Jordan Peterson Explains Free Will

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 ธ.ค. 2024

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  • @topheftyr533
    @topheftyr533 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +294

    I have always felt as though reality is not one or the other, but rather a mixture of both determinism and free will. I love how he essentially explained it as "The further out into the future you look, the more free will you see, and the closer things get the more deterministic they become."

    • @PhialSubstance
      @PhialSubstance 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      I see it more like one of those story books where you read a chapter then it says something like "if you open the door go to page 12, if you run away go to page 47". We have free will in the moment, but all of the possibilities are already written. It's like how a video game can have multiple endings depending on player choice. That's how I respond when people say "if you believe in predeterminism why do you look before crossing the road?". Because free will is both real _and_ non-existent. It's the illusion of choice.

    • @martinarooney228
      @martinarooney228 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      Without God we cannot see anything

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Free will doesn't exist. Only free experience

    • @blumousey
      @blumousey 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      ​@@theshushu7940if true, then you can never ethically justify punishing someone for their actions, or holding them to account for anything.

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@blumousey Exactly. You might think you're holding someone accountable but it was always going to happen regardless of what you think you decide. Your experiences good or bad are just that. We must have the illusion of free will for the experience to be authentic. Even what I write is no decision of my own, I made a mistake and it wiped out my whole message, that was not coincidence either. Sorry but the other point is that holding someone accountable is part of the illusion and will happen or not regardless of what you think about the situation.

  • @smakadace
    @smakadace 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +287

    "If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice"

    • @RJ-ie8cc
      @RJ-ie8cc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      don’t agree with all of their ideas, but love rush ✌️

    • @odavis1364
      @odavis1364 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The philosophers that predated Jordan Petersen…. Rush

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      That doesn't mean that's your choice though does it. It's just your mind going "oh yea i seem to be going in this direction so guess i'll make my choice to go this direction." You get it? If you understand light it all makes more sense, we're literally only seeing and experiencing the past.

    • @alterego157
      @alterego157 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@theshushu7940 "That doesn't mean that's your choice though does it."
      It does. Because choice by definition means the power to select A or B, or XYZ. If you have the power, the only other remaining variable is the will. If you chose the path A, means you had the power to do so, and it was your will to do so.

    • @Knight766
      @Knight766 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@alterego157 False. You didn't create or have any control over the framework in which so called "decisions" emerge. This is evident in people who are intoxicated, mentally impaired, brain damaged or under general anesthetic.

  • @kyleolin3566
    @kyleolin3566 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

    “Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”
    Viktor E. Frankl

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @King-oj8hr
      @King-oj8hr 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      In that space would only be space. Time ….. would really be “in that time is how we choose to power our response”

  • @niguel4438
    @niguel4438 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    I took this to heart. Woke up, got up and stubbed my bloody toe on the furniture. So much for that theory!!

    • @petersc1000
      @petersc1000 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      Well if you had just cleaned your room.....

    • @niguel4438
      @niguel4438 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@petersc1000 🤣👍

  • @DIPLOMATCENTER
    @DIPLOMATCENTER 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +34

    In the most fundamental extreme it can be best put that we do not posses our minds but it possesses us and we are lead by whatever informs the mind.
    If therefore we claim to be conscious, that is to be aware and the watcher of our minds, we will be careful enough to plant the right programs that has the better chances of contending with the unmapped territory of the unknown future with courage and security to manifest potentials and possibilities in actuality…this then is participating in moving the society forward and upwards Jacobs ladder.
    Thank you Jordan Peterson.

    • @Sorenthaz
      @Sorenthaz 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yep that fits in with other teachings that the mind, or ego - the thing we build up over our life experiences to interface with the world around us, is essentially a false self, but it is a part of what makes us human beings. Strip away the mind and the body and the soul - or simply "being" - is still there. And that is what observes the thinking, observes the body's movements and interactions and experiences. And if we can tap into that deeper truer sense of self, and align our choices more with it, then we stop caring so much about outcomes and uncertainties because we are secure in that which is connected to everything, and we gain this deeper knowing that everything that happens to us is meant to build us up and deepen our union with creation and existence. Obviously in Christianity this would be thanks to the Holy Spirit, aka God's Spirit, which He puts in us to erase all obstacles (and thus the mind and its machinations serve as illusory obstacles) between us and Him upon accepting Christ as our savior and king. But I suppose if one wants to avoid that rabbit hole, it's that one learns how to better coexist and unify with all that is.

    • @64bluegrass
      @64bluegrass 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We are not our “minds?” Most of human history saw the word “mind” as a verb as in “minding the store.” Only after the Enlightenment did the word “mind” become a noun replacing the word “soul.” A great book is The Meaning of Mind by Thomas Szasz. I highly recommend it.

    • @Raadpensionaris
      @Raadpensionaris 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@64bluegrass We are pur brain

    • @DIPLOMATCENTER
      @DIPLOMATCENTER 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@64bluegrass Thank you 😊,
      I’m addicted to books about the mind because of my journey to revolutionize the mind of African youths so we come out of dependence to creativity.
      I hope you’ll be able to engage in a discuss because I will get the pdf tonight if it’s available👑

    • @64bluegrass
      @64bluegrass 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Raadpensionaris Well, consider this: if I say I’ve “lost my mind,” would that mean I’ve lost my brain? Mind is a metaphor, there is no “mind,” only persons.

  • @cerealdude890
    @cerealdude890 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +102

    When he starts with “the universe is not deterministic, there isn’t any dispute about that”, how am I supposed to take the rest seriously? I see people dispute that claim all the time.

    • @plotofland2928
      @plotofland2928 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Of course the universe is deterministic lol, anything else implies magic somehow magically outside a the cause and effect chain.

    • @Sam-d7m8w
      @Sam-d7m8w 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@plotofland2928 If all things are within a cause and effect chain then the universe itself makes no sense to me. Where is the terminus? "Always was" doesn't fit within a cause and effect chain.
      It's irrelevant whether the universe is deterministic or indeterministic. Indeterminism doesn't result in free will. As opposed to choices being determined then choices becomes random.
      However, the belief that your choices are determined and that you can't will things, whether or not it's true, results in worse outcomes. Some Christians believe even your very willpower to do the right thing is through the grace of god. Some are destined for hell and others destined for heaven. You're an observer of a piece of art that you're a part of.

    • @plotofland2928
      @plotofland2928 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Sam-d7m8w I mostly agree with you, especially the last paragraph.
      The universe seems to work by cause and effect although that does sort of imply that there was a "beginning" to this process which doesn't really make sense.
      Indeterminism doesn't result in free will but does indeterminism really exist anyway? If the world is indeterministic, that can only mean that certain things are random but does randomness actually exist or is it just unexplained or not yet understood cause and effect? Take rolling a dice: The result is not random, it is just influenced by so many factors that humans playing monopoly or Yahtzee cannot predict or control these factors. Randomness on an absolute true level does not make any sense. It is akin to magic.

    • @Sam-d7m8w
      @Sam-d7m8w 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@plotofland2928 Some things are determined since from moment to moment we experience them. In the domain of consciousness there may be randomness influencing our decisions. He's generally right about us not being like a clockwork machine. We have qualities that are very different. E.g color perception. Just as we can't describe color yet it's an ability we have. We can train a robot to detect a certain wavelength and call it blue but the robot wouldn't necessarily experience what we experience. It's detecting a quantity not experiencing a quality.
      None of that would escape the dichotomy of determinacy or indeterminacy both of which don't allow for "free will" in some sense of the word. Indeterminacy maybe gets closer to "free" as in unrestrained but when people say "free will" they mean ultimately as an agent "they" decide. Not because of a random number generator or a script written by god.
      He knows all this though. He also knows that people tend to function more poorly when they believe they lack autonomy in the ultimate sense. Especially stupid people. I think so much of what he says is a kind of paternalism for stupid people.

    • @thomascromwell6840
      @thomascromwell6840 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@Sam-d7m8wSo acceptance of truth depends on your convenience. Well that explains a lot about Christian conservatives and JP fans.
      Who cares about the truth? We will believe whatever is good for us. No matter how immoral and false it is.

  • @pz3j
    @pz3j 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    I'm grateful for you doc! You've helped me hone my moral compass on truth. We love you brother. Stay the course!

    • @iwenolongertrustliars9396
      @iwenolongertrustliars9396 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Isn't it interesting how the more people explore finding the truth of life on earth, sanity and ethics that the more attacks come from slave classism owners / controllers and their bribed helpers. Then when the attacks fail they go covert with them as these being exposed publicly shows people the evil control freaks run societies we live in.
      Finally on another note the amount of making money scams in advertisements online is appaling, annoying and criminal. Showing the extreme greed and lack of honest accountability towards the slavery system helpers while everyone else gets attacked for telling more truth that is a totally incorrect accountability against the decent saner people. Backwards and upside down to morals and ethics finally changing from the saner people pushing back in recent years

    • @fullyawakened
      @fullyawakened 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Oooof. this comment is reminds me of a creationist telling his preacher how much they love him for revealing the truth of jesus lol.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@fullyawakened nail on head

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fullyawakened Ooooof. This reply's false equivalence is a biiiig yikes.

    • @fullyawakened
      @fullyawakened 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@AppleOfThineEye apologies if that straight forward analogy was way over your head lmao

  • @Simon53188
    @Simon53188 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

    'Well, it depends on what you mean by 'free' and what you mean by 'will' 😂😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

    • @Messianic-Gentile
      @Messianic-Gentile 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Well, it does depend on those things…

    • @Simon53188
      @Simon53188 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @Messianic-Gentile 🤣😂🤣🤣😂🤣😂 it's such a JP sentence

    • @amibrainwashed
      @amibrainwashed 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      It does get a bit old hearing that, but making these distinctions early on is important in order to solidify the idea your trying to discuss, especially when we live in a world rampant with post modernist sophists that like to use language in a way that redefines words to fit their worldview when it doesn't align with reality. When you solidify the meaning of words, it makes it that much harder for someone who might disagree with you to engage in motte and bailey type argumentation.

    • @Simon53188
      @Simon53188 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @amibrainwashed I agree with you. My issue with him now is that he can never seem to give a straight answer. I love his psychology work, his lectures on personality, the Big 5 specifically. It was his debates with Sam Harris and recently with the Islamic chap and that meme started kicking about that really made me laugh. It just seems like a cheap evasion tactic to me. I liked when Dawkins called out some of the things he was saying, he even asks him why he keeps jumping from subject to subject. He's no doubt an intelligent and interesting man, but I think evading questions and sometimes changing the definitions of what some words mean is somewhat hypocritical.

    • @greghefley3626
      @greghefley3626 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I​@@Simon53188I see ur profile pic. Do you watch the punisher?

  • @glennvengroff7235
    @glennvengroff7235 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    You absolutely Chushed it!
    Best answer Ever!

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @epicboiee6176
      @epicboiee6176 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​​​​@@insanetubegain For long such realities are questioned, where prespective and it's popularity are present within aggregation and of prevalence in instances it's no wonder the prominance such realities hold in our lives. But contrary to your point, ive found an inference we can make within the bible. The bible relies on the fundamental that is context to infer authenticity. Now as the bible says, there mentions that the fact that God never lies and that he's just. As seen in Genesis 18, it tells a time where God was planning to dedtroy the city of Sodom, but then bargained with Abraham to then spare them if 10 righteous people are indeed there, and that absence free will within all holds such great prominece as to be in complete contradictory contrast, de-justifying God's actions, and every pain, suffering, scream, torture, happiness that has ever occured within history. With that reality in mind it's seems that correlation between his omniscience, and our decisions isnt constricted to a single outcome, that he sees the outcome of our every choices and that we indeed are free beings, with free choices.

    • @VVooshbait
      @VVooshbait 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@insanetubegain I really do not want to personally attack you but if you actually read the bible you would know Hell is not a place of eternal torture nor is it any place at all. Hell is a state of being, the ultimate death. God creates you, when he creates you, even if he knows you won't live eternally with him, he doesn't just outright kill you, because he values the short mortal life you will have as well. That's the reason he even created you, to live. He only just gives you a choice to live eternally because that's what he thinks you should be able to do.
      If God is already making a consciousness, I am sure he knew there was a possibility that consciousness might not get along with the idea of eternal life, so instead of eternal life being a default setting, it's a choice. If you don't choose eternal life, you just die once and for all, no such thing as eternal torture.

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@VVooshbait You have apparently never read the Bible. Jesus doesn’t only reference hell, he describes it in great detail. He says it is a place of eternal torment (Luke 16:23), of unquenchable fire (Mark 9:43), where the worm does not die (Mark 9:48), where people will gnash their teeth in anguish and regret (Matt. 13:42), and from which there is no return, even to warn loved ones (Luke 16:19-31). He calls hell a place of “outer darkness” (Matt. 25:30), comparing it to “Gehenna” (Matt. 10:28), which was a trash dump outside the walls of Jerusalem where rubbish was burned and maggots abounded. Jesus talks about hell more than he talks about heaven, and describes it more vividly. There’s no denying that Jesus knew, believed, and warned about the absolute reality of hell.

  • @Baes_Theorem
    @Baes_Theorem 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    Pretty much everything he said can be true, that still doesn't get us to free will. Seems like he's addressing something fundamentally different than what most people define as "the ability to have done otherwise".

    • @Boykot1
      @Boykot1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      You choose if you want to walk with god, nothing is forcing you, not even god.
      Many argue that it is forced, and have a lot of different arguments about why.
      What he explains is that nothing you do is as pre-determined and controlled as 'something without free will'.
      Like any type of machine, a clock or an engine. They are forced to do that, no way around it, if so, it breaks.
      Arguments common here is that it's indirectly forced, being that you can't do whatever you want and still get to paradise/heaven.
      If you dont want God as you friend, it would be foolish of him to force you to be that, wouldn't it?
      It is pretty complex in of itself, but this is basically what it is all about.
      You'd be a resentful friend, not a good friendship.
      You get to choose, but you do not get to choose the outcome.
      Politicians prove this to me every day.
      Their action was to preserve and protect, help and sanctify, but ends in big arguments.
      Blame others, sure.
      You choose.
      Whatever arguments to go around it is not the narrow path.
      That is why belief lies in actions and not words.
      It is what you do, not what you wish for.
      What is forcing you, if not your own mentality?
      Knowing that the things you do may be wrong, but you don't want them to be, and make excuses to do them anyway.
      This applies to me at least, and I don't see it being different for anyone else.
      Kinda reminds me of Peter Pan and all that, living in a fantasy.
      You choose that, you get the outcome it gives.
      Up to you, isn't it?
      Outside factors being a thing you cannot control, you have to play the hand you've gotten.
      These are the ones you got, those are the ones they got, you can't steal others.
      I am not perfect at all(!), mind you, I am not here to point fingers and ''tell you'', I just wanted to share my point of view around this.

    • @gins8781
      @gins8781 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      “Whatever arguments to go around it is not the narrow path…..That is why belief lies in actions and not words. In other words; ” Faith without works is dead.” - James 2:26

    • @Baes_Theorem
      @Baes_Theorem 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Boykot1 I'm not sure what god has to do with this; both myself and Jordan Peterson are atheists.
      In any case, you can talk about the importance of your mentality, but you don't get to choose your mentality. You don't choose what mentalities compel you, or why they compel you. You don't get to choose how easy it is to adopt particular mentalities, or which ones appear to you. You are entirely a slave to your brain states and the environment you inhabit.

    • @Baes_Theorem
      @Baes_Theorem 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@ConcedoNulli Agency is not the same thing as free will. Agency is the ability to make models of the future and act in such a way that they come about or do not come about. However, that doesn't tell us whether we were *free* to make those particular models or take those particular actions.
      In the same way, you can absolutely choose to defy one urge you have, such as the desire to eat when you are hungry, but that still doesn't mean you were free to do so. You were still moved by an inclination which you did not choose to have, nor did you choose to be moved by it.

    • @Aditya1998pandey
      @Aditya1998pandey 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You've only proven that what you're calling free will is merely an illusion.@@ConcedoNulli

  • @OdurMartin
    @OdurMartin 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    What do u see when u wake in your room in the morning? I've honestly seen furniture...... never realised that 'possibility of the day' was right there waiting 4 me to interact with it! That's an eye opener 4 me.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What you "see" is largely determined by your current intentions. Your brain interprets the signals from your eyes and presents you with the elements that are most important to you at that moment. If you are trying to quickly traverse a room, furniture is largely "obstacles between me and the door", perhaps subdivided into "obstacles I have to avoid", "obstacles I can brush out of the way" and "obstacles I can step over".

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I assume that's tongue in cheek? Because the first thing I always think of is what my day holds or at least I wonder what is on the schedule for the day. Haven't you ever woke up mulling over something that you know is going to happen that day...eg an outing, an interview, an obligation/deadline?

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@rizdekd3912 what do you think Peterson was thinking when he lost his licence for claiming his training supports denigrating people he doesn't like?
      I think of BPD, with probably some NPD. Being a white guy with those features, makes it sometimes easier to advance a career.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jesipohl6717 "what do you think Peterson was thinking when he lost his licence for claiming his training supports denigrating people he doesn't like?"
      I would imagine someone losing their license would feel disconcerted and frustrated. He may feel chagrined or angry or like he was unfairly treated. I don't know. But I don't understand how that relates to my comment.

    • @chibibar
      @chibibar 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@rizdekd3912 It could be that but the awesome thing (depending on how you look at it) each person look at the potential and deal with it differently. The younger would probably think about what going in school (class, homework, potential love interest, upcoming date) or adult (work, workload, how to pay the bills)
      How we tackle each day might be a pattern (clock in, clock out, get paycheck) but others may do that AND try to figure out way to make more money (hopefully legally ;) )
      now as for Dr. Peterson losing his license, he said he does not affect him AS much today. He can do talks and streaming like normal.

  • @yudoball
    @yudoball 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    4:00 "you are not a clockwork machine driven by stimulus"
    I think the less conscious a person is the more that person is driven by stimuli

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It may be the case but every human being is conscious to some degree.

    • @MichaelWestgate
      @MichaelWestgate 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I would add that the more traumatized the person is the less free will they have. trauma rewires the nervous system to be very affected by everything around you rather than having any sort of choice.

    • @martinburrows6844
      @martinburrows6844 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      ​@@MichaelWestgatewe can be very reactionary creatures when operating on our instinct to survive. When we feel we are safe, we then can reflect and reason and logic etc.

    • @shinybird5204
      @shinybird5204 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@MichaelWestgate But we must consider each individuals level of self-consciousness regarding how their trauma affects them. Some people can look at themselves in the third person and recognize their behavior has changed but others seem less able.
      We could argue that those who become self-aware weren’t as traumatized in the first place but then we run into the problem of forcing our interpretation on somebody else’s experience. Idk tho

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You all are so right and so smart I wish I could hang with you guys. I appreciate your contributions and thinking process. Nice to read and to have been a part of this simple conversation. Thank you. Made my day.

  • @gregorywitcher5618
    @gregorywitcher5618 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

    As always, you are brilliant Dr. Peterson, but, it is the seeing of you and your bride together that is the real treat for me. Y’all are adorable. Some say adoration ought be reserved for Christ alone. To them I say: Well when a couple, their relationship itself aims at embodying The Logos, how could they NOT be adorable?
    May God grant you many many many years!!!
    ✝️☦️✝️

    • @Doug-tp1jp
      @Doug-tp1jp 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I was fortunate enough to have a "meet & greet" with both of them. It's so obvious that they love each other and that he deeply respects her.

    • @gregorywitcher5618
      @gregorywitcher5618 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@Doug-tp1jp I want to respond with a Napoleon Dynamite huffing “Lucky…” .gif, but, alas, I cannot.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@gregorywitcher5618 that actor hates Jordan Peterson

    • @gregorywitcher5618
      @gregorywitcher5618 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@jesipohl6717 does this look like the face that gives a flip? Hell to the Naw…

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @kaislate
    @kaislate 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I havent been able to find it since, but i remember it being explained as two trains on parallel tracks that exactly run parallel forever no matter which way they turn. One track is free will and one track is determinism.
    In other words you have free will... But it also so happens that you will make the same choices no matter what.

    • @pauljohnson6019
      @pauljohnson6019 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That's contradictory, if you have free will, you can't make the same choice all the time- if so you're basically an automaton, which makes no sense, if God has already programmed you, the argument will be, what's the point of repenting anyway, if God already knows, whatever you do, you are destined for hell, doesn't make sense at all.

    • @kaislate
      @kaislate 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pauljohnson6019 I think it was said best when God was talking with Bender

    • @kaislate
      @kaislate 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      There are concepts that are beyond the scope of this conversation, but to give you a direction to go with I'll say this.
      Our experience of time is a symptom of our limitations. Our limitations are set because of a need for an all powerful being to desire to k ow himself. Once that desire manifested limitation was created... which in turn manifested everything down to where we are now.
      Back to time though. Our limitation of experiencing time linearly is only our perception. All time happens at once. Everything that has happened will happen, everything that will happen has happened, as well as all of it is currently happening. This is a concept that takes some dedication to understand as with most metaphysics.
      These are some things that will help with understanding "free-will" as it is often misdefined therefore misunderstood.

  • @RealCoachRonn
    @RealCoachRonn 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Yes Doc! We, humans, are visionaries; constantly and yet unaware of it. In this we are "free" but imprisoned by the idea or false notion of predetermined event. 🎯😲🔥🔥🔥🔥💡

  • @arrgylerawrgyle3784
    @arrgylerawrgyle3784 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    We operate as though we have free will, even if the universe is deterministic. We dont have perfect knowledge, let alone sufficient limited knowledge. Even if it is merely the story we form to justify deterministic actions, that story is free.

    • @pyros4333
      @pyros4333 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      The universe isn't deterministic either lol

    • @arrgylerawrgyle3784
      @arrgylerawrgyle3784 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@pyros4333 maybe re-read what I said.

    • @sammesingson7584
      @sammesingson7584 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It is, we just can never know what is determined infinitely. So free will is like money, it exist but conventionally​@@pyros4333

    • @pyros4333
      @pyros4333 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@arrgylerawrgyle3784 no I rather not. My universe is free of your will

    • @-.-Rob-.-XY
      @-.-Rob-.-XY 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The only reason we can’t predict every event in every place at any time is insufficient knowledge

  • @SpiritualLife999
    @SpiritualLife999 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Loving your voice in the world. You inspired me (and I'm sure many tens of thousands more, at least) to be a better person in an ethical way and contribute to the world... much love and respect xx

    • @petehoward8494
      @petehoward8494 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes, JP can inspire you and make you think, at the same time.

    • @me1ody69
      @me1ody69 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Lmao this has to be a joke

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @InfoArtistJKatTheGoodInfoCafe
    @InfoArtistJKatTheGoodInfoCafe 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I like his free will blazer. "I'm free to be two colors if I want."

  • @TycoVai
    @TycoVai 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I believe that it is both Freewill and Predestination at the same time. Humans have no idea how this can be.

    • @flymoolahman2763
      @flymoolahman2763 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Or maybe, we haven't figured out a way to express it soundly just quite yet.

    • @martinburrows6844
      @martinburrows6844 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sneezing is not free will. Using my hand or handkerchief or not, is the free part (albeit socially influenced)

    • @TheGiantMidget
      @TheGiantMidget 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Those are literally polar opposites you can't believe in both. You are trying to have your cake and eat it too. If we have free will then the future is completely chaotic and has no destination

    • @elizabethl6187
      @elizabethl6187 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      My current working theory is that God allows us free will, while using His complete mastery of what we call Chaos Theory, able to bring about His goals regardless of our decisions.
      We also fail (understandably) to see how He operates outside of our linear time. He can tweak any part of the story at any point.
      It’s because He wants to evoke a response of real love, freely given. Automatons are not fit for purpose.

    • @SupachargedGaming
      @SupachargedGaming 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Any "theory" that includes a god, or anything else supernatural, is a fiction not a theory. Use the evidence you have available, don't make extraordinary claims such as god unless you have extraordinary evidence to back it up.@@elizabethl6187

  • @joerogan3079
    @joerogan3079 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    *BEST ADVISE I EVER HEARD:*
    *"DON'T LISTEN TO THE WORDS OF FOOLS, LISTEN TO THE GREAT MASTERS"*

    • @nickf2657
      @nickf2657 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well, there is only one master. This idea that there are masters takes away from the rightful master. The one true God.

    • @adayah2933
      @adayah2933 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I have another deep advice for you: always do the right thing. And never do the wrong thing. You're welcome. 😊

    • @MelissaR784
      @MelissaR784 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@adayah2933Think that's called having integrated. Doing the right thing, because it's the right thing to do.

    • @robertjsmith
      @robertjsmith 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Fools believe what they think,not what they see
      The wise believe what they see not what they think. Huang Po

  • @gingerkonnis9448
    @gingerkonnis9448 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    We are bound by the limitations of our individual brains mixed with our life’s experiences. Mic drop!

    • @BlandBandit
      @BlandBandit 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      And genetics but I suppose that fits under the individual brains bit

  • @jeanfoutre3620
    @jeanfoutre3620 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +35

    The dude is a precious diamond. Protect him at all costs. Society needs more people like him. I could understand (although i don't agree with) someone that feels absolutely unconcerned about what he has to say. But when people attack him, ever single time, they have dark political objectives under their sleeves.

    • @michaelwright8896
      @michaelwright8896 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      No, they attack him when he is wrong and he usually is.

    • @narendrasomawat5978
      @narendrasomawat5978 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@michaelwright8896no he's not. But people can be wrong he's not god but he still makes a lot of sense.

    • @michaelwright8896
      @michaelwright8896 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@narendrasomawat5978 He is usually wrong.

    • @jesipohl6717
      @jesipohl6717 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@narendrasomawat5978he's so wrong he lost his licence to practice therapy trying to claim torture in therapy was OK.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ^That wasn't why he lost his license(*), lol

  • @rembeadgc
    @rembeadgc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Let me join the chorus here...
    "Free will" is obviously not something you can touch or put under a microscope. It seems more of a state of consciousness where the individual soul inhabits a state of undetermined possibility. The degree to which we are inhabiting it, I believe only God can observe, but it exists. Otherwise the concept of accountability would be meaningless.
    I believe this is why the example of faith needing not being of comparatively significant material size (mustard seed) is appropriate. The future is to be met with faith enough to move the direction of a part of your soul that seems so small that you can't even "put your finger on it".

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The complete opposite in fact, you must surrender all to God and only then will you experience faith and freedom. If you believe in God I don't understand how you can paradoxically say you have free will and yet God is the alpha and omega. Besides which science has pretty much proven that we only experience things in the past and can only react. As to why God gave us the illusion of free will it's pretty obvious isn't it? Otherwise the experience wouldn't feel very authentic now would it. There is nothing to be accountable for, we are all God and will return, nothing happens on earth or heaven without the will of God, even "evil". Once you understand these things you will know that good and evil don't exist as God has formed everything to our benefit. Our suffering isn't real and neither is our joy. It only is as has been willed. Nothing happens without God's say so isn't that so?

    • @rembeadgc
      @rembeadgc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@theshushu7940 You must have faith before you can surrender to anything. Why would you surrender unless you trusted in the benefit of doing so? What then is the purpose of faith if you are not allowed a measure of freedom to exercise it? Scripture clearly outlines these parameters throughout the writing of all its authors and it is inherent in the propositional nature of the entire biblical record... not to mention being evident in man's natural understanding of himself and the universe.
      Some of what you are saying is true but it has to be understood with the correct framework. Your presentation is a bit convoluted and means to me that it is still in formation. God is the author of meaning and reality. God is not the creator of evil as evil is not a created thing. It is a state that exists in the absence of righteousness and holiness. It's purpose is in its relevance to our experience and relationship to God. That is as real as it needs to be and so is our experience of it. It clearly has purpose and effect, whether one believes it or not.
      i think Peterson described the parameters of what we call free will aptly.

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That’s because accountability is meaningless. Coming from my subjective experience, the mind and brian are not separate they are one in the same. Not trying to change your opinion, I just disagree.

    • @GabrielMillen
      @GabrielMillen 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@insanetubegainthat is true under classical theism. This view of theism was incorporated into christian thought by neo-platonist theologians like Augustine. And it actually aligns very poorly with literal reading of the narrative biblical texts. It also seems to go against the randomness of recent quantum physics (think past 10 years). I’d recommend looking into Open Theism. In my opinion it comports better to the biblical texts and is being vindicated by the most scientific research.

  • @formerjw3874
    @formerjw3874 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Everything we are is defined by what we are not. What we used to be or what we never were.
    Every choice we make, every outcome we experience is an opportunity to establish what and where we are or to bring into bold relief where we are lacking.
    To me free will is simply the opportunity to engage in this process of self evaluation and self creation.
    I see it as a collaborative effort between us and our Creator and serves us both as we engage in the eternal adventure of self realization.
    To think of it otherwise would make life essentially pointless.

    • @Misha0013
      @Misha0013 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Self is illusion. Have fun :)

  • @Mangolorian-je3eo
    @Mangolorian-je3eo 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    JP’s brain: (complex deterministic philosophy)
    My brain: “Why is he dressed like Two-Face?”

  • @peterdrysdale2602
    @peterdrysdale2602 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    A brilliant exposition of what distinguishes our humanity from everything else .., long live free will!! And more power to you JP!!

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @idratherstayanonimous7020
    @idratherstayanonimous7020 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I agree that perception is reality, totally. Not so long ago i was on a car and i just looked at the streets and i understood that everything i was seeing was amorphous and none-sensical, in modern terms ''absurd''. I understood that i was the interpreter, we are interpreters of that nonesensical reality, and that's our task. Matter shapes the Psyque, Psyque shapes Matter. As above, so below. In free will, a secret determinism. In determinism, a secret free will. I think our free will resides on the capacity to surrender to our task and embrace whatever life throw at us. Free will is an act of love, not of Will to Power. Or may be both, i just know i know nothing.

    • @Doug-tp1jp
      @Doug-tp1jp 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Don't be so hard on yourself. You had no choice except to know that you know nothing.

    • @jorgeserrano6295
      @jorgeserrano6295 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I love the part about matter shapes psyche, thus psyche must shape matter. Incredible

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Perception is not reality. None of this is real. Neither is any form of free will. We do not shape anything, we merely follow the algorithm and experience things. You think surrendering to your task is your choice? It's already been made for you if you accept the truth or not. Even what I say here is already been written and I have no control over this even if I know you are an illusion also and my words are pointless.

    • @zorkabiljecki7408
      @zorkabiljecki7408 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well put! Extraordinary! Especially when you actually used word - secret, both ways.

    • @bvokey8842
      @bvokey8842 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Or you might say, free will resides on the capacity to surrender to, and embrace, our purpose. In that regard, we’re free only to the extent that we move toward our purpose. And you could say our purpose is to move toward love - which by doing so we inevitably give glory to God.
      In contrast, when we’re not surrendering to or embracing what life throws at us, with love, we necessarily move away from our purpose and instead toward a form of enslavement in that we’re stuck dwelling on things which we know are detrimental to our wellbeing. That’s the opposite of freedom - trying to be, or move toward, something that we’re not made for.

  • @AnonymousWon-uu5yn
    @AnonymousWon-uu5yn 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    People are forced to think and do the types of things that their type of genetics and their types of life experiences program them to think and do throughout their life. Who and how someone happens to be is an extremely unfair unjust lottery that is dependent on what type of genetics that they happen to have and depending on what types of life experiences they happen to have throughout their life.

  • @peterv7258
    @peterv7258 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I contacted a lawyer about having some estate planning paperwork done. That was when I found out that there is no free will. 🙂

    • @Ashtor1337
      @Ashtor1337 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @terranaut3314
      @terranaut3314 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yeah, but some academic in some university said that the entire universe is deterministic even though they have spent their entire life couped up in a lab... on earth... not even talking to people

    • @terranaut3314
      @terranaut3314 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah, but some academic in some university said that the entire universe is deterministic even though they have spent their entire life couped up in a lab... on earth... not even talking to people

    • @terranaut3314
      @terranaut3314 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yeah, but some academic in some university said that the entire universe is deterministic even though they have spent their entire life couped up in a lab... on earth... not even talking to people

  • @ab2774-k6i
    @ab2774-k6i 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I wake up with the exact same thoughts. My goal for the day and the obstacles. My goal may be preset but I have no power over the obstacles.

  • @sigigle
    @sigigle 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

    "the difficulty in predicting the future means it's not deterministic"
    lul wut.

    • @Baes_Theorem
      @Baes_Theorem 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Exactly. Our epistemic state has zero bearing on whether we are the author of our choices.

    • @derekdurst2146
      @derekdurst2146 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      NO! It is only "difficult" because it is complicated.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@derekdurst2146
      "NO! It is only "difficult" because it is complicated."
      I'm not sure who you're responding to, but that's not the only reason we couldn't predict the future based on the current arrangement of matter/energy if, that is, one buys into quantum indeterminacy. IF there is an indeterminate feature of quantum mechanics, it likely means that no matter how much we know about the arrangement of the physical world and the processes, we still could not calculate the future including decisions.

    • @derekdurst2146
      @derekdurst2146 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@rizdekd3912 If we had a big enough computer, sure we could, absolutely!

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@derekdurst2146 "If we had a big enough computer, sure we could, absolutely!"
      Do you not agree with the idea of quantum indeterminacy?

  • @parko246
    @parko246 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Was this in Brisbane? I remember this

    • @nf6386
      @nf6386 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I was thinking Melbourne, where I saw him wear that suit at least. But then I watched recordings of the other Aussie events, so can’t remember which Q&A was which. Hope he makes it back here!

  • @titusbaum9690
    @titusbaum9690 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Wondering about free will's existence is actually so stupid it basically proves that it exists. Since it is apparently unprovable, what can it matter? It is clearly profitable for your mentality to believe that you can effect change in the world - put post-modernly, "believe in yourself". To accept anything other makes you not an agent but a tool.
    So you can embrace toolhood, or simply tell the world you are an agent and in so doing be one. And since we see around us a great body of men and women who are apparently agents, and some who seem to be tools, what shall we say? That all the agents are merely tools too? No. We shall say it as it is. We may choose either role, and in so doing we display the capacity to choose, thus becoming an agent. And so, no tools remain. And the circle continues. Hence, we conclude, we must take the answer at least partially on faith. In the absence of evidence, one may reserve judgement I suppose, but in this case, I think it's fine to just say that you do.

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @kamaltahir6440
      @kamaltahir6440 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@insanetubegainGod knowing what will happen and God forcing you on that path as in he writes you will do this and you do it are two different things. God has the knowledge of all the possibilities and he knows you're gonna take certain paths based on your free will and IT is written. He does not force you. Big difference

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@kamaltahir6440 People can and do believe things that aren't true. On that fact, I need more than someone's feelings or what some old book says, that needs faith to be believed. In my mind it is being gullible to believe only on feelings and faith. I have never seen or felt anything supernatural and until then I will not be gullible. Besides I read the Bible and if it's true, the God of Abraham is a monster that murders the first born and commits genocide among numerous other atrocities. The god in the Old Testament is the same god of the New Testament.

  • @BLAISEDAHL96
    @BLAISEDAHL96 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What location was this from Jordan’s tour? Could that information be included in the description?

  • @tiffanytimbric
    @tiffanytimbric 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    That was the most wonderful answer I ever have heard.

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
    @REDPUMPERNICKEL 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Free will...
    Free is unconstrained.
    Will is the label for one's wanting thoughts,
    I want to do this, I want to have that, etc.
    Thus free will is simply unconstrained wants.
    Why I want what I want is a different and very interesting question.
    Since the source of all one's conscious thoughts is one's unconscious
    we have the proximate answer.
    How one's unconscious becomes stocked is
    very largely one's experience of culture and
    it is this experience that constitutes the more distant answer.

  • @jrtodd-br4zc
    @jrtodd-br4zc 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    The amount of truth and light this dude is dropping here is genuinely shocking

    • @Christ60
      @Christ60 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      It’s amazing

    • @fredjimbob2962
      @fredjimbob2962 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It sounded like a load of nonsense to me.
      "The universe is not deterministic, technically speaking. There isn't any dispute about that." This statement is completely false. We have no evidence to say whether it's deterministic or not.
      "You're not a clockwork machine. And the reason that we know that is because a clockwork machine can't compute the transforming horizon of the future." This is just meaningless word salad which he doesn't even attempt to explain.
      Even if the universe isn't deterministic, that in no way implies that free will exists. And that's to say nothing of the fact that nobody has ever come up with any coherent definition of free will, and certainly not Peterson. Free will does not and can not exist because the concept itself is incoherent and self contradictory.

    • @Christ60
      @Christ60 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@fredjimbob2962 free will exists, even if it’s a small amount it exists cuz if it didn’t none of these things in this life would exist. God has given us free will because it’s the only way we can exist as a species

    • @fredjimbob2962
      @fredjimbob2962 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Christ60 Ok, well if you believe in the old man in the sky, then you'll believe anything and I guess there's not much point in us discussing free will.

    • @Christ60
      @Christ60 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fredjimbob2962 I believe what I believe you believe what you believe, but Jesus Christ is realer than all things of this world and he suffered and died for our sakes, was buried and rose again, I wish you a blessed day🩸🙏

  • @MiamiV14
    @MiamiV14 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Absolutely correct, and if you don't understand, you need to watch a few more times. There's only two "choices" in this world, and he does give choice a very fair representation, but shuts it down with the justification that you ultimately have 2 paths. When you choose to believe there is no good or evil, you have ruined yourself for eternity.

  • @deborahbeeton3634
    @deborahbeeton3634 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    So glad I listened to my man Rush Limbaugh from the beginning ( RIP) He specifically told his audience long ago that this man is a brilliant glittering gem of wisdom and truth! Little did I know, as I first was introduced to his book 12 rules for life, Rush was Right!!! Now this man is one who I follow closely and learn from him each time I hear him speak!!!

    • @bricaaron3978
      @bricaaron3978 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Rush? Really? How long ago was that?

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @bricaaron3978
      @bricaaron3978 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@insanetubegain *"So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you?"*
      Your problem is that you assume that you have any idea whatever what it means to be hyperdimensional. Any argument based upon a likening of human perception to hyperdimensional perception is illegitimate.
      *"If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil."*
      What do you mean --- "evil"?

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bricaaron3978 Immoral, wicked, sadistic, a fetish for foreskins. I just threw that last one in because it's true and funny at the same time.

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bricaaron3978 do you have any idea what it means to be hyper dimensional?

  • @overcookedcooki5285
    @overcookedcooki5285 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If things look more determined as they get closer to the present, then does that mean that hindsight will reveal determinism?

  • @artemissthee3
    @artemissthee3 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    VERY well put. It may take those who are overcomplicating it a bit to get honest enough to see the simplicity.

  • @thenameless2016
    @thenameless2016 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    There are several undefined perspectives coming from just this sentence alone, "Whatever you are you're not a deterministic clock," whatever those may be, the sentence seems to describe that indeed objectively you're not something alike or near to a deterministic mechanical structural device technically speaking. It would be great to ask Peterson, "What is technically speaking? Define it." However, Peterson is taking a more literal approach to this: we cannot determine the future like a clock, therefore the future is unpredictable.
    This might also be a simplistic approach regarding the *literal sense,* PLUS, the fact that human observation will only observe simplicity when complexity isn't specified. "The universe is not deterministic, technically speaking," from the same standpoint, the universe cannot avoid complexity of factors due to our observation. Assuming that 'complexity of factors' implies that we partook in the essential *definition* of the universe.
    However, that further implies it was inherent for us to observe, but the universe would not take that into consideration at all. Now, the example that Peterson shows actually supposes free will because it proves there can be an abrupt change that you chose to happen, at your will, whether the complexities or simplicities led to that outcome it still then determined a different state of being. Sort of as if I collapsed my worldview.
    The next point is essentially is nicely put "Reconfigure how you think about the world," then he follows up with, "You don't see objects that are objective," and, "You see patterns that are functional." Us humans truly defy basic stimuli in a sense. I think those concepts can certainly be intuitive as we play the role of observers.

  • @chad8537
    @chad8537 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    “Do we have free will?” Is the wrong question. We do have some will of our own but it most certainly isn’t “free”.

    • @tylerdurden4396
      @tylerdurden4396 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Still not true in my view. Peterson poses the notion of forward planning as evidence to not being the same as a clockwork machine, but this is a strawman argument because nobody is saying we are like machines. We are, as far as we know, entirely different as we get to experience our existence. But forward planning is an easily explicable function of evolution; you don’t have to work too hard to figure out how that might be the case. His analysis is wrong on another level also: they very plans he nods to as evidence are, by definition, based upon past experience and societal indoctrination that drive us to certain things. You don’t THINK you are hungry, you are hungry. You don’t think you want a Lamborghini, you explain to yourself in your head that you want one, but wanting is a feeling, not a thought, and we don’t, without practice l, decide our feelings. Even when we do, practice itself is an overt, obvious example for programming our biology. You can’t do that unless it is mechanistic.

    • @AI3Dorinte
      @AI3Dorinte 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@tylerdurden4396 yeah, but when you put so much passion into words and expand your vocabulary people seem to believe all the bullshit you fling at them...

    • @tylerdurden4396
      @tylerdurden4396 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@AI3Dorinte I guess so. I like JBP by the way and I think his general message (something like take responsibility and aim for the highest good) is a sound one. I just think he tends to misrepresent arguments a little. He’s thrown himself into promoting religion in the last year or so, perhaps because of his loyalty to his wife, but it to the detriment of his own logic. He couldn’t even help bringing it up to this question, and when anybody uses religion as an argument for science the game is up.

    • @AI3Dorinte
      @AI3Dorinte 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@tylerdurden4396 I used to like JP, not anymore. I sense a fraud each time somebody deliberately uses language that's difficult to understand either by complex vocabulary or by the structure when there's no need to. He's a fraud and when it comes to his general message, please understand that it's a political one, not in the self care category. He is far more interested in changing the culture than helping individuals. Not once have I heard him say that taking responsability is not the pancea for all hardship or mental disease... I bet there's a bunch of suffering people out there beating themselves up because they can't follow JP's advice... Anyways, I have to agree with you 100% on one thing: "when anybody uses religion as an argument for science the game is up" - when this shit happens it's so obvious it stinks...

    • @TheFloNTheMo
      @TheFloNTheMo 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      If we truly had free will, we would all will ourselves to live our best possible lives, yet 99% of the people on this planet are not doing so.
      We are merely influenced by Good or Evil.

  • @didimockets
    @didimockets 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Aristotle said in his Organon that, if there are contingent things, then determinism is false. There are contingent things. Therefore, determinism is false.

  • @c.galindo9639
    @c.galindo9639 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Very well articulated and makes perfect sense of what it is to be put into being through a cosmic divinity that manifests truth into reality and rightful meaning into purpose.
    I thoroughly enjoyed watching this to ascertain even more knowledge on the matter.
    Thanks for this great video

  • @MrAkifusion
    @MrAkifusion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    FABULOUS, Thank You!!! ❤

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @BrightBitGAMES
    @BrightBitGAMES 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    Determinism is irrelevant for the concept of free will! Even without determinism a case for free will can't be made logically! It basically boils down to HOW we make a decision: Either there is a reason for why we decided something, i.e. there is a chain of causes and effects that lead to this decision (determinism) or there is no reason for why we decided something, i.e. there was an effect without a cause but that would mean that we are not responsible for the effect!
    I am aware of how demoralizing this realization can be and want to add something: Although the concept of free will is illogical, we still need to act as if free will exists! It requires us take responsibilities. Without it, I assume, we would be much more likely to just blame the universe for our miserable existence. It was not our decision after all.

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Classic example of a false dichotomy you’ve built for yourself there 👍

    • @BrightBitGAMES
      @BrightBitGAMES 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Classic example of claiming something without saying much! 👍In case you think that I am conflating the terms responsibility and free will: No I am not! They are obviously not the same but they are related: You can't be responsible for something without a free will. I am interested in feedback/criticism but please be a little bit more clear about what you mean.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BrightBitGAMES tldr lol

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I find it interesting how, the realization tends to leads to just act like it dose exist. And doesn’t lead to more anti-natallist ways of thinking as it did with my self, because yes, I metaphorically “blame” the universe for our miserable existence and it would be “wrong” of “me” to subject anyone else.

  • @joeypuvel1228
    @joeypuvel1228 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What Dr. Peterson describes is the highest good in the natural order. When he says “highest good” one must contextualize it this way. For the highest good, our sanctification, is the ordering of our lives naturally so as to make way for the highest good which is not of the strength of man but of the goodness of God, namely to love.

  • @jmoore20121992
    @jmoore20121992 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I love Dr. Peterson.
    Jonathan Edwards answered the question of free will in the 18th century. Some say that if it were the only thing he ever wrote, it alone would be enough to make him the greatest philosopher to ever be born in America.

    • @tubsy.
      @tubsy. 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What did he say

    • @jmoore20121992
      @jmoore20121992 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      The title of the work is this:
      “An Inquiry into the Modern Prevailing Notions of the Freedom of the Will which is Supposed to be Essential to Moral Agency, Virtue and Vice, Reward and Punishment, Praise and Blame”
      Or simply “Freedom of the Will”

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jmoore20121992 Johnathan Edwards was wrong. He was dedicated to his Calvinism, or in other words, his determinism.

    • @jmoore20121992
      @jmoore20121992 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      That’s an interesting position. Have you read his book?

    • @brando3342
      @brando3342 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@jmoore20121992 To be fair, I haven't read his book. However, I am fairly familiar with his more contemporary theological mates, who ascribe to his way of thinking. People like James White, Steve Lawson, John Piper etc.

  • @fantaybrilliancy_23
    @fantaybrilliancy_23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I think that it's both free will and predestination at same time. It is because we have some limitations like this human body and circumstances, we know that we lives in particular frequency and we think we have unlimited version of ours but it's not. You have some limitations in it. Just like time is illusion but also it's limited living beings. So yeah we can have free will but without crossing the boundary of our limits because we can't cross. So it's like we already are predestinated at the end we can see overall picture of our life. There are some limited possibility that people think it's free will but it's already programed and destined.

  • @iamtimsson
    @iamtimsson 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    no we really are a machine
    your ability to perceive the formula does not make it unestablished

    • @guardingsoul6652
      @guardingsoul6652 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      unestablished? what do you mean?

    • @iamtimsson
      @iamtimsson 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      would you prefer nonestablished?@@guardingsoul6652

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I appreciate the clarity in your expression.
      To answer, I believe Dr. Peterson posits that machines solely respond to objects and stimuli. He contends that our distinction from machines lies in two key aspects: firstly, our embodiment of the spirit of God, and secondly, our unique unability to perceive objects but our subjective interpretations of them, which is what we contend with.

    • @lovetownsend
      @lovetownsend 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Exactly. Philosophers argue abstract version of free-will but that's such a cop out. We are 100% determined, everything that ever will happen is decided.

    • @guardingsoul6652
      @guardingsoul6652 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@lovetownsend Decided by what exactly?

  • @EricSmith9000
    @EricSmith9000 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We could be composed of deterministic mechanisms that are tuned to optimize our response to a variety of environments. Just because we are adaptable doesn't mean it's not deterministic.

  • @daves-c8919
    @daves-c8919 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Seems to me that all the people who are arguing that they don’t have free will secretly hope not to be fully responsible for their choices.
    Whether it’s “we’re just chemical reactions” or “I’m just following what it says in the Bible”, it looks like people unwilling to see just how powerful they truly are.

    • @lbjay8914
      @lbjay8914 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      but it is chemical reactions isnt it?

    • @theshushu7940
      @theshushu7940 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Free will doesn't exist, that doesn't mean that the illusion of it doesn't. If the illusion of free will didn't exist this experience wouldn't be very authentic. It's proven scientifically now that our reality isn't even real, and that our "decisions" are just reactions to what our body does autonomously. If you understand how light and photons work it makes perfect sense.

    • @Messianic-Gentile
      @Messianic-Gentile 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ⁠@@lbjay8914no, it manifests itself through chemical reactions. No amount of chemical reactions on their own can produce a thought or feeling.

    • @cmvdlp1630
      @cmvdlp1630 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It’s a pure matter of fact. There cant be free will. Either something is determined or it is random. There is no between. In 2500 years of Philosophy no one ever gave a positive definition of what free will is. So i think, that people, who say that there is no free will, are just intellectually honest and want to face the consequences of reality, but the one who denies it, by ignoring the logical conclusions, is just scared to give up his sacred Freedom: it’s weakness. But nontheless, the ontological question of free will is a matter of fact and not of morals and emotions. Study the matter, before saying your thoughts about it.

    • @yoni6442
      @yoni6442 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      We don’t have free will. Everything that will happen can ultimately be determined if you knew the position and trajectory of every particle in the universe. Although we don’t have free will, we choose to do our actions and are fully accountable for them.

  • @fatihkaya94
    @fatihkaya94 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you do not have enough time to listen here is the summary:
    Dr. Peterson is discussing the nature of the future, asserting that it is unpredictable and the universe is not deterministic. The idea is that individuals are not like deterministic clockwork machines, and although there may be some bounds on free will, actions are not entirely predetermined. Dr. Peterson introduces the concept of ballistic movement as a deterministic action but emphasizes that overall, perceptions and actions become less determined as one looks further into the future. The argument challenges the idea of seeing objects as objective and deterministic, suggesting that they are facilitators of symbolic meaning. He emphasizes the importance of confronting the possibility of the day and interacting with the transforming world in a manner that brings about desired ends. The discussion extends to the role of individuals in participating in the creation of the world, drawing parallels to the divine act of shaping chaos and potential into habitable reality. The ethical significance of transforming potential into a habitable order is highlighted as a sign of ethical action.

  • @Milestonemonger
    @Milestonemonger 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Free will is available for all who choose to exercise it.
    I choose not to drink or do drugs. I choose instead to get a good night sleep and be at work on time.

    • @Dsksea
      @Dsksea 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Did you choose your personality which led you to make decisions such as abstaining from using drugs?
      Or was your personality formed by environmental and biological factors which you had no control over?

    • @CaptainTitforce
      @CaptainTitforce 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What made you think that you are doing the right thing by not drinking? Did you decide that you are good by your own free will?

    • @Arguments_only
      @Arguments_only 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      free will is scientific impossibility, an absolute fairy tale.

    • @rumfordc
      @rumfordc 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Dsksea Seeing as how you directed your comment to them, and not their surrounding environment or internal biology, you understand perfectly well already where their personality is formed.

    • @mensaswede4028
      @mensaswede4028 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @Milestonemonger Sadly a lot of people think it’s that simple, but it’s not. The other comments here should help you start to understand why it’s not that simple.

  • @arminoleg1624
    @arminoleg1624 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I agree with Jordan here but I’ve got an issue with this hand movement example he uses. I’ve seen him use it before. If your hand moves toward a surface and you stop it right before isn’t that predetermined? You know you’re not going to let it hit the surface regardless of how fast your brain sends that signal to stop. Can anyone better explain?

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You decided in advance whether your hand was going to strike the table. You could also be wrong, and strike the table by accident. Once your brain initiates the activity, it is outside your conscious control. I think I have quite a lot of free will about where I will be in a month's time. I don't have much control over where I will be a second from now though...

  • @Ben-bg2lp
    @Ben-bg2lp 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    You control your arm continuously, hence that's not a ballistic movement. It's guided.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      You can move your arm continuously, but you can also move your arm moves faster than the time it takes your conscious brain to send signals to your arm. This is clearly the case in fast-moving sports where players train their reflexes to react faster than their brain can consciously make decisions.

    • @bosspaw4028
      @bosspaw4028 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It’s literally called a ballistic movement, he didn’t just make this up. The point is well and truly over your head.

    • @Ben-bg2lp
      @Ben-bg2lp 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bosspaw4028 No son, I'm a mechanical engineer.

    • @bosspaw4028
      @bosspaw4028 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Ben-bg2lp And I’m a biologist. What’s your point daddy?

    • @Ben-bg2lp
      @Ben-bg2lp 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@bosspaw4028 What is your job though? I don't expect a zoo employee to know about physics. Or logic for that matter!

  • @mcgackaclan9909
    @mcgackaclan9909 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We have will as bounded by the laws that restrain it. The question that is primary is who established the laws? Secondary, is that if there is an authority that established and maintains the laws bounding will, what are those laws?
    Intellectual, emotional, moral, ethical, physical, and spiritual…

    • @mcgackaclan9909
      @mcgackaclan9909 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Now one must ask, what are the consequences of breaking the laws. If it is the law of gravity you reject, you fall to your death. If it is the law of morality you reject you fall to hell. This is why Christ came to connect the laws, the lawmaker and those bound by the law, because we have all sinned, transgressing His law. Christ offers those who chose Him, forgiveness of the transgressions of things that are bounded as good vs evil.
      We are gifted by grace the ability to express our will to accept or reject the offer of redemption from our transgressions of Gods moral law.

    • @Christ60
      @Christ60 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      GOD THE FATHER THROUGH HIS SON JESUS CHRIST ESTABLISHED IT

  • @troyblackwell3995
    @troyblackwell3995 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    To me, free will is defined by mankind being the only part of God's creation that can say "no" to God. We're also the only part of God's creation that can say "yes" to God. We have the power to choose to live a life, eternal with God or a life eternal apart from the presence of God. Freedom to choose is the bedrock of humanities' "free will."

    • @ThomasThornton-zh7cl
      @ThomasThornton-zh7cl 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well put!

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

    • @troyblackwell3995
      @troyblackwell3995 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@insanetubegain You just acknowledged there is a God. God allows you to make the decision, He just accepts that decision you made. God is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Hell was not created for man, but for the devil and his followers: Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels. God doesn't leave you, you choose to leave Him. Repentance means to change your mind. If it was not possible to change your mind, it would be a lie, and there are three things God cannot do, He cannot lie, He cannot die, and He cannot change. The choice is yours where you spend eternity, not God's.

    • @mobina616
      @mobina616 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lol

  • @stimpsonjcat67
    @stimpsonjcat67 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Railroad tracks look like they meet at some point in the distance.
    They don't...but it's useful to think about them doing so.

  • @paulmartin7332
    @paulmartin7332 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I would tend to agree more with Dr Robert Sapolsky on this topic. His ideas can be somewhat disturbing for many but definitely worth checking out.

    • @kamaltahir6440
      @kamaltahir6440 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They're not disturbing at all, they just don't make sense to some one like me who has just decided to write this comment. Or maybe it was my neurochemistry or the influence of my ancestors 1 billion years ago that led to this.
      These are first world problems, when people have too much time on their hands. This thing with no free will, in my mind is on the same level as the universe being a simulation. You can't even prove it. The fact that we are even talking about free will tells me we have free will.

  • @Tigrebleau1
    @Tigrebleau1 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "God is the spirit that confronts chaos and possibility and transforms it into habitable reality, and that's you". Wow

    • @raoulduke7668
      @raoulduke7668 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Buch of gibberish

  • @lukeatmyas
    @lukeatmyas 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Free will is an illusion. Humans are not uncaused causes. Free will does not exist whether or not determinism is true. If our actions are caused, then our actions are determined and thus no one is free. If our actions are randomly generated, then our actions are not really in our control and thus no one is free. I also take British philosopher Galen Strawson's 'Basic argument' to be correct. Strawson summarizes his argument as follows:
    "When one acts, one acts in the way one does because of the way one is. So to be truly morally responsible for one’s actions, one would have to be truly responsible for the way one is: one would have to be causa sui, or the cause of oneself, at least in certain crucial mental respects. But nothing can be causa sui - nothing can be the ultimate cause of itself in any respect. So nothing can be truly morally responsible."

  • @vmasing1965
    @vmasing1965 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    One of the best speeches JBP has ever given, definitely. Whenever anyone tries to explain God using logic it falls flat, because that's an impossible task, thus destined to fail no matter how smart you are.
    It's the foundations of the religious world view that can be (and should be) explained to the modern man who has forgotten their true meaning.

  • @budaraivoso
    @budaraivoso 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    summing up, deterministic materialism is just wrong because, well it is, and i can waive my arm and stop suddenly and my analogy about life being a play is right because look at my beautiful interpretation of the bible.

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      AHAHAHA

    • @sarcasticinema
      @sarcasticinema 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      current brain science about perception and how we process vision and other inputs indicates the immateriality of “solid objects”. It’s a quantum problem.

  • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
    @ChaoticNeutralMatt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I think my issue is the concept of "free" will. But rather what we can do is a product of where we are and who we are. What we can try to do is without limit, but we can't do everything. Sorta the reverse of everyone can cook from ratatouille. We still have choice. But it's not unrestrained.

  • @sbtechdif
    @sbtechdif 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Those who make the case for a lack of free will present their arguments in clear, consice ways; those who hold the opposite views tend to ramble incoherent and unfocused nonesense.

    • @george.vasilev.reyner1916
      @george.vasilev.reyner1916 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes. Cause it's easy to be a depressed loser who wants to take no responsibility for how the world is and our part in shaping it and just drag on with the flow. If you actually want to embrace life you'll find out that it's more complex than you realize. And that's ok. You don't need to understand everything.

    • @chronicle8080
      @chronicle8080 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@george.vasilev.reyner1916 Understanding ones lack of free will can cause some people to go down a bad path of laziness, but suffering and wellbeing still exist and are drivers of moral action regardless.

  • @jesse6468
    @jesse6468 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well, how would you know if the future really is not determined or if no one knows that the future is determined? Natural selection is not a clockwork machine, but does that mean that natural selection is random?

  • @ToddTheMetalGod
    @ToddTheMetalGod 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Being unable to predict what's going to happen doesn't make it any less determined. Everything is set in stone. The past, present, and future are all locations that exist at once. The universe is like an object that we experience. Our conscious experience travels through spacetime like a train on a track. We only have the illusion of being able to choose the direction we go. There is no free will.
    If it makes you feel better to imagine yourself as being free, or if it helps you make better decisions, by all means pretend. But ultimately everything is just cause and effect, with you caught in the middle.
    I think Jordan's religiosity gets in the way of him seeing this.

    • @RK-rb2jr
      @RK-rb2jr 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It is not 100% known whether absolute determinism exists as far as I know; however, the alternative is randomness, which would't make free will real. In my opinion, the concept of free will itself makes no sense.

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'm struggling to understand. What allows you to confirm that everything is set in stone if you acknowledge your incapacity of being conscious of it?

    • @reb3799
      @reb3799 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@RK-rb2jr it seems that your argument may be characterized as a false dilemma fallacy.

    • @martinarooney228
      @martinarooney228 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Is that just a cop-out way of thinking though, kinda like defeatism? It's harder to will the better good than give in to the easier choice...But doing so far more rewarding

    • @RK-rb2jr
      @RK-rb2jr 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@reb3799 I see your point. Let me clarify: When thinking about how the universe works on a fundamental level, it either has structure / causality / logic, which would make it deterministic, or there is no structure, aka randomness. It could also be partly deterministic and partly random, which seems to be the most likely, as far as I know. Free will then is a whole ’nother topic. It is already hard to define it. As far as I consider, what is meant by it is the power over decisions an individual has. But looking at it from the outside and in the context of the universe, it makes no sense and is more of a feeling than a logical construct.

  • @Srindal4657
    @Srindal4657 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Im going to have to listen to this multiple times to understand.

    • @Srindal4657
      @Srindal4657 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wait, I think I get it. Free will is meaning of the self.

  • @alessandrorosina9560
    @alessandrorosina9560 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Best yapping of the year!🎉Congrats!!

    • @kamaltahir6440
      @kamaltahir6440 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Mate he doesn't have free will according to you people, and neither do you. Just 2 brains judging each other. I wonder what millions of years of events happend that led to you making this comment. With out your choice ofcourse. You people believe your brain is separate from you and that it decides things for you. Just come out and say it, some people don't like to take responsibility for their lives. It's completely acceptable

  • @archlich4489
    @archlich4489 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you!

    • @insanetubegain
      @insanetubegain 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I copy pasted this from my previous post on here. If there is a God of Abraham, there still can be no freewill, and here's why. God knows literally everything including the past, present, and future, he knows every second of everyone's life even before they are born. So in effect, God knows before hand that most people will suffer through life only to end up suffering for eternity in the Hell he made for them, and he knows the ones that will believe in him. So why does he make people he knows will suffer in the first place? Does god like suffering? As I said before, he already knows which people will believe and get to live in Heaven for eternity, and which ones will be skeptical and spend eternity suffering in Hell. So if you believe or you don't, God already knows the outcome, as he made you, knowing you are going to Hell or Heaven. So, how can you change your mind if God already knows the outcome before he made you? If the God of Abraham intentionally makes someone knowing they will suffer forever, in my mind it makes that god evil.

  • @gknight4719
    @gknight4719 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Of course, we have free will, we have no choice.

    • @pauljohnson6019
      @pauljohnson6019 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Good one! Actually either way, that's a paradox, if you had a choice to be determined, your very choice leads to something which cannot be free, which means God is controlling your every thought and action, better to have a choice in the sense of not choosing to be determined, but in fact, if you want, God can make you determined.

    • @mrgrumpycat9049
      @mrgrumpycat9049 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pauljohnson6019 dont compliment him he stole it from Hitchens

  • @Green.Country.Agroforestry
    @Green.Country.Agroforestry 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Here, let me help with this simple high school algebra equation:
    aX(aX)+bX+c = 0
    With just three known variables for a,b, and c, there are two solved states for the value of X (I am not going to write a mathematics textbook in the comments here, consult yours for 'quadratic equations' for more detail)
    How many variables at the Big Bang? If three variable in a complex equation result in one of two outcomes being true, how many more diversions will the expanding universe take, moment by moment? How many more potentially true states .. and what is the mechanism that determines which of a magnificent array of possible outcomes becomes the reality that we can observe and interact with? Is it .. _consciousness?_ .. So, although the potential solved states for the universe are calculable in theory, all quantities knowable (again, in theory) and everything determined by the patterns established upon creation .. free will is STILL happening.
    My credentials? I'm just a red neck tree farmer, with a massive library, and way too much free time.

  • @shuffleslunuffle
    @shuffleslunuffle 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    "Man can do what he wills but he cannot will what he wills" - Schopenhauer

  • @MeathammerFour
    @MeathammerFour 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Anyone know what the full video for this one is?

    • @Jack__________
      @Jack__________ 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The link is in the description.

    • @lovetownsend
      @lovetownsend 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ty!@@Jack__________

    • @nf6386
      @nf6386 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can see all the recordings of this tour with a DailyWire subscription. I cancelled mine, but there was enough good content from JBP and some excellent anti-woke documentaries to justify 1-2 months subscription cost at least.

  • @francismcglynn4169
    @francismcglynn4169 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    A child born into a poor family is not predetermined to remain poor. A child that is born into a wealthy family is not destined to remain rich. They each make choices and have influences which help them arrive at different ends that those at which they began.

    • @RandallWhiskey
      @RandallWhiskey 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Can you tell me how said choices and decisions are formed and made ? Whats their origin ?

    • @nickf2657
      @nickf2657 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@RandallWhiskeyThe word God spoke

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      That’s only looking at edge cases (outlines) honing in on the 100 or so million. Completely discounting, a much larger data set, also determinism doesn’t mean predetermined, that’s fatalism.

  • @glenwillson5073
    @glenwillson5073 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The God of the Bible certainly talks to us as though we have free will.
    "I have set before you life and death, therefore CHOOSE life, for why would you die?"

  • @tnvheiseler
    @tnvheiseler 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Wow, this is just a religious answer. Where on the way, did he lose his scientific approach?

    • @whousa642
      @whousa642 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      incorrect

    • @Eisenmengercpas
      @Eisenmengercpas 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Using science to prove religion is fruitless. Science requires a repeatable event for proof. Science cannot prove the existence of George Washington.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "Religion is when answer I don't like"

    • @Renato404
      @Renato404 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Just because you cannot check everyone's genitalia at the door, doesn't mean that they aren't - as a matter of fact, a man or a woman.
      Likewise, just because you can't antecipate the future, doesn't mean that it can't be predetermined.

    • @gallevran
      @gallevran 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It's a spiritual answer. Not a religious one. Can you tell the difference?
      The man's too smart to be only scientific.

  • @valentinholzner8919
    @valentinholzner8919 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    brings tears to my eyes

  • @astrophysicist137
    @astrophysicist137 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Peterson is wrong about free will and his ballistic hand move demonstration is also wrong.

    • @bogdanshevchenko
      @bogdanshevchenko 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Let's hear a better explanation from you. I'll wait.

  • @hach2023
    @hach2023 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As a Canadian with, I hope a British background, you should know "Free Will Exists". Predestination is an Eastern non Druidic ideological construct.
    That is why our systems are so different.

  • @srinivasanp.b9914
    @srinivasanp.b9914 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Bro just used some word salad

    • @jeremiahgrimm928
      @jeremiahgrimm928 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      No, he is concise. Understanding him requires knowledge of the words he uses, which requires above High School level reading.

  • @rwesenberg
    @rwesenberg 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dr. Petersen presents some very interesting points. Certainly, our machines are engineered to be deterministic. They are characterized by the deterministic theory that defines them. We operate them within a specific domain so they remain predictable. Science also deals with deterministic systems. The key quality of a scientific theory, what makes them valuable, is they predict the future. Not all components of deterministic systems are predictable, the motion of a molecule in a gas, for example. An indeterministic system may include deterministic components, the human heart, for example. Thus, most deterministic systems have indeterministic aspects and vis versa. The question is, what do we mean by "free". I think we mean a thing is free if it is, in principle, unpredictable. The question is, how can we know that something is, in principle, unpredictable .

  • @lufang438
    @lufang438 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It’s a whole lot of deepities. And BTW, being deterministic is not the same as being predictable. One is about following the laws of physics, the other is about whether it can be simulated. The universe can be both deterministic and unpredictable.

  • @alexvo6873
    @alexvo6873 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dr. Peterson is a fundamentalist in a best possible meaning of this word.))

  • @natureplay9164
    @natureplay9164 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like what your saying and i like the suit just as much. Ty.

  • @LeandroSilva-ts3uq
    @LeandroSilva-ts3uq 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This sort of reminds me of when you have to write an assay at the absolute last minute. You know nothing about the subject but still go around in circles trying to reach the required minimum of words.
    Some of these are just truisms, some are just uncoherent sentences. "Free Will" was barely mentioned.

  • @storiesandpoems
    @storiesandpoems 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wow, I love this idea. We are visionary every morning.

  • @observerone6727
    @observerone6727 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The free will debate continues because most people don't understand causality. Even fully stochastic randomness is causal (we can't know, determine, or acquire the underlying factors, by definition). We feel agency because we're unaware of the subconscious choiceless causes; we don't cause what causes what happens to us. Mathematics itself works because base reality (the universe's 'liquid' of forces and fields) is causal; equations add up and balance because of causality. Otherwise, the continuum flow of one Now to the very next Now wouldn't obey conservation of energy.

  • @thinman8621
    @thinman8621 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Would love to have taken one of his classes when he was a college lecturer.

  • @JesseTate
    @JesseTate 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very beautiful and insightful but it's too much code switching. He moves from descriptive or mathematical language (describing what is) to perceptual or teleological language (describing how things seem and their aims or relations as pertaining to other perceptual beings). It's fine to suppose that perception changes our definition of reality. Absolutely. In many ways perception is the only reality we can truly know and discuss. And it does seem like thay can only be coherent, can only exist, within the framework of a finite conscious mind with this translational nature. This nature within us that doesn't react machinelike, bitlike, to every input (one to one) but rather simulates and extracts abstract patterns and applies them in some finite way to a horizon of possibility. Which indeed does grow more nebulous and eventually disappears at the borders of our finite ability to perceive. But this is once again a description of how things seem to conscious perceived. It's fully a part of reality--but to propose that it's not determined.... Or not nested in mathematical structure.... To propose that conscious perception somehow acts EXTERNAL to mechanics yet influences them.... That's another thing entirely. Thus far there doesn't seem to be any reason to suppose consciousness could influence matter without itself being part of material law. The very concept seems incoherent. It defies what we understand about causality and interaction. So it seems he's trying to claim that perceptual reality is undetermined simply because our finite perception can't comprehend the infinite interconnected math of all the universe--but this describes what we experience, not how it comes about.

    • @alterego157
      @alterego157 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      He's always all over the place. He just hopes waving hands and a word salad will be enough to impress.

  • @PaulBolton-jl2qm
    @PaulBolton-jl2qm 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I don't always agree with JP but I always learn something when he speaks. It is hard to believe some people want to silence him.

  • @DADela-ht6ux
    @DADela-ht6ux 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "...all of the buildings
    and all of the cars
    were once just a dream
    in somebody's head."
    - Peter Gabriel, Mercy Street

  • @gunsandpoker7432
    @gunsandpoker7432 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Cleaning my room with my lobster broom.

  • @robertmegee9052
    @robertmegee9052 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I want free will, but as a physicist, I look at the models we use to describe the universe and I don't see it. What needs to happen to counter this is a mechanism needs to be shown that allows free will. My current hope for this is that consciousness has defied modelling. That leaves room for a non-deterministic process for consciousness. That is what is needed.

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just read Robert Sapolsky’s books there isn’t room. Unfortunately I guess.
      “It’s asking Neurons to do something they can’t.”
      I have no degrees or nothing fancy, I was born to poor parents with mental illnesses, and feel (

  • @alohm
    @alohm 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ballistic, the root in Greek being βαλλίστρα ballistra - or to throw - you throw something you no longer control its path beyond the predetermined strength and angle of the throw... SO know what you do, and why... Free will?

  • @omgopet
    @omgopet 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    "The universe is not deterministic" - citation needed.
    Also, this ability to speak rapidly for 7 min while mostly saying nothing (at best) so confidently would be impressive even for a politician. Between 2-face over here and all the postmodernist clowns, the humanities departments are definitely not sending their best.

    • @donatello9482
      @donatello9482 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      This is beyond your understanding if you think this world is black and white. It’s gray. You wanted a definite answer to a extremely complex analysis. Even you have to know one man cannot fully explain the universe as it came to be along with free will. JP is doing a great job

    • @AI3Dorinte
      @AI3Dorinte 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@donatello9482 JP is doing a great job on calming your anxiety, he ain't doing a great job at explaining shit.

    • @AppleOfThineEye
      @AppleOfThineEye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@AI3Dorinte His explanations hold up, lol

  • @DaSkarekrow
    @DaSkarekrow 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tomorrow, I will eat dinner, do I know what I will eat? And what I will eat was that already determined? Or it is determine seconds before I decide? If someone ask me pizza or lasagna? And I said, give me few seconds, and if I choose lasagna, was that always going be determine it was going to be lasagna regardless of those seconds? I am fascinated by free will or the lack of it conversations

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The real questions are, why are you choosing between Pizza and lasagna? What led to the choice?

    • @DaSkarekrow
      @DaSkarekrow 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@theofficialness578 someone asked me pizza or lasagna, those were the choices for dinner...now if I had the choice, maybe it would have been neither

    • @theofficialness578
      @theofficialness578 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@DaSkarekrow why would you choose neither though?

  • @petervalt
    @petervalt 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Since everything that happens has it's subjective & objective reason for happening, I would say that everything is predetermined. It's just impossible to process the whole amount of data in order to predict most of the things.

    • @Yorushima
      @Yorushima 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Granted I'm not particularly good at speech comprehension but I thought his point was that in a general outlook, choices that free will cover are often composed of pre-determined steps that are observable. The near future is easily predictable because recent and immediate general choices that were made (and often cannot be reversed) pushed it into a common pattern that are associated with those choices but the distant future is less so because the choices that would begin to establish any observable patterns have yet to be made.
      For instance...and I'll stop with those two words. Those two words indicate an upcoming analogy, which you can predict will be some hypothetical example that connects to my first paragraph and tries to convince you of the point I made. But without them, it's within possibility that I'll switch to a different wording that sets the road to criticize your statement, go off on a meaningless tangent, use a different wording to start a different analogy, or completely forego the paragraph and end my statement right there. I have the active choice to continue into the next paragraph, but once I start writing it, I'm forced to narrow down my flow of wording to a predictable pace.
      Immediate patterns are easily observable and can be rightfully identified as pre-determined, but they stem from decisions made previously before they were caught by real-time restrictions and thus are comparatively free. Thus, it's possible to exercise free will by making and sticking to a decision that will not be fully realized until a long time later or by performing an action that outright ignores the confines of pre-determined patterns.