I love how I’m actually at a restaurant bussing tables when he’s talking about being a busser. like seriously, I’m bussing tables with this in my AirPods, I’m typing this from the break room lmfao.
@@samjohnson2103 yeah man, sounds good! i wish all the best to you and hopefully some good customer contacts also, not only those douchy ones ;-) Greetings!
Good work man, I've made it a habit to tip busser individually if I get a chance typically waiter/waitresses get first dips on those cash tips so it's not the fairest but hang in there and work hard 🤘
Concerning the idea of "what you see in the world depends on what you're aiming at" 1:15:53 - There was a book written in the early eighties titled 'Political Pilgrims' by the sociologist Paul Hollander about Western intellectuals visiting The Soviet Union from the twenties through the fifties, looking for the utopia they so badly wanted to be real - and were blind to all the negative evidence and contradictions right in front of them. Hollander is not the best writer but the story of these visits carries the book.
I got to go see some newborn leopard cubs at a nearby zoo with the kids. They were in a cot indoors. So, the way we we are primed by evolution to spot eyes and teeth, you can add claws to that :-). While we were completely focused on the little cubs in a corner of my vision i peripherally 'saw' a big claw sticking out from under the table behind me's table cloth and in that moment I had one of the most intense and physical fright experiences of my life. Consciously I knew they had some stuffed animals around but for a small fraction of a second that knowledge didn't matter. So thinking about how some of the optic nerves connect 'lower down' probably explains that. What I find interesting is that once I was aware of the specific stuffed adult lion under the table, I didn't keep getting the same fright reaction every time its huge claw entered the edges of my vision. So even though the higher order consciousness is slower it must also somehow suppress some of the baser 'circuits'...?
I just read about this from Robert Sapolsky's book BEHAVE. I believe he said that LEARNING fear primarily happens through the quick route (straight to the Basolateral Amygdala and the primary amygdala), and thus unconsciously, but UNlearning it is more of a conscious process, as in being done primarily in the frontal cortex (PFC if I've got this right).
Maybe the circuit of fear of social embarrassment and judgement suppressed your feeling of fear and having to jump away and thus making your brain have to look for other rational solutions and maybe that’s when it hit your memories and made you remember there’s a stuffed animal under the table Maybe we have different fear circuits and some are stronger than others and have the power to suppress other ones, although I’m sure it’s depending on how you’ve lived that shapes our circuits (traumas..etc) It can also be that you froze when you saw a sign of danger, and it happens to all of us, I’m not trying to make you feel weak.
Thanks, Dr Peterson. I listen to a lot of lectures on TH-cam, and so far yours are my favourite and most profoundly affecting. I'm a musician, guitar teacher and Wizard from New Zealand. Psychology and Carl Jung factor hugely in my interactions with people.
14:00papers 23:00 swanson lays out perfectly with peaget 36:00 driveway example of automatic control of the present and free will only for the future End: Maya, people live in ilucions
Excellent lecture, as always. Question though: Do you think it will ever be possible to understand personality through reductive terms? From this lecture you seem to be stating that there are a myriad of personality "subroutines" that are either running or that we consciously select. However, aren't all these "subroutines" running in concert? Doesn't each one play off the other and adapt and change based of the actions of other "subroutines"? To complicate matters, isn't the whole body doing this? Or to take it to an extreme couldn't it be argued that all of nature is running these "subroutines" which interact with ours? Just curious as to what your thoughts would be. Thanks for the great video!
1,700 of the most common English words cover about 90% of a standard text (newspapers, easy novels, etc). High school graduates have a vocabulary of around 10,000 words. University grads around 30-50,000. Roughly.
The centipede dilemma @ ‘ 27:26 ‘ The centipede dilemma (or effect or phenomena) occurs when a normally automatic or unconscious activity is disrupted by consciousness of it or reflection on it. The concept was developed after a poem in an article by a British zoologist, Ray Lankaster, which discussed the work of photographer Eadweard Muybridge in capturing the motion of animals. Here’s the poem: A centipede was happy - quite! Until a toad in fun Said, "Pray, which leg moves after which?" This raised her doubts to such a pitch, She fell exhausted in the ditch Not knowing how to run.
I looked around and his name seems to be Jeffery Alan Gray. Think it is www.amazon.com/Neuropsychology-Anxiety-Functions-Septo-Hippocampal-Psychology/dp/0198522711/ref=la_B001HP6380_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1505843312&sr=1-1#customerReviews
I'm high in extraversion and neuroticism :'D hahahaha, shit. Love you Pete xoxox Thought about the pianist reading music ahead of time. The same happens with DJing. On a vinyl record you learn to read the surface of the record. You can tell when a breakdown or verse is going to begin or end and you know how many bars it will be. Cool observation m8
I know I am 7 years too late but on the off chance you see this Dr Peterson at 17:20 you're recommending that the class read one of Swansons papers, I very interested in psychology & would love to read the paper you were referring to.
I sound dumb for not realizing sooner but when doing 3D imagery for a job I never knew why sometimes it was like my brain separated the 3-4 images but now I think its about retina fatigue like he was saying about holding your eyes still, I think all my brain could do was show me what it knew was there instead of the stacked images with to many details
Because human beings have for a long time went beyond the mere survival. We have evolved further than any other entities in our World so our brain adapted to it
So are we saying that the cat without most of its brain is hyper- curious is so because the brain desires to become larger and more sophisticated? Like that brain knows it is supposed to be something more..?
Lack of knowledge leads to the aiming to gain knowledge (exploration). The cat was not capable of remembering things, "everything was as if it was the first time," so it would endlessly explore without being able to store the knowledge gained from that exploration. That's my understanding of it, anyway.
@@wingnut1grant University is difficult and it's not for everyone. It's especially the case with what Dr. Peterson teaches because he's not teaching a Mickey Mouse course like media studies or photography. Psychology and philosophy are difficult subjects and there's no shame in struggling to understand. Anyway, ask a member of the God squad. Jesus loves everyone so I'm sure they'll be a bit nicer about it.
Miss Sarah Ashplant lol thx for the pointers. I have a BS from UC Berkeley with a dual major in Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering, and an MS from UCLA in Structural Mechanics, with a 4.0GPA. In my undergrad I was also only 1 or 2 courses away from a minor in Psychology. Please don’t lecture me on “university is hard.” I’m not having any trouble understanding the material. Was just an honest question asking others if they caught the material from the previous lecture on “measurement.” Maybe I missed it, and someone could provide a simple reminder to help. That’s all. No need to come in swinging with condescension, spewing insults and making assumptions about the intelligence and education of perfect strangers. Sad, honestly, that writing these replies is somehow reaffirming to you or gives you enough pleasure that you would spend your time on them. Does it make you feel big and important to inform random strangers of the futility of their efforts to understand all the high-minded secret knowledge to which you have access and they do not? Yikes. Good luck in life, Miss Assplant.
@Jack McCabeHave you thought about going to a leaping-house and having some fun with a night-worm? That might help to alleviate your anger. Daughters of the game are there to help!
What was weird for me on the second gorilla video was; I felt something wrong when the player left, but didn't understand why until the end of the video.
It's NOT true that chess programs on home computers are 'better than everyone in this room'. My home chess computer is better than any human who's ever played. This was true in 2016. (Small Correction)
Alpha Zero and Stockfish are very good chess computers. I think Carlsen has come the closest to any chess player in history to thinking like a computer. He's something else altogether. I think his IQ is somewhere in the region of 145 which goes some way to explaining why he is so good at chess.
Although they wrote books that are hard to dissect I still feel that writing isn’t enough, we need those people here and now and teaching the new people, face to face not book to face lol 😂
The lecturer forgot to mention that the model has no biomarkers for any of its traits, as it was developed just using verbal descriptors. No, it was not well mapped into neurological circuits, please, professor, do your homework. A very weak lecture... The Big Five was pushed in the past 20 years into the throats of psychologists but in reality is a rather useless test... They took 2 scales from temperament research, 1 scale from intelligence research and 2 from social compliance characteristics, a bit here, a bit there but missed a lot of biologically-based traits... It is a very poor model but was advertised using all social power of McCrae and Costa, simply was pushed onto the market... Results - thousands were tested with rather empty outcomes, and predictive power is very weak, it can predict only what people already know. Big Five was used by Cambridge Analytica using the Facebook and dating agencies, to collect massive samples, without any consent of participants... Not very professional... But very efficient to promote the academic career of Big5-vers...
You haven't been around this channel long, have you? Maybe watch a few more Jordan lectures. He goes into insane depth about the actual research. Telling JP to "do his research" is kind of hilarious actually. The dude is one of the most oft-cited scientists in his field.
Watching all of these lectures. Amazed by the quality, depth of content and analysis. Thank you Dr. Peterson, thank you.
I love how I’m actually at a restaurant bussing tables when he’s talking about being a busser. like seriously, I’m bussing tables with this in my AirPods, I’m typing this from the break room lmfao.
love your comment brother, stay strong!
@@konstantinonassis7015 now I’m a server :)
@@samjohnson2103 yeah man, sounds good! i wish all the best to you and hopefully some good customer contacts also, not only those douchy ones ;-) Greetings!
Good work man, I've made it a habit to tip busser individually if I get a chance typically waiter/waitresses get first dips on those cash tips so it's not the fairest but hang in there and work hard 🤘
Those last 5 minutes brought it together in a way I never quite thought about. Amazing.
i am coming back to this lectures often. its like a hard ground that i can stan on when i am loosing my ground. Thank You!
Man , all this stuff is so fascinating. I cant stop watching...
Really helpful to solidify what I've learnt about neuroscience as a layman. So clearly and dynamically illustrated. Thank you.
Wow -- what are you aiming at? -- that is powerful.
Concerning the idea of "what you see in the world depends on what you're aiming at" 1:15:53 - There was a book written in the early eighties titled 'Political Pilgrims' by the sociologist Paul Hollander about Western intellectuals visiting The Soviet Union from the twenties through the fifties, looking for the utopia they so badly wanted to be real - and were blind to all the negative evidence and contradictions right in front of them. Hollander is not the best writer but the story of these visits carries the book.
What's grays book called
“The Neuropsychology of Anxiety.”
I got to go see some newborn leopard cubs at a nearby zoo with the kids. They were in a cot indoors. So, the way we we are primed by evolution to spot eyes and teeth, you can add claws to that :-). While we were completely focused on the little cubs in a corner of my vision i peripherally 'saw' a big claw sticking out from under the table behind me's table cloth and in that moment I had one of the most intense and physical fright experiences of my life. Consciously I knew they had some stuffed animals around but for a small fraction of a second that knowledge didn't matter. So thinking about how some of the optic nerves connect 'lower down' probably explains that. What I find interesting is that once I was aware of the specific stuffed adult lion under the table, I didn't keep getting the same fright reaction every time its huge claw entered the edges of my vision. So even though the higher order consciousness is slower it must also somehow suppress some of the baser 'circuits'...?
I just read about this from Robert Sapolsky's book BEHAVE. I believe he said that LEARNING fear primarily happens through the quick route (straight to the Basolateral Amygdala and the primary amygdala), and thus unconsciously, but UNlearning it is more of a conscious process, as in being done primarily in the frontal cortex (PFC if I've got this right).
Maybe the circuit of fear of social embarrassment and judgement suppressed your feeling of fear and having to jump away and thus making your brain have to look for other rational solutions and maybe that’s when it hit your memories and made you remember there’s a stuffed animal under the table
Maybe we have different fear circuits and some are stronger than others and have the power to suppress other ones, although I’m sure it’s depending on how you’ve lived that shapes our circuits (traumas..etc)
It can also be that you froze when you saw a sign of danger, and it happens to all of us, I’m not trying to make you feel weak.
Thanks, Dr Peterson. I listen to a lot of lectures on TH-cam, and so far yours are my favourite and most profoundly affecting.
I'm a musician, guitar teacher and Wizard from New Zealand. Psychology and Carl Jung factor hugely in my interactions with people.
You're a wizard? Wizard of Oz?
Genialne. Zwłaszcza druga połowa.
14:00papers
23:00 swanson lays out perfectly with peaget
36:00 driveway example of automatic control of the present and free will only for the future
End: Maya, people live in ilucions
Excellent lecture, as always.
Question though: Do you think it will ever be possible to understand personality through reductive terms? From this lecture you seem to be stating that there are a myriad of personality "subroutines" that are either running or that we consciously select. However, aren't all these "subroutines" running in concert? Doesn't each one play off the other and adapt and change based of the actions of other "subroutines"?
To complicate matters, isn't the whole body doing this? Or to take it to an extreme couldn't it be argued that all of nature is running these "subroutines" which interact with ours?
Just curious as to what your thoughts would be.
Thanks for the great video!
1,700 of the most common English words cover about 90% of a standard text (newspapers, easy novels, etc). High school graduates have a vocabulary of around 10,000 words. University grads around 30-50,000. Roughly.
thank you so much
The centipede dilemma @ ‘ 27:26 ‘
The centipede dilemma (or effect or phenomena) occurs when a normally automatic or unconscious activity is disrupted by consciousness of it or reflection on it.
The concept was developed after a poem in an article by a British zoologist, Ray Lankaster, which discussed the work of photographer Eadweard Muybridge in capturing the motion of animals.
Here’s the poem:
A centipede was happy - quite!
Until a toad in fun
Said, "Pray, which leg moves after which?"
This raised her doubts to such a pitch,
She fell exhausted in the ditch
Not knowing how to run.
What is Grays book called? Or what was his first name
i posted your joe rogan podcast on my facebook. all ready hearing good reviews from friends
I looked around and his name seems to be Jeffery Alan Gray. Think it is www.amazon.com/Neuropsychology-Anxiety-Functions-Septo-Hippocampal-Psychology/dp/0198522711/ref=la_B001HP6380_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1505843312&sr=1-1#customerReviews
Have yet to watch a JBP lecture that doesn’t absolutely amaze me
Wow, Thank you for posting these. What are all the Books/Papers/Sources?
His website has them all in Courses
I'm high in extraversion and neuroticism :'D hahahaha, shit. Love you Pete xoxox
Thought about the pianist reading music ahead of time. The same happens with DJing. On a vinyl record you learn to read the surface of the record. You can tell when a breakdown or verse is going to begin or end and you know how many bars it will be. Cool observation m8
Got a set of 1210s also 😁
thank you sir, much appreciated
I know I am 7 years too late but on the off chance you see this Dr Peterson at 17:20 you're recommending that the class read one of Swansons papers, I very interested in psychology & would love to read the paper you were referring to.
The syllabus is on his website
@@ZYYXYZY thank you💜
1:02:35 why people drink alcohol
I sound dumb for not realizing sooner but when doing 3D imagery for a job I never knew why sometimes it was like my brain separated the 3-4 images but now I think its about retina fatigue like he was saying about holding your eyes still, I think all my brain could do was show me what it knew was there instead of the stacked images with to many details
Audio goes silent for a little bit starting around 1:04:30
Can someone point me in the direction of where I can get the slides that he used for this?
58:20 why dont we have only hypotalamus if we can survive with it
Because human beings have for a long time went beyond the mere survival. We have evolved further than any other entities in our World so our brain adapted to it
Anyone know the particular paper, by Gray, Dr. Peterson is referencing? or is it part of his book (The Neuropsychology of Anxiety)
Indulge yourself
How common are stages of asphyxiation screened if one is limited to environmental contamination only..
Does anyone have the names/Info on the papers hes taking about at around 16:00?
Uh, the previous video didn't cover measuring . . . I'm confused. Was there a class between video 9 and 10?
I am confused too. Construct validation? When and in what lecture was it discussed?
56:20 anxiety is norm in some way in brutal nature
48:49 Cat brain, hypotalamus, exploreation, extroversion
There should be an experiment that learns the reflexive movements of animals and even insects 🐜
Are their limbs also connected to the spine?
Probably the case with most mammals
Are some lectures skipped in the series?
So are we saying that the cat without most of its brain is hyper- curious is so because the brain desires to become larger and more sophisticated? Like that brain knows it is supposed to be something more..?
Lack of knowledge leads to the aiming to gain knowledge (exploration). The cat was not capable of remembering things, "everything was as if it was the first time," so it would endlessly explore without being able to store the knowledge gained from that exploration. That's my understanding of it, anyway.
35:15 free will
Wasn’t the last lecture all about phenomenology? But he opens this one talking about “last time we talked about measurement.” Did I miss something?
@@misssarahashplant31 Well, that's not helpful at all. What did the last lecture on phenomenology have to do with measurement?
Miss Sarah Ashplant wow that was unhelpful and insulting. Thanks for not answering the question.
@@wingnut1grant University is difficult and it's not for everyone. It's especially the case with what Dr. Peterson teaches because he's not teaching a Mickey Mouse course like media studies or photography. Psychology and philosophy are difficult subjects and there's no shame in struggling to understand.
Anyway, ask a member of the God squad. Jesus loves everyone so I'm sure they'll be a bit nicer about it.
Miss Sarah Ashplant lol thx for the pointers.
I have a BS from UC Berkeley with a dual major in Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering, and an MS from UCLA in Structural Mechanics, with a 4.0GPA. In my undergrad I was also only 1 or 2 courses away from a minor in Psychology. Please don’t lecture me on “university is hard.” I’m not having any trouble understanding the material.
Was just an honest question asking others if they caught the material from the previous lecture on “measurement.” Maybe I missed it, and someone could provide a simple reminder to help. That’s all. No need to come in swinging with condescension, spewing insults and making assumptions about the intelligence and education of perfect strangers. Sad, honestly, that writing these replies is somehow reaffirming to you or gives you enough pleasure that you would spend your time on them. Does it make you feel big and important to inform random strangers of the futility of their efforts to understand all the high-minded secret knowledge to which you have access and they do not? Yikes. Good luck in life, Miss Assplant.
What you see is what you're aiming at.
What if my aim is to see everything?
whats the name of gray`s book?
Does anyone know where the papers Mr Peterson mentions might be available?
I believe they are all on his website under courses.
Thanks.
How do i look up that paper by Swanson?
I feel like I have met quite a few neurotic extroverts. He seems to describe them as opposites? Cant they exist simultaneously?
@Jack McCabeHave you thought about going to a leaping-house and having some fun with a night-worm? That might help to alleviate your anger. Daughters of the game are there to help!
1:15:20
What was weird for me on the second gorilla video was; I felt something wrong when the player left, but didn't understand why until the end of the video.
Still here.
It's NOT true that chess programs on home computers are 'better than everyone in this room'. My home chess computer is better than any human who's ever played. This was true in 2016. (Small Correction)
Is your chess computer better than Magnus Carlsen?
Alpha Zero and Stockfish are very good chess computers. I think Carlsen has come the closest to any chess player in history to thinking like a computer. He's something else altogether. I think his IQ is somewhere in the region of 145 which goes some way to explaining why he is so good at chess.
His success is even more notable considering Norway doesn't have a history of producing great chess players like Russia, China and India.
Can you send a link to Gray ' s paper ?
What is Gray ' s full name ?
I'd like to hear his opinion on the movie Inside Out.
Although they wrote books that are hard to dissect I still feel that writing isn’t enough, we need those people here and now and teaching the new people, face to face not book to face lol 😂
Bro go learn how to read man, it will really open up a whole new world for u
1:12:38 blind kids who can echo locate like ”clickers” in last of us
OMG he makes some statements that are just trippy because they are so on the nose but it can take a couple seconds to realize it.
40:59
👍
31:42
1:08:00 Cheshire Cat illusion
th-cam.com/video/w_RoDbP7nHc/w-d-xo.html
He looks so young and handsome
Next lecture - Bring Your Own Lobster
There goes the beard.
500? Pffft I only use four
"We're gonna talk about the brain today" really? I would've expected him to talk about quantum mechanics in a psychology class.
He does as well.
he sounds tense and angry.
The lecturer forgot to mention that the model has no biomarkers for any of its traits, as it was developed just using verbal descriptors. No, it was not well mapped into neurological circuits, please, professor, do your homework. A very weak lecture... The Big Five was pushed in the past 20 years into the throats of psychologists but in reality is a rather useless test... They took 2 scales from temperament research, 1 scale from intelligence research and 2 from social compliance characteristics, a bit here, a bit there but missed a lot of biologically-based traits... It is a very poor model but was advertised using all social power of McCrae and Costa, simply was pushed onto the market... Results - thousands were tested with rather empty outcomes, and predictive power is very weak, it can predict only what people already know. Big Five was used by Cambridge Analytica using the Facebook and dating agencies, to collect massive samples, without any consent of participants... Not very professional... But very efficient to promote the academic career of Big5-vers...
You haven't been around this channel long, have you?
Maybe watch a few more Jordan lectures. He goes into insane depth about the actual research. Telling JP to "do his research" is kind of hilarious actually. The dude is one of the most oft-cited scientists in his field.
Get the tin foil hat
44:20
38:14
14:20