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12 Rules for Life

Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson has flooded our consciousness over the past few months.  Snippets of his talks keep popping up on my social media.  His book tour attracted national interest.  People on the right love him, those on the left hate him.

None of this is accidental.  He has been carefully curating his public profile for years, posting prolifically on his Youtube channel, speaking publicly and making himself available to media outlets of all kinds.  He has a devoted following and earns a decent income from Patreon via donations from viewers of his long and complex videos.  

His reputation is as someone who thinks deeply about the meaning of life and the significance of ancient mythology for the problem of Being.  However, he has been pushed into the mainstream in the guise of a champion of the Right courtesy of his embroiling himself in a rather strange and silly war in his university over the use of pronouns.  In the process he has become a champion of that most favoured and misused slogan of the Right, freedom of speech.  Right on cue, he has published a book.

I'm not one to listen to endless hours of people talking on Youtube.  I lose concentration after about 10 minutes.  Frankly, for a person with a reputation as a deep thinker Peterson's politics are surprisingly conventional.  Freedom of speech divorced from any care about which vulnerable people you might hurt, the equation of anything progressive and collective with Marx/Stalin/gulags, the glories of strong individuals.  The usual guff you hear from conservative, privileged white men.  

Fortunately his new book, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos is not much about politics and a lot about his actual area of expertise, clinical psychology.  This meant I could read it right the way through and quite enjoy it, not to mention find a lot of food for thought.

If you were to assign 12 Rules for Life to a genre, it would be self-help, or perhaps pop psychology.  You know: Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus; The Five Love Languages; How to Win Friends and Influence People; Games People Play.  These books aim to take the findings of psychology and communicate them in simple language in a way that might help readers towards self-understanding, improved relationships or greater success.  They typically revolve around a simple idea and use this idea to analyse a range of situations and dilemmas.  They are sometimes helpful, but often they are illustrations of the old adage, 'when you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail'.  Accessibility can slide into vacuity.

Peterson's book certainly looks like this kind of book.  Its title promises you a finite and manageable number of things you should do to make your life better.  His introduction outlines a simple idea - that human life represents a tension between order and chaos, and the secret to an authentic life is to walk carefully along the boundary between the two.  

The chapter titles (the 'rules') also promise simplicity, helpfulness and sometimes a little bit of fun.  Some have a 'motherhood and apple pie' feel to them - stand up straight with your shoulders back, treat yourself as someone you are responsible for helping, make friends with people who want the best for you, tell the truth, assume that the person you are listening to might know something you don't.  Others promise a bit more fun - do not bother children when they are skateboarding, pet a cat when you encounter one in the street.  And there is just enough there to hint at something a little more challenging - do not let your children do anything that makes you dislike them, pursue what is meaningful (not what is expedient), be precise in your speech.

However, once you dive in, you quickly realise that this is not your normal self-help book.  He draws from a wide range of sources - the stories of the Old Testament (especially the story of the Fall and of Cain and Abel), the history of 20th Century dictatorships, the lives and experiences of his friends, neighbours and family and, of course, his own specialist area of clinical psychology.

Much of the attention in my social media circle has fallen on his sympathetic use of stories from the Bible and other ancient mythologies.  His only other book is a detailed exploration of the meaning and use of such mythology and he talks about this a lot in his lectures and interviews, as well as in 12 Rules.  However, he is not an orthodox believer.  His use of the stories most reminded me of Joseph Campbell, whose book The Hero with a Thousand  Faces drew on a wide selection of mythical stories to outline an archetypal 'hero's journey' which ordinary people could use as a guide for living.

When you draw on mythology in this way you are not taking the stories on their own terms or trying to discern what their authors meant by them.  Rather, you are using them to illustrate conclusions you have already reached, often from quite different sources.  In Peterson's case, his primary source is his own field of clinical psychology, in particular the psychoanalytic tradition of Freud and Jung and their philosophical predecessor Nietzsche, with additional references to evolutionary psychology.

This yields a lot a valuable stuff.  For instance, 'stand up straight with your shoulders back' provides a fascinating description of the prevalence of dominance hierarchies in the animal world and ultimately also in human societies.  'Do not let your children do anything that makes you dislike them' is a common-sense explanation as to why we should teach young children self-discipline and the results when we don't.  'Assume that the person you are listening to might know something you don't' discusses the value and importance of listening genuinely and sympathetically to others, not just in formal counselling sessions but in our day-to-day lives.  'Treat yourself as someone you are responsible for helping' shows us ways to guard against self-sabotage and to allow ourselves to grow and develop as people. 

Yet there is more to it than this.  Psychology, and particularly psychoanalysis, has a long tradition of shading into philosophy.  If you spend your life trying to help troubled patients adjust to reality, sooner or later you have to ask yourself what exactly is the nature of this reality and whether it is truly worth adjusting to.  The centrepiece of Peterson's exploration of this question, and for me the high point of the book, comes right in the middle - 'pursue what is meaningful (not what is expedient)'.  This chapter is worth the price of admission on its own.  He explores the way our systems of meaning collapsed in the 20th century as our religious certainties were stripped away by the advance of science and reason.  This left us dangerously close to the edge of chaos.  He talks about the life-denying thoughts of people as diverse as the Columbine killers and the academic he shared a platform with who described humans as cancer on the face of the planet, and the tragic effects of the attempt to rebuild order through the all-encompassing secular philosophies of fascism and communism.  For Peterson, this is not a simple problem.  We can't retreat to the earlier certainties without colossal self-deceit.  However, in his view we need to take up the challenge and find a way to live authentically, identifying what is meaningful and fulfilling for us and doing this as opposed to simply the thing that is easiest, most likely to please those around us or most likely to earn us a good income.

Other chapters follow on from this theme.  For instance, 'Tell the truth - or at least don't lie' is far from a simple exposition of the commandment about bearing false witness.  Rather, it explores the way what we perceive is not 'the naked truth', it is a highly processed and filtered interpretation of that truth.  New information, particularly shocking or traumatic information, doesn't only add to our knowledge, it changes our perception of reality itself.  For instance, a woman might see herself as a good dutiful wife in a happy marriage, but then discover her husband is having an affair.  This information is not simply tacked onto what she already knows, it puts the things she previously thought she knew into question - not only about her husband and her marriage, but also about herself and the people she thought were her friends.  Hence our task is not simply to 'tell the truth' but to discover it and rediscover it, and allow our discoveries to shape us and help us grow.

There's a lot to like here.  Peterson is indeed a deep thinker and a skilled, thoughtful psychologist.  He wants us to be better people, and provides us with a lot of insights that can help us achieve that.

However, he's not immune to the hammer-nail problem, and with him it takes the form that it takes for so many of his fellow psychologists.  A life spent thinking about and practicing the disciplines of individual growth and psychological wellbeing can make them think that this is the answer to everything.  If you think you are oppressed, stop letting people oppress you.  If you are offended, examine why and let the offence strengthen you.  If you are bowed down by past traumas, let those traumas teach you and contribute to your inner growth.  

It's all well and good but it's not enough.  People do need support to overcome the effects of trauma, but we should also act to prevent the trauma itself, for instance by not enabling sexual abuse and doing our best to avoid war.  We do need to be less thin-skinned, but it wouldn't hurt privileged white men to watch their words a little more carefully.  We do need to avoid gulags but not everything socialist or even Marxist is inevitably oppressive - and gulags are much more universal than Peterson seems to think.  We even have them in Australia.

Along with this classic psychologist's mistake, Peterson often allows himself to be seduced by various forms of the 'is/ought' fallacy - what is, must be.  Hence, the fact that men and women are unequal in almost every society leads him to assert that this is the natural order of things and we try to change it at our peril.  The prevalence of dominance hierarchies in nature leads him to think that inequality is natural and good and egalitarianism is a perversion of nature.  Along with his professional individualism, it's a recipe for not only conservatism but the kind of libertarian individualism that would do both Ayn Rand and his own hero Nietzsche proud.

I have seen recently (generally re-posted by right-wing people) that Peterson himself says he is not right-wing.  He can say what he likes, the cap fits, and perhaps he would do well to apply his own lessons and assume his progressive critics know something he doesn't. Still, none of us likes to be put in a box and such labels are clumsy at best.    Just because someone is on the right this doesn't mean they're always wrong.  Those of us on the left could also learn a lot from Peterson about self-examination, authenticity and careful listening, not least to people like him.

Comments

Alex Smith said…
I really liked most of your review but…

He has said many times that inequality causes huge problems—see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sSe6FSrylc. He also spent about 10 years coaching/helping female lawyers gain better conditions/pay & says the emancipation of women is good.

He doesn't think individualism is the "answer to everything" but acknowledges the role of groups: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxW-vaCzcKg

From what I've heard JP say, I think he would actually agree that "we should also act to prevent the trauma itself, for instance by not enabling sexual abuse and doing our best to avoid war."

He isn't anti-everything-socialist eg he thinks universal healthcare is good https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxHglXh99SI

His stance of Freedom of speech is more nuanced than you've presented https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gru_JBBMBbY

I don't think opposing the government introducing compelled speech is a "rather strange and silly war".

There are plenty on the Right who hate him (see Twitter & some of my Christian friends) and plenty on the Left who love him (http://quillette.com/2018/03/22/jordan-b-peterson-appeals-left/ & https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4IBegL_V6AA).
Jon said…
Thanks for that Alex. You've undoubtedly read/heard more of his stuff than I have!
Jon said…
Having said that, I have heard him in speeches argue, for instance, that because women tend to marry at or above their own social status while men marry at or below, this indicates that neither women nor men want gender equality - this is an example of his falling into the 'is/ought' fallacy. He makes a similar argument about hierarchy - that because some of us are better at what we do than others, there will always be inequality. This is true but only marginally relevant to social inequality - why are some things valued more highly than others? And how much wealth comes from great personal ability? Rupert Murdoch may be a skilled entrepreneur but he also inherited a large amount of wealth from his dad.

I have also heard him argue that the gulags discredit Marxism, but not all Marxists have gulags (in fact many were IN the Russian gulags as a result of Stalin's purges) and not all gulags are Marxist.

As for the campus war, I was suggesting that the war itself is silly, on both sides. Confected outrage about the words used for particular people is met with outrage about being told what to say. However, two things struck me in reading about it - firstly, I read a number of lawyers commenting that Peterson has misunderstood the law. Secondly, campus politics is by its nature immature because the people who practice it are in their late teens and early 20s. For this reason, faculty staff generally keep out of it, knowing that in year or two those activists will graduate and move on. It's a bit like his comment about juvenile skateboarders - they need to take risks to know the limits of their strength.

In general, my observation is that Peterson tends to stoke conservative outrage, mostly by simplistic conclusions drawn from his psychological knowledge. His psychology, used for the purposes for which it is designed, is really good and useful, but applied to political questions can be misleading.
Alex Smith said…
//women tend to marry at or above their own social status while men marry at or below//
As far as I know, he's simply stating a fact (I'm no expert but it seems to concur with https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypergamy), rather than commenting on its morality or "ought"-ness.

I agree that personal ability isn't the only reason people get rich, although if your ability is too low, you'll quickly lose all your inheritance no matter how large it was.

I don't know heaps about Marxism but from what I do know, it doesn't seem liberating.

I don't think he's saying all gulags are Marxist eg didn't the Nazis have similar things?

The lawyers I've seen comment say JP was right about the compelled speech (see videos & articles linked from https://jordanbpeterson.com/podcasts/podcast-episode/episode-32/).
Andrew said…
Great write up! Thank you!

I agree with a lot of your insight into Pederson. I find folks' strong like or dislike of him interesting. He is not the hero the Right makes him out to be, nor is he the boogie man proclaimed by the Left. Each side is reading too much into him.
Unknown said…
Thanks Ted - I might try and read his book as it sounds less off-putting and hypocritical then his youtubes, which just seem to intentionally antagonise...

The pronoun debate seems symptomatic tho' of a flaw in trying to apply psychology to society: psychology may accept that hurt is done to individuals by society, and its job is to try to heal that hurt to the extent that person can have a fulfilling life, but it seems to accept that the individual is not able to change society, society changes the individual. That is, the power structures inherent in society are the given and it is only the ruthless and exceptional that will make much impact on those structures, given the superior influence elites have in defending their position. Hence his "rules" to support people trying to live a good life in spite of what society may deal out to them. He just comes across as arrogant in opposing a collective imposition in restricting his right to say what he likes, as one who knows it will only result in his hurt, not in a change to the rule. And especially since he knows the intent of the rule is to limit the right to hurt vulnerable people, regardless of how effective in doing so it is. But then maybe that betrays why he objects so strongly to Marx - his materialism and rejection of transcendence as offering any hope to the individual.
Alex Smith said…
Mike I highly recommend watching Jordan B. Peterson joins Neil Mitchell in studio as I think you'll find it more encouraging than what you've watched.
Unknown said…
Thanks for the link Alex - a lot less abrasive! More the psychologist less the philosopher! But still many of the same contradictions: he applauds the peacefulness of "western" societies and the mutual trust between citizens, that he sees as at risk by immature objectors to the status quo, without seeing that his own form of identity politics, his own strident manner and black and white views, reinforce division. People don't get on because they man up and carry their burden. They get on because we are social creatures that survive on mutuality. You can't criticise "identity politics" but demand a solution thru individuals standing up for themselves, and make sense. Besides, the power elites have thru collective action been forced to recognise self identifying groups: they haven't created them! And those same power elites overtly play "identity politics" in the way they keep power within their ingroups.

And the "success" of the west that he is so keen to preserve has come, not thru better distribution of the results of exploiting the earth, but rather by simply getting better at exploiting it at a faster rate. The result has put us on the brink: we won't wipe out the human race by arguing about pronouns, we will wipe it out by sinking it under its own sea of shit.
Harden said…
Have you read haidts happiness hypothesis? He does a similar thing to Peterson but uses evidence based psychology instead of psychoanalysis.
Jon said…
I read something by Haidt which I thought was good, about the psychology behind people's political opinions. Don't think it was that, though. Will have to look it up.