2017 Personality 15: Biology/Traits: The Limbic System

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  • Опубліковано 12 бер 2017
  • In this lecture, I begin my discussion of the relationship between brain function, at a deep, subcortical level, and the existence of the five traits identified by psychometric researchers.
    This is a repost from a 2014 lecture, but the slides are edited in. I was not available for this class, and the scheduled replacement speaker had to cancel.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 566

  • @albertodebenedictis3380
    @albertodebenedictis3380 4 роки тому +525

    The full papers are free on his website. That's incredibly nice

    • @olliemoseley8157
      @olliemoseley8157 3 роки тому +13

      Where do you find these? I'm interested in finding the articles he mentions in his lectures too...

    • @albertodebenedictis3380
      @albertodebenedictis3380 3 роки тому +8

      @@olliemoseley8157 It's been a while. I think I googled the title and his website came up. Or you can find it on library genesis probably

    • @alexp766
      @alexp766 2 роки тому +2

      You have the link at the end of the first lecture

    • @massajion-demandmassage3492
      @massajion-demandmassage3492 2 роки тому +10

      “That’s not nice that brave”.. I’m jk it’s nice 🙃

    • @baronvonbeandip
      @baronvonbeandip 2 роки тому +1

      You can find then all on Libgen too

  • @svengalilord
    @svengalilord 5 років тому +242

    Wow, what a genius! I have listened to over a hundred hours of his videos, and I am still amazed at how brilliant he is , how much knowledge he possesses and his ability to communicate so clearly these very complex ideas.

    • @AaronMartinProfessional
      @AaronMartinProfessional 4 роки тому +6

      Mark Kramm I think you will be interested in Daniel Schmachtenberger - his way of connecting multiple complex processes, to from a cohesive and understandable whole is intense.
      A guest on the Tim Ferris show called a 3-part podcast of Future Thinkers where Danny S. was a guest, “the best crash course in critical thinking”.

    • @ForwardNewsToday
      @ForwardNewsToday 2 роки тому +6

      Best believe Jordan Peterson puts in the hours, this level of knowledge doesn’t come easy

    • @teebee3309
      @teebee3309 2 роки тому +2

      I wouldn’t say he’s a genius, he’s a human, and is learning like what homosapiens have done to evolve, humanity has regressed that’s the issue

    • @AnyMotoUSA
      @AnyMotoUSA 2 роки тому

      @@teebee3309 dead end evolution brought to you by beurocracy!

    • @germanarroyo
      @germanarroyo 2 роки тому +4

      Meee too! I binge listen everyday, it's like taking a multivitamin.

  • @sharonaldridge3332
    @sharonaldridge3332 4 роки тому +93

    Jordan Peterson videos are the only videos that I occasionally think: "I should take notes!" On the other hand, I send them ALL to my 'favorites.'

    • @alexradu1921
      @alexradu1921 3 роки тому +3

      I've took some.. got like 10 pages

    • @CamRebires
      @CamRebires 2 роки тому

      @@alexradu1921 I've taken* my friend

  • @brians7100
    @brians7100 7 років тому +383

    Sorting myself out a little each day

  • @b3zzo
    @b3zzo 5 років тому +141

    8:15 - can you IMAGINE getting a fan letter from Dr Peterson? Think i'd just retire right then.

  • @Hady100
    @Hady100 4 роки тому +150

    World-class education from home! Thanks, Professor!

  • @Liberty8775
    @Liberty8775 6 років тому +208

    I enjoy listening to JP's college courses running in the background while I play simulation video games. I never finished high school and work in the trades so it's nice to be mentally/abstractedly stimulated in my down time.

    • @JoseAmaya-gp2yb
      @JoseAmaya-gp2yb 6 років тому +20

      Man of the future.

    • @elel2608
      @elel2608 4 роки тому +7

      Great balance.

    • @HueghMungus
      @HueghMungus 3 роки тому

      @Andrew Cummings Your name is like *PG rating 18+* hahaha 🤣😏👍

    • @JakubFerenc1911
      @JakubFerenc1911 3 роки тому

      @@JoseAmaya-gp2yb indeed, what I started calling a future of "infrastructural male proletariat".

    • @FK-ef7xx
      @FK-ef7xx 3 роки тому +4

      These are not college lectures. It is from University Of Toronto. People pay good money to listen to him.

  • @Ganesha900
    @Ganesha900 7 років тому +143

    Dr. Peterson is such a gift & so are his lectures!

  • @mindfirst9672
    @mindfirst9672 5 років тому +24

    THIS COULD BECOME RULE NUMBER 13:
    DON’T PAY ATTENTION TO ANYTHING THAT INST DIRECTLY RELEVANT TO THE DESIRABLE OUTCOME.
    This is GOLD. THANK YOU JBP

    • @theycallmefilip
      @theycallmefilip 4 роки тому +4

      It could be a rule. But then again, your brain already does this, whether you like it or not.

    • @mindfirst9672
      @mindfirst9672 3 роки тому +5

      @Jordan Gill
      YOU ARE DOOMED TO FAILURE IF ARE FOCUS IN EVERYTHING.
      Jordan Peterson speaks a lot about sacrifices and one of the things that he says is that " YOU GET TO PICK YOUR SACRIFICES YOU DO NOT GET NOT PICK ONE.
      I completely understand where you coming from however, you should re-think the following:
      1-How can you achieve anything worthwhile IF YOU PAY ATTENTION TO ANYTHING THAT INST DIRECTLY RELEVANT TO THE DESIRABLE OUTCOME.
      2- You have to define what is THE DESIRABLE OUTCOME. Maybe paying attention to your mother's health is part of it. For example your goal is to make more money so that she can get better healthcare.
      IF DO NOT KNOW WHAT YOU TRULY DESIRE, IS TIME TO HAVE THAT CONVERSATION WITH YOURSELF. IF YOU LOOK FOR THE ANSWERS YOU WILL FIND IT.

    • @mindfirst9672
      @mindfirst9672 3 роки тому +1

      @Jordan Gill
      You should be ashamed of what you have written. Do you know how many people this man has helped around the world that went from darkness to light?
      Being someone that has attended 3 of his live lecturers and experienced how JBP is a genuine person that truly cares about people.
      You must have done a lot better than him to be writing that..

    • @Keriousity
      @Keriousity 2 місяці тому

      Wait what😂 ummm not what I got at allllllll
      I also perceived a change in lighting saw the gorilla and missed 2 passes (14 not 16)
      When applied to less arbitrary situations like political and spiritual and making choices that are judged by external entities.
      I know that I probably got the task close but can have a reasonable understanding that there are people told to block out everything but those elements....and we will never eliminate complexity it about how quickly you can decide and decentralized and complete assigned task without disregarding the existence of the other components...

  • @MrRyan13214
    @MrRyan13214 6 років тому +22

    when a professor get applause at the end of a lecture you know its a good lecture.

    • @GrahamLeach
      @GrahamLeach 2 роки тому +1

      It's a weird new norm. Never did it when I was a student, get it every time I teach now. Blame it on the blurring between entertainment and education and the gamification of everything. Edutainment gets applause.

    • @Antelopesinsideme
      @Antelopesinsideme Місяць тому

      ​@GrahamLeach im gonna pretend you're also just an amazing teacher & that the claps truly mean Jordan interests all he teaches

  • @dthompson1450
    @dthompson1450 6 років тому +168

    "What that means, at least in part is that you guys are all the beneficiaries, lets say, of an evolutionary process that's basically been going on since the beginning of life, and that's about 3.5 billion years ago. ... and poof.. you're the stellar consequence of 3.5 billion years of... effort.. and death. And now look at you. You can't even clean your damned room. "

    • @nickkorkodylas5005
      @nickkorkodylas5005 4 роки тому +24

      _>when your mom's a systematic biologist_

    • @HueghMungus
      @HueghMungus 3 роки тому +1

      *@Æd_Thompson* My moms dead haha, no one call tell me to clean things. I do wtheck I want

  • @berenicedecastilla4980
    @berenicedecastilla4980 3 роки тому +20

    Listening from France. Ive been hoping to listen to somebody like him developing all these topics all my life...Its fantastic ! Young students probably dont realise how lucky they are ! Im going to listen to all your videos and carry with the 17 vidéos on the Bible . Thats a miracle of Internet with the opening to knowledge.
    Merci merci !! 💙

  • @DarthTellor
    @DarthTellor 7 років тому +80

    19:36 I was like *"Heck yeah I spotted the gorilla! AND I counted number of passes right!"*
    19:47 *" **_ECH_** sonofabitch... you got me"*

  • @integralstanley
    @integralstanley 5 років тому +16

    Jordan confirms Abraham Maslow's findings that our most basic motivations are our most powerful ones. It is best to understand how we are designed.

    • @Changetheling
      @Changetheling 5 років тому

      I agree with this. Why is this so hard to understand (or rather, accept) on a global scale, I wonder?

    • @Tarteh
      @Tarteh 4 роки тому

      @@Changetheling Because then it would mean racism is good.

    • @p_serdiuk
      @p_serdiuk 3 роки тому +1

      @Charles Yuditsky Only if this realization comes with the understanding that the world needs different people. Otherwise there is no shortage of metrics that can be used to establish racial superiority, such as IQ.

  • @Utubmusical
    @Utubmusical 7 років тому +59

    Oh boy I just finished lecture 14 and this pops up! Thank you very much for posting these, Mr. Peterson. I love your work and you are truly changing the way I view life.

  • @Ockerby
    @Ockerby 6 років тому +28

    35:00 onwards is absolutely fantastic! The value in understanding this is immeasurable, especially if your primary goal is psychotherapy, or other such helping professions; even diplomacy and other such important political and military affairs! There are multiple ways of looking at the world! Literally, different ways of looking at the information; even to the idea of what information actually is, what is defined as worth being known. What you see, is determined by your fundamental values - and these values are not even close the capacity of the individual to consciously choosing their own values - it is much deeper than that; fundamental values determine perception; perception determines what you see, and values determine how you will see it. It is much deeper than this, and I can't even scratch the surface yet, but to understand this is so very helpful. Then it is a matter of learning the skills through committed discipline of more accurate communication abilities, and the ability to control ones emotional reactions in conversations that you find repugnant; because for the aforementioned reasons - because the way that you look at the world is different and how you look at the world is different; perhaps even more strange, that they way you do this, in relevance to the set of topics at hand, may be inaccurate.

  • @edwaaard46
    @edwaaard46 3 роки тому +7

    i tell you guys, what here happens, with this lectures, is something really unusual and special. Never before we had such a chance for high quality education, without university. Thank you Jordan Peterson, you set a large standard for human behavior, so that we can overcome the nihilism.

  • @guloguloguy
    @guloguloguy 6 років тому +16

    WOW!!! So INTERESTING!!!!!!!! FYI: I once was jogging down a remote trail, (in moderately weather, mid September, in Northern Minnesota, in the BWCAW, checking out a "portage" route), not expecting to encounter anything "unusual", when I suddenly, just happened to glance down where my foot was going to land, and saw a small snake, resting, right where I could've stepped! I was able to side-step and avoid injuring the snake, and I could quickly tell that the snake was just as startled as I was, as it was trying to also react quickly enough to get out of my way, as I approached it so suddenly! It was something which I will Always remember, and, It really helps me to remember your Brilliant, and fascinating lecture about these AMAZING topics! I LOVE your AWESOME Lectures!!!
    THANKS!!!

  • @MrTrenchcoatguy
    @MrTrenchcoatguy 7 років тому +498

    "Way back when we were frogs..."
    Some of us still are, professor. :)

  • @vladimirofsvalbard9477
    @vladimirofsvalbard9477 2 роки тому +7

    A complete 1 hour lecture for free right here on UA-cam; what an age we live in!
    There is such a wealth of information on this platform it boggles my mind why anybody would continue paying for a College education, at least for the didactic years.
    No wonder the inequalities are becoming so massive with the technology available.
    Anyone not taking advantage of this will unfortunately be left behind; that's a lot of people right now.

  • @andrewbalderree338
    @andrewbalderree338 5 років тому +12

    It warms my heart that this has 200k views

  • @ayy2193
    @ayy2193 7 років тому +72

    15:15 Complexity of reality and the brain
    1:02:12 your brain isn't the only thing that creates reactions, your whole body is your brain
    1:12:03 Parietal lobe damage to the right = you lose the left side of everything and ability to recognise the left side.
    1:16:35 Cortex and consciousness, humans can remain conscious even with significant damage to the cerebral cortex (we don't know where it's located). maybe everywhere inside and outside the body?

  • @jazzybree4239
    @jazzybree4239 6 років тому +12

    That is amazingly fascinating. I dropped our of college due to chronic incurable illness but I miss learning so much! Love you, Dr. Peterson!

  • @jean-francoisguilbo7833
    @jean-francoisguilbo7833 3 роки тому +11

    That’s how you realise you become a fan: when 90% of the most amazing things you’ve heard about in 2020 are coming from a single person: Jordan Peterson

  • @BritneyGrills
    @BritneyGrills 6 років тому +19

    i subjected myself to a 4 day fast. it was amazing. it felt amazing

    • @rdrzalexa
      @rdrzalexa 4 роки тому

      Audio Garden why?

    • @lesli3jonesg0rillamusiccha62
      @lesli3jonesg0rillamusiccha62 4 роки тому +17

      Then you should say you indulged yourself in a 4 day fast rather than subjected yourself to it.

    • @rhs5683
      @rhs5683 3 роки тому +1

      I forget to eat sometimes... the longest time was 2,5 days.

  • @jreeder76jr
    @jreeder76jr 7 років тому +45

    He broke character! The good Doctor has jokes! :D

  • @Milestonemonger
    @Milestonemonger 6 років тому +12

    "Bounded by our expectations and desires". This is painfully true.

  • @eli8069
    @eli8069 6 років тому +14

    Seeing the interaction between the students is quite amazing, he feeds off there energy and they love it.

  • @terrormilk384
    @terrormilk384 Рік тому +2

    1:10:25 i love when he puts his own experience of thought and insight into the theories he explains. It shows the unbeliveable attention he pays when reading through literature as if he incorporated his entire being into the insights provided by the literature to form his verry own ideas and thoughts out of it. I love this mans thinking.

  • @Story_1
    @Story_1 4 роки тому +6

    I recommend lissening to classic music while watching jordan. Its something special

    • @brendadepre1897
      @brendadepre1897 2 роки тому

      Anyone in particular?

    • @Story_1
      @Story_1 2 роки тому

      @@brendadepre1897 mozard piano or just tony anderson

  • @acidwolf5235
    @acidwolf5235 6 років тому +8

    Im loving this classes, please keep uploading this awsome content. Also tank you so much for sharing this unvaluable knowledge.

  • @francklegon1529
    @francklegon1529 4 роки тому +5

    Love your lectures. Indeed "as many neuronal conections as stars (not particles) in the observable univers". You're enlightning.

  • @Severe_CDO_Sufferer
    @Severe_CDO_Sufferer 4 роки тому +6

    @58:55 I've gone without food for 10 days, on two separate occasions... and both instances were between the ages of 13 and 17.
    As an adult, I usually eat one meal a day, and it's almost always after sunset. I also regularly skip a day too, where I eat nothing at all. (roughly every 10 days or so)
    I can tell you that hunger pains or the drive to find food, peaks after 3 or 4 days, then declines again... and for me, was completely gone in about a week.
    (I only felt hungry when I thought about food, so my solution was... Try to Think about Something Else)
    I have not been to a doctor (outside of the emergency room) in almost 30 years, and I have smoked a pack to a pack and a half or cigarettes a day for 35 years, and I can still blow out a candle from about 15 feet away.
    I don't know why that is, or even why I'm telling you all this... but, here we are.

    • @e.mcm.9076
      @e.mcm.9076 4 роки тому +2

      John Smith maybe because you activate 'authopagy' without knowing you are healing yourself constantly.

    • @Severe_CDO_Sufferer
      @Severe_CDO_Sufferer 3 роки тому

      @Gary Russ LOL, kinda like...
      more people die in hospitals, than any other building on the planet... so I try to stay away from those too.

    • @CraigTalbert
      @CraigTalbert Рік тому

      You should start a UA-cam channel.

  • @T-Bone99
    @T-Bone99 3 роки тому +5

    Imagine being fortunate enough to be in one of Jordan's classes...that'd be amazing

  • @m3po22
    @m3po22 4 роки тому +14

    12:00 The ancient part of the brain is in charge
    17:30 We only sense a tiny amount of what's in the world
    58:00 Sponges, the brain is in the whole body
    1:06:00 Feeling uneasy can be a perception. Signals map all over your nervous system

  • @harkyo
    @harkyo 3 роки тому +1

    I like that he draws from material in scientific disciplines other than psychology and manages to integrate them into his lecture.

  • @ToLWaM
    @ToLWaM 2 роки тому +5

    Honest to God probably the best lecture I’ve ever watched in any field of study

  • @veronicaford5208
    @veronicaford5208 2 роки тому +3

    This conscious energy in a meat suit is everything to me! I love this man and since listening to him my life has been on an incredible incline!

  • @John-lf3xf
    @John-lf3xf 4 роки тому +5

    Motivation->Intentionality->Perception both physically and in term of perception of meaning, (if there is a distinction).

    • @GrahamLeach
      @GrahamLeach 2 роки тому

      It's mostly visual.
      Think "motivation goggles"

  • @9Zeek7
    @9Zeek7 3 роки тому +2

    Love these lectures so much! One thing that would be awesome is know hear what the students are asking or saying. (Or maybe just their questions posted on the screen in text).
    I have never had the desire to learn about psychology and philosophy until I started watching Peterson's lectures. I now have his book, and my room is very orderly.

  • @calebebers9557
    @calebebers9557 7 років тому +16

    And that's that.

  • @michaelpalmeri4460
    @michaelpalmeri4460 2 роки тому +1

    This man is a genius.He articulates information in a very interesting fashion.

  • @anthonyferrara4756
    @anthonyferrara4756 4 роки тому +13

    I love this guy. "The Dragons of Eden" by Carl Sagan, really help set the basis for his argument.
    It's nice to see great thinkers...gives ya hope.

  • @aosa1238
    @aosa1238 Рік тому

    I am so grateful and thankful 🙏 that all this wealth of knowledge is available for free. I can tolerate the annoying ads any time 😊 Thank you!

  • @RareTechniques
    @RareTechniques 7 років тому +3

    Infinite levels of analysis

  • @jordang8317
    @jordang8317 3 роки тому +3

    I freaking LOVE your lectures! I would love to take all of your courses (will full syllabi, reading lists, blackboard discussion board, etc) if you ever offer all of them! Signing up for your personality course--hoping its a full university style course!!! :D

  • @Sayaboong10
    @Sayaboong10 3 роки тому +10

    28:00 " When you are focusing on the basketball , all the black moving things look the same"
    Ladies and gentlemen, we got him.

  • @jacky7878
    @jacky7878 2 роки тому +3

    - Motivation set goals (how you see the world), emotions orient in relationship to your goals
    - Each motivation is a subset of your personality
    - Cortex never wins against hypothalamus (keeps you alive)
    - Cortex (newly evolved part of brain) only controls when nothing is bothering you. If you deviate from normality, primordial brain takes control

  • @michaelpalmeri4460
    @michaelpalmeri4460 2 роки тому

    I've never been bored listening to doctor Peterson.

  • @olliemoseley8157
    @olliemoseley8157 6 років тому +26

    If only everyone had the open and willingness to learn more about them selves ...

  • @brdrummond
    @brdrummond 15 днів тому

    You can say whatever you want about his opinions, but can we at least all agree that this man is an absolute GEM of a teacher?

  • @ccg8803
    @ccg8803 4 роки тому +2

    I'm thinking that my life is getting longer, because of each minute of this video I have something to learn and it does me be satisfied like being in an entire class just in 10 minutes. So, here I have 7 classes on my own

  • @connercleveland1994
    @connercleveland1994 11 місяців тому

    Thank you Dr. Peterson! God bless

  • @Rahel8811
    @Rahel8811 Рік тому

    God bless you for being so generous with your lectures

  • @baronvonbeandip
    @baronvonbeandip 2 роки тому +1

    I hate how much fun these lectures are. As a math major, anything past, say, evolutionary biology or neuroscience is a no-go. JP makes it really alluring though. Engages that sleeping psychologist and philosopher in me.

  • @c.w.5688
    @c.w.5688 Рік тому

    Whenever I finish listening to one of Dr Peterson’s podcasts or lectures I feel a) incredibly enlightened and inspired, and it’s like fireworks of new information and patterns go off inside my head, and b) incredibly humbled by the realisation that I don’t know ANYTHING really xD It’s a weird and yet exhilarating combination.

  • @John-lf3xf
    @John-lf3xf 4 роки тому +2

    It gave life meaning, and the ending affirmation was a an affirmation of the flatness, nonuniqueness of life, the only thing making it bearable, being sociality...

  • @zachschannel5007
    @zachschannel5007 7 років тому +4

    I think the primary reason I feel that "me" is in the head is because hitting my head disrupts the "me" easiest, compared to other parts of the body. Even a relatively low impact blow (enough to produce mild concussion or even just dizziness) disrupts or warps my experience of me and the world, consciousness basically. Whereas a similar low impact blow to, say, the leg typically only disrupts the leg.
    I've also had some trouble with sensitive nerves in my elbow, and when I have a problem there, I can feel the pain shock traveling up the arm, and when it hits the neck/head is when I black out. So if I think of "me" as the entity doing the perception of the world, and head is where you shut that down the EASIEST, then that's an example of how one would intuitively arrive at the "self is in the head" conclusion.

  • @AnaRodriguez-ry8ix
    @AnaRodriguez-ry8ix 3 роки тому +3

    ¡MAGISTRAL! 🙏
    Love hear you laughing 😄 Come back soon 📖 💛🌻

  • @karensilver8853
    @karensilver8853 2 роки тому

    This is one brilliant person.

  • @vhaalgorn
    @vhaalgorn 9 місяців тому

    When he mentioned the gorilla experiment I thought 'well seen that before', I was not prepared for what was coming in that clip. Incredible.

  • @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork
    @TheFarmacySeedsNetwork 6 років тому +3

    Thank you for sharing your EXCELLENT lectures on youtube!
    I hope to meet you some day even if only for a quick hello and a handshake.

  • @icebirdz
    @icebirdz 12 днів тому

    PETERSON
    Lectures on you tube
    IS an education……..better then any “ university “
    🤺

  • @sarahhoolihan3329
    @sarahhoolihan3329 3 роки тому +3

    And just like that....I feel like I'm back in graduate school....completely enveloped and perfectly stimulated!

  • @angelocastiglione1
    @angelocastiglione1 Рік тому

    Brilliant lecture! 👏

  • @tommythompson7941
    @tommythompson7941 2 роки тому

    The best man in the world right now.

  • @antonyliberopoulos933
    @antonyliberopoulos933 3 роки тому

    Thank you Dr Peterson

  • @TheTygertiger
    @TheTygertiger 7 років тому +2

    What he says about seeing the snake and jumping into the air without having first gone through a real thought process is so true. I'm really scared of snakes and I tend to scream when I'm suddenly and unexpectedly seeing one. I've been known to scream in a pet shop when I turned the wrong corner and all of a sudden saw a snake in its terrarium. One time I experienced a scream and run episode where I really didn't have time to really see the snake before I reacted, just like professor Peterson explained.
    I was helping some friends to move some furniture into their house. They were living upstairs and they had a storage room on ground floor where the new furniture was carried into from the moving trailer. My boyfriend and one of the guys living in the flat were carrying a sofa or something into the storage room and I was behind them telling them which way to turn etc. The other guy who lived in the flat too came walking down the stairs. He held his arm weirdly pointing forward and I remember thinking: "Why is he holding his arm so strangely?" Then I noticed a long blotch of light color on his arm and I can't remember which came first. Did the idea of a snake flash in my head first or did I first start screaming and then directly had the idea of a snake flash in my mind? I let out such a bloodcurdling scream that the guys had never heard anything like it and I ran back through the open door into the backyard where I stood screaming and shaking until my boyfriend came to hold me and got me to calm down enough to stop screaming.
    The guy had meant to scare my boyfriend by sneaking up on him with his pet snake, but that plan was foiled by my reaction. The snake was no longer than his forearm and maybe as thick as his thumb. When I started screaming and running, there were 2 guys and a sofa between me and the snake, and the distance was maybe 5-6 meters. I really couldn't see it well enough under the circumstances to know consciously that it really was a snake. I don't remember even seeing any movement which would have told me that it was a living thing on his arm. Somehow my monkey brain just recognized it as a snake and off I went.

  • @nickgood9593
    @nickgood9593 7 років тому +2

    Hi Jordan. I think you'd be interested in the sonic equivalent to the multiple ways of seeing visual information. Perhaps you've heard of metric modulation. Thanks for the videos. I've been absorbing as much as I can.

  • @sperk01
    @sperk01 6 років тому +1

    wow... i experiment with psychedelics and zen buddhism and this info is very enlightening and also close to what i was suspecting but couldnt describe in neurobiology language..

  • @giannimorandinix2156
    @giannimorandinix2156 Рік тому

    thank's professor Peterson, huge entertaining and inspiring lessons.

  • @makermarx8862
    @makermarx8862 6 років тому +6

    Someone with more time on their hands than me, and bloody high resolution earphones, please include subtitles for the student interactions.

  • @tiburcio43
    @tiburcio43 5 років тому

    Peterson is a great professor. I think the lectures are where he is at his best. It's good to see his swordsmanship on debates, but there he is usually angrier, and pushed to talk about things that are not his area of expertise.

    • @Hexanitrobenzene
      @Hexanitrobenzene 2 роки тому

      Hm, in most lectures I perceive him as half-shouting. He has a very fiery style of delivery, it's probably a part of his popularity.

  • @zinalee1271
    @zinalee1271 3 роки тому +1

    Simulate catastrophic outcome, yet we go do exactly these things

  • @quaintabyss5696
    @quaintabyss5696 2 роки тому +1

    My college courses no longer appeals to me, but this …. This is golden.

  • @catreecemacleod7556
    @catreecemacleod7556 6 років тому +33

    Figured you'd want an update on your information - the origin of life isn't nearly the mystery you made it out to be at 52:18 after all. Like we know DNA is far too complex to have developed on its own, not just because of the DNA issue, but also because of the additional supporting structures that are required for DNA to exist, such as mitochondria and proteins, as well as being able to interact with enzymes.
    RNA, however, can synthesize proteins in a way DNA can't, can interact with enzymes easily (a bit too easily one might say), and uses a much simpler sugar molecule. It's vastly, vastly more likely to occur naturally, and basically does a ton of different jobs - most of them rather poorly compared to more specialized components like DNA, but the important part is that it's able to do those tasks in the first place, even if at minimal levels.
    This is why a lot of viruses and single celled organisms don't have DNA at all, only RNA.
    Now, since the way RNA works to transfer genetic information within a cell means that DNA physically can't create proteins without RNA present, it means that you couldn't have just had DNA start out as the initial form of life. In fact, it's physically impossible for it to be part of the initial biogenesis process. It's not 100% guaranteed that RNA is what life would have started with, but it's excessively likely because of how it works and we already see RNA as being an integral part of how cells operate, so it'd be really weird if life started with something else then changed over to RNA, then to DNA. It makes vastly more sense for life to have started with RNA as its core genetic component.
    So yeah, creating RNA is actually pretty easy, and it basically brings all its supporting structures with it as part of itself. It doesn't do a very good job of most of those other things, but it's able to do almost everything by itself. Life would almost have guaranteed started with RNA, it wouldn't have been all that difficult to do, and DNA would've formed quite a bit later on afterward, taking on a more specialized role once the other parts of single-celled life had managed to be formed independently. Basically, you're looking at a gap of at least a few million years, with the current estimate being somewhere over 750 million, between the initial biogenesis event and the advent of DNA.
    What's more fun is that there were probably at least two biogenesis events on Earth, which shouldn't really be surprising once the conditions turned favourable for such. Felisa Wolfe-Simon's work on GFAJ-1 hints that there may have been an arsenic-based biogensis event, though it's been since proven that the arsenic doesn't get incorporated directly into the DNA in place of phosphorus. That doesn't completely rule out the possibility of the second genesis event, only that it's much less likely.
    Anyway, sorry, kinda getting off on tangents now. The point is just that no, DNA would not have been the origin of life, and we've since stopped even considering such as a reasonable possibility. Also, even Francis Crick, the one you mention directly, is well aware that some viruses are based off of RNA alone, and that they appear more primitive and seem to be closer to the original structures used before DNA would have been created. And I say created because DNA has to be synthesized by other established parts of a cell, it wouldn't have just spontaneously formed like RNA can. So yeah, the idea of DNA just appearing out of nowhere at the origin of life is kind of absurd, which we now realize. As far as I'm aware, there is no one even trying to perform experiments to see if they can generate life with DNA from component parts spontaneously, pretty much all that research is now being done with RNA instead as the basis of the initial biogenesis event.
    For more information, contact your nearest exobiologist who will have waaay more information than I do on this kind of stuff. =P

    • @vincelang3779
      @vincelang3779 6 років тому +1

      @Catreese:
      Thank you SO MUCH for this explanation - and clearly worded to boot! You have a gift, friend!
      Thanks again and . . . . I'm off to go clean my room.

    • @sweetieturner3377
      @sweetieturner3377 6 років тому

      thanks catreese for helping to reveal neosomato hypergenesis' fifteen incher. id like to debate his usage ;-) I mean he is a he, correct? and not one of those 70 gender pronouns, right? penis does mean as belonging to the male species and a human male does have the biggest penis, unlike the marine mammalia whalus phallus, hmmm?

    • @dastreetspart3370
      @dastreetspart3370 5 років тому +2

      thanks for copy/pasting your wikipedia entry here

  • @labornurse
    @labornurse 3 роки тому +3

    For this professor, I would read the optional papers. Only for him.

  • @vannersp
    @vannersp 7 років тому +5

    I perceive myself through my head because I am primarily visual and then auditory - almost ignorant to my other senses.

  • @tjcambre5236
    @tjcambre5236 Рік тому +1

    1:10:00 you are so right I can't explain it but you hit the nail on the head.

  • @spyguythesamurai
    @spyguythesamurai 7 років тому +85

    "You would have been dead years ago because--- what do you know about livers?" - J. Bae Petey, 2k14

    • @debi7105
      @debi7105 4 роки тому

      Thats the best you've got? Unsophisticated.

    • @udhiw.4663
      @udhiw.4663 4 роки тому +1

      @@debi7105 then how would you sophisticate it Debi?

  • @theraven9849
    @theraven9849 2 роки тому

    28:35 "has no bearing whatsoever on whether or not you can complete the task. so it doesnt matter if you ignore the information."
    big true.

  • @hemispherectomy4140
    @hemispherectomy4140 5 років тому +7

    @Jordan B Peterson What are your thoughts on the DSM 5?

  • @John-lf3xf
    @John-lf3xf 4 роки тому +2

    Their is a positive relation between time utilization and detail representation

  • @tedbkd1
    @tedbkd1 2 роки тому

    You know you’re a badass when your students applaud what would be a mundane lecture from anyone else

  • @CivilWarz
    @CivilWarz 5 років тому +92

    If I watch ALL of Peterson's videos, can I atleast get a bachelor's for googling every big ass word he spews?

    • @bijitkonwar9415
      @bijitkonwar9415 3 роки тому +20

      me googling spews

    • @andrewwabik5125
      @andrewwabik5125 3 роки тому +6

      Maybe not, but you're probably increasing your intellectual "bandwidth".

    • @TheJpwzrd
      @TheJpwzrd 3 роки тому +7

      You lost me at "big ass word"

    • @HelloThere.....
      @HelloThere..... 3 роки тому +16

      Well first you have to ask yourself if that's actually something you WANT! Like you think that's a good idea? It's like.. WRONG! You can't possibly fathom the complexity something like that would bring into your experience.

    • @user-ux5mo2ng2c
      @user-ux5mo2ng2c 3 роки тому +2

      @@HelloThere..... great man! have that same voice in my head!

  • @RukaSubCh
    @RukaSubCh 7 років тому

    The big 5 ties into economics and business pretty well, there is a predictability of how organizations will perform during fluctuations in the market.

  • @CaptainSkeletor
    @CaptainSkeletor 7 років тому +32

    How can there be more connections in the brain than subatomic particles in the universe?

    • @brianholden7981
      @brianholden7981 7 років тому +26

      combinatorics

    • @markos635567
      @markos635567 7 років тому +28

      There aren't and there can't be. The number of subatomic particles in the universe has 80 digits or something.. The number of connections in the brain has less than 22.
      In the video he talks about the 'number of patterns in the connections'. It's a different thing, and they can be more than 10^80. But comparing "number of patterns of things" with "number of things" seems poor.

    • @Spike294
      @Spike294 7 років тому +9

      Yeah I double-checked that and I think he was wrong on that one. It's fine, there's still an unimaginable number of connections in your brain and it's still impossibly complex

    • @brianholden7981
      @brianholden7981 7 років тому +8

      If (10^9)! > 10^80:
      Then Peterson is right.

    • @markos635567
      @markos635567 7 років тому +18

      Peterson is right. It's just a poor comparison. He compares a "number of things" with the "number of patterns a thing can have".
      Even 3 objects have more configurations than all the particles in the universe (given enough space).
      Also (10^9)! is absurdly big. Millions of digits or something.

  • @gigijoon7663
    @gigijoon7663 4 роки тому +1

    I think I feel myself as a whole transparent version of myself. I was thinking about this after I had a dream a few days ago, Where I laid down to die. I was aware of the dead me, while I was aware of the me sleeping, but the only one that projected thought was the spirit me looking down at my body and recognizing all my other versions of me.

  • @jasonsomers8224
    @jasonsomers8224 Рік тому

    21:00 when I was asked if I saw the curtain change color, I thought "no." However, when the video was replayed, I remembered noting it and wondering why it had changed before putting it out of my mind. That was fascinating.

  • @ItsJustAnotherVideo
    @ItsJustAnotherVideo 10 місяців тому

    The comparison of consciousness to a video camera recording its own display screen is very interesting. Only our video camera distorts the image which leads to us not knowing ourselves

  • @ahmedabbasi5691
    @ahmedabbasi5691 3 роки тому +2

    6:15 favourite moment from this lecture.

  • @jester9217
    @jester9217 5 років тому +6

    I have been listing as i work my job is fairly simple to me in that after a few days i no longer had to focus on what i was doing. So at first i listened to music then audio books and no lectures. So based on what you said about the invisible gorilla experiment and framing. My job is a necessary chore for my living but is intellectually boring and in my opinion deading so i turn my focus to outside stimuli to complete my goal of furthering my knowledge? In any case thank you for placing your lectures online

    • @raewynurwin4256
      @raewynurwin4256 4 роки тому

      Well done young man, only you know what will profit you ultimately.

  • @rjones83061
    @rjones83061 3 роки тому

    thank you Doc.!

  • @ghanisth1735
    @ghanisth1735 Місяць тому

    I miss this JP❤....doing what he love shining like a sun 🌠

  • @jacobjuul954
    @jacobjuul954 7 років тому +3

    Hello Jordan, thanks for these greats vids they are extremely inspirational, tho i would like a few recommendations of papers/books/test that should be read before or after of these lectures, in the description if possible.
    Sorry for my poor English, it is not my native language.

    • @anotherlover6954
      @anotherlover6954 6 років тому

      I was thinking the same thing. I don't know precisely what this is yet, but it's in the vid description:
      jordanbpeterson.com/2017/03/great-books/
      I'm definitely looking forward to it. Gotta finish The Gulag Archipelago first, though! Cheers

  • @piggyrush
    @piggyrush 5 років тому +7

    The reason why most of us feel like we are in our heads is because four out of our five senses through which we collect all the informations are located in our heads.

  • @RukaSubCh
    @RukaSubCh 7 років тому +1

    Milton Friedman's pencil analogy makes a lot of sense now in a different light.

  • @mannyuribe8780
    @mannyuribe8780 4 роки тому +4

    18:50 ball test mind blown 🤔💨

  • @CorpusKristieTN
    @CorpusKristieTN 4 роки тому +1

    Thank You For Helping Us Dr Peterson! Thank You! Nashville Tn Over Here!
    💖💖🔥🔥 (3rd attempt at leaving you a comment let’s hope UA-cam Allows it this Time!) never give Up!! 6th time!?

  • @johnathanavery577
    @johnathanavery577 7 років тому

    Paraphrase: your brain is distributed throughout your body; the experience of consciousness in the head is a recent phenomena.
    It seems as though the Buddhist/Hindu descriptions of chakras might have been an early attempt to integrate the various modes of thought (as defined by this context, thought being whatever emerges from action of the complete nervous system) into an experience of consciousness that is "properly" distributed.
    Maybe.