Jordan Peterson: Advice for Hyper-Intellectual People

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  • Опубліковано 11 лип 2017
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    Jordan B Peterson (born June 12, 1962) is a Canadian clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at the University of Toronto.
    This is part of his Biblical Series VII. Watch the full video here: • Video
    You can support Dr. Peterson at his Patreon: / jordanbpeterson
    ---
    This channel aims at extracting central points of presentations into short clips. The topics cover the problems of leftist ideology and the consequences for society. The aim is to move free speech advocates forward and fight against the culture of SJWs.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @PhilosophyInsights
    @PhilosophyInsights  4 роки тому +1446

    This channel aims at extracting central points of presentations into short clips, focusing on criticism of leftist ideology. For more content, including Jordan Peterson, subscribe and hit the bell!

    • @scholargeneral247
      @scholargeneral247 4 роки тому +193

      This clip has nothing to do with left wing or right wing ideology, but Intellect, wisdom, knowledge, arrogance and the lack of those attributes in correlation to coexistence between the intellect and people who are not really anti intellectual, but not very bright l within modern society !
      Maybe your other clips are about left wing ideology, but not this one ! Sorry .

    • @scholargeneral247
      @scholargeneral247 4 роки тому +22

      @Dominic Tétrault The values the intellect could uphold ! But still have nothing to do with left or right wing.

    • @scholargeneral247
      @scholargeneral247 4 роки тому +5

      @Dominic Tétrault I agree and couldn't have put it any better myself.

    • @dbrad3387
      @dbrad3387 3 роки тому +5

      @@scholargeneral247 now what colour is the table cloth?

    • @lordsamich755
      @lordsamich755 3 роки тому +35

      So was this really intended as advice for hyper intelligent people? Or quote mining intended to make stupid assholes feel better about being stupid assholes?

  • @mohammadshabih5293
    @mohammadshabih5293 5 років тому +8477

    "Advice for hyper-intellectual people
    Recommended for you"
    Why, thank you!

    • @shurik3nz346
      @shurik3nz346 3 роки тому +16

      TG 125 , lol

    • @RIFLQ
      @RIFLQ 3 роки тому +52

      I feel attacked

    • @lefaek3720
      @lefaek3720 3 роки тому +103

      and then I watched the video and based on his explanation: No, I am definitely not a Hyper-Intellectual Person lmaoo

    • @RIFLQ
      @RIFLQ 3 роки тому +12

      @@lefaek3720 [X] - doubt

    • @Spookspek
      @Spookspek 3 роки тому +11

      Ad esse pulchra, non sunt habendi ipsum intelligere solvo altus QI Morty Rick. Quod maxime humor tenuis, et non in solidum capacitatem amet theoretical Physicis maxime iocos ibit super caput videntium. Nihilistic Rick scriptor mentis habitu, suus 'etiam ibi, quae in ratione retorta, hinc arte recentis - trahit sua propria philosophiae heavily fromNarodnaya Volya litterae, exempli gratia. Et hoc intelligunt fans supellectilem, intellectualis non habent facultatem in profundis vere appreciate a quibus ludibriis, non solum ut animadverto ut es profundus aliquid de vita Funny- sunt. Inde est quod homo qui odisti Rick Morty vere sunt idiots- utique non bene, exempli gratia, in humor in Rick scriptor existencial catchphrase "Wubba Lubba Sanctus Sanctus," quae se crypticus ad Turgenev in Russian heroicis patres et filii Im 'iam smirking imaginatur unum tantum eorum scalpentes capita eorum in confusione addlepated simplices sicut Armon Dan scriptor genius adimpletum est in television screens. Quae ... stulti ea quam misericordia. Et quod sic per viam 😂, caelō animus a Rick Morty Threicae. Et non potes videre eam. Est enim dominarum, et unigenitum oculos habent et demonstrabo est ut sis inter puncta V IQ meae (potius minus) præsens respicit.

  • @samsmith1580
    @samsmith1580 7 років тому +16266

    What I find shocking is the number of people with doctorates who are not intellectually curious and become extremely hostile if you try to have an intellectual conversation with them.

    • @locutusdborg126
      @locutusdborg126 7 років тому +856

      The only doctorates I meet are serving coffee at Starbucks.

    • @iinRez
      @iinRez 7 років тому +667

      Even the most intelligent of human's is prone to developing a dogma.

    • @JeanPKlaus
      @JeanPKlaus 7 років тому +1053

      College has never been an indicator of someone's intelligence. The education system is about piece milling information together and vomiting it out. Education doesn't teach people how to critically think for themselves or analyze for themselves. Or to seek out their own education. To further explore ideas. It was designed to spit out factory workers. It wasn't designed for the intellectual in mind. The education system rarely does anything for the intellectual. Take a look into history of people who we view as genius, who rejected the traditional educational road. Instead they invented and created without ever stepping into the doorstep of organized education beyond the ones they were forced into during their youth.

    • @peaceharmony4115
      @peaceharmony4115 7 років тому +411

      I'm not surprised. We are in a harshly anti-intellectual age, right now. Even many of the intellectuals don't want their ideas challenged.

    • @Zippyser
      @Zippyser 7 років тому +40

      Peace Harmony Eh not really as many voices as their are, we are in no more an anti intellectual time than any other time.
      Given the fact there are many things about the human brain and how we work we are still rather unsure of I would recend your comments. Why because you sound like you're gonna put your foot in your mouth. Avoid this and go study more. And please don't try to say oh I know enough to know.....no you don't. Is this your field of study? Or are you basing it off commonly held beliefs? Spoilers those in that field can't confirm or deny it so neither can you.

  • @lordofthewest
    @lordofthewest Рік тому +696

    As someone of pretty average intelligence, this will be extremely helpful to me as I continue to pretend and act like a hyper intellectual genius.

    • @Blake4625kHz
      @Blake4625kHz Рік тому +11

      LOLLOLLOL

    • @sirrealism7300
      @sirrealism7300 Рік тому

      Yesh Jordan Peterson seems like a huge circlejerk for upper class elite intellectualites.

    • @hearthatbird
      @hearthatbird Рік тому +23

      Literally me after watching Evangelion

    • @Theundergroundwoman
      @Theundergroundwoman Рік тому +4

      Same bro 😂

    • @user-su3nw7gj9b
      @user-su3nw7gj9b Рік тому +32

      This is exactly what a hyper intellectual arrogant genius would say

  • @denilla8034
    @denilla8034 10 місяців тому +214

    If you're intelligent, people assume you're arrogant even if you're humble. You can't be intelligent without people hating you for it because it makes many people feel inferior. Ignorance is applauded in society.

    • @christophstuwe4330
      @christophstuwe4330 10 місяців тому +37

      Acting like an idiot while being smart really helps to solve that problem.

    • @celebratedrazorworks6732
      @celebratedrazorworks6732 6 місяців тому +19

      My life.. Always being told i just want to be right while i watch everybody ignore my advice at their own peril. I have a curse. I cannot stop obsessively thinking about everything in extremely deep ways. 😞 I hate it and it causes many many dysfunctions in my life. Still, i don't think I'm smarter.. I do however access what little intelligence i possess in a rapid uncontrollable manner that often exceeds the average mental energy most individuals are equipped to have at any given moment.

    • @brndxt
      @brndxt 3 місяці тому

      Some intellectuals use their intellect to cheat, steal, manipulate, fool, bully, and obfuscate the general public in order to amass undeserved gains in power and wealth, such as some politicians and Wall Street fraudsters, are part of the reason why they aren't liked.
      Not all people live their days by envying others seemingly better than themselves, including intellect.

    • @SebastianBeniaminBarac
      @SebastianBeniaminBarac 3 місяці тому +9

      @@celebratedrazorworks6732 well I think it is a lot better to dig deep behind the meaning of even simple things than to take things superficially.

    • @MG-fr3tn
      @MG-fr3tn 3 місяці тому +1

      The brutile reality of being inferior whilst the other is loading it ,how can that be acceptable to ones ego.

  • @ImmortalGaming551
    @ImmortalGaming551 3 роки тому +4299

    4 Million people: sometimes my genius is... it’s almost frightening.

    • @lunatipable
      @lunatipable 3 роки тому +24

      So uncivilized?

    • @thecanmanification
      @thecanmanification 3 роки тому +193

      Jordan Peterson really knows how to tickle the part of an underachievers brain that tells them they’re special for being lazy.

    • @timm2003us
      @timm2003us 3 роки тому +4

      Hello there!

    • @chrismathachan4469
      @chrismathachan4469 3 роки тому +1

      Crub your bloody comment

    • @KH-ks7si
      @KH-ks7si 3 роки тому +17

      @@thecanmanification some people here are not that though lol

  • @SaadKhan-us2vt
    @SaadKhan-us2vt 3 роки тому +3920

    "You know, I'm somewhat of an intellectual myself."

    • @TeaParty1776
      @TeaParty1776 3 роки тому +107

      What is that like? Does the grass smell sweeter?

    • @BlacksmithTWD
      @BlacksmithTWD 3 роки тому +32

      How am I supposed to know? and to what degree goes 'somewhat' in your claim?

    • @Awarapan
      @Awarapan 3 роки тому +70

      I am not supposed to give my opinion BUT I think we intellectuals have to have an opinion about EVERYTHING.

    • @snakeoo7ca
      @snakeoo7ca 3 роки тому +80

      @@Awarapan bold of you to assume that you're one of us lol

    • @zodiatube
      @zodiatube 3 роки тому +9

      Back the formula OFF!!!

  • @cute1141
    @cute1141 11 місяців тому +149

    When I was in high school I fell in love with the academia aesthetic because I loved the idea of being a gifted intellectual and I love pursuing knowledge. This also was because I felt intellectually inferior and I would often get in heated debates because it felt like I had to prove. But then one person told me in the community, we are all learning. It took away the hierarchy or competition mindset for me.
    I left the academia aesthetic behind but I still enjoy exploring ideas and philosophies and understanding the human experience.

    • @cagejonny704
      @cagejonny704 10 місяців тому +7

      I was told that too and just hit the dude. Lowered his IQ by 50 and raised mine by 100

    • @azumarie229
      @azumarie229 8 місяців тому +5

      What do you mean by academia aesthetic? As in the image of someone that reads books or studies rather than actually doing those things?

  • @louismartinez6322
    @louismartinez6322 Рік тому +662

    I think because I started to be smarter than people around me from a very young age, even while being the guy who never talk I was very arrogant, and I still am, but it’s been only a few months that I’m working on it. Everyone told me I was really smart since I’m a child and it made me feel superior (especially because I was also very curious and I have a good memory, I was wiser than people my age). My dad has an IQ of 149 and always amazed people around him, and everyone expected me to be like him. But I became lazy because I never had to work until I was in a university, and now I failed my first year in that university twice, because I don’t know how to work since I never had to. I’m impressed by hardworking people, because I never really did that, but I have to learn that skill now. Anyway, all that to say, being smart is not all good, because it made me arrogant, deeply depressed since I was 7, and too lazy for my own good.

    • @TJ-wt9op
      @TJ-wt9op Рік тому +111

      Im 100% right there with you. School was so easy, that I never developed study habits, and I would plan it out like a grand strategy, that I would just play the system and do as little as possible to pass. In my view it was a game, and I was trying to win with the least amount of efffort, when in reality, school is alot about self discipline, and doing the things that need to be done regardless how boring or tedious. Because there will be lots of things, especially in a career, that are boring and tedious, and dont require alot of thinking, but still need to get done.

    • @proudfatherofadeadweightso5715
      @proudfatherofadeadweightso5715 Рік тому +21

      Iq is really not a correct measure of intelligence

    • @louismartinez6322
      @louismartinez6322 Рік тому +40

      @@proudfatherofadeadweightso5715 yeah but most of the times, someone with 150 is smarter than the one with 80. Yeah there are different kinds of intelligences quand the IQ test doesn’t touch all of them at all. But it still give a vague idea

    • @proudfatherofadeadweightso5715
      @proudfatherofadeadweightso5715 Рік тому +9

      @@louismartinez6322 yeah I mean the problem arises because of the fact that people actually study and practice and revise previous tests to take the Mensa test which completely destroys the concept of natural intelligence , Mensa tests also have a very pretentious grammar section at first lol , although I like the spatial recognition and mathematics part I have always felt like these days iq test only tells you the academic mental aptitude of the person
      Don't know what iq tests used to be like in your father's time
      Also excited for the anime?

    • @louismartinez6322
      @louismartinez6322 Рік тому +2

      @@proudfatherofadeadweightso5715 yeah my dad did it a long time ago while he joined the equivalent of special forces but in France (he left just after the training because he didn’t like it). So it was really different from today.
      And yes, excited for the anime, it’s been one of my favorite manga for a while now, and both the voice actors and the animation seems awesome for the little we saw

  • @blan_k4691
    @blan_k4691 6 років тому +1500

    "so, yeah."
    -jordan Peterson

  • @maddash9070
    @maddash9070 2 роки тому +3849

    When I was a kid I idolized my uncle. He was so smart and so wise. I was always messing up in school and breaking things being careless. He always let me hang around with him in his shop though holding a flashlight for him. In my 20s I finally asked him how he got so smart and wise to stuff. He grinned and said “real wise men were once real dumb kids and being smart was from books.” He let me hang out cause he saw himself in me. Now he’s gone and I’m him with my boy holding the flashlight for me. Lol.

    • @adamalouette1047
      @adamalouette1047 2 роки тому +155

      That’s beautiful!

    • @amishtechwizard5540
      @amishtechwizard5540 2 роки тому +149

      Good man, raise that boy right. We need more good men in this world.

    • @iloverussia111
      @iloverussia111 2 роки тому +69

      This Is such a beautiful story. Continue reading and teach your boy to also read. May your uncle rest in peace. Wish you all the best, and may curiosity eternaly live in us and generations to come!

    • @RaduP3
      @RaduP3 2 роки тому +26

      I am glad you had someone that you could look up to in this way. God bless

    • @ivoryas1696
      @ivoryas1696 2 роки тому +16

      @@adamalouette1047
      *_Truthfully_* the good ending.

  • @adrianmargean3402
    @adrianmargean3402 Рік тому +27

    I completely agree with Jordan on the points he's making in this video. I find myself bored with small talk and most people get very bored with what I want to talk about, which is usually abstract.

  • @jimguilland4290
    @jimguilland4290 Рік тому +28

    Jordan is both intelligent and wise. A rare combination.

    • @mv9787
      @mv9787 10 місяців тому

      Very good point 👍🏻

  • @azfarshaik8058
    @azfarshaik8058 3 роки тому +1238

    Video: Advice for hyper-intellectual people
    1.5 Million people: Clicks

    • @rapidgaming4703
      @rapidgaming4703 3 роки тому +22

      thats less than a thousandth of the population

    • @_sam_6793
      @_sam_6793 3 роки тому +6

      Not 1.5 Million people liked this , this is the number of times this particular video was watched .

    • @freshmanwithgotee
      @freshmanwithgotee 3 роки тому +2

      Why do we assume the general public isn't hyper intellectual?

    • @freshmanwithgotee
      @freshmanwithgotee 3 роки тому +4

      The arrogance 😂

    • @antoespiga
      @antoespiga 3 роки тому +12

      @@freshmanwithgotee Because it cannot be. Hyper intellectuals here refers to the "most" intellectual people, that's always going to be a minority.

  • @maxonmendel5757
    @maxonmendel5757 5 років тому +1898

    “Some people I’ve known were intellectually impaired and still wise”
    You mean like my man Forrest Gump?

    • @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone
      @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone 4 роки тому +86

      Forrest Gump was emotionally intelligent

    • @missmathildedu92
      @missmathildedu92 4 роки тому +10

      You made me happy with your comment, thank you

    • @cheesedie
      @cheesedie 4 роки тому

      Great example :D

    • @TVSuchty
      @TVSuchty 4 роки тому +8

      Forest Gump did not exist. He would have been dead three times. He - in my opinion - is just stupid.

    • @cheesedie
      @cheesedie 4 роки тому +37

      ​@@TVSuchty yeh i agree with you. the movie isnt realistic. but my opinion is that its an exaggeration in order to prove a point. that being that one can be good without being intelligent. or rather - intelligence and goodness are not necessarily to be conflated.

  • @angelocomic77
    @angelocomic77 Рік тому +13

    Humility is the only path from Intellect to wisdom

    • @claudiamanta1943
      @claudiamanta1943 3 місяці тому +2

      I prefer the term ‘modesty’ to ‘humility’.

  • @oskarbrenner13
    @oskarbrenner13 10 місяців тому +45

    Six years ago, I stumbled across this video. It was a time when I was mentally ill, terribly anxious and as lost as one could be. It was the beginning of a journey, that would teach me what suffering, morally good suffering means. I've got engaged with the litterature of C.G Jung, MLVF and many others. Even though still suffering, my life has meaning, and I'm slowly leaving these authors behind and beginning to live the life I was made to live. My gratitude, even if not too high, is slowly growing despite several setbacks. Seeing this video popping on my recommend feed, makes me reflect the time my life changed, and maybe awakes a little bit of happiness. I've now gone a full circle.

    • @spacelook9076
      @spacelook9076 10 місяців тому +1

      Hey, well written. Good for you and all the best!!

    • @claudiamanta1943
      @claudiamanta1943 8 місяців тому +1

      Suffering is immoral and it’s promoted by those who are too stupid (perhaps both intellectually and morally, the moral stupidity being the main factor) to reframe life’s challenges in a positive manner. I have no respect or sympathy for those who glorify suffering and, in them doing so, create or condone suffering for others ‘because it’s necessary’. In addition to being stupid, they are lazy and uncaring. Whereas they are free to ruin their lives, they should not be allowed to make the lives of others more difficult than they naturally are. For example, let no one dare place a cross on my shoulders just because they’re spiritually masochistic and think it’s good for me. Keep your stupidity and callousness in private.
      Yes, you may call me arrogant (though I’m not a genius or morally perfect). You better be genuinely wise and pay attention to my insulting attitude or words.

    • @oskarbrenner13
      @oskarbrenner13 8 місяців тому +1

      @@claudiamanta1943 With morally good suffering I mean suffering through the things that unavoidably cause pain, and similarly embracing this feeling. It might sound counterintuitive, but it's the only way out of longlasting suffering that I know. Therefore I disagree with you, and whole-heartidly encourage everyone to bear their cross!

    • @claudiamanta1943
      @claudiamanta1943 8 місяців тому +1

      @@oskarbrenner13 There are very few pains that are genuinely unavoidable. Suffering is distinct from experiencing pain. Suffering is a vague term that is the psychological shadow of objective pain.
      Take giving birth, for example. Is pain unavoidable? Yes. Does it have to be suffering, though? No. What is the meaning of that pain? You say that this pain is because Eve was disobedient and was cursed by god. Does your attribution of your meaning help? No.
      This is just a crude example.
      Most suffering is not needed. The causes are social, economic, psychological- all highly preventable. Not addressed, though, by those who have your mindset- attitude of ‘righteous suffering’ and all that ‘bear your cross’ (frankly) utter crap.
      I don’t care about the meaning you give to my suffering. I want (nay, demand of) you to do everything you can to eliminate the causes for social ills that affect all of us. But you won’t, thus being in breach of the basic social contract, because who and what would you be without your beliefs?

    • @oskarbrenner13
      @oskarbrenner13 8 місяців тому

      @@claudiamanta1943 I think we are on the same page, really. Since English is not my mother tongue I might have expressed myself unclearly.
      I do not put any glorious meaning into suffering, nor do I think anyone should do anything in order to increase ones suffering. The problem I see is that many distract themselves from psychological pain, for example difficult emotions. As long as the painful event is not dealt with, it makes you suffer from it. In order to overcome it, you need to suffer through it, and this is what I mean with morally good suffering. Not distracting oneself from the emotion, simply letting it pass. This pain is unavoidable.
      Having "a cross to bear" I've interpreted it as taking responsibility of ones personal issues, regardless of if they awake old wounds, causing pain and perhaps making you suffer until you dealt with the problems. So in a sense this cross lightens the more you suffer through your problems.
      Thanks for your psychoanalysis. Now, go and project your shadow at someone else.

  • @mattasticmattattack8546
    @mattasticmattattack8546 3 роки тому +3280

    " The difference between stupidity and genius , is that genius has it's limits." - Einstein

    • @mattasticmattattack8546
      @mattasticmattattack8546 2 роки тому +15

      @@lolipoppification pretty Deep of you , just as Einstein would've taken his own quote 👏🏼

    • @diphenhydramine6072
      @diphenhydramine6072 2 роки тому +3

      Never seen that quote. I like it.

    • @kohikappu
      @kohikappu 2 роки тому +1

      I legit thought that's coming from L. Very relatable though.

    • @casperinsight3524
      @casperinsight3524 2 роки тому +1

      I thot the quote was there is a fine line between genius and insanity

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 2 роки тому +7

      Einstein wasted his intellect on physics: he should have been a stand-up comic. :)

  • @bleuwater9629
    @bleuwater9629 5 років тому +987

    _"Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools"_

    • @DariaRock1
      @DariaRock1 5 років тому +13

      Hmm Amen. The road is narrow.

    • @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone
      @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone 4 роки тому +35

      God has chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God has chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty - 1 Corinthians 1:27

    • @Sanctifiers
      @Sanctifiers 3 роки тому +11

      at least cite it as the Bible

    • @chrisbattaglia475
      @chrisbattaglia475 3 роки тому +3

      Being foolish is wise

    • @bleuwater9629
      @bleuwater9629 3 роки тому +6

      @@chrisbattaglia475 I have noticed that fools often think they are wise.

  • @SpookyRumi
    @SpookyRumi 10 місяців тому +116

    One of the most challenging things I had to overcome was realising at 19 years old that I wasn't as gifted and intelligent as everyone always told me I was. I just had a headstart on everyone else and wasted my potential by becoming lazy. Now university is kicking my ass and I struggle to develop the work ethic that is necessary. I feel terrible about it, my parents keep ridiculing me even though they never got as far as me. I hate myself for letting this happen

    • @mattoucas869
      @mattoucas869 10 місяців тому +14

      Don't. You're gonna make it bruh, just keep going.

    • @todaywefly4370
      @todaywefly4370 10 місяців тому +9

      As the parent of a young man who is in same position as you, trust yourself, understand that your parents ARE proud of you, work as hard as YOU need to achieve YOUR goals. That takes focus not brains.
      Remember, after all that effort that a university education is to prove what you are capable of to yourself firstly and to others secondarily. Be proud of your achievements not ashamed of your shortcomings.

    • @shadeburst
      @shadeburst 10 місяців тому +13

      At school I didn't see the need to work hard because it was too easy. Then I failed first year at university. I took a few gap years, driving construction machinery, working on a mine first on the surface and then underground, and found that I didn't too too badly. That gave me the confidence and maturity that I lacked and when I went back to university I topped out in most subjects. Work is fun, when you approach it with the right attitude. Fear of failure is holding you back. Find something that you are exceptional at, whether it's diagnosing car problems or getting a poem that most others misunderstand. Carry the attitude that you can solve it through to everything else in your life.

    • @stevenwolfe591
      @stevenwolfe591 10 місяців тому +4

      I see much of myself in your comment, and I'm shocked to think I'm about 8 years ahead of you. First off, be at University for the right reason. In the video, when Peterson mentions the dwarf with a big ear, your goal at University is to give yourself that big ear. If you're not there for STEM (or a handful of other career-oriented degrees), it's a waste of time and money. There's a rumor that going to University once used to be about bettering yourself more generally, but my experience did not match this for the most part. (Better yourself along the lines of getting a more positive worldview and dispel the nihilistic lies you've been led to believe, become a better writer and reader, and make yourself useful to other people.)
      Secondly, I had those same struggles of feeling failure quite often on this path. Talk therapy was incredibly helpful for me (being more of a "bottom-up" solution to my nihilism and self-defeating tendencies). Dopamine addiction is also something worth actively managing (e.g. porn, video game, or social media addiction). For me, I quit video games cold turkey, including watching video game related media (Let's Plays, Streaming). I was shocked at how much more "mundane" things became enjoyable. These things do not respect your time and are usually trying to replace something more meaningful with an imitation (romance, progression towards a goal, or friends). Next, get a part-time job (about 20 hours/week is perfect). If you can, get a job related to your major as well, which is usually possible through the University. (The equivalent to this might be a paid internship.) The amount of income you can gain is virtually incomparable to amount others can give you. It can also be critically important if you're financially insecure, as I was. But, more importantly, it's worthwhile use of time and can help feed your interests.
      I digress, I could say so much more as someone who made it through University. I wish you the best and I know we're all going to make it.

    • @gwynnfox9767
      @gwynnfox9767 10 місяців тому +4

      Dudee.. cant believe that theres someone else out there that has a description of life exactly like me, Not that I think Im one of a kind or special, cause theres no goddamn special about it, but its just so ''refreshing?'' that theres someone out there that I know for sure that im walking the same path with. I think our only difference was that i havent even entered college yet, and life is financially hard as fck for me (Im living with my father and I have my own room, internet and PC. But other than that, im dirt poor as fck).
      Thanks for reading my essay if you ever did, just unnecessarily vented with no particular reason at all. BTW, how are you :) ?

  • @williampagdon4822
    @williampagdon4822 Рік тому +43

    I have learned a great deal from my Non-Verbal Severely Autistic 19-year-old son. Depspite reading voraciously and trying to learn about everything and travelling the world, I learn more by watching him and trying to understand his needs. Knowledge can come from anywhere. Wisdom appears to be scarcer but is always present.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 11 місяців тому

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day ?

    • @williampagdon4822
      @williampagdon4822 11 місяців тому +1

      @@edithbannerman4 I am having a great day. My son went for his bi-annual Checkup for his Autism and I also spent some time talking with a friend in Australia and a New Neighbor. How are you doing?

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 11 місяців тому

      @@williampagdon4822 I’m good and glad you did a lot, where you located?

  • @RIFLQ
    @RIFLQ 3 роки тому +601

    The first mistake of being smart is to think you're the smartest.

    • @bouzakmaya3260
      @bouzakmaya3260 3 роки тому +33

      That's right, it's the beginning of the downfall. And anyway if a person is smart they should know there's always someone smarter than them

    • @DavidLinn
      @DavidLinn 3 роки тому +2

      @@bouzakmaya3260 i've met one girl my age and one man older than me who were more intelligent than me without fail. the only thing i lack is wisdom. you can learn a lot from an old person who is happy (whether they have money or not).

    • @bouzakmaya3260
      @bouzakmaya3260 3 роки тому +2

      @@DavidLinn that's right and you can find even people who are the same age as you or younger and they have certain wisdom because they probably faced some situations or experiences that taught them a lot.

    • @KimTiger777
      @KimTiger777 3 роки тому +6

      There is always a bigger fish.

    • @SuperFitzieZX
      @SuperFitzieZX 3 роки тому +1

      Its because people can be self-centered. The world doesn't care what you have to say unless people give you validation. In a way, that validation is what could end up creating that nature as they become complacent from that status.

  • @DangerousFacts48
    @DangerousFacts48 5 років тому +1789

    Advice for hyper-intellectual people:
    *You're probably not as smart as you think you are*

    • @midnightbluenoz
      @midnightbluenoz 4 роки тому +15

      Damn even with I'm still pretty smart lol

    • @NQuick-bn7ts
      @NQuick-bn7ts 3 роки тому +83

      I think many people who specialize in one area believe their intellectual value translates across all mediums equally.
      This naturally gives a distorted view of their reality. This is consistent in what I've seen of modern academics.

    • @Xahires
      @Xahires 3 роки тому +12

      thats not how it works, if u deeply know u re intelectual one u just are, u can assume ure the one and act like it so u start to believe it, but when u just deeply know ure smarter than rest, it probably is true

    • @rapidgaming4703
      @rapidgaming4703 3 роки тому +10

      Stop self-projecting

    • @priceofiron6900
      @priceofiron6900 3 роки тому +9

      @@Xahires Well reading that you positively aren't an intellectual

  • @RahulSharma-dq4yr
    @RahulSharma-dq4yr Рік тому +14

    I was always shy and good in studies so some people literally called me arrogant to my face and it hurts sometime. I have come to term that there is no point in arguing to people let them perceive you however they see fit.

  • @annbrown9273
    @annbrown9273 Рік тому +18

    Toughest thing to accept about intelligence is that it is varied and variable. Some will have great depth of understanding without great knowledge and vice versa. Others will have great ability but it will not be visible or accepted by the world, while others will be smart because they have what people want or fear, and they can deliver it in effectively.
    To be smart is know that you can't know it all, can know a great deal of many or just a few things, or just make others believe either of the two.

    • @FortheBudgies
      @FortheBudgies Місяць тому

      Knowing a lot about one thing is not a sign of intelligence. I'd say it's the opposite. If you don't see how what you do fits into the world and general body of knowledge then your expertise has far less value.

  • @hunterhemingway3477
    @hunterhemingway3477 3 роки тому +445

    "when you're dishonest, what you build falls down"

    • @freshmanwithgotee
      @freshmanwithgotee 3 роки тому +1

      Honesty is to be sincere, free from untruthfulness.

    • @TheLucidDreamer12
      @TheLucidDreamer12 3 роки тому +6

      @Mike Jones in the very short term. If you're in it for the long game, dishonesty rarely works out.

    • @slicedtopieces
      @slicedtopieces 3 роки тому +4

      @Mike Jones You think the dishonesty that motivates the overcharging won't leech into other aspects of your construction work such as using cheap, unstable building materials over more expensive but more reliable materials? Where have you ever seen a liar so disciplined that they lied only about one type of thing but committed themselves to the truth in others without exception?

    • @123Mathzak
      @123Mathzak 3 роки тому

      @Mike Jones You’re assuming the finished product is all that matters.

    • @123Mathzak
      @123Mathzak 3 роки тому

      @@slicedtopieces The elites lol

  • @chaeeprice449
    @chaeeprice449 6 років тому +1658

    “True knowledge exists in knowing you know nothing!”
    -Socrates
    “True wisdom comes to each of us when we realize how little we understand about life, ourselves, and the world around us.”
    -Socrates

    • @spectacular7990
      @spectacular7990 5 років тому +19

      "Pffffffffffffffff... Ffffffft"
      -my asshole
      (just having a laugh at (insert smart quote here) and explaining that it is satire for those unaware)

    • @rahulmilan1458
      @rahulmilan1458 4 роки тому +4

      Hold on mate i here to feed my ego

    • @tyleroldham4676
      @tyleroldham4676 4 роки тому +2

      That's what real knowledge looks like.

    • @tyleroldham4676
      @tyleroldham4676 4 роки тому +12

      I think he also said that one shouldn't endeavor in philosophy until your 30s. First one must be a warrior to understand true struggle and right and wrong, then a poet to express what you've seen, and then finally a philosopher to try and understand it all. Im definitely butchering the quote I paraphrased and am going off of memory lol. Might have even been Plato that says that.

    • @lazar2949
      @lazar2949 4 роки тому +3

      The more we know, the less we know.

  • @surajvisana2025
    @surajvisana2025 Рік тому +8

    Thanks Jordan you made me realize what I was lacking. I was being better but you reminded me to enjoy it. You are really great guy.

  • @WhereAreYouNowAtlantis
    @WhereAreYouNowAtlantis Рік тому +30

    I testify that whatever he said is so on point. I have been having these thoughts about how I and my college friends are a minority in our society because we have high intelligence. Also, we really do tend to think that since we are so smart everything should come to us naturally, however slowly as we progress through our college curricula and face the outside world we are seeing how delusional we were and how our intelligence isn't the only requirement to carry us forward. And I am guilty of being useless in many aspects all the time. At home, it's not easy for me to do chores that others of my age find easier to do, event management, bargaining or repairing stuff, whereas my own skills which I am really good at are utterly useless at home. They don't need me to find a solution to a business problem or do an analysis of the household budget, they are fine without it. So yeah, struggles of being academically bright.

    • @nervonabliss2071
      @nervonabliss2071 10 місяців тому +2

      That's the issue with people attributing intelligence or being smart to being academically inclined. University is moreso how determined are you to follow instructions and complete deadlines. Yes it is a skill to remember and demonstrate the knowledge was learned. But outside of that realm how useful is that time spent... All you gained in terms of life skills was how to learn best and to show up on time. But even those skills from academia don't translate into learning life skills on the outside. It takes a special person to be gifted in both and generally one suffers at the expense of the other. For me, my academic side suffers but I'm gifted physically. I'm still pursuing one of the rarest degrees my school offers and am nearly done with my 4th year but it would be a lie to say I'm anywhere near the top of my class. I'm an average student. But outside of the classroom I'm leagues ahead of my peers bc I had to grow up early. It's okay as long as you understand where you lack bc you can focus on developing those skills later in life, but it's those who refuse to believe that they have any shortcomings who will truly be useless.

    • @cagejonny704
      @cagejonny704 10 місяців тому +1

      You've just stated you aren't smart 😂

  • @davidmonroy2509
    @davidmonroy2509 7 років тому +1371

    Ego is the roadblock from intellect to wisdom.

    • @MegaVIDEOGAMEVIDS
      @MegaVIDEOGAMEVIDS 7 років тому +93

      A lot of wisdom is gained when one removes the ego. It's quite shocking really, the amount of introspection one stands to gain if they merely listen and observe.

    • @Templarinn
      @Templarinn 6 років тому +4

      Well put.

    • @luker.6967
      @luker.6967 6 років тому +9

      David Monroy Generally true, but it's not quite that simple.

    • @azrael6280
      @azrael6280 6 років тому

      This is the main point.

    • @SA2004YG
      @SA2004YG 6 років тому +19

      That's something I learned recently, although if you're not vigilant the ego can make a come back without you even noticing

  • @scrapmason3721
    @scrapmason3721 3 роки тому +283

    I was that guy. Can't vouch for my intelligence but I was certainly arrogant. I had reached the conclusion that people who did not subscribe to a certain type of philosophy of nihilism were beaneath me. And then I went and worked in a warehouse.
    I met a guy who was kind of weird to others because he was obsessed with hip-hop culture and shoes. But he was super-honest, very brave in everything he did, very hard working and made no apologies for being genuine.
    I met a young girl who was, according to her, not the brightest, but none of us could keep up with her in our main task, due to her determination and endurance. She was also very honest and straight forward and had the most amazing ability to sincerely relate to anyone. Soon enough she was cracking jokes with everyone in the warehouse and people were seeking her company.
    I met a guy who was struggling with doing something with his life, maybe wasting a lot of time on pot and escapism. But he was really open, kind to everyone who didn't behave like an arse, made everybody laugh and kindof acted like a glue that linked people together.
    I also met a 56 year old man who had quit some banking job to work in a warehouse because he was bored to tears and actually enjoyed his new role. I learned that he had been a marine in his youth, he was super keen on talking to all sorts of people, never took crap from anyone and he shocked me when he said "I don't say anything about people that I wouldn't say to their face" because I realized it was true and that I was the exact opposite.
    And here I was surrounded by these peculiar but magnetic people who were becoming my friends and the rules in my head, the "intelectual", were saying I should think nothing of them. When I realized and accepted that I had genuine respect and care for them I realized that I was the problem. It hit me like a truck and it changed my views.
    And this would not have been possible without Jordan Peterson. So thank you JP. I'm not wise yet, but life sure is a whole lot better after that shift.

    • @biggSHNDO
      @biggSHNDO 2 роки тому +26

      This was really well-written and a pleasant anecdote, and I thank you for it. Cheers.

    • @philamavikane9423
      @philamavikane9423 2 роки тому +14

      Welcome to the real planet earth💫

    • @reneeraw6927
      @reneeraw6927 2 роки тому +12

      Now that was a great story. Thanks for sharing it.

    • @hoboeyjobi7020
      @hoboeyjobi7020 2 роки тому +4

      That was quite beautiful

    • @freethinker3083
      @freethinker3083 Рік тому +2

      This was beautifully written. I firmly believe that once, we tear down our beliefs that conflict with our reality we can start to see the beauty in people and experiences.

  • @RememberTrueStyle
    @RememberTrueStyle 5 місяців тому

    Wow thank you so much for sharing PhilosophyInsights! Thank you to Jordan Peterson for this too.

  • @surajvisana2025
    @surajvisana2025 Рік тому +4

    You made me realize having satisfaction will make life easy. I will never forget that.

  • @TopsideCrisis346
    @TopsideCrisis346 3 роки тому +593

    The moral of the story: stay humble. There's a reason why so many villains are evil geniuses - the mind, unchecked by the conscience, will learn to justify anything. It is often those who are possessed of a strong conscience, their mind unclouded by excessive information, who have the most profound insights. And this is not to say that the pursuit of knowledge isn't worthwhile. But the question becomes: what are you pursuing knowledge for? Knowledge is itself just a tool, a means to an end. It must be directed into a worthwhile purpose, else it be allowed to run riot.

  • @kapelski104
    @kapelski104 3 роки тому +2272

    I've seen THREE WHOLE seasons of Rick and Morty.

    • @TheMissiIe
      @TheMissiIe 3 роки тому +150

      Pathetic... I'm a Buzzfeed member

    • @abyssalboy8811
      @abyssalboy8811 3 роки тому +176

      Hehe, you fool…
      I AM A MODERATOR ON R/ATHEISM

    • @itsjusachannel6852
      @itsjusachannel6852 3 роки тому +56

      I've watched jojos 69 times

    • @derekrunyan983
      @derekrunyan983 3 роки тому +36

      "I've seen what makes you people laugh ! You're opinions mean nothing to me!"

    • @disappointment8094
      @disappointment8094 3 роки тому +3

      @@TheMissiIe Oh god

  • @HailAnts
    @HailAnts Рік тому +5

    Best. Episode. Ever.
    Creativity is so incredibly rare. Best way to spot it is thru someone's sense of humor. Non-creative people will have a very limited one..

    • @Rumplegirlskin
      @Rumplegirlskin 4 місяці тому +1

      Non-creative people tend to be rather good at comedy and having a good sense of humor. This is because of the thought that if you make people laugh, they can’t be mad at you. A lot of people learn to make people laugh. That is not creative, they take their environment and use what is common to make people laugh when they are in groups. So they are not getting laughed at, but they laugh with.

  • @sofiaw3308
    @sofiaw3308 11 місяців тому +4

    Utterly speechless, perfectly explained and perfectly concise.🙌🏽

  • @ForTheOmnissiah
    @ForTheOmnissiah 2 роки тому +1959

    I watched this speech 2-3 years back, think it was 2018. It caused me to have an epiphany. I'd taken my above-average intelligence and realized I had been acting a real jerk regarding it. I even realized my friends who also do similar things that I do, I was seeing them partially as rivals, and I realized when I was sharing my work with them I wasn't simply doing it out of fun, or to feel proud, I was doing it to show off, to feel superior.
    This speech seriously changed me, a lot. I spent a week pondering over how I'd been acting and realized I had slowly become... well, basically an a-hole, and I didn't realize the change because it was subtle, over time. Thanks Peterson, you stopped me from getting worse, and I've every much changed my mindset for the better.

    • @certified_geek7536
      @certified_geek7536 2 роки тому +57

      Sounds like a step in the right direction.

    • @seth2308
      @seth2308 2 роки тому +55

      This is the funniest fucking shit I swear 🤣🤣🤣

    • @gurururuwarararara8164
      @gurururuwarararara8164 2 роки тому +116

      @@seth2308 you have an odd sense of humor

    • @estebanarjona5185
      @estebanarjona5185 2 роки тому +55

      @@seth2308 you clicked on the wrong video buddy

    • @gaobeardutch5595
      @gaobeardutch5595 2 роки тому +41

      Good for you, but never be ashamed of your intelligence. Keep aware of when you are a jerk, but also when people are just jealous of you

  • @MisterTutor2010
    @MisterTutor2010 6 років тому +1388

    Intelligence and Wisdom are two different things as any D&D player will tell you :)

    • @Choppasama
      @Choppasama 5 років тому +45

      @Jd Brunette True, you roll 4d6 and drop the lowest.

    • @davidpurkiss7777
      @davidpurkiss7777 5 років тому +14

      This comment is highly underrated

    • @Mjhavok
      @Mjhavok 5 років тому +2

      Nice.

    • @MrBunksauce
      @MrBunksauce 4 роки тому +58

      Intelligence is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting a tomato in a fruit salad.

    • @genkiferal7178
      @genkiferal7178 4 роки тому +11

      My dad has a genius IQ, but no wisdom or even introspection. he's hard to be around

  • @TrueWalker88
    @TrueWalker88 6 місяців тому +1

    I love it when I hear someone whose experience I value, say things I've been saying for a long time, because I came to the same conclusion on my own, and it helps add data to the experiment of exploring whether something is true.

  • @notallgarbage
    @notallgarbage Рік тому +36

    I am a gifted INTP (m 48yo). I have chosen a career where my mind is free and where I can work on autopilot without thinking, and where there is no stress. I am a telecommunication technician. I can listen to an audio-class/podcast/conference/debate while working.
    Sometimes, I need my brain to solve a problem at work and need 100% of it... like for 30 minutes... and then I can revert back to my audio stuff... feels like I am not working... feels like I have my hobby at work... It's a lot of fun 🙂

    • @Kaizen747
      @Kaizen747 Рік тому +7

      Lmao, Intp here too and i do that as well! Listen to podcasts all fucking day long while mindlessly working as a landscaper

    • @retropragma
      @retropragma Рік тому

      Under achiever syndrome

    • @KyriosHeptagrammaton
      @KyriosHeptagrammaton Рік тому +1

      I'm a Leo

    • @yuzan3607
      @yuzan3607 Рік тому

      why do you think you are "gifted", I'm curious.

    • @AdamBechtol
      @AdamBechtol Рік тому

      interesting, sometimes I think I'd like a job like that but also sometimes worry I'll tire of it.

  • @RoyalGuardGeine
    @RoyalGuardGeine 3 роки тому +149

    "I am smart enough to know I am not." - Solaris

  • @Gottaculat
    @Gottaculat 5 років тому +572

    I think it was Hawking who said something like, "The enemy of knowledge isn't ignorance; the enemy is the ILLUSION of knowledge."
    Always assume you can learn something from others, even if they seem dim-witted. You just might learn something crucial.

    • @bacht4799
      @bacht4799 4 роки тому +3

      That’s explain why I sometimes gets annoying of so called intellectually lefty on UA-cam.. “ no offense I not saying you are wrong on what you believe or your believes is wrong.. just saying you frustrating and kind of arrogant but I can be wrong “ .. but what I find annoying is they are so sure of what they believe or like or do is the right thing and anyone else is a idiot or a fool.. and fair enough in some regard they probably right.. read more books, enjoy nature more or see intelligent movie there question your beliefs and such.. I just get annoyed when they can’t understand that not for everyone and that’s doesn’t mean you are a terrible person or not.. but again I can be wrong ..

    • @manuj2868
      @manuj2868 4 роки тому +6

      Coolt XZ If you dismiss viewpoints that are different than yours immediately as idiotic (without having a discussion beforehand), then that might even be a sign of low-intelligence.

    • @bacht4799
      @bacht4799 4 роки тому +1

      Manu J. Maybe.. or maybe it’s because I got Asperger and have fight with anxiety and bad thoughts most of my life and self hate .. believe me I want to give this people right in those things they say I know they are probably right in what they talking about and I do read books or watching no mainstream movies.. but I just tired of feeling like a terrible person and just being okay with myself without self righteous people telling me I gonna changing my way of life.. especially for people who themselves is quite arrogant and believe they are better then the rest.. but that’s just my opinion.. again I not saying they are wrong.. I just saying.. not everyone can’t empowering all the time and it’s frustrating that we should all the time..

    • @manuj2868
      @manuj2868 4 роки тому +3

      Coolt XZ Yeah it’s hard when people judge you. I also have my fair share of problems (anxiety, intrusive thoughts, suicidal thoughts, sometimes even a bit paranoid) and I’m told a lot to “man up”. Just know that there’s always someone to talk to and others who, at least to some degree, have the same problems as you.

    • @bacht4799
      @bacht4799 4 роки тому +1

      Manu J. Sorry too heard .. but you get what mean then.. too be honest I got a little annoying of what you wrote before but you didn’t mean it as a bad thing but as a helping hand and so .. so what about we shake hands.. sorry if I wrote something stupid and wish each other the best for both of us.. please take care and be good..

  • @leekspinner
    @leekspinner Рік тому +29

    Whatever anyone says about Jordan Peterson, this speech is amazing.
    I've learned a lot of lessons about intellect and wisdom throughout my life. In childhood, I used to associate high intellect and talent with moral superiority, which was, thankfully, corrected without a soul-crushing disappointment.
    I've had many friends with the arrogance of the intellect. It was very hard to deal with it, as I've developed an inferiority complex and felt hopeless about my abilities. Funny, parted ways with each one because of lack of emotional intelligence and wisdom.

    • @nstix2009xitsn
      @nstix2009xitsn 11 місяців тому

      @leekspinner "emotional intelligence" There's no such thing.

    • @josiahsey8924
      @josiahsey8924 9 днів тому

      Explain?;​@@nstix2009xitsn

  • @user-xr1mi4om1i
    @user-xr1mi4om1i 8 місяців тому

    Nice to have this inspiring message from you Jordan

  • @SerWhiskeyfeet
    @SerWhiskeyfeet 7 років тому +1543

    "Elon Musk can't dunk" is one of my all time favorite quotes. No matter how good anyone is at anything, they completely suck at something else.

    • @thejackanapes5866
      @thejackanapes5866 7 років тому +21

      I see wisdom in your comment. Thank you!

    • @keithode1737
      @keithode1737 7 років тому +164

      Except that dunking is a pointless non-skill that does nothing for anybody.

    • @keithode1737
      @keithode1737 7 років тому +8

      True.

    • @FreedInPieces
      @FreedInPieces 7 років тому +80

      Elon Musk can shatter the back board. Have you not seen his videos on this? The dude is raw on the court.

    • @jackjones4275
      @jackjones4275 6 років тому +34

      Thats not correct Jordan. People with higher IQ's are better at more tasks.

  • @fancypig
    @fancypig 3 роки тому +1408

    Jordan - "you can be really intelligent and also completely useless"
    the comments - "OMG this was recommend to me, I must be really intelligent"
    me - "no, we're all fekkin useless"

    • @catcat4697
      @catcat4697 3 роки тому +19

      I'd rather be useless than to be used

    • @maybeantoniovivaldi2522
      @maybeantoniovivaldi2522 3 роки тому +14

      MBTI community be like; INxx

    • @AmanSharma-jy7lw
      @AmanSharma-jy7lw 3 роки тому +13

      Depends on why you're being useless... If you're just avoiding something till it gives you anxiety then you're stupid. If you really consider what should really be done and you analyze a lot and end up doing nothing then you're intellectual enough to beat your own memories and that is to change your own beliefs again and again at will and hence smart people are afraid of committment.... And when these smart people learn to fear nothing ( takes a lot of work) they become psychopaths.

    • @utkarsh3708
      @utkarsh3708 3 роки тому +1

      @@maybeantoniovivaldi2522 🤣OMg so true...

    • @MW-pi8ql
      @MW-pi8ql 3 роки тому

      @@catcat4697 it depends on u mean by useless

  • @ariel-mindfuladventures4709
    @ariel-mindfuladventures4709 Рік тому +1

    Just found this at the perfect time! Thanks for sharing 😁

  • @FartherReach
    @FartherReach 9 місяців тому +1

    Good advice. It took me forever to figure out that I need to be around intellectual peers, which is to say people who think similarly so I can progress spiritually. There is one path to wisdom and it's different for each person.

  • @lisawest2637
    @lisawest2637 7 років тому +821

    I, too, applauded at him drinking that water

    • @coffee24seven
      @coffee24seven 6 років тому +55

      the water sip really put things into perspective and drove his talking points home

    • @mrRufffnTumble
      @mrRufffnTumble 6 років тому +74

      coffee24seven I would argue to the contrary, his talking points were merely a way of putting the water sip into perspective and driving it home. In this day in age with all the super techno gadgets we forget, at times, that the simple act of sipping water from a plastic receptacle can be such a powerful act of defiance and beauty.

    • @guyincognito5663
      @guyincognito5663 6 років тому +37

      So you’re saying women are lobsters?

    • @notatheist
      @notatheist 6 років тому +1

      I would agree with your analysis if it weren't for the glaring oversight of large aspects of human nature.

    • @notatheist
      @notatheist 6 років тому +6

      I nearly suffered an existential crisis after submitting a comment containing a misused conjugation of "your".

  • @TENNSUMITSUMA
    @TENNSUMITSUMA 6 років тому +141

    'He who seeks knowledge, begins with humbleness.'
    ~ Buju Banton

    • @bacht4799
      @bacht4799 4 роки тому +1

      TENNSUMITSUMA good one.. 😊

    • @VwapTrader
      @VwapTrader 4 роки тому +6

      “If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency, and vibration.”
      ~ Snoop Dogg

    • @peterlukach310
      @peterlukach310 3 роки тому

      Naw. Modesty. What does one gain from thinking less of themselves?

    • @TENNSUMITSUMA
      @TENNSUMITSUMA 3 роки тому +1

      @@peterlukach310 who said anything about thinking less of them self?!

    • @peterlukach310
      @peterlukach310 3 роки тому

      @@TENNSUMITSUMA to be humble is to have a low value of one importance.

  • @atlantic_love
    @atlantic_love Рік тому +3

    I could listen to that guy to no end. I'm sad that I just discovered this. I'm a polymath, (my two disciplines of interest are oil painting and computer programming) and at 50 years old am struggling more and more with this fear that I will NEVER be able to come up with a schedule, if you will, to help me manage my time more wisely (along with my full-time job) so that I can focus on those two disciplines. I've basically just given up and stepped away from both disciplines because I don't know how to get myself back into them and do them at the same time in any given week. I hate being a polymath.

  • @trevor_osborn
    @trevor_osborn Рік тому +16

    Does anyone ever think that's it ive reached my potential intellectually?
    It blows me away how dumb I was at school and how far ive come 21 years later. I just assume most people over time find their feet and if they don't.... well they wont be messaging here on a JP clip. My guess we are all winners and growing daily. Well done everybody 👏🏼

    • @lithygreen4106
      @lithygreen4106 Рік тому +1

      Thanks 🙏🙏 we keep improving ourselves 😊😊

    • @markg8022
      @markg8022 Рік тому

      Yeah. For me, every seven years ago I recognize how stupid I was and count my regrets. Most regrets I cannot change, and by that time, the moment is lost forever thats swept into my subconcious as unfulfillment. It then fuels a hyper-creative-rage, which then becomes useful in itself if used carefully.

    • @jan-lukas
      @jan-lukas 9 місяців тому

      I can look back 1 year and list so many mistakes to fill an entire comment of their own. In another year I will be able to do the same. But isn't that an important part of intelligence already?

  • @Serpent947
    @Serpent947 3 роки тому +173

    I am a hyper-intellectual, watch this
    *clears throat* “Yes indeed sir, indubitably”

    • @patrioticmink7452
      @patrioticmink7452 3 роки тому +2

      lol

    • @christiancarrera4476
      @christiancarrera4476 3 роки тому +6

      Indubitably indeed, my good Sir.

    • @rrayrray1234
      @rrayrray1234 3 роки тому

      @@alexanderseton6013 boardman knows

    • @marcin8865
      @marcin8865 3 роки тому

      That was book-smart, but smart right?

    • @-Kal-
      @-Kal- 3 роки тому +11

      Hmm yes, I find this avenue of discourse suitable for such illumined minds as we. I clicked on this video in due haste as the struggles that beset we, the gifted, are hardly trivialities. Now, lest I be accused of credulity I must inform the reader that I have made something of a perusal of the timely fable ‘Rick and Morty’, ergo, by that metric alone, the moniker ‘hyper-intellectual’ is well qualified. Indubitably, the uncommonly adroit mind deserves uncommon praise and a video title thus crafted can hardly be refused.

  • @to2burger
    @to2burger 3 роки тому +430

    Not sure why people assume we clicked on this because we see ourselves as hyper intelligence; I just like his discussions and wanted to hear about a subject matter that didn’t (necessarily) apply to me

    • @JohnLange
      @JohnLange 2 роки тому +43

      Right…if every recommendation from UA-cam applied to my character….I would be a really really weird person haha

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage 2 роки тому +4

      UA-cam recommendations and Google search results are marketing siblings ...

    • @113alfafan
      @113alfafan 2 роки тому

      I most certainly do not but I do know people that are like this. Intellectuals look down there noses a lot. Not all, but most do. Especially if you do not have an education that meets their “standards”.

    • @Loriensen
      @Loriensen 2 роки тому +1

      I was simply curious what advice would be given to the hyper intellectual despite the fact that i know that i'm not one of them

    • @Willyama
      @Willyama 2 роки тому +3

      Want a cookie?

  • @kelvinmostafa5860
    @kelvinmostafa5860 Рік тому

    Thanks,I need that.

  • @peace1012
    @peace1012 Рік тому +6

    Well said 👍... you pointed subtly the snag of the pb of the majority of smart people... arrogance... wisdom takes more time and effort( observation, focus, experience of life and a solid behavior system... most important modesty and temperance )
    As person who masters some truth .. it is on his responsibility to simplify things so ordinary people can understand and react in the supposed way.... you brought the easiest way to close the gap between classes of society for better world where everyone is important, indispensable, respected with gratitude and here again in some way you contribute to solve some psychosocial pb like self-esteem issues and depressions...and so on....

  • @MisterAwestasia
    @MisterAwestasia 6 років тому +1292

    “Never criticize another individual as beneath you as they didn’t have the same resources and opportunities as you did.” -First line of Great Gatsby.

    • @clandestineman6655
      @clandestineman6655 6 років тому +80

      MisterAwestasia okay, not trying to discount what your comment adds to the discussion, but I just cracked open my copy of the book and it doesn't say that exactly.

    • @MisterAwestasia
      @MisterAwestasia 6 років тому +27

      Clandestine Man I was paraphrasing as I didn’t have the book in front of me at the time but I appreciate the correction :)

    • @JiffKha
      @JiffKha 6 років тому +121

      "In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since. Whenever you feel like criticizing anyone, he told me, just remember that all the people in this world haven't had the advantages that you've had."

    • @anabolicphilosopher8765
      @anabolicphilosopher8765 6 років тому +7

      Straight White Male You don't believe what, OP's original post or the quote from Great Gasby? Either way though I feel they both ring pretty true, everybody has a unique set of skills that they have learned through life because everyone's life is different. How you use those skills is what makes the difference and money is really is just opportunity, because if you don't do anything with it you'll lose it. People who are rich work hard for their money, you can't become wealthy being lazy.

    • @villiestephanov984
      @villiestephanov984 6 років тому +2

      MisterAwestasia : this makes no sense. Great was his own arrogance, which never failed him. No one wins an argument without criticism. So I can not stand loosers.

  • @miguelmagana7460
    @miguelmagana7460 2 роки тому +600

    Struggling with a superiority mindset and it’s getting in the way with my relationships
    Loved this talk

    • @eliasvonbrille
      @eliasvonbrille 2 роки тому +38

      Smart for recognizing that.

    • @user-or4ut2qi3q
      @user-or4ut2qi3q 2 роки тому +65

      And the terrifying truth is that you're probably not all that superior.
      It's hard letting go of the things which make us feel good about ourselves.
      But it's even more painful if you don't let go of them.

    • @michaelhighlights1614
      @michaelhighlights1614 2 роки тому +1

      @@user-or4ut2qi3q why so?

    • @edwardmitchell6581
      @edwardmitchell6581 2 роки тому +24

      I'm having this issue as well. With my wife I have the superior IQ. We both have below have EQs.
      My biggest problem is that, because I always win arguments, she refuses to talk to me about disagreements.
      One of the things about high IQ is that you are right most of the time, but you are also better at arguing, even if you are wrong.

    • @AG-yv3ot
      @AG-yv3ot 2 роки тому +25

      @@edwardmitchell6581 Pick your battles. Don't belittle her. Reach out to her in other ways. "Winning" over minor disagreements is unlikely to be worth losing your marriage.

  • @liligloo
    @liligloo Рік тому +2

    Well worded ❤

  • @mrw1733
    @mrw1733 Рік тому

    Thank you for the tips

  • @XEM_Ajax
    @XEM_Ajax 3 роки тому +3246

    Reddit atheists watching this be like "omg that's me!"

    • @lomouche
      @lomouche 3 роки тому +102

      Sounds like the 5.1 K people who all commented on this video

    • @XEM_Ajax
      @XEM_Ajax 3 роки тому +8

      @@lomouche lmao

    • @imagine-unleashyourcuriosi7418
      @imagine-unleashyourcuriosi7418 3 роки тому +129

      Well, that's a generalisation. And you better watch that. Because those are millions of people who escaped the brainwashing of abusing religious parents. The nihilism that comes through it is absurd though. But surely there is an escape.

    • @kade1348
      @kade1348 3 роки тому +58

      yikes dude dragging religion into it. that’s very low IQ of you to do...

    • @shadowbanned3136
      @shadowbanned3136 3 роки тому

      looool true.

  • @richardthompson6079
    @richardthompson6079 3 роки тому +632

    1:50: Carlin had a quote about this:
    “Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.”

    • @alexvolk6063
      @alexvolk6063 3 роки тому +61

      And everyone thinks of themselves to be on the upper part

    • @javierelizalde4653
      @javierelizalde4653 3 роки тому +4

      This is funny. I think though, that the average person is more "hopelessly lost" in themselves than anything. Now im wondering if the same idea applies

    • @javierelizalde4653
      @javierelizalde4653 3 роки тому +1

      @@alexvolk6063 well theres different kinds of intelligence right? Or is that still just a theory?

    • @Marco..1
      @Marco..1 3 роки тому +2

      @@javierelizalde4653 there are different kinds of intelligence. But there is not only one theory what the different kinds are.
      So yes you can think that something is more important than something else. And nearly everyone thinks that where he is good at is more important than where he is bad in.
      But besides of that it also depends what is the average.
      Do you take the average of every human, of every healthy human, of every human with a good social status or of a different population?
      If you take every human then you need to be below average smart to be (exactly (IQ=100))average smart, because there are some humans who didnt go to school or did not even had enough food for their brain to develop normally. There are hundreds of reasons why someone can be less smart.

    • @user-mx4sm9cv7e
      @user-mx4sm9cv7e 3 роки тому +1

      @@javierelizalde4653 There's Raw intelligence which is self evident and verbal intelligence which can be increased through reading

  • @jeanninecathcart627
    @jeanninecathcart627 Рік тому +7

    MY old uncle was a house painter who could just look at a house and decide exactly how many cans of paint it would take to paint the whole house inside and out. He never graduated from high school but, listening to him talk, you would've thought that he was a college grad.

    • @el_micha
      @el_micha Рік тому +1

      Ain't that what people call streetsmart? I think it derives from curiosity and can be described as a sum of life experience, observation and maybe even not overthinking stuff but constantly doing. Just living life and going onwards gives you so much practice instead of all theorethical knowledge. And in the end thats what counts I guess. You gotta be curious and have/develop open eyes for social interaction and the world around you.

    • @jackheinemann8780
      @jackheinemann8780 Рік тому +2

      My grandfather was a Builder, had his own company with men and all building houses. He built the best houses and everyone in town knew about Johnnie Walker masterbuilt homes. He left school at 15

    • @NJGuy1973
      @NJGuy1973 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@el_michaI don't know about street smart, but the painter uncle clearly spent a lifetime surrounded by paint and houses, gaining massive knowledge. No different than a history professor sending decades teaching about some time period, then writing a book about it.

    • @el_micha
      @el_micha 11 місяців тому

      @@NJGuy1973 That's basically what I meant. Please don't understand street smart as an insult. It is sth. very positive as I understand it.

  • @GodisGraciousAlways
    @GodisGraciousAlways Рік тому +1

    Such an apt description of the pains of hyper-intellectualism. Such is, without doubt or contention, something that has plaugued me most of my life, and has left me a pretty solitary and somewhat reclusive person as long back as I can remember, which, given that I was born with an eidetic memory, stretches back to infancy possibly preceding the age of two. Someday, God willing, I do so wish to make acquaintance with Dr Peterson. He has a very eloquent, but also unrestrained and still humble ability to describe things in just such a manner as to be of a very understanding and empathetic nature when describing the psychological proclivities and phenomena of various strengths and disorders of the mind and psyche.
    Sorry for expending such space here merely for the trite purpose of extolling praise on Dr Peterson, but hearing his empathy on this topic was, for me, quite special.
    Thank you for this post, folks. May the Lord bless and keep you in your way😇

  • @TheBigdan210
    @TheBigdan210 2 роки тому +282

    The more books I read, the more humble I become…

    • @ashandwit
      @ashandwit 2 роки тому +17

      Same. While at time I recognize, "HEY, I thought that TOO!", nevertheless, I did NOT write it down, and put it in a BOOK.

    • @omaga501
      @omaga501 2 роки тому +11

      I feel dumber the more I read and the more I know 😅

    • @cMind607
      @cMind607 2 роки тому +5

      @@ashandwit Lack of courage. I believe we’ve all had great ideas but we are worried about being ridiculed for them. That’s why the worlds stagnant. I feel the same whilst reading or watching UA-cam etc. if only we had support for individuals suffering from mental health issues, anxiety etc maybe the world would change. Imo atleast.

    • @sleepybraincells
      @sleepybraincells 2 роки тому +1

      lmao, this comment is genius.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl Рік тому

      on the contrary, the more books you read the more you swagger. You can't help it having no choice in the matter.

  • @boledle
    @boledle 2 роки тому +1031

    At the ripe age of 50, after being told my whole life how creative and witty I am, I've concluded I would have been far happier to go through life as a simpleton like Forrest Gump

    • @wolframgrosser2696
      @wolframgrosser2696 2 роки тому +9

      Sorry to hear that

    • @pecan11
      @pecan11 2 роки тому +5

      Why?

    • @quirkasaurussaurus2896
      @quirkasaurussaurus2896 2 роки тому +32

      if i may take this one, K L, it's the pressure. It can also become a unfruitful pre-occupation. Also, what is often overlooked, talent and/or creativity is of no value if not couple with virtuoso level skill. It's the acquisition of that skill, which may take an "all-in" approach, that keeps most of us from taking that route. we need more secure vocations than "performance acting."

    • @ohmyv3gatron
      @ohmyv3gatron 2 роки тому +4

      How about normal? Lol thinking in extremes does no good. You’re overshooting the target

    • @dorklingduck638
      @dorklingduck638 2 роки тому +9

      @@pecan11 he knew what love is

  • @waynezahra9213
    @waynezahra9213 Рік тому +3

    Confession: I’m a late listener to Mr Peterson. However, I absolutely love his directness. Obviously I’m not in the same league as Mr Peterson but I find myself agree with him all the time and that’s extremely odd going by my character.

  • @Nosirrah2112
    @Nosirrah2112 Рік тому +6

    I work in a warehouse and I have a problem with Marijuana that ive come to sort of believe i use to shut off. I've kind of learned over the years, that due to my surroundings I'm stuck in a loop. I love reading history. I understand geopolitics, economics, and sociology, along with psychology and some various subjects I've half studied. But my dad is blue collar and I'm kind of frightened of breaking out. But I had this problem as a kid, disinterested, and creative, fleeting thoughts adhd all that. And now I feel very shut down. I don't wanna talk to anyone and I feel annoying because I'm not just into all the pedantic frivolous things anymore.

    • @sirrealism7300
      @sirrealism7300 Рік тому

      Dude ADHD is overdiagnosed bullshit. You can fake the tests to get adderal lickety split and use it to get extended time in tests but it's not a real disability dipshit.

    • @user-cw3wm9lx7w
      @user-cw3wm9lx7w 5 місяців тому +1

      Focus on your dreams.

  • @robertbrandywine
    @robertbrandywine 3 роки тому +271

    Everybody watching this is thinking "I'm an intellectual, and wise, but not stuck-up about it".

    • @Wafa-bf4nv
      @Wafa-bf4nv 3 роки тому +4

      No, I was curious 😅

    • @BrysenJacobsen
      @BrysenJacobsen 3 роки тому +15

      I'm an intellectually adept person, IQ is high, and I am very stuck-up about it. But, I'm also insecure about it sooooo.

    • @deacon8318
      @deacon8318 3 роки тому +35

      @@BrysenJacobsen Ya know, it's funny, I'm sure most on this comment section also either believe, or know that they have a high IQ. But it's amazing how hard it is to say "hey, I'm smart"without having immediate backlash for sounding arrogant and foolish.
      I mean, look at all the pseudo intellectual people who patrol the chats using any wording they can think of to sound as intelligent as possible.
      It kinda resonates with this video quite a bit. So many folks are clearly watching these videos and learning lessons or at least striving too. But don't have the moral and social wisdom to know that claiming to be intelligent does nothing but make you seem unintelligent. It's a strange phenomenon.
      *Edit*
      After re-reading my comment, I could even sound like a dumbass pseudo intellectual. Can really get you thinking in circles and have you questioning your own ego lol. Trying to be self aware isn't always easy.

    • @gamercatsz5441
      @gamercatsz5441 3 роки тому +16

      To be fair, it is possible that the majority looking at these kind of video’s is at least in top10 of IQ range.

    • @robertbrandywine
      @robertbrandywine 3 роки тому

      @@gamercatsz5441 Oh, I don't think there is any question of that. I scored in the top 2% when I took my tests in high school.

  • @benendesc3931
    @benendesc3931 5 років тому +1548

    Academics can never represent someone’s true intelligence .

    • @mjolninja9358
      @mjolninja9358 3 роки тому +27

      Benendes C Thats a common thought

    • @mjolninja9358
      @mjolninja9358 3 роки тому +2

      Alex Jay lol

    • @armanthompson8401
      @armanthompson8401 3 роки тому +4

      Alex Jay lmao

    • @st1ck993
      @st1ck993 3 роки тому +60

      @@armanthompson8401the current school system caters to a certain type of temperament lmao

    • @armanthompson8401
      @armanthompson8401 3 роки тому +37

      b1b4 yeah the current system has many flaws, and quite frankly not many redeeming qualities

  • @Liam-ho9du
    @Liam-ho9du 8 місяців тому +1

    I had always been interested in abstract ideas from a very young age. Especially in my conversations in the last 2 years, when talking to people, I would often find myself adding a hint of philosophy/deeper meaning to what people have to say. For most people, my comments would fly right over their head seeming uninterested. However, this summer, I met a guy who was into abstract ideas just like I was. When I added that hint of philosophy to the conversation, he responded very well and we found ourself in a deep tunnel of abstraction for hours. It was so weird because I genuinely liked talking to this guy where as most new people I meet, we talk about general small talk which is mostly boring to me.

  • @marianbundel1229
    @marianbundel1229 6 місяців тому

    What a man. I love this guy. Wisdom. Lovely. Thanks.

  • @GorgonDrageil
    @GorgonDrageil 5 років тому +373

    He hit the nail on the head.
    The fact that I still have to learn things and put in sincere effort applying myself hurts my ego terribly.
    And the fact that I can still end up a useless nobody despite being traditionally "smart" feels like a betrayal.

    • @Hey-jw3dm
      @Hey-jw3dm 4 роки тому +10

      Good luck // on your journey. I Respect your attitude.

    • @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone
      @yourkingdomcomeyourwillbedone 4 роки тому +6

      Exactly. Well put.

    • @sheraawrr2009
      @sheraawrr2009 4 роки тому +7

      I can weirdly relate to you. You won’t find many who will admit having that big of an ego. Furthermore, not many understand the dynamics of a big ego. Good job

    • @aaronvelazquez5599
      @aaronvelazquez5599 3 роки тому

      Then why would wanna be traditional in any way

    • @AnonyMous-jf4lc
      @AnonyMous-jf4lc 3 роки тому +4

      Try not having to put effort in. That’s how you get truly jaded. It’s very rare that I have to fully focus, things are just easy to understand. Books are easy to read. Shortcuts are easily found. It’s taken me decades to understand how to not label people incompetent fools or lazy pigs. I’ve found one person that shares this with me. He’s a very rich VP in a global business. He’s the only man I’ve ever met that I know is a level above me. He taught me how to cope.

  • @cambo6911
    @cambo6911 6 років тому +64

    To become wise, you must care about things that most people do not. The key is how full of self you are.
    Selfish people are clueless to what achieves enlightenment and wisdom.
    A great deal of smart people think they've arrived, while wise people are on a never-ending journey to continue to learn and grow on a daily basis.

    • @andreadomingachidiac9855
      @andreadomingachidiac9855 5 років тому

      It's not necessarily about learning (and reading and memorizing). Just become the best version of yourself.

    • @Hey-jw3dm
      @Hey-jw3dm 4 роки тому

      ah yep. thats me. idk but I feel like alot of people will think its annoying, there just isnt really many ppl I can talk to comfortably about the stuff I've learnt.

    • @Hey-jw3dm
      @Hey-jw3dm 4 роки тому +1

      @@andreadomingachidiac9855 the best version of yourself is achieved by learning who you are and why you do the things you do right? or what do you mean.

    • @andreadomingachidiac9855
      @andreadomingachidiac9855 4 роки тому

      @@Hey-jw3dm yes

    • @domicioannioulpiano6845
      @domicioannioulpiano6845 4 роки тому +1

      Philosophers > Sophists

  • @ManthaaHD
    @ManthaaHD 10 місяців тому +3

    All my life i thought myself highly intelligent and my early school life suggested the same. Everything i had an interest in i picked up pretty much instantly. Even in later highschool years i winged the classes without much struggle. In my first try at "abitur"(which is the german degree that enables you to go to university) though i failed, so i took the classes again. It was then that i met probably the most intelligent being i have ever known to this day. He was my math teacher then and is still the only Person that made me feel truly small.
    We were of similar height but he felt like a giant. It was magnificent really.
    He understood my mind and helped me a lot in understanding it myself.
    I changed schools before graduating because of personal circumstances but its thanks to him that i managed to graduate. I studied 2 times at a university but quit both times. I never felt guided anymore ever since i met him. Thats why im really excited about the start of the peterson Academy and want to give it one more shot. Its not like im living a bad life but i feel like i keep lagging behind my potential.

    • @spacelook9076
      @spacelook9076 10 місяців тому

      An honest man in Sodom, Lord!!

    • @christophstuwe4330
      @christophstuwe4330 10 місяців тому +2

      Das Problem wenn man inteligent ist, ist dass Dinge die einen interessieren aufsaugt wie ein Schwamm aber alles was nur minder interessiert einfach langweilt. Sag bescheid wenn du dafür ne Lösung findest...

  • @Simon-op7nn
    @Simon-op7nn Рік тому +1

    Yes Dr. Peterson you have my full attention..

  • @thomaschichester3020
    @thomaschichester3020 3 роки тому +525

    A while ago I came up with a small truism:
    -- Intelligence is being able to recognize, identify and categorize new information
    -- Wisdom is knowing what to do with that information

    • @Ivyboma
      @Ivyboma 3 роки тому +1

      True.

    • @Vikingwerk
      @Vikingwerk 3 роки тому +32

      I'd go so far as to add:
      Wisdom is the ability to convert knowledge (information) into practice.

    • @nihilistcentraluk442
      @nihilistcentraluk442 3 роки тому +18

      Intelligence is the ability to adapt quickly to a variety of new situations.
      It is not passing exams

    • @KelsaRavenlock
      @KelsaRavenlock 3 роки тому +34

      I always like the saying
      "knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit, wisdom is knowing it tastes bad in a fruit salad".

    • @KelsaRavenlock
      @KelsaRavenlock 3 роки тому +18

      You could also say Knowledge is collected information, Intelligence is the ability to manipulate that collected information, and Wisdom is knowing the best way to apply the results.

  • @nulliusinverba6324
    @nulliusinverba6324 3 роки тому +500

    "The problem I see smart people make all the time, is that they think they are already smart." ~Elon Musk

    • @snackers7
      @snackers7 3 роки тому +2

      Another nihilistic story?

    • @nulliusinverba6324
      @nulliusinverba6324 3 роки тому +29

      Elon Musk I have no doubt has read philosophical writings, and this quote, though paraphrased, was originally made by philosophers like Socrates. The thought captures assuming that oneself is already adequate, preventing ourselves from broadening our perception of the cosmos.

    • @tenningale
      @tenningale 3 роки тому +19

      Musk pretends to be a world-class virus expert on Twitter (e.g., no cases by the end of April). Another Dunning-Kruger.

    • @RE-qj4db
      @RE-qj4db 3 роки тому +6

      Musk is a front man

    • @tenningale
      @tenningale 3 роки тому +8

      @@RE-qj4db Exactly he's just a PR clown used to make a company more appealing to the public. He's actually quite bad at business.

  • @thouwilltarot8916
    @thouwilltarot8916 Рік тому

    Thanks Doc.

  • @MarMaxGaming
    @MarMaxGaming 10 місяців тому

    That was really cool… what a nice snippet

  • @booberry6715
    @booberry6715 7 років тому +864

    The real problem is that the intellectual believe themselves to be wise.

    • @NipsnapsGamer
      @NipsnapsGamer 7 років тому +85

      The biggest real problem is that many arrogant people just parrot the current politically correct opinions and dogma and think themselves to be intellectuals. I call them pseudointellectuals, and they are often the most vocal (on social media or mainstream media). Pseudointellectual apparently is also a real word that pretty well depicts it, though I started using it even before I knew it was a real word. :P (English is not my native language.)
      But yeah also the above is true, of course.

    • @aliasbrush2
      @aliasbrush2 7 років тому +8

      Or that cretins wouldn't know wisdom if it were presented to them in a neat package.

    • @adamcochran1309
      @adamcochran1309 7 років тому +6

      The real problem is using popularity as a way to determine something that has nothing to do with popularity!

    • @sanguinelynx
      @sanguinelynx 7 років тому +31

      The more intelligent a person is, the more they understand the limitations of intellect. In contrast, the median or less intelligent 'feel' intelligence is not quantifiable.

    • @ciaareinthecommentssection9575
      @ciaareinthecommentssection9575 7 років тому +9

      I find the real problem is that people take so much solace in platitudes and external validation for thus instead of persisting with introspection.

  • @MrsTruthTeller
    @MrsTruthTeller 3 роки тому +305

    One of my favorite quotes...
    “I know that I am intelligent because I know that I know nothing.”

    • @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239
      @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 3 роки тому +4

      MrsTruthTeller okay Jon Snow!

    • @loganharris6713
      @loganharris6713 3 роки тому +9

      @@donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 it was said by Socrates shortly before the oracle declared him the smartest man in ancient greece. Read more books and watch less TV

    • @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239
      @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 3 роки тому +13

      @@loganharris6713 I was making a joke. :p Why would I value the words of a dead guy. If he was so smart he would have risen from the grave and lived forever.

    • @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239
      @donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 3 роки тому +7

      @@loganharris6713 Reading is for nerds! You dweeb!

    • @loganharris6713
      @loganharris6713 3 роки тому +1

      @@donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 according to your logic, the smartest man in the world thought he could feed thousands of people with 7 loaves of bread

  • @rosrebel
    @rosrebel Рік тому +1

    Education is regurgitation , paid and bought for . To be able to create is priceless..

  • @mangoproduction5993
    @mangoproduction5993 Рік тому

    Thank you

  • @kharkaroto9486
    @kharkaroto9486 3 роки тому +421

    This is how I'm feeling right now. I know I have great potential within but I feel like I'm completely useless because I can't find a path I want to put my ability and effort to walk down.

    • @ekhmoi4552
      @ekhmoi4552 3 роки тому +22

      I'd suggest to check out programming. Incredible investment of time.
      I can't thank younger myself enough for learning it.

    • @kharkaroto9486
      @kharkaroto9486 3 роки тому +17

      @@ekhmoi4552 Thanks so much for your input. It means so much to me.
      I've had experience with programming, especially at A level. I really dislked it. My future is in Computing somewhere, just don't know where.

    • @mirror8519
      @mirror8519 2 роки тому +8

      Just do the same thing the simpsons's comic book guy did and learn an impressive amount of comicbook facts
      So when someone asks "Who's faster, Superman or Flash?" you can write a 160 pages on how Flash is capable of running faster than instant teleportation without even using the speedforce.

    • @Dixi379
      @Dixi379 2 роки тому +36

      Step 1, uninstall league of legends

    • @kharkaroto9486
      @kharkaroto9486 2 роки тому +21

      @@Dixi379 lol. So update: I'm doing a Data Analytics course and enjoying it. Playing league of legends is the very last thing I do if I get time.

  • @officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408
    @officermeowmeowfuzzyface4408 6 років тому +74

    Find areas you're weak in and improve yourself. Suddenly new interests will focus and hone your abilities far beyond what they were. Focusing on one thing is like building a tower taller than it was designed; at some point you have to go back to the base and expand.

    • @sosig8332
      @sosig8332 6 років тому +1

      Meow Meow Fuzzyface wow so wise

  • @kerrymartinez4463
    @kerrymartinez4463 6 місяців тому

    Well you had me at the first sentence! I’m so blessed to have three besties that share my traits however i tend to have too many ideas and inventions for them. I’m humble. I just can’t be “normal” nor have I succeeded at it because of circumstances of my life but it is ok because I am free. Getting out in my community talking and just saying hello is how I learn amazing things about the people around me and appreciate traits like kindness and love:

    • @CrochetNewsNetwork
      @CrochetNewsNetwork 6 місяців тому

      Good ideas and inventions are a dime a dozen. Try taking said invention to the market place and have millions of people pay for it.

  • @georgeanastasopoulos5865
    @georgeanastasopoulos5865 Місяць тому

    Very well said.🏅

  • @Gottaculat
    @Gottaculat 5 років тому +1630

    He's spot-on. I have an I.Q. of around 148, but it's gotten me to amount to nothing significant in this life, but it certainly contributes to depression as people expect more from me, as if I have more potential for some reason.
    If I could choose between infinite intellect or infinite wisdom, I'd choose infinite wisdom.
    I think another downside to people with high I.Q.s is that we over-analyze, which lets us see what COULD go wrong, and that makes us less likely to take risks. As we all know, true wealth is guarded by extreme risk. It's the dragon hoarding the gold. Never would a hyper-intellectual risk going for that gold, but a less intelligent knight who can sum up the courage to take that risk stands a better chance of getting the gold.
    This is why many entrepreneurs aren't too bright, but they are wise enough to seek aid from those more knowledgeable in areas they lack knowledge. They are the leaders who take up the mantle of responsibility and consequence, and they organize the people who would otherwise not take on such risk. If they succeed, they become millionaire CEOs, and if they fail, they lose everything, sometimes even their family. That's why your dim-wit boss gets paid the big bucks; he's legally responsible and is at the most risk. As the old saying goes, "fortune favors the bold." It doesn't say fortune favors the coward who knows best.

    • @zanzoy
      @zanzoy 5 років тому +137

      Sums up my life in a nutshell. Also for the highly gifted reading this: you are a threat to everyone.

    • @thesisko4031
      @thesisko4031 5 років тому +27

      Sit back and go over every posinility to every decision and path in ur life. What do u want, hardest thing for me to do was say NO then deal with the fallout in having to disown family members.
      Also ya, i get called loser all the time cause i am white Canadian born and not making 6 figures a year.
      Anxiety and depression will ruin anyone no matter who they are.
      Find urslef then move forward.

    • @rnbsounds5705
      @rnbsounds5705 5 років тому +66

      IQ tests are the problem, as they are constructed to fit together with symbolic reasoning best of all; that's something of a "late stage" development in culture history and reasoning. It's a great fit to subjects like physics and computing and engineering. It's not necessarily a great fit to acts of perception into the structure of the world as it really is (including the nature of of the relation between the psyche, the physical world, and other minds, therefore also society). Nor can the IQ test deliver a person qualities such as personal charm, which has a big effect on business relationships. Nor can it lead to discipline or organisation since those require will power and the diligent structuring of time. so while IQ is positively correlated to success, there are many ways the life lived won';t necessarily be a successful or a stable one. IQ test does NOT range over tall the domains of character and perception so well as it does for symbolic reasoning. In many contexts IQ test will be a great predictor of success but it can and will hit its limits on some of the deeper kinds of question or for where perceptions of systems requires other modes of insight. Think when the test was devised. It hasn't changed much in 100 yrs. imagine trying to create a "test of intelligence" before actually having a viable "theory of consciousness". Obviously the consciousness theory is needed, before knowing even exactly what intelligence consists in. its a nice match to the task of analogical reasoning and a few other skills eg rotating shapes. but not much beyond that. And we have no way of knowing as yet what is lacking.

    • @martinsaumure5861
      @martinsaumure5861 5 років тому +17

      Sounds like you are getting wiser my friend!

    • @cosmicmind7392
      @cosmicmind7392 5 років тому +38

      Speak for yourself. Cure your neuroticism and be thankful for your supposedly high IQ

  • @joshuamorales1095
    @joshuamorales1095 3 роки тому +562

    I really did use my “intelligence” as a huge part of my ego. And my athleticism was the other part. But in the center of my pride was pain and fear. And letting go is my biggest weakness. So I suffered at my own fault. Now I just hope to be wise enough to know what is valuable and what is not and just go after that.

    • @josepedrogaleanogomez4870
      @josepedrogaleanogomez4870 2 роки тому +10

      We already got a problem when your intelligence is a part of your ego, man.

    • @grumpyhermit8657
      @grumpyhermit8657 2 роки тому +10

      this will get you the wrong pussy

    • @joecostanzo9358
      @joecostanzo9358 2 роки тому +5

      What are u talking about

    • @danielholth
      @danielholth 2 роки тому +7

      I can relate. With age I've come to realize how unwise I've been. Now I'm navigating my life one failure at a time :D

    • @radvydaspeciokas4556
      @radvydaspeciokas4556 2 роки тому +7

      A.k.a I really want random strangers in this UA-cam comment section to think I'm smart.

  • @RickyB464
    @RickyB464 Рік тому

    I happened across this video quite by accident, and I'm glad.

  • @robertbiel6096
    @robertbiel6096 Рік тому

    Kudos to all the people in the comments using Jordan Peterson's words to analyze themselves rather than others. That, I think, is a sign of wisdom.

  • @bgoodfella7413
    @bgoodfella7413 7 років тому +27

    Too many people believe themselves to be an intellectual when they're not. That's the problem 9 out of 10 times.

    • @bgoodfella7413
      @bgoodfella7413 7 років тому +3

      Ysaack France I like what one of my college professors called a Phd. He said Phd stands for Piled Higher and Deeper lol.

    • @noone5370
      @noone5370 6 років тому +7

      are you saying my free online IQ test with ads lied when it said I had an IQ of at least 140... ? As an intellectual I find this preposterous and implement Occum's Razor to accept that the simplest solution is my own brilliance.

    • @jessstuart7495
      @jessstuart7495 6 років тому

      " 'I'm so smart, everything should just come to me.' Sorry, that's not how the world works."
      Real understanding takes lots of hard work. Schools are way too concerned with student self-esteem and feelings, convincing students they are smart by lowering the bar and measuring their performance only against their peers.

    • @claudiamanta1943
      @claudiamanta1943 3 місяці тому

      The problem is that ‘being an intellectual’ and ‘having a high IQ’ are obsessively valued at the detriment of other things that should matter more. It’s a cultural obsession of the analytical West.

  • @daviddelgado9503
    @daviddelgado9503 6 років тому +1207

    Ahhh finally a video for the Rick and Morty fans

    • @HardyJap
      @HardyJap 6 років тому +6

      David Delgado or Tool

    • @CreativeVery
      @CreativeVery 6 років тому +47

      The thing is though... Rick and Morty fans are not "hyper intellectual".

    • @daquickscopa39
      @daquickscopa39 6 років тому +78

      Doctor Cereal Thats kinda the joke.

    • @legomaniacsss
      @legomaniacsss 6 років тому +34

      Hmmm, the great richard and mortimer

    • @silverblue73
      @silverblue73 6 років тому +1

      You mean for the Ricks... you seem like a Morty supporter 🤔

  • @guszimbalist8416
    @guszimbalist8416 Рік тому

    Glad the comments are exactly what I expected

  • @eduarddez4416
    @eduarddez4416 10 місяців тому

    getting humbled quickly was the best thing to happen to me at 18 once I got into uni, nowadays i am looking to be a well rounded individual , despite my families inclination to excel in the area of research and basically lacking in many others... (and being pressured to do so as well)

  • @phantomwolf9929
    @phantomwolf9929 7 років тому +141

    What I like about this video is it showed me a flaw in my thinking. I was discouraged to find out that I have only a slightly above average IQ. It's not that I expected it to be higher, it was that I felt I wouldn't be able to match up to the hyper intelligent. My flaw was that I equated high IQ with success in every endeavor; from business to the social to the creative. It never occurred to me that an immensely intelligent person could be worthless. That helps to calibrate my perspective and gives greater value to all the time that I spend learning.

    • @CooLKiD640
      @CooLKiD640 6 років тому +1

      M. S. Intelligence is influenced by both genetic and environment.. 50% of your intellectual capacity directly correlates to the amount of energy and time you put into learning. Just like the biggest people in the gym. They put in the most time. How they look when they are big is determined by their genetics.

    • @CooLKiD640
      @CooLKiD640 6 років тому +8

      Straight White Male Who do you know that could focus on becoming "intelligent" 24/7 365 without taking time to do other activities? No one. So sure in your world of imagination focusing on becoming intelligent apparently is correspondent directly to missing out on "lifes experiences" But in the real world you don't just focus on one thing forever... Therefore your attempt to seem intelligent by using vocabulary majority of your audience cannot comprehend is destitute. Your message literally landed probably 10% of the viewers that saw it.. The ultimate form of intelligence is being able to understand all the details and then simplify it to the worlds understanding; So that it can help people wake up. Not put a negative association with intellectuals..

    • @sasquatchycowboy5585
      @sasquatchycowboy5585 6 років тому

      EvanEnterprises please define life success.

    • @sasquatchycowboy5585
      @sasquatchycowboy5585 6 років тому +2

      Alwaysbehumble I'm assuming straight white male edit edited his comment after reading your to take because I don't see anything wrong with it. That being said you're not wrong but what you're describing is also leaning towards having wisdom to use your intellect in a way that benefits everybody. I do not disagree with you the being able to take the high-minded ideas and break them down for we'll call it the masses is probably one of the most important uses of intellect.

    • @CooLKiD640
      @CooLKiD640 6 років тому

      SasquatchyCowboy yes, he edited his initial comment. So I'm glad. That's a sign my message resonated.

  • @janetmcgregor775
    @janetmcgregor775 7 років тому +504

    I grew up in what could be called an 'intellectual silo', as a member of a gifted children's association, So I know exactly what he is talking about. Some people with extremely high IQs have no common sense at all, not much in the way of social skills and/or unpleasant personalities - I was lucky that my parents were aware of the problem and worked hard to socialise my brothers and I from the beginning, but many 'gifted' children grow up too fast and skip important social development stages.

    • @TheArnoldification
      @TheArnoldification 6 років тому +68

      I think it's also the issue of being very smart doesn't mean you have motive or interest in being productive. In my high school everyone thought I was the smartest kid in school. Thing is though is i had a friend (who happened to be in all the math classes I was taking during high school) who was definitely smarter than I was (and probably am now) yet nobody really payed him any mind. He was bored and disinterested. I helped him out when it came literature/english but he was definitely gifted in mathematics - for instance, in our AP calculus class he was using lagrange multipliers to quickly solve problems involving finding the dimensions of an object with a certain volume given its surface area, which is a concept in three dimensional calculus, a course I took in my sophmore year as an electrical engineering student (AP calculus is mainly understanding the basic concept and applications of derivatives/integrals).
      He had no aspirations to go to university or really do anything after graduating. I had my IQ taken when I was 10 and had a score 139 (though that's probably dropped off a considerable amount and 120-130 is likely a more reasonable estimate) so he was definitely at least a little smart, but alas "never amounted to anything" or whatever superficial accolade is supposed to be attributed to people who can think flexibly.
      I think the issue is many successful people are intelligent, but being unsuccessful doesn't necessarily mean you're not intelligent. Ultimately I think intelligence (at least on a colloquial level) is effectively meaningless and shouldn't be at the forefront of peoples' thoughts. I'm starting to dig myself out of that rabbit hole and just worry about things I like doing or things I like thinking about, and it is making be less depressed and more productive.

    • @tarzanhedgepeth354
      @tarzanhedgepeth354 6 років тому +26

      TheArnoldification For me, having the ability to figure things out quickly causes me to be able to see the end of a thing; then I think, "What's the point going forward? I already know the pattern, I already know I could easily do it, so now what's the point?" I throw myself at things I've never considered before for the challenge. Quickly, the essence of the mundane is revealed. Am I the best at any one thing? No, I'm simply good at everything. That's not because I can't... it's because I already know how. However, there needs to be a solid "why". Saving the person in front of you from dying, making sure someone has a warm place to sleep, making sure someone else doesn't feel bad, making sure I'm not dying inside; now those are solid "why"s. Still yet, it is agonizing to know my pain and the pain of others. It is agonizing to never meet someone who understands or even cares about all things instead of a few things. For example, communication with people gets boring because topics dry up quickly. Most people don't discuss "everything" and keep a conversation interesting for me. It's not them, it's me! But I don't have anyone to talk with for this purpose. So, I find myself really enjoying silence with people instead. Isn't that interesting, though? By myself, my mind is a constant video stream changing channels seamlessly to the next in the same way a comedian transitions to his next joke. However, when someone else is around, I am content if they prefer silence because that is what my mind prefers. Self-employed, self-researched, self-useless in the big picture - at least, to this world... beyond the work niche I discovered to make money... which is simply something that most people are too lazy to do for themselves. /laughing at myself now

    • @tarzanhedgepeth354
      @tarzanhedgepeth354 6 років тому +1

      Cyclone Jack I don't know. His signature is neater than mine.

    • @droptak
      @droptak 6 років тому +11

      Cyclone Jack 128 is anything but low. With an IQ of 128 your intelligence will never be the bottleneck with anything you do

    • @cysenscarlet5205
      @cysenscarlet5205 6 років тому +21

      Social intelligence doesn't seem to have a great "IQ" metric. I have a coworker who struggles to problem solve and learn new technology. I can do this very easily. I did well in school and he struggled. However, after meetings, he will explain how my comments are crass, insensitive, or my thoughts could have a negative impact on people. In this way, he is a genius compared to me. He also gets more promotions because people love to work with him. I certainly envy his skill and try to match it, but I struggle. My mind is not fast like his in that way.

  • @sgs261
    @sgs261 Рік тому

    This is very very good.