The Wisdom Of Intuition - Iain McGilchrist

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  • Опубліковано 23 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 283

  • @ChrisWillx
    @ChrisWillx  2 роки тому +72

    Give it up for Iain. What a boss. Here's the timestamps:
    00:00 Intro
    00:22 Common Threads in Iain’s Work
    09:00 Society’s Lack of Intuition
    13:43 Defining Wisdom
    18:45 Cognition v Intuition
    31:59 Left & Right Sides of the Brain
    36:52 Functionality of Brain Sections
    51:50 Optimism for the Future
    58:54 Our Moral Obligations
    1:01:27 Where to Find Iain

    • @thebigredwagon
      @thebigredwagon 2 роки тому +1

      8:15 I think what he’s describing is a monotonic process. Mother Nature rejects monotonic processes but humans naïvely believe we can achieve them. We push the limits of concepts like freedom or equality miss understanding what we may be sacrificing. During the industrial revolution nothing was more important an invention that the steam train. The goal was to make the train go faster and faster. Problem was that the engines kept blowing up. The solution was the fly ball governor that essentially bleeds speed but keeps the speed constant and the train integrity sound. They pushed one value above all else and the whole thing went to shit. Progress is an illusion. You see novel things as additions but you don’t see they consequences. You have antibiotics, now you have super resilient strains. You have cancer treatments so people live longer, now those cancer sells that nature would select out of the gene pool by natural selection become more perennial and more people get cancer. The world and reality is a set of compromises. Progress does not exist.

    • @grmalinda6251
      @grmalinda6251 7 місяців тому

      ​@@thebigredwagon tech progress man does not.

    • @wendellbabin6457
      @wendellbabin6457 6 місяців тому

      ​@@thebigredwagon24:49 Depends on whether it was a cancer that killed in childhood or adolescence. AKA before organism passed on flaws that resulted in cancer.

  • @celiacresswell6909
    @celiacresswell6909 Рік тому +19

    Chris is a good interviewer- never trips himself up by trying to be cleverer than he is: ie he is sincere in his style

    • @bobdillaber1195
      @bobdillaber1195 9 місяців тому +3

      Yes, he is an excellent discussion host. Vastly superior to many others.

    • @allen5455
      @allen5455 8 місяців тому +1

      Why does this guy look like Tom Dowdy? Are they related?

    • @TheSigil
      @TheSigil 7 місяців тому +1

      He has gotten good I've been taking notes

  • @paigeu23
    @paigeu23 2 роки тому +202

    Some of these comments prove the truth of McGilchrest's view that the quality of your life is dependent on the quality of your awareness. If you can't see the value in this man's insights then you are probably not paying attention to the things in life that bring fulfillment.

    • @garydaly
      @garydaly 2 роки тому +11

      In Iraq I had an instinctive feeling without any direct evidence that someone was looking to kill me. I simply sat down and I got away unscathed, though it fucked my mind up.

    • @signoreburns
      @signoreburns 2 роки тому +3

      @@garydaly It seems this is actually a thing. Anthony Peake reports of a number of people's experiences very similar to yours (one almost identical!) in his book The Daemon.

    • @plaiche
      @plaiche 2 роки тому +4

      Rupert Sheldrakes body of work on what he dubbed "morphic resonance" might be an interesting topic delve deeper into the awareness beneath your specific experience. He highlights multiple scientific studies, to name one example, of repeated ability of subjects able to perceive the gaze of someone else on them from behind.

    • @stvbrsn
      @stvbrsn Рік тому +7

      You are 100% correct in my view. However as you regard those with “low awareness” you encounter in your day to day life… also consider that there are some of us who are on the other end of that continuum.
      For the roughly 10% of humans who skipped the “synaptic pruning” stage of neurological development, as adults we “enjoy” the “privilege” of having 50% more neurons than average (neurotypical) humans *all throughout our bodies.*
      So… an overabundance of sensory neurons, motor neurons, proprioceptive neurons…
      An overabundance of awareness.
      This is why (from the 19th century to the mid 20th) so many people who would now be considered “Asperger’s” were diagnosed schizophrenic.

    • @willcharlt1993
      @willcharlt1993 Рік тому

      You are quite correct, in my opinion. Western civilisation is on a precipice of its destruction. It has long over extended itself by too much thinking and not nearly enough feeling. ❤❤❤❤

  • @AaronMartinProfessional
    @AaronMartinProfessional 2 роки тому +38

    You‘re inviting all the right guests these days, Chris! Please keep going down this road. 😁

  • @nicolesawyer-jm6ir
    @nicolesawyer-jm6ir Рік тому +17

    Iain McGilchrist, Sir you’ are. so on point and a gift to the world! Wisdom literature!!! 🙏🏼💜😇🙏🏼

  • @andreakrueger7851
    @andreakrueger7851 2 роки тому +91

    I read McGilchrist's "The Master and His Emissary" years ago, it was a game changer. Thanks for this interview- good stuff!

    • @cx_n1
      @cx_n1 2 роки тому

      what were the essential take aways for you?

    • @Dialogos1989
      @Dialogos1989 2 роки тому

      No you didnt

    • @andreakrueger7851
      @andreakrueger7851 2 роки тому +11

      @@cx_n1 How McGilchrist dispels the left brain/right brain myth of the left hemisphere is rational and the right hemisphere is emotional. Whereas, McGilchrist clarifies how both hemispheres coordinate both rationality and emotion in different ways. And how in fact, the left hemisphere gives attention to detail and the right hemisphere gives attention to the bigger picture. I love McGilchrist's analogy of the bird feeding on the ground and at the same time looking out for predators. This is just one takeway. I've read "The Master and His Emissary" twice now and learn new things each time.

    • @siyaindagulag.
      @siyaindagulag. Рік тому

      A game changer ?
      Yes but the fight, should things come down to that is far from over and we are hampered by the tide...

  • @ezza88ster
    @ezza88ster Рік тому +13

    I could listen to Iain forever.

  • @carolineoakshett8520
    @carolineoakshett8520 2 роки тому +10

    Thank you for your work, Dr McGilchrist.
    Our world is in great need of your deep thinking and expression.
    Maybe there is a reason you have felt so driven, because of this great need for the subtleties that you attend to and bring to our attention.

  • @adriennewarg
    @adriennewarg 10 місяців тому +27

    What a brilliant man! Some of what he says reminds me of Alan Watts

  • @semperfi2974
    @semperfi2974 Рік тому +13

    45:00 when he’s talking about the necessity for a broad view and a focused view.. reminds me of the particle / wave duality in quantum physics.

    • @user-rj4yb8vz1d
      @user-rj4yb8vz1d 8 місяців тому

      Cool

    • @Havre_Chithra
      @Havre_Chithra 4 місяці тому

      I approached my psychology professors about the clear analogies between the brain and the universe with things like quantum potentials and action potentials.
      It is clear that quantum physics is modelling how the brain predicts and models the world. There is a clear link between how Quantum physics models reality and how action potentials and affordances work in the brain.
      I also noticed how Godel's theorem basically proves that if we treat the brain and consciousness as a formal system, then there will always be something about consciousness and the brain which cannot be explained by any formal system of language produced within. Therefore, we either had to accept that certain questions were off the table/taken for granted or we had to view the brain as something other than a kind of formal computational system.
      I was treated as a quak, despite my academic performance, and I felt like the university tried to stamp out any sort of individuality in my thought.
      Now, most of these ideas are gaining traction and are quite popular.

  • @CandyPanada
    @CandyPanada 2 роки тому +8

    Thank you for inviting Ian. Love the podcast and the episode!

  • @sheilac5319
    @sheilac5319 2 роки тому +20

    So good to see and hear Iain McGilchrist again! Another fantastic interview; thanks Chris.

  • @andrewblake2254
    @andrewblake2254 2 роки тому +7

    What a brilliant man McGilchrist is! I always enjoy listening to him although it is sometimes challenges my thinking.

  • @Romie15
    @Romie15 2 роки тому +29

    Thank you! ¡Gracias! Very interesting!
    Sometimes I wonder if as a modern society we try to remember the importance of intuition by telling fantastic stories in which magic has been forgotten but the main character has it for some reason. His hero journey is learning to trust that magical, forgotten force that he can’t explain.
    Also, McGilchrist’ voice is so calming for some reason.

  • @vaishalivaidya7978
    @vaishalivaidya7978 Рік тому +5

    We all need ppl who can talk and provide insight into whole brain living or rather wholesome living.

  • @S.G.Wallner
    @S.G.Wallner 2 роки тому +11

    Excellent questions Chris. You did especially well as the interviewer today and we're able to expertly draw out the wisdom of Dr. M.

  • @b.melakail
    @b.melakail 2 роки тому +9

    Listen to Iains lecture on the Ralston College podcast. This man's love for nature and people is beautiful

  • @adriannemartin9966
    @adriannemartin9966 8 місяців тому +3

    Unity in love within humankind is the way thank you x

  • @mrsmrlattewcoconut9901
    @mrsmrlattewcoconut9901 2 роки тому +4

    Wonderful interview, Chris!!! Thank you for your insightful follow up questions and for allowing a peacemaking visionary the time to give full ideas!

  • @tommyj6481
    @tommyj6481 2 роки тому +12

    Brilliant men. What an inspiring and important conversation🤙👍

  • @kathybochicchio1411
    @kathybochicchio1411 6 місяців тому

    Thanks!

  • @michaelmorrisinfarsi
    @michaelmorrisinfarsi 2 роки тому +13

    Chris, you’re a beast! Thank you for this. You been putting out quality like crazy! You’re such a good, balanced presence in the alternative media space. Mad respect! Maybe they don’t say that in England. Anyways, love your northern accent, it’s like a mix of Scottish and Canadian. Peace and love from Nevada, USA ✌️

  • @tommorris8066
    @tommorris8066 2 роки тому +4

    34:04 This section of the conversation about intuition reminded me of one of my favourite songs - Intuition by feist.
    Which even speaks of maps like Mr McGilchrist: "A map is more unreal than where / you've been or how you feel"

  • @ariesstage2188
    @ariesstage2188 2 роки тому +3

    I don't read much but I appreciate this level of thought, using the reference of many to tap into another level of how the clock tics. Well done conversation 👏
    Chris.... you are ahead of your time!

  • @edwardapreda5863
    @edwardapreda5863 2 роки тому +5

    I love the variety of guests you have on here, Chris. As much as I often appreciate the psychologically useful life-hack content, discussions focusing on stuff like this is super interesting. Can’t wait to look in some of iain mcgilchrist’s books!

  • @TheOldGreggggg
    @TheOldGreggggg 23 дні тому

    I had encephalitis 16 years ago and no doubt it damaged the left side of my brain, as I think have Anomic Aphasia..this video is very helpful, I will buy one of his books.

  • @stuartmartin7259
    @stuartmartin7259 2 роки тому +27

    Mcgilchrist has Christ in his name FFS.
    Great interview Chris and you seemed to flow well on this one, very intuitive subject for you. Iain is one of a few people who I've listened to deeply over the years, him & Peterson have probably been the biggest influences in the 12 years I've been watching UA-cam.

  • @ALMAENCASA
    @ALMAENCASA 2 місяці тому

    Loving you Iain ❤more and more every day..and say😊🙌happy for that entity driving You to write❤

  • @h____hchump8941
    @h____hchump8941 2 роки тому +5

    "Tradition is a set of solutions for which we have forgotten the problems. Throw away the solution, and you get the problem back. Sometimes the problem has mutated or disappeared, often it is still there as strong as it ever was"
    Donald Kingsbury

  • @CarliMichelle
    @CarliMichelle 11 місяців тому +1

    The most brilliant and important polymath of our era

  • @dmac2573
    @dmac2573 2 роки тому +4

    Iain is so fascinating

  • @householdone7559
    @householdone7559 2 роки тому +4

    Superb interview. Loved the whole left/right brain bit. Slightly at odds with other things i read but maybe not, depending on my understanding.

  • @petermalmgren1207
    @petermalmgren1207 8 місяців тому +2

    Absolutely love this one

  • @Leo-mr1qz
    @Leo-mr1qz 2 роки тому +25

    Intuition being somewhat of "real life magic." That's an interesting way of looking at it. At times, when you don't trust your own intuition, things can go array. If you follow it, (the lessons that you have consciously and unconsciously learned from past experiences), then the situation seems to work towards your advantage; giving you the outcome you desire.

    • @reasonium7760
      @reasonium7760 2 роки тому

      did you happen to mean awry?
      Asking for both my curiosity and possibly your minor benefit. (:

    • @MarkoTrapani
      @MarkoTrapani 2 роки тому

      @@reasonium7760 yes, I would bet they meant "awry" :)

    • @CONEHEADDK
      @CONEHEADDK 2 роки тому

      I think it's "all you have inside you, telling you, what you can't/don't want to, see with your consiuos mind".

    • @CONEHEADDK
      @CONEHEADDK 2 роки тому

      @@reasonium7760 "wrong" - I think, or "off the road" or something lke that..

    • @sunmoonstars3879
      @sunmoonstars3879 Рік тому +4

      It drives my fiancé mad when I say I just know about something, like a gut feeling ie intuition. He says ‘but where’s your proof/evidence?’ And I say ‘no need, I trust my inner knowing’. It’s got me through the past 4yrs without any unnecessary medical interventions, restriction of freedoms or living in fear, and gives me great self reliance and a deep feeling of connectedness with the world and the greater cosmos. No wonder it’s discouraged by tptb, academia, the corporate world, religion etc etc etc

  • @IntuitArt-rb4br
    @IntuitArt-rb4br 6 місяців тому

    @33:05 such a good opportunity to remember Alfred Habdank Skarbek Korzybski who so brilliantly said "The map is not the territory." in about 1931. Thanks AK !

  • @randr302
    @randr302 2 роки тому +2

    Seek the divine, compassion, let go of greed.sounds awesome to me.

  • @andrewblake2254
    @andrewblake2254 2 роки тому +3

    Excellent interview Chris. Leave the man space to speak.

  • @kathybochicchio1411
    @kathybochicchio1411 6 місяців тому

    Awesome interview..
    Thanks so much ❤

  • @gabrielclark9093
    @gabrielclark9093 5 місяців тому

    Absolutely brilliant!

  • @phillipsmime
    @phillipsmime Рік тому +15

    Just a thought that maybe Iain McGilchrist is almost like a quiet type of messiah for the modern age. Ie strangely the right man to carry a certain message.
    His academic record is staggering - he is a former Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, an associate Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a Consultant Emeritus of the Bethlem and Maudsley Hospital, London, a former research Fellow in Neuroimaging at Johns Hopkins University Medical School, Baltimore, and a former Fellow of the Institute of Advanced Studies in Stellenbosch - and yet he is totally unassuming and kind.
    He is now delivering to the world a truly important and ultimately spiritual message about what matters most in life when it's most needed to be heard. And he does so after decades of rigorous study at the most respected academic establishments on earth.
    Which all in all makes him a very hard man to question. If only people would listen.
    Thank you Iain 🙏

    • @PabluchoViision
      @PabluchoViision 8 місяців тому +1

      I don’t agree (nor do I think he himself would) that all of his credentials and achievements make him “a hard man to question.” But they should make him a hard man to ignore, or, put differently, they make him a man whose ideas deserve to be taken seriously.

    • @robertmcpartland3638
      @robertmcpartland3638 8 місяців тому +1

      lovely to read your assessment; I agree with everything. M&E is the greatest book I've ever read and I believed (and still do) it would change everything. Alas, due to the very things he revealed and described in detail - principally left hemisphere dominance/blindness in our culture - he still has to fight his corner and address much smaller audiences than he should, always with integrity, modesty and humanity. He needs as many advocates as possible to communicate the importance and relevence of his insights to everyone who will (or won't) listen.

    • @michaelricketson1365
      @michaelricketson1365 6 місяців тому

      @@robertmcpartland3638 Mind was blown away many times while reading M&E. Such important insights.

  • @karate4348
    @karate4348 Рік тому +6

    We are animals who are carrying unhealed trauma which some of us, or parts of many of us deliberately traumatise others with..literally building maimed and nonlife on foundations of pain and fear.
    The unmet needs are split from abundance of healthy life and healthy ability to respond.
    Responsibility and falling and walking to balance with all.
    We need nature from which to relearn how to live with her...spirit, timeless, conscious, sacred and alive with all dimensions.

  • @ChrisOgunlowo
    @ChrisOgunlowo Рік тому +2

    Incredibly beautiful and brilliantly

  • @JohnAtkinson-v5z
    @JohnAtkinson-v5z Місяць тому

    We need to have clarity of mind about what is eternal and what is perishable.

  • @marcellocapone4925
    @marcellocapone4925 2 роки тому +4

    The sheer eloquence of this man.

  • @hokimocus
    @hokimocus 2 місяці тому

    I find the enneagram to be a useful way to have compassion for self and others. The 9 drives of personality are wonderfully clear to understand but what really has helped me is the 3 sections of the enneagram that separate modes of feeling and thinking. The top 3 drives in the circle , the 8, 9 and 1 feel and that engages thought. The 2 3 and 4 are thinking first that brings forth feelings or emotions. The 5 6 and 7 have the balance of both, they can easily go either direction. As you might suspect, each drive has it's benefits and liabilities. The segue here is the question, what is this life really about?

  • @ColbyBlack
    @ColbyBlack Місяць тому

    I’ve had a description of me seeing the world through microscopes and telescopes. Your book spoke to things I’ve intuited and gave structure to understanding my thinking processes better.
    It seems as if the left brain chops information at a faster frequency so that it’s chopping data into bits of information about toes and ankles and knees and hearts and lungs while the right brain is slower and sees organisms over organs. It also speaks in metaphor, which is something that I do naturally and had the most interesting epiphany talking to an autistic nephew I didn’t realize was using kids’ cartoons to compress data through metaphor, and as I walked through this process, it was almost like rediscovering how you would’ve naturally discovered writing.

  • @denisecnasser
    @denisecnasser 2 роки тому +3

    Fantastic! 👏👏

  • @abcabc9893
    @abcabc9893 Рік тому +2

    It's lovely to hear IMcG talk to a group of school children... struggling to use examples as basic as he can and not to stall and fall into abject boredom .... this really reveals the level of these interviews.... which is the problem IMcG is trying to clarify. Very amusing.

  • @cameronidk2
    @cameronidk2 2 роки тому +1

    Iain McGilchrist one of the most interesting people I've come across... He may not crack the nut, but I'm sure in the future they will say .. he was on the way to the truth of it!.

  • @RajeevKumar-wl6ei
    @RajeevKumar-wl6ei 2 роки тому +3

    Fucking Bravo! You pull these crisp episodes back to back to back to back to back, inspiring af, cheers mate!

  • @VenusLover17
    @VenusLover17 2 місяці тому

    Beautiful❤❤

  • @JohnAtkinson-v5z
    @JohnAtkinson-v5z Місяць тому

    Beyond any trace of doubt. Leaving no place for any ambiguity.

  • @martynspooner5822
    @martynspooner5822 2 роки тому +2

    That confucian quote can be applied to music ie you master your scales which will eventually enable you to improvise freely later on down the road.

  • @keyboarddancers7751
    @keyboarddancers7751 2 роки тому +5

    I've just started reading *"The Master and His Emissary"* - I was sceptical before picking up the book but it turns out that I find it quite absorbing and thought provoking.

  • @LadyBug1967
    @LadyBug1967 10 місяців тому +2

    I'd like you to do an interview re war and the use of the two sides of the brain . Thx

  • @patricktoth-meyers5044
    @patricktoth-meyers5044 2 роки тому +12

    'I swear to you that to think too much is a disease. A real, actual disease' - Notes from Underground, F Dostoevsky

    • @neilpace
      @neilpace 2 місяці тому

      @patricktoth-meyers5044
      And yet, he is an author of much renown for his thought. Tortured by it in fact. I wonder if that quote is perhaps a little out of context from the whole 'speech' from which it was taken?

  • @kleisclissold8800
    @kleisclissold8800 19 днів тому

    Fascination ,discussion and I'm so pleased Chris Williamson hasn't used the "F" word once!!! I've almost given up listening due to offensive language and it's completely unnecessary. Thanks, Chris

  • @Mart-Bro
    @Mart-Bro 2 роки тому +1

    Brilliant. Great job on this interview. Really great

  • @TheYakkis
    @TheYakkis 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you

  • @jimcuddy7407
    @jimcuddy7407 2 роки тому +3

    Nice interview, I enjoy it!

  • @estherchandy6292
    @estherchandy6292 5 місяців тому

    "You take what comes to you and take the advantages out of it rather than resisting it or trying to make it into something it isn't "

  • @johnryan2193
    @johnryan2193 7 місяців тому

    A brite star for our times , anyone not asking these questions are poor but unaware of their poverty. Unfortunately so many of us just accept what the crowd are grasping to achieve without thinking if its real .

  • @LadyLuck8_4
    @LadyLuck8_4 Рік тому +1

    42:12 this question has plagued me for quite some time

  • @lindsey6579
    @lindsey6579 2 роки тому +1

    Combined awe and dread - the romantic concept of the sublime.

  • @Nonplused
    @Nonplused 10 місяців тому +3

    My takeaway: The left hemisphere gets things done. The right hemisphere decides what's worth doing. So in a world where production matters more than anything, the left hemisphere is desired by our rulers. Not for themselves, perhaps, but for those of us that run the farms and the factories. This explains how so many of us find ourselves working in small cubicles or manning the machines for 8 hours a day, and spending the other 16 either commuting, sleeping, or watching TV. Or I suppose social media now, which seems like it's actually worse.

  • @Heart-Core
    @Heart-Core Рік тому +1

    "Wisdom primarily refers to a deep understanding of the connections in nature, life and society as well as the ability to identify the most coherent and sensible course of action when faced with problems and challenges."

  • @dartharpy9404
    @dartharpy9404 2 роки тому +2

    Brilliant 👏 🙏👍🇦🇺

  • @braumski2
    @braumski2 2 роки тому

    23:45 When he says this quote I can only thing of the counter-quote that is "Tradition is the corpse of wisdom." 😂

  • @helenphelan4433
    @helenphelan4433 2 роки тому +2

    Great chat

  • @tgunersel
    @tgunersel 11 місяців тому

    Thank you both so much :) Since 1990s, I have considered myself a 'post-rationalist' :)

  • @cx_n1
    @cx_n1 2 роки тому +1

    sweet loved this interview ✨

  • @philnewton3096
    @philnewton3096 7 місяців тому

    40:59 As a string teacher im puzzled how some you tube left handed bluegrass fiddlrrs play on regular. right hand tuned instruments.

  • @shereeclinton8741
    @shereeclinton8741 5 місяців тому

    I have two high functioning autistic step kids. I'm very gut driven. I battle not to get frustratedi I move as though life is a dance and can't even explain why I choose to do things I feel my way though. I have battled with increadable stress and anxiety having to try explain why you should or shouldn't do it.

  • @pierfrancescorubini2899
    @pierfrancescorubini2899 10 місяців тому

    what a wonderdful talk, thank you

  • @cmuralhas
    @cmuralhas 3 місяці тому +2

    And smartphones, that replaced telephones, are the most irritating and less practical telephones that ever existed.

  • @James-bv4pw
    @James-bv4pw 4 місяці тому

    Thinking is power of humans !! Feelings will be the end of humans !!

  • @chelamae
    @chelamae Рік тому +3

    I may be misremembering, but I believe there was some research done in the 1980s, possibly published in psychology today (but don’t quote me on that), in which patients who had suffered a left hemisphere stroke or injury, when watching a speech of Ronald Reagan, said that he didn’t make sense. In contrast, patients who had suffered a right hemisphere stroke or injury, watching the same speech, said he was lying.

  • @givemorephilosophy
    @givemorephilosophy Рік тому +2

    52:16 Hopefully optimistic rather than hopefully pessimistic

  • @zeroonetime
    @zeroonetime 10 місяців тому +1

    Yes, feel before you think.

  • @JohnAtkinson-v5z
    @JohnAtkinson-v5z Місяць тому

    No empathy felt for the Eternal, is a disaster when all we have and all we are is the timeless empathy.

  • @stephaniemodavis
    @stephaniemodavis Місяць тому

    It is important to innerstand gentlemen, many females experience this differently. We have already been operating in our innate experiential journey but it's been squandered and devalued.

  • @householdone7559
    @householdone7559 2 роки тому +8

    Good question on "how would you define wisdom" - relating to society. I'd agree with saying that we are the least 'wise' society. I'd define it by saying we probably know ourselves less than anyone in history. We've had the carrot of 'success' dangled in front of us as it being what everyone wants when in the end, so many of those who end up with the money, the house, the car and all that end up lost...
    Or through chasing this illusive 'success' we end up failing and being miserable or worse...compromising on things that we may have once held dear.
    (quick e.g. but not going to make it political... Do you think Tony Blair at university ever thought he was going to end up causing as much death and misery as the bubonic plague?)
    We are very disconnected with everything.
    To Bojo food grows in the supermarket ... why grow it here when we can buy it from losers who grow it? (that kind of dipshit sentiment)
    We admire some tosser on some shit reality show more than the local farmer.
    We are unwise... and lost.

  • @LadyBug1967
    @LadyBug1967 10 місяців тому +2

    Midway through something that Dr McGilchrist said rang so true to me because I have said for some time that-- yes, it's very sad when a child is autistic but actually they do very well professionally in the world because this is a world made for autistic people people. Case in point, of course, would be the following: Bill Gates is considered autistic ; Elon musk is considered autistic. Those that excel in computers are autistic.
    I remember noticing in the 80s that when I was at a cafe hearing young people talk --they sounded like a computer talking. There was such a rigidity to their manner of speech and they all spoke the same way. IT actually drove me crazy and I would try to move to a different part of the cafe so I wouldn't have to listen to the cadence of their speech. I have found that this has only accelerated as computers have actually taken over and become the new God.

  • @Wingedmagician
    @Wingedmagician 2 роки тому +50

    Jordan Peterson, John Vervaeke and Iain Mcgilchrist could start a religion. And I would join it.

    • @Vineeth..v
      @Vineeth..v 2 роки тому +12

      No religion, An integrated teaching of different traditions, world views and culture would be better.

    • @Krasbin
      @Krasbin 2 роки тому +4

      @@Vineeth..v But maybe it is a good starting point in finding something in place of religion.

    • @paigeu23
      @paigeu23 2 роки тому +1

      Religion is supposed to do exactly what he is saying, unify our left and right brain...ie.the exoteric and esoteric. Religion becomes fundamentalist when it stops being intuitive, relying entirely on left brain understanding. When you read the sacred texts of these religions it's pretty obvious that the exoteric practice served the purpose of mystical understanding. Any religion that has maintained it's mysticism will unify the mind and expand the ability to use the right brain. Mystical Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, some sects of Islam, native traditions, Bahai, theosophy, anthroposophy, mystical Judaism (kabbalah), etc. are paths to the mystical marriage, which is right-left brain union.

    • @eddie-ni5ox
      @eddie-ni5ox 2 роки тому +11

      Really, Jordan Peterson as a prophet, the local Amish patriarch is a far better role model with more wisdom and more life experience than 10x of him, on top of that, look at his family, his daughter, his drug addiction. What a wreck! The fact that anyone who gravitates towards fame / the limelight makes them the total opposite of a role model. That is the most basic understanding that people should possess. Ofcourse, they no longer dont.

    • @paigeu23
      @paigeu23 2 роки тому +7

      @@eddie-ni5ox aren't you just a ray of sunshine.

  • @Beederda
    @Beederda 2 роки тому +2

    Chris have you ever had an experience with magic mushrooms? I think we need to have more conversation about these 🍄and this🧠. Love your podcast mate newly found viewer keep up the amazing work! ~dylan of Canada~

  • @genechorney
    @genechorney Рік тому +2

    Marshall McLuhan pointed out that the bias towards the left hemisphere thinking was caused by the dominance of the literate print culture initiated by the Gutenberg printing press over five hundred years ago

  • @freedomandease
    @freedomandease 6 місяців тому

    Is there anywhere I can go to understand more about how to spark up the right brain hemisphere, mabe some tools. He shares a lot of really interesting information, it would be helpful to also have some things to practice.

    • @jewishgenes
      @jewishgenes 3 місяці тому

      Go do something nice for someone without hesitation and without reward just do

  • @wendellbabin6457
    @wendellbabin6457 6 місяців тому

    28:25 Fighter Jocks often talk about strapping on the plane. Sensing what plane is doing almost unconsciously so all their focus is on mission.

  • @jaydamalley3398
    @jaydamalley3398 2 роки тому +5

    Chris, please urge Iain to set up an interview between JBP and John Cleese. Iain is friends with Cleese.

  • @S.G.Wallner
    @S.G.Wallner 2 роки тому +2

    "Quite often the truth can only be expressed in a paradox." Brilliant. Is this the penultimate deep truth? ...Yes...and no.

  • @JohnAtkinson-v5z
    @JohnAtkinson-v5z Місяць тому

    We need to identify the timeless in a world which is entirely perishable. No excuses. No matter what.

  • @rodknipping1578
    @rodknipping1578 11 місяців тому +1

    Sublime.

  • @kimsherlock8969
    @kimsherlock8969 10 місяців тому

    Good balanced sense of knowing that we never will know 😊
    The body is our armoury to hold safely contained and energetic life within the armoury
    The armoury is amazing, to protect organs full of blood fluids and a beating heart,
    The armoury will never be understood in segmented specialised divide.

  • @susankircher
    @susankircher 6 місяців тому

    I read "The Matter With Things" and it was the most brilliant and engaging work I ever came across. It changed my thinking more than any other book or experience has. It's worth the time investment!

  • @123JoshyC
    @123JoshyC 2 роки тому +2

    What’s the practical application of Iain’s research? I’m really want to understand, but am struggling to figure out how this knowledge can help us in our day to day lives

    • @pirotrav
      @pirotrav 2 роки тому +6

      My main take away personal take away was to practice a given domain relentlessly until the right brain can have a bigger impact and you can intuitively act. Also, it might be worthwhile pursuing things that are already somewhat intuitive to you. But many things are not intuitive without a lot of practice.

    • @123JoshyC
      @123JoshyC 2 роки тому

      Thanks!

    • @4real277
      @4real277 2 роки тому +1

      The negative aspect of our current culture is that it encourages you to view yourself as a machine and this is actually very seductive as as Iain’s book explains - it is left hemisphere brain capture which is pathological when not tempered by the better more human, more real capacities our right hemisphere permits us. Read his new book, really it will change your life.

  • @peterwellspauntley151
    @peterwellspauntley151 8 місяців тому

    Thank you both. I too have hope, some of your words, and the spirit in which they are given move me almost to tears. I am inclined to a belief in Yeshua of the Jews and Jesus to the Gentiles.

  • @LyndseyMacPherson
    @LyndseyMacPherson 2 роки тому +1

    I believe Iain McGilchrist is correct: in the ripe fullness of our egos, whilst we've gained tremendous volumes of knowledge in this information age, we have failed to increase our _wisdom_ in this process.
    But with gentle talons, hope clings as I observe signs of a shift. In more than mere splinter groups and pockets, I notice people increasingly seek to incorporate a spiritual component in their lives. We see this with the rise in popularity of spheres and people, such as Sadhguru, astrology, meditation and other undogmatic forms of spiritual understanding.

  • @idaloup6721
    @idaloup6721 2 роки тому +1

    The story of horse racing has happened to me too. I had intuited the five horses but by the time I bet I heard a forecast of a journalist and stupidly followed his advice and I broke down when I saw my five horses winning the race. The intuition is a mystery but not from the brain, rather out of the brain, in the meta that gives the brain the breaking news. The brain is finally a mail box of the meta angel ( messenger). It's easier to receive intuition in putting the brain in alpha waves. Einstein was in alpha waves all the time.

  • @dcooper004
    @dcooper004 10 місяців тому

    As an old Buddhist, to me……..Wisdom = Knowledge + Compassion

  • @otg1433
    @otg1433 6 місяців тому

    Talking never does it, no matter how clear it sounds, the mind, this egoic self, this aparition.. this imposter convinces you via the intellect that you have had some kind of awakening...it has no shelf life...for any clarity it has to be experiential, the direct path is spending some part of one's day alone, sitting in silence. Meaning, observing ones on movie...the mortal dream.......the mind is not your friend and you are definitely not who you "think" you are. As stated over thousands of years...in the absolute sense....anything that changes is not real... keep truckin....