Saturday, May 5, 2018

JORDON PETERSON DEFENDS COMMON SENSE

     Peterson inhabits a polarized and fractured media landscape in which the very concept of a consensus reality has become undone, perhaps permanently. He is promoted by Random House Canada as a bearer of timeless truths and denounced on Canadian public television as a borderline fascist.
   Many of Peterson’s seemingly grandiose pronouncements are, in fact, quite modest. He is often derided for repackaging banal common sense in a vague and pretentious idiom, and there is something to this. Peterson is an apologist for a set of beliefs that we once took for granted but now require an articulate defense, such as: Free speech is an essential value; perfect equality inevitably conflicts with individual freedom; one should be cautious before attempting to re-engineer social institutions that appear to be working; men and women are, in certain quantifiable respects, different. His life advice concerns the necessity to defer gratification, face up to the trials of life with equanimity, take responsibility for one’s own choices, and struggle against the temptation to grow resentful. How such traditional values came to be portrayed as a danger adjacent to Nazism is one of the puzzles of our time.

No comments:

Post a Comment