Jordan Peterson: How To Be Authentic

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  • Опубліковано 10 чер 2018
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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. In this clip, he talks about being authentic.
    Full talk "2014 Personality Lecture 11: Existentialism: Viktor Frankl", quoted under fair use: • 2014 Personality Lectu...
    You can support Jordan Peterson at his Patreon: / jordanbpeterson
    ---
    This channel aims at extracting central points of presentations into short clips. If you like the content, subscribe to the channel!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 84

  • @newbranday
    @newbranday 5 років тому +191

    This actually worked for me. The time in my life when I was the most authentic was when I carefully considered each word I said before speaking until it finally became an automatic behaviour. I found that the words I speak play a large role in defining my identity as I am interpreted by others.

    • @dalcloud8873
      @dalcloud8873 3 роки тому +8

      I may need to stop talking completely again for 10 days to kickstart that.

    • @bbinyah6401
      @bbinyah6401 3 роки тому

      Very nice

    • @yoloteh1585
      @yoloteh1585 2 роки тому

      How did doing this make u feel?

    • @LiveWeightLossSupport
      @LiveWeightLossSupport 7 місяців тому

      How long did this take you before it became authentic. How are you suppose to stop talking mid sentence in a conversation to think about all of this and reword or take back what you have already started saying without looking crazy lol

    • @napakamu9670
      @napakamu9670 5 місяців тому +1

      @@LiveWeightLossSupport ikr I'm also trying to figure out a practical way of implementing this into my life without it being awkward as fuck at start :D
      What I'm thinking would be a great way to get started is to practice this with someone who you know very well. Just tell them about your situation, and then ask if you could practice it with them. Then have a long discussion about anything really, and focus on the stuff Peterson talked about.

  • @JackHaveman52
    @JackHaveman52 6 років тому +51

    This may well be the best that I've ever heard him say. I've spent a lifetime, always wondering if my thoughts were my own or whether I'm just a mouth piece for everything I've ever heard.
    It's like he was talking to me. Now I'm going to have to sit back and see if this is me or a reflection of who I wish to be. I never stop learning. How boring life would be if the learning stopped.

  • @notdatnice9846
    @notdatnice9846 5 років тому +36

    Such excellence of mind and speech, this is authenticity in it's purest form

    • @yvettecheevers278
      @yvettecheevers278 5 років тому +2

      How is defining authenticity and how one can be authentic, actually being so?

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      ​@@yvettecheevers278 Because authenticity has a definition. That is true.
      So defining it is authentic because it represents something true.

  • @Dontletthemdullyoursparkle
    @Dontletthemdullyoursparkle День тому +1

    This is sooo helpful. To feel your way to authenticity. Thanks. ❤

  • @mxwtubemxw
    @mxwtubemxw 6 років тому +31

    All Good stuff :-)
    Brings to mind Socrates; “An unconsidered life is not one worth living.”

    • @peekeyeseek
      @peekeyeseek 5 років тому +3

      Unconsidered. I heard it as unexamined.
      Not pulling you up, I could be wrong.

    • @concerned1
      @concerned1 3 роки тому

      @@peekeyeseek who cares?

    • @xo3166
      @xo3166 2 роки тому +1

      Ironic, considering the message of this video

  • @COAKY
    @COAKY 6 років тому +7

    I can appreciate Dr. Peterson’s critique of clichés and how critical analysis of an undergraduate student’s cliché-riddled paper is truly an assessment of the cliché itself, not the student’s own ideas. It causes me to think about one who endlessly overuses axioms from a particular theoretical creator, say Carl Jung for instance.

  • @SilentWarden93
    @SilentWarden93 2 місяці тому +1

    I’m here to learn how be authentic, learn how to relieve myself from worrying about other people’s opinions and working on allowing myself to grow in knowledge bc I’m currently 30 and ik I won’t live forever so i have to get better, do better and be better.

  • @nitirajdaby2554
    @nitirajdaby2554 2 роки тому +4

    My lifetime appreciation goes to this man who is always trying to make the world better place. Thank you so much. God will reward you 🙏

  • @slrd_spiritual
    @slrd_spiritual 4 роки тому +7

    This is pure solid 100% GOLD!!!
    Thank you Jordan 🙏🏾🙏🏾

  • @clintcarter
    @clintcarter 2 місяці тому +1

    Simple yet profound.

  • @consistentialist
    @consistentialist 10 місяців тому +2

    There is so much knowledge in this, it is both exciting and terrifying.

  • @Gtech-ny5rd
    @Gtech-ny5rd 2 роки тому +3

    I actually really need this right now.

  • @kimejiku7660
    @kimejiku7660 3 роки тому +6

    I wish there were more professors like jordan peterson

  • @siphosibanyoni6732
    @siphosibanyoni6732 Рік тому +1

    Wow, I love this

  • @josephvictory9536
    @josephvictory9536 6 років тому +12

    Peterson describes Existential authenticity in the vein of Sartre and Kierkegaard. Leaning Kierkegaard. But definitely far more ground up and prescriptive than either manage to be (despite their tremendous efforts into the topic). In a way you can follow this advice without treading the tiniest existential waters.
    From 'science' Ironically our human experience of 'individualistic' authenticity is very conditional with our external environment and achieving largely the same goal as others: Financial independence, good friends, moderate popularity, confidence in social situations, choosing to do the right thing with or without an audience, obtaining a partner, and not going against your personal highest context sensitive values, even when they appear irrational in a moment (say the benefits work against this decision aka you feel afraid).
    Authenticity also has two general modes. A passive mode experienced almost as if a mood or continuous state which can be checked at any moment. And an active 'intervention' which can peak or drop in but typically does at value defining moments where you are positioned with a difficult choice. (cognitive dissonance literature is an extremely interesting connection here that has yet to be made in large strides)
    The second comes as if your awareness intervenes in your daily living due to some circumstance or event which you must successfully resolve with respect to your internal states. The passive state is continuous, operates on a tragectory and is the result of our relative state of affairs. But it is with our general attentiveness and awareness of our personal issues whatever they may be at the time. It is extremely highly correlated with our wellbeing, higher than every other psychological factor other than hope.
    Active intervention states are strong authenticity anchors and help to define our values. Interestingly authenticity has very little to do with conformity.
    Academic authenticity (which is very explicitly what peterson is talking about with awareness of 'whose words' those belong to) is correlated with wellbeing but less so than general authenticity, and it is correlated with higher awareness (which should be self evident). Academic authenticity is correlated with lower alcohol consumption and binge drinking. Interestingly.
    Overall this is what we do know about authenticity. There are some big 5 correlations, like with conscientiousness, openness and against neuroticism. However, they are marginal. And there is a gentle association with higher IQ.
    In some cases authenticity is associated with high levels of short term anxiety and even negative affect. But always with higher long term well being.
    biggest problem with authenticity (psychologically) is its root in ego based literature today. Rogers, Ericksons, Freuds, and its drawing on existential literature outside of Frankl. Frankl suggested man's freedom comes when he abandons himself, when he forgets himself. And flow literature largely supports this (for private matters). SDT largely confirms this for social and achievement matters. And if Ericksons theory can be reconceptualized to discuss developmental goals which result in higher levels of wellbeing and authenticity (due to the relationships) then which ericksons conceptualization broadly supports.
    There is a new branch looking at 'broader ego' theories which incorporate 'self abandonment'. A tremendously difficult task given that a lot of the pleasure and corrective benefit of authenticity comes from self reflection.
    Authenticity is extremely complex, it is my masters study. Peterson does a fantastic job of providing a technique you can use to get honest reflection and genuinely develop an academically honest self awareness (which is pretty important to developing a more broad authenticity). His concept of 'words which make you weak' is what inuathenticity represents and does to you. And his use of terms is exact to the nature of the discourse, and even somewhat to the physiology, which every meaningful psychological experience is expressed as. no matter your values, the words which make you weak do not represent you (and later as you become more aware, they simply cannot represent you without your permission). Fantastic advice. This can really help you nourish your own beliefs and avoid being controlled too much by others ideas. (It is not entirely wrong to be controlled by others ideas, but they should have your permission first).

    • @arieroskam4000
      @arieroskam4000 Рік тому +1

      Incredibly fascinating and valuable. Thank you for writing and sharing this.

  • @Jandhyghandy
    @Jandhyghandy 3 роки тому +3

    Incredible

  • @genres381
    @genres381 2 місяці тому +1

    So basically: intelligent people always rely on their intellect but doing so invalidates their own thoughts (inauthentic) but they also can not stop relying on their intellect because of habit. Instead of that they can bring other clues to their attention while forming thoughts

  • @russiane.lection-hacker2057
    @russiane.lection-hacker2057 6 років тому +7

    In Soviet Russia you don't have ideas, ideas have you.

  • @vallip4254
    @vallip4254 Місяць тому

    Seriously you have to be told how to be authentic!!! We are in trouble. Just have the courage to be YOU!!!!, and that the whole gamut of behaviours integral to you and quite possibly many other if not all people...

  • @TTTTTTTTT853
    @TTTTTTTTT853 5 місяців тому

    The problem is that there are people who hammer it down.

  • @user-wy2iw5vy5u
    @user-wy2iw5vy5u 6 років тому +1

    Looking at ideas presented doesn't make original thought. I asked a lecturer what the countries around the one being discussed thought of the country, and received a blank stare.

  • @timb350
    @timb350 Місяць тому

    The irony here...is the JBP explicitly said (don't remember where...in one of his lectures) that there is no such thing as emotional intelligence. And yet...here he is advocating the application of exactly that (emotional intelligence) to 'weed-out' (adjudicate...IOW) whether a particular thought makes you weak or strong.

  • @warriorwisdomclips337
    @warriorwisdomclips337 3 роки тому +4

    Anyone know where can i find books or further material on this topic?

    • @marymcdavid5405
      @marymcdavid5405 3 роки тому

      He's written some books but idk if they have to do with how to be your genuine self

  • @pauldeleon6317
    @pauldeleon6317 6 років тому +4

    What if your own idea is an accumulation of other ideas that brought forth an original idea?

    • @GreyGooTheory
      @GreyGooTheory 6 років тому +6

      That's basically how everything came to be.
      You learn things/ideas and eventually it swirls around in your head until something original emerges.

    • @faydo2787
      @faydo2787 6 років тому +4

      Just don't stand on something you haven't personally developed and gotten familiar with.

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому +1

      That's authentic

  • @TheColossusofRhodes
    @TheColossusofRhodes 6 років тому +2

    Nine people who watched this short quip of one of Peterson's lectures actually likes being inauthentic, writes in cliches, and 95 percent of what they say actually has nothing to do with what they believe?

  • @zamzam2188
    @zamzam2188 3 роки тому +2

    But If I’m quite before I speak it’s going to be more likely unoriginal thoughts that’ll come out when I speak. Isn’t better to blurt out your words rather than ponder?

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      He didn't say to ponder the words. He said to say them, and feel what feels authentic

  • @GirishVenkatachalam
    @GirishVenkatachalam 5 місяців тому

    Well most people are other people.

  • @ralph4233
    @ralph4233 2 місяці тому

    The only way I can be authentic again is to go back and become an embryo. Everything is learned from ideas of others that came before you did.

  • @chbrules
    @chbrules 6 років тому +2

    I'm a big JBP fan, but his claims that your thoughts aren't yours because you accepted ideas that have been thought through by others is ridiculous. By that logic, your thoughts are not yours because every thought has been influenced by everyone else, even your emotions and feelings, as they're done to you by others.

    • @GreyGooTheory
      @GreyGooTheory 6 років тому +2

      You're not quite understanding what he's saying.

    • @chbrules
      @chbrules 6 років тому +1

      I understand what he's trying to say, but it's a ridiculous line of reasoning. He wants you to peel back these supposed thoughts that "you don't own" to find the "authentic thoughts and feelings" underneath that are yours. Nothing you think isn't not influenced by others anyway. Why bother with such a line of reasoning? Just tell people to examine their feelings when they speak about things and what feels true to them.

    • @tawkischeap1
      @tawkischeap1 5 років тому

      @@chbrules I agree and see what u mean

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      That's not the point. He didn't say you can't have thoughts that are authentic that are influenced or even found from others.
      He's saying you have to make them authentic once you learn them instead of just parroting them.
      There's a way to communicate what you learned from others that's authentic, and a way that isn't.
      Where the hell did he say that authentic thoughts are ones that weren't influenced by others?

  • @dalcloud8873
    @dalcloud8873 3 роки тому

    Terrifying

  • @stephenmorawski953
    @stephenmorawski953 6 років тому

    'With our eyes'? Don't we pay attention with our minds?

    • @rickbenjamins8587
      @rickbenjamins8587 6 років тому +1

      In today's world, I would say no. I heard a man say that today we think with our feelings, and we look at the world with the eyes devoid of a conscience rather than looking through the eyes with a conscience (paraphrased). It seems to me that this is true (unfortunately).

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      Well yes, but the eyes are the primary sense organ involved with that.

  • @rbmk__1000
    @rbmk__1000 6 років тому +3

    WOW! jp has lost so much weight since this was filmed

    • @nickwright4457
      @nickwright4457 6 років тому

      parity bit 0 his daughter changed his diet to fix a autoimmune disorder he has.

  • @mike569112
    @mike569112 6 місяців тому

    Try really, really hard.

  • @CreativeKrist
    @CreativeKrist 6 років тому +1

    His beard 😥

  • @medwho959
    @medwho959 2 місяці тому

    Gibberish at best!!

  • @toastcrunch9387
    @toastcrunch9387 6 років тому +9

    Step 1: Don't be fake.
    There. Done. The end.

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому +2

      That's like giving someone a tutorial on how to fix a computer and saying: "step 1. Fix it. There, done, the end."

    • @whysoseriousinc7756
      @whysoseriousinc7756 7 місяців тому

      My life is so much better with this advice🙄

    • @toastcrunch9387
      @toastcrunch9387 7 місяців тому

      @@whysoseriousinc7756 glad i could help you. for more blatantly obvious truths that people should be ashamed for not knowing, please see google.

  • @bilykralik885
    @bilykralik885 2 роки тому

    he's just repeating what Foucault said...

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      Lol nope, Foucault believes that all constraint and influence is inauthentic, because he's a bullshitter who doesn't realize rebelling against everything is just as inauthentic as accepting everything

  • @dr.daverobbo2407
    @dr.daverobbo2407 2 роки тому

    Here's my contribution - a song I wrote called 'I think I'll be Me'. Enjoy: ua-cam.com/video/2kmPHHCeERQ/v-deo.html

  • @alpharomeo1772
    @alpharomeo1772 3 роки тому

    Am I the only one who thinks he gained some weight.
    But he also put lots of weight in this topic, very well explained.

  • @SunnyFly100
    @SunnyFly100 6 років тому

    Hm.. in that case I will have to be silent for 2 weels

  • @imulippo5245
    @imulippo5245 6 років тому

    Instructions to be authentic, wtf?!?!

    • @immanuelcunt7296
      @immanuelcunt7296 Рік тому

      It's not instructions, it's an idea, that you can try, and see if it works.

  • @vizak20
    @vizak20 6 років тому +3

    Yeah yeah why don’t you tell the truth about Israel??

    • @jeffmoss118
      @jeffmoss118 6 років тому +1

      Yea that’ll work out well for him. The media is in the process of digging up any bit of dirt possible to try and destroy him. You think he should just give them ammo?

    • @jeffmoss118
      @jeffmoss118 6 років тому

      Imu Lippo Peterson is a Jew? Proof?

    • @andyrix54
      @andyrix54 6 років тому

      Peterson is not a Jew.

  • @FU_theMODEL
    @FU_theMODEL 8 місяців тому

    Ahahahaha! Agreed..