Whenever I listen to Iain McGilchrist, I feel I have returned home to safety and sanity. This is a nugget of an interview teeming with enlivened information, speaking right to the heart of the sickness in our society today! What a relief. Thank you 🙏🏼
McGilchrist is a bonafide genius. 'The Matter With Things' is the greatest work of philosophy of the 21st century imo, and 'The Master and His Emissary' is also an absolutely excellent book and extremely accessible to the layman. He and Ken Wilber are the only two thinkers I've read in modern times that have been able to show a way out of scientific materialism, postmodern relativism, and other nihilistic modern ideologies without recourse to some long, forgotten golden age. Not that I don't sympathize with traditionalists who want to go back to some golden age, as the modern world is insane. But I think the way out of this clusterfuck of a civilization is through, not back.
Here is the fundamental matter with "things" ua-cam.com/video/wvLKIv0uaQ4/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/V5gV9Z4xrA8/v-deo.html I understand ALL at the most fundamental level. I honestly do.
Agreed, I think his work represents a major breakthrough. Those who can understand it may be able to offer some hope for the future, contrary to the clusterf**k approach of the WEF and so on.
And I've got a right-brained idea. It involves local interaction, and national networking. It is political, but it is nonpartisan. It's what man lost, and can maybe get back again. I want Dr. McGilchrist to see this... The Two Sides of Everything, and Complete Introduction To Building Communities, at Breaking Ground.
@@abbasalchemist 🤣 good spot Although perhaps it was the context of Plato having earlier "banished poets" earlier in his life that gave Plato that regret- wider whole and all! :) ...
I have been a student of Dr.McGilchrist for many years, starting with an in depth study, reading and rereading, "The Master and His Emissary'", and now a many months examination of "The Matter with Things." The current global context, with catastrophic loss of planetary habitability, rising totalitarian impulses in the political realm, and huge disparities in the economic realm to name just a few of our problems urgently asks these questions; "Who are we and why are we behaving in this globally self-destructive way?" My opinion is that Dr. McGilchrist could well be the most relevant and greatest teacher of our age regarding the much needed answers to these questions. Just watching this video for the last hour has shifted my awareness to an expansive realm where many of the most helpful insights into the way in which humans inhabit their worlds are connected and pointing to a possible transformation, or rebalancing of human potential to mitigate our global free-fall into the abyss of self-destructive ignorance.
Just as Iain McGilchrist recommends- we need to be nourished by our roots. To find answers to your questions, maybe you need to go back to the story of Genesis and God's love affair with humankind in spite our fallen nature. Listen to some Orthodox scholars, mystics - add some lectures from Jordan Peterson, be generous in your approach..... the Bible is not this moth-eaten, irrelevant fairytale nonsense that the modern and progressive world of the Machine has been feeding us to believe.
@@kbeetles Thank you for your beautiful reply. I have watched some lectures from Jordan. My mother was a Lutheran minister's daughter and I was highly conditioned by a brutal machine like version of Christianity all through my childhood. "Man is by nature, sinful and unclean." was the message that accreted the obstructions around the inherent goodness that is at the core of all of us. I think Dr. McGilchrists message is not that the part of us that is "sinful" needs to be eliminated. It plays an important role in survival and adaptation; rather, we need to rebalance those ways of inhabiting the world associated with the left hemisphere with the right hemispheric modes that open to the widest possible, most expansive, connected views of the Universe. This possibility is inherent in every healthy human brain... but needs to be uncovered as human capacities are rebalanced. Further, I would say that the so called "answers to questions" come as felt senses in the body as much as words or religious belief.... Having said that, I have nothing but the greatest respect for those who are trying to reclaim Christianity's key value to our current human predicament. For instance, I have a Christian friend who runs a weekly study group that looks at all the ways that some versions of Christianity, like the current evangelical movement in America that votes for Trump, have turned into totalitarian, machine like systems that takes away the Freedom that Ian talks about at the beginning.
I agree that there is great potential for change to (in time) come from the turmoil of our times. I'm currently about have way through Dr McGilchrist's latest book the Matter with Things, having read his first book shortly after it first came out. His writing has been and continues to be some of the most impactful on my own thinking and study over the last 10 years. A true deep thinker. Another neuroscientist Beau Lotto at UCL, who studies how the brain learns, once said in a talk that, "the brain hates uncertainty" and went on to explain how it enters into a sort of tunnel vision, holding onto (grasping, ie left hemisphere) "what it knows". One of his insights that chimes with this talk, is that "play" is the only human activity whose purpose is the activity itself. There would be no point, as he says, to play a game whose outcome was known. He also advocates play for children, as well as adults: the play state is the state in which we embrace change... I think what your comments mean to me, is that we need better teachers - in every sense, I'm not referring to the job title, but the activity of teaching. Religious teachers have traditionally been some of the most insightful in all cultures that embrace open inquiry and learning. In today's secular worlds, teaching seems undervalued. The common saying is even "those than can't (do), teach"... I really appreciate McGilchrist's wisdom, and I hope his ideas spread.
Wonderful comments by all, I agree that religion is often depicted as something outdated yet I think we need to recall at lest some of the core values that unite humanity as one (not inferring that a religion is better than another), we need to have a renewed moral construction of society thus the desperate need to educate the younger minds because for most of the people change is far more difficult especially with age. A great lecture is Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari. I’m sure that if we find a common root for humanity we can aim for higher goals while recognising our intrinsic differences. Right now we’re just plummeting into an abyss of instant gratification that daily shorten our long term view.
Wow! Within the first minutes he's addressing one of the most important public goods: FREE SPEECH ! This is so important and a shame that people don't value it. Although it cannot even be bought with money...
"A mind that is learning is constantly growing." Thank for having Iain McGilchrist on. I have all three of his books and am still listening to his lectures. Thank you both again.❤ Dr. McGilchrist has had an extraordinary education that was different and he made choices outside the box. With the deepest appreciation and admiration for his wisdom he imparts to those who listen.❤
I've just started reading Master and Emissary. It is hard work so I find his YT interviews greatly helpful. They are talking about him and the importance of his insight as a modern-day Plato. I find explaining his work to friends a good way to test & develop my own understanding of his message. A companion book is the Twilight of American culture by Morris Berman [2001] - which chronicles the intellectual decline of the west and contrasts this with the decline of Roman/Greek thinking. Berman and McGilchrist arrive at the same conclusions from very different starting points.
This is stirring. I feel a sense of enormous relief, all over. I know so many women like myself who alternate between a constant state of anguished helplessness and furious anger at what the left is doing to our country, to our children, to our culture. Evenen here in Charlottesville, Virginia, a small, intimidating group is destroying our local monuments which have graced our historic university town for two centuries. But thanks to Dr. McGilchrist I have stepped back. I have listened to other lectures and sent them to others, but this 42 minutes opens up a world of understanding. If anything it addresses my own anger, and has offered me a way to understand and navigate my way around such destructive personalities -- some of which are relatives. Thank you, Dr. McGilchrist, for your profound, life-changing research, and your passion to spread your discoveries.
Iain is clearly a prophet and a guide. Extremely grateful for his passion, wisdom, and love of humans and life. Ways we can rebalance: Nature immersion: this is the right brain context in which humans have always existed, and in which the left brain grew and flourished. And in it's absence, the left brain has overrun not only the right brain but the emotions and the body as well. Play: doing things for the sheer delight of the experience. Elicits our child-like capacities. Includes spontaneous self-expression, especially authentic movement when dancing, which is a way to fully embody being free, and is also great authenticity training. Having a deep time perspective about the evolutionary nature of universe and the Earth, that is the context of Existence. Humility naturally arises, as well as a deep connection to our magnificence as a part of this glorious Creation. Profound gratitude for all our ancestors and earlier life forms that have provided an unbroken chain of life that has made our existence possible.
Great answer, I think any form of art has that element of play and freedom which activate our brain as a whole: input, output, remembering, changing, creating, sharing etc. Human needs sensory experiences to flourish, anything that is imposed is inevitably going to contaminate this growth. If we take a look at the most advanced civilisation in human history there was always a theme of questioning our reality, finding a meaning, debating to create a fertile narrative.
I read something relevant to this in an old book: “If you cannot be like one of these children, you will never get into my Father’s Mansion.” Seems as relevant today as ever.
McGilchrists ability to calmly and crisply illuminate the darkness he sees is inspiring. Perhaps however one needs distribute the 'blame' beyond the 'we' that is legally referred to as a "natural person" and to deeply question the status of the "corporate person" (company). Corporate Persons have many human rights plus privelages not available to the natural person and most powerfully exercised via scale and legal shielding, with special additional legal shielding for companies that are banks and in particular central banks (and some transnational entities). Although corporate persons are peopled by humans-with two hemispheres-the behaviour of corporate persons often looks like the behaviour of a natural person with right hemisphere damage. And it is these behaviours whose impact dominates our world.
I love his work so much, but in this video he says: “we need to wake up” but there are no actionable suggestions. “We need to eradicate this way of thinking”. How? I’m catholic and I’m doing that for myself with faith and prayer, but what about people who don’t like religion?
The horrific true of this world's moment is that even those who sees clearly what's the problem is, can't see a way out of it. We may need to go through a chaotic and convoluted time to somewhere in the future find a new balance.
@@StimParavane there's no despair, on the contrary, when we study human history is clear that all situations resolve themselves on the long run. But, to shift paths, the usual human way is war and chaos, and there's no way to foresee the new balance derived from this.
@@semqueixas There are those of us who see the path that will limit undue suffering, it takes time though. People like Elon Musk and Jordan Peterson are beacons of light to bring hope and inspiration.
Peace on earth could be had today, this instant, but it will take those of us who have a say in the matter to choose it, and that goes for each and everyone one of us.
@@mattmyers2624 I think Jordan Peterson's usefulness has ended. Now he just preaches to the choir when he was most effective fighting publicly in his TV interviews with the state approved journalists. His open 'letters' to the likes of Twitter are cringeworthy. They know what they are doing and no amount of reason will stop their evil plans.
And deep thinking - the source. We can even let - the Voice Real (within) - speak through us. Everyone - including the speaker - will learn profound and useful answers - constantly and eternally. (Just a note from Joimany) Thank you - for your initial idea.
Caution with calling synchronicities easily, but I was only this morning debating if I should purchase Ian's McGilchrist's new book 'The Matter with Things'. Excited to listen to this conversation, and it looks like I found my book-buying answer - excellent mind, important voice. Thank you.
I very much wanted to dive into his books dealing with an updated view of the human experience..... the 🧠, perception... so amazing! Unfortunately I'm too broke to spend money on myself
@@jordanthornton Especially, I believe, books which engender imagination and, as he discusses, right-brain activity versus left-brain intellectuallization.
I fully agree. We used to learn clear thinking at school for our awareness of the dangers of language, and debating and argumentative essays to develop our own oral and written persuasive skills. These lessons gave me an awe for the power of communication and the difference between information/facts and the various ways in which information is presented. Such training conveyed an understanding of the possibility of being fooled and manipulated. We learned to search for the truth by recognising faulty logic and emotional appeals, and read between the lines. It seems few people are trying to assess claims for BS, these days. Are thinking and speaking skills out of vogue, or discernment itself?
School can't teach the necessary skills - only experience can. We can teach kids techniques to quieten their minds, and to learn how to listen to their own experiences, but it is hit-or-miss if the kids choose to employ these.
Are you sure you learned that at school? Because when you say "we", it sounds like it was a standard thing. Certainly when I was at school it wasn't. We did some argumentative essays later in school, but it was only open to those who did English (mainly) at a higher (I don't mean the qualification) level. There were many, probably a majority who weren't exposed to that type of education at all. Remember, too, that it's people of our generations (older people who might have been taught critical thinking) that have laid the path for this malaise. The "last ten years" that Iain mentions in the video has been a long time in the making. Almost inevitable. Obviously magnified by the dirtiness of social media of course.
Excellent points. Critical thinking skills can be taught, and it’s sobering to know that actual objective thinkers who are intelligent enough to actually think objectively-even about themselves-are extremely rare as a personality and IQ combination type. Like 1% of the population. Clearly, 1% is not doing all the talking…. And perhaps more importantly when it comes to algorithms, clearly the 1% is not doing all the listening either. Keeping this in mind should really help us with our perspective. Thanks 🙏🏻 ❤️🔥👍🏻
This was such an inspiring and eloquent conversation. Iain really does say what I am thinking without missing a beat. It's as if he gives wings to my own thoughts and allows them to be spoken. Thank you so much.
Such a fantastic discussion - as always. McGilchrist is a fascinating human being. Thanks for bringing discussions of hope, compassion and deep understanding.
What a great conversation. I especially enjoy Dr. McGilchrist’s points on the importance of the nature, myth, and traditions in we have lived for thousands of years as as rebalancing tool. Time in forest or mountains, time listening to the best stories, time understanding how others have lived, can really help to reveal the patterns of the greater reality around us; patterns that the left hemisphere can’t grasp on its own.
Dear fellow humans, let us heed Ians call. Let us do an be our utmost to rise beyond all hijacked values and perceptions. No matter what it takes. It is literally life or death for generations to come.
@@OmicronFra I am just a construction worker so I have no large stages to enter upon. I am informing myself to the best of my ability, communicating with people about some key topics (communicating is not my strongest side because of hot temper), I also do various kinds of inner work to clear my vision and strenghten my authenticity and work out fears and traumas as much as I can - something I believe is THE key for any lasting change. Sometimes i attend in street manifestations in Stockholm. So, that is pretty much what I do,
To be brutally honest if you haven't worked out we are quickly heading into a post truth world and you need to watch a video to discover this you've been living under a rock.
We are on a collision course and have been for some time. Each time I speak to people about the way things are going I hit a brick wall, It's like the younger generations feel a sense of hopelesness and feel powerless to do anything to change things for the better. Poor education and conditioning has left the masses unable to think properly, reliable ways of old have been rejected in an attempt to prove to themselves they can fix things, but pride always comes before a fall and I think it may be to late already.
what are we supposed to do? Boomers have all the money and they're heavily invested in things continuing exactly as they are. Nobody looked out for my generation to consider if we would have an education appropriate to the world we were growing in to, or that there would be jobs for us. Or homes. Or healthcare.
It's very heartening to see explicitly identifying the regressive behavior that people on the political extremes are engaging in. The more that reasonable and compassionate individuals speak out, the greater the likelihood that everyday people will unify around a higher set of principles like the ones Iain Identifies as sacred and transcendent.
Thank you for having easily one of the the most important thinkers back again to propound a very urgent call. McGilchrist's hypothesis is prescient and a case in point. HIs work is critical to our survival and restoring our bearings.
We need a return to Romanticism, the integration of the poetic and the scientific. The German Idealists had it right back in the 18th Century. Pure calculative rationality can never lead to human flourishing and can only leave us shrivelled husks of human beings.
@@zootsoot2006 Absolutely. Too many aspects vital to life cannot be contained or forced into the Procrustean bed of an indurate purely linear analytical calculus. Pure rationality alone is itself irrational. Juggernauts like Wittgenstein and Heidegger turned to embrace more poetry in their later years.
@@aleksandrl6740 At a certain point of thought you realise everything you need to know is right in front of you as it is and to wrap it in conceptual bindings is merely a turning a way from truth and the will to keep on dreaming.
Free speech is not free, it has cost me personally many times throughout my life. My military service showed me that humor is not welcome in the Army hehe. Censorship is not the answer to bad speech, good speech is. Cheers from a retired soldier down under.
I've held a strong feeling from an early age that people should try to live in one place for MOST of their lives. The connection to place and belonging builds a sense of responsibility and continuity with a part of the planet, a nation, a state, a city, a suburb a street and a home. The novelty of nomadic vagrancy and constant movement is a contributor to our disconnect from place and desire to assert change on each location we move to. With burgeoning population, it has become difficult to remain in place and not be enticed to other places by profit or novel motivations.
What if that one place doesn't appreciate your talents? What if it is ravaged by war or persecution? What if society is profoundly sick? As a native Londoner, I've lived in several countries for work, and I've settled in central Europe because I've been able to flower here.
I live just outside London and I’m slowly watching the degeneracy eat my little village as Londoners are pushed out of the city. All crime in our sleepy village has sky rocketed to the point the council has installed stab kits in the town centre.
I have come to realize how profoundly my life experience has been altered and damaged by so many moves as I was growing up. That constant disconnect along with familial and societal dysfunctions has taken me a lifetime to achieve an ever evolving understanding of the consequences. I have an abiding love for the natural world and have found healing and support in direct experience and appreciation of the earth. I sincerely believe the only way humanity will survive with any success is to embrace nature’s ways and wisdom in cooperation, Not destruction.
Nice one David, getting Iain back on. I find myself effortlessly resonating with what Iain says. Regards what to do about the path we are on, Iain's response of, 'firstly, just be aware where we are heading' reminds me of the Buddha's 1st noble truth (fully know dukkha (suffering)). Also, acknowledging sin (sin meaning, missing the mark/point of life) in Christianity. Basically, raising awareness encourages better resolution than frantically going after problems like a bull to a red rag. Hence not losing site of our wisdom traditions! With tremendous clarity and precision after years of pioneering research, Iain's work, for me, reveals the importance and depth of our wisdom traditions and their paramount importance for our times.
That power is not the purpose of life, really hits the nail on the head for me. I agree that the utilitarian mindset dominates everything in our culture; it sucks the joy out of life. On anger and discourse, I am reminded of the work of David Bohm on dialogue. In one interview, he was asked what are the conditions required for deep dialogue to flourish. His answer was "attention and care" by which he meant that any dialogue requires both parties to listen with exquisite attention to each other, but also to care... to break past the baggage that we all bring to a conversation, we have to connect at that most basic level of speaking and connecting with another human being. It seems to me that we are all finding it difficult in the current climate of discourse to show care to our fellow human beings. For quite some time I was struggling myself with anger, and I've had to work diligently to nurture my own sense of compassion and connection with those whom I am in opposition with politically or in terms of thought. So I would advocate for a caveat on McGilchrist's suggestion that we have to challenge ideas, and "push back". We must do so whilst showing compassion and care for "the other" and avoid the tendency (which surfaces in this conversation too at times) to refer to "they" and other forms of generalisation, that de-personalise and thus dehumanise.
Completely agree with the wise Ian McGilchrist. Been following Ian for some time, also reading his books ( you need time) and the more you understand this the more we can balance the scales. These are the real first principle fundamentals at work and we need to understand them before it is too late. Excellent podcast.
I am finding M&E a challenge & would strongly recommend 'The Twilight of American Culture' by Berman (2001) as a companion to M&E. It arrives at the same conclusion from a totally different perspective - the two books are complementary in a quite shocking way. Berman quotes Francis Bacon from The Parasceve in 1620 as follows "For the world is not to be narrowed till it will go into the understanding (which has been done hitherto), but the understanding is to be expanded and opened till it can take in the image of the world".
I would like to believe that Iain McGilchrist's message is one that many people (myself included) inherently consider to be true, although without fully understanding the reason why. Perhaps because his explanations are articulated with such precision and clarity, and are based on a solid foundation of thought, study, research and involvement that so few have been able to match in time, effort and interest. This forty minute podcast encapsulated many ideas and thoughts that I have had myself, but have not been able to reduce, rationalise and summarise so succinctly. "We Need to Act" is a clear and compelling message, but requires enormous and truly universal acceptance and effort. A formidable challenge!
I work in a marketing department in a multinational and the entire department is being reduced to a large spreadsheet with budgets attached. It’s a perfect illustration of the the left hemisphere’s dominance on the way we see the world.
I have been binge-watching RW, McGilchrist, John Headaeke , Jargon Peterson and IDW for a month, and now I am even more convinced than ever that it is time to act. I have renewed all my online subscriptions and taken out a new broadband contract already.
Hi... a year later.... The world is going downhill fast but the people on UA-cam telling everyone its time to act are a whole lot more rich and famous. Get your hemispheres round that!
This is so great! Straight to the point. Unfortunately just like his example of diagnosing the problem and then telling the patient who does not then listen until they find the answer themselves, many will not hear these words and self reflect on them. Classic left brain. 🤦♂️
Let those who have ears hear it - said Jesus. He faced the same blindness and deafness.....but his words are still with us, although he had only 3 years teaching us.
What's left of the humanities has been taken over by social engineers , and more and more of the research in the humanities gets only funded if it can somehow appear as if it was a domain of computer science. This started already by the end of the 20th century, when in sociology and anthropology, and even in linguistics, in order to appear more "scientific", the use of statistics proliferated, and building so-called quantitative models became almost a requirement to be taken seriously.
During the discussion, Daniel Schmachtenberger's concept (about the third factor) and J. Krishnamurti’s ideas (about how we should observe ourselves and the world) came to my mind as a "solution", and how we can contribute/act in a more positive direction as individuals. I would love to know your opinion about that and again, thanks for your work on this channel.
Schmactenberger's search for a third attractor as a way out of multipolar traps encourages me because it sees beyond the silliness of the cultural wars and doesn't seem to give a shit about it. The issues he is concerned about seem so much more tangible and the solutions more brave.
@@weltraumaffe4155 Thank you for that reminder about Schmachtenberger. Though must say that me, a mother of 4 age 60 living in Finland. Things are looking dire.
@@weltraumaffe4155 good point, I think a third “actor” is necessary as in multiple scenarios: science double blinded studies, psychology counseling, law decision etc. Could this be a way of creating our free will ?
I've watched the first 14 minutes, I'm 72, born in 1951, and was in my late teens at the start of the hippy era. In a rather foreboding way (to make my point), I have this to say: Yes, I agree that we have less freedoms, inclusive of speaking our minds. And everything online distracts us, literally deflects us away from what we truly think, as individuals. There is nothing to debate anymore. Black is the only colour paint allowed for fences and decor now, with 'grey' detail and highlights. It is as if we only recognise black, grey and some small amount of white. As colours. The power of the internet has decided that only these limitrd colours are allowed to be used in building decor and externally. It is just an example of how choice - has shrunk. On my local shopping mall. I sometimes just observe those walking by (i'm really just trying to move safely at 72 into the stream of moving humaity), and those walking by - often are - glazed and zombie like in animation and pace. No-one seems to be aware anymore of the importance of individual thought and ideas.
It is satisfying to get the feeling that Iain is getting closer to revealing the human condition, there is of course the great but which is the realization that the real split is the mind body split and a dysfunctional brain is a consequence. Our situation is the mind over reality as our true individuated nature is reality over mind which is the experience of psychic wholeness embodied gnosis.
Wow!!! I have heard Ian talk to other youtube channels before and was interested in what he had to say, but this conversation is just so on point! I need to be doing better. Thank You Ian.
in the 70s at junior school, every week our class had a debate.... we were given a viewpoint to defend. and taught how to discuss things in a civil way. just saying
Being a fan of the channel and just having listned to the first 2 minutes; I sincerly hope the conversation about the (abstract) left brain dominance will be unpacked in very relatable and concrete action... fingers crossed... Oke a (technocratic) tirany is what we need to be afraid of... (like Mattias Desmet, I concur)
It is pretty clear that Jordan P hasnt taken Ian's messages on board although they had a really interesting conversation. He is increasingly angry and preaching fr the pulpit. We need more of Ian's thoughts coming to the public sphere.
It breaks my heart that the preciousness of childhood is being trashed in the name of rights and this awareness of the awfulness IM speaks of seems to be a sad but awful challenge we need to confront before its too late.
so drag queen storytime is ruining youth- - not school shootings, environmental collapse, economic disparity, bad infrastructure so kids are stuck in their houses and can't o outside to play... ok.
Sorry about the typos. My fingers often wobble onto the wrong alpha key. The real danger is that people are unaware that compared to the 1970s - they have shackled themselves. On impluse about ten days ago i bought myself an orange jacket with orange fur all around its edges. I'm well seen now when crossing roads, it's a fun jacket, it is hippy nostalgia on my part - and I wear it with black and pale grey herring bone checked pants. I have more than enough staid, safe, old lady clothing in my wardrobe. Inclusive of five black winter warm clothing. No More! Difference is needed to shake apathy up and out of people while some of us still can see the danger of societies of mind washed humans with zero original input. Too many people now, can't see the importance of original input. I shake them awake quite a bit at 72, a bit tubby, and swanning around in a hippy styled orange jacket with 'lion's mane' faux fur stitched onto every edge. It's a fun, ridiculous jacket. And I love wearing it: Old?, Lonely? Our society is being groomed to believe being old equals being alone equals being down and out. I am old. I am alone. I am not down out. Not by a long shot. I bought an orange jacket with fur, 'cos I wanted to, 'cos I could, 'cos I wasn't brave enough to wear an orange jacket in the early nineteen seventies. Colour and difference stimulates new ideas.
Iain said he would like to discuss more in-depth where the zombie shuffling, now rushing headlong on this path will take us exactly. This means that he is alarmed and quite desperate to give his warnings out to the world. Of course, he could not say one sentence about it in mainstream media which could reach a much-much wider audience. It is up to us to act as loudspeakers for him. His 2-volume book is pretty heavy, pricey and challenging for the average reader so it will never get to the majority of society especially with no popularising of it anywhere. He remains a hidden treasure for most people.
There are many great thinkers highlighting our present crisis: Dr McGilchrist, Dr Verwaeke, Dr Peterson of the academic world, Paul Vander Kay, Jonathan Pageau, Karen Wong, Mary Harrington, Paul Kingsnorth, all people of wide-ranging talent and expertise. There is certainly potential for a mind-shifting conference here. Alessandro Barbero, Professor of the Medieval at the University of Torino in Vercelli, author and Italian UA-cam presence and Alessandro D’Avenia, author, educator and journalist would offer interesting perspectives, as well.
Iain is so articulate and he is 'right'... and by this I don't mean corresponding with his own premises (which is what most people mean): His ideas are coherent both in utility and meaning. Culturally, we are so dismissive of our debt to other people both living and dead. The myth of the 'self made' person, of individualism, is a sickness. Literally everything you know, 'own', eat, all the words you use, every mile you dive on roads, systems of understanding every brick or stone in your house, every song (even if you 'wrote' it), depends on other people. He is absolutely and frighteningly correct that we should not allow people who have no appreciation or humility reformulate civilisation, whether 'left' or 'right', on the basis of what they think of as just and true. Arrogance, cynicism and disgust threaten to kill us all.
Interesting Ian McGilchrist at the beginning of this conversation reflected on how he described our human predicament, as being sleep walkers who are approaching the abyss. Later he reformulates our current human predicament as being zombies who are walking towards the abyss. Sleep walkers still have the hope of awakening. Can the same be said about zombies? Nietzsche reminds us that (only) those who stare into the abyss long enough will see the abyss staring back at them. To avoid stepping off the abyss needs an awakening to the real byss or ground of being, for only it can offer firm ground for pathfinders.
“I don’t think we’ve explored fully the awfulness of where we’re going….” I will add that the deeper we go into this abyss, the more mired we become, the harder a full exploration becomes on a scale required for real change. I sometimes wonder if we’ve reached a sort of ‘peak species’ or ‘peak civilization’ and are on our slow but certain descent toward extinction, guided along by social media tech.
It's a small but significant point. Inwardly I often suspect that the internet has shoved humanity over a cliff - that the mere connectivity, this sudden, endless connectivity with every corner of the world is itself something we were neither evolved to experience nor can healthfully manage. Social media as a sub-phenomenon of the internet is of course easier to identify as rankly deranging, but truly, I more and more wonder if the mere scope of the connectivity inherent to the net full stop is simply more rife with drawbacks to the human mind than is given credit. Anyone beyond a certain age (myself included) remembers life before the net, before the phones, before the connectivity. I both realize that the net's arrival is an inevitable chapter in human history, and simultaneously, I'd happily, regretlessly wave it all away.
I think the question of technology’s influence on the human parallels the hemispheric relationship of the brain. We must absolutely make technology the emissary, not the master.
Progress always follows a two step process. 1 better thinking 2 effective cooperation. This IS accessible and COULD BE fantastically wonderful. I've been working on this.
Does anyone know when a second printing of “the matter with things” may happen or where I can find a copy for under $119? Cant find it anywhere including Iaan’s website - 🙏
We so badly need these erudite' passionate voices like Iain's to name this urgency that we all feel either subconsciously or consciously. Martin Shaw, in Cinderbiter, describes the bardic training schools for Irish bards in the Middle Ages, which involved many hours of lying on wooden plank beds in the dark in cells composing. The intent was to teach poetic technique, cultivate imagination and strengthen memory. The most avid would lie on rock floors with a stone on their bellies. We all feel that stone on our bellies, but there is no school. Perhaps we need a gathering in which those seeking the way forward, sit in solitude, then come together in music and community, perhaps fasting, listening to the sounds of the night or daybreak, out in the woods, listening to ancient legends and stories, returning to the tent cold and hungry, to see what right hemispheres resonating together might imaginatively and intuitively come up with, sort of Kekule falling asleep on the double decker bus, but not drowsy or comfortable. We will not imagine a future in our disembodied left brain screen world of theology and idea shopping, we just won't. The crossroads, sacred to Hermes and Robert Johnson, are where the robbers and the devil wait, but one of the roads is Dylan's "highway of diamonds with nobody on it" Otherwise, black will be continue being the color and none will be forever the number.
I find it tiresome trying to wake friends who are "sleepwalking " its like Ian said when you point something outside of the matrix to them YOUR the problem
Iain McGichrist has written a great book. The Master and His Emissary. When I read the book ....I read and reread paragraphs, grabbed a pencil and made notes, told anyone who would listen about the book. Atten. Span (LH), precludes those that need this knowledge from reading. Movies of the 1950s and 60s have the remnants of Right Hemisphere balanced brain characteristics....the storyline, conversation and laid back mannerisms vs. todays simpleton characters.
Mark my words, detailed brain scans of neuro-synaptic triggering patterns will become mandatory law before too long as well as a prerequisite to receive medical care or certain (all?) employment, just as fingerprints were during the Hoover era.
You have articulated my concerns with expert concise precision, and if you examine my past year’s writings on Twitter, you will see the same thread which echoes your words… which I only knew intuitively, but it always helps to have a credentialed response which is spoken in somewhat more scientific terms in order to convince the skeptics! Thank you so very much… I hope this will encourage others to buy & read your books! 🙏🏻💯💡🗽👼🏻♾️
I love that Iain McG, in his own calm way is concerned for our kids mental health. Our kids are told there is an infinite number of genders and they can change them as we wish and also told they need to irrversible surgical and medical interventions if they like the idea of being a different gender - Schitzophrenia.
Our schools share a lot of responsibility for this state of affairs. Kids are given bits of texts immediately followed by exercises and memorisation. The primary aim of all this is to pass the next test. There is always the next hurdle to ‘overcome’, we are formatted that way and carry such unfortunate mindset into the ‘adult’ life.
When was the national curriculum established.? When it was introduced in Scotland our standard of education fell.... The teachers and head mistresses/masters spend far too much time filling in forms in an attempt to constantly monitor children, and the objectives are wrong.....we are breeding people who are not taught to question, or even how to.... That curriculum needs upgrading, to bring back what we have lost.! Thank you....great interview. :)
It never ceases to amaze that people who are well versed in criticism and identifying problems can't see their way to a solution. I have action plans for society and I'm nowhere near as deft of analyzing its depth of self-destruction.
They always stop digging too soon. For example, Daniel Schmachtenberger seems to have stopped at game theory. The way to dig deeper is to ask another "Why?" question. For example: Why do people submit to game theory? It's because they think they are trapped by it. But why do they think they are trapped? It's because they think they are dependent on the benefits of continuing the game. Why do thy think think they are dependent? It's because they were trained to think that way by society. Why does society train us that way? Etcetera. We can apply the same line of questioning to Iain's Left Hemisphere hypothesis. Why is the left hemisphere dominant? That question instantly takes us past Iain's premature conclusion.
Yes and what is even more concerning is that I find when truth is mentioned online or in the political sphere it gets no more recognition than fake new or disinformation. It’s a gut feeling as well that even if we did have the answers, nobody acts on them. I see stagnation and moral decay continuing to take place in society. Can only speak for the west where I live.
Simple - because there's always a bigger picture. Your so called 'action plans' might appear, on the surface, to be a viable solution to humanities problems, but you'll find that there are always factors you haven't taken into account in your original plans. So then, rather than being the solution, your plan of action merely becomes another part of the overall problem.
No actionable solution was given, so let’s give it a try. David asked, “How do we rebalance?” There might appear to be two solutions: 1) reduce the left hemisphere, 2) increase the right hemisphere. Since there’s nothing wrong with human beings (which Iain also suggested), I don’t think we need to increase anything. Instead, I’d suggest that we relax the left hemisphere by finding the causes of its dominance. If we dig deep, we will find that the causes are dependence and judgement. The left hemisphere simplifies and narrows reality and then feels dependent on things to fill the subsequent sense of lack. Then it judges itself or others as enemies who are in the way of achieving that goal. So the solution is to undermine dependence and judgement. For example, we can ask, “We are a highly advanced species, so why should we feel dependent and why should we judge ourselves and others? Shouldn’t life be easy for us?” You might think this analysis comes from the left hemisphere, and that we need more nuance, etc. But the left hemisphere might just be adding ideas like nuance to its tool belt to continue its dominance, e.g. the galaxy brain tendency of endlessly devouring information. Regardless, the right-hemisphere will naturally be activated in the process of undermining dependence and judgement.
I have not read Iain's book "The matter with things' (yet?) and his critic of a mechanistic worldview fully resonates with me. However, I am uneasy about his theory of the two brain hemispheres working in such different ways, each one closed off in his own domain. Isn't it well documented now that the two hemispheres work in collaboration, that there is constant communication between them trough the "corpus callosum", this nerve structure that allows continuous signaling between the two? I am not a neurologist and I submit this commentary in all humility...
This presentation uses the metaphor of being in a culturally left-brain moment and is quite coarse grained. But in The Master and his Emissary, Iain emphasises that it's not a simple left-right divide, that both sides are always involved in everything, eg language has a strong left-brain locus, but the right brain also has a language role. The hypothesis, that there might be multiple components of consciousness across the brain giving rise to experience and that we might experience a hemisphere bias phenomenologically and ultimately culturally is treated more speculatively, albeit with a comprehensive argument drawn from science, philosophy and the arts.
Even putting out video upon video of just conversation becomes unhelpful after a point. The title of the video is we need to act, yet contains no action just more intellectualising
long form conversation is left brain activity if I’m not mistaken (as is commenting underneath the video I’m aware of the irony).. An Iain McGilchrist Novel for example would be the next book I'd like to read next. How about we all become artists
The shift from talking to action isn't a simple nothing to all process, I’m sure it exists on a spectrum and those who will inspire others and make change are probably battling with deep uncertainty, unworthiness, highly introverted.. so videos like this surely turn the dial that little bit further
I really hope that David and co can take on board the good Doctor's plea to move beyond pure rationality. RW has done some great work over the past few years but now seems somewhat blinkered by an over-adherence to Hegelian synthesis. Especially in regard to the COVID response as an expression of technocratic totalitarianism.
Whenever I listen to Iain McGilchrist, I feel I have returned home to safety and sanity. This is a nugget of an interview teeming with enlivened information, speaking right to the heart of the sickness in our society today! What a relief. Thank you 🙏🏼
Please also listen to Daniel Schmactenberger
Thank you. I will do that. 🙏🏼✨
Agree fully, home and honest!
This man is a very rare mix of heart and mind.
An ideal mix - both are given - to be used rightly, fairly and universally. Thank you.
McGilchrist is a bonafide genius. 'The Matter With Things' is the greatest work of philosophy of the 21st century imo, and 'The Master and His Emissary' is also an absolutely excellent book and extremely accessible to the layman. He and Ken Wilber are the only two thinkers I've read in modern times that have been able to show a way out of scientific materialism, postmodern relativism, and other nihilistic modern ideologies without recourse to some long, forgotten golden age. Not that I don't sympathize with traditionalists who want to go back to some golden age, as the modern world is insane. But I think the way out of this clusterfuck of a civilization is through, not back.
Here is the fundamental matter with "things"
ua-cam.com/video/wvLKIv0uaQ4/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/V5gV9Z4xrA8/v-deo.html
I understand ALL at the most fundamental level. I honestly do.
I have friends who are Koscielnys. Brilliant musicians.
I agree!
Yes. We need to be able to hold the mess/state if where we are and sort through it
Agreed, I think his work represents a major breakthrough. Those who can understand it may be able to offer some hope for the future, contrary to the clusterf**k approach of the WEF and so on.
If someone as sensible and gentle as Dr McGilchrist is sounding the alarm on the direction of civilization then we really are in peril
And I've got a right-brained idea. It involves local interaction, and national networking. It is political, but it is nonpartisan. It's what man lost, and can maybe get back again. I want Dr. McGilchrist to see this... The Two Sides of Everything, and Complete Introduction To Building Communities, at Breaking Ground.
“Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history.”
~ Plato
Said the man who banished poets from his Republic. ;)
History is like poetry to me. Likewise politics. It is definitely more symbolic than actual to my mind.
@@abbasalchemist That's exactly what I was thinking!
@@abbasalchemist 🤣 good spot
Although perhaps it was the context of Plato having earlier "banished poets" earlier in his life that gave Plato that regret- wider whole and all! :)
...
Can you remind me where plato said this quote? Thanks . Love & light
I have been a student of Dr.McGilchrist for many years, starting with an in depth study, reading and rereading, "The Master and His Emissary'", and now a many months examination of "The Matter with Things." The current global context, with catastrophic loss of planetary habitability, rising totalitarian impulses in the political realm, and huge disparities in the economic realm to name just a few of our problems urgently asks these questions; "Who are we and why are we behaving in this globally self-destructive way?"
My opinion is that Dr. McGilchrist could well be the most relevant and greatest teacher of our age regarding the much needed answers to these questions. Just watching this video for the last hour has shifted my awareness to an expansive realm where many of the most helpful insights into the way in which humans inhabit their worlds are connected and pointing to a possible transformation, or rebalancing of human potential to mitigate our global free-fall into the abyss of self-destructive ignorance.
Just as Iain McGilchrist recommends- we need to be nourished by our roots. To find answers to your questions, maybe you need to go back to the story of Genesis and God's love affair with humankind in spite our fallen nature. Listen to some Orthodox scholars, mystics - add some lectures from Jordan Peterson, be generous in your approach..... the Bible is not this moth-eaten, irrelevant fairytale nonsense that the modern and progressive world of the Machine has been feeding us to believe.
@@kbeetles Thank you for your beautiful reply. I have watched some lectures from Jordan. My mother was a Lutheran minister's daughter and I was highly conditioned by a brutal machine like version of Christianity all through my childhood. "Man is by nature, sinful and unclean." was the message that accreted the obstructions around the inherent goodness that is at the core of all of us.
I think Dr. McGilchrists message is not that the part of us that is "sinful" needs to be eliminated. It plays an important role in survival and adaptation; rather, we need to rebalance those ways of inhabiting the world associated with the left hemisphere with the right hemispheric modes that open to the widest possible, most expansive, connected views of the Universe. This possibility is inherent in every healthy human brain... but needs to be uncovered as human capacities are rebalanced. Further, I would say that the so called "answers to questions" come as felt senses in the body as much as words or religious belief....
Having said that, I have nothing but the greatest respect for those who are trying to reclaim Christianity's key value to our current human predicament. For instance, I have a Christian friend who runs a weekly study group that looks at all the ways that some versions of Christianity, like the current evangelical movement in America that votes for Trump, have turned into totalitarian, machine like systems that takes away the Freedom that Ian talks about at the beginning.
I agree that there is great potential for change to (in time) come from the turmoil of our times. I'm currently about have way through Dr McGilchrist's latest book the Matter with Things, having read his first book shortly after it first came out. His writing has been and continues to be some of the most impactful on my own thinking and study over the last 10 years. A true deep thinker.
Another neuroscientist Beau Lotto at UCL, who studies how the brain learns, once said in a talk that, "the brain hates uncertainty" and went on to explain how it enters into a sort of tunnel vision, holding onto (grasping, ie left hemisphere) "what it knows". One of his insights that chimes with this talk, is that "play" is the only human activity whose purpose is the activity itself. There would be no point, as he says, to play a game whose outcome was known. He also advocates play for children, as well as adults: the play state is the state in which we embrace change...
I think what your comments mean to me, is that we need better teachers - in every sense, I'm not referring to the job title, but the activity of teaching. Religious teachers have traditionally been some of the most insightful in all cultures that embrace open inquiry and learning. In today's secular worlds, teaching seems undervalued. The common saying is even "those than can't (do), teach"...
I really appreciate McGilchrist's wisdom, and I hope his ideas spread.
Wonderful comments by all, I agree that religion is often depicted as something outdated yet I think we need to recall at lest some of the core values that unite humanity as one (not inferring that a religion is better than another), we need to have a renewed moral construction of society thus the desperate need to educate the younger minds because for most of the people change is far more difficult especially with age. A great lecture is Homo Deus by Yuval Noah Harari. I’m sure that if we find a common root for humanity we can aim for higher goals while recognising our intrinsic differences. Right now we’re just plummeting into an abyss of instant gratification that daily shorten our long term view.
Well done, keep at it stranger! 👏
Wow! Within the first minutes he's addressing one of the most important public goods: FREE SPEECH !
This is so important and a shame that people don't value it.
Although it cannot even be bought with money...
The Stoa is still trying to figure it out. Maybe in a decade they'll allow comments.
"A mind that is learning is constantly growing." Thank for having Iain McGilchrist on. I have all three of his books and am still listening to his lectures.
Thank you both again.❤
Dr. McGilchrist has had an extraordinary education that was different and he made choices outside the box.
With the deepest appreciation and admiration for his wisdom he imparts to those who listen.❤
I've just started reading Master and Emissary. It is hard work so I find his YT interviews greatly helpful. They are talking about him and the importance of his insight as a modern-day Plato. I find explaining his work to friends a good way to test & develop my own understanding of his message. A companion book is the Twilight of American culture by Morris Berman [2001] - which chronicles the intellectual decline of the west and contrasts this with the decline of Roman/Greek thinking. Berman and McGilchrist arrive at the same conclusions from very different starting points.
A profound and timely warning from the wisdom and brilliance of Iain McGilchrist.
This is stirring. I feel a sense of enormous relief, all over. I know so many women like myself who alternate between a constant state of anguished helplessness and furious anger at what the left is doing to our country, to our children, to our culture. Evenen here in Charlottesville, Virginia, a small, intimidating group is destroying our local monuments which have graced our historic university town for two centuries. But thanks to Dr. McGilchrist I have stepped back. I have listened to other lectures and sent them to others, but this 42 minutes opens up a world of understanding. If anything it addresses my own anger, and has offered me a way to understand and navigate my way around such destructive personalities -- some of which are relatives. Thank you, Dr. McGilchrist, for your profound, life-changing research, and your passion to spread your discoveries.
Yes, be upset abt where "the left" has gone too far, but for Gods sake open ur eyes to the rights insanity as well.
Iain is clearly a prophet and a guide. Extremely grateful for his passion, wisdom, and love of humans and life.
Ways we can rebalance:
Nature immersion: this is the right brain context in which humans have always existed, and in which the left brain grew and flourished. And in it's absence, the left brain has overrun not only the right brain but the emotions and the body as well.
Play: doing things for the sheer delight of the experience. Elicits our child-like capacities. Includes spontaneous self-expression, especially authentic movement when dancing, which is a way to fully embody being free, and is also great authenticity training.
Having a deep time perspective about the evolutionary nature of universe and the Earth, that is the context of Existence. Humility naturally arises, as well as a deep connection to our magnificence as a part of this glorious Creation.
Profound gratitude for all our ancestors and earlier life forms that have provided an unbroken chain of life that has made our existence possible.
Great answer, I think any form of art has that element of play and freedom which activate our brain as a whole: input, output, remembering, changing, creating, sharing etc. Human needs sensory experiences to flourish, anything that is imposed is inevitably going to contaminate this growth. If we take a look at the most advanced civilisation in human history there was always a theme of questioning our reality, finding a meaning, debating to create a fertile narrative.
Yes to rewilding ourselves and embracing our untamed wild, soft animal body. To reparenting ourselves and much, much more playfulness.
How do we spread this message? Surely it needs to be done at local / grass roots levels?
How do you help people see the importance of this?
Beautiful ideas for action, thank you for sharing.
I read something relevant to this in an old book:
“If you cannot be like one of these children, you will never get into my Father’s Mansion.”
Seems as relevant today as ever.
McGilchrists ability to calmly and crisply illuminate the darkness he sees is inspiring. Perhaps however one needs distribute the 'blame' beyond the 'we' that is legally referred to as a "natural person" and to deeply question the status of the "corporate person" (company). Corporate Persons have many human rights plus privelages not available to the natural person and most powerfully exercised via scale and legal shielding, with special additional legal shielding for companies that are banks and in particular central banks (and some transnational entities). Although corporate persons are peopled by humans-with two hemispheres-the behaviour of corporate persons often looks like the behaviour of a natural person with right hemisphere damage. And it is these behaviours whose impact dominates our world.
He makes it sound like common sense. Mayhe because it is....or should be.
I love his work so much, but in this video he says: “we need to wake up” but there are no actionable suggestions. “We need to eradicate this way of thinking”. How? I’m catholic and I’m doing that for myself with faith and prayer, but what about people who don’t like religion?
The horrific true of this world's moment is that even those who sees clearly what's the problem is, can't see a way out of it.
We may need to go through a chaotic and convoluted time to somewhere in the future find a new balance.
Do not despair.
@@StimParavane there's no despair, on the contrary, when we study human history is clear that all situations resolve themselves on the long run. But, to shift paths, the usual human way is war and chaos, and there's no way to foresee the new balance derived from this.
@@semqueixas There are those of us who see the path that will limit undue suffering, it takes time though. People like Elon Musk and Jordan Peterson are beacons of light to bring hope and inspiration.
Peace on earth could be had today, this instant, but it will take those of us who have a say in the matter to choose it, and that goes for each and everyone one of us.
@@mattmyers2624 I think Jordan Peterson's usefulness has ended.
Now he just preaches to the choir when he was most effective fighting publicly in his TV interviews with the state approved journalists.
His open 'letters' to the likes of Twitter are cringeworthy. They know what they are doing and no amount of reason will stop their evil plans.
Free Thought is the seed...
Free Speech is the flower 🌹
And deep thinking - the source.
We can even let - the Voice Real (within) - speak through us.
Everyone - including the speaker - will learn profound and useful answers - constantly and eternally. (Just a note from Joimany) Thank you - for your initial idea.
Caution with calling synchronicities easily, but I was only this morning debating if I should purchase Ian's McGilchrist's new book 'The Matter with Things'. Excited to listen to this conversation, and it looks like I found my book-buying answer - excellent mind, important voice. Thank you.
I very much wanted to dive into his books dealing with an updated view of the human experience..... the 🧠, perception... so amazing! Unfortunately I'm too broke to spend money on myself
@@justinlaporte9414 Always invest in yourself first, my friend! Excellent books are some of the cheapest sources of quick gains.
K'ching
Recognized the name, but this is the first time I've been exposed to his thoughts. Impressed, and will also be purchasing his most recent book.
@@jordanthornton Especially, I believe, books which engender imagination and, as he discusses, right-brain activity versus left-brain intellectuallization.
I fully agree. We used to learn clear thinking at school for our awareness of the dangers of language, and debating and argumentative essays to develop our own oral and written persuasive skills. These lessons gave me an awe for the power of communication and the difference between information/facts and the various ways in which information is presented. Such training conveyed an understanding of the possibility of being fooled and manipulated. We learned to search for the truth by recognising faulty logic and emotional appeals, and read between the lines. It seems few people are trying to assess claims for BS, these days. Are thinking and speaking skills out of vogue, or discernment itself?
That quickly goes by the wayside when critical thinking threatens social relationships, social standing, or ability to get on in an employment
School can't teach the necessary skills - only experience can. We can teach kids techniques to quieten their minds, and to learn how to listen to their own experiences, but it is hit-or-miss if the kids choose to employ these.
Are you sure you learned that at school? Because when you say "we", it sounds like it was a standard thing. Certainly when I was at school it wasn't. We did some argumentative essays later in school, but it was only open to those who did English (mainly) at a higher (I don't mean the qualification) level. There were many, probably a majority who weren't exposed to that type of education at all. Remember, too, that it's people of our generations (older people who might have been taught critical thinking) that have laid the path for this malaise. The "last ten years" that Iain mentions in the video has been a long time in the making. Almost inevitable. Obviously magnified by the dirtiness of social media of course.
Excellent points. Critical thinking skills can be taught, and it’s sobering to know that actual objective thinkers who are intelligent enough to actually think objectively-even about themselves-are extremely rare as a personality and IQ combination type. Like 1% of the population. Clearly, 1% is not doing all the talking…. And perhaps more importantly when it comes to algorithms, clearly the 1% is not doing all the listening either. Keeping this in mind should really help us with our perspective. Thanks 🙏🏻 ❤️🔥👍🏻
@@spiralsun1 Critical thinking is specifically the problem
This was such an inspiring and eloquent conversation. Iain really does say what I am thinking without missing a beat. It's as if he gives wings to my own thoughts and allows them to be spoken. Thank you so much.
Such a fantastic discussion - as always. McGilchrist is a fascinating human being. Thanks for bringing discussions of hope, compassion and deep understanding.
What a great conversation. I especially enjoy Dr. McGilchrist’s points on the importance of the nature, myth, and traditions in we have lived for thousands of years as as rebalancing tool. Time in forest or mountains, time listening to the best stories, time understanding how others have lived, can really help to reveal the patterns of the greater reality around us; patterns that the left hemisphere can’t grasp on its own.
McGilchrist spot on. The culture is seeking to extract our identity down to the soul. We are not digital code.
Dear fellow humans, let us heed Ians call. Let us do an be our utmost to rise beyond all hijacked values and perceptions. No matter what it takes. It is literally life or death for generations to come.
What would you practically do everyday ?
@@OmicronFra I am just a construction worker so I have no large stages to enter upon. I am informing myself to the best of my ability, communicating with people about some key topics (communicating is not my strongest side because of hot temper), I also do various kinds of inner work to clear my vision and strenghten my authenticity and work out fears and traumas as much as I can - something I believe is THE key for any lasting change. Sometimes i attend in street manifestations in Stockholm. So, that is pretty much what I do,
@Ed O'Brien I will, Ed. Thank you.
@@M-i-k-a-e-l I can relate to problems caused by hot temper...very much. :D
I love Iain. I hope more people pay attention to what he’s saying.
When iain speaks out, you know you are required to carefully listen.
Amen!
Absolutely.... We need to pay very careful attention
Watching again!
To be brutally honest if you haven't worked out we are quickly heading into a post truth world and you need to watch a video to discover this you've been living under a rock.
ABSOLUTELY TRUE 💕
We are on a collision course and have been for some time. Each time I speak to people about the way things are going I hit a brick wall, It's like the younger generations feel a sense of hopelesness and feel powerless to do anything to change things for the better. Poor education and conditioning has left the masses unable to think properly, reliable ways of old have been rejected in an attempt to prove to themselves they can fix things, but pride always comes before a fall and I think it may be to late already.
what are we supposed to do? Boomers have all the money and they're heavily invested in things continuing exactly as they are. Nobody looked out for my generation to consider if we would have an education appropriate to the world we were growing in to, or that there would be jobs for us. Or homes. Or healthcare.
The younger generations have always wondered why the older generations are referred to as “grown-ups.”
Let us push back against tide of global/political/economic direction & recover our human dignity & purpose as embodied participants in evolution.
"A fool and enemy of civilization" well said! Freedom and sense making on short supply these days.
Good luck out there everyone 😅
It's very heartening to see explicitly identifying the regressive behavior that people on the political extremes are engaging in. The more that reasonable and compassionate individuals speak out, the greater the likelihood that everyday people will unify around a higher set of principles like the ones Iain Identifies as sacred and transcendent.
Rebel Wisdom will never die ♥️✌️
I thought they were going to end the channel.
@@ClassPunkOnRumbleAndSubstack fantastic publicity stunt, they know how to manipulate us.
Thank you for having easily one of the the most important thinkers back again to propound a very urgent call. McGilchrist's hypothesis is prescient and a case in point. HIs work is critical to our survival and restoring our bearings.
We need a return to Romanticism, the integration of the poetic and the scientific. The German Idealists had it right back in the 18th Century. Pure calculative rationality can never lead to human flourishing and can only leave us shrivelled husks of human beings.
@@zootsoot2006 Absolutely. Too many aspects vital to life cannot be contained or forced into the Procrustean bed of an indurate purely linear analytical calculus. Pure rationality alone is itself irrational. Juggernauts like Wittgenstein and Heidegger turned to embrace more poetry in their later years.
@@aleksandrl6740 At a certain point of thought you realise everything you need to know is right in front of you as it is and to wrap it in conceptual bindings is merely a turning a way from truth and the will to keep on dreaming.
Free speech is not free, it has cost me personally many times throughout my life. My military service showed me that humor is not welcome in the Army hehe. Censorship is not the answer to bad speech, good speech is. Cheers from a retired soldier down under.
Oz by all accounts seems particularly infected
I've held a strong feeling from an early age that people should try to live in one place for MOST of their lives.
The connection to place and belonging builds a sense of responsibility and continuity with a part of the planet, a nation, a state, a city, a suburb a street and a home.
The novelty of nomadic vagrancy and constant movement is a contributor to our disconnect from place and desire to assert change on each location we move to.
With burgeoning population, it has become difficult to remain in place and not be enticed to other places by profit or novel motivations.
What if that one place doesn't appreciate your talents? What if it is ravaged by war or persecution? What if society is profoundly sick?
As a native Londoner, I've lived in several countries for work, and I've settled in central Europe because I've been able to flower here.
I live just outside London and I’m slowly watching the degeneracy eat my little village as Londoners are pushed out of the city. All crime in our sleepy village has sky rocketed to the point the council has installed stab kits in the town centre.
I have come to realize how profoundly my life experience has been altered and damaged by so many moves as I was growing up. That constant disconnect along with familial and societal dysfunctions has taken me a lifetime to achieve an ever evolving understanding of the consequences. I have an abiding love for the natural world and have found healing and support in direct experience and appreciation of the earth. I sincerely believe the only way humanity will survive with any success is to embrace nature’s ways and wisdom in cooperation, Not destruction.
Nice one David, getting Iain back on. I find myself effortlessly resonating with what Iain says. Regards what to do about the path we are on, Iain's response of, 'firstly, just be aware where we are heading' reminds me of the Buddha's 1st noble truth (fully know dukkha (suffering)). Also, acknowledging sin (sin meaning, missing the mark/point of life) in Christianity. Basically, raising awareness encourages better resolution than frantically going after problems like a bull to a red rag. Hence not losing site of our wisdom traditions! With tremendous clarity and precision after years of pioneering research, Iain's work, for me, reveals the importance and depth of our wisdom traditions and their paramount importance for our times.
Two of my favourite people!💖Talking about things that matter.
That power is not the purpose of life, really hits the nail on the head for me. I agree that the utilitarian mindset dominates everything in our culture; it sucks the joy out of life. On anger and discourse, I am reminded of the work of David Bohm on dialogue. In one interview, he was asked what are the conditions required for deep dialogue to flourish. His answer was "attention and care" by which he meant that any dialogue requires both parties to listen with exquisite attention to each other, but also to care... to break past the baggage that we all bring to a conversation, we have to connect at that most basic level of speaking and connecting with another human being. It seems to me that we are all finding it difficult in the current climate of discourse to show care to our fellow human beings. For quite some time I was struggling myself with anger, and I've had to work diligently to nurture my own sense of compassion and connection with those whom I am in opposition with politically or in terms of thought.
So I would advocate for a caveat on McGilchrist's suggestion that we have to challenge ideas, and "push back". We must do so whilst showing compassion and care for "the other" and avoid the tendency (which surfaces in this conversation too at times) to refer to "they" and other forms of generalisation, that de-personalise and thus dehumanise.
Completely agree with the wise Ian McGilchrist. Been following Ian for some time, also reading his books ( you need time) and the more you understand this the more we can balance the scales. These are the real first principle fundamentals at work and we need to understand them before it is too late. Excellent podcast.
I am finding M&E a challenge & would strongly recommend 'The Twilight of American Culture' by Berman (2001) as a companion to M&E. It arrives at the same conclusion from a totally different perspective - the two books are complementary in a quite shocking way. Berman quotes Francis Bacon from The Parasceve in 1620 as follows "For the world is not to be narrowed till it will go into the understanding (which has been done hitherto), but the understanding is to be expanded and opened till it can take in the image of the world".
Long time since I watched this channel.....but Iain is ahead of the rest.
I would like to believe that Iain McGilchrist's message is one that many people (myself included) inherently consider to be true, although without fully understanding the reason why. Perhaps because his explanations are articulated with such precision and clarity, and are based on a solid foundation of thought, study, research and involvement that so few have been able to match in time, effort and interest. This forty minute podcast encapsulated many ideas and thoughts that I have had myself, but have not been able to reduce, rationalise and summarise so succinctly. "We Need to Act" is a clear and compelling message, but requires enormous and truly universal acceptance and effort. A formidable challenge!
The trouble is, we cannot act - we can only _react._ Which is why there are no human solutions to our problems. We can but see what happens.
I work in a marketing department in a multinational and the entire department is being reduced to a large spreadsheet with budgets attached. It’s a perfect illustration of the the left hemisphere’s dominance on the way we see the world.
Great video, superb interview. Will share it like crazy. Thank you.
Wonderful, wonderful! Don't stop taking interviews.
Yes, we need to act!
I for one am going to snap into action and watch a shed load more videos of academics on UA-cam telling me that it`s time to act.
I have been binge-watching RW, McGilchrist, John Headaeke , Jargon Peterson and IDW for a month, and now I am even more convinced than ever that it is time to act.
I have renewed all my online subscriptions and taken out a new broadband contract already.
Hi... a year later....
The world is going downhill fast but the people on UA-cam telling everyone its time to act are a whole lot more rich and famous.
Get your hemispheres round that!
This is so great! Straight to the point. Unfortunately just like his example of diagnosing the problem and then telling the patient who does not then listen until they find the answer themselves, many will not hear these words and self reflect on them. Classic left brain. 🤦♂️
Let those who have ears hear it - said Jesus. He faced the same blindness and deafness.....but his words are still with us, although he had only 3 years teaching us.
What's left of the humanities has been taken over by social engineers , and more and more of the research in the humanities gets only funded if it can somehow appear as if it was a domain of computer science. This started already by the end of the 20th century, when in sociology and anthropology, and even in linguistics, in order to appear more "scientific", the use of statistics proliferated, and building so-called quantitative models became almost a requirement to be taken seriously.
During the discussion, Daniel Schmachtenberger's concept (about the third factor) and J. Krishnamurti’s ideas (about how we should observe ourselves and the world) came to my mind as a "solution", and how we can contribute/act in a more positive direction as individuals.
I would love to know your opinion about that and again, thanks for your work on this channel.
Except Krishnamurti was extremely frustrated because people just didn’t get it..
Schmactenberger's search for a third attractor as a way out of multipolar traps encourages me because it sees beyond the silliness of the cultural wars and doesn't seem to give a shit about it. The issues he is concerned about seem so much more tangible and the solutions more brave.
Nice point
@@weltraumaffe4155 Thank you for that reminder about Schmachtenberger. Though must say that me, a mother of 4 age 60 living in Finland. Things are looking dire.
@@weltraumaffe4155 good point, I think a third “actor” is necessary as in multiple scenarios: science double blinded studies, psychology counseling, law decision etc. Could this be a way of creating our free will ?
Outstanding! and love how he rephrased Ephesians 4:14. Thank you for an illuminating talk ❤️
Thank you for the allusion to Ephesians 4 which I just read, and wow, yes, what a call to action it is for each and every soul.
+1. That’s the solution in a nut shell.
I've watched the first 14 minutes, I'm 72, born in 1951, and was in my late teens at the start of the hippy era. In a rather foreboding way (to make my point), I have this to say: Yes, I agree that we have less freedoms, inclusive of speaking our minds. And everything online distracts us, literally deflects us away from what we truly think, as individuals. There is nothing to debate anymore. Black is the only colour paint allowed for fences and decor now, with 'grey' detail and highlights. It is as if we only recognise black, grey and some small amount of white. As colours. The power of the internet has decided that only these limitrd colours are allowed to be used in building decor and externally. It is just an example of how choice - has shrunk. On my local shopping mall. I sometimes just observe those walking by (i'm really just trying to move safely at 72 into the stream of moving humaity), and those walking by - often are - glazed and zombie like in animation and pace. No-one seems to be aware anymore of the importance of individual thought and ideas.
It is satisfying to get the feeling that Iain is getting closer to revealing the human condition, there is of course the great but which is the realization that the real split is the mind body split and a dysfunctional brain is a consequence. Our situation is the mind over reality as our true individuated nature is reality over mind which is the experience of psychic wholeness embodied gnosis.
To combat the worst of the world, we must recognise it in ourselves first.
Some sanity here, but why the combat? Recognition will suffice.
Wow!!! I have heard Ian talk to other youtube channels before and was interested in what he had to say, but this conversation is just so on point! I need to be doing better. Thank You Ian.
An exceptional human being - what an extraordinary contribution he’s made to the world of ideas - thank you 🙏
in the 70s at junior school, every week our class had a debate.... we were given a viewpoint to defend. and taught how to discuss things in a civil way. just saying
Think is, independently thinking loses you friends and jobs these days.
Being a fan of the channel and just having listned to the first 2 minutes; I sincerly hope the conversation about the (abstract) left brain dominance will be unpacked in very relatable and concrete action... fingers crossed...
Oke a (technocratic) tirany is what we need to be afraid of... (like Mattias Desmet, I concur)
A voice of sanity imbued with humanity.
Your channel is a treasure …and so is Iain.
It is pretty clear that Jordan P hasnt taken Ian's messages on board although they had a really interesting conversation. He is increasingly angry and preaching fr the pulpit. We need more of Ian's thoughts coming to the public sphere.
@@sekeetaheliastraatmans8190 its pretty clear you have not taken Ian's message on board as well.
A truly remarkable and insightful interview. Thank you.
It breaks my heart that the preciousness of childhood is being trashed in the name of rights and this awareness of the awfulness IM speaks of seems to be a sad but awful challenge we need to confront before its too late.
so drag queen storytime is ruining youth- - not school shootings, environmental collapse, economic disparity, bad infrastructure so kids are stuck in their houses and can't o outside to play... ok.
Good video Great wisdom Thank you...
Thank you for sharing this truly eye-opening, profound, and insightful talk! Thank you, Professor McGilchrist!
More of this please Rebel Wisdom.
Sorry about the typos. My fingers often wobble onto the wrong alpha key. The real danger is that people are unaware that compared to the 1970s - they have shackled themselves. On impluse about ten days ago i bought myself an orange jacket with orange fur all around its edges. I'm well seen now when crossing roads, it's a fun jacket, it is hippy nostalgia on my part - and I wear it with black and pale grey herring bone checked pants. I have more than enough staid, safe, old lady clothing in my wardrobe. Inclusive of five black winter warm clothing. No More! Difference is needed to shake apathy up and out of people while some of us still can see the danger of societies of mind washed humans with zero original input. Too many people now, can't see the importance of original input. I shake them awake quite a bit at 72, a bit tubby, and swanning around in a hippy styled orange jacket with 'lion's mane' faux fur stitched onto every edge. It's a fun, ridiculous jacket. And I love wearing it: Old?, Lonely? Our society is being groomed to believe being old equals being alone equals being down and out. I am old. I am alone. I am not down out. Not by a long shot. I bought an orange jacket with fur, 'cos I wanted to, 'cos I could, 'cos I wasn't brave enough to wear an orange jacket in the early nineteen seventies. Colour and difference stimulates new ideas.
Such a sensible voice of reason.
Iain said he would like to discuss more in-depth where the zombie shuffling, now rushing headlong on this path will take us exactly. This means that he is alarmed and quite desperate to give his warnings out to the world. Of course, he could not say one sentence about it in mainstream media which could reach a much-much wider audience. It is up to us to act as loudspeakers for him. His 2-volume book is pretty heavy, pricey and challenging for the average reader so it will never get to the majority of society especially with no popularising of it anywhere. He remains a hidden treasure for most people.
There are many great thinkers highlighting our present crisis: Dr McGilchrist, Dr Verwaeke, Dr Peterson of the academic world, Paul Vander Kay, Jonathan Pageau, Karen Wong, Mary Harrington, Paul Kingsnorth, all people of wide-ranging talent and expertise. There is certainly potential for a mind-shifting conference here. Alessandro Barbero, Professor of the Medieval at the University of Torino in Vercelli, author and Italian UA-cam presence and Alessandro D’Avenia, author, educator and journalist would offer interesting perspectives, as well.
Iain is so articulate and he is 'right'... and by this I don't mean corresponding with his own premises (which is what most people mean): His ideas are coherent both in utility and meaning. Culturally, we are so dismissive of our debt to other people both living and dead. The myth of the 'self made' person, of individualism, is a sickness. Literally everything you know, 'own', eat, all the words you use, every mile you dive on roads, systems of understanding every brick or stone in your house, every song (even if you 'wrote' it), depends on other people. He is absolutely and frighteningly correct that we should not allow people who have no appreciation or humility reformulate civilisation, whether 'left' or 'right', on the basis of what they think of as just and true. Arrogance, cynicism and disgust threaten to kill us all.
The opposite of courage is not cowardice it is conformity and the opposite of good is not evil it is indifference.
That’s an astute observation.
Interesting Ian McGilchrist at the beginning of this conversation reflected on how he described our human predicament, as being sleep walkers who are approaching the abyss. Later he reformulates our current human predicament as being zombies who are walking towards the abyss. Sleep walkers still have the hope of awakening. Can the same be said about zombies? Nietzsche reminds us that (only) those who stare into the abyss long enough will see the abyss staring back at them. To avoid stepping off the abyss needs an awakening to the real byss or ground of being, for only it can offer firm ground for pathfinders.
“I don’t think we’ve explored fully the awfulness of where we’re going….” I will add that the deeper we go into this abyss, the more mired we become, the harder a full exploration becomes on a scale required for real change. I sometimes wonder if we’ve reached a sort of ‘peak species’ or ‘peak civilization’ and are on our slow but certain descent toward extinction, guided along by social media tech.
It's a small but significant point. Inwardly I often suspect that the internet has shoved humanity over a cliff - that the mere connectivity, this sudden, endless connectivity with every corner of the world is itself something we were neither evolved to experience nor can healthfully manage. Social media as a sub-phenomenon of the internet is of course easier to identify as rankly deranging, but truly, I more and more wonder if the mere scope of the connectivity inherent to the net full stop is simply more rife with drawbacks to the human mind than is given credit. Anyone beyond a certain age (myself included) remembers life before the net, before the phones, before the connectivity. I both realize that the net's arrival is an inevitable chapter in human history, and simultaneously, I'd happily, regretlessly wave it all away.
I think the question of technology’s influence on the human parallels the hemispheric relationship of the brain. We must absolutely make technology the emissary, not the master.
well said Iain ... a great mind articulating wise words
Progress always follows a two step process. 1 better thinking 2 effective cooperation. This IS accessible and COULD BE fantastically wonderful. I've been working on this.
Beautiful ❤❤❤
A discussion between Ian and Daniel schmactenburger would be A1!! Make it happen rebel wisdom
Does anyone know when a second printing of “the matter with things” may happen or where I can find a copy for under $119? Cant find it anywhere including Iaan’s website - 🙏
We so badly need these erudite' passionate voices like Iain's to name this urgency that we all feel either subconsciously or consciously. Martin Shaw, in Cinderbiter, describes the bardic training schools for Irish bards in the Middle Ages, which involved many hours of lying on wooden plank beds in the dark in cells composing. The intent was to teach poetic technique, cultivate imagination and strengthen memory. The most avid would lie on rock floors with a stone on their bellies. We all feel that stone on our bellies, but there is no school. Perhaps we need a gathering in which those seeking the way forward, sit in solitude, then come together in music and community, perhaps fasting, listening to the sounds of the night or daybreak, out in the woods, listening to ancient legends and stories, returning to the tent cold and hungry, to see what right hemispheres resonating together might imaginatively and intuitively come up with, sort of Kekule falling asleep on the double decker bus, but not drowsy or comfortable. We will not imagine a future in our disembodied left brain screen world of theology and idea shopping, we just won't. The crossroads, sacred to Hermes and Robert Johnson, are where the robbers and the devil wait, but one of the roads is Dylan's "highway of diamonds with nobody on it" Otherwise, black will be continue being the color and none will be forever the number.
I find it tiresome trying to wake friends who are "sleepwalking " its like Ian said when you point something outside of the matrix to them YOUR the problem
Iain McGichrist has written a great book.
The Master and His Emissary.
When I read the book ....I read and reread paragraphs, grabbed a pencil and made notes, told anyone who would listen about the book.
Atten. Span (LH), precludes those that need this knowledge from reading.
Movies of the 1950s and 60s have the remnants of Right Hemisphere balanced brain characteristics....the storyline, conversation and laid back mannerisms vs. todays simpleton characters.
"I think we should start pushing back". Understatement of the decade 💪
Mark my words, detailed brain scans of neuro-synaptic triggering patterns will become mandatory law before too long as well as a prerequisite to receive medical care or certain (all?) employment, just as fingerprints were during the Hoover era.
You have articulated my concerns with expert concise precision, and if you examine my past year’s writings on Twitter, you will see the same thread which echoes your words… which I only knew intuitively, but it always helps to have a credentialed response which is spoken in somewhat more scientific terms in order to convince the skeptics! Thank you so very much… I hope this will encourage others to buy & read your books! 🙏🏻💯💡🗽👼🏻♾️
I love that Iain McG, in his own calm way is concerned for our kids mental health. Our kids are told there is an infinite number of genders and they can change them as we wish and also told they need to irrversible surgical and medical interventions if they like the idea of being a different gender - Schitzophrenia.
Our schools share a lot of responsibility for this state of affairs. Kids are given bits of texts immediately followed by exercises and memorisation. The primary aim of all this is to pass the next test. There is always the next hurdle to ‘overcome’, we are formatted that way and carry such unfortunate mindset into the ‘adult’ life.
When was the national curriculum established.?
When it was introduced in Scotland our standard of education fell....
The teachers and head mistresses/masters spend far too much time filling in forms in an attempt to constantly monitor children, and the objectives are wrong.....we are breeding people who are not taught to question, or even how to....
That curriculum needs upgrading, to bring back what we have lost.!
Thank you....great interview. :)
It never ceases to amaze that people who are well versed in criticism and identifying problems can't see their way to a solution. I have action plans for society and I'm nowhere near as deft of analyzing its depth of self-destruction.
They always stop digging too soon. For example, Daniel Schmachtenberger seems to have stopped at game theory. The way to dig deeper is to ask another "Why?" question. For example: Why do people submit to game theory? It's because they think they are trapped by it. But why do they think they are trapped? It's because they think they are dependent on the benefits of continuing the game. Why do thy think think they are dependent? It's because they were trained to think that way by society. Why does society train us that way? Etcetera. We can apply the same line of questioning to Iain's Left Hemisphere hypothesis. Why is the left hemisphere dominant? That question instantly takes us past Iain's premature conclusion.
Yes and what is even more concerning is that I find when truth is mentioned online or in the political sphere it gets no more recognition than fake new or disinformation. It’s a gut feeling as well that even if we did have the answers, nobody acts on them. I see stagnation and moral decay continuing to take place in society. Can only speak for the west where I live.
Simple - because there's always a bigger picture. Your so called 'action plans' might appear, on the surface, to be a viable solution to humanities problems, but you'll find that there are always factors you haven't taken into account in your original plans. So then, rather than being the solution, your plan of action merely becomes another part of the overall problem.
Thanks for this interview.❤
30:45 "We are not machines, we are men!" (Chaplin, 1940).
Right brain here first.
No actionable solution was given, so let’s give it a try. David asked, “How do we rebalance?” There might appear to be two solutions: 1) reduce the left hemisphere, 2) increase the right hemisphere. Since there’s nothing wrong with human beings (which Iain also suggested), I don’t think we need to increase anything. Instead, I’d suggest that we relax the left hemisphere by finding the causes of its dominance.
If we dig deep, we will find that the causes are dependence and judgement. The left hemisphere simplifies and narrows reality and then feels dependent on things to fill the subsequent sense of lack. Then it judges itself or others as enemies who are in the way of achieving that goal. So the solution is to undermine dependence and judgement. For example, we can ask, “We are a highly advanced species, so why should we feel dependent and why should we judge ourselves and others? Shouldn’t life be easy for us?”
You might think this analysis comes from the left hemisphere, and that we need more nuance, etc. But the left hemisphere might just be adding ideas like nuance to its tool belt to continue its dominance, e.g. the galaxy brain tendency of endlessly devouring information. Regardless, the right-hemisphere will naturally be activated in the process of undermining dependence and judgement.
A commercial just broke the flow...it screamed "Cut the Clutter!!"
I'm against advertising.
I have not read Iain's book "The matter with things' (yet?) and his critic of a mechanistic worldview fully resonates with me.
However, I am uneasy about his theory of the two brain hemispheres working in such different ways, each one closed off in his own domain.
Isn't it well documented now that the two hemispheres work in collaboration, that there is constant communication between them trough the "corpus callosum", this nerve structure that allows continuous signaling between the two?
I am not a neurologist and I submit this commentary in all humility...
This presentation uses the metaphor of being in a culturally left-brain moment and is quite coarse grained. But in The Master and his Emissary, Iain emphasises that it's not a simple left-right divide, that both sides are always involved in everything, eg language has a strong left-brain locus, but the right brain also has a language role. The hypothesis, that there might be multiple components of consciousness across the brain giving rise to experience and that we might experience a hemisphere bias phenomenologically and ultimately culturally is treated more speculatively, albeit with a comprehensive argument drawn from science, philosophy and the arts.
@@evanblackie7510 thank you for this enlightening comment: culturally we certainly are left hemisphere biased.
Very interesting. thank you. We need to provide a counter method or narrative.
McGilchrist is world class.
What I like about this man is that he always makes me think, thank you sir
“the awfulness of where we’re going…” It cannot be put better than that, and there’s no getting out of it on our own.
Every single person concerned about what to do must become embodied, this is the answer.
Even putting out video upon video of just conversation becomes unhelpful after a point.
The title of the video is we need to act, yet contains no action just more intellectualising
long form conversation is left brain activity if I’m not mistaken (as is commenting underneath the video I’m aware of the irony).. An Iain McGilchrist Novel for example would be the next book I'd like to read next. How about we all become artists
The shift from talking to action isn't a simple nothing to all process, I’m sure it exists on a spectrum and those who will inspire others and make change are probably battling with deep uncertainty, unworthiness, highly introverted.. so videos like this surely turn the dial that little bit further
With enough CBD you can become embodied jello. My personal recommendation.
Have just posted this excellent interview on Twitter.
I can't help but think of Just Stop Oil at 37 minutes.
Love Iain! (misspelled edit)
I really hope that David and co can take on board the good Doctor's plea to move beyond pure rationality. RW has done some great work over the past few years but now seems somewhat blinkered by an over-adherence to Hegelian synthesis. Especially in regard to the COVID response as an expression of technocratic totalitarianism.
He is being kind.
He knows the darker truth that is upon us.
What do you believe that darker truth is?