • entered an entirely different universe and Dostoevsky does a lovely job of

  • describing that universe of horror and chaos and and and deception and and and

  • suffering and terror and all of that and he doesn't even use the money he just

  • buries it in a and an alley as fast as he can and then doesn't want anything to

  • do with it again and anyways the reason I'm telling you all this is potentially

  • to entice you into reading the book because it is an amazing amazing book

  • but also because you might say well his risk is what happened to Raskolnikov

  • true are the stories in that book true and the answer to that is well from a

  • factual perspective clearly they're untrue but then if you think of

  • Raskolnikov as the embodiment of a particular type of person who lived at

  • that time and the embodiment of a certain kind of ideology which had swept

  • across Europe and really invaded Russia and which was actually a precursor a

  • philosophical precursor to the Russian Revolution then Raskolnikov is more real

  • than any one person he's like a composite person he's like a person

  • who's irrelevant sees have been eliminated for the purpose of relating

  • something about the structure of the world and so I like to think of those

  • things as sort of meta real meta real they're more real than real and of

  • course that's what you expect people to do when they tell you about their own

  • lives about their own day you don't want a factual description of

  • every muscle twitch you want them to distill their experiences down into the

  • gist which is the significance of the experience and the significance of the

  • experience is roughly what you can derive from listening to the experience

  • that will change the way that you look at the world and act in the world so

  • it's valuable information and they can tell you a terrible story and then that

  • can be valuable because that can tell you how not to look in the world look at

  • the world and act in it or they can tell you a positive story you can derive

  • benefit either way which is why we also like to go watch stories about horrible

  • psychopathic thugs you know and and hopefully we're learning not to be like

  • them although there are additional advantages in that you know someone you

  • might be some say that someone who is incapable of cruelty is a higher moral

  • being than someone who is capable of cruelty and I would say and this follows

  • young as well that that's incorrect and it's dangerously incorrect because if

  • you are not capable of cruelty you are absolutely a victim to anyone who is and

  • so part of the reason that people go watch anti heroes and villains is

  • because there's a part of them crying out for the incorporation of the monster

  • within them which is what gives them strength of character and self-respect

  • because it's impossible to respect yourself until you grow teeth and if you

  • grow teeth and you realize that you're somewhat dangerous and let or maybe

  • somewhat seriously dangerous and then you might be more willing to demand that

  • you treat yourself with respect and other people do the same thing and so

  • that doesn't mean that being cruel is better than not being cruel what it

  • means is that being able to be cruel and then not being cruel is better than not

  • being able to be cruel because in the first case you're nothing but weak and

  • naive and in the second case you're dangerous but you have it under control

  • and you know a lot of martial arts concentrate on exactly that as part of

  • their philosophy of training it's like we're not training you

  • to fight we're training you to be peaceful and awake and avoid fights but

  • if you happen to have to get in one and then I guess the philosophy also is is

  • that if you're competent at fighting that actually decreases the probability

  • that you're going to have to fight because when someone pushes you you'll

  • be able to respond with confidence and with any luck and this is certainly the

  • case with bullies with any lock a reasonable show of confidence which is

  • very much equivalent to the show of dominance is going to be enough to make

  • the bully back off and so the strength that you develop in your monstrousness

  • is actually the best guarantee of peace and that's partly why Jung believed that

  • it was necessary for people to integrate their shadow and he said that was a

  • terrible thing for people to attempt because the human shadow mmm which is

  • all those things about yourself that you don't want to realize reaches all the

  • way to hell and what he meant by that was it's through an analysis of your own

  • shadow that you can come to understand why other people are capable and you as

  • well of the sorts of terrible atrocities that characterize let's say the 20th

  • century and without that understanding there's no possibility of bringing it

  • under control when you study Nazi Germany for example or you study the

  • Soviet Union particularly under Stalin and you're asking yourself well what are

  • these perpetrators like forget about the victims let's talk about the

  • perpetrators the answer is they're just like you and if you don't know that that

  • just means that you don't know anything about people including yourself and then

  • it also means that you have to discover why they're just like you and believe me

  • that's no picnic so that's enough to traumatize people and that's partly why

  • they don't do it and it's also partly why the path to enlightenment and wisdom

  • is seldom trod upon because if it was all a matter of following your bliss and

  • doing what made you happy then everyone in the world would be a paragon of

  • wisdom but it's not that at all it's the it's a matter of facing the thing you

  • least want to face and everyone has that old there's this old story in King

  • Arthur where the night's go off to look for the Holy

  • Grail which is either the cup that Christ drank out of it the Last Supper

  • or the cup into which the blood that gushed from his side was poured when he

  • was crucified the stories vary but it's it's basically a holy object like the

  • Phoenix in some sense that's representation a representation of

  • transformation so it's a it's an ideal and so King Arthur's knights who sit at

  • a round table because they're all roughly equal go off to find the most

  • valuable thing and they and where do you look for the most valuable thing when

  • you don't know where it is well each of the knights looks at the forest

  • surrounding the castle and enters the forest at the point that looks darkest

  • to him and that's a good thing to understand because the gateway to wisdom

  • and the gateway to the development of personality which is exactly the same

  • thing is precisely through the porthole portal that you do not want to climb

  • through and the reason for that's actually quite technical this is a union

  • presupposition - is that well there's a bunch of things about you that are

  • underdeveloped and a lot of those things are because there's things you've

  • avoided looking at because you don't want to look at them and there's parts

  • of you you've avoided developing because it's hard for you to develop those parts

  • and so it's by virtual necessity that what you need is where you don't want to

  • look because that's where you've kept it and so and that's why there's you know

  • an idiosyncratic element of it for everyone your particular place of

  • enlightenment and terror is not going to be the same as yours except that they're

  • both places of enlightenment and terror so they're equivalent at one level of

  • analysis and and different than another so anyways back to the fiction and and

  • and and what it does if it distills truth and it produces characters that

  • are composites and the more they become composites the more they approximate a

  • mythological character and so they become more and more universally true

  • and more and more approximating religious deities but the problem with

  • that is they become more and more distant from individual experience and

  • so with literature there's this very tight line

  • where you need to make the character more than merely human but not so much

  • of a God that you know one of the things that happened to Superman in the 1980s

  • Superman started out he's got a heavenly set a parents by the way in an earthly

  • set of parents and he's an orphan like Harry Potter very common theme is that

  • when Superman first emerged he could only jump out of her buildings you know

  • and maybe he could stop a locomotive but by the time the 1980s rolled around like

  • he could juggle planets and you know swallow hydrogen bombs and you know he

  • could do anything well people stopped buying the Superman comics because how

  • interesting is that it's like something horrible happens and Superman deals with

  • it and something else horrible happens and Superman deals with it and it's like

  • that's dull he turned into such an archetype he was basically the

  • omniscient omnipresent omnipotent God and that's no fun it's like God wins and

  • then God wins again and then again God wins and you know so then they had to

  • weaken him in different ways with kryptonite you know so green kryptonite

  • kind of made him sick and red kryptonite I think kind of mutated him if I

  • remember correctly and anyways they had to introduce flaws into his characters

  • so that there could be some damn plot and that's something to think about you

  • know there's a deep existential lesson in that in that your being is limited

  • and flawed and fragile you're like the genie which is genius in the little tiny

  • in the little tiny lamp you know this immense potential but

  • constrained in this tiny little living space as Robin Williams said when he

  • played the genie in Aladdin but the fact that you have limitations means that the

  • plot of your life is the overcoming of those limitations and that if you didn't

  • have limitations well there wouldn't be a plot and maybe there would be no life

  • and so that's part of the reason why perhaps you have to accept the fact that

  • you're flawed and insufficient and and live with it and consider it a

  • precondition for being it's at least a reasonable

  • it's a reasonable idea so anyways one of the main characters is the country the

  • known the explored territory we went over that a bit and it always has two

  • elements I mean your country is your greatest friend and your worst enemy you

  • know because it squashes you into conformity and demands that you act in a

  • certain manner and reduces your individuality to that element that's

  • tolerated by everyone else and it it constrains your potential in a single

  • direction and so it's really tyrannical but at the same time it provides you

  • with a place to be and all of the benefits that have accrued as a result

  • of the actions of your ancestors and all the other people that you're associated

  • with so there's the good tyrant or the bad tyrant and the good King and those

  • are archetypal figures and that's because they're always true and they're

  • always true simultaneously you know which is partly why I object to the

  • notion of the patriarchy because it's a myth the law the it's the what do you

  • call that it's the apprehension of a mythological trope which is that of the

  • evil tyrant without any appreciation for the fact that the archetype actually has

  • two parts and the other part is the wise king and you know you can tell an evil

  • tyrant story about culture no problem but it's one-sided and that's very

  • dangerous because you don't want to forget all the good things that you have

  • while you're criticizing all the ways that things are in error that's a lack

  • of gratitude and it's a lack of wisdom and it's it's founded in resentment and

  • it's it's very dangerous both personally and socially I told you that Captain

  • Hook is a tyrant because he's got this crocodile chasing him in the crocodile

  • has a clock in its stomach and that's death it's like obviously right tick

  • tick tick tick and it's a crocodile and it's under the water and it's already

  • got a taste of him so he's being chased around by death and that makes him

  • terrified and resentful and and cruel and bitter

  • so he's a tyrant and he wants to wreak havoc everywhere and then Peter Pan of

  • course looks at Captain Hook and thinks why the hell should I grow up and to be

  • a tyrant and sacrifice all the potential of childhood and the answer to that is

  • the potential sacrifices itself if you don't utilize it as you mature and you

  • just end up a 40 year old lost boy which is a horrifying thing to behold it's

  • almost as if you're the corpse of a child the living corpse of a child

  • because who the hell wants a six-year-old 40 year old you're a little

  • on the stale side by that point and not the world's happiest individual so you

  • know your potential is going to disappear because you aged anyways and

  • so you might as well shape that potential in a particular direction and

  • at least become something no matter how limited rather than nothing so you know

  • Peter Pan that's a great story it's a great mythological story so well so

  • let's talk about tyrants well not only are they mythological figures but they

  • exist and they tend to be deified I mean Stalin was for all intents and purposes

  • God the Father in Soviet Russia although he was pretty much only the worst

  • elements of Old Testament God who was you know constantly smiting people and

  • and wiping out populations and doing all sorts of things that seem to be quite

  • nasty but nonetheless you know people worshipped him in many ways and and he's

  • a representation of just exactly what goes wrong when things really go wrong

  • when people stop paying attention and when they all lie because one of the

  • things that characterized the communist state was that no one ever got to say

  • anything they actually believed ever and that was partly because one out of three

  • people was an informer which meant if you had a family of six people two of

  • them were informing on the government about you and that included your own

  • children and you and if you were an informer you were often amply rewarded

  • by the state so that if you lived in an overcrowded apartment building with

  • three families in the same flat and you informed on you know the

  • woman down the hall that you didn't like she got shift shipped off to the old

  • concentration camp and you got her apartment and so that was a lovely

  • society and it only killed about thirty million people between 1919 and nineteen

  • fifty-nine so that's what happens when the archetypal structure gets tilted

  • badly when people forget that they have a responsibility to fulfill as citizens

  • as awake citizens who are capable of stating the truth and the archetype

  • shift so there's nothing left of the Great Father except the tyrant and let's

  • not have that happen I mean the one on the right is really interesting because

  • consciously or unconsciously you know there's Stalin surrounded by what is for

  • all intents and purposes fire you know he looks like he looks like Maleficent

  • in Sleeping Beauty when she shows up at Aurora's christening you know she puts

  • her arms up in the air and green fire surrounds her it's like it's like he's

  • surrounded by fire and there's Lenin above him who's like king of the fiery

  • realm and that's for sure so I mean all the terrors that happened

  • in the Soviet Union didn't start under stell and they started under Lenin and

  • Lenin was or Stalin was definitely Lenin's legitimate son let's put it that

  • way so you know this is another example of the tyrannical element of the Great

  • Father and the sorts of things that can happen I mean I kind of got a an evil

  • kick out of this bad that was quite old you know

  • it's kitschy in some sense and and you know it shows I don't think that's

  • something you'd ever see at a magazine today

  • 10 unusual stamps showing evil dictator you know well fair enough I mean that's

  • what he was and that's the consequence and that's just a tiny bit of the

  • consequence because the Nazis wiped out a very large number of people often

  • using compassion as a as a as a as a justification so when they went

  • after the mentally ill and the terminally ill and those who whose

  • intelligence was compromised for biological reasons and and those who

  • were too old they basically justified it by saying

  • that the enforced euthanasia was merciful and that you were actually

  • being a good person by complying with the requirements and so something to

  • think about more mythological representations I like

  • these quite a bit so there's their Hitler as you know Knight of the faith

  • essentially with I suppose that's a recreation of the Christian holy spirit

  • dove you know except it's an eagle which is a bird of prey and and a prayer and

  • uh what do you call those things a scavenger right so that's kind of

  • interesting but that's Hitler as night of the of the blood roughly speaking and

  • there this is an allied war poster essentially that assimilates the Nazis

  • to poisonous snakes and you know we don't like poisonous snakes very much

  • and and it's probably because they've been preying on us for approximately

  • twenty million years because snakes and primates humans in particular co-evolved

  • and so the snake is a representation of that which lies outside the comfortable

  • domain and that can be you know a snake obviously or it can be an abstract snake

  • and the abstract snake is your enemy or an even more abstract snake is the evil

  • in your own heart and this is going to be a bit of a leap for you but there's

  • this ancient idea that developed in what in the West over thousands of years far

  • predating Christianity that at least its origins that the snake in the Garden of

  • Eden was also Satan which is like of what the hell it's a very strange idea

  • but the reason for that as far as I can tell is that you know we have this

  • circuitry that detects predators and a predator

  • representation of a predator is a snake or a monster that incorporates

  • snake-like features like a dragon or something like that or a dinosaur with

  • lots of teeth or a shark that lives under the water and will pull you down

  • you know because I suspect a lot of our ancestors met a nasty death at the hands

  • of Nile crocodiles while they were in the African veldt going down to get some

  • nice water so you know that's the thing that jumps up and pulls you under and

  • you know that happens in your own life because things jump up and pull you

  • under you know and use the same circuitry we use the same circuitry to

  • process unknown things that upset us as we once used to detect predators who

  • were likely to invade our space and so and and human beings are capable of

  • abstraction and so you know you could think about the real predator that might

  • invade your space and maybe that's a snake or a wolf or or some kind of

  • monster you know and that's pretty concrete and biological chimps have that

  • you know chimps don't like snakes and so if you a chimp comes across a snake in

  • the wild then like a big let's say I don't know what live with chimps I don't

  • know if they're pythons but they have constrictors there anyways so you know

  • maybe there's like a 20 foot constrictor and this and the chimp like stays a good

  • distance away from it but it won't leave and then it has this particular cry that

  • it uh ters that's called a snake rah WRA a and so it makes this noise which means

  • something like holy shit that's a big snake and I actually mean that because

  • the circuits that primates use to utter distress calls are the same circuits

  • that we use to curse just so you know that's why people with Tourette's

  • syndrome swear because like what what's up with that how can you have a

  • neurological condition that makes you swear well it turns out that guttural

  • effect Laden curses are mediated by a different speech circuit and that's the

  • speech circuit we share with the predator alarms of other primates so

  • that's pretty cool so anyways this chimp stands there and makes this snake noise

  • and then all bunch of other chimps come running and you know some of them stay a

  • fair ways from the snake can some of them get pretty close but

  • they'll stand there and watch that snake for like 24 hours you know so they're

  • fascinated by it and you know if you've handled snakes you can understand that

  • fascination because they're fascinating you know and they're numinous I would

  • say that that's the right way of putting it at numinous is a word that means

  • intrinsically meaningful like a fire you know you can't look away from fire you

  • know if you're sitting in front of a fireplace it's like you're staring at it

  • and that's because you're all descended from the first mad chimpanzee who had

  • some weird genetic mutation that made it impossible for him to stay away from

  • fire it was like the first chimp arsonist you know and and he figured it

  • out and well hey now he was a chimp with a stick with fire on it like that's a

  • mega chimp man and so you know we have that mutation in spades and no wonder so

  • anyways so they they make this you know they have this reaction to snakes and

  • chimps that have never seen a snake if they're in a cage and you throw a rubber

  • snake in there it's like bang they hit the roof but then they look at the snake

  • you know it's so it's like it's terrifying and fascinating at the same

  • time and you should look at the snake because you want to know what it does

  • but you should stay away from it because it's a snake so you you're kind of

  • screwed in terms of your motivations right one is get the hell away and the

  • other is well don't don't let that thing do anything that you're not watching and

  • so that's really the reaction we have to the unknown it's terrifying but we watch

  • it and then you know the meta story is that not only do we watch it but we go

  • explore it and so you might think well back in the Garden of Eden so to speak

  • when we were living in trees the snakes used to come and eat us and and our

  • offspring more likely and you know we weren't very happy about that and then

  • we figured out how to maybe maybe by accident draw up a stay a stick on a

  • snake and that was a good thing because the snake didn't like that and then

  • maybe the next thing we learned a little later was to like actually take a stick

  • and like ock the snake with it and you can

  • believe that the first primate who figured out that was just as popular as

  • the guy who mastered fire and so we're pretty good at whacking state snakes

  • with sticks which is why Springfield has a snake

  • whacking day it's devoted to nothing but that right I don't know if you know that

  • Simpsons episode but it's quite comical so well so then you think about the

  • snake as a predator and it's the thing that invades the garden always because

  • you just can't keep snakes out of the damn garden no matter how hard you try

  • and then you think of snakes and maybe you think of meta snakes and like a meta

  • snake would be also a predator but maybe that's the predator that represents the

  • the destructive spirit of the other tribe because chimpanzees for example

  • are quite tribal and they definitely go to war with one another and so you think

  • you abstract out the idea of the predator to represent malevolence as

  • such and then you take that one step further and you realize that the worst

  • of all evil predators is the human capacity for evil and then at that point

  • you know you're starting to I would say psychologize or spiritual eyes the idea

  • of danger and making it make it into something that's conceptual and

  • something that's psychological and something that you can you can face sort

  • of on mas I mean one of the things people had to figure out was how do you

  • deal with danger and so you feel figure out how you deal with a specific danger

  • but then because human beings are death so damn smart they thought well what if

  • we considered the class of all dangerous things and then what have we considered

  • a a mode of being that was the best mode of being in the face of the class of all

  • dangerous things well that's a lot better you get you know you could solve

  • all the dangerous problems all at once instead of having to conjure up a

  • different solution for every dangerous thing and that's basically as far as I

  • can tell where the hero's story came from and the hero's story is basically

  • you know there's a community it's threatened by the emergence of some old

  • evil often represented by a dragon that's

  • sort of typical say of the Lord of the Rings stories there's a hero often a

  • humble guy but not always sometimes a knight decides he'll go out there you

  • know and chase down the snake maybe even or the serpent or the dragon maybe even

  • in its lair and he'll have a bunch of adventures on the way that transform him

  • from you know useless naive Hobbit into you know sword wielding hero and he

  • confronts the dragon and gets the gold and frees the people that it had

  • enslaved and then comes back transformed to share what he's learned with the

  • community it's like well that's the human story fundamentally and that's

  • that's our basic instinctive pattern and it's represented in narratives

  • constantly and that's partly what this see this has meaning you know what this

  • means why why do you know well you know

  • because it draws on symbolic representations that you already

  • understand you understand that a mess of tooth snakes is not a good thing and

  • that may be the sensible thing to do is stomp them and it's not like you need an

  • instruction manual to figure out what the poster means and so you know that's

  • two different representations of Hitler that's sort of the pro-hitler

  • representation and I would say that's the anti-hitler representation and you

  • know that's the real Hitler who at this point does not look like a very happy

  • clam so so that's the known that's culture that's order and what's

  • eternally juxtaposed to culture and the known and the explored and order is the

  • unknown and the unknown is a strange place the unknown is actually it's a

  • physical place like the unknown is the place that when you're camping and

  • you're around a fire the unknown is everything outside the circle of the

  • light and you remember in the Lion King you may not remember when when when

  • Mufasa that's the king right goes and takes Simba up to show him his territory

  • he says he is the king of everything that the light touches

  • and that's a very old idea and you guys had no problem with you know that was

  • fine that made sense and that I would be on the light was the darkness and that

  • was the elephant graveyard that was death that was the place of death and

  • danger that's where the hyenas hung out and you weren't supposed to go there and

  • so of course Simba because he's a rule breaking hero just like Harry Potter

  • immediately goes there and so you know that's like the forbidden fruit it's the

  • same sort of idea if you want someone to do something the best thing to do is

  • tell them that they shouldn't and not explain why you know so for example if I

  • said to you at the beginning of this class look I've got one rule here don't

  • sit in that chair no matter what you'd be thinking the whole year especially if

  • I reminded you well just what's up with that chair like let's chair as magical

  • all of a sudden you some of you might even well you probably wouldn't because

  • this is a ridiculous example but maybe you know you come to class early and sit

  • in that chair just to see what would happen you know and people are very

  • curious and that's exactly what we're like and that's a very old story too

  • right it's like opening Pandora's box don't open that box you'll be sorry it's

  • like oh huh you know all the horrors of the world fly out and believe me you

  • will open Pandora's box many times in your life because you know with your

  • family or maybe your mate or maybe your children you'll have this idea that they

  • have a box with things in it that you want to know about and you'll say well

  • I'm kind of curious about this particular event so why don't you tell

  • me about it and they say well no we probably really shouldn't open that box

  • and you keep bugging them and then they open it and then all sorts of things fly

  • out that you didn't expect and then maybe you think hey it would have been

  • better if I would have just left that damn box closed but and you can do the

  • same thing to yourself believe me and so the Pandora's box idea the

  • forbidden fruit idea that's that's a major-league idea and part of the reason

  • in the judeo-christian tradition why people are saddled with the notion of

  • original sin is because hyper cortically developed chimpanzees without much sense

  • can keep their hands off things and so they

  • keep exploring even when they know better and every time they do that they

  • learn something that is that destroys the paradise that they currently inhabit

  • right because there's plenty Unni and I never learned anything in your life

  • that's of importance without it having a pretty damn destabilizing effect on you

  • at the moment of realisation right you learn something happy it's like whatever

  • you know that all that means is that I was doing things right like it's nice

  • and everything but it's not informative you do something and all hell breaks

  • loose that'll make you think that's for sure you might never stop thinking for

  • the rest of your life so anyways the unknown the unknown is that which

  • surrounds the known it's an unexplored territory it's usually represented as

  • female I think for a variety of reasons and not not as female exactly it's not

  • the right way to think about it as feminine and that's not the same thing

  • because feminine is a symbolic category whereas female is like an actual female

  • and so you don't want to confuse the metaphor with with the with the

  • actuality because we have these social cognitive categories built-in you know

  • you might say masculine feminine and offspring something like that we had to

  • use what we could to represent what we were attempting to figure out and we

  • kind of mapped them onto the external realities of being the best we could

  • using what we could and so you know nature is benevolent and it's fruitful

  • you know all things come from nature and all things come from the unknown right

  • because the known is already there it's the unknown that manifests the new right

  • and so that's part of the reason for the characterization of the unknown as

  • feminine and then there's also the case that women play a massive role in sexual

  • selection among human beings so that mmm from an evolutionary perspective you're

  • twice as likely to be a failure if you're a man then you

  • or if you're a woman in that you have twice as many female ancestors as male

  • ancestors and you think well that's impossible but it's not all you have to

  • do is imagine that every woman has one child half the men have two and the

  • other half have zero and so end of problem and that's basically how it

  • works out so women are more choosy mater's than men by a substantial margin

  • there was a funny study done by the guy who established it's one of the big

  • dating sites and he looked at how women rated men and they rated the 50th

  • percentile man at the 15th percentile so 85% of men were below average according

  • to women's ratings now men had their same arbitrary choices because of course

  • they preferred younger women to older women and and they were more swayed I

  • would say by by attractiveness but that didn't have set nearly as big an effect

  • on their actually actually writing of women so anyway so you know from from a

  • Darwinian perspective nature is that which selects so that's all it is and so

  • sexual selection plays a massive role in human evolution you know the fact that

  • we have these massive brains is very likely a consequence of a positive

  • feedback loop and sexual selection you know because otherwise that's the

  • only time you can get really rapid changes in evolutionary space where you

  • know you get a process going that reinforces itself so there's a little

  • preference for intelligence and then that produces more intelligent men and

  • women and then there's a little more preference for intelligence and you know

  • maybe then that turns into the ability to speak and or to master fire and then

  • there's way more selection for intelligence and the brain just goes

  • like this you know and women have paid a pretty big price for that because your

  • hips are basically so wide that you can barely run and if they were any wider

  • than you couldn't and of course the pelvic passageway through which the baby

  • travels is too small so it's really painful and dangerous and the

  • baby's head has to compress quite a lot I mean they come out cone-shaped often

  • and then they're born really young so you have to take care of them forever

  • like what the hell you know a deer is born a fawn is born and it's like two

  • seconds later it's standing and then it's running from a lion it's like you

  • know it's like 15 minutes later and a baby it's like you just lies there and

  • you know utters plaintive noises that's all it can do and that does that for

  • like ten months before it could skitter away from a sloth if it was predatory

  • you know so you really got to take care of those creatures and so that's a big

  • price to pay that's a big price to pay for our cortical evolution so anyways

  • here is some of the symbolic represents representatives of the unknown the

  • unconscious Dionysian force of the it'd that sort of Freud's representation of

  • the unknown the terrors of the darkness that's the unknown the monsters that

  • lurk they're the source and the resting place of all things the great mother the

  • Queen the matrix which means matter which means mother

  • the matriarch matter mother the container the cornucopia the object to

  • be fertilized the source of all things the fecund

  • the pregnant the strange the emotional the foreigner the place of return and

  • rest the deep the valley the cleft the cave hell death and the grave because

  • it's beyond the moon ruler of the night and mysterious dark and matter and the

  • earth then you know all this because when you watch a movie that's rife with

  • symbolic representations it draws on those underlying metaphors and they're

  • natural I mean where does a witch live well in a swamp for God's sake she

  • doesn't live in the penthouse of a New York Tower she lives in a swamp and it's

  • dark there and if the moon's up that's a better and maybe it could be a crescent

  • moon or maybe it could be a full moon but you know witches live in the right

  • place if you're going to understand it and you all you understand all of that

  • and it's part of the structure of your imagination you could say

  • and so it's part of the unspoken fantastical imagination that unites all

  • of us and it makes us specifically human there's a good representation of the

  • underworld and the place of transformation so that's Hell in Isis in

  • Egypt was queen of the underworld and the underworld generally has a queen and

  • she usually shows up when order falls apart and so you go to the underworld

  • when your life falls apart that's what it means and so when you see these

  • stories of the hero you know journeying to unknown lands of terror and danger

  • that's that's what happens to you it happens to you all the time you know

  • you're you're in this little safe space like The Hobbit in the Shire and then

  • you know there's a great evil brewing somewhere and you can no longer ignore

  • it so off you go into the land of terror and uncertainty and better to go on

  • purpose then accidentally that's for sure because at least you can be

  • prepared and we also know that if you're going to face a threat if you face it

  • voluntarily what happens is your body activates itself for exploration and

  • mastery but if you face it involuntarily same size threat then you you you you

  • revert to pray pray mode and you're frozen and that's way way way more

  • stressful it's way harder on your body and so it's better to keep your eye open

  • and watch for emergent threats because you all know you know what you're not

  • doing quite right and where your life is likely to unravel you all have a sense

  • of that and the best thing to do is to not ignore that to pay attention to it

  • to watch it and to take corrective action early and then you know you stay

  • on top of things and things your little trip to the underworld might be a few

  • minutes long instead of a catastrophe that produces post-traumatic stress

  • disorder knocks you out for four or five years and maybe you never recover so and

  • that's right you know that's what these kind of symbolic representations mean

  • it's those are states of being that that that indicate being devoured and you can

  • be devoured your own unconscious Jesus that happens

  • all the time what does that mean well you know and it's an autonomous thing in

  • some sense you know like if you if you get depressed or if you get really

  • anxious you don't have any control over that it's like it sweeps up over you and

  • pulls you down why down well down is where you go when you're sad you don't

  • go up man I'm up today oh that's too bad no it's man I'm down today and well

  • that's partly this and it's partly because this is subordinate and it's

  • partly because down is closer to the ground and farther from the sky like

  • there's all sorts of reasons you're feeling down rather than up up is where

  • you're aiming right yeh MUP you don't aim down well there the reason those

  • phrases make sense is because they're locked deeply into this underlying

  • structure of imagination and well those are the architect or the archetypal

  • structures according to Jung and I I think that he's far as I can tell he's

  • dead accurate and I think we understand the biology of such things much better

  • than we did so there is more representations she's she's quite the

  • friendly creature that's Kelly I like this representation better those

  • are heads by the way in hands so she sort of represents well very complex

  • things she represents death she represents transformation in this I

  • already like this representation I think it's brilliant so imagine that what the

  • people were doing who formulated these representations what they were trying to

  • do was to make a representation of the domain of threat itself right so that

  • they could deal with the idea that because we can say threat well what is

  • that what the hell does that mean well threat is the category of all

  • threatening things and so then you can think about threat and you can think

  • about threat across all those individual instances and maybe you can figure out

  • how to deal with threat right how what's the best way to be in the world so that

  • you most effectively deal with threat well that's sort of like apart from how

  • do you deal with pain that's sort of like the ultimate

  • question of human beings you want to be terrified No

  • so you want to be in danger No so like you better figure out how to deal with

  • threat so first of all you have to conceptualize it so we'll take a look at

  • this representation so that's Kelly shear

  • her hair is on fire well fire you know that's that's a numinous phenomena

  • dangerous but transformative she's wearing a headdress of skulls she has a

  • weapon in this hand and and she has a tiger's tongue she often has a snake

  • around her waist need none of these do but she often does but in this case this

  • then that's because you know it it's a snake we've already covered that well

  • these things that look like snakes here aren't you notice how her belly is

  • concave well it's because she's just given birth to this unfortunate person

  • that she happens to be standing on and she's eating him intestines first and

  • that's a fire ring which he is in and then it's got skulls on the inside of it

  • it's like what's that supposed to do well partly it's supposed to represent

  • that which terrifies you it's like yeah fair enough man because I don't imagine

  • you saw those things in there before I explained them but someone who was

  • familiar with that image would know what it meant it's like some poor artist was

  • sitting there thinking well how do I represent destruction it's like bang

  • whoa okay well put that down and then we won't look at it again so and then what

  • do you do with this you make sacrifices to it and you think well that's kind of

  • primitive you know first of all well that doesn't really exist well it does

  • if it's an amalgam of threat symbols I can tell you that it exists that's for

  • sure so it exists as an abstraction if nothing else do you offer it sacrifices

  • well what the hell do you think you do what are you doing in class why aren't

  • you like drinking vodka and snorting cocaine you know because you could be

  • doing that instead here you are listening to me you know slaving away in

  • university you're young it's like really you've got nothing better to do than sit

  • there you know well what you're willing to forego today

  • pleasure for tomorrow's advantage and that's what sacrifice is and human

  • beings discovered that dramatically first you know like we were we were apes

  • for God's sake we didn't just leap up and think oh we better save for tomorrow

  • you know we it took thousands of years for that idea to emerge and it emerged

  • in dramatic form and it was sort of like well society is sort of like a god know

  • what they weren't thinking this through is like if you're gonna represent

  • society well it's like this masculine God that's always judging the

  • hell out of you that's everywhere all at the same time it's like yeah yeah that's

  • true absolutely and what do you have to do with it well you have to give it what

  • it wants why why do you have to give it what it wants because it'll crush you if

  • you don't and that's exactly right and if you're lucky and you give it the

  • right sacrifice then it'll smile on you and you get to have a good life and that

  • was like that was the major discovery of mankind man that was a killer discovery

  • it was like the discovery of the future you know we discovered the future as a

  • place and it was a place that you could bargain with you can bargain with the

  • future wow that's just what an idea that is you know it's it's so unlikely well

  • how do you bargain with the future well you give it what it wants and you know

  • some of that you maintain your social relationship and you know you make

  • yourself useful to other people and you shape yourself so that you can cooperate

  • with people and you you don't act impulsively and maybe you squirrel

  • something away for the next harvest even if you're hungry and you know and then

  • the future isn't hell and you make the proper sacrifices and so if you

  • sacrifice to Kelly then she turns into her opposite and showers benevolence on

  • you and that's Mother Nature right it's like look out for Mother Nature man you

  • know two weeks out in the bush right now and you're dead and it's not pleasant

  • and then if it's the spring you last longer huh but the bugs eat you and so

  • that's not very fun either so nature you know it's bent on your

  • destruction but if you treat it properly and carefully and make the right

  • sacrifices then maybe one of her trees will offer you some fruit and that would

  • be okay and so believe me lots of people died trying to figure that out

  • so here's another way of looking at it so I said you know order and chaos known

  • unknown explored territory unexplored territory I love this this is the Taoist

  • symbol it's a symbol of being and being isn't reality as you would conceptualize

  • it as a scientist it's more like reality as it manifests itself to you as a

  • living thing which is completely different you know science extracts out

  • all the subjectivity all it is there is an array of our objective facts of

  • equivalent value and that's part of its method but that's not the world in which

  • you live the world in which you live is full of motivation and emotion it's full

  • of terror and pain and joy and frustration and and other people that's

  • for sure and so that's the real world and so well that's what this is it's

  • it's the real world and what is it made out of well it's made out of all those

  • things you know that can get out of hand you know because the explored territory

  • and the known can get so damn tight that it's nothing but a tyrant and then it's

  • all those things you don't know and that's pretty exciting because you know

  • you want to go find out some things you don't know and that adds a lot of spice

  • to life you want a little adventure you don't want to go out with someone who's

  • so predictable that you know everything about them in a week you know unless

  • you're hyper conservative you want to go out with someone who's got they're a

  • little erratic like not too erratic let's say they're a little dangerous

  • perhaps not too dangerous but some of that at least you want predictability

  • with a bit of unpredictability in there well that's exactly what this means it's

  • like that's predictability with a little unpredictability in it and what that

  • also means is that what you know can be turned into what you don't know just

  • like that and that's going to happen to you lots of times in your life man when

  • someone close to you dies suddenly it's like poof

  • order turns into chaos and now you're in chaos and what the hell are you gonna do

  • there and that's a good question because you need to know what to do

  • there cuz you're gonna be there and it happens to you when your dreams fall

  • apart you know I mean your dreams for your life or you know when you discover

  • something awful about yourself that you didn't know or you know it flips on you

  • all the time and in small ways sometimes you know you have a fight with a friend

  • or in big ways that that wipe you out for well indefinitely sometimes because

  • you can fall into chaos and never get out you know that's the people who are

  • trapped in the belly of the beast it isn't necessary that when you descend

  • into chaos that you learn something and you get back out you could just be stuck

  • there suffering until you die and that's you know I wouldn't recommend that you

  • know it's something to avoid but it happens to people all the time all the

  • time you see them wandering around you know shattered on the streets of Toronto

  • you know they're done they're in chaos and there's so much chaos around them

  • that you won't even go near them the chaos spreads like eight feet around

  • them and so when you see someone like that you're like well first we're not

  • going to look too closely and people like that often don't like you to look

  • at them because that also helps them remember where they are and that's no

  • Pleasant thing and you're gonna just stay away from that maybe you'll cross

  • the street maybe you'll keep your head down whatever you're not going anywhere

  • near that chaos and no bloody wonder you know and and you don't think about it

  • much after you pass it because it's a hell of a thing to think about and what

  • are you gonna do about it anyway so you don't know what to do about it you might

  • just make it worse well so chaos you know that's the other half of life and

  • it can turn into order sometimes better order that's actually what you do when

  • you explore right you explore you find out something new not too new not to

  • Pandora boxy you know you bite off as much as you can chew but no more and so

  • that rearranges the way you look at the world but you're doing it voluntarily so

  • you can kind of tolerate there the recalibration and you strength

  • and the order right because now you become more competent and I would say

  • that you're trying to live on the edge between order and chaos and I and I mean

  • that's a real place that's an actual it's a meta place but it's more real

  • than places because it's so old it's such an old place it really exists and

  • your nervous system knows that it sees the world this way in fact the right

  • hemisphere is roughly specialized for chaos and the left hemisphere is roughly

  • specialized for order which is why the left hemisphere tends to have the

  • linguistic elements and and why people are right-handed and the right

  • hemisphere has a more diffuse structure it's more associated with negative

  • emotion and imagination and the two communicate between each other through

  • the corpus callosum and the right hemisphere appears to update the less

  • left hemisphere kind of slowly often in dreams and so if you were hurt if your

  • right hemisphere is hurt for example back here in the parietal lobe then you

  • lose the left part of your body you can't move it anymore

  • but you also lose the idea that you have a left part of your body so it's like

  • blindness it's a blindness to the left and so if someone comes along and says

  • you know you're not moving your left arm you're gonna say yeah well my arthritis

  • is bothering me 2d have moved it for six months MA my arthritis is bothering

  • today or you know you don't move in your left foot it's like well you know uh I'm

  • too tired well what's happened is the left hemisphere has a representation of

  • the body and it's not being updated because the part of the brain that would

  • notice that the left is gone because of a stroke it isn't there anymore and so

  • the left already has a model and it's not gonna change just it's hard to

  • change your model of yourself you know have a tooth pulled what happens it's

  • like your damn tongue is in that hole for the next six months fiddling around

  • constantly and that's because you're rebuilding your neurological model of

  • your body it's like try it out with your whole left side and see how well you do

  • you know so this guy named Ramachandran was experimenting with people like this

  • and one of the things he did was kind of he was checking their balance and you

  • can do that by irrigating the ear with cold water and

  • that makes people go like this makes their eyes move back and forth because

  • it upsets the vestibular system and what he found was that if he if he poured

  • cold water in the left ear of someone with right per aisle damage who had left

  • neglect that they'd all of a sudden sort of wake up catastrophic ly they'd have a

  • terrible reaction to the fact that they were paralyzed on the left and they

  • would know that it had happened and cry and you know amid all sorts of distress

  • and no wonder and then like 20 minutes later they'd

  • snap back into their damaged mode of being and they would not deny because

  • that isn't really what it is is that they couldn't update the model they just

  • didn't have the neurology for it anymore so they were back to not noticing that

  • it was gone and coming up with stories about it and so well so that's a good

  • example of how the right and left hemispheres worked together and how

  • they're kind of mapped onto this weirdly enough so you know we're map were

  • adapted to the meta reality and so what that would be is we're adapted to that

  • which remains constant across the longest spans of time and that's not the

  • same things that you see flitting around you day to day those are just they just

  • like clouds they're just evaporating you know there's things underneath that that

  • are more fundamental that are more fundamental realities like the dominance

  • hierarchy like the tribe like the danger outside of society like the threat that

  • other people pose to you and that you pose to yourself

  • those are eternal realities and we're adapted to those that's our world and

  • that's why we express that in stories and so then you might say well how do

  • you adapt yourself to this world and the answer to that isn't I believe this is a

  • neurological answer I believe this that your brain can tell you when you're

  • optimally situated between chaos and order and the way it tells you that is

  • by producing the sense of engagement and meaning so let's say there's a place in

  • the environment you should be okay what should that place be

  • well you don't want to be terrified out of your skull like what good is that and

  • you know you don't want to be so comfortable that you might as well sleep

  • you want to be somewhere where you know you're kind of on firm ground here but

  • over here you're kind of testing out new territory and some of you who are

  • exploratory and emotionally stable you know you're gonna go pretty far out into

  • the unexplored territory without destabilizing yourself and other people

  • are gonna just put a toe in the chaos and you know that's neuroticism

  • basically that's that your sensitivity to threat that's calibrated differently

  • in different people and more some people are more exploratory than others that's

  • kind of extraversion and openness working together and and intelligence so

  • some people are going to tolerate a larger admixture of chaos in their order

  • those are liberals by the way and I mean that technically liberals are more

  • interested in novel chaos and conservatives are more interested in the

  • stabilization of the structures that already exist and who's right well it

  • depends on the situation and that's why conservatives and liberals have to talk

  • to each other because one of them isn't right and the other wrong sometimes the

  • conservatives are right and sometimes the liberals are right because the

  • environments go in like this you can't predict the damn thing so that's why you

  • have to communicate and that's what a democracy does it allows people of

  • different temperamental types to communicate and to calibrate the damn

  • societies so anyways so let's say you're optimally balanced between chaos and

  • order so what does that mean well you're stable enough but you're interested

  • right because a little novelty heightens your anxiety that wakes you up a bit

  • that's the adventure part of it but it also focuses the part of your brain that

  • does exploratory activity and that's actually associated with pleasure

  • that's the dopamine circuit and so if you're optimally balanced and you know

  • that you know you're there when you're listening to an interesting conversation

  • or you're engaged in one it's a real conversation you know you're saying some

  • things you know and the other person is saying some things they know

  • but the both of what you know is changing it's like wow that's so

  • interesting you'll have a conversation like that forever or maybe you're

  • reading a book like that or you're listening to a piece of music that

  • models that because what music does is provide you with predictable forms

  • multi-level predictable forms that transform

  • just the right amount and so music is a very representational art form it says

  • this is what the universe is like you know there's a dancing element to it

  • repetitive and then cute little variations that sort of surprise and

  • delight you and and you think wow that's so cool and it doesn't matter how

  • nihilistic you are you know music still infuses you with a sense of meaning and

  • that's because it models meaning that's what it does that's why we love it and

  • you know you can dance to it and that sort of symbolizes you putting yourself

  • in harmony with these multiple layers of reality and positioning yourself

  • properly and you like that too you know you'll pay for it oh boy I get to go

  • dancing you know oh boy I get to listen to music it's like what the hell are you

  • doing listening to music what good is that well you think that's a stupid

  • question I don't care about your dopey criticism I'm going to listen to some

  • music right it did there's no rational there's no rational argument against

  • music it's like you just don't even think about it you just walk away from

  • someone who's stupid enough to ask that question it's like some things are

  • obvious well why okay so that's pretty fun so

  • what mediates between these two domains well that's what consciousness does far

  • as I can tell and that's sort of the individual and that's the hero that's

  • another way of thinking about it it's the logos that's another way of thinking

  • about it it's the word that generates order out of chaos at the beginning of

  • time it's the consciousness that interacting with the matter of the world

  • produces being that's basically it that's basically you for all intents and

  • purposes how do you do that well the unconscious

  • does it to some degree you know because it's with our fantasy that we first meet

  • the unknown right well look say you're going out with a new person it's like

  • what do you do you project a fantasy on them and then you fall in love with the

  • fantasy and aren't you stupid because you're gonna find out that the match

  • between your damn fantasy and the actual person is tenuous at best and so young

  • would call that a projection of either the anima or the animus you know the

  • anima is what a man projects onto a woman he finds desirable it's like oh

  • she's the perfect woman it's like well how do you know that

  • you've like seen her for four seconds you know but it grips you and the same

  • thing happens in the opposite direction and it's an action of instinct you know

  • it's like you fall in love with the image and but interestingly enough what

  • you do in a relationship that works is that you actually I think that what you

  • see it's a rough approximation when you

  • project the ideal and fall in love with it you see what could be it could be

  • that but it's going to take you a hell of a lot of work because like you got no

  • shortage of flaws and the other person has no shortage of flaws and so you're

  • bringing your flaws together and that's going to produce a lot of friction and

  • you're gonna have to engage in a lot of dialogue before you approach that level

  • of perfection again but maybe you can do it then you get to live happily ever

  • after well would not be nice well so the

  • unconscious meets the unknown and it it meets it with imagination and fantasy

  • and dream and art that's how you take so you don't just go from what you don't

  • know to fully articulated knowledge in one bloody leap you can't do that you

  • have to extend pseudo pods of fantasy and imagination into the unknown that's

  • kind of what theorizing is like right even scientifically you know you don't

  • know something scientifically you generate a theory well it's an

  • imaginative representation that your unconscious is helping you generate and

  • so you meet the unknown with fantasy that's what the unconscious is for from

  • the psychoanalytic perspective that's what

  • rheems do and you can see why you dream about the future you know it's like well

  • what's the future gonna be like well you have a little imaginative story going on

  • and it's like you don't really create it it's sort of you watch it unfold you

  • know maybe you could tweak it here and there but it sort of comes to you from

  • wherever the hell things like that come from you know the unconscious that's the

  • psychoanalytic answer it's not really much of an answer because it's more like

  • a representation of a place that we don't understand but that's where

  • creativity comes from and I mean some people are really creative right down to

  • the bloody core so in my clinical practice I often see people who are high

  • in openness because they're attracted to me because they watch my lectures and

  • you have to kind of be high in openness to like my lectures so because well you

  • do because they go everywhere you know and and they're not necessarily very

  • orderly so so anyways lots of my clients are really high in openness and they're

  • funny people often especially if they're smart because sometimes they have the

  • most nihilistic intelligence you can imagine it's just self-critical and

  • nihilistic and brutally brutal man and smart and so they just criticize

  • themselves out of existence and so often I have to just try to get them to quit

  • listening to their chattering right self-critical rationality and go out and

  • create something you know with their massive creativity and as long as

  • they're doing that they're engaged in the world and happy as hell but as soon

  • as that self-critical rationality comes in and shuts down the creativity they're

  • just they're just like walking corpses you know and it's because if you're

  • really open like that's your a tree and it has some trunks and you know your

  • your most prominent trait is the most lively trunk and if you're a creative

  • person and you're not engaging in a creative enterprise

  • you're just you're like a tree that that has been that has had its vitality

  • amputated and so this is not trivial this stuff is this is deeply deeply

  • deeply rooted in your biology and and those are people often who have like

  • dream lives you just can't believe I have one client

  • he has like four spectacular dreams a week and most of the time we

  • just spend discussing them I mean God he and I had another client who could be

  • lucid in her dreams which is more common among women she could ask the damn

  • characters what they represented and they would tell her it was like okay

  • that was pretty weird and like a lot of the things they told her were really

  • helpful and they were not things that she wanted to hear she she basically one

  • of them told her she if she was gonna live she'd have to go visit a

  • slaughterhouse and the reason for that was because she was raised as a little

  • princess and protected from horrible mother nature until she hit puberty in

  • which time she turned into an evil villain because that's how the family

  • worked perfect child evil teenager overnight and then well

  • that was hard on her and she wasn't prepared because she thought the world

  • was princess world and you know she couldn't go through a butcher store

  • without having a fit and no wonder you know like really Jesus you know it's no

  • wonder but you do it but she couldn't so we used to go to butcher stores and that

  • would make her cry and and that she was a vegetarian that would make her cry and

  • you know bemoan the cruelty of the world and it's like yeah fair enough man those

  • are bloody slabs of meat it's like I don't know why everyone isn't screaming

  • when they walk through the butcher store but but you got to get used to it man

  • because you can't live in the world otherwise and so the dream character who

  • was a gypsy told her that she had to go visit a slaughterhouse which seemed

  • rather impractical and so I asked her if she could think of anything else to do

  • and she saw it well why don't we go visit a funeral home and and watch an

  • embalming and I thought oh how good that sounds that sounds like a fun way to

  • spend a day and so I phoned up a funeral parlor and I said I had a client it was

  • terrified of death yeah and I was the therapist who was also a little shaky on

  • the concept myself and so they they had no problem with that they deal with

  • death all the time which is really something to think about right a human

  • being can actually have an occupation where they do nothing but deal with

  • death and they don't go stark raving mad it's like what the hell's up

  • with that it's like working in a palliative care ward where your your

  • clients that you you know have a relationship all they're gonna do is die

  • this week next week the week after people do that it's like those people

  • are tough man they're tough so anyways we went and watched this embalming which

  • was I have a rather high level of disgust sensitivity so it was a little

  • on the rough side for me but she sat there and first while she was not we

  • were outside this little room she was not looking at that man no way and she

  • kind of go like this and you know that was pretty good and then she'd go like

  • this and then she go like this and then and she watched it and then she asked if

  • she could go in and she put on the glove and she touched the body and she didn't

  • have a fit she didn't have a panic attack and so she walked away from there

  • learning that there was a hell of a lot more to her than she thought there was

  • and that she could see things that she didn't think she could see and live and

  • after that she sort of had a touchstone it's like well I'm kind of afraid of

  • this well is it as bad as going to see the embalming

  • no it's not that bad well I guess I can do it it's like an initiation right she

  • had an initiation and so did I you know and I learned a lot from doing that I

  • learned that one of the things you need to do if you're going to be a human

  • being is to prepare yourself to be useful in the face of death and so when

  • you have a parent that dies which you know shatters people's ideas often they

  • can't even think about it if you can't even think about that man you've got

  • some thinking to do because you need to be able to at least think about that

  • because otherwise you're just gonna be a wasteland when it happens and you never

  • know you could even have a higher ambition maybe you could even be useful

  • when it happens instead of being part of the heap of destroyed people who also

  • have to be taken care of you know and that's brutal you have to be brutal to

  • be useful in the aftermath of your parents death you know you don't get to

  • crumble and fall apart and no you have every reason to so you got to be kind of

  • some tough monster to manage that but you want to be useful in the face of

  • tragedy or do you want to be well you make your choice so out of the

  • unconscious you get ritual you get dreams you get drama you get stories you

  • get art you get music and that sort of buffers us we have our little domain of

  • competence and we're buffered by the domain of fantasy and culture and that's

  • really what you learn about when you come to university if you're lucky and

  • and the professors are smart enough to actually teach you something about

  • culture instead of constantly telling you that it's completely reprehensible

  • and should be destroyed it's like why you would prefer chaos to order is

  • beyond me and the only possible reason is that you haven't read enough history

  • to understand exactly what chaos means and believe me if you understood what it

  • means you'd be pretty goddamn careful about tearing down the temple that you

  • live in unless you want to be a denizen of chaos and some people do you know

  • because that's when the impulses that you Harbor can really come out and shine

  • and so a little gratitude is in order and that makes you appreciative of the

  • wise King well being smart enough to know that he's also an evil tyrant it's

  • like that's that's a total conception of the world it's balanced it's like yeah

  • we should preserve nature but good god it is trying to kill us and you know

  • yes our culture is tyrannical and oppressive people but it is protecting

  • us from dying that's helpful you know and yes we're reasonably good people but

  • like don't take that theory too far until you've tested yourself and you

  • know that's wisdom at least in part and that's what these stories try to teach

  • you there's a nice mythological

  • representation I love this one it's like the Dome of the known and the seeker

  • looking outside you know that's a that's a metaphysical representation you know

  • and then that is the world as it looks to us right you go out in a field and it

  • looks like there's a dome covering it it's a circle a big circle with a dome

  • over it and you know what's outside the dome well the unknown right that's where

  • heaven is theoretically you know it's a projection obviously

  • heaven is in the unknown well it was localized in space

  • I suppose that's partly because when people looked up in the sky they were

  • overwhelmed with all so it's a reasonable conclusion you know it it's a

  • projection of an unconscious presupposition it's a projection of

  • fantasy you know heaven is a fantasy and and I'm not denigrating fantasy by the

  • way and it's projected imaginatively onto the sky and that's part of the way

  • you discover what's in your fantasy well this is us man we mediate between chaos

  • and order and you know those are the two archetypal representations fundamentally

  • you know and I think they apply to both genders you know like women can act as

  • the individual who holds the world on his or her shoulders and males men can

  • play a maternal role you know meet female human beings are quite masculine

  • and male human beings are quite feminine and so you know maybe maybe this

  • archetype dominates among men and that archetype dominates among women which I

  • would say is that is the case as far as I'm concerned although there in our

  • individual conceptions and of course those two things have to work in

  • conjunction but that's you the eternal mediator between chaos and order which

  • also has its enemy so that's that's Horace there and that Seth who's

  • eventually turns into Satan as though as the West progresses so to speak and

  • that's represented there as well the temptations of I would say resentment

  • and hatred which everyone has to fight with all the time all right

  • initiations so this is cool this is a standard hero story and initiate

  • initiative rights are a part of human heritage and so let's take a look this

  • is from el yada I would like even now to stress the fact

  • that the psychopathology of the shamanic vocation is not profaned

  • it does not belong to ordinary symptomatology it's not mental illness

  • it has an int initiatory structure and signification

  • short it reproduces a traditional mystical pattern the total crisis of the

  • future shaman sometimes leading to complete disintegration of the

  • personality and to madness can be valuated not only as an initiatory death

  • but also as a symbolic returned to the pre cosmogonic chaos to the amorphous

  • and indescribable state that precedes any comes Morgan II well what he means

  • by that is that I suppose the mythological view of the emergence of

  • order that's a cosmogony is that there's a state of potential and chaos out of

  • which order emerges and you know here's here's how it is that you think that way

  • because you do think that way so you know imagine what you're facing when

  • you're facing the future right well you might say well the future is full of

  • potential right it's full of potential what the hell does that mean you know

  • you act as if that you act as if that potential is really a real thing and

  • you're confronting it all the time I'm confronting the potential of the future

  • well it doesn't exist yet so did what you're confronting doesn't even really

  • exist what you're conceptualizing doesn't really exist and in some sense

  • you bring it into being by plotting your path through it well the pre cosmogonic

  • chaos is the same as the potential of the future it's exactly the same idea

  • it's the realm of possibility from which actuality emerges and you participate in

  • turning that possibility into actuality that's what you're doing all the time

  • now can I explain that well no I have no idea how consciousness and the substrate

  • of the world interact i I can only say that that's how it

  • looks that's how it feels you know that's how people act and

  • they'll get into trouble if they don't manifest their potential whatever that

  • is that's all those things you could be that you're not well where are those

  • it's just potential well that's the chaos this is a that's the I would say

  • that's the the cosmos that's the cosmos that you live in all the time it's a

  • little story it's the thing that you extract out of the chaos it's

  • - consists of your conception of where you are now and your conception of where

  • you want to be at some point could be ten minutes could be three years if you

  • can slide it and then you have a little plan about how you should move your body

  • to do transform one in into the other that's your action powder and that's a

  • little story and when you ask someone to say what they were up to you they'll

  • tell you a little story like that you know I was at some place and I went

  • somewhere else and here's how I did it then they might tell you more

  • interesting story which is I was someplace and something happened that I

  • really didn't expect and it knocked me for a loop you know and that's a good

  • divorce story I came home one night and my wife was gone it's like yeah chaos

  • and probably a bit of willful blindness preceding it we might suspect

  • anyways down into chaos and then well maybe you learn something down there and

  • maybe you don't but hopefully you do and you put yourself together if you're

  • lucky and then pop bang you pop up into another little structure of order and

  • that's an initiatory process it's like you're some more stable falls apart or

  • maybe you break it apart on purpose you do it voluntarily you know people do

  • that all the time you know they do that for example when they experiment with

  • drugs and they do that when they go on wild adventures and you know when they

  • break themselves out of their normal routine and throw themselves somewhere

  • they don't understand and hope that that's going to produce a transformation

  • of personality that's the basic story that's the initiatory story now this is

  • William James who was the one of the establishes of modern psychology and a

  • kind of an odd guy he was an early experimenter with psychedelics of course

  • they'll never tell you that but he was and he is his drug of choice was nitrous

  • oxide which is an inhalant gas which seems to be inert no one really knows

  • why it works but it produces quite intense hallucinogenic experience

  • mystical experience although if you breathe too much of it then you die

  • because it doesn't it doesn't have any oxygen in it so so don't do that and and

  • he wrote some really bad hippie poetry back

  • in the 1880s well he was you know experimenting with with nitrous oxide

  • I'll read a little bit of that to you pure experience is the name which I give

  • to the original flux of life before a reflection has categorized it only

  • newborn babes in persons in semi coma from sleep drugs illnesses or blows can

  • have an experience pure in the literal sense of that which is not yet any

  • definite what though ready to be any sorts of what's both full both of

  • oneness and of many 'no specs that don't appear changing throughout yet so

  • confusedly that its phases interpenetrate and no points either of

  • distinction or of identity can be caught 1905 William James Journal of philosophy

  • you know a lot of these old guys that established what we regard is you know

  • fairly stable bodies of knowledge we're just as crazy as you could possibly

  • imagine they're just the most peculiar damn people and they get sanitized you

  • know as they are represented in history and that's no fun you know I mean it's

  • much more interesting to know what they were like they were just so bloody

  • peculiar and and strange and involved in all sorts of weird things that's a lot

  • more fun to know that here's his poem Wow

  • it's like right from 1968 no verbiage can give it because the verbiage is

  • other incoherent coherent same and it fades and it's infinite and it's

  • infinite don't you see the difference don't you see the identity constantly

  • opposites United the same me telling you to write and not to write extreme

  • extreme extreme something and other than that thing intoxication and other nest

  • and intoxication every attempt at betterment every attempt at other menthe

  • is a it fades forever and forever as we move it's like it's just about as

  • incoherent as post modernist philosophy so we know for archaic and traditional

  • cultures that a symbolic return to chaos is equivalent to preparing a new

  • creation it follows that we may interpret the psychic chaos of the

  • future shaman as assigned the profane man is being dissolved and a

  • new personality being prepared for birth transformation here's a way of thinking

  • about it paradise Paradise Lost redemption classic story

  • of mankind always it was a great past we're in a state of chaos we're heading

  • towards a better future everyone thinks that way the stories are based on that

  • well that's that now Ellen Burch a who wrote a lot about the psychoanalysts

  • believed that Freud and Jung in particular had a creative illness which

  • he regarded as a sort of spontaneous shamanic transformation and he said a

  • creative illness has these elements it follow succeeds a period of intense

  • preoccupation with an idea and search for certain truth it's a polymorphous

  • condition that can take the shape of depression neurosis psychosomatic

  • ailments or even psychosis Jung was in that state when he wrote this book

  • called the red book which was just released last year which is full of

  • visionary illustrations and hands very strange poetry and it contains the the

  • communications he had with imaginative beings that he conjured up when when

  • practicing doing exactly that he practiced that for years and he had

  • these autonomous beings manifest themselves in his fantasy it had long

  • conversations with them it just you know while he was working as a doctor and

  • having a sane normal life and well it's kind of well it's really something

  • whatever the symptoms they're felt is painful while he thought maybe he was

  • going mad and some people think he did if not agonizing by the subject with

  • alternating periods of alleviation and worsening throughout the illness the

  • subject never loses the thread of his dominating preoccupation it's often

  • compatible with normal professional activity and family life but even if he

  • keeps to his social activities he's almost entirely absorbed with

  • himself he suffers from feelings of utter isolation even when he has a

  • mentor who guides him through the ordeal like the shaman apprentice with his

  • master the termination is often rapid and marked by a phase of exhilaration

  • the subject emerges from his ordeal with a permanent Tran

  • formation in his personality and a conviction that he has discovered a

  • great truth or a new spiritual world many of the 19th and 20th century

  • figures regarded universally as great Nietzsche Darwin Dostoyevsky Tolstoy

  • Freud Jung were all additionally characterized by lengthy periods of

  • profound psychological unrest and uncertainty

  • well you don't generate a new theory without some birth pangs right because

  • your old theory has to bite the dust first and when your old theory bites the

  • dust it's like where are you you don't know do you know if you're gonna come up

  • with a new one no here's a cool thing this is my daughter she was five years

  • at this point she was playing prince or in princess

  • with Julie and her three-year-old she said dad if we killed a dragon we could

  • use his skin as armor wouldn't that be a good idea I thought

  • hey yeah that's that's a hell of an idea kid you know you go right after the

  • thing that frightens you the most and you develop something that protects you

  • from doing that it's like where did she get that idea

  • well good work kiddo she had plenty of dragons in her life so the following

  • dream was described by my daughter Mikayla three years nine months old

  • about my son Julian one year Julian was in the process of toilet training and

  • rapid speech development was having some trouble controlling his emotions Mikayla

  • liked to call him baby we had several discussions about the

  • fact that he wasn't really a baby anymore she told me this story while I

  • was at the computer so I was able to get it for Batum she wasn't very happy with

  • the idea that he wasn't a baby anymore because she kind of liked the baby she

  • took care of that baby a lot and her little brain was having a hard time with

  • the notion that whatever that thing is now it isn't a baby it's like well

  • where's my baby and believe me plenty of mothers go through the same thing then

  • they attempt to keep their children babies for the rest of their lives so

  • this is what Mikayla said the dream Julian's eyes fell out and then he

  • falled into pieces I said what sort of pieces she said Julian pieces and the

  • bones fall doubt too then a hole got him and there was water in it and when he

  • came out he was big mom Julian isn't a baby anymore no he

  • a big boy and a bug with legs got him out cuz bugs can swim and the whole was

  • in the park and it moved into the backyard and he fall into it a tree

  • burned and left the hole I thought wow that's so amazing it's like it was a it

  • was a shamanic transformation dream it was like the tree that's The Tree of

  • Life had burnt and left a hole the kid fell into it it dissolved him right down

  • to his bones this little bug which would be a union representation of the self

  • like Jiminy Cricket by the way in Pinocchio the bug was the thing that was

  • alive that helped him through the transformation he stepped out and now he

  • was big it's like that was her little brain conjuring up the notion of radical

  • transformation so this is cool I hope this works

  • this is a dream that my my nephew had did someone animated Jordan Peterson is

  • a clinical psychologist from the University of Toronto Maya do disagree

  • with some of his fundamental ideas but his thoughts and facing problems merge

  • with my stoic values within one of his maps of meaning lectures he tells a true

  • story about a four year old boy his nephew who for months was suffering from

  • terrible night terrors terrors that were waking him up screaming this boy by the

  • way did have some areas of instability in his family life Jordan visited the

  • young boy's house and the boy was running around dressed as an eight with

  • a sword a shield and a helmet at night aim he would take a sword and shield to

  • bed so Jordan got speaking to him and the boy described his dream and the

  • dream he's standing surrounded by knee-high Dwarfs these dwarves had beaks

  • and every time you would try to move the dwarfs would jump up and bait him a very

  • fretting scenario for a young boy and if you look behind all the dwarfs away in

  • the background there was a dragon and every time this dragon would puff out

  • fire and smoke more dwarfs would be created so there's no point fighting off

  • the dwarfs because more would just be me it

  • so Jordan tapped him and asked what could you do about that so the kid says

  • he could jump up on the Dragons head he could poke out his eyes with a sword so

  • he couldn't see then they could go go down the throat to the box where the

  • fire came from carve a piece out of that box thereby destroying it and use that

  • piece as a sheet its shamed before Jordan arrived was already a keynote in

  • life what he knew he had to do and after that conversation he had no more Nate

  • pears this is what Marcus really is meant when he said the impediment to

  • action advances action what stands in the way becomes the way he was tell not

  • us that we must not shy away from problems or shown or personal

  • responsibility we must be willing to sacrifice her comfort Goethe source of

  • her problems to solve them and then take something away well there you go so yeah

  • he was waking up screaming at night for four weeks

  • that's night terrorist he couldn't really remember what hell was going on

  • and there was instability and his family his parents got divorced soon after and

  • he was off to kindergarten and that was kind of destabilizing him too and so it

  • was fun to watch him zip around as a knight it's like you know where'd he get

  • that idea well you know he watched TV watch movies see his little imagination

  • was aggregating the picture of the hero and then he was trying to act it out

  • that's what he was doing pretending right I'm pretending to be the thing

  • that takes on the unknown and then he has this amazing dream it's like it's

  • mind-boggling it's so sophisticated it's like well here I am

  • and there's troubles everywhere and they're biting me they're jumping up on

  • me and it's like a Hydra you know in the Hydra you cut off a hydras head and

  • seven more heads grow it's like that's life man solve one problem seven more

  • appear right so also that that was the Dragons at the background chaos itself

  • and chaos kept breeding these are the evil little Dwarfs which is what it does

  • it's like it's one damn trouble after another we fight this one off fight this

  • one off it's like who cares the dragon the dwarf generating machine is still

  • working in the background so he I asked him and that was purposeful what

  • could you do see that's a leading question that

  • implies that there's something that he could do he said well I take my dad that

  • was missing in the animation and we go well poke the dragon's eyes out go right

  • down to the source of the problem extinguish it make a shield right so

  • that meant that he would have strengthened his character by the

  • encounter so brilliant and then and I talked to his mom for months afterwards

  • done no more night terrors what had happened he identified with the

  • mythological hero he did identified with st. George and the dragon he identified

  • with that little bloody tree dwelling primate who 20 million years ago was the

  • first one to drop a stick on a snake he adopted the classic human mode of being

  • in the face of uncertainty and construed himself as that which could prevail end

  • of terrors well I guess we're done E so we're gonna do something a little

  • different than the syllabus today because you know we got this one hour to

  • our problem and I really can't cover constructionism reasonably in two hours

  • or one hour that was supposed to be today

  • so what I'm going to do is instead is continue on the line that I've been

  • pursuing but I'm going to expand it up more into Union psychology which is the

  • what we're going after after constructivism anyways and so I can

  • weave the constructivism and the depth psychology together and it's nice to do

  • that because it gives you a kind of a coherent view so just so you know we're

  • one lecture ahead at the moment roughly speaking and I'll do constructivism on

  • Tuesday for two hours so all right so I showed you that anime animation I told

  • you about my nephew's dream which is a remarkable dream you know really it's

  • just amazing amazing dream and it's it's got this archetypal pattern you know and

  • the pattern is that there's a threat and worse than not that there's there are

  • threats and at the back of it there is the the

  • fact of threat itself you see so human beings were so smart hey so this is so

  • amazing that we figured this out so you imagine well human beings are the only

  • creatures that can really conceive of the class of all threatening things

  • right and that's kind of why we can be permanently anxious there's so it's sort

  • of annoying so you know here you are and it's safe there's no Lions here or or

  • anything that might prey on you but you can think of something to be anxious

  • about no problem you know I'm certain you've got some little skeleton rattling

  • around in your closet somewhere that's like eating away at you and so I think

  • part of the reason we're so damn awake human beings is because we're always

  • anxious like and you have to be awake when you're anxious and the the anxiety

  • system actually activates your reticular activating system and that that that

  • actually produces its the substrate for consciousness if you snap a few fibers

  • in the back of your brain that are part of the reticulating activate reticular

  • activating system in a car accident or something you'll go into a coma and

  • that'll be that here you're not getting out of it doesn't take much of an injury

  • either in the right place so anyways so human beings have been struggling with

  • this problem of threat forever really for as long as there's been life

  • or at least as long as there's been life with a nervous system and you know

  • that's several hundred million years it's a long time and of course it's easy

  • to you know to respond to a particular threat think about zebras they're out

  • there on the veldt and there's lions everywhere right but the zebras are like

  • they're calmed because there's lions are sleeping and so the zebras don't think

  • apparently oh my god what was going to happen with those Lions wake up because

  • they don't think that way you know and they're not going to be happy if the

  • lion goes into a hunting Crouch and starts its hunting approach obviously

  • but it's not like the zebras are freaking out non-stop because there are

  • Lions around you know so they can react to specific threats but human beings

  • partly because we discovered the future which was a big mistake was a big

  • mistake because the future is an uncertain place

  • we realized that well there isn't any threat right now but there might well be

  • some tomorrow and if there isn't some tomorrow well maybe next week or next

  • month or next year like it's coming and so there's danger so it's the category

  • of danger you know and out of the category of danger emerged specific

  • threats and the dragon seems to be a symbol of it is a symbol I believe of

  • the ever-present fact of predatory slightly predatory threat but our

  • nervous systems as they've become capable of abstraction have used that

  • underlying architecture to represent more abstract categories so it's not

  • it's not a predator like a dragon is not a predator because there are no dragons

  • but maybe a dragon is a snake and a and a crocodile and maybe a leopard and

  • maybe a predatory bird all mangled into one monster because a monster is

  • actually technically something that's made out of disparate parts and so it's

  • a good symbolic representation for the unknown as such that which lies beyond

  • the campfire let's say and what lurks out there and so the eternal problem is

  • what the hell do you do with the dragon and that also explains why the dragon

  • typically is a treasure garter right because it's even more the problem is

  • even worse out there in no-man's land out there in potential

  • there's threat and and and like mortal threat but there's also endless

  • opportunity and riches and wealth and and and the possibility of attracting

  • someone and all of that and so well the dragon

  • you can't just be afraid of it you just stay in your burrow the whole time and

  • lots of animals more or less do that is you know especially the nocturnal ones

  • they just hide away but that is what human beings alight because we're not

  • only prey animals right we're also predators and then of course we're crazy

  • we're absolutely insane chimpanzees right we're crazy and so we're always

  • out there mucking about with things and with our you know fingers and and our

  • thumbs and and taking the world apart and putting it back together and we're

  • crazily exploratory and and in troublemaking and so we don't just run

  • from dragons we go hunt them down and so and so there's a story here there's the

  • oldest story that mankind knows and literally it is the oldest story that we

  • know is this stories in this story basically is there's a bounded space a

  • walled garden a walled city you know on all the original cities were walled

  • because if they weren't barbarians would swoop in and they'd just steal all your

  • stuff and so you know that was kind of pointless so you know you wanted to have

  • some major-league walls surrounding your territory and so that's inhabited space

  • and inside that is here little dominance hierarchy and so all you primates knew

  • exactly who was who inside that space so you didn't have to fight with each other

  • and you could predict each other's behavior because you believed the same

  • things and saw the world roughly the same way and acted the same way and so

  • you were sort of secure but then the problem is is that that can always be

  • breached there's always something outside of it that's a danger and so

  • that's signified by this this little creature here this is dragon and that

  • that twirl in its tail is very common among dragons actually it's actually a

  • symbol because you imagistic languages imagistic symbols have an ancient

  • language and it it's referring to something that's basically eternal and

  • so it lives down here in this in this cave because it's an underground thing

  • it's an underground thing and you can kind of imagine what that's like and

  • sometimes this happens in initiation rituals among archaic people they're

  • gonna when they're gonna initiate usually the young men because nature

  • initiates women know by itself usually the young men maybe they'll put them in

  • a cave and leave them there you know for like well who know who knows how long

  • and Sagada think what's in a cave that caves are dark man I don't know if

  • you've ever been in one but like they're dark and they're really dark and so not

  • only is there whatever there is in the cave and you don't know what the hell's

  • in the cave there's whatever you imagined might be in the cave and so

  • when you're in that cave and you're alone you you're confronting the devils

  • and demons and monsters of your own imagination you know and so then you

  • have a chance to perhaps deal with that and overcome it and that's perhaps part

  • of the initiation ceremony you know and that's part of growing up because you

  • have to learn how to face the things that terrify and upset you and

  • and we cast them and put them back together we talked a little bit about

  • this idea of the pre cosmogonic chaos that that Iliad it refers to and and

  • that's this stuff out of which order is produced at the beginning of time and

  • it's also the stuff out of which you constantly reproduce order and the young

  • unions the psychoanalysts especially the really deep psychoanalysts like young

  • Freud was a more surface psychoanalyst and that's not an insult there's some

  • things that Freud figured out they're absolutely amazing he was a precursor to

  • Jung for sure for Jung the hero's journey was the journey inside the

  • unconscious and that would be perhaps in some sense that the the willingness to

  • face everything terrible that's happened to you and to think it through and to

  • articulate it and and to come to grips perhaps with your own capacity for

  • malevolence that was a really important part of Union ideas that the first step

  • towards individuation which is the manifestation of your full self let's

  • say was the discovery of your shadow and your shadow is the part of you that will

  • do terrible things under the right circumstances and maybe even without

  • that much provocation and you know and it's a terrifying part of you to come

  • into contact with because it's sort of it's sort of the way that you're

  • specifically attached to the archetype of evil that's a that's a good way of

  • thinking about it and you know modern people they don't really think much

  • about think much about the idea of good and evil but that's because the most of

  • them are so they I'm naive you can just barely even comprehend it you know if

  • you read any history if you really read it like and you and you don't come away

  • with the idea that evil exists it's like you're just reading the wrong kind of

  • history you know it's just unbelievable what people can do to each other and

  • we're so imaginative you know and one of the things I figured out about people

  • the reason that we're we have the knowledge of good and evil let's say is

  • that because we're self conscious and we know about ourselves we know about our

  • own vulnerability right you know what hurts you you really know what hurts you

  • way more than an animal knows and so when you're all so creative and so once

  • you know what hurts you man you can really hurt someone else and you can do

  • it in such a creative way you can draw it out you can

  • make it excruciating you can take people apart physically and psychologically and

  • you can keep them say even right on the edge of death so that you can keep doing

  • that endlessly and you know that happens hell of a lot more than you think it

  • happens it happens a lot and so well and you think well you know that doesn't

  • involve me it's like oh yes it does man that's the problem because you know

  • you're human and that's the sort of things that human beings are capable of

  • and I'm not saying you're all it's all probable that you do that ever or or

  • that but I'm saying that you know you got to take that into account when

  • you're looking at the world and you think about all the perpetrators out

  • there it's like it's not like there's perpetrators and there's victims that

  • isn't how it works it doesn't work that way at all and so the horrors of

  • humanity as well as the noble elements of humanity are all elements of your

  • central being and for you and this is the terrible thing for young the pathway

  • to higher wisdom was through the terrible portal of well you could say

  • hell for that matter really in and so who wants to do that man it's like no

  • you know like maybe you're resentful about something well you probably are

  • because like everybody's resentful about something you know and resentment is

  • just vicious emotion it's really useful it's really useful because if you're

  • resentful about something it either means that you should grow the hell up

  • and accept the responsibility and quit sniveling around and whining or it means

  • that someone actually is oppressing you and and pushing on you too hard and

  • bullying you and demeaning you and you have something to say or do that you're

  • not saying or doing and no wonder you're not saying or doing it because you know

  • it can be really dangerous to say things or do them to free yourself from from

  • being oppressed you can get in a lot of trouble in the short term for doing it

  • so it's easier just to not say anything sort of day after day in the short term

  • you protect yourself but just crushes you and then the the resentment comes up

  • and resentment and that can just get so out of hand you know it starts with

  • resentment and then it starts it goes to the desire for revenge

  • you know because you'll play nasty little tricks on the person that's

  • opressing you at any chance you'll talk about them

  • behind their back and if they want you to do something you'll do it badly or

  • you'll do it grudgingly or you'll do a half rate job and you'll set up little

  • traps and you know so it puts you in a poisonous space and then if that if you

  • really start to dwell on that say in your basement for three or four years

  • about just exactly how terrible the world is and how that's focused on you

  • and how everyone's rejected you and how you get to this point where you're

  • thinking that you know existence itself is a kind of poisonous endeavor and that

  • the best thing for you to do is go out there and do as much you know create as

  • much mayhem as you possibly can and if you really get to a dark place you think

  • I'm going to create as much mayhem as I possibly can by targeting the most

  • innocent thing I can possibly imagine and then you end up shooting kids in

  • Connecticut and that's how you get there and so that's a bad road man there's

  • dark things down there but you can go there and people do and they go through

  • the hole of resentment and so resentment can tell you you've got something to say

  • you bloody well better say it you've got a free yourself from what's oppressing

  • you you have to stand up for that because otherwise you become oppressed

  • and then once you're oppressed that's just not so good and so like in your

  • marriage and your relationships you got to tell people what you're thinking you

  • don't have to assume you're right that's a whole different story because you're

  • not cuz you're you know ignorant and you're biased and you know so you're not

  • right but you can stumble towards your this the expression of yourself and then

  • you can listen to the other person and hope that they tell you some way that

  • you're stupid that's useful so you can be a little less stupid in the future

  • because that wouldn't that be good and so you know you go after the unknown you

  • don't protect what you know you already know what you know you go after what you

  • don't know that's why you have to talk to people you don't agree with that's

  • where you have to talk to your enemies because they're gonna tell you things

  • you don't know you could even listen to them it's possible they know a thing or

  • two you don't know but people don't like that you know they just talk to people

  • who think the same way and then they just stay stupid and so that's and

  • that's not because if you're not wise the world

  • will wallop you it'll flatten you and and far more than it has to and then

  • you'll be better and resentful and you'll be part of that force that

  • Wallops instead of the force that fights against that so well so you go after the

  • dragon and that's what that's what this guy is doing he's going after the dragon

  • it's it's threatening the society because it always does chaos what's

  • outside of order always threatens order always always and so you have to step

  • forward you know in this manner voluntarily and and and go after that

  • when it's still manageable right and that's the case in your own life too so

  • you know if you're if you've had a proclivity to be bullied in the past you

  • know and you want to get out of that what you have to do is you have to make

  • yourself awake to the to the Maite to the to the what would you say to the to

  • the initial stages of that sort of bullying emerging in your life again

  • that sort of domination and you have to step forward against it when it's still

  • in its developing stages because maybe you can just not have it happen that

  • would be better and so you have to be ready to speak what you have to say more

  • or less at a moment's notice you can't be impulsive about it you know like if

  • you and I are talking and you make a mistake or I make a mistake

  • even if it's bothers one or the other of us we should just write it off because

  • it's like one encounter what the hell you you know maybe we had a bad night's

  • sleep or something you know you gotta be a little forgiving and what if it

  • happens twice then you know you should be a little awake and you should

  • remember both times and then if it happens a third time it's like that's

  • when you that's when you act and you say look we talked and this happened and I

  • thought yeah whatever and but then you did it again

  • and then you just did it again well then the person is basically like what are

  • they gonna do you know no well maybe they might argue with you but you kind

  • of got them and you're generally if you just point that out to people just like

  • that just that you noticed and they're willing to say something about it

  • they'll back the hell off they'll often apologize and sometimes you even make

  • them a little more conscious which is like hey that's

  • not such a bad idea that's what all this means and so this caught this chaos idea

  • it's so for young it was the unconscious right it was the contents of your

  • unconscious and so that might be the unknown past the threatening past that

  • you have never dealt with there might be the threatening future it might be the

  • threatening present but you realized as his as he got older that that the

  • unconscious was also the world and you think and so the chaos is not only your

  • unconscious mind which meets the unknown but it's actually the unknown itself

  • mingled together you think what the hell does that that's why the dragon is a

  • land creature and an air creature it's matter and spirit at the same time and

  • this sort of gets us into constructivism because the constructivist think that

  • basically what happens is that you encounter those elements of the world

  • that don't fit into your theory and out of those new elements you make the world

  • through your perceptions and you make yourself by incorporating the

  • information and transforming yourself and that's how Piaget explains the

  • development of a child if the child starts out with some reflexes basic

  • reflexes and manifesting the reflexes produces results in the world and then

  • the child has to reorganize its perceptions to take into account the

  • transformations and so then it it gets a little more sophisticated and then it

  • can do a few more things and then it can manifest more changes in the world and

  • then it martyr it attracts them and modifies its perceptions and actions to

  • account for them and it just keeps doing that that's how the child boots itself

  • up like a computer does it's a very cool idea and so from from the Piaget Gian

  • stance so it's constructive the stance you could think of the world as a latent

  • pool of information it's something like that with a structure obviously that you

  • can interact with with your little fingers in your body and your mind and

  • your eyes and your mouth and you make changes happen and you track them and

  • you model them and you build your skills and as you continue to do that in the

  • safety of your house initially under the care of your parents who who fill in

  • where you're ignorant you you you just emerge more and more competent and

  • confident and ready to move ahead so that's that's how the constructivist

  • idea works and so so there's kind of a chaos idea at the bottom of that which

  • is that out of which you emerge and the world emerges at the same time because

  • you know you don't see reality not at all you see almost like an animated

  • version of reality you know like when I look at you I just see the front of you

  • I just see the outside of you I see you at this height I don't see any of your

  • internal structure I don't see the the back part of you at all I don't see your

  • family I don't see your history I don't see your future you know I just see this

  • slice of you you're so complicated I just see this little like oversimplified

  • slice of you right now and I think that's the reality that's it's it's sort

  • of the reality the way that the Simpsons a Simpsons character is you it's like

  • it's sort of like you and it's enough so that you can watch the story but the

  • real you man god only knows what that is and that's a union idea you know that

  • the real you is something that radically transcends your perception of yourself

  • or your conception of yourself and that you get to that higher you at least in

  • part by going into the darkest place and so it's a hell of an idea man it's

  • really but it's the old idea of initiation it's as old as time that idea

  • and and there's something to it and we definitely recreate it in psychotherapy

  • like this isn't an airy theory it's quite the contrary because what you do

  • and as a psychologist always always a behaviorist say that the most the most

  • logical clinical type of psychologists a behaviorist is it an initiatory shaman

  • even though he or she doesn't know it because what they do is they say okay

  • well let's take a look at your life like okay you got a bunch of problems and

  • they're like massive dragons and you're just like you're not going anywhere with

  • those problems you're just cowering in the corner and what the behavioral

  • therapist does is cut them cut that dragon into those little Dwarfs until

  • the dwarfs are small enough so that you can really kick the hell out of them and

  • so and that by the way they do that is they they take the problem and they

  • decompose it into elements that are small enough that you have a reasonable

  • probability of mastering them so you take that problem apart into into its

  • micro problems careful careful process and then you think okay well how

  • could we progress a little bit this week and some of that is to face to practice

  • facing things you're afraid of so like if you're a graphic and you can't get on

  • an elevator you can't get on a taxi and you can't stand up to your husband and

  • I'm saying husband because most agoraphobic sar women most of them are

  • middle-aged women and most of them were too dependent for most of their life so

  • that's a monster it's like society husband elevator taxi

  • subway it's a monster and it's that place you will not go and that's because

  • you feel this high and everything else looks this big and so and partly that's

  • because you've run away and when you run away from something it grows and chases

  • you which is well it's exactly what happens to a prey animal man if you go

  • in the woods and you find a bear especially a grizzly well you're in real

  • trouble if it's a grizzly but if it's a black bear you know generally speaking

  • if you stand your ground and make a hell of a lot of noise that thing will leave

  • you alone but if you run well what's it supposed to think it eats things that

  • run from it so that's exactly where that idea came to come from you turn tail and

  • run and then the thing that you're afraid of is really a monster and it's

  • gonna like get you and eat you it's like well that's true psychologically as well

  • and and the same circuits that we use to when we were you know out in the forest

  • even even in trees the same circuits that we used to parse up the world then

  • into safe territory and place where the predators loom is the way we parse up

  • the world now which is safe territory and the place where the predators loom

  • it's just become abstracted way up abstracted way up so but it's the same

  • damn circuits it's we know this like the same circuits you used to forage for

  • information it's a dopaminergic circuit is the

  • circuit that squirrels use to forage for nuts and you think well why well it's

  • because there's no difference between information and food like you trade

  • information for food all the time that's what you're doing when you're working

  • especially if you're working on a computer so the idea that there's

  • there's an equation between information and food it's like well obviously

  • obviously there's an equation between them so of course you'd use the same

  • and I mean the damn squirrel has to remember where the nuts are and so for

  • him information is food even so when what happened to human beings is that we

  • started thinking hey maybe it's better to go after information than it is to go

  • after food because going after information produces more food than just

  • going after food and so that was a pretty damn smart idea so we're still

  • doing that so anyways this is what you're supposed to be doing and so and

  • this is what behavior therapists do they decompose your problems what are you

  • afraid of well okay you're afraid of everything well let's get something

  • specific you're afraid of well I'm afraid of an elevator okay an

  • elevator so I have a client she's afraid of elevators the elevator door open she

  • goes that's a tomb and I thought oh wow I thought it was an elevator but for you

  • it's not a bloody elevator it's death and so that's what you're

  • afraid of it's worse than that you're afraid of being trapped inside there in

  • the dark alone alone not knowing if anyone is going to rescue you stuck

  • there with your damn imagination freaking out it's like and if that's not

  • and then maybe you have a heart attacks because you're so terrified and you die

  • it's like you know so that's the elevator

  • well it's no bloody wonder there no one's gonna get into something like that

  • and then maybe underneath that is your distrust in the mechanisms of society

  • right because you know a normal person those weird creatures they'll get an

  • elevator what the hell they don't care and partly it's because they have an

  • implicit belief even if the thing stops somebody will come along and rescue them

  • and usually you don't even think about it right it's like no what the hell it's

  • an elevator it's like the danger is invisible to you and it's partly because

  • you implicitly trust the structure and so maybe you go into the unconscious

  • presuppositions of the person who is terrified of the elevator in the subways

  • and you find out they have a real problem with trusting Authority that's

  • partly why they don't get along with their husband why they've never been

  • able to stand up for themselves so then you say okay well you're afraid of the

  • damn elevator but it's not an elevator it's a tomb and the tomb is partly you

  • and partly it's partly the elevator and partly your unconscious mind and so well

  • what can you handle can you go look at an elevator from

  • and feet away it's like yes okay how about 9 feet away yes 5 feet yes 4 feet

  • no okay no problem four and a half feet we're gonna go from that elevator we're

  • gonna look at the damn thing until you're bored of it because that's what

  • we're trying to you should be bored of the elevator because then you're not

  • afraid of it obviously it's like it's an elevator you just don't notice it right

  • all these things around here that you don't notice I take you out of here and

  • ask you what color the walls are you haven't got any idea you know yeah I

  • suspect for most of you there's not a chance you'd be able to identify the

  • gender of the person who's sitting next to you unless you know them it's like

  • you just don't remember anything and why should you everything works like you

  • don't have to pay attention to it it's like is that staying up yeah it's still

  • up yeah still up still up if it's like really no you know you get bored of that

  • real quick and so then you just ignore it and but the agoraphobic has had that

  • veil of ignorance torn away and what they see behind it is mortal threat and

  • so that's really what you're helping them deal with and so this week there

  • are four and a half feet from the elevator next week they're a foot from

  • the elevator and the week after that the horrible gates of Hell open and they

  • look inside and they don't run and so hey they're tougher than they thought

  • they were and that's what you're teaching them actually you're not

  • teaching them that the world isn't dangerous because that's a stupid thing

  • to teach someone bloody right the world is dangerous it's terrifying and

  • sometimes people under they realize that and the veil lifts and they see horror

  • everywhere they see that and then they think well I'm just a little rabbit I'm

  • over here in the corner I can't move I'm petrified and then they

  • can't move they hide it home they cower at home because everything has become a

  • predatory domain and so what you teach them is you're not as much of a rabbit

  • as you think and part of that is that you help them grow some teeth so that

  • they can go home and have that fight with their husband that they should have

  • had 25 years ago and it happens very frequently with agra phobic clients that

  • you get them so they can go on the damn elevator and they can go on the subway

  • and they can take a taxi maybe they learn to drive Wow they get

  • some autonomy and then they're a little tougher and so then they can stand up

  • from loot for themselves and they go back and like their husband might not be

  • very happy with any of this really it depends on what sort of guy he is you

  • know if he's a real tyrant he might be just perfectly happy that he's married

  • to someone who you know was afraid of her own shadow because then she won't

  • ever leave and so that's a nasty little story and believe me it's not uncommon

  • so she gets tougher by facing what she fears and what she finds out is there's

  • a hell of a lot more to her than she thought and that's really what happens

  • when you do behavior therapy with someone who's agoraphobic it isn't

  • really that they get less afraid it's that they get braver that's way

  • different it's because brave is alert and able to cope naive is there's no

  • danger it's like hell yeah right there's no danger Jesus what a stupid theory

  • that is so anyways that's what all this is that's that's the story man and it's

  • a it's a major story it's the story of human transformation and growth it's the

  • evolution of mankind it's like it's a major story and we've been working on

  • the damn thing for like god only knows how long you know snakes and primates

  • co-evolved and our vision are sharp sharp sharp vision seems to have been an

  • evolutionary adaptation forced on us by the presence of predatory snakes and

  • we're talking tens of millions of years ago and human beings have unbelievably

  • sharp eyesight the only thing that can out see us is birds of prey and they

  • have eyes like an eagle a bald eagle has eyes as big as ours and it has two

  • phobias that phobia is the central part of the vision so an eagle is all eyes

  • man and so but human beings we're kind of like that too and like half our brain

  • is devoted to visual processing we have acute vision in Madagascar where there

  • are primates with no predatory snakes there are lemurs they can't see worth a

  • damn and I'm a anthropologist named Lynn Isabelle did a comprehensive study

  • worldwide trying to account for the acuity of primate vision and what she

  • found was that the more predatory snakes in the vicinity the sharper the eyesight

  • of the primates and so we have a really sharp eyesight

  • so that means a lot of us were eaten by snakes and none of your ancestors

  • fortunately because otherwise you wouldn't be here but a lot of those who

  • fell by the wayside were snake snack and you know when you're little and living

  • in a tree a snake is no damn joke and even now lots of people get bitten by

  • snakes and people are phobic of snakes at quite a rate and some of that

  • actually seems innate there's arguments about cycle between psychologists about

  • this but even the ones who don't accept the fact that it's innate accept the

  • fact that you can make someone afraid of a snake by conditioning just like that

  • we're trying to make them afraid of a flower by conditioning is really really

  • hard so we're at least at minimum prepared to be afraid of snakes minimum

  • and I believe it's I don't I believe this fear is actually an 8 although you

  • can learn to control it so anyways so that's that story and like

  • what a story man it's an amazing amazing story you see the the den of the dragon

  • here is littered with skulls and bones that's what that is so either thing is

  • no joke it's like look the hell out and that's this you know and look it up at

  • the top right hand corner there you know that's from Peter Pan right well you

  • remember Captain Hook we talked about him already he's a tyrant and he's a

  • tyrant because he's afraid of death and that's all he sees in life and so it

  • makes him cruel and better and death has already taken part of him right that's

  • why he has a hook and that damn crocodiles chasing him tick tick all the

  • time and of course that's the same situation you're all in man there was a

  • crocodile with a clock at its stomach chasing you and it could easily turn you

  • into a tyrant it can turn you into a tyrant or a cowering victim or a hero

  • those are the options fundamentally so and that's the Gorgon looking at her own

  • the Medusa looking at her own reflection you know mother nature with a head full

  • of snakes you know a terrifying vision and that's actually to some degree an

  • archetype that men get confused with women and you know that's the witchy

  • part of women and that's the part that's attractive attractive attractive but

  • rejecting rejecting rejecting it so many men are petrified by women they won't

  • approach them at all they have no idea how to talk to them they're just

  • petrified into and that's way more common than you

  • think and so that breeds resentment like you wouldn't believe you know you hear

  • the guy who shot up like Dawson College it's like what the hell do you think

  • motivated him it's like he that's what he saw and and it was because well he

  • was my opinion is he was too goddamn useless to be attractive to anyone and

  • so that's a hell of a place to be in you know it's then that's the problem

  • too if you're chronically rejected by people it's often because of your own

  • insufficiencies you know whether that's cowardice or lack of social skills or

  • whatever it is it's like you can't just brush it off as oh well you know no one

  • likes me but really I'm okay it's like no no wrong if everyone rejects you

  • there's probably something wrong and it's probably deep and difficult and

  • it's going to be horrible to fix and so it's this isn't a trivial problem it's

  • not a trivial problem at all and so you know that's mother nature for man too

  • because from from the sexual selection point of view if they if they're not

  • selected as a mate Nature has taken them out of the game right and so you know

  • people don't really like that they're not that happy with that and so but

  • getting all whiny about it and then getting violent it's like that's just

  • not all not really very helpful although it's very common so this is Lyndon

  • Isabel an evolutionary arms race between early snakes and mammals triggered the

  • development of improved vision and large brain in primates a radical new theory

  • suggests these are old representations I really like this one this is I don't

  • remember I think it's Greek but it doesn't

  • exactly look Greek it might be older it doesn't matter anyways you see it's

  • the same thing same ideas as Graham's dream right it's like there's this thing

  • that exists this this multi headed snake and it's got this infinity problem it's

  • everywhere that's that little circle down there and the problem is well what

  • do you do with it you cut off one head seven more growth that's the eternal

  • problem of life and the problem is there there there is the category of problems

  • in life and it ain't going anywhere and so the question is can you deal with the

  • whole category at the same time that's the thing that's how to be in the

  • world is to deal with that category all at the same time and so how did how did

  • human beings what did they come up with as a solution and that's so cool too

  • because the solution they come up with not only was the heroism that allows you

  • to approach what you're terrified by and what you find offensive and to learn

  • from it but also the idea of sacrifice and and that was played out by cultures

  • everywhere including human sacrifice and you think what the hell was up with

  • those crazy bastards so long ago they were sacrificing two gods all the time

  • what kind of clueless behavior was that burned something and please God burn

  • something valuable and please God it's like what was with them what were they

  • thinking well they weren't stupid those people if they were stupid we wouldn't

  • be here they were not stupid and believe me they lived under a lot harsher

  • conditions than we do so those were some tough people man you know back then

  • you'd last about 15 minutes and so you don't want to be thinking of your

  • ancestors as stupid like there's no real evidence that we're much different

  • cognitively than we were a hundred and fifty thousand years ago

  • so anyways sacrifice what does that mean sacrifice well it's a discovery man it's

  • the discovery of the future it's like the future is actually the place where

  • there is threat and it's always gonna be there so what do you do you make

  • sacrifices in the present so that the future is better right everyone does

  • that that's what you're doing right now that's what you're doing here that's

  • what your parents are doing when they pay money to send you to university they

  • think you can bargain with reality it's amazing you can bargain with reality you

  • can forestall gratification now and it'll pay off it at a place in time that

  • doesn't even exist yet it's like who would have believed that it's like

  • that's a miracle that that occurs and it's not like people just figured that

  • overnight you know we were chimps for Christ's sake like how are we gonna come

  • up with an idea like that well it's like well we thought about it for seven

  • million years and you know we got to the point where we could kind of act it out

  • but we didn't know what we were doing but it was a merge it's like a dream it

  • was so the terror of the future is a dream

  • and the solution to the terror the dream of the terror of the future is another

  • dream and and it comes out in mythology and in fantasy and in drama where you

  • act out the sacrifice and then it's a step on the way to full understanding so

  • we can say sacrifice now instead of doing it you know although we still do

  • it it's just not concretize like it used to be we do it abstractly and we all

  • have faith that it will work you know and we also set up our society so that

  • it'll work and one thing about you know I'm not a fan of moral relativism for a

  • variety of reasons partly because I think it's an it's an extreme form of

  • cowardice but anyways apart from that no no no no there's minimal ways that you

  • can set up a society that will work and so one of them is is that the society

  • has to be set up so that your sacrifices will pay off or you won't work and then

  • the society will die and so it has to make promises people have to make

  • promises to one another and that's what money is money is a promise that your

  • sacrifice will pay off in the future that's what money is and so if the

  • society is stable you can store up your work right now you can sacrifice your

  • impulses and you can work and you can store up credit for the future and then

  • you can make the future a better place but Society has to be stable enough to

  • allow for that hyperinflation will do you in so the promise that's implicit in

  • the currency is the promise that what you're doing now will pay off in the

  • future and if people don't have that promise then well we know what they do

  • because in in gangs for example and say gangs in North America the time horizon

  • of the gang members shrinks rapidly because they don't really expect to be

  • alive at much past 21 and so they get really impulsive and violent and like

  • why the hell not that's that's what you do when when the future doesn't matter

  • when it's not real you you default back to living in the moment and you take

  • what you can get right now and no wonder because you don't know if you're gonna

  • be around you know in a year and you get whatever you can well you can bloody

  • well get it and that's like anarchy that state and so

  • you don't want to live and some people like to live in that state because

  • they're really wired for that you know and so they're they're much more

  • comfortable in those conditions there they're kind of like warrior types I

  • would say in some sense but you know for most people that's just where that

  • stress will just do you in you know the stress of a life like that so that's a

  • pretty horrible picture the one on the right I think and you know it's it's a

  • creepy picture and don't you think doesn't it seems like a creepy picture

  • to me yeah and so that's quetzel a codel if I remember correctly who's me who is

  • an Aztec dragon God and that's the Eye of Horus by oh by the way this little

  • thing here and that see the Egyptians they worship the eye

  • yeah well that's cool because well why did they worship the eye well wake the

  • hell up and look at the world that's your salvation to do that pay bloody

  • attention especially to the things you don't want to pay attention to and use

  • your vision have some vision and you can use your vision to see into the future

  • and that is your that's your Redemption and the Egyptians they didn't know how

  • to say that but they knew how to represent it and that's how they

  • represented it like the pupil on that is completely open completely dilated and

  • that's a God as far as the Egyptians we're concerned it's Horus and I'll tell

  • you Horus a story at some point so early primates developed a better eye for

  • color detail and movement and the ability to see in three dimensions

  • traits that are important for detecting threats at close range humans are

  • descended from these same primates all right

  • so now the initiation when you go into psychotherapy or when you make any

  • supreme moral effort which is roughly the same thing you have to confront that

  • which you do not know now I mentioned the called prima cosmogonic chaos and

  • the idea that at the end of Jung's life he sort of thought of the unconscious

  • and the world as the same and you think what the hell does that mean but here's

  • what it means so let's say you're in a long-term intimate relationship and you

  • get betrayed okay so what is it that you see when you see your partner at the

  • moment you know of the betrayal well you see the pre

  • maganda chaos and here's why well it rattles your unconscious up because you

  • don't know anything anymore you don't know what the past was right you don't

  • know what it was and it's supposed to be real and all of a sudden you don't know

  • what it was and so you come up with wild ideas about what it might have been and

  • what it represented and then you don't know what the future is gonna be anymore

  • so then your fantasy fills that space and you don't know who the hell you're

  • looking at that's for sure and you don't know much about human beings and you

  • certainly don't know anything about yourself

  • and so all of a sudden not only is everything in chaos inside your mind but

  • everything is in chaos in your world and it actually is and

  • there's no telling the difference between those two things you know and so

  • then they you're just shattered and so then you go talk to a therapist for like

  • two years and you think what happened what was the reality and the reality is

  • because who knows what the reality was like but as far as you're concerned the

  • reality is I better represent this properly in my head I better figure out

  • who I was who that person was what we did together and what it meant because I

  • do not want this to happen again and so you're healed

  • when you get to the point where you've grasped the bloody moral of the story

  • what went wrong and how can I not have that happen again

  • because that's the purpose of learning right that's the purpose of memory it's

  • to prepare you for the future and so you have to pull out of that massive chaos a

  • functional representation that increases your wisdom so that you're not this

  • naive target the next time you enter into a relationship so at least you can

  • have another relationship without being so traumatized that you know you you're

  • done and you know it can take people years to talk that through because this

  • landscape of potential opens up when when they're betrayed it's like well

  • anything could have been the truth well you to sort through that you have to

  • wander through all that mess and it's really painful and and emotional as well

  • you have to sort through all that mess to come out with the new you right there

  • renewed you and so well this is a representation of it this

  • is how people act this out by but whatever method he may have been

  • designated the shaman is recognized as such as only after having received two

  • methods of instruction the first is ecstatic dreams trances and visions the

  • second is traditional shamanic techniques names and functions of the

  • spirit mythology and genealogy of the clan and the secret language well one of

  • the things that happens this happens to you even if if you encounter something

  • terrible like a betrayal what happens is that you have to take a journey into the

  • domain of morality essentially which is how did I act and how did that person to

  • act and how should have they acted and how should have I acted and so and

  • that's part of your cultural structure and so that's the idea of rescuing the

  • dead farther from the depths right and that's what we'll show you some examples

  • of that so this is a critical issue with regards to the shamanic transformation

  • is that people go through these terrible terrible experiences often drug-induced

  • by the way with regards to the shaman they usually use psychedelic chemicals

  • of one form another often mushrooms but but they've come up with some very

  • strange concoctions like ayahuasca down in the Amazon and ayahuasca is an

  • amazing substance it's made out of the bark of one thing and another plant

  • whose name I don't remember that hardly even grow in the same place and that

  • have to be cooked together in a special way and no one has any idea how the damn

  • Amazonians figured that out it looks impossible and if you ask them they say

  • well the plants told us how to do it which you know Western people don't find

  • very helpful but the shamans are perfectly helped happy with that that

  • description in ayahuasca takes them apart and it does that in part because

  • its effects the serotonergic system very very powerfully like all psychedelics do

  • and it transports them to another world and that's how they interpret it and and

  • and and what we know about psychedelics you could put in a thimble and then

  • throw the thimble away we know nothing about psychedelics there's new

  • experiments going on at Johns Hopkins for example with psilocybin which is

  • part of this active chemical in magic mushrooms same structure basically as

  • LSD and mescaline all the real psychedelics have basically

  • the same structure except the one that's derived from Amanita muscaria which is

  • called muscarinic acid and it's a it's its own weird thing that no one knows

  • anything about anyways they have profound neuro chemical effects in very

  • small doses and the research group at Johns Hopkins has given psilocybin to

  • research subjects you know purified psilocybin because

  • they started the new experimentation with psychedelics and that's been banned

  • for like 40 years because psychedelics were so terrifying

  • to our culture that we just put them away it's like oh no we're not going

  • there and so even from a research perspective and even though some of the

  • psychedelics look very promising for the treatment of disorders like alcoholism

  • they recently used psilocybin to help people stop smoking down at Johns

  • Hopkins and I think they had an 80% success rate which is just like that's

  • just absolutely mind-boggling and so but if you give people psilocybin

  • and they have a mystical experience which is very common among people who

  • take these sorts of chemicals then their personality transforms permanently such

  • that one year later their one standard deviation higher in openness and

  • openness is the creativity dimension and that seems to be a permanent

  • transformation so that's really remarkable and about 80 percent of the

  • people who undergo the Johns Hopkins experiments report that the experience

  • is like one of the two or three most important things they've ever that's

  • never ever happened to them and so well that's that's something you know it's

  • like and then there's this guy named Rick Strassman down at I think he was at

  • the University of Texas and he did experimentation with DMT and DMT

  • dimethyltryptamine I remember I remember correctly is the active ingredient in

  • ayahuasca and you produce it in your brain and it's in plants it's like a

  • very common chemical but DMT is a weird hallucinogen because it has an

  • extraordinarily short mechanism of action it's like and people who take it

  • report that they're blasted out of their body like out of a cannon and then they

  • go out somewhere and encounter beings of various sorts and then ten minutes later

  • they're back and virtually everyone reports that which is really strange and

  • and so strassman was giving people DMT intravenously so that the trip

  • would last longer he this was all all you know nih-funded

  • experimentation all cleared with the relevant ethics boards all conducted

  • within the last 10 years and he basically quit doing it because he was a

  • pretty straight scientist you know he was measuring heart rate and pulse and

  • all that sort of thing trying to look at the physiology and then the people he

  • was giving these chemicals to kept coming back and telling him these these

  • crazy stories and well it just it was too much for him you know and no wonder

  • you know cuz they all said the same thing and he'd say well that was a dream

  • and they'd say no and it was the most real thing that ever happened to me and

  • he'd say well you know it's an archetypal experience and they'd say no

  • no no that was no archetypal experience I went somewhere else and I saw things

  • and I'm back and like I don't care what you think and like who the hell knows

  • right because it's all subjective but but the weird thing about it is that

  • everyone's reporting the same thing how the hell do you account for that and

  • then the shaman you know when they take these psychedelic chemicals they

  • basically say the same thing they say well first of all it more or less killed

  • me that's this you know i dissolved two skeleton and then I climbed the tree

  • that unites heaven and earth and I went into the realm of the gods and they gave

  • me some information and I'm back it's like okay well you know we don't really

  • know what to make of that and we and certainly that's what Elia describes

  • when he describes the shamanic the shamanic procession not the shamanic

  • initiation and you know there's dissolution to a skeleton first and then

  • like a death the symbolic death or experienced as an actual death and then

  • bang up into the realm of the gods and then they come back there's a very old

  • idea and that's a medieval representation of the tunnel that people

  • travel through at the end of their life to you know to find the light which is a

  • very common near-death experience report and people don't have any idea what the

  • hell to do with those reports except say well it's the paroxysm zuv the dying

  • brain which you'd expect to be a hell of a lot more random in my opinion and the

  • idea is there's a rebirth after that and you know here this is the Scandinavian

  • representation of that tree that unites earth with heaven and so there's the

  • Scandinavian representation it has a snake snakes down here eating it and

  • and that's the amazonian representation it's like how the hell he account for

  • that I mean those those pictures are so similar that it's just it's beyond

  • belief well you know we lived in trees for a long time a long long long long

  • time millions of years and there were lots of snakes around them and so the

  • idea that reality is a tree that's surrounded by a snake is that's in us

  • man it's down there it's deep and there's something about it that's true

  • now not true like we normally think of truth a truth true in an entirely

  • different manner so and all that's pretty damn strange we'll stop with this

  • my son drew this when he was seven years old blew me away man I thought it was so

  • cool so I had it laminated and so here is what it is on the right hand side

  • that's ordered it's like the yin-yang thing that's order left-side chaos right

  • and those are all mushroom houses which I thought was amazing and then there's

  • this river that runs right down the middle like the line for order and chaos

  • and then there's this tree that goes up to heaven and that's heaven up there

  • it's like there st. Peter there's the pearly gates there's the clouds it's

  • like it's he never went to church you know it's like what the hell and then

  • there's a little bug there that goes up and down from heaven to earth and that

  • was him and I thought he had a very organized psyche that kid he was a very

  • very stable kid and still is and I he drew that and I thought Jesus that's

  • just bloody will unbelievable and I still think that when I look at it and

  • that's a great example of an archetype and so we'll see you Tuesday

  • you

[Music] all right so I suggested to you last

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2017年04/05期人物:英雄與薩滿的啟事 (2017 Personality 04/05: Heroic and Shamanic Initiations)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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