Bobcat
Full Member
I haven't watched the interview either but I am familiar with Peterson. I've listened to him on a few different podcasts. Very smart and interesting bloke, with some goofy ideas (mainly related to religion/spirituality) but a lot of very sensible ideas too. He's a bit fecking depressing if you listen to him too much, mind you. He does polarise opinion, of course, and the alt-right seem to have taken him on as some sort of figure-head for their movement. So he's damned by association.
That's a very good piece. Far too many interesting exchanges like the interview described in the article end up being nothing more than click-bait, tit for tat nonsense, once they're put through the ringer of social media. We should have more open and honest exchange of ideas, not less.
Yeah, i actually did a bit of digging too find out what this was about. As far as i know he likes the alt-right as little as he does the extreme left, but is still seen as some kind of leader by them in the "culture wars". Truth be told, the alt-right will cling onto anyone who criticizes the left and, since they are few and far between them who is either not a bigoted arse or a total loony (Stefan Molyneux comes to mind) a seemingly clever bloke like Peterson will obviously seem like an attractive target to claim
*Apart from the biological issues, I think he is also very guilty of this: https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/tools/lp/Bo/LogicalFallacies/131/Naturalistic-Fallacy
Yeah, i can understand his point, but it seems like a classical case of Maslow's hammer, him being a clinical psychologist and all. Reminded me a bit of Jared Diamonds Guns, germs and steel, who is a very good read, but is very colored by his background as an anthropologist and becomes a tad to deterministic. Hell, i think any academic discipline often gets to eager to explain the world by their own frame of reference.
It gets super tricky when you start with the nature vs nurture discussion since it's often very hard to measure which takes precedence and especially when looking back at something like a hunter-gatherer society the best you can do is make a qualified guess. No there is no doubt that for example the agricultural revolution and the division of labor reinforced social hierarchies, but i would be wary to claim they outright created them.
There have been plenty of examples both through history and present of pastoral nomadic tribes or hunter/gatherer tribes that has created quite complex social structures. I am by no means any expert on the field, but i do find it fascinating