Jordan Peterson and IQ

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  • čas přidán 30. 08. 2022
  • Let's talk about Jordan Peterson and his strange IQ takes and how they make me FEEL. For a monthly bonus video and other cool stuff, go to my Patreon! / bigjoel
    Follow me on Twitter: / biggestjoel
    Edited by Mothcub: / mothcub_
    Special thanks to Unlearning Economics:
    / @unlearningeconomics9021
    Some More News' Video: • A Brief Look at Jordan...
    Footnote One, on the subject of universal healthcare:
    A patron had this point to make, so I thought I'd address it here. They said, paraphrased, "Actually Peterson is from Canada and supports their healthcare system. Doesn't that challenge your point on his conservatism"
    The answer? Not really. While Peterson is broadly a conservative, of course I recognise that universal healthcare is the status quo position in most places where it exists and that he supports it. My point here was not about particular policies he doesn't support, but about the incoherence of his claim that "shovelling money down the hierarchy" is so profoundly difficult because people are too stupid. To make that point, he has to disregard obvious solutions to this problem.
    Footnote Two, on the subject of Race and IQ:
    I assume some fans of Peterson will think I am straw-manning him or taking him out of context on this point. I am not. It is impossible to watch this video and think he doesn't believe certain races, including black people, are genetically different with regard to IQ: • Jordan Peterson - The ... . And he has, on multiple occasions, lent support to the Bell Curve. I don't think my claim here is controversial at all, to be honest. Here is Shaun's incredible video on the Bell Curve, if you're interested: • The Bell Curve
    Peterson clips in order of rough appearance:
    • 2017 Personality 18: B...
    • Jordan Peterson | The ...
    • Jordan Peterson - The ...
    • The IQ Problem | Jorda...
    • 2017 Maps of Meaning 0...
    • The Neuroscience of In...
    • Jordan Peterson - Lect...
    • Why Free Speech is the...
    • Jordan Peterson On Pov...
    • Fix Yourself | 5 Minut...
    • How to Solve Growing F...
    • Jordan Peterson: Why W...
    • ‘F*** you, if you don’...
    Articles I used:
    scholar.harvard.edu/files/sen...
    nationalpost.com/opinion/jord...
    www.scientificamerican.com/ar...
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 8K

  • @BigJoel
    @BigJoel  Před rokem +966

    If you want to watch a monthly bonus video from me, go to my patreon and give me a few bucks! This month I have a few deleted sections from this video, which is, maybe fun, and will be out today. Anyway, here's the link! www.patreon.com/bigjoel

    • @hazeust
      @hazeust Před rokem +9

      Watching your videos is fuyn

    • @Exxalted
      @Exxalted Před rokem +3

      Uhh maybe I'm engaging with this comment as well??😚😚👍😌🐍🧐 Wow I really am

    • @stevechance150
      @stevechance150 Před rokem +8

      Joel, buy a microphone stand. Seriously.

    • @Wired_User
      @Wired_User Před rokem +17

      @@stevechance150 But then he couldn’t hold his microphone

    • @Aleyaha699
      @Aleyaha699 Před rokem

      All of these paid talking heads are dumbing down America.

  • @jacobodell5231
    @jacobodell5231 Před rokem +9991

    I love how Jordan Peterson, a clinical psychologist, saw that one of his patients suffering with a drug addiction was spending all of his money on drugs when he got it and concluded that "poor people don't know how to handle money" rather than "my patient's disease is making him spend money on drugs instead of necessities." I feel bad for anyone who is a client of this man.

    • @maxwang2537
      @maxwang2537 Před rokem +785

      He uses generalisations madly yet he sometimes claims he’s a scientist. I almost died laughing 😂

    • @Vizivirag
      @Vizivirag Před rokem +614

      I was also baffled. This psychologist doesn't know what addiction is?

    • @SuperStrik9
      @SuperStrik9 Před rokem +869

      @@Vizivirag To make it even more baffling Peterson himself was addicted to benzos. He was physically dependent on them and experienced hellish withdrawal symptoms coming off them. How he doesn't seem to understand addiction and what being physically dependent can drive a person to do is mind blowing.

    • @rayzecor
      @rayzecor Před rokem +43

      Did I misunderstand? I thought he said that money sometimes is bad; he wasn't just making the blanket statement that poor people are bad with money, just that sometimes people shouldn't be given more of it

    • @cascharles3838
      @cascharles3838 Před rokem +509

      @@rayzecor he was using that anecdote as justification for his belief that if you give money to that 10% of people in society, they won't know how to use it properly and will waste it. It's a gross oversimplification and ignores the systematic issues which make it so much harder for people in poverty to hold onto money.

  • @cheeselovingtree
    @cheeselovingtree Před rokem +4704

    Imagine if your clinical psychologist told you that he didn't believe that people could fundamentally change

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před rokem +216

      I stg, people call him a therapist, psychiatrist, and now a psychologist-
      Which is it, they’re not the same thing 😭

    • @moonfolkrapid
      @moonfolkrapid Před rokem +16

      Well, it is unlikely for most people. Most of the change comes later in life when your psychological characteristics tend to become more pronounced. Ofc complete shift in your environment, like war situation etc., can change somewhat temporarily or permanently change it.

    • @superdeli47
      @superdeli47 Před rokem +311

      @@moonfolkrapid I think cheeselovingtree meant that a psychologist's career is built on the premise that people can fundamentally change with the psychologist's help. Otherwise why work in this field in the first place.

    • @JuanPabloSelvaje
      @JuanPabloSelvaje Před rokem +18

      @@DeathnoteBB He’s a psychologist. That’s the right one to call him. Why are you mad?

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před rokem +148

      @@JuanPabloSelvaje “Why are you mad?” 1. I- Never said I was mad? I was reasonably frustrated and confused…
      2. Because _they’re not the same thing._ It’s like calling someone a gardener, botanist, and herbalist when you really mean one of those things. It’s nonsensical, useless, and confusing.

  • @porcelainmannequinn549
    @porcelainmannequinn549 Před rokem +450

    Imagine your dad coming to you, his adult daughter, to complain about a fat woman on a magazine cover for five solid minutes tho. Imagine

    • @sweetsnejinka9411
      @sweetsnejinka9411 Před rokem +24

      That was so creepy to me.

    • @runawaygemm5397
      @runawaygemm5397 Před 10 měsíci +58

      And it’s like, she’s literally just not skinny. It’s not an uncommon or ugly body type by any means, even subjectively. I can’t understand why he thinks she’s so horrific

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci +52

      @@runawaygemm5397 The funny thing is the magazine has probably had plenty of women on it that he would consider attractive. But he doesn't think its acceptable for one model to not be to his taste. He's actually the closest one to being authoritarian about this.

    • @elsea6461
      @elsea6461 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I'd seriously tell my Dad to get over himself 😅😂

    • @jacobwheeler6136
      @jacobwheeler6136 Před 2 měsíci +6

      That's how parents get disowned by their children

  • @UdarRusskihPudgei
    @UdarRusskihPudgei Před 5 měsíci +173

    When I was a kid, my mom, a college teacher, brought me Eysenck's IQ Test book, with ~10 variants of test. And I solved them all during a weekend. At the first one I got around 110, and last ones I easily solved for 140. So it is either a greatest intellectual improvement in human history, or IQ just shows how someone is good at solving poorly defined logical puzzles.

    • @TragicHeroine-kd6uy
      @TragicHeroine-kd6uy Před měsícem +16

      Peterson really solved one of these and got a high result and thought he is the chosen one huh

    • @Linkman8912
      @Linkman8912 Před 7 dny +1

      ​@@TragicHeroine-kd6uynah he's just the only one who knows the truth... Right?

  • @jello4835
    @jello4835 Před rokem +4801

    "I have no idea. People who boast about their IQ are losers." -- Stephen Hawking, when asked by a reporter for his IQ

    • @K1ttyGam3r
      @K1ttyGam3r Před rokem +358

      Chad

    • @rootfish2671
      @rootfish2671 Před rokem +114

      Yup just look at Mensa

    • @ratboy2164
      @ratboy2164 Před rokem +88

      based

    • @emilymonahan5232
      @emilymonahan5232 Před rokem +169

      BASED AS FUCK

    • @name-removed-
      @name-removed- Před rokem +43

      @@ugadugaga4972 IQ is dumb but that statement is categorically false. Some people are genuinely more talented at thing than others, and someone that is both naturally gifted at something and passionate about it will always be better at that than someone that is solely passionate.

  • @jeffriesmovies
    @jeffriesmovies Před rokem +3295

    The sentence “To Jordan Peterson’s credit, I have no idea what he’s talking about” is beautiful

    • @vtorious9102
      @vtorious9102 Před rokem +167

      That's his power and weakness. He's able to say "xyz", people who critique him say "yeah that xyz is not good", and then he says, "I didn't say that, I said x^2, y^3, z^4, to the degree that 4^z = 3^y = 2^x."

    • @noahmay7708
      @noahmay7708 Před rokem +74

      @@vtorious9102 filibusters upon filibusters

    • @krumpelschtiltzkeen
      @krumpelschtiltzkeen Před rokem +81

      To JP's credit, neither does he.

    • @MickeyMouse-lm6zj
      @MickeyMouse-lm6zj Před 11 měsíci +3

      leftists when they're told to clean their room or something

    • @Tcrror
      @Tcrror Před 11 měsíci +40

      ​@@MickeyMouse-lm6zj You're not very bright.

  • @zigzagzipbag6561
    @zigzagzipbag6561 Před rokem +525

    "The relationship between poverty and intelligence is self evident once you think about it for any length of time" is just "I think there is a relationship between poverty and intelligence, no I don't have any source, my word must suffice, clean your room"
    To think I once adored this man.

    • @augustp7543
      @augustp7543 Před rokem +35

      ikr. There is a correlation, but asserting it as a fundamental and unchanging relationship is really reductive. And his version of "believing IQ science" seems to start and end with predictions based off of someone's current/most recent IQ, which is reductive of multiple other fields of study, like sociology and economics. You could theoretically argue that it's a starting point for an entry level course and will be expanded on in later courses, but when he's submitting these lectures as stand alone content it requires a different standard.
      Tl;dr IQ does affect quality of life, but society and intelligence are both more complicated than just "dum dums are useless"

    • @Cynsham
      @Cynsham Před 10 měsíci +26

      There is somewhat of a correlation between poverty and intelligence, but the way Peterson phrases it, like most horseshit that comes out of his mouth, is both wildly reductive and oversimplified in order to fit his own personal narrative about whatever subject he's decided to believe that he's an expert on at that moment.

    • @alexjames7144
      @alexjames7144 Před 10 měsíci +24

      It's bizarre because obviously there's a relationship between poverty and intelligence but Peterson implies that stupid people just naturally end up poor, which makes no sense because stupid rich people don't tend to end up on state benefits.
      The actual relationship is that poverty limits the ability to access good education, especially early education and leave parents with less time to spend trying to nurture their kids' minds.
      We understand that IQ is significantly impacted by early childhood education, and that poverty predicts abysmal access to good early childhood education due to outside factors with no fault of the parents. Yet Peterson looks at that and says "hmmm..... Maybe there's a link somewhere but I guess we'll never know..... Nobody could possibly think of a solution for this.....I guess it's just the natural order......."

    • @Player-pj9kt
      @Player-pj9kt Před 9 měsíci +15

      I think JP doesn't realize that Iq scores have to be normalized because the average IQ score is steadily going up. Does that mean the our brains are bigger than ppl from 100 years ago? No the increase us too fast to be explained by genetic changes instead it means that our education system is getting more comprehensive, knowledge is more readily available (e.g. the internet), high calorie food is readily available... all of these factors are economy related

    • @quantize
      @quantize Před 8 měsíci +10

      Hes a blithering grifter, the self help is basic psychology and how he radicalizes ppl

  • @marcybons
    @marcybons Před rokem +80

    literally so easy to diagnose this guy with "divorced because his wife got sick of being treated like she was literally an inferior being, also rolled her eyes at his bullshit a bunch before she finally left" it's unreal

    • @bigbrothertw
      @bigbrothertw Před 11 měsíci +10

      he has hostage wife energy

    • @notthatLeia
      @notthatLeia Před 7 dny

      What positive words could possibly describe Jordan and be the truth?

  • @GreyGramarye
    @GreyGramarye Před rokem +574

    “This is why I’m a radical defender of free speech. You should be exposed to ideas that make you ask questions even if they make you uncomfortable!”
    *looking at magazine cover*
    “This isn’t where this picture belongs! It makes me uncomfortable, as though it’s trying to make me question my preconceptions!”

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      He never said that they shouldn't be allowed to print the cover. He reacted to it.

    • @SorowFame
      @SorowFame Před rokem +64

      @@MrCmon113 he said that they “aren’t beautiful no matter how much authoritarian tolerance” or whatever the exact quote was. Heavy implication being that because he doesn’t find the model attractive they shouldn’t be there and that they’re only there because of wokeness or whatever. If he’s literally just stating his preference then why not say “I don’t think they’re beautiful” rather than saying it as if it’s an objective fact and if he doesn’t see it as an issue to be corrected why say anything at all?

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci +31

      @@MrCmon113 No dude. The implication was pretty clearly that they shouldn't do it. In fact he was quite authoritarian about how not just he doesn't find her attractive but no one can. Because if he didn't, why would he react at all? A normal person doesn't whine because a swimsuit model for one issue isn't their type.

    • @Randomlycreatedbyme
      @Randomlycreatedbyme Před 3 měsíci +24

      @@MrCmon113 He didn’t say “I don’t think she’s beautiful” he said “She isn’t beautiful and everyone who disagrees has been brainwashed by woke culture”.
      It’s the old “no one can have different experiences from me, and if they say they do, they are either brainwashed or part of some evil plan that is trying to corrupt me”. Is this how you approach people in your everyday life?

    • @demilembias2527
      @demilembias2527 Před 2 měsíci +16

      can we please all talk about how yumi nu is also, like, conventionally attractive lol? she's probably genuinely in the top 1% of having traits that appeal to the most stereotypical of male heterosexualities. she's a little chubby and pear shaped in a way that was literally considered the height of beauty in most cultures at most times in history except like, for this one random handful of decades. Jordan's beloved ancient greeks would probably be going crazy for this woman. its like. what the fuck is he even talking about on so many levels lmfao

  • @nolanhanna
    @nolanhanna Před rokem +1231

    "some rich people *are* parasitical but some aren't" but also ALL poor people are parasitical and just want government handouts to spend on drugs. Super consistent jordy

    • @espeon871
      @espeon871 Před rokem

      Ah yes people who exploit people for gain and hurt them, (parasite activity) arent all parasites cuz they give money (bare fucking minimum also not always guarenteed) arent parasites but poor people being exploited (like parasite host) who want handouts cuz no money (to live and keep up and survive cuz of parasite) are bad actually cuz capitalism yummy
      Dude if u use his parasite model literally his argument is debunked lol so like what's up

    • @derp195
      @derp195 Před rokem +62

      I don't think it's inconsistent, just terrible and simple. Not all rich people are good, no good people are poor.

    • @alex.g7317
      @alex.g7317 Před rokem +5

      @@derp195 that’s true

    • @SharkyMcSnarkface
      @SharkyMcSnarkface Před rokem +52

      @@derp195
      "No good people are poor"
      Whatever keeps you awake at night, man.

    • @Kyrielsh1
      @Kyrielsh1 Před rokem +78

      @@SharkyMcSnarkface Isn't he/she simply rewording Peterson's statement?

  • @Danielle-zq7kb
    @Danielle-zq7kb Před rokem +552

    At my grocery store we have a lovely teen with Down syndrome who bags groceries. He is helpful, smiling and cheerful every time I see him. I don’t buy the IQ argument at all. Some of the stupidest people I have met have been wealthy and less useful to society than this young man. I don’t know who he lives with, but I’ll assume he isn’t living on his own or earning a living wage, but he is helpful and useful to society. Our acceptance of him throughout his life, along with good parents and social programs have helped make him the cheerful person he is. Tossing our hands up and giving up on a low IQ child robs the world of people like this young man. I will assume that he has a job due to some social program benefiting his employer.

    • @alexjames7144
      @alexjames7144 Před 10 měsíci +90

      I also think the more pressing issue is that Peterson insists these people must have some sort of "productive" job in the first place. Why? Even if 10% aren't that useful we can surely just accept them anyway, 90% is a pretty good success rate.
      Realistically considering how much excess we produce for the ultra rich we could all live very comfortably based on what we currently produce, and that's in a system where most people's talent is wasted by being disadvantaged.

    • @jacobs7764
      @jacobs7764 Před 9 měsíci +85

      ​@@alexjames7144Way more than 10% of billionaires and executives haven't done jack shit to make anybody's life better in at best decades.
      I am, much like Peterson, deeply concerned about a small contingent of our society seeming unable to contribute anything of value.
      We just disagree on which neighborhood you can find them in.

    • @alexjames7144
      @alexjames7144 Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@jacobs7764 ?
      I'm not on the side of billionaires, I'm all for decapitation and wealth redistribution. As for 10%, I shouldn't really have to point out that 10% if billionaires and 10% of the population of the whole are very different numbers. Idek how you managed the mental backflips required to bring that up.
      I also agree that the rich are the problem. That was never up for debate. I was just saying that forcing everyone to be "productive" isn't necessary, if wealth was shared fairly they wouldn't need to be.
      Also not quite sure whether you're saying that you disagree with me or Peterson?

    • @thornels
      @thornels Před 9 měsíci +28

      ​​@@alexjames7144I think they're agreeing with you in a very angry manner hahaha

    • @footballrestored171
      @footballrestored171 Před 8 měsíci

      @@alexjames7144 The line about "productive" jobs also got to me. If a job is so worthless, then completely get rid of the position and either have a machine do it, or have a pre-existing employee also do that assignment (on top of their regular duties). The fact that so many places don't do this, shows it's not always cost effective, so even a "non-productive" job DOES have some value (even if it's in a roundabout way). Also, people degrading those jobs would be the first to complain if Walmart was only open from 5:00 PM to 12 Midnight, because "Only high school students and college students should have those jobs."

  • @TheAoide82
    @TheAoide82 Před rokem +120

    My IQ is 143 and I've lived below the poverty line most of my adult life. Take that, JBP

    • @Dock284
      @Dock284 Před rokem +12

      Yeah IQ is not a good way of measuring that kind of stuff. Even the people with the highest IQ can have to live on the streets while people with low IQ can live great lives.

    • @Redsky973
      @Redsky973 Před 11 měsíci +18

      "Up yours, woke moralists" 💀

    • @physics_lover100
      @physics_lover100 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Your iq dose not 143

    • @Literallyjustmint
      @Literallyjustmint Před 2 měsíci +12

      @@physics_lover100and you don't love physics

    • @physics_lover100
      @physics_lover100 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Literallyjustmint 😂🤣 okk ok

  • @duck6100
    @duck6100 Před rokem +1743

    Personally I think his position has always been "I want to do eugenics but would never straight up say that because I'd get cancelled"

    • @antlerbraum2881
      @antlerbraum2881 Před rokem +207

      He looks like the type of guy who in the early 20th century would have been one of those mad scientists who dissects people and tries to find ‘racial impurities’.

    • @SadisticBlessings
      @SadisticBlessings Před rokem +215

      This is precisely what Peterson is saying, though Big Joel pulls up short of straight up accusing him of it - when he says "it's a big problem (the low IQ population being genetically incapable of performing what he considers meaningful labor), and I don't know what the solution is," he's simply advocating for eugenics. Because if you believe that people having a low IQ is a problem for society, and that low IQ is caused purely by genetic factors and cannot be meaningfully improved through environmental improvements or societal intervention, then the only "solution" is eugenics.

    • @HazeLmao
      @HazeLmao Před rokem +10

      jesus christ worst faith possible interpretation

    • @mister_kaniela
      @mister_kaniela Před rokem +2

      @@HazeLmao argue a better one😂😂 you people are in a cult

    • @wzywg
      @wzywg Před rokem +43

      The irony being that there is no way to tell if he'd have survived in the realm we evolved from. Again, just the privileged decrying the failings of the underprivileged.

  • @unrightist
    @unrightist Před rokem +664

    "I don't know the solution" = "I actually think the solution is eugenics but I can't say that out loud"
    Every single thing about him is like psychology 100 years ago or something. He was born in the wrong century.

    • @emylily8266
      @emylily8266 Před rokem +84

      considering the figures he holds in the highest regard like Jung are incredibly outdated for the modern field of psychology, it's no wonder he gives off that impression.

    • @unrightist
      @unrightist Před rokem +51

      @@emylily8266 that's exactly what I mean yeah. He's like a human time capsule.

    • @marspower1288
      @marspower1288 Před rokem

      Stefan Molineux, the bald guy he was explaining IQ to, is literally a self proclaimed eugenicist and white supremacist so...

    • @FirstnameLastname-bn4gv
      @FirstnameLastname-bn4gv Před rokem +3

      @@emylily8266
      This is totally unrelated, but I was wondering what your profile pic is from, it looks familiar

    • @Megaghost_
      @Megaghost_ Před rokem +29

      "I can't say it out loud so I'll let my followers do it for me." That's his strategy.

  • @thecorraleseffect1182
    @thecorraleseffect1182 Před rokem +161

    School psychologist here. When I evaluate a kid’s “IQ,” I’m more concerned about their individual cognitive differences-not how “smart” they are. Knowing that a child has trouble in a specific area (like the kiddos with ADHD or Autism who struggle with processing speed and working memory or the kids with SLD who have a hard time with auditory processing) is useful because it tells me how to design the child’s Individualize Education Plan (IEP) to best help. Just saying “we’ll, they’re just dumb” isn’t constructive at all-even when you’re working with a child with low cognitive and adaptive abilities due to an intellectual disability.

    • @squawkietalkie56
      @squawkietalkie56 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Yeah. IQ measures a "central intelligence" based on several skills, but no one type of intellect to tie these skills together has been found. I personally have some trouble communicating verbally and focusing, and it definitely makes me feel "stupid" but it doesn't point to my math skills or how well i retain information. It's like if you colored in a drawing with markers and then said "i just used my fantastic new product, all art supplies© and yes, that includes markers, and you could do the same thing with plain old markers. But it is real!"

  • @realsanmer
    @realsanmer Před 5 měsíci +737

    Remember children: IQ tests only prove how good you are at solving IQ tests.

    • @Kevin_the_Caveman
      @Kevin_the_Caveman Před 4 měsíci +71

      They're not even that good at measuring that, actually, as the same individual's result can vary greatly between two tests. IQ isn't even good at measuring IQ.

    • @spacedragon1453
      @spacedragon1453 Před 4 měsíci +6

      TRUE

    • @jacobwheeler6136
      @jacobwheeler6136 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Exactly

    • @thatswhatsgood24
      @thatswhatsgood24 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Hm it's almost as if ones ability to take in and regurgitate information may be related to their intelligence

    • @whatno5090
      @whatno5090 Před měsícem +6

      This kind of misses the point of the video. Joel never debates the point that IQ is a metric connected to various other factors such as what jobs you may be able to occupy and sustain. Though IQ isn't probably as meaningful as we'd hope a meaningful statistic would be, IQ does have some meaning beyond a number, and even Joel seems to accept that in this video.
      If you claim IQ is meaningless to one of Peterson's followers, you won't get to any of the more significant problems in Peterson's rhetoric.

  • @jackdeath
    @jackdeath Před rokem +2157

    Point of order: The idiom of _picking yourself up by your bootstraps_ was an example created by Samuel Smalls in his 1848 book _Self Help_ to illustrate an impossible action. Nobody can do this.

    • @jackdeath
      @jackdeath Před rokem

      @BARF just as impossible. Get your boots and take a long look at those straps. You can barely fit your finger in them let alone your neck.

    • @itsyedino874
      @itsyedino874 Před rokem +195

      How ironic, and now people are saying it everywhere as if it’s a possible task. Wow.

    • @jackdeath
      @jackdeath Před rokem +329

      @@itsyedino874 People understood the expression "pulling yourself up by your bootstraps" to mean "attempting to do something absurd" until roughly the 1920s, at which point it started to evolve toward the current understanding: to do something without any outside help. But that's like digging yourself out of a hole, which is also absurd.
      Go ahead: put on some boots, grab the straps, and try to pull yourself off the ground. You won't manage to "pull yourself up" in any meaningful sense because gravity is a thing that keeps us firmly on the ground. You can't pull yourself up by your bootstraps, and thinking you can is fantasy.

    • @itsyedino874
      @itsyedino874 Před rokem +29

      How interesting, thank you, @@jackdeath

    • @VenstaMusic
      @VenstaMusic Před rokem +41

      ​@@jackdeath Thank you for sharing this, I had no clue about the etymology of the expression. The mo' you know!

  • @edgarallenhoe3518
    @edgarallenhoe3518 Před rokem +3028

    Peterson's refusal to define the actual problem is maddening. "There's is nothing for 10% of the population to do" sure SOUNDS like a problem, but he's missing the very last step. How is this actually affecting the world right now? Is there 10% of the population that can't get jobs and are suffering because of it? So we need to find a way to fit them better into society, by making jobs for them? Or is 10% of the population failing at jobs that they aren't able to do, and employers should be free to fire them? Peterson's great trick is to stop right before he finishes his argument, so that in order to disagree with him you have to infer his conclusion, giving him the ability to dismiss you immediately because "I never said that." It's cowardly and brilliant at the same time.

    • @Rawnblade13
      @Rawnblade13 Před rokem +316

      Given his politics, I'm pretty sure I know what his solution would be to these so-called useless people...

    • @shelbypowell9919
      @shelbypowell9919 Před rokem +471

      Problem A exists. Problem A must be solved. Solutions B, C and D have been proposed. Solution C and solution B won’t work for reasons I will spend the next six hours discussing in detail. I maintain the problem must be solved but offer no alternative solution.
      [Solution D is eugenics and genocide. I’ll just leave that there for you to pick up on.]

    • @christopherrushdudley
      @christopherrushdudley Před rokem +137

      He is apparently incapable of listening to ideas outside of capitalism's dark, sad box.

    • @minhducnguyen9276
      @minhducnguyen9276 Před rokem

      @@christopherrushdudley "Muh culture Marxists!" Man literally dodging every Marxist or socialist wo can and are willing to debate him.

    • @EmoBearRights
      @EmoBearRights Před rokem +40

      @@Rawnblade13 And it may well be final.

  • @coaxill4059
    @coaxill4059 Před rokem +348

    "If you don't buy IQ, you might as well throw out the rest of psychology"
    Me keeping up with developments in modern psych:
    lol ok, we can do that.

    • @squishykotetsu
      @squishykotetsu Před 11 měsíci +61

      if you take it to mean "the other outdated, oversimplified garbage he believes" then yuuuup, out with that shite. And beyond that, there's so many instances where he just misses the point of more modern psychological studies that you truly have to wonder what he even thinks psychology IS

    • @happygucci5094
      @happygucci5094 Před 10 měsíci +6

      😂😂😂 🎯

    • @dieSpinnt
      @dieSpinnt Před 10 měsíci +1

      I am very intelligent, but also stinking lazy. Otherwise this comment could've been a masterpiece (as an analogy for Peterson's "bigger IQ = better proficiency" claim).
      This directly destroys Peterson's laughably narrow-sighted worldview (which his "theory of IQ" actually is). The lazy part: Come to your own conclusions, can you?!
      Other living contradictions we cannot ignore: Elon Musk and Donald Trump. They are at the top of the income pyramid and are part of the best payed/richest people of this world. Oh and they are actual idiots. Not only literally but in the medical sense of the word!

    • @stanleyklein524
      @stanleyklein524 Před 8 měsíci

      That stance make no sense. Peterson is an academic fraud.

    • @eyebrid
      @eyebrid Před 8 měsíci +10

      It really puts JP's "expertise" in question.

  • @kaibird542
    @kaibird542 Před rokem +119

    Automatically I’m really against JP’s claims that IQ is equal to how much money you have, bc I went to a private school for ten years and there were consistently ppl in my classes who were legitimately dumber than a bag of rocks. And to this day they’re still doing just fine bc their parents have money.

  • @quantheory
    @quantheory Před rokem +783

    Jordan Peterson: "I had a client who spent his disability paycheck on drugs every single time. This 100% definitely happened, and also it's the disability program's fault, while poor little old psychologist me did nothing."

    • @PrettyPinkPeacock
      @PrettyPinkPeacock Před rokem +110

      It's such a lazy answer too. Even if the money seemed to cause the drugs, was the client actually okay whilst totally skint? Absolutely not and any basic understanding of addiction would tell you that. Maybe his money could be better managed but it doesn't mean no money was a solution! So binary.

    • @KSJAFN
      @KSJAFN Před rokem +49

      He was also ashamed, horrified and repentant after being "completely dead".

    • @edwardcampbell8807
      @edwardcampbell8807 Před rokem +2

      So what should he have done? Did he have power of attorney?

    • @kaemincha
      @kaemincha Před rokem

      right??? like some good ole DBT might have helped there but nope, Jordan just lets em die ig

    • @AmandaHugandKiss411
      @AmandaHugandKiss411 Před rokem +54

      Peterson has spoken about his addiction with benzoy. He basically blamed everything about it and doesn't recognize his own role in it I.e. he works in the medical field and yet claims he was unaware of the potential addiction to this classification of medications.
      He went to a number of clinics but didn't like the idea that he had to do the work including dealing with withdrawal. He said he looked online for a better program. Then with his wealth flew to somewhere in Russia that at a extreme cost, paid to be put into a medical induced coma....
      Seriously, look it up and watch some of his interviews on the subject. A few of them he burst into tears....conveniently.

  • @Hyper_1989
    @Hyper_1989 Před rokem +725

    I actually died laughing when you cut to him in a completely quiet room followed by him saying "free speech" as if he hadn't slept for a whole week.

    • @cuzned1375
      @cuzned1375 Před rokem +14

      RIP

    • @connorsullivan1855
      @connorsullivan1855 Před rokem +68

      I had the same response. I felt like it was the start of some interpretive stage show, where he is going to start dancing or other people are going to come out and act out a scene behind him, but nope it's him dramatically explaining a very basic conversative idea.

    • @J5L5M6
      @J5L5M6 Před rokem +2

      Hahaha, I giggled my silly ass off. Now you're dead and I'm assless.

    • @randyohm3445
      @randyohm3445 Před rokem +27

      For a second I wondered if my browser had crashed. I guess he fell asleep standing up, woke up, didn't remember what he was there to say, and just blurted out the first thing that came to mind. :D

    • @aquelajuno9701
      @aquelajuno9701 Před rokem +6

      LMAO same 💀💀💀

  • @disfuncionexe
    @disfuncionexe Před rokem +199

    “IQ is predictive of success”
    My school tested my IQ to screen for intellectual disability’s because of my dysgraphia and my family’s history of ADHD. I scored 135 and I have gotten Ds in nearly all of my classes since my sophomore year. If you look at my comment history (please don’t look at comments I made when I was 16 oh god) and talk to me you wouldn’t guess I scored 135 on an IQ test. IQ tests are the phrenology of the 21st century.

    • @dickwellington8578
      @dickwellington8578 Před 10 měsíci +12

      I have ADHD as well, I scored in the 99th percentile of GATE (California’s testing for gifted and talented children) I routinely got f’s except for P.E LOL. I remember telling teachers I was in GATE and them not believing me. I remember my freshmen science teacher pulling me aside after class and telling me he knew how intelligent I was and that he really wanted me to do better in school, it’s something that’s always stuck with me. Somebody actually believing in me for once.

    • @viktorthevictor6240
      @viktorthevictor6240 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Wait, how do you look at someone else's comment history?

    • @disfuncionexe
      @disfuncionexe Před 10 měsíci +21

      @@viktorthevictor6240 IDK but I hope you cant. the shit I said when I was 15...

    • @viktorthevictor6240
      @viktorthevictor6240 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@disfuncionexe
      😰

    • @Player-pj9kt
      @Player-pj9kt Před 9 měsíci +6

      Veritasium made a video on how suceess (measured by income) is not correlated by iq

  • @leeloo6676
    @leeloo6676 Před rokem +33

    Sometimes I'm convinced JP got his liscence from a cereal box, because I can't imagine how he actually managed to convince someone he could be a psychiatrist.
    Also, I love how Joel points out that Jordan says that the snake symbols were inspired by DNA strands, when in fact, it just looks like snakes fucking. Brilliant. Tells you how much the man "thinks" about stuff.

  • @jmv333
    @jmv333 Před rokem +5419

    I was one of those classically 'gifted but arrogant' undiagnosed ASD kids at the age going into high school, and I remember getting an IQ score of 124 and being so mad that I didn't get a 'genius' score (140), so I took another test, and another, and another, I googled tips & tricks, I practised over and over and over because I needed so badly to be my dumb kid idea of 'clever'. Eventually I managed to get a score of 161, a jump from the 7th percentile to the 0.007th, in no more than a couple months. Considering that I am also a total idiot, then if that story doesn't prove how little merit IQ tests have, then idk what does, love the vid!

    • @christopherrushdudley
      @christopherrushdudley Před rokem +1017

      I scored a 160+ in middle school and have f'd up, destroyed, and pretty much ruined almost everything I've touched in life ever since, always thinking I was smarter than everyone and it was their fault. I'd trade 50 IQ points for a few emotional points.

    • @xXluluchanelXx
      @xXluluchanelXx Před rokem +482

      @@christopherrushdudley that's too real. I score high too, but I don't have the sense god gave a tapeworm. ADHD doesn't help, but overall.. I am a paradoxical trashfire of smarts and bad decisions

    • @bills.prestonesq.5905
      @bills.prestonesq.5905 Před rokem +212

      A mate of mine got into Mensa this way, God knows what he felt he had to prove. Of course this story is much sadder because he was a 25 year old man at the time, not a kid.

    • @wl9162
      @wl9162 Před rokem +435

      I score incredibly high on IQ tests and yet I nearly failed math in high school a couple times lol -- IQ doesn't even necessarily correlate with applicable academic proficiency all the time, and that's something people like Peterson and other IQ proponents really like to gloss over a whole lot...

    • @pipzog389
      @pipzog389 Před rokem +64

      Thats because you practised it, no shit you got better

  • @greyfox4838
    @greyfox4838 Před rokem +2344

    the thing with Peterson is that he really impresses centrist pseudointellectuals because he does this thing where he finds problems with everyone including conservatives, he says "these people who are trying to find solutions aren't smart enough to realize the problem is complicated" and everyone claps him for it, failing to see all he has said is that the problem is complicated and offers no complicated solution himself, he is contrarian for the sake of it and never says anything meaningful if you look carefully

    • @Kitty-the-Bunny
      @Kitty-the-Bunny Před rokem +58

      I know this is not the point but I like your icon

    • @immortalituss
      @immortalituss Před rokem +3

      and how do you measure genetic influences on genetics then? We knkw west africans have genetic predisposition for sprinting

    • @greyfox4838
      @greyfox4838 Před rokem +232

      @@immortalituss I don't want to crap on you, you're probably high, but I find it hilarious that I say "Peterson is contrarian and doesn't offer solutions" and your response to that is "how do we measure genetic influence on genetics?" I have no idea what you're on, cocaine maybe. But my response to you is: how do we measure scientific influence on science? Hmm?

    • @immortalituss
      @immortalituss Před rokem +2

      @@greyfox4838 i meant genetic influence on intelligence, sorry mistyped

    • @bathroomsexmurder
      @bathroomsexmurder Před rokem +81

      @@immortalitusslol wtf

  • @Dock284
    @Dock284 Před rokem +55

    I took an actual IQ test (not one of those cheap online courses) and my IQ is something like 75-80 within that general range but I'm doing great in life. I'm not the smartest man alive but I can do everything that people with 100 IQ can.

    • @mr.sandman7587
      @mr.sandman7587 Před 8 měsíci

      @@Fatb0ybadb0y how does this count as dunning kruger? he's just using a personal anecdote to attack the credibility of IQ tests, which deserve all the attack they get. i don't see how he's claiming expertise or competence on a topic he isn't knowledgable in.

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Fatb0ybadb0y Uh no, no it is not. But you have helpfully demonstrated IQ is no substitute for learning what something is.

    • @randomusername1735
      @randomusername1735 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Don't underestimate yourself just because a very questionable test says your number was lower than average

  • @locklanh
    @locklanh Před rokem +27

    everytime i see this, his tweet about dr feldman barrett is EXTREMELY funny. I work and am doing my postgrad at a damn law school and we cite barrett! you can't discuss neurology, culture or emotion in the 2020s without discussing barrett, not if you want to pass peer review lol. the fact he doesn't know who she is really goes to show how disconnected he actually is from the academic disciplines he pretends to have expertise in.

    • @9Nikko8
      @9Nikko8 Před 14 dny

      I mean he had expertise, 15 years ago before he got kicked out for the bullshit he said and then started building his guru brand of adoring incels and far righters.

  • @GarryDumblowski
    @GarryDumblowski Před rokem +777

    The sad thing is, Peterson is touching on a genuine problem here, that there are disabled people who can't get jobs because their superiors are unwilling to provide them the tools they need to function. But, of course, instead of phrasing his argument in terms of "People have different needs and those needs don't take away from their worth and right to live a comfortable life", he phrases his argument in terms of "Some people are inherently better than others"

    • @thisisthewaterandthisisthe3254
      @thisisthewaterandthisisthe3254 Před rokem +42

      Honestly disgusting 😔 He is so lame

    • @jeanpaulmichell7243
      @jeanpaulmichell7243 Před rokem +149

      Worse than that, when Peterson says that there is nothing but NOTHING these people can contribute and NOTHING can be done about it, there is an ominous subtext to his statement; like society may have to send these reprobates off to an internment camp or some such. No way to profit off this demographic, they might as well be disposed of. It's this undertone to Peterson's words that comes across as creepy. He is a weird, conflicted man.

    • @taylorchapman7860
      @taylorchapman7860 Před rokem +99

      Not to mention the assumption that everyone should be participating as a worker in the capitalist system… There are so many ways to generate value that don’t rely on being a cog in that machine.
      Besides, if everyone feels like they have to work long painful shifts in 20 years, then what the heck is the point of all this “technological progress” anyway…

    • @zzzaaayyynnn
      @zzzaaayyynnn Před rokem +41

      his ellipsis after stating the supposed issue leaves open the idea that we don't "need" these people...

    • @pantalaemon
      @pantalaemon Před rokem +22

      yeah, and he does so because deep down he's not at all convinced that disability doesn't take away from people's worth and right to live a comfortable life.
      As evidence i submit the fact that he frequently talks to and is comfortable being on the same platform as nazis like stefan molyneux. (And before anyone makes the "well he's just not afraid of different ideas" argument; when's the last time you've seen JBP on an anarchist talkshow?)

  • @brianp3570
    @brianp3570 Před rokem +188

    Fun fact: "Jordan Peterson" is the correct way to pronounce the word "eugenics" in a Toronto accent

  • @witchypoo7353
    @witchypoo7353 Před rokem +19

    Essentially he’s saying “poor people aren’t good with money, they’re too stupid. That’s why they don’t need it.”

  • @Erimgard13
    @Erimgard13 Před rokem +15

    In other letures he's cited a book that he got the whole "snakes fucking = DNA" idea from. The source the author of the book gave for that info basically amounted to "I did a lot of drugs in South America"

    • @Ryu1ify
      @Ryu1ify Před 13 dny

      How else are you gonna learn something?

  • @KillahMate
    @KillahMate Před rokem +247

    Ultimately it's kind of obvious: the Sports Illustrated cover is an affront to Peterson because it's an institution (Sports Illustrated) very publicly placing a particular person _somewhere Peterson doesn't think she belongs._ At their core there is perhaps nothing more conservative than believing that 1) _people have their place_ and 2) people should _know_ their place and not get uppity. It doesn't matter that this is an utterly silly and meaningless hierarchy of 'people who get to be on Sports Illustrated covers' - it _is_ a hierarchy, and as such just like any other hierarchy it _must not_ be challenged.

    • @espeon871
      @espeon871 Před rokem +21

      All to justify private ownership and unequal access to shit baby, the hoops theyll jump instead of admitting that they want hierarchy. Great analysis tho dude.

    • @jasonhendricks4562
      @jasonhendricks4562 Před rokem

      What's ironic is I bet Peterson wouldn't dispute your ending argument here. The reason Peterson went after Sports Illustrated wasn't because he's attempting to enforce "their place". It was because he recognized that this model was being put on display out of pity, not out of beauty. And we all know this, but Sports Illustrated wants to market off of their own self righteousness like the rest of the woke crowd. "Oh, you don't think this model is beautiful? It must be because you're a shallow bigot!"

    • @KillahMate
      @KillahMate Před rokem

      @@jasonhendricks4562 He saw this model as being put on display out of pity not out of beauty because that's the only reason _he_ would have done it. And same goes for you - 'we all know this'? What other things some people agree with you about so you wrongly assume _everyone_ does?
      Any fan of the free market should at least be aware that _different people have different aesthetic preferences._ This isn't rocket science. But while buying a car in your favorite color is a concept everyone should grasp, I guess Peterson fans who like black cars assume all the many people who prefer red cars are _faking it for clout?_
      So there's no woke mafia coming to cancel you because you don't think a model is beautiful. You're only a shallow bigot if you have trouble with the idea that _other people might like_ how she looks, and need to make up _explanations_ (beyond 'some dudes at SI thought she looked hot').
      But if you just can't imagine any of that, I invite you - as an intellectual exercise - to visit Pornhub, and write down all the categories of videos the site offers. Then put a checkmark next to all the categories you think are there because Pornhub 'wants to market off of their own self righteousness like the rest of the woke crowd'.

    • @jasonhendricks4562
      @jasonhendricks4562 Před rokem

      @@KillahMate Yeah you're not wrong at all, I'm not disagreeing. I'm just clarifying that Peterson saw this move by Sports Illustrated as an agenda to make being overweight idealistic. Because modeling is about capturing the 'ideal' afterall. Beauty is subjective and Peterson admits that he could have handled his tweet better. But it absolutely had wokeness written all over it. "Lets celebrate being overweight just like we celebrate fit bodies, you know - the bodies that take great effort to maintain. You don't think fat people are equally worthy? You bigot!"

    • @MilkyMinded
      @MilkyMinded Před rokem +1

      Perfectly put!

  • @DanielBrice7f58a6
    @DanielBrice7f58a6 Před rokem +1451

    So, this is what I'm hearing: if it's genuinely the case that there are very few jobs for people with IQs below 85, then that's the best possible case I've ever heard for Universal Basic Income.

    • @unrightist
      @unrightist Před rokem +306

      But you're coming out at it from the perspective of wanting a society that allows for every person to exist comfortably, whereas Petersen wants a society where everyone* needs to struggle, and those who can't reach comfort don't deserve it.
      *everyone who doesn't happen to be born rich or extremely lucky

    • @Julius064
      @Julius064 Před rokem +95

      But then the poors will breed!

    • @JonMartinYXD
      @JonMartinYXD Před rokem +231

      Experiments with UBI have also destroyed Peterson's claim that poor people can't manage money. It turns out that living in poverty is brutally efficient at teaching people the value of a dollar.

    • @kylegonewild
      @kylegonewild Před rokem +96

      @@JonMartinYXD People conflate a willingness to choose short-term comfort while living a hellish life every once in a while with an inability to even evaluate their situation and make hard decisions. It's elitism through and through.

    • @terawatt1
      @terawatt1 Před rokem

      if you listen closely to what he doesn't say when he goes on about how hard it is to do anything and how nothing may be possible to be done, you can hear "we should euthanize the dumb, so us elites can profit even more"

  • @Elfos64
    @Elfos64 Před 6 měsíci +12

    Most people who say they believe in personal responsibility think that just means "everyone needs to hold themselves accountable for their own lot in life without unfairly blaming others", but responsibility also necessarily means "everyone needs to hold themselves (and each other) accountable for how their actions negatively affect others- intentionally or not, individually and collectively". People tend to forget the latter part.

  • @killerkitten7534
    @killerkitten7534 Před 10 měsíci +13

    Peterson reminds me of those kids in class who would take a 5 minute IQ test online and base their whole being on it.

  • @KingoftheJuice18
    @KingoftheJuice18 Před rokem +625

    The more I watch analysis of JBP, the more I just want to say, "Jordan, who hurt you and how?" I mean, for a psychologist, Jordan's lack of reflection on his own rage is kind of shocking. Here's a man who literally said that he would rather die than be "forced" to use someone's chosen pronouns.

    • @zzzaaayyynnn
      @zzzaaayyynnn Před rokem +55

      Right. He is full of rage. And is raging even more now that he has some real fame.

    • @KaritKtana
      @KaritKtana Před rokem +3

      💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯

    • @luna-p
      @luna-p Před rokem

      The three people he s3xually harrassed, by reporting him would be my guess.

    • @christaylor9095
      @christaylor9095 Před rokem +65

      He outright publicly states that men should be monsters....

    • @luna-p
      @luna-p Před rokem +59

      @@christaylor9095 Oh, but he didn't really mean that, you're taking him out of context 🤪🤪🤪 /ssssss

  • @AndyBestHP
    @AndyBestHP Před rokem +4939

    Seeing these clips of him lecturing help me understand how he developed his idea of students as entitled or complaining etc. and why he joined the "PC has gone mad" lot: he somehow became a college prof through some broken system, despite being deranged. Then a bright, young and motivated new-gen of students get into the college and show up for their first lecture "wow, we made it, academia" .. and it's Peterson saying 'IQ testing is actually 100% real and people who score less than 87 cannot even dig a ditch, and we need to 'do' something about them' ... and the students are like 'what the actual f-ck' and legitimately think they have wasted their life working to get into a college program, then they question him or complain to staff. lol.

    • @anone.mousse674
      @anone.mousse674 Před rokem +914

      Speaking personally, if I was in Peterson's class and he started saying that we need to 'do something' about low-IQ people, I'd just say "You mean by doing eugenics? Because that's what you're implying."

    • @synthstatic9889
      @synthstatic9889 Před rokem +714

      “It’s disgusting of you to say I was implying the very thing I was implying! How dare you!”
      Also, do we have a name for this rhetorical trick?

    • @anone.mousse674
      @anone.mousse674 Před rokem +392

      @@synthstatic9889 I call it The Name Blame Game, aka the "Stop calling everyone you disagree with a Nazi" defense.

    • @FTZPLTC
      @FTZPLTC Před rokem +402

      I would kind of like to see a lecture by him - ideally one where he doesn't think he's being filmed. Because based on these isolated clips, it seems like he lectures the same way he gives interviews; and if that's the case, that'd be completely useless to any actual student.
      Either way, a lecturer using the words "self-evident" is earning deep suspicion and scepticism.

    • @DMO-DMO-DMO
      @DMO-DMO-DMO Před rokem +247

      @@FTZPLTC "self evident" is the professorial version of "it's just common sense" lol

  • @brunobucciaratiswife
    @brunobucciaratiswife Před rokem +57

    “Adam Ruins Everything” does a great job debunking IQ tests, including going back to their history! It’s a great watch and I recommend it for sure.

    • @TheBonkleFox
      @TheBonkleFox Před 11 měsíci +8

      I know Shaun also has his video on "The bell curve."

    • @sashakruezhev9555
      @sashakruezhev9555 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You mean the guy who embarassed himself on JRE? If his show is as poorly researched with strong beliefs as what he previously demonstrated I don't think it's a good source of debunking anything.

    • @confustled
      @confustled Před 7 měsíci +8

      ​@@sashakruezhev9555they have a team of researchers and they always put their sources onscreen. they even did an episode once that pointed out and corrected a couple mistakes they made in the past.

  • @lilithalieno5795
    @lilithalieno5795 Před rokem +20

    My IQ is 140, but I’m an human disaster, Jordan.

    • @heythisanimalcantalk
      @heythisanimalcantalk Před rokem +9

      IQ is academic smarts but no amount of academic smarts will help us get our shit in order

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 Před rokem +1

      have you tried cleaning your room?

    • @lilithalieno5795
      @lilithalieno5795 Před rokem +5

      @@thejuiceking2219 omg, this is life changing, thanks 🤩

    • @thejuiceking2219
      @thejuiceking2219 Před rokem

      @@lilithalieno5795 and while you're at it, stop saying and doing stupid things

    • @thecjweej2761
      @thecjweej2761 Před 9 měsíci

      Something something go to church something something snowflake something something Im an asshole

  • @Zahaqiel
    @Zahaqiel Před rokem +771

    Ah yes, Jordan "It's impossible to train people to be creative, adaptive thinkers" Peterson. A psychological inspiration for the ages - the only psychologist who's willing to tell you he can't make you a better person, even while he sells books telling you he can make you a better person. It's that creative, adaptive thinking of his that does it. You just can't teach that! And neither can he.

    • @vaiyt
      @vaiyt Před rokem

      The idea is that YOU,who's primed to believe him, are special person material, while THEY who don't are hopeless idiots. It's nothing but the same flattery tactic that gives us Randroids.

    • @Mieze0503
      @Mieze0503 Před rokem +9

      Gold

    • @milofitness7726
      @milofitness7726 Před rokem +2

      His book is about fixing your life not about being more adaptive and creative this point doesnt make sense

    • @Zahaqiel
      @Zahaqiel Před rokem +37

      @@milofitness7726 And how does a non-creative, non-adaptive person fix their life exactly? How does one non-creatively, non-adaptively figure out what in their life is "broken"? How does someone take some very generic BS (admittedly wrapped up in some creatively adapted BS to hide how very, painfully generic it is) and apply it to their life without some level of creativity and adaptability?
      Then again, JP doesn't even follow his own books, so I guess the answer is that they don't. But perhaps you begin to see the point.

    • @hambospictures
      @hambospictures Před rokem +3

      Hahaha one of the best jokes/points I have ever heard

  • @tos100returns
    @tos100returns Před rokem +140

    I took an IQ test and scored very well. And yet, I am unemployable because I've committed the crime of being over 50 years of age. The system is broken.

    • @dolfuny
      @dolfuny Před rokem +17

      Truly an unforgivable crime lol

    • @bestaround3323
      @bestaround3323 Před rokem +20

      How dare you be over 50? You clearly need life in prison to straighten that issue out.

  • @kotyrollins
    @kotyrollins Před rokem +37

    Also that "fat" woman isnt fat at all, and incredibly hot, just saying.

    • @DDub04
      @DDub04 Před měsícem +11

      Those things aren’t mutually exclusive. She is both.

    • @guaranteedtopwn
      @guaranteedtopwn Před 5 dny

      no she is fat actually you don't need to lie.

  • @axtract
    @axtract Před 7 měsíci +4

    Joel, I just wanted to compliment you on your oratory and delivery of this video. You make a lot of points I don't agree with, but you deliver your arguments in an extremely convincing manner. Keep it up!

  • @IgN5P
    @IgN5P Před rokem +246

    "Other people aren't the problem"
    - bullies are not the problem
    - systemic failures are not the problem
    - rapists are not the problem
    - abusers are not the problem
    - the biases and failings of MDs and other elements in the system are not the problem
    "You are the problem!"
    - Jordan Peterson

    • @ernestoacosta7918
      @ernestoacosta7918 Před rokem +28

      He’s a neoliberal, everything is your own fault, mostly the failings that are not in your control

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 Před rokem

      @@ernestoacosta7918 F this "neoliberal" BS. He's a neocon/conservative /rightwing extremist hypocrite.

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 Před rokem

      Then JP cannot say criminals or terrorists or protestors or violent protestors are a problem, or Antinatalists like me trying to outlaw people having kids, or the IPCC, or climate activists, or animal rights vegans like myself trying to shut down factory farms.

    • @SpydrXIII
      @SpydrXIII Před rokem +25

      yes, jordan peterson IS the problem.

    • @user-ix9lx4sp1z
      @user-ix9lx4sp1z Před rokem +4

      I'm 14 and this is deep bro

  • @grizcuz
    @grizcuz Před rokem +315

    I think it was in the second year of my psych degree when someone asked a lecturer if childhood IQ scores was a good determinant of adult success. Her reply was that IQ alone didn't map to the highest scores being the most successful. There's far too many other variables at play for it to be a simple positive correlation. Then she said something that I've always remembered and this was 30 years ago. "There's people who could easily complete a doctorate sleeping on a park bench and people who can barely read or write that are multimillionaires".

    • @r_se
      @r_se Před rokem

      i dont think he would argue that its the only variable or that smart poor people dont exist. and you should probably google what a correlation is. but jp does (to varying degrees of intentionality) make it easy for his audience to misconstrue simple facts in support of reacrionary talking points. if you take time to dig into him you'll find fairly liberal (not speaking about the american democratic liberal sense of the word), moderate, right leaning views on social issues, but he presents things in such a way that his audience will generally use his videos, books, etc. to support more radical views.

    • @grizcuz
      @grizcuz Před rokem +55

      @@r_se I know perfectly well just what a correlation is, thank you very much. Nobody with any expertise in anything that he takes a position on treats what he says as worthy of taking into account. He's the intellectual for people who don't know what they're talking about, pretty much like you by the sound of it.

    • @johnnygoodman2003
      @johnnygoodman2003 Před rokem

      IQ was invented by the French public school system to justify giving foreign students in France a lower quality education system than French born students.

    • @nfzeta128
      @nfzeta128 Před rokem +45

      @@r_se "but he presents things in such a way that his audience will generally use his videos, books, etc. to support more radical views."
      That's because that's their purpose and always has been. His entire line of thinking leads to right wing radical views. Any liberal lean is completely surface level and pretty much a mirage.

    • @youtubespag
      @youtubespag Před rokem +5

      @@r_se just look at him now

  • @renendell
    @renendell Před 11 měsíci +7

    It's just eugenics wearing a mustache and a funny hat.

  • @gavinthejanitor
    @gavinthejanitor Před 9 měsíci +8

    took some random online iq test the other week and got ~130, guess i'm off to law school, jordan peterson really has changed my life

  • @austinwinstead6543
    @austinwinstead6543 Před rokem +628

    Jordan Peterson’s assertion that “IQ is the metric that determines if someone is good and/or capable of anything” is essentially just eugenics. I am shocked that a University ever let him teach.

    • @joshuahitchins1897
      @joshuahitchins1897 Před rokem +159

      There's a reason he says "there isn't a good solution" because he damn well knows what final solution he is gesturing towards.

    • @lord125000
      @lord125000 Před rokem +35

      The funny thing is, I recently watched a video that did an analysis on JBP (I can't remember the video off the top of my head) but it went a bit on how he got into being a professor at the University of Toronto. He got referred for the position from another prof there that had a really good impression from a speach or presentation that he did, saying it helped him in his personal life. Then after Peterson started teaching and students were like" He chamged my life and stuff" and the guy that reffered him saw that JP was a really good motivatinal coach and stuff, but he didn't really teach the subject of psychology very well to the stundents.
      They came out of the class more as if they went to a Tony Robbins speach or similar.
      If I remember the video I'll link it here.

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 Před rokem +12

      @@lord125000 Are you talking about the fairly recent Some More News video on him?

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 Před rokem +32

      Even if you want to buy into it: An IQ of below 85 (or 87, as shown in the list of jobs) is ridiculously high for someone to be considered incapable of doing any kind of useful job. I've both worked as a cleaner and spent a significant amount of time around people who have IQs of between 50 and 85. An IQ of 50 is absolutely compatible with working a useful job. In some cases, these jobs would need to be adjusted (less unwarranted "I don't need to show you how to do your job, I am not responsible for it, just do it" in situation where it is extremely unclear what the "obvious" way to do that job could be and with which very intelligent people struggle just as much if not more), and in some cases you could leave them exactly as they are (or make them a bit more challenging, to prevent bore-out).

    • @camelopardalis84
      @camelopardalis84 Před rokem +33

      Also, since when is it actually necessary for everybody to work? So much nonsense work is being done. You could easily make the cut-off at an IQ of 100 and say that everybody with a lower IQ (and below the age of, say, 20) is forbidden to work, and still end up with a perfectly functional society.

  • @Gh0sb0ss
    @Gh0sb0ss Před rokem +167

    When asked in a 2004 interview with The New York Times what his IQ is, Stephen Hawking gave a curt reply: "I have no idea. People who boast about their IQ are losers."

    • @adamoutaleb7571
      @adamoutaleb7571 Před rokem

      ahh yes lets ask a physicist a psychological question and take his answer as truth

    • @fpedrosa2076
      @fpedrosa2076 Před rokem +13

      @@adamoutaleb7571 1st - I think you mean 'psychology question' rather than 'psychological question'. The 1st is a question regarding psychology, the 2nd is a question that affects the asked person mentally or psychologically.
      2nd - Most actual psychologists don't see IQ scores as a big deal either, and certainly not indicative of intelligence.

    • @mohamedwalidoutaleb4970
      @mohamedwalidoutaleb4970 Před rokem

      @@fpedrosa2076 hi it’s me on another account
      1. yes this is what I meant
      2. Every psychologists you’ll go too will use iq test to help diagnosis with adhd, autism, nvld, learning disabilities

    • @Gh0sb0ss
      @Gh0sb0ss Před rokem +7

      @@adamoutaleb7571 i'm sorry but im pretty sure stephen hawking was smarter than you or I will ever be

    • @adamoutaleb7571
      @adamoutaleb7571 Před rokem

      @@Gh0sb0ss YeS because einstein beileved in a god god is real

  • @cel2651
    @cel2651 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Your analyses are so good! Compelling. What a gift

  • @sandrols7
    @sandrols7 Před rokem +15

    During my College years, I was for the first time kinda made to really depend on myself and my own adulting skills: working, planning out costs and money, all that.
    I, who was a kid who, by some IQ tests (yes, plural) had a pretty high IQ.
    And I was an idiot in handling my money, I can safely say!
    Now though, I have grown to be smarter with it, because of experience, because I started looking at ways to spend it more carefully, and use sales in the grocery store and all that, or by dressing up much warmer during winter to save on gas, or by spending more time with other people, either at my place or at theirs, to sort of save on that.
    Part of that came from other students, either on campus or in the same classroom, sharing their tricks to save money. A few of us even shared which grocery chains sold the most important products at a discount at any given time, so we could save money every week.
    It didn't take high IQ to manage this. It took experience and helping each other out. Jordan Peterson is a quack

  • @chelsgo8675
    @chelsgo8675 Před rokem +663

    Ever since I watched Shaun's video on The Bell Curve, any time I hear someone bring up IQ my brain instinctively waits for them to bring up racial differences. And given enough time, they'll do it almost without fail.

    • @MCArt25
      @MCArt25 Před rokem +119

      It's the "I'm not racist, but..." of social science

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB Před rokem +94

      The funny thing is, if there are “racial” differences, the actual difference is culture. Standardized tests are apparently harder for people outside a very specific culture.

    • @sneakyjeeves5785
      @sneakyjeeves5785 Před rokem +40

      Yeah, totally, me too. I'm always waiting for something eugenics-y.

    • @Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh
      @Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh Před rokem +22

      @@sneakyjeeves5785 Yep! Always reminds me of phrenology too.

    • @KingBobXVI
      @KingBobXVI Před rokem +6

      I know you're just covering your bases with the "almost" in there, but I really don't feel like it's necessary, lol

  • @mcarpen89
    @mcarpen89 Před rokem +438

    He words his arguments very cleverly to absolve himself of the burden of proof. 8:39 "The relationship between poverty and intelligence is self-evident if you're willing to think it through for any length of time." In other words, if this relationship he claims exists is NOT self-evident to you, you simply haven't thought about it enough.

    • @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327
      @imnotnotgameiacmaniac5327 Před rokem +62

      he does this so much its infuriating he always words it in a way that claims you are stupid of delusional if you don't agree with him without actually saying it

    • @inefffable
      @inefffable Před rokem +40

      Really, the only credit I can give JP is that his words are clever, but, as you pointed out, it's not to provide clarity: it's only to obfuscate the points he wants to stay hidden/ignored. The fact he got so lost in the culture war over the last few years and exposed himself as an intellectual fraud was p hilarious to me.

    • @Mathee
      @Mathee Před rokem +33

      So basically an Emperor's New Clothes argument: "Only people who are smart can see this; if you can't see this, it's because you're an idiot"

    • @paulsmart4672
      @paulsmart4672 Před rokem +1

      It *is* self-evident if you're willing to consider it for any length of time, though. It's just that Peterson isn't willing.

    • @Graknorke
      @Graknorke Před rokem +5

      this proof is left as an exercise for the listener

  • @EliStettner
    @EliStettner Před rokem +4

    You're so incredibly right. Also your voice is soothingly poetic.

  • @Palindrone-lj3fo
    @Palindrone-lj3fo Před rokem +18

    My parents told me my IQ is in the low 140s, which is perfect because I can almost understand the plot of most Rick and Morty episodes. Thanks genetics!

  • @sierrafarnum9689
    @sierrafarnum9689 Před rokem +437

    A popular phrase I've heard in my Psych BA and my research position which studies cognitive development is "intelligence is what intelligence tests measure". When testing for a construct, you want to know what the construct is first so that you can then make a valid test. The problem with intelligence is, no one really knows what it is. If you don't know how to define intelligence, how are you supposed to make a test with construct validity? IQ tests reveal how well you've done on the test, not necessarily how intelligent you are.

    • @susanatkinson3978
      @susanatkinson3978 Před rokem +7

      Yes! Thank you!

    • @adamoutaleb7571
      @adamoutaleb7571 Před rokem +1

      okay but iq is the scientific way to approach the concept of intelligence

    • @calisto789
      @calisto789 Před rokem +48

      @@adamoutaleb7571 no it isn't.

    • @adamoutaleb7571
      @adamoutaleb7571 Před rokem +3

      @@calisto789 ok so iq test started with an observation : people who tend to be intelligent in one task ex : mathematics tend to be intellingent in other tasks by intelligent i mean better than others. this discovery sparked the idea of a general intelligence and the creation of the g-factor that is supposed to indicate how high this general intelligence is. and then we find out that this general intelligence is way more general than we tought its every thing that demand abstaction : language, memory, everything that uses your brain. if you are better at one of them you are usually better in everything that demand your brain. and we created iq test to mesure your "g" the first iq test were heavily influenced by your level of education and your culture but we have perfected them to the point that no matter how much you studied for them you cant score better they correlate at .9 to .95 to your "g"

    • @calisto789
      @calisto789 Před rokem +60

      @@adamoutaleb7571 There no consensus agreement on "general intelligence" metrics that could include every variable needed to quantify a humans worth in society. That why no professional industry uses it to determine who they employ. They test for relevant skills in their field. A mathematician in a jungle is basically an invalid compared to a preteen member of a local tribe with intimate knowledge of how to survive in that environment. In that way, the tribe would likely consider the mathematician an idiot for his lack of knowledge of the forrest. But hes not dumb generally. Neither is the tribe generally. They grew up in distinct environments that facilitate certain skills, knowledge or ease at aqiuring those things. Take a baby from that tribe into the city to be adopted by professionals of some sort and that child will very likely grow up to be one themselves. Bring a baby born from a professional couple and raise them to live in a jungle, they will learn whatever their environment demands of them.
      Human being are very adaptable and iq just isnt a very helpful metric when it comes to solving social problems.

  • @phaerlax
    @phaerlax Před rokem +372

    I like it when big joel is challenged by insane tweets

    • @sista363
      @sista363 Před rokem +2

      OMG i thought you are AOC😭😭

    • @phaerlax
      @phaerlax Před rokem +4

      I'm her cousin ey

    • @Shaggy.Vibes-
      @Shaggy.Vibes- Před rokem +1

      @@sista363 All women on the left look the same.

    • @sista363
      @sista363 Před rokem +19

      @@Shaggy.Vibes- yeah. They look like ✨QUEENS ✨. Beautiful smart and they slay

    • @Shaggy.Vibes-
      @Shaggy.Vibes- Před rokem +10

      @@sista363 that's right.

  • @AviKats66
    @AviKats66 Před rokem +9

    There’s an important difference between “thinking things through” and “thinking things through after actually confirming or at least reasonably evidencing the facts, information, and ideas behind said things.”

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci +1

      And acknowledging how personal biases may be colouring how you interpret what you read and compensating if you think it occurs.

  • @loupax
    @loupax Před rokem +6

    I really like the "put your house in order before saying anything".
    Like the people that decide the policies that affect our lives have their houses in order.

  • @DrakeCaliburn
    @DrakeCaliburn Před rokem +876

    Peterson: "You're poor because you're stupid."
    Me, someone who is unemployed with a masters in bio science and has an IQ of 145: "Hold on there. I think you are missing a lot of things."
    P.S. I know IQ doesn't mean jackshit but the fact that I am unemployed even though I have a Master's degree is probably more about the systemic stigma of disabled people (yes, I am wheelchair bound)

    • @isaganipalanca8803
      @isaganipalanca8803 Před rokem +56

      I remember a pandering online site "estimating" IQ scores of celebrities giving Trump an IQ of 160...

    • @theomegajuice8660
      @theomegajuice8660 Před rokem +97

      @@isaganipalanca8803 Lol, I think they might have mixed that up with his cholesterol or his resting heart rate

    • @rockfire1669
      @rockfire1669 Před rokem +4

      Nah bro. If they bring out IQ, what right do they have to you for you to tell the truth. Like holy shit, if they are that high on their stuff BECAUSE of their IQ, see if they can even try to prove it.

    • @vladys5238
      @vladys5238 Před rokem +1

      You don't have to respond but as a university chemistry student I am wondering do you have special accomodations to work in a lab or are you not doing lab work? Most apparatus i had to set up it's hard for me to imagine how someone in a wheelchair would do. Or is it that in bioscience most things you work with are level and can be done in a wheelchair?

    • @DrakeCaliburn
      @DrakeCaliburn Před rokem +39

      @@vladys5238 I went into human biology because I wanted to research how pollution affects people's health. I'm wheelchair bound because of the pollution where I grew up, so I've been trying to find a job in that field that could accommodate my disability. To be fair, I just graduated two months ago but having nothing to do is driving me insane. I do have a friend in the same field is working on getting me to be his research assistant, so it's not all bad. I'm just pointing out flaws in Peterson's logic with my own experiences

  • @nalivai4862
    @nalivai4862 Před rokem +604

    I took two IQ tests in my life, one when I was a kid in a relatively poor family, in a country that just went through a revolution. My IQ was quite low at the time, according to the objective list presented by professor here, I was destined to be somewhere between mechanic and "factory production assembler". Later in life, my saint mother moved mountains to give me the ability to educate myself, (useless endeavor, according to esteemed professor, it's not like I can move stratas), our country got more stable and our financial situation got way better, and I took that test second time at the end of my uni. I got very high numbers this time, high enough to even maybe be a "Trainee" (really, professor, trainee? Just, like, in general?).
    Clearly all of this means that I am unique creature that could somehow defy my preexistent faith and jump from one group to another. I still don't know how it is possible, but as the only person on the planet who is able to do that, I think I need to be studied by the best iqologists out there. Maybe have my skull dimples measured or whatever real science they do

    • @bob-ng7ol
      @bob-ng7ol Před rokem

      @@stephen1744 hasn’t thought of this cheers

    • @Junosensei
      @Junosensei Před rokem +55

      @@stephen1744 - I'm a geneticist and nothing of what you've said about this author or book sounds particularly controversial. It's also entirely possible we could, in time, learn about a non-zero innate genetic influence on IQ score.
      But IQ tests were created to evaluate a specific type of audience in a specific cultural and linguistic context, tailored to value certain cognitive skills _or_ ways of measuring those cognitive skills over others, meaning results are often self-fulfilling (eg. people who grow up in an environment that emphasizes verbal communication over numeric cognition are going to have an advantage in verbal IQ tests, but struggle with non-verbal IQ tests). We've never really been able to universally define "intelligence" outside of a very niche, culturally-specific context, so using IQ to determine this sounds like circular reasoning to me.
      It is also not particularly surprising that IQ tests can predict future "success" (which is the only angle it has been utilized in any meaningful way in science) because a lot of potential factors that influence IQ might also influence future success, but that doesn't mean IQ tests are useful for rating one's inherent genetic potential to become successful. Genetics alone cannot account for the multitude of variables that would affect cognition, intelligence, and/or success. IQ does have a few small uses in science, but they're very limited for this very reason.

    • @user-pd5ot4zd4b
      @user-pd5ot4zd4b Před rokem +44

      @@stephen1744 I don't think the OP is trashing the notion that IQ has any predictive power, but he is making fun of the idea that a test taken at a specific time is an immutable predictor of future performance. The environment and resources available to the test taker prior to the test have been shown to impact the score. Peterson seems to throw his hands up and say, these folks are dumdums, hard problem, hand them a broom, while OP seems to suggest that policy changes could provide the environment that moves people closer to their natural limits. These "optimized" folks maybe get a wrench instead of a broom, live a better life, produce more, win -win, etc, blah blah. As far as I can tell, JP doesn't really address this possibility beyond scoffing at the idea of training a dumdum to be a software engineer, though I don't think anyone is suggesting that. I dunno, wicked tough problem man (throws hands up) :D

    • @psychicbyinternet
      @psychicbyinternet Před rokem +11

      I think IQ tests are usually more based around education than intelligence so that would probably explain it.

    • @jo1stormlord
      @jo1stormlord Před rokem +12

      @@stephen1744 'Intelligence is highly heritable and predicts important educational, occupational and health outcomes better than any other trait.' Hard disagree. It is too wide a claim to be of any use. How do you define intelligence? How do you measure intelligence? How do you define educational, occupational and health outcomes?
      Also, there is a different sort of intelligence, like emotional intelligence or, for the lack of better word, physical intelligence. Some people are abstract thinkers. Other learn by doing.
      Anecdote time (I know you hate it because it is unscientific)!
      One of my best friends has only high school, economist vocation. His mother is college educated accountant. His father is high school educated metal worker. His sister has finished college as a technical designer. He might not have a college diploma and he might suck when it comes to math and calculations and, for the lack of better name, brute force problem solving. What he has instead is highly developed emotional intelligence. He is great at sales (including selling himself to an employer) and the way he solves a technical problem (for example, my MS Word document is out of alignment) is "try myself for half an hour, then call somebody else to fix it for me". Thus showing delegation and managerial skills.
      Now, if you took and measured his intelligence with a paper or online IQ test, you'll get a solid 93, maybe 97 IQ. But if you gave him oral test, his natural charisma and quick-wittedness would give you much higher score. He now works as business analyst and occasional tester, after years of successful career as a salesman.
      So, what would you say his intelligence is? What would you say are his occupational outcomes?

  • @joshuaa7266
    @joshuaa7266 Před rokem +11

    Lately I've been a little skeptical concerning IQ, mainly regarding what it is measured and how they know their measurements are right. When calibrating a speedometer, you can verify the measurement is correct by measuring how long a vehicle takes to travel a known distance and using the correct formula. With IQ, there doesn't appear to be a straightforward test like that, and I haven't even heard what exactly IQ is measuring from people who strongly advocate for it.
    That isn't to say I don't think people have different characteristics. I just think they can't be accurately summed up in one number, and it would be far more beneficial to use a number of tests to learn more about a person's strengths and weaknesses.

  • @christiananderson142
    @christiananderson142 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Pulling yourself up by your bootstraps is *literally* *impossible.* Why do people keep repeating this phrase?!
    The level of unintentional irony in using that phrase as an synonym for "effort," is so high, it gives me nosebleeds.

  • @liamking5142
    @liamking5142 Před rokem +1296

    It is extraordinary how long I was able to be a fan of Jordan Peterson's early lectures, assuming he was talking in good faith and that the problems he raised were meant in the spirit of improving people's wellbeing, like an actual lecturer in psychology concerned with the question of meaning whose solution to nihilism was "orient away from Nazi death camps."
    Hearing him say "10% of the population have trouble with the complexity of modern occupations and we haven't done anything to address this" back in 2015: damn straight, we need to revolutionise work and make it less needlessly bullshit.
    Hearing him say it now, in an interview with Stefan Molyneux, and go "I don't have a solution": god damn, it's going to be death camps, isn't it.

    • @randyohm3445
      @randyohm3445 Před rokem

      It's a fair bet that any time a conservative raises a problem but doesn't want to talk about solutions, it's because their preferred solution is too monstrous to say in public and they want you to draw that conclusion on your own so they can maintain deniability.

    • @kevinsantillans7415
      @kevinsantillans7415 Před rokem +72

      Yes, considering the public he has this guy' ideas are dangerous.

    • @mjcrom
      @mjcrom Před rokem +1

      Be fair, it might not be eugenicist death camps… it might be eugenicist sterilization programs.

    • @Scootfairy
      @Scootfairy Před rokem

      I agree. When Jordan said 10-15% can’t contribute to society, but I don’t “have a solution”, it does sound like, “I can’t say the solution out loud but if you’re a white supremisist, you know what I mean, wink wink.”

    • @valentine2911
      @valentine2911 Před rokem +57

      He is the warm-up act for Final Solution 2

  • @knastvogel
    @knastvogel Před rokem +292

    Jordan Peterson is the regular conservative person's idea of a smart person.

    • @Clipzilla42
      @Clipzilla42 Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/sJ6spWuioFg/video.html
      Can’t wait for SnA to dissect this video hoo boy

    • @kyledesilva1589
      @kyledesilva1589 Před rokem

      No, he's roped even relatively moderate or even progressive minded people into believing he's smart. No, he's simply the dumb person's idea of a smart person. Dumb people will gravitate towards him from all walks of life.

    • @marxist-leninist-protagonist
      @marxist-leninist-protagonist Před rokem +21

      I used to think he was so smart because I couldn't understand a single point he'd make. Now I realize he simply never says anything worth listening to.

    • @rediz5557
      @rediz5557 Před rokem +8

      my dad would fall for this man's bullshit IMMEDIATELY lmao

  • @kensley8502
    @kensley8502 Před rokem +6

    Why does Jordan Peterson sound more like a preacher than a lecturer

  • @sarahcullen5690
    @sarahcullen5690 Před 11 měsíci +8

    We all agree that Jordan Peterson is obviously extremely attracted to fat women and is deeply afraid of admitting it even to himself, right?

    • @user-ew2sz3ez4n
      @user-ew2sz3ez4n Před 11 měsíci

      Lmao. But fr the only reasonable issue is this was a sports magazine, as to suggest you can be chonky and sporty

    • @sarahcullen5690
      @sarahcullen5690 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@user-ew2sz3ez4n Good thing you quite obviously can be chonky and sporty. In fact there are lots of sports where it would be weird if you weren't!

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci

      @@user-ew2sz3ez4n You should see women weight lifters, they make this lady look petit.

  • @christopherrushdudley
    @christopherrushdudley Před rokem +229

    The worst thing about Peterson is that he pulls in a certain demographic that is genuinely seeking reason and meaning, and he fills that need with his weird, vacuous, dog-eat-dog nonsense.

    • @facelessdrone
      @facelessdrone Před rokem

      Yeah, the ammount of otherwise genuinely smart people ive met that believe his dogshit? Its embarrassing and pathetic that he hasn't been laughed to hell publicly on all platforms for all the joker fans and intellectually dishonest tryhards to feel some real shame in their life for falling for his manipulation. Because thats all it is, he plays the part of pretending to be a woke smart guy, but he's really just some old coot that took drugs once and thinks that means he's enlightened and more socially aware than everybody combined, he's the type to dismiss Stephen Hawking for being "too woke" as if empathy and a nuanced understanding of others is a bad thing...

    • @wildoaklane3
      @wildoaklane3 Před rokem +10

      His videos are a good stepping stone to reaction videos like this

    • @christopherrushdudley
      @christopherrushdudley Před rokem +6

      @@wildoaklane3
      That's a good point.

    • @igoralmeida9136
      @igoralmeida9136 Před rokem

      very similar to socialists

    • @nfzeta128
      @nfzeta128 Před rokem +5

      @@wildoaklane3 or much, much worse videos.

  • @realitypoet
    @realitypoet Před rokem +239

    SI has been in the process of rebranding their swimsuit issue to be a women-centered lifestyle magazine more than catering to men for a few years now, and I had the joy of being put in charge of SI’s customer service line right when that change started - and since I had nobody to tell me what I could or couldn’t say since the company was in the middle of a big restructuring and they replaced the whole customer service team with me I had the freedom to pretty much tell a bunch of angry men to shove it and we already have their money so there’s nothing they can do about it bc we don’t give refunds to entitled pricks. It was great.

    • @doublinx2
      @doublinx2 Před rokem +41

      Unimaginably based

    • @nfzeta128
      @nfzeta128 Před rokem +10

      This why you don't get too attached to brands, especially in today's world. One, because brand doesn't mean what it used to; two, because there will always be some other brand or company that will come along to fill in the gap once the demand is there.

    • @realitypoet
      @realitypoet Před rokem +59

      @@nfzeta128 yeah they did lose a lot of subscribers but they got a lot better brand deals, celebrity partnerships and ad revenue that way more than made up for the decrease in sales so all in all it was a good business decision regardless of the boomer dudes who can’t figure out how to Google image search for women in bikinis

    • @nfzeta128
      @nfzeta128 Před rokem +17

      @@realitypoet Honestly conservatively minded people have such a weird way of thinking it intrigues me sometimes, when it isn't annoying me that is.

    • @VesnaVK
      @VesnaVK Před rokem +2

      Isn't that bait and switch, though? If my Family Handyman rebranded to be a cooking magazine halfway through my subscription, I'd call for a refund. I guess that would make me an entitled prick? To assume I was entitled to the thing I bought, instead of some random other thing?

  • @Anark
    @Anark Před rokem +9

    I think this was one of the best argued video essays you've created. It has very substantive rebuttals to each of Peterson's positions and maintains nuance and subtlety throughout.

  • @KattReen
    @KattReen Před rokem +21

    People not being able to handle money due to mental illness, addiction and disability is certainly real and present in society, and in most countries they solve that by having something like a conservatorship that is handled by government employees, relatives or volunteers. Transparency is important, and you're usually not allowed to enrich yourself through it since that would be incredibly immoral. I mean, who would possibly want to systematically prey on the most vulnerable people in society through weird for profit shenanigans anyways?

    • @siukong
      @siukong Před 11 měsíci +6

      I don't know if your last question is genuine, or sarcastic/rhetorical. But there are definitely immoral scumbags who would prey on (or at least try to prey on) people in such a system. As you mention, transparency and oversight would be critical components for combatting this.

  • @sugarfrosted2005
    @sugarfrosted2005 Před rokem +313

    It turns out that "it's really complicated to explain why" he thinks they're DNA means it came to him in a hallucination. He thinks he saw DNA when he was on shrooms. And he believes in a collective unconscious. Those combined gets there. He explained it in a discussion with Richard Dawkins.

    • @elvingearmasterirma7241
      @elvingearmasterirma7241 Před rokem +82

      Okay who let him do mushrooms

    • @rgs8970
      @rgs8970 Před rokem +22

      oh boy

    • @marspower1288
      @marspower1288 Před rokem +44

      bruhhhh this man is unhinged, I feel bad for anyone to have ever been his student or patient

    • @AZ-ty7ub
      @AZ-ty7ub Před rokem +35

      He takes his belief in a collective unconscious and takes that to mean Joseph Campbell's monomyth (which is not actually universal) is a result of the collective human subconcious and that archetypes are real and should be enforced.
      It's bonkers.

    • @Romanticoutlaw
      @Romanticoutlaw Před rokem +5

      somehow this doesn't surprise me

  • @theviewer6889
    @theviewer6889 Před rokem +2551

    I was I a family iq test as a toddler, where me and my mum were tested. Based on what my mum said, the two of us did far far better than was predicted compared to our social class and family education history. The reason? My mum travelled as a young adult, she saved for years to backpack across europe and the USA. She fully admits that the only reason she could answer half of these questions was cause she learned while travelling. And, as an overly curious child, she taught me stuff.
    Basically, the test was far easier to pass if you were upper class and had taken a European centric education. I.E. it was really crappy science. If it had instead had a far heavier knowledge focuse on things more common in the working class, like local info, trade skills, etc. then it would have produced entirely different results.

    • @tomislavnekic5306
      @tomislavnekic5306 Před rokem +82

      Did you ever see a question from the IQ test? What has "backpacking Europe" got anything to do with it?

    • @pissapocalypse
      @pissapocalypse Před rokem +216

      @@tomislavnekic5306 Their mom backpacked through Europe and the iq test was apparently centered around European knowledge, so that's why they scored well.

    • @theviewer6889
      @theviewer6889 Před rokem +197

      @@tomislavnekic5306 UK based IQ test had an upper middle class European focus. That bias gave my fam an advantage.
      Granted, this was almost 20 years ago so things have probably changed since then, but based on what I've seen, there is still a bias against knowledge morr commonly held by immigrants and working class folk.

    • @tenaar
      @tenaar Před rokem +205

      @@tomislavnekic5306 I scored a 120 IQ on my test when I was in 5th grade. Why? Because in 2001, IQ tests in Norway were largely problem solving and pattern recognition. Having undiagnosed ASD at the time, that was my jam and I aced it.
      Today I'm on disability for life and have been since I turned 18.
      IQ tests are complete bogus & rely too much on specific themes without accounting for the collective intelligence of a person, and they are often tailored in such a way that if you don't have a brain disorder, your performance is better if you have wealth and/or are of a specific class of people or higher (usually white middle class).
      The end result of this is that IQ ends up being used solely as a classification and justification of the abuse of people of colour, who for many obvious reasons (least of which the systemic racism which keeps people of colour from buying certain property easily, pick up high paying jobs, often makes it hard if not impossible for children of colour to get access to better schools & generally gets in the way of them climbing the classes) struggle many places in the West and especially in America.
      Community also affects the results of IQ tests as well as level of segregation (which is still a thing in practice though not in law).
      In short, IQ has to do with "backpacking in Europe" because IQ is less of a measure of intelligence, & more of a measure of how wealthy (and especially in the US, how white) you are.

    • @angeloskoulas3988
      @angeloskoulas3988 Před rokem +41

      @@theviewer6889 But the IQ test is just math and logic puzzles, how does traveling places help you? I get that it can help you indirectly by making you more curious and more likely to study, but not directly.

  • @AnimatedLoopHD
    @AnimatedLoopHD Před 11 měsíci +25

    My IQ was 90 when I took it (10 years ago, age 23). I did well in high school, but I never went to college. And yet, I taught my self 2D and 3D animation and have worked on music videos and tour visuals for bands like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Incubus, Bad Bunny, and many more. I run an online animation studio and am completely financially self-sustained from it. But I have a poor IQ score. I'd like to hear Peterson's thoughts on this.
    From what I've read, IQ tests can be helpful at diagnosing some learning disabilities, but is it possible we put too much stock into these tests? What do they really measure? I suck at tests in general because I think long and hard about things. Tests prioritize quick problem solving skills and memorization. I'm slow to make decisions, but does this mean I'm dumb? People are different, and we shouldn't punish people for thinking differently. There's a theory of multiple intelligence, and many forms of intelligence can't be easily measured through standardized testing. Creativity operates on a different wave length. My personal life experience is a contradiction to Peterson's hypothesis that IQ predicts success. How many people have you heard of who brag about having a high IQ score and yet don't produce or do anything notable with that IQ.
    Saying you have a high IQ is just a fancy way to say you have high insecurity.

    • @Hostefar
      @Hostefar Před 11 měsíci +13

      10 points off from the average makes way less of a difference than people think. And most people who brag about their iq just took a 10 minute online test anyway

    • @darkmatter9643
      @darkmatter9643 Před 11 měsíci +8

      an iq test does not measure intelligence, instead measures your aptitude in taking iq tests

    • @piprolling7303
      @piprolling7303 Před 10 měsíci +2

      IQ changes with education, it is not an objective value of how “smart” you are

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Honestly I'd say thinking long and hard about things before reaching a conclusion is a type of thinking that's desperately needed these days. Way too many people reaching snap judgments and making unwise tweets because they believe they're being smart.

  • @LarsIsFromMars
    @LarsIsFromMars Před 11 měsíci +1

    I adore how continues the "brief" joke from the Some More News video

  • @christopherkapeleris5216
    @christopherkapeleris5216 Před rokem +106

    I love how Big Joel has just grown more and more to look like an ancient Greek philosopher over the past years

  • @Dekubud
    @Dekubud Před rokem +1304

    As someone with a bachelor in Psychology and who was trained in psychometry... every one of my teachers warned us against using IQ as anything more than an academic success predictor. My psychology statistics teacher especially made sure to debunk The Bell Curve (without naming the book) during one of our first classes. This teacher trained us on administering an outdated version of the IQ test and one of our tasks was to point out where the test was lacking and how to account for it in our evaluation.
    IQ can be a useful metric to determine if someone is having a hard time learning and can sometimes give a bit of an indication as to why it's the case, but it's an incredibly faillible test that must be administered with a lot of care and its results read with even more care.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem +11

      >every one of my teachers warned us against using IQ as anything more than an academic success predictor
      Lol. What makes academic success different from everything else in the world?
      >IQ can be a useful metric to determine if someone is having a hard time learning
      Which a lot of people here are denying precisely just because of the attitude spread by your teachers. There is nothing academic about this, it's purely about giving in to social pressure.
      >but it's an incredibly faillible test that must be administered with a lot of care
      Bullshit. Compared to what? What test in psychometry is less "fallible"?
      It's measures the MOST reliable and meaningful quanity in all of psychometry, *g* .

    • @blvckdrako4334
      @blvckdrako4334 Před rokem +132

      @@MrCmon113 academic success is way less affected by luck and way more affected by competence than the real world success I'm sure you know that

    • @popdop0074
      @popdop0074 Před rokem +14

      Academic success predictor? Maybe in some ways but would things like mental health problems or attention issues not significantly lower someone's academic success. Schooling sounds like more a predictor of effort than anything else.

    • @Griot.7294
      @Griot.7294 Před rokem +2

      But doesn't your productivity, education and problem solving abilities have strong implications when it comes to the workplace?

    • @popdop0074
      @popdop0074 Před rokem +27

      @@Griot.7294 To a degree but these factors, I would assume, get less apparent as time goes on as people tend to get paid by wage and not by performance. Not to mention that there's just so many factors and every single one of them in a person's life will contribute in some way. Mental illness, relationships, family, substance misuse, or a myriad of other things would for sure impact work performance.

  • @d.lan3y
    @d.lan3y Před rokem +7

    you just KNOW that jordan peterson would become a phrenologist so quickly if he didn't know it would ruin his reputation

  • @cameron8772
    @cameron8772 Před rokem +16

    iq is kinda crazy when you think about what factors into how someone preforms on tests. i have taken iq test and scored high(130-135), and other times i’ve scored lower (90-110). the world is more complicated than tests and its sad we hammer this into kids

  • @te-ter
    @te-ter Před rokem +251

    in the last 5 years i have had 2 semesters of classes on psychology, at some of which they explained to us the problem with IQ tests
    ...but i'm sure JP would just take it as a sign that the modern education is inferior to the one he had.

    • @paulsmart4672
      @paulsmart4672 Před rokem +31

      It's more clear what's going on when he reacts to the pure biology side of things... With IQ and psychology, well, he's a psychologist, maybe he knows what he's talking about. Surely he's done his research, right? He's saying it's important and *he's* got a PhD in this stuff.
      But then it moves into pure biology, and he's got no qualifications here, and he's enraged that the cutting edge of the science isn't aligned with the 200 year old traditional understanding of the matter. How dare these "researchers" with the "data" and "experiments" and "computer models" and "hundreds of years of science to build upon" suggest that Darwin didn't magically and perfectly solve everything centuries ago!?
      That's based on nothing. That's just 100% his outrage at the notion of new information challenging old ideas.
      The reason he gets upset when people challenge the importance of IQ is he's an anti-intellectual conservative who can't stand the notion of academic or scientific progress.

    • @TimothyCHenderson
      @TimothyCHenderson Před rokem +16

      @@paulsmart4672 The problem with Peterson is he plays the field and both sides. He quote's numbers and statistics when he wants to that support his beliefs and then quotes mysticism and religion when it suites the argument as well. He'll bounce between the two and rail against authoritarianism but loves to tell people exactly what they should think and do. His final form of defense is the somewhat famous "there's something important there but I just haven't figured it out yet", usually attached at the end of some wild claim.
      He's able to manipulate the conversation by sounding academic, sounding spiritual and all encompassing, sounding contrarian to subvert his critics and keeping things open enough to build upon later. A slippery character indeed. I am enjoying the word salad moniker though.

    • @Definatalie
      @Definatalie Před rokem +10

      I was in uni doing education 20 years ago and they were saying IQ was a bad lens to view students through then!

    • @tyler9123
      @tyler9123 Před rokem

      Up yours woke moralist

    • @dkickelbick
      @dkickelbick Před rokem

      @@paulsmart4672 IQ tests are racist BD. They were invented to give racism a scientific touch as if it is founded on facts. But it is not, it is scientism. Peterson talks just rubbish sh*t. Big word which means nothing. Once he made clear that one of his "sources" is "The Bell Curve", which does exactly that claiming that racisim has scientific grounding and IQ test tell something useful. For a debunking of the Bell Curve there is e.g. the book by Stephen Jay Gould (The Mismeasure of Men). You don't need more to read to know the BS Peterson says.

  • @joet3935
    @joet3935 Před rokem +72

    The "women must be beautiful and skinny" seems to me to exist to suppress women. A man who insists that a woman must fit that body type doesn't see women as equals.

    • @shadenox8164
      @shadenox8164 Před 6 měsíci +13

      He's also telling other men they aren't allowed to find women attractive he doesn't.

    • @ejtattersall156
      @ejtattersall156 Před 4 měsíci

      A. The target market of this magazine is targeted toward men, not women, men. These women have always been more curvy than women in magazines with a target of women, like Cosmopolitan. Rail thin, shapeless, buttless, boobless women were a staple of women's magazines, not men's.
      B. Women have always had beauty standards. You know why? Women rank each other by looks. Women are far less forgiving of other women's bodies than men are, and there is extensive study to back this up.

    • @celewign
      @celewign Před měsícem

      I like he more likely saying “the majority of men find skinny women more attractive” which is factually true.

    • @joet3935
      @joet3935 Před měsícem

      @@celewign Which culture? Some cultures hold that non tan and overweight is the peak of beauty.

    • @ejtattersall156
      @ejtattersall156 Před měsícem

      Every single culture on planet earth has a female body standard. And that standard, thick or thin, is maintained by women. Every single culture on planet earth has a male body standard, and that standard is selected for by women. Women give sex to men they find physically appealing, and rank each other by physical appeal, and blame men for all of it. Great gig, women have.

  • @wildmooseking
    @wildmooseking Před 7 měsíci +5

    The more I hear Jordan Peterson talk, the more he sounds like a 19 year old r/atheism Libertarian who listens to Rage Against the Machine wrong and watched two Sargon of Akkad videos.

  • @D31taF0rc3
    @D31taF0rc3 Před rokem +8

    Oh boy my eugenics alarm was going off this whole video and when you brought up his attitudes on race i cringed. Also he's completely ignoring the fact that most psychologists have completely thrown IQ out the window as a useful metric of study.

    • @asimplenight8220
      @asimplenight8220 Před rokem +2

      ​@DarkXSeries7 lmao

    • @bigbrothertw
      @bigbrothertw Před 11 měsíci +3

      @darkxseries7 an iq test isnt a test you 'pass' you dolt, are you sure you aren't the one with a sub standard iq result?

    • @Redsky973
      @Redsky973 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@bigbrothertwbro i failed the IQ test 💀

  • @katyungodly
    @katyungodly Před rokem +1910

    The fact that people find Jordan Peterson and Ben Shapiro intelligent tells you a lot about our society.
    It's theatrical intellect.

    • @inefffable
      @inefffable Před rokem +104

      Or they're just great actors. I think it's pretty easy to fall for a well-crafted con when you aren't suspecting it.

    • @facelessdrone
      @facelessdrone Před rokem +176

      @@inefffable its pretty easy to see through, too, if you genuinely consider their words... and besides all that, their cadences are equal to nails on a fucking chalk board, they exude annoying egotistical frat-boys best friend energy. They were praised as kids for being mature Their age and then rode that high for the rest of their lives and carreers.

    • @inefffable
      @inefffable Před rokem +33

      @@facelessdrone definitely easy to see through, I agree. I think that's why we see a lot of people get out of the pipeline and realize "wow I actually nodded along to this guy?"
      I just think if you are unsuspecting/assuming positive intent and in a mindset of giving the benefit of the doubt (generally how I think people tend to operate, myself included, esp in comfort of own home browsing The Internet), it's easy to get sucked in.
      Hope you have a nice day :)

    • @aeririahelmold
      @aeririahelmold Před rokem +10

      They are obviously intelligent people its just that they reach crazy conclusions for whatever reason

    • @polydynamix7521
      @polydynamix7521 Před rokem +36

      Well I think it's relatively speaking. College educated right wing extremist is the 2nd rarest specimen of conservative- right behind conservative comedians.

  • @ActuallyHoudini
    @ActuallyHoudini Před rokem +208

    never forget with any metric of measuring intelligence, the ones who introduce it into the status-quo are the ones who rank the highest on their own quiz. it is not a varied group of people with different scores who propose it. the people who claim that they can determine if an individual is a big-brained genius or not just so happen to fall under their own definition of a big-brained genius. you are more likely to vouch for something if it boosts your own ego and the fact nobody factors in that bias shows how flawed the idea of iq is.

    • @naomistarlight6178
      @naomistarlight6178 Před rokem +12

      It's always been tied to imperialism too. The original IQ guy, Binet, was a French guy who wanted to find the African kids who were worth educating in the best schools in France while the remainder would be left behind, orchestrating "brain drain" from the colonized countries for decades which still obv has an effect.

    • @MissMoontree
      @MissMoontree Před rokem +2

      I think it is not just about scoring well, but also about this score being flexible. Like over 10 points flexible. And you can practise for it. I'm sure the test is useful for something, but relying on it too much is dangerous. A hammer is a nice tool too, but it is hard to mow the lawn with one.

    • @ActuallyHoudini
      @ActuallyHoudini Před rokem

      @@MissMoontree I see it working well within psychiatry, of which it was originally intended, but not within the space it is today. I once compared it to xanex. A drug intended solely for psychiatric use but is now mostly known for being a party drug. In a sense, modern IQ tests are the nerdy party drug meant for people who prefer to get high off their own ego more than anything else.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      @@naomistarlight6178
      So you think it's accurate and it worked.

    • @MrCmon113
      @MrCmon113 Před rokem

      It's "biased" towards pattern recognition, short term memory, logic, and 3D mental rotation.
      Your stupid generic criticism is typical for someone, who has never done anything by himself and never even tried to understand anything properly.

  • @stephanietuck9246
    @stephanietuck9246 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Jordan Peterson is winking at eugenics with both eyes

  • @EricUlberg
    @EricUlberg Před 6 měsíci +1

    at 1:05 this already rates to be my new favorite Big Joel 🥳going to put the kettle on and settle in for this one

  • @realleon2328
    @realleon2328 Před rokem +258

    one of the points that I think is often neglected with the silly "poverty and iq" question is the way that increased stress and trauma really fuck with a lot of your higher order functions. You can see this in how previously high-performing people end up doing worse as they go through trauma or as increased life stressors that occur as one ages takes their toll. I haven't read all too much on this effect developmentally but I can't imagine that kids living through the family stress and everything that comes with being in a tight place economically is gonna be especially Conducive to developing study and test-taking skills.

    • @alexandrenganda4650
      @alexandrenganda4650 Před rokem +11

      Thank you

    • @caramazzola2399
      @caramazzola2399 Před rokem +21

      I agree with your point and I happen to have read an awful lot about the intersection between exposure to stress & trauma and poor health outcomes, especially the link to chronic pain and inflammatory auto-immune disease. There's a lot in that body of research regarding how your body deprioritizes certain functions when in a prolonged state of fight or flight. Also, cool profile picture. That album slaps.

    • @Sokhnalabs
      @Sokhnalabs Před rokem +1

      @@caramazzola2399hey do you mind sharing those readings? I’m quite curious about this

  • @LlartyVoz
    @LlartyVoz Před rokem +385

    My therapist has another client that apparently loves Peterson very much (I don't know the client or anything else about him, so I can't judge him as a person) so the both of us talk about him at times. I actually brought up Peterson first because he basically stated that BPD is the female version of ASPD which I found quite strange because the two disorders have some glaring differences between them.
    That promted my therapist to look into Peterson because two clients of his mentioned him. His conclusion was that Peterson was a very typical old university professor, insane, conservative with a dangerous love for facist rethoric.

    • @j0nni235
      @j0nni235 Před rokem +32

      > "a very typical old university professor, insane, conservative with a dangerous love for facist rethoric."
      Wait that's typical??? Dang I just got into uni I gotta watch out 👀

    • @facelessdrone
      @facelessdrone Před rokem +35

      Yeah, autism is nothing like bpd, take it from someone who is autistic and has met people with bpd many times. They arent even cognitive cousins, I have more in common with my cats than I do someone with bpd, thats not a bad thing, its just true, women with bpd and autism may act similar but thats literally just because of sexism, and how women with mental differences are raised to basically be submissive niave robots, its depressing, but thats ableism for you.

    • @crowwithashortcake
      @crowwithashortcake Před rokem

      @@facelessdrone aspd is antisocial personality disorder, the acronym for autism is asd

    • @j0nni235
      @j0nni235 Před rokem

      @@facelessdrone ASPD is Anti-Social Personality Disorder, not Autism Spectrum Disorder - ASD.

    • @koda90
      @koda90 Před rokem

      @@facelessdrone i think aspd refers to antisocial personality disorder. youre thinking of asd, autism spectrum disorder

  • @kitalesunepou5467
    @kitalesunepou5467 Před rokem +3

    TLDR: I agree with the video and I'm telling why I watched it and how some of the things he says affected me positively (the idea of moral responsability)
    I agree with the major points of the videos and would like to complement it with my perspective, because Jordan Peterson with all his flaws did really helped me on a rough time. One of the points that did this is one of the only things that I did take on that time and that I still like about his points: moral responsability or clean your house before wanting to change the world.
    In short, I always adapt what I hear from questionable fonts (He seems to be suffering deeply, I prefer people who seems to have attained peace), and the idea seemed reasonable how can I change the other's if I don't change myself. But, that wasn't new, what was new for me is how that can impact negatively society, he puts that idea as moral responsability.
    We don't have the right to be bad to ourselves, to not do the right thing because that will affect others. I'm deeply empathetic with others and sometimes fail to be empathetic with myself, this changed my perspective profoundly now I recognized that I can't be empathetic with others if not with myself.
    I think the ideas that make me okey with watching him are more of the based somehow in his background as clinical psychologist. It is sad that his political ideas are so...(I don't even know how to express it in English) confusing, misleading, bad, and without a reasonable foundation.

  • @glass2271
    @glass2271 Před 11 měsíci +3

    you keep shit so real big joel

  • @itsROMPERS...
    @itsROMPERS... Před rokem +353

    One thing Jordan completely ignores is the idea that IQ could be multivariate, that people can be extremely stupid in some ways but less so in others.
    I'm a terrible businessman but I'm a top-level problem solver, and my IQ is over 140.
    Some stuff i can do better than anyone around me, and some stuff i seem brain-dead trying to solve.
    My supervisors at work have struggled with what to do with me, thinking of how they could smash me into being a business-minded worker, but ultimately realizing that succeeding in this could also smash my creativity, which was the real benefit i provided that others around me couldn't.
    They finally decided to just put up with me, and enjoy the unique solutions i threw off.
    Anybody can do time cards. Or can they?
    I designed a time card system, but i wouldn't really do them myself. So i contributed to getting thousands of time cards in, just not mine.
    The evidence that most people are like this is all around us, that people are almost never "just stupid" to the point of being incapable of anything.
    To make it more obvious, we have actual people in govt who are very clearly intellectually low-level, people making laws that obviously just don't understand what they are doing.
    Total abortion bans passed by people who don't know what "ectopic" means.
    What happens to Jordan's theory when the President's IQ turns out to be 90, and a homeless street person hits 135?
    As is commonly true of Jordan, his rationalizations tend to be lazy. He hits on a track, and fits everything to it. Everything bad is radical-leftist post-modern cultural Marxism, and Marxism is the ultimate evil because 100 million died in the Soviet Union.
    Yeah, that follows.
    Everything is on the most rudimentary level of abstraction.
    But he is articulate, and a lot of dumber people mistake that for erudition, or, to them, "smarts".
    Jordan is a conservative pseudo-intellectual for the post-Trump reality. We would be much better off of he hadn't come out of his Russian-induced rehab-shortcut coma.
    Seriously, a clinical psychologist hopelessly addicted to benzos. Talk about stupid.

    • @pantalaemon
      @pantalaemon Před rokem +65

      Normally I don't feel okay making fun of people who struggle with drug abuse, especially not to the point Peterson does, but for a man who preaches self-reliance and hard-headed realism (to the point of villifying and demonizing civil rights activists as totalitarian monsters) to end up unable to cope without insane amounts of drugs, well, it's just... it's the sort of thing one can only laugh at homerically.
      If he had an ounce of integrity he'd ask himself some hard questions about how valid his ideas really are. But of course he doesn't. Then the whole shithouse would go up in flames.

    • @chriss780
      @chriss780 Před rokem +69

      @@pantalaemon his entire thing is "if you're own life isn't even in order you have no right to critique socity" and watching him spend all of his time critiquing society while his own life is a shit show is just objectively hysterical"

    • @johnnygoodman2003
      @johnnygoodman2003 Před rokem

      IQ was invented by the French public school system to justify giving foreign students in France a lower quality education system than French born students.

    • @Talentedtadpole
      @Talentedtadpole Před rokem +2

      YES!

    • @zk5228
      @zk5228 Před rokem +32

      Anecdotally speaking, part of my ADHD diagnosis involved taking an IQ test with ~5 different subscores that were combined to find your aggregate IQ.
      In one of the categories, I got the highest possible score - better than they'd ever seen in their office. But my processing speed score was awful (because of the ADHD lol), so the total score landed around 120. I felt so slighted!
      I don't think this version of the test is much better at objectively measuring intelligence than standard ones, but I like it better as a means of communicating the results. It allowed me to think "oh, this is stupid! it directly penalizes neurodivergent traits!" and disregard it entirely

  • @carrot-cat1746
    @carrot-cat1746 Před rokem +41

    I've seen cats less obsessed with boxes and fitting in them no matter the cost than Peterson.

  • @tdsmtdsm
    @tdsmtdsm Před rokem +8

    JP's behavior is a projection of his underlying emotional or psychological issues, such as low self-esteem, insecurity, or a need for attention or validation. However, he is also aggressive, hostile, and possibly even sadistic. I think "IT" may derives pleasure from causing others emotional pain and feel a sense of power or control over them.

  • @geinikan1kan
    @geinikan1kan Před měsícem +1

    Getting Big Joel 1yr ago video dunking Jordan Peterson, what a great way to end the week.

  • @outsidethewall8488
    @outsidethewall8488 Před rokem +360

    It's also so wild to me that he's a psychology professor because I'm about 3/4 of the way through a psychology undergrad degree and my classes are literally nothing like any of this lectures and I'm glad for that. They contain actual information about research with discussions of where the evidence is mixed etc. No emotional political rants lmao.

    • @outsidethewall8488
      @outsidethewall8488 Před rokem +62

      Also we are taught extensively both the positives and negatives of IQ science. An oversimplified summary is that IQ tests can be excellent measures of
      m specific skills among particular cultural/ language groups in comparison to other members of that group in a similar age range but can never be taken as an all encompassing objective measure of pure intellect.

    • @Dominique_99
      @Dominique_99 Před rokem +10

      Did you learn about EQ tests and those other annoying tests. The ones that businesses just love like the Myers Briggs test that are a load of garbage too. Research has shown you can throw them in the bin. I mean it’s like astrology fun to do .

    • @tos100returns
      @tos100returns Před rokem +45

      I watched a few of Peterson's classroom speeches. He says some horrific things about depression that do not match what I learned in my college Psychology course, and do not match in the things that I've learned from therapists over the past 3+ decades.
      He once said, "The thing about depressed people is that they are depressed about everything." This is SO wrong, because depression isn't about anything. It's about nothing.
      He also said, "Depressed people are sad even though they have good lives." Again, WRONG, because it has NOTHING to do with one's position in life. It also has nothing to do with being sad, and my therapists would suggest that depression is the ABSENCE of sadness.
      When I made the mistake of questioning this in the comments section on the video, his brainwashed minions went on the attack. They said that I could not criticize him until I've read all of his books and writings, and have watched ALL of his videos.
      That was when I realized that I was watching the video of a cult leader.

    • @halcyonacoustic7366
      @halcyonacoustic7366 Před rokem +8

      I would walk out of most lectures I've ever seen him make.

    • @outsidethewall8488
      @outsidethewall8488 Před rokem +4

      @@Dominique_99 I can't think of any EQ tests that have come up but lots of personality tests including Meyers Briggs have been discussed and yes I am well aware that it doesn't have good evidence for it. That falls more under personality psychology whereas IQ tests tend to fall more under Cognitive psychology. Although plenty of overlap between categories of course.

  • @aleks5340
    @aleks5340 Před rokem +678

    It’s so incredibly to me that JP can say “IQ is the biggest predictor of success” while completely ignoring the hundreds of studies that show that high IQ is associated with higher nutrition and better education in early age, stemming from wealth. Therefore the biggest predictor of success isn’t the high IQ but the fact that people with high IQs overwhelmingly tend to come from higher socioeconomic backgrounds, which is by far the bigger predictor of success. It’s such a simple and easy to see confounding factor, and I know he’s deliberately obfuscating this fact to support his own deranged obsession with IQ

    • @Nosliw837
      @Nosliw837 Před rokem +57

      I tried to explain this to a friend of mine about five years ago, almost exactly these words, and he would have none of it. He was one of those "I don't understand 'The Blacks', it must be their low IQs." But I guess racism doesn't make sense, so yeah. :(

    • @larrydewesse655
      @larrydewesse655 Před rokem +14

      @@Nosliw837 it's part you're friend doesn't get it part we're taught meritocracy is a thing and that high IQ is passed down through selective breeding. We know that's not true but until you completely disprove meritocracy nothing will stick

    • @hammockcamping2500
      @hammockcamping2500 Před rokem +3

      There's a racial group in the United States for which having a SES at the 80th percentile is not enough to compete academically against the whites who are at the 20th percentile - however they excel at basketball.

    • @ckq
      @ckq Před rokem +15

      It's also kind of the other way around though.
      Higher IQ = better socioeconomic status.
      It's a chicken and egg type thing.
      Ppl like Peterson overstate it's value and others say it's completely useless.
      The truth is it's somewhere in between, it's kind of outdated and has some flaws but in general it does have some importance.

    • @hammockcamping2500
      @hammockcamping2500 Před rokem +7

      People with higher IQ make better decisions and choose to have better nutrition. And the Wilson effect shows that the older one gets the more IQ correlates to one's ancestry. One of the evidences for the Wilson effect is adoption studies which show that IQ becomes more correlated with one's ancestry the older they get and that folks in their early youth have an IQ that more strongly correlates with the quality of their environment..

  • @DamienPalmer
    @DamienPalmer Před rokem

    Oh, Some More News did a brief look at this. I'll have to watch that when I have less time.