Archive for the ‘Jordan Peterson’ Category

Jordan Peterson Releases Doc On Newfoundland Alongside Beloved Canadian Broadcaster – The Daily Wire

Dr. Jordan B. Peterson released a documentary on DailyWire+ on Sunday featuring beloved Canadian journalist Rex Murphy highlighting the history and culture of Newfoundland and the people who call it home.

The DailyWire+ documentary, called Requiem for Rex Murphy: A Tribute to Newfoundland, features Peterson and Murphy diving deep into the culture of Newfoundland as they travel around the Canadian province for a week. The documentary was released on Sunday as a tribute to Murphy, who died earlier this month after a battle with cancer.

Newfoundland is a persona, Murphy, who was born in Newfoundland, says in the documentary. It is a presence. There is no place that has so magnetic a hold on the people who have grown up here. The fealty that Newfoundlanders have for their place, it mimics the emotional bond of family.

Murphy became known to many Canadians through his writing for the National Post and work on Canadas Cross Country Checkup, which he hosted for 21 years.

Peterson and Murphy began their tour by climbing up Signal Hill for a view of Newfoundlands St. Johns Harbor. Murphy explained that Signal Hill was important because it was the point where wireless communication was first made between North America and Europe.

WATCH REQUIEM FOR REX MURPHY: A TRIBUTE TO NEWFOUNDLAND

After visiting Signal Hill, Peterson and Murphy toured a variety of locations including small fishing towns and historic sites to speak with local tour guides and fishermen. They also visited the town of Bonavista, where European explorer John Cabot is said to have landed in the 15th century.

The two also visited the city of Gander, where many Americans were stranded after the air traffic stop that followed the terrorist attacks on September 11.

For me, going to Newfoundland, where theres an overwhelming experience of beauty to see the past alive and preserved and so beautifully done, Peterson says. And Ive been thinking about that. You know that as there are more and more people on the planet and as the weight of the present and the future grows ever greater, the past becomes increasingly valuable, increasingly invaluable.

In a tribute article celebrating the life of Murphy for the National Post, Peterson described his experience filming the documentary. Peterson wrote that the weather was perfect for the visit with lots of sunshine, which was unusual for an area known for its cold and stormy weather.

We could not believe our luck: a guided tour of the ports and towns of Newfoundland, that hidden gem, with none other than the man whom anyone with any sense would most devoutly hope for as a guide! Perhaps everyone will enjoy the trip as much as we did when it is released, Peterson wrote.

WATCH REQUIEM FOR REX MURPHY: A TRIBUTE TO NEWFOUNDLAND

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Jordan Peterson Releases Doc On Newfoundland Alongside Beloved Canadian Broadcaster - The Daily Wire

Trauma and the Demolition of Faith | Ronnie Janoff-Bulman – The Daily Wire

The Jordan B. Peterson PodcastMay 16, 2024

Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down with social psychologist and author, Ronnie Janoff-Bulman. They discuss how most implicit beliefs are consciously unknown to those who hold them; the human reactions to fear, disgust, pain, and the destruction of hope; why people blame themselves for truly random events; what the experts get wrong about motivation; and the difference between proscriptive and prescriptive morality.

Ronnie Janoff-Bulman is Professor Emerita of Psychology and Brain Sciences at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. She is a social psychologist and the author of two books and over 90 published papers. Her first book, Shattered Assumptions: Towards a New Psychology of Trauma, has been cited over 9,500 times. She was awarded a National Science Foundation grant for her research on morality, which serves as the backbone of her recent book, The Two Moralities: Conservatives, Liberals, and the Roots of Our Political Divide. She is the recipient of teaching and mentoring awards and is the former editor of Psychological Inquiry, an international journal devoted to advancing theory in psychology. A mother and grandmother, Dr. Janoff-Bulman lives in Amherst, Massachusetts with her husband of over 50 years.

- Links -

2024 tour details can be found here https://jordanbpeterson.com/events

Peterson Academy https://petersonacademy.com/

For Ronnie Janoff-Bulman:

Shattered Assumptions (Book) https://www.amazon.com/Shattered-Assumptions-Towards-Psychology-Trauma/dp/0743236254

The Two Moralities (Book) https://www.amazon.com/Two-Moralities-Conservatives-Liberals-Political-ebook/dp/B0BX1JDL8C/?_encoding=UTF8&pd_rd_w=qQoj5&content-id=amzn1.sym.cf86ec3a-68a6-43e9-8115-04171136930a&pf_rd_p=cf86ec3a-68a6-43e9-8115-04171136930a&pf_rd_r=138-3764402-1287437&pd_rd_wg=H5RDI&pd_rd_r=fccdebc5-a090-4e01-b536-33c552e5005f&ref_=aufs_ap_sc_dsk

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Trauma and the Demolition of Faith | Ronnie Janoff-Bulman - The Daily Wire

Alternative Walk of Fame | Brett Cooper – The Daily Wire

The Jordan B. Peterson PodcastMay 13, 2024

Dr. Jordan B. Peterson sits down in person with actor, podcaster, and host of The Comments Section, Brett Cooper. They discuss the adversity Cooper faced early on which prompted her to try out theater, the landscape of growing up as a child actor, her positive and negative experiences with Hollywood and university, the psychology of exploitation, why she joined The Daily Wire, her upcoming film and television projects, and her motivation to be a voice for young women who embrace their femininity.

Brett Cooper is a viral internet personality, content creator, and actress. Shes best known as the charismatic host of The Comments Section with Brett Cooper on YouTube, captivating over 4 million subscribers with her irresistibly irreverent opinions on current news and cultural phenomena. Bretts rise to digital fame was meteoric, amassing 1 million followers within just six months of launching her show and surpassing 4 million within two years. She moved from Tennessee to Los Angeles at the age of 10 to pursue acting. After years of balancing homeschooling and a professional acting career, Brett honed her art of storytelling while studying English at UCLA. At just 20 years old, Brett returned to Tennessee to launch The Comments Section with Brett Cooper at The Daily Wire. Following the shows rapid success, the rising star is returning to acting in the forthcoming DailyWire+ animated sitcom Mr. Birchum and the historical fantasy series The Pendragon Cycle. In a debut role, Brett will star as Snow White in Snow White and the Evil Queen in the first feature-length production for Bentkey, The Daily Wires childrens entertainment platform.

- Links -

2024 tour details can be found here https://jordanbpeterson.com/events

Peterson Academy https://petersonacademy.com/

For Brett Cooper:

Brett Cooper on X https://twitter.com/imbrettcooper?lang=en

Brett Cooper on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/imbrettcooper/?hl=en

The Comments Section With Brett Cooper on X https://twitter.com/CommentsSection

The Comments Section With Brett Cooper on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/@TheCommentsSection

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Alternative Walk of Fame | Brett Cooper - The Daily Wire

Jordan Peterson: "Deadly boxers have become profound economic philosophers" – Jordan Peterson stunned by … – Sportskeeda

Renato Moicano was able to extend his winning streak to three with a second-round TKO victory over Jalin Turner on the early preliminary card of UFC 300. Following the bout, the No.13-ranked lightweight used his post-fight speech to state:

Bitcoin Rapid-Fire podcast host John Vallis shared the footage, leading psychologist and author Jordan Peterson to respond:

Peterson added:

Moicano caught wind of Peterson's comments and responded, stating:

He added:

Check out the tweets from Jordan Peterson and Renato Moicano below:

Moicano has seen his popularity increase since UFC 281, thanks in large part to his post-fight speeches. Following his victory over Brad Riddell, he expressed his desire for more money.

He followed that up by expressing his love for the United States and his desire to become a citizen after his UFC Fight Night 235 victory over Drew Dober in February.

Jalin Turner had one of the biggest gaffes fans will ever see as he walked away from Renato Moicano after dropping him in the first round, assuming he had knocked out his opponent rather than pursuing a finish. Things did not work out as Turner planned as he wound up suffering a second-round TKO loss.

The No.13-ranked lightweight weighed in on his opponent's blunder in his post-fight press conference, stating:

Check out Renato Moicano's comments on Jalin Turner walking away below (starting at the 0:22 mark):

While Turner has not commented on the loss, there have been suggestions that his decision could have been motivated by a pursuit of the $300,000 bonus that was on the line. Moicano later made the case that he was deserving of a bonus as he overcame adversity.

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Jordan Peterson: "Deadly boxers have become profound economic philosophers" - Jordan Peterson stunned by ... - Sportskeeda

Sam Harris and Jordan Peterson on Dogma – Word on Fire

Whatever dogma is, Sam Harris certainly doesnt like it. In his recent conversation with Jordan Peterson, Harris repeatedly condemns dogma, and Peterson repeatedly tries to moderate this condemnation. Harris notes correctly that dogma is a Catholic term. But what exactly is being condemned? The target is moving.

First, Harris defines dogma as a belief that is held in spite of the fact that theres no good evidence for it. According to this definition, belief in God is not a dogma. If Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, Liebniz, Plantinga or William Lane Craig are right, there is good evidence to believe that God exists. Indeed, the Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches that, By natural reason man can know God with certainty.

But belief in God is not only a dogma, but is the fundamental dogma of the Catholic creed. So, Harris definition of dogma must differ radically from Catholic understandings of the term. In which case, his critique of dogma is a straw man of his own invention.

Harris offers a second understanding of dogma, If I say to you, listen, I believe X and theres nothing you can say to convince me otherwise, and no matter how good your evidence gets, no matter how good your arguments get, Im not gonna want to hear it. And if you press the case, Im gonna get angrier and angrier until the possibility of having a conversation about anything fully erodes. Dogma in this sense means close-mindedness.

Yet close-mindedness is a characteristic that can afflict a believer or a skeptic, an atheist or a theist. As woke mobs show us, you could reject all dogma in the religious sense of the term and yet be utterly certain of your beliefs and closed off from learning from others. Moreover, you could believe in a dogma (lets say, God exists) and also not get angry and indeed (as I do) even enjoy talking to people who see things differently. So, close-mindedness is a sloppy definition of dogma.

Everyone who reasons has basic beliefs, first principles, fundamental axioms, or dogmas from which they begin to reason to other conclusions.

In a third characterization, Harris seems to understand dogma as a belief that leads to harming others. Harris is right that dogma can lead to harming others. But anything, even the best of things, can be misused, distorted, degraded. Romantic love can be the beginning of a relationship that lasts a lifetime. But, as countless true crime episodes indicate, the abuse of romantic love can lead to murder. Harris and I share an admiration for the achievements of science. But can science be abused? The answer to this question is found in the scientific experiments conducted at Tuskegee as well as those of Dr. Josef Mengele.So, it hardly counts against dogma that it can lead to bad consequences.

Peterson recognizes this when he says we should try to distinguish between religious experience per se, or the religious experience thats valuable and a counterproductive totalitarian dogmatism. Indeed, if someone believes and lives in accordance with the dogma that every single human being deserves respect, this belief would in general help rather than harm people. The world would be a much better place if the dictum of Bernard Lonergan were universally adopted as dogma, Be attentive, be intelligent, be responsible, be loving, and, if necessary, change.

In a fourth way of using the term, Harris contrasts dogma and method,

Dogma is not a statement of how good the method was. Dogma is just, we didnt have a method, but this is so. It says so in the book, the book is perfect. How do we know its perfect? cause the book itself says so, right? Thats a, that bites its own tail. Thats not a method. That is dogmatism and in my view, totally illegitimate.

I totally agree with Harris that circular arguments are invalid. But as Karl Keating points out in his book, Catholicism and Fundamentalism, [Catholics] are not basing the inspiration of the Bible on the Churchs infallibility and the Churchs infallibility on the word of an inspired Bible. That indeed would be a circular argument. At least if his target is Catholic belief, Harris has again attacked a straw man.

Harris has confidence in method, and in this too I think he is right. But even the best method cannot be self-authenticating. If I have questions about whether I can trust the empirical method, it hardly helps to gather empirical evidence. If I am unsure whether logically valid deductive arguments show their conclusion, I cannot settle the matter by means of a logically valid deductive argument.

So, as Aristotle noted, first principles are necessary in order to begin the process of reasoning. Every method must presuppose some starting points. There is nothing illegitimate or dogmatic in a pejorative sense about having first principles in science, in philosophy, or in theology.

As the philosopher Alvin Plantinga pointed out, Every train of argument will have to start somewhere, and the ultimate premises from which it starts will not themselves be believed on the evidential basis of other propositions; they will have to be accepted in the basic way, that is, not on the evidential basis of other beliefs. Everyone who reasons has basic beliefs, first principles, fundamental axioms, or dogmas from which they begin to reason to other conclusions.

So, what is dogma actually? Rather than understand the meaning of the term as Catholics understand it, Harris gives his own idiosyncratic meanings to the term dogma and then criticizes figments of his imagination.This method is like ignoring what evolutionary biologists mean by the term evolution, and understanding evolution as, the belief that one day an ape gave birth to a human being.

An accurate definition of dogma comes from Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (later elected Pope Benedict XVI). He wrote that dogma is by definition nothing other than an interpretation of Scripture. Catholic dogma constitutes the first principles or basic beliefs of Catholics expressed, for example, in the Nicene Creed.

There is nothing close-minded, harmful, or viciously circular about intellectual activities arising from first principles or basic beliefs. Mathematicians, philosophers, and scientists all begin to reason from fundamental axioms. But, despite Petersons efforts to pull Harris away from caricatures, this sympathetic understanding was not found in Harris diatribes against dogma.

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Sam Harris and Jordan Peterson on Dogma - Word on Fire