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Curt Jaimungal AMA #1 (Consciousness, education, IQ, which Theory of Everything is correct?)
April 2, 2021
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All right, hello toe listeners, Kurt here. That silence is missed sales. Now, why? It's because you haven't met Shopify, at least until now.
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I should have you know that I don't like to say I plenty because I is narcissistic the more I say it the more I become self-involved and I do have a predilection to self-involvement which I am actively fighting against at almost every moment but it's difficult to avoid this because many of these questions or almost all of them are directed toward me so how can I answer them without speaking my personal experience and at the same time I am guided by
a screenwriting adage which says that the more personal the pain, the more general it is. Which means that the more specific you can get with being wholeheartedly open, the more people resonate with it rather than staying at a superficial high level. That's actually one of the guiding principles of the podcast itself. That's one of the reasons why I try to get into as much
meticulous technicalities as I possibly can because that's what I would like to know and I imagine that the audience is more engaged the more I'm engaged even if sometimes some of the terminology goes over some of the people's heads not all the people the this podcast tends to have a huge huge following of extremely bright people brighter than myself and if that's extremely flattering
if i seem nervous it is because i am i am nervous i'm not comfortable speaking about myself if i'm darting my eyes around it's because i'm thinking i can give you some background as to how the podcast is run i get
notes about my furrowed brows and I'm constantly looking as if I'm angry and I'm not angry my wife even comes to me at times and I have to bark at her I feel bad because she thinks I'm angry but I'm thinking and I'm in such such deep thought stacked upon one another as soon as she comes to me and says, babe are you okay? I'm thinking, if I'm mad I'll let you know if I'm mad don't bother me I'm speaking somewhat quietly because she's sleeping in the next room
Okay, Akash1996 asks, tell us something about yourself. Who are you? What is your science background? When and why did you start your YouTube channel? What are your aims? What are your dreams in general? Okay, so that's quite a few questions, man. Akash, it's a great thing that your name starts with an A because I sorted this by alphabetical. I sorted this alphabetically by username. And this will serve as an introduction to myself and to the channel. So who am I? Well, I'm Kurt Jaimungal.
As to who am I? You know, there's a Greek phrase called know thyself. Its origins are Greek. John Vervecky said to know thyself isn't what most people in the Western world thinks it means to know thyself, which we think it means
Let's have a scrapbook and post our memories. That's not what it means. It means to understand the operating system by which you run. And I don't, I don't know mine. I'm tempted to give an itemized biography. I'm tempted to state my ethnicity and my job and so on, but I don't think that is what I should identify with. And I'm wary of saying,
I am so-and-so because unconsciously I'll identify with it, and that's part of my issue with the whole political discourse right now, is that people tend to be identifying with aspects of themselves that they shouldn't see as a paramount part of their personality. So as for who am I, man, I don't know, and I'm figuring that out, sorry Akash, what is your science background? It's math and physics, particularly something called high energy physics, which is more in the theoretical end. I'm not concerned, I'm wholly unconcerned with the practical end of physics.
I even told Nathan Mirvold I'm more comfortable with fiber bundles than I am with Bernoulli's equation and that's absolutely true. I'm concerned with something called general relativity and quantum field theory and merging them. Now some people think you'll hear this spouted off plenty that quantum field theory, people will say quantum mechanics, but it's technically quantum field theory and general relativity can't be merged. They can easily
fairly easily in low energy limits it's just in high energies that you have problems so I'm interested in the high energy or in other words low distance because high energy means low distance the high energy and low distance merging of general general relativity and quantum mechanics when and why did I start my youtube channel well when and why when depends on what constitutes this youtube channel so
in many ways it could be with the gnome interview so that's about a year and a half ago in many ways my channel started with brian keating which is about 10 months ago brian keating was the first interview that i did that was non-political that was just about math and physics because at the time i was i started this channel called better left unsaid for a film which is releasing tomorrow by the way this is promotion for it
I have a film that I directed called Better Left On Set, a documentary about when does the political left go too far, and it has nothing to do with me accepting the right, even though people see the absence of the right, the quote-unquote political right in the tagline as me admitting that they're correct in some manner. That's not the case. In fact, if you watch the film, you'll see that I talk about the extreme right as well as the extreme left.
this channel was interviews for that and then I pivoted because I thought well now that the film is done which the film has been done for almost a year why not go back to my original interest of math and physics
So I did with Brian Keating, and Brian Keating has a great channel. Our channel is extremely similar to mine, so I curse him for that, but it's great because we have a revolving door of guests. If you like his guests, you'll like mine and vice versa. I'll leave his channel in the description. You should subscribe to it if you like this. You'll most likely like Brian Keating's, perhaps even more. So in some ways, the channel started one and a half years ago with Gnome or 10 months ago with Brian Keating, but in another way, the channel truly started
eight months ago or nine months ago with Donald Hoffman once I interviewed Donald Hoffman it was almost as if toe or theories of everything became its own genre some people in the audience say that there's no channel like it and while that's flattering I don't know how much of that is true I hope it's true that's pretty cool if it's true I don't see myself as having a particularly different interview style other than going into some of the abstruse mechanics but other than that I don't see it as particularly inventive or particular
What are
My aims, at least with this channel and at least with the next few years of my life, is to clarify my thinking and develop what's called a Weltanschaung. It's a German word which means an all-encompassing worldview or framework through which to interpret the world. To call it a worldview is to minimize it. By the way, you can think of a Weltanschaung as a theory of everything in the psychological sense. Not in the physics sense, though it does include the physics sense for me. Weltanschaung is the word.
Welt, if you ever hear the word V or the letter V in a German word, it's W. The other aim for this channel to answer Akash's question, I'm only on question number one, to answer Akash's question is that there is a part of me that thinks coming up with a theory of everything, the way it's traditionally done is with private practice of erudite individuals in academia.
And I'm unsure if innovation is to be found there anymore. That's false. There's plenty of innovation coming from the universities, especially in the STEM field. What I mean is, I think that there's vast swaths missing from our current theories of everything. And I think that it's a, I'm hoping that what I can do is make this a community effort that people from the outside can watch and contribute
who didn't necessarily have the chance to go to university, or aren't trained mathematically. And collectively, though I despise the word collectively because of how it's been co-opted, but collectively we can come up with, or at least advance, a theory of everything. So that's a goal of this channel. That's a dream. A dream of mine. Alright, let's get to the next one.
Account number one says, what are your thoughts on Rupert Spira, invite, invite to vent dot vet Vedanta. And thanks for making such an awesome podcast. Now, account number one, you can see by the fact that I'm struggling to pronounce Vedanta, that I'm unfamiliar with it, I know a tiny amount like a modicum about it. And I know a modicum about Rupert Spira, though I do have an interview with him booked June 15 or so, which means it'll go online June at the end of June.
They also say thank you for making such an awesome podcast. I don't like to read the plaudits, but I'll do so because it's part of the question and it also it's endearing. Thank you, account number one. Account number one has another question. What or how do you think about abstract mathematical structures philosophically? Okay, I'm not quite sure I understand what you mean when you say how do I think of them philosophically. I imagine what you mean is
Am I a Platonist or non-Platonist? That's all I can think of unless what you mean is am I algebraic or am I analytical or geometrical or visual? I'd say I'm minorly visual and a majorly algebraic and majorly conceptual. So that means that I don't know how to describe the conceptual one because I haven't heard many people talk about it. It's more like I think in terms of concepts that are nebulous or nubilous and then they relate. As for Platonism,
I don't see how mathematical truths can be invented. I don't see it as being dependent on us, though Lee Smolin makes a case that they're time-dependent. This means that I'm... I'm not sure. The answer is I'm not sure and I'm tilted toward Platonism. You can think of it as I'm platonically dating Platonism. This comes from account number two. Kurt, have you considered getting Douglas Hofstadter on the show? The answer is every day.
Alex Bromans says, what's the role that I see psychedelics having in our society for the next 20 years? And then he says, good job with a peace sign. Medically, it seems to be efficacious. It seems to be more so than traditional medications and treatments. As for individuals, I hope it's a force for good.
Aleksander96 says, you seem to be a gamer, at least you've mentioned, excitedly, games when talking to other people. So what games do you like? What games have you played in the past and any thoughts on the value of video games?
Personally, I'm certain that Dark Souls, a pretty challenging game if you don't know it, has strongly conditioned me to enjoy more difficult challenges. Okay, so this person is extremely perceptive. Alexander. I love Dark Souls. I love Demon's Souls. I love From Software games in general. I love Fallout. I love single player wide open sprawling vistas and missions and RPGs. I love those. I love those two bits. I'm extremely looking forward to playing this game called Disco. LSEM or LSI.
Elysium, I believe. Disco Elysium. Though I played it for about an hour. I don't get time to play video games, man. I'm just studying for this podcast almost all the time. I wish I had more time to play because I love playing video games. I dislike shooters. Although I do like some mindless games, games that I could listen to a podcast or do some research that just require auditory input.
while I play, but I don't like them in the sense that I enjoy playing those games. It's more like, okay, now I get to listen to this book that I have to read or research this person, and at least I can play a video game, maybe get a trophy or two at the same time. Disco Elysium, there seems to be elements of one psychological state speaking to oneself, and that's alarming to me. I won't rehash why. You can watch the Ian McGilchrist video to find out why.
I just hope it doesn't induce something like psychosis. I don't know if I can handle that game. Metal Gear Solid, I love the series Metal Gear Solid. Metal Gear Solid V, though, I was extremely disappointed. I think everyone was. The gameplay in it is great, but it's not what I was looking for in a Hideo Kojima game. I love indie games. Indie games that play with mechanisms, sorry, mechanics, gameplay mechanics, inventively.
I'm one of those rare people that find Metal Gear Solid 4 to be peerless. I actually think it's the best of all the Metal Gear Solids, even though... even though it's lacking in terms of the intricacies of Metal Gear Solid 3. In terms of fan service, it was wonderful. If you're a fan of Metal Gear Solid from 1, 2, 3, you're... I don't know how you can't love Metal Gear Solid 4. Someone said, Rebecca says, why am I wasting my life with video games instead of experiencing the earth? Well, that
one can say why are you telling stories instead of experiencing the earth in some way the stories inform how you experience the earth and in some ways a video game is a more interactive story it depends on if you're using it to escape the earth and also video games are part of the earth where am i from daniela daniela wants to know i'm from trinidad i believe someone asks that later i also have an idea for a video game which at some point i because i don't like
These games that have speech checks and then sneaking options or kill options, those are just three, and then they think, well, look, I've spanned the gamut of all you can do with a video game. Look how wonderful in options my RPG is. I don't think that's all there is. I like more than that. I have an idea, but I may have to lay it to the side along with the multiplicity of other forlorn ideas of mine. Amidu, Chimera, says, what ism of consciousness do I lean most toward?
and what are my thoughts on the bizarre phenomenon of alien abductions well okay as for the ism that I lean toward I would say none yet as for alien abductions I don't know what to make of it I don't think that everyone who claims that they've been abducted are asinine or lying I also don't think the same about Bigfoot and I would like I would love to get Les Stroud on the podcast to keep reaching out to his
People and they keep putting me off. They keep saying six months from now or five months from now Hopefully at some point less drought will come on the podcast. I would love to talk to him That's survivor man for those of you who are unacquainted I do have an intimation as to why UFOs and Bigfoot and other phenomenon might exist As well as an explanation for why they're mysterious but it may be imbecilic so I don't I Won't state it because it's not well formed
It's just that I don't know. I find it odd that Bigfoot hasn't been captured by any camera. Some people will claim it has been. Okay, Anna Lukomsky says, by the way, if I'm appearing tired, I am. For the past couple nights, I haven't gotten much sleep. Groggy, so I'm in the midst of that. Okay, let's see. Anna Lukomsky says, I would love to hear the story behind your podcast and how
You became inspired to do a podcast on toes on theories of everything. The practicalities of how you actually managed to get it going, especially the story behind how you got your first guest. I wonder if you knew how much that moment would change your world. Theories of everything. Theories of everything. That is this channel was an evolution. It started as blue. That is better left unsaid. I call it blue. So if you ever ever hear me use the word blue, I'm referring to better left unsaid, which is a documentary I directed, which is releasing tomorrow.
And again, quick promotion. If you want to buy it, please get it from betterleftunsaidfilm.com. Don't buy it from iTunes and so on, because betterleftunsaidfilm.com will have the director's version, which is the much longer, ponderous, philosophical, psychological version that contains elements the public won't necessarily like. But if you're a fan of this channel, you'll probably like
And that one, you get it for free on the BetterLeftOnSaidFilm.com when you buy the regular version. It just, you get a choice. Do you want to watch the regular or the director's cut? Which is two hours long. So a half hour of extra material. As for the first guest, it depends on what qualifies this channel. The first guest in many ways was Gnome, or in many ways it was Brian Keating, or in many ways it was Donald Hoffman.
Now, the Hoffman interview was one that I had no idea would change me as much as it did. Not because of his theories per se, but because it seems like as soon as I released that podcast, it was as if Toe, theories of everything, became his own genre. And that was exciting. Because it was me talking to someone the way that I would like to talk to them, instead of somewhat of a facade of an interviewer, journalist type person. Which,
Characterized the previous interviews which I've now unlisted because I am embarrassed about them and they don't fit the theme of this channel so Donald Hoffman and the reception to it indicated to me that I was on an interesting past path and it spurred me on Apostolos Prel says Do you have a Facebook page for your YouTube audience? Sorry, do you have a Facebook page for your YouTube channel and I want to support you Kurt so I don't have a Facebook page
not for this channel at least and if you want to support then please support on patreon it patreon genuinely helps each dollar helps and you may not think so but it helps because it's completely voluntary it's someone voluntarily is giving me a dollar or ten or whatever maybe per month continually it financially it's it's a boon
I tell my wife each time I get an email from a patron and I also personally email each patron they think that it's a form letter because they're usually surprised that they get a personal communication but I'm genuinely happy my wife and I were delighted each time it also serves the amount of patrons I have also serves as a metric of the positive response to this channel beyond the adulatory comments because some of these comments
They're extremely flattering, but at the same time, I look at other channels. I'm sure if anyone here is a content creator, you've experienced this where someone says, I love this. This was the best podcast or this was the best video. And then you watch some other video of a, of a cat hitting a dog and then the dog being happy about it. And then someone says, this is the best video I've ever seen online. And then you wonder, okay, I was happy about my comments at first, but then that also gets the same attribution.
So there's a temporary ego boost I get, but then a subsequent deflation of it. However, the Patreon subscribers definitely indicate to me that someone's willing to say that this is something they see worth supporting, a mission that they can believe in, and they do with their dollar. So I'm delighted and I find it truly touching. Thank you.
Aspen French says, I want, I'm a fan of your content Kurt, but I'm also a feminist and I try to listen to the opposition and so on. But this was on the Janice Fiumengo interview. But I was extremely frustrated by this discussion. There's not. Well, what I want to ask is, would you consider a voice from the other side and answers? Absolutely. I am actively looking for people who are on the more radical left end who espouse critical race theory and
are black lives matters supporters and so on whatever you think of as the typical left extreme left-leaning whatever you want to call it I'm not disparaging it but those types of people I'm definitely looking for in fact for the documentary better left unsaid I reached out at least initially to way more people professors on the left than I did on the right and I got no after no after no after no after no it was only people who are on
the center center left center right who actually said yes to me but I'm looking for people I have a whole document of questions for hoping that someone eventually will come online and speak with me hopefully a professor I don't want just some postdoc or it could be a postdoc I don't want some undergrad or recent graduate to talk to me or just someone who says that I'm a trans person and you should talk to me well I would prefer a professor for various reasons
Austin Harper says, Do you believe in free will? Are aliens here God? Is ego death real death? What is the perfect form of government assuming there is one? Why does life have symmetry but physics is having issues with it? Do you think black holes have singularities? What about panpsychism? I've subbed since your Sabine interviews. That is the Sabine Haassenfelder interview. So basically you're required to answer at least one of these questions.
Okay, do you believe in free will? I'm not sure. There are arguments for it and there are arguments against it and I don't know. There's definitely the feeling that free will exists and there's definitely the feeling that you're feeling a free will is illusory. That is during meditation or a psychedelic experience, let's say, or even a hypnagogic near dream state. As for our aliens here, I'm not sure. As for God, I'm not sure. As for his ego death, real death, that's a terrifying question.
That's a terrifying question. Well, that's an extremely, extremely, extremely terrifying question, man. It's such a terrible question, I have to move on from that question. What is the perfect form of government, assuming there is one? So it might be that there's not, it might be God's government, or might be one that's dependent on time, or it might be one where you maximize
Voluntary choice, but then you get into the issue of what constitutes voluntary choice. Is it positive freedom or is it negative freedom? which means you get into the base of philosophy and I see that many of the arguments about capitalism versus socialism or communism in fact are Arguments not about which political system is correct, but which philosophical strain do we use to interpret freedom? I
I see it as a debate between freedoms, rather than political, which means it's a philosophical debate. As for it, why does life have symmetries but physics doesn't? I don't think physics has an issue with symmetries. In fact, I would say life has an issue with it. So I don't- I disregard the question. Do I think black holes have singularities? I don't- I don't know. They may, they may not. Panpsychism. Hmm. Panpsychism may be true. May be true in some strange way that we don't conceptualize currently.
Now hopefully, Austin Harper, hopefully I've answered your question somewhat, although I assume not copasetically. Babak Rasall... Babak Rasall the... Babak, I can't pronounce your last name, says, what have you learned from the many brilliant people you have interviewed that has affected your day-to-day life and what are the practical changes that I see day-to-day?
Each one, each interview has influenced me. Though, to say specifically how, would require me to dredge the influence from the depths, and often that requires sufficient reflection which I haven't been able to do, at least not for this AMA. What's influenced me most? Okay, well, that one, at least recently, is Ian McGilchrist.
To... Let's say... Well, it's worldview-shattering, that's for sure. It has me second-guessing almost all my thoughts and actions more so than usual, which we're already at... Brabdingnagian proportions, to use a word that I like. Beers Adidju says,
After interviewing all these brilliant people and educating yourself on so many topics, do you see the world clearly, more clearly, or are you lost? Now, I'd say, Beers, that I'm... ...much more lost, although simultaneously I do see the world... ...more clearly. Now, the way that I... I've been thinking about this for a while, and the best I could do is come up with an analogy.
Okay, so the analogy looks like this. Imagine that you're a swimmer and you can't see the top. You don't know where the surface is. And you're aiming for the surface. You want to get out. You don't know how far below you are. So you estimate. You have some gut. You have some intuition. You have a hunch. And you say, I think I'm 200 meters below the surface. I think the surface is 200 meters up, let's say. And you have a flashlight at the same time, which can see
50 meters ahead so that's like your clarity you can see a certain amount ahead but then you also have an estimation as to how much farther along are you well I would say that what's happened with each interview I'm swimming upward so I'm making progress that is well I'm making progress but my estimation as to how far
the surface is keeps increasing. So whereas last year or two years ago, it would have been 200 meters up. Now it's a kilometer up. So 1000 meters up. But my flashlight has also gotten more powerful. So my flashlight can now see 100 meters up. So that's like my clarity has increased. And I've seen that I've made some progress. But at the same time, I'm much farther along. I mean, sorry, much, I have much farther to go than I thought. So it's a strange mix of both clarity and
I wouldn't say confusion, but being lost. Boris Martinez says, I see you're a man with a talent for figures, and I wonder what is your IQ, what is your age, and net worth? Three simple yet meaningful numbers. Of course, feel free to send me to hell with my impertinent questions. Okay, for IQ, when I was a teenager, I did a few tests. I got obsessed with them for a couple weeks.
And I did a gamut of tests. The score that I had most frequently was around the high 150s.
the lowest score that I achieved was in the high 120s and the highest score that I achieved was in the low 200s so take that for what it's worth it could be anywhere from 120 high 120s to low 200 likely it's around or likely it was around the high 150s though it has drastically decreased because well turning to the next question my age is 32 turning 33 and your IQ
Steadily decreases from 18 to 24 onward And some of these IQ tests were the Ravens progressive matrices tests, so I do have some faith in them but at the same time they weren't official though I was officially tested by an ADHD clinic because I Was tested for ADHD and I apparently do have it but first the way that this clinic works is they have to make sure that they separate people from those who can't Stay focused because they're simply slow minded. Let's say
in other words having a low IQ or those who have a functioning IQ and can't focus and they need to make sure you're in that group before they diagnose you with ADHD so they did a battery of cognitive tests for me and I remember that I either scored perfect or scored one away from perfect there were some verbal tests that is what is the definition of so-and-so word there were some mathematical tests now that's should be a breeze for me because hopefully I'm trained mathematically I mean I should be if I got a degree in it and
there was some physical manipulation puzzles I remember and I think that one I didn't I either scored correctly at the last second like there's a timer or I just missed it by one second I don't recall which one but either way as for my net worth my net worth is disappointing this guy said that I asked him I believe his name is Boris Boris Martin is Boris what do you think my net worth is before I answer this question on on an AMA and he said
He thinks it's a half a million USD to 1.5 million USD and like That would be well, it's much much much less in many ways what I'm doing is extremely irresponsible by putting YouTube videos out because I should be Working toward building my net worth especially considering I'm thinking of having a kid at some point, but my net net worth is Less than a tenth of what he thinks it is So there Hear that sound
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As for the earnings of this podcast per month, it's something like $1,000 and that seems like plenty to some people and nothing to others. It depends on where you live and where I live. It's almost nothing because the rent is already $2,000 per month.
and the $1,000 doesn't even go directly toward me, it goes toward IndieFilmTO which is a company that I have as a non-profit because technically we're incubating this theories of everything channel as well as my documentary and so on. So what I'm doing is extremely irresponsible but I see the growth, monetary growth and I also believe wholeheartedly in what I'm doing and I'm much more fulfilled and excited almost each day to wake up and get started on studying for new guests
And to talk to some of the community as well. So I'm at least temporarily being foolish and pursuing this rather than an accumulation of wealth.
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Okay, I'll take some questions from the audience right now. If I'm ignoring your questions, it's because I'm reading the questions that have been given to me from a few weeks ago. There are quite a few comments. Please. Oh, Rune Thorson, thank you so much for donating. Have you considered space being a literal movie stage? I don't know what it... I'm sorry, Rune. I don't know what you mean by literal movie stage. I'm a filmmaker. And I would say we use
Our movie stage in space. So it would be strange if space was a movie stage. I don't know how to understand that question. Boxers are briefs. Boxers. Stefan, the current status of Better Left Unsaid is that it's complete. It's releasing tomorrow. Please visit betterleftunsaidfilm.com if you want to buy Better Left Unsaid because then you will get the director's version
This is something you may hear me talk about quite frequently, at least starting soon. It's a project of mine. Think about this. Science started from pre-science, that is from alchemy and
Rebekah says that she loved the Tammy Peterson interview. Thank you, Rebekah. I appreciate it.
making sense as we're investing in your growth man thank you so much you definitely are investing in my growth and I appreciate it and hopefully in some small way I'm investing in yours would I like God to be a reality hmm that's a tough question Rebecca I can't answer that Brandon SP says do you think philosophy should be more crucially in stem that's interesting see
the people of this channel sorry that is you who are watching you're likely extremely high in openness extremely high otherwise you wouldn't be on this channel and people who are high in openness and high in intellect tend to think that everyone else should operate in the same way that they do and i don't think so i don't think that everyone should be guided by philosophy i don't think it interests them i don't think that it's useful for them at all and i i despise when you'll hear me never
or seldom I don't like to use the word never you'll hear me almost never say the word stupid to describe people of low IQ and that's because I don't I don't think there's anything wrong with people with low IQ and I I see it as a an arrogance of people who are intellectual to look down at people who are less intellectual than them
at the same time they need them to run their company so they despise them yet they need them which means you you don't like the people that you cooperate with which means you don't like humanity in some respect also IQ is heavily hereditary that means that calling someone stupid which to me is an ethically thick word which means that it comes with a descriptive a description and a connotation
So the description is you have a low IQ, but the connotation is that you're inferior because of it. It's almost like the N-word. There's the description. You're a black person. But then there's the connotation that you're inferior and I'm insulting you. The word stupid is like that. And I don't like the word stupid. I wish that intellectuals wouldn't use that word because it firstly makes people with low IQ feel horrible about themselves and they can't necessarily help it because, like I mentioned, the research indicates that IQ is
is extremely inveterate it's it's like your ethnicity it's something you can't change though you can harm it you can reduce it and so it's like being racist to me if someone says you're stupid that's like it's the same it should be considered to be the same as being racist anyway Brandon to answer your question about do I think philosophy should feature more crucially in STEM education I don't
think so necessarily because I don't think it's for everyone, though I need to think more about that question. Brandon SP, you also have another question. What is your intuition as to the weirdness of a theory of everything that would have to be there for it to be the real deal? Any ideas as to its form compared to current conceptions of physics? I think at a minimum it should unify general relativity and quantum field theory. I think at a minimum it should do that. I think that there may be more forces than just the four that we know. I think space-time
isn't as simple as, or may not be as simple as, a pseudo-Romanian four-manifold. I think it may be more strange than just that. I think consciousness may have some integral part to play. And I'm not saying this in any hokey or quote-unquote woo-woo manner, because Nima Arkani Hamed and even Ed Witten have espoused similar sentiments, though I can't find the exact quotation. I've looked for the Ed Witten one.
Nima, though, Nima did say that he thinks consciousness may have something to do with the collapse of the wave function, and the reason he gives is it's a great one. He says Penrose thinks so, and Penrose isn't an idiot, and I don't... well, that's basically the argument. Nima's one of the brightest physicists in the world, by the way. I also think that an understanding as to the origins of the universe is necessary for a tau, for a theory of everything. So those are... those are five elements. That is, unifying
Bubble Puppy says, have you tried to get Bob Lazar on? So yes, I've tried to get Bob Lazar on. I don't want to use Jeremy Corvell
or Korbel as a contact because it's off-putting to use some of your interviewees to get other interviewees but I have no idea of how to contact Bob and I think that Bob Lazar is uninterested in speaking which is why I would love to just talk to him about physics. Philip, Philip thank you so much I appreciate it. Philip Strenstrom asked a question and it I believe it'll come up yeah okay so Graham
Josh says, or Joss, please excuse me if I'm mispronouncing your name. Graham Joss says, Kurt, what do you plan on doing with the knowledge you're collecting? Is there a synthesis coming? Well, see, there are different kinds of mathematicians. There are the kinds of mathematicians, and I'm not a mathematician, but let me go down this route. There are some mathematicians who are great at the details, and there are some mathematicians who are great at overviews. Now, I would say I'm more esemplastic.
in the sense that I'm much more interested in unifying disparate fields and principles, and I seem to have a knack for that. This is one of the reasons why I'm interviewing as many variegated intellectuals as I possibly can, then I'll assemble. So yes, there is a synthesis coming. It's not coming only from me, but hopefully from you all as well. We have a Discord and people talk there, and I do read it. I don't get the chance to read them all all the time, but
oh yes at some point here's what i would like to do this is an announcement i would like to get some people who are audience members that have their own toe their own theory of everything to come on the toe clippings channel which will have a link in the description i think it already does if not you can find it search toe clippings and youtube it's a channel of the clips from this channel and i want them to live stream because i don't have the time always to go through it takes me quite some time to go through someone's corpus of work it would be great if
what would happen is I get two people who two audience members who have toes and I say hey you want to be talked about on this channel and I would like you to be talked about as well but I don't have the time to go through your entire theory so why don't you learn this person's theory and this person learn this person's theory and battle it out on a live stream with me moderating this way there's something called Theo Maki which is battle of the gods and I tend to like that that's one of the reasons why I think people find debates to be nourishing and
Daniel says, how have your views on Marxism evolved since starting this channel? Well, again, for those who are watching, not to turn this into a complete promotion for Better Left Unsaid, but I have a documentary called Better Left Unsaid which is about when does the left go too far, the political left,
the reason is that it's extremely easy to identify when the right goes too far because one might co-locate them with racists and bigots and so on and they seem to overtly state that whereas on the left it's more philosophical which you can read as that being my domain i like philosophy now that that's out of the way the person wants to know how have my views on marxism evolved
My views have changed to become more perplexed by anyone who is staunched in thinking that Marxism is correct or if they think socialism is correct or socialism is de facto wrong. It's just extremely difficult to... These concepts, these... Firstly, there's no consensus as to what Marxism is.
There's no consensus as to what socialism is. There's no consensus as to what capitalism is, though there seems to be a little bit more of a consensus there. And so when someone says capitalism is absolutely correct, or socialism is absolutely correct, it tells me more about their predilection to adherence of a particular handed down doctrine than it does tell me about the doctrine itself. And so I'd say that's how my views have changed. Dhruv Gupta says, he wants to know, or she wants to know, your introduction with films and your interest in watching them now.
I watch virtually any movie now. I used to be a film snob. As for my introduction to films, I started off just like anyone else, just watching films. Never had a extreme attraction to them. Still don't. I just watch them with my wife, almost as pastime to enjoy with her. I don't crave watching films. I actually enjoy creating more than I do watching, and I always have. Elijah says, hey Kurt, Revulet here. I'm fascinated by people's upbringing
and was curious if you could give us a rundown as to what it was like growing up. What were your parents like? What were some of the most significant moments of your life? What was it like growing up? Well, I grew up in a somewhat tough neighborhood of Toronto. Keep in mind, tough neighborhood of Toronto, that's in Canada. That means a pleasant neighborhood in the States, let's say. So I grew up in a relatively tough neighborhood in Toronto called Jane and Finch. As for my parents... My parents are hardworking people.
Hard, hard, hard, hard, hard working people. They, they worked like mad. They came from almost nothing. My dad, especially, my dad's and his brothers slept on dirt in Trinidad. There were nights where they slept on dirt. There were nights or times where they ate dirt. They also ate the dirt. They slept on dirt. They ate the dirt at times, which I think means that they were lacking in a certain vitamin might be B12. Came from that.
to coming to Toronto bringing their family having kids and now I have this sumptuous splendor of prosperity around me where I have a condo and I can speak into a microphone and relay that to hundreds or at least almost a hundred people who are watching and I have nice clothing and I have
It's just wonderful. I'm not a tenth of my parents in terms of diligence. As for what were the significant moments of my life getting married, getting married was a huge moment for me. I love my wife.
Greening my first film was also a huge moment for me. It screened at a place called the Toronto International Film Festival Lightbox. That's the Tiff Lightbox, or the Bell Tiff Lightbox, because it's owned by Bell Media. That was a huge moment for me because it was received... well, although I wouldn't recommend watching it now, it's... anything that I've done that's more than two years old I'm utterly embarrassed of. Otterly. In fact, anything that's more than six months old, I...
I cringe at. So this is five years old on it, or six years old. I wouldn't look at it if I was young. I'll take some questions now from the chat. Did I ever take Peterson's classes at U of T? No. Didn't know about him. Okay, so this person says, you said in the Borchard's interview that he was the smartest, one of the smartest if not the smartest, then who is the smartest? He is. He's the smartest person that I've interviewed, I believe. What did my mother and father do to earn this type of wealth? They just kept working. My mom worked at a factory job like a hard labor factory job. My dad
at like 35 got an undergrad degree when he couldn't even understand the teachers because he not that Trinidad is different than English but it is a different kind of English he would have to write all the words that the teacher said and he even wrote down the jokes and he didn't know what were jokes and what weren't jokes because he couldn't comprehend it particularly well and he would reread and read he basically memorized different textbooks because that was the only way he could learn
they tell you don't memorize but memorizing is actually I think that's a I think that's a disservice that our culture has done by saying you shouldn't memorize what you can easily look up and in some sense that's true but there is a case to be made for memorization having it within your working memory or at least within your the capacity of your working memory with facility is of great use so my dad at 35 he said he was humiliated because people were 18 year olds in his classes but
And at times he would even sleep in a car because he had to drive far and he couldn't drive back. He would sleep in his car, go to classes just to get a degree at around 35, 36 years old, just so that he can get eventually a master's so that he can become a teacher. So my mom's back breaking work, almost literally back breaking work at a factory and my dad's intense
Devotion to scholarly accolades so that he can be hired as a teacher is what? Allowed for me to be in the position that I'm in now Eli J says can you explain the most bizarre and profound experience that I've ever had whether Dreaming under the influence psychedelics, whatever it may be. This is more Sean Lynch aka beast mode checking in this holiday season. Everybody are stressing
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Philip O says, do you think there could be another coherent answer to the question of why is there something rather than nothing? I think there could be. I don't see why there can't be. I just don't know what it would look like and I don't have a clue as to what it is. Philip S says, I have a question for you that's waited on me for some time. This is a problem, a feeling of inadequacy and uselessness. When I think of someone better than me, I get the feeling that I'm less than that person.
There's something humiliating about the fact that there's someone who's better than me and stands up higher in the hierarchy, and as if they have power over me, are all humans equally worth? I think you mean to say are all humans of equal worth? Isn't it obvious that humans have different degrees of power? He references Spinoza. The thought of this makes me feel inadequate and worthless, especially compared to some people like, for example, Noam Chomsky, he says.
Okay. There's a quote that I reference plenty. It's by Hildegard de Bingen. She was a medieval monk, I believe. She said, in one of her writings, and pride germinated in the first angel as he could no longer comprehend the source of his own light and through his own radiance, he said, he spoke to himself and said,
I want to be master and want none above me. Now that one strikes me. That one I think about weekly, maybe. There's such power there. So I want none above me is interesting. It equates wanting no master with Lucifer. So that is it's satanic thinking to think that I want none above me. I understand that this can be
taken to mean, okay, well, let's justify slavery then, but that's not what it's saying. I mean, you can interpret it like that, but I think that's as foolish as interpreting the early comics of Wonder Woman to be about sex, when that's not all they were about. I saw that in a movie once, and that reminded me of Matt Dillahunty talking about that God likes human barbecue. It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous to say that. It's such a simple-minded reading of it, and in what's
What's false about it is that it's true. Actually, sorry, what's tricky about it is that it's true. But it's not all that's true in the same way that the early Wonder Woman comics weren't just about sex. They also liberated many women or were about female empowerment and so on and to say it was just about someone in scantily clad clothing performing BDSM. It's such a devaluing of what it is. It's such a
I think that to believe that any human is above you or even below you is a sin.
I think that to compare yourself to anyone in terms of worth is a sin. I think that for you to think of yourself as more moral than someone else is a sin. Or even conversely, then the converse has to be the case that for you to think of yourself as less moral is a sin, though that one might be a lesser sin. In the Judeo-Christian doctrine, there's a huge emphasis that there's a nugget of divinity at the core of each person and that they're all equally inviolable.
Which means that you are of no less worth than Jeff Bezos. Now, see, this is what materialism does. Materialism is the philosophy as well as being materialistic, but let's talk about the philosophy. If you just look at the world through a material lens, then Jeff Bezos is better than you in some way, because yes, he has more power and more money. But then that to me demonstrates the lack
that demonstrates to me that there's something lacking in pure materialism see in Christianity there's the cross and I always wonder if one it symbolizes quite a few symbols are interesting because symbols take into account maybe a hundred phenomenon put it into one so this is just one interpretation but I've always wondered if this level the horizontal
Sorry, if I keep biting my mouth, it's because, like I said, I didn't sleep much, and I didn't drink enough water, and so my lips are dry. The horizontal may be the material level, and the vertical may be the spiritual. What it's saying is the spiritual, the material matters, but also the spiritual, and it's where they intersect that matters most. And what's interesting is in the cross, not in the olden days, they were even, but now,
You see the material level as being slightly higher. What that means is that this spiritual matters more because it's higher on this spiritual axis. I think it's a sin to think of the world only through a materialistic lens. But this is a tough question.
in some sense all that matters is that you're swimming you're swimming upward to go back to my analogy of the diver I think all that matters is that you're swimming upward and you're trying to try to swim upwards make sure that each day you can see yourself as farther along than you were before and that's easy absolutely easy for anyone for me to say especially because like I mentioned I have such and I'm so lucky with what I have and I'm in a fantastic place in my life and I know that if
When I was depressed, which I can get to a little bit about here, if you like, Philip, this may interest you. When I was 18 until maybe 26 or so, I was extremely, extremely depressed, even suicidal. I was so depressed, depressed from indolence, from my own indolence and from my own self-loathing. But I was so depressed that I even
Enumerated the different ways that I could commit suicide and the pros and cons of each. I lost many years of university to it. I got literal zeros in my classes because I just didn't show up. Literal zeros. My undergrad which should have taken me three to four years to complete ended up taking me seven years.
It wasn't until... I mean, there are many factors that got me out of it, but one of them was to... One of them was akin to self-development and not thinking of... I want to say not thinking of people as better than myself, but that's a human quality. I don't know of anyone who... Some people will say, yeah, hey, like, I don't think of this person as above me or this person as below me, but
I'm pretty sure that they are just unaware of their own unconscious attitudes, but you can mitigate it. I think our society has done a huge disservice with its emphasis on dating, dating people over and over. And I think that there's a profound, a profoundness to finding one person, one person and devoting yourself to that person loyalty.
And, and love and saying, I'm never leaving you. I'm never, never, never, never leaving you. No matter what I'm choosing you, no matter what, no matter, no matter what other temptations there are, I choose you, I choose you. And then that, and then that person has to, has to do the same to you. And that's in our culture, that's called marriage. And there's something to that because life is such a harsh, harsh, harsh game. It's such a harsh game.
and if you can say man it doesn't matter the world can be against me the whole world can be against me but if you're with me then it's okay as long as you're with me and i'm with you it's okay you also have to be close to god now god can be whatever you conceptualize it to be the universe or so on i mean it then becomes so diluted that it becomes meaningless but
What happens if you lose your partner, right? Then you've lost your only hope. So that means you have to have something outside your partner. And that's why it's important that you hear that sound.
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In a marriage, the marriage ceremony is sanctified by God because God is always going to be there. At least that's what it says in the Judeo-Christian texts.
You have to have something that will always be there. So at least you can always have God. You have to always have something, always have your family, let's say, so that the world can be against you, but you have them and that's all that matters. And I think that our society has done such a disservice by telling people that what matters is for you to date and see people and treat them in treat them in dispensably as if they're as if they're pieces of clothing that you try on and return until you find the right fit.
I think that's a horrible... I think that's a... And I'm saying this because there were years where I flandered and was a letharial, let's say, indiscriminately seducing women. And I regret that. And it's not fun for you to look at your... And I know this from talking to people. No matter what, whenever you're in a committed relationship with whoever it is,
You're hurt as much as you don't want to say you're hurt by their past, and they're hurt by yours. It's not good. It's not fun. So I'd say stick to your. That's a tough question, Philip. Stick to your conscience. Don't violate your conscience. Never violate your conscience. Stick by someone never violate them never violate them. And that's all that matters and swim up always swim up no matter what.
Jim Carrey said that he wishes everyone had 15 minutes of fame because they would see how futile it is now. That may be easy for him to say because he already has it. But wouldn't it be a shame if you were led by something false simply because you told yourself it was true?
so have a goal keep moving up the world can be against you as long as you have your loved ones and conversely look you can have the world but not have your loved ones and it's a horrible life it's a meaningless one so that's not where the meaning is move toward where the meaning is finn says appreciate your videos what is in your opinion the most suited sentence to describe consciousness
I don't know how to describe consciousness without automatically assuming it, so there's one which is consciousness is awareness. Consciousness is what it's like to be, but then what is to be? Well, who knows? DasStellMain wants to know, do you think string theory is wrong? I think string theory may actually be correct in a strange manner. For example, I was talking with the
a professor or a former professor of mathematics about Eric Weinstein's geometric unity as well as the monster group which seems like it has nothing to do with geometric unity but there is a way to unify geometric unity string theory as well as lysis e8 via the monster group and strings more technically brains so
I don't, I don't know. I don't know. I'm not one of those people like Sabine Hassenfelder who make their abhorrence of string theory known and develop a following because of it. I don't know if string theory is correct. I used to be somewhat of an arrogant little teenager who barely understood string theory at the time and would say, yeah, string theory is foolish, but I'm not like that anymore. Okay. Frederick Guigui wants to know. He just says AMA with Robert Sapolsky. So I'm working on it, Frederick.
Gamechanger says, should one go against his belief in order to not risk his own financial security, well-being, and when does persuasion become manipulation if the intent is never selfish or bad? Please watch your health and make sure you get enough sleep, and do not stress even if the quality suffers. The fastest tortoise wins, sending you lots of love. And then there's a couple emoticons. Okay, so the question is, should you risk financial insecurity in order to retain your beliefs?
I would say never violate your conscience never never never always do what you believe is right never lie never never never lie especially in the small cases especially in the small cases because they're the easiest to lie about there's a time that I was when I was doing videography there's a client who said and I'm making up some numbers but let's say he said we agreed upon 5200 dollars for a video
So he said, and this was over the phone, and he's like, or video call, whatever, 5200. I said, Okay, a day later, he said, Hey, Kurt, what was that number that I that you quoted me again, or that we agreed upon? Now, there's one option that he was lying and testing me. But I didn't get that feeling. And let's assume it's not. I remember debating for an almost an entire day. Should I tell him 5400?
Don't violate your conscience for $200, Kurt. Don't corrupt your soul for $200.
If the money is large it's easier to not corrupt yourself because you can always say to yourself well I can't ask for ten thousand dollars extra because one they'll find out but two maybe someone else needs it and so on so it's the small cases that matter because they're harder the small cases are so minor as to merit disregard but you can't disregard the blemishes on your soul and they often take they often require wiping clean with interest
Keep in mind, Jesus didn't have financial security, by the way. Jesus didn't have F-U money, and he still lived right. Same with Moses. In fact, Moses, I believe, gave up F-U money. It's a bit ridiculous when I hear people say that what you need is F-U money. No, what you need is principles, and you need to stick by them. So it's easy to be courageous when you have tenure. In fact, that's not courage. It's courageous to stand up for what you believe in despite not having the security behind you.
In fact, just so you know, I left the field of marketing. I used to be a marketer. I left the field of marketing specifically because of this. I don't think it's ethical. I think most of marketing is unethical, and I think the people who are marketers know this, and they have to couch what they do in language that is so self-deluded like value. I'm adding value, adding, you'll hear this over and over, this Tony Robbins-esque rhetoric that I was wholly
Supporting and a part of and indoctrinated in although I wouldn't say indoctrinated because I I allowed it to take place as for the persuasion and manipulation question, I would say Lay the truth out as best you can and allow whatever Occurs to occur Don't try to persuade anyone of anything. See this is extremely difficult because there are some people who come to me for advice personal people and
They're so personal that I actually have a stake in which way it goes. And I want to... I used to do so much influencing that I feel like I know the set of words that I could say such that they would then choose one outcome over the other, but then I have to tell myself that I don't know what's best and I have to just say what I think is true and listen to them and let them come to their own conclusions. So that's another reason why when I'm being interviewed for the documentary, people ask, what am I advocating for? I'm not advocating for anything because
I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything. I don't think that's a great way to operate. I think you should just say what you think and then let people incorporate that and then they contribute some and then you take some of that. I think that this whole to advocate implies that you already know the answer and that you know what's better for the other person as well. That's why I would say that there's a fine line between persuasion and manipulation and I would advise against it.
don't breach a contract with yourself or with God or with the universe don't violate yourself okay and as for my health and my sleep well that's tricky because some of this takes quite a bit of work and I often have to sacrifice if I want to release with quality frequently and grow this channel it requires some amount of longevity which saps me of my well which saps me slowly
But at some point soon, I would like to go on a one week, a full week vacation. I would love that. That would be great. My wife would also love that. Would I consider doing an interview with Stephen Wolfram Frederick? Yes, I'm working on it. Stephen's Stephen's entire theory may take two months of work. Jim Carrey is crazy. Look, I don't think you should. I know you're saying that somewhat flippantly and frivolously, but this is something else that I feel adamantly about. I don't like I don't like to dismiss anyone as stupid. I don't like to dismiss anyone as crazy. I actually haven't
I don't like this dismissal of people by labeling them as crazy. This could be interesting, you said. Paul VanderKlay talked about F.U. Money and Jesus.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. Well, I did talk to Paul Van der Kley. It's on this channel
Okay, getting back. Gamechanger says, what drives you to find a toe, and how much do you entertain that a toe can be found in this universe? Because if this universe came from another one, where there was a singularity, then how can we find a toe? Well, okay, what drives me to find a toe is the same reason that drives people to understand God, or to understand their place in the universe, or their purpose, or where they're going, or their origins. And I also happen to like puzzles, and I can't conceive of a greater puzzle than this. I mean, the Riemann hypothesis is interesting. When I was 16, I thought that that's what I would go into university
This is not a question. It's almost a critique. But it's one that I hear brought up quite frequently, so I thought I'd address it. See, this is almost a question about my interview style to the degree that I have one. I always am surprised when people say that they like my interview style or that they
No one is at least that abrupt to say, I hate your interview style. So I mainly get compliments, but I'm sure they do. And they just don't leave comments because they're actually nice people and don't want to be rude. But either way, I'm always surprisingly, I don't have a style. I don't see myself as having a particular style. Once I was talking to Desh, who's the producer of Better Left Unsaid. One last promo for Better Left Unsaid. It's a film that's releasing tomorrow. I directed it, wrote it, starring it. It's about when does the extreme left go? What constitutes the extreme left?
Okay, so I was talking to Desh about one of my older videos. It wasn't doing too well. I mean, it had like a 90% like ratio, but that's actually low. It should be around 98% if you have a
decent following and so on. And I asked him, I was saying, okay, I'm getting criticized. And he said, Kurt, it's because you're mixing up different interview styles. The audience doesn't know which frame to interpret. It's not the content itself. It's just that they don't know how to interpret what you're doing. So there's three styles. This is what Desh was telling me. He said, there's the Joe Rogan conversational style of interview.
there's the documentary style and that documentary style is probably the one that I had going in going into that interview because it was for the documentary and that one is where you actually know the format of your documentary and you're not trying to get them to say a particular phrase but you're trying to get them to say phrases in a particular manner so that they're easily editable and easily placeable in the lacuna inside the editing and then so there's the Joe Rogan interview the documentary interview
And then there's the journalist type interview and he said, Kurt, you're mixing up all three and people are getting confused. And then I said to him, there's a fourth that you're not considering and that is office hours.
In fact, I wanted to rename this channel Office Hours at one point, because in university there's something called Office Hours where a professor just says, come in and ask me whatever you like. You have questions, you have misunderstandings and misapprehensions. Come, let's hammer them out. That's what theories of everything is. It's office hours. I get this professor or this luminary in for an hour to three hours often. I have questions. I don't understand particular aspects of their theories. So what I'm doing is I'm asking them almost
selfishly what I don't understand and then the audience is there I'm almost indifferent to the audience I know that sounds horrible but in a way it's not because the audience tends to be more engaged the more I'm engaged and there's a facade of some people who ask questions that they don't care about so I'm asking questions that I care about and when one gap has been filled then I just move on to the next there's no need for me to make a smooth transition because I don't care about a smooth transition
I understand that the audience can often feel disoriented, but I'm also aware that I have a fixed amount of time with the person, and this is primarily to explicate toes. This is about explicating toes, theories of everything. I want to make sure that this channel gives some time to each potential theory of everything. When you talk to people who say that they study theories of everything, they actually don't. And the reason why I say that is that there are maybe
30 to 50 academic tolls and then 100 they're about 100 to 200 non-academic tolls and when I interview virtually every single person and I ask them so what do you think about this theory of everything or this one or this one some of them they'll know about and some of them they won't have an opinion about because they've never investigated it which to me how can you claim that you have the correct theory of everything if you haven't conversed with the community and understood what the options are the alternatives
It's not simple. It's absolutely not simple. That's another reason why my interview style, if there's a style, is that I get into some of the academic chaperone or the intricacies because I need to mention what is SO10 or what is X-bar structure in microtubules or sporadic groups and so on. If this podcast is geared towards solving a problem, which it is, so if you are part of this community,
One of the ways that you can think about this community to the degree there's a community is that what separates this podcast from others is that other podcasts are mainly conversational and they're just about, well, I want to talk inspirational often like Tim Ferriss and Lex Friedman. There's nothing wrong with them. They're brilliant, brilliance of what they do. I'm not adept at what they do, but this is geared toward actually solving a specific problem and the problem of theories of everything. So that means there may be a final date to it. It may end in three years, may end in two years, may end in 10 years.
There's a series, my favorite series, that's a drama called Breaking Bad. One of the reasons it was so great, absolutely great, was that they didn't have it run past its prime. They had an end in mind from day one. It was, how do I get from here? That is, I forget what Vince Gilligan called Walter White, whatever, some nerdy teacher calling Mr. Magoo, to Scarface. That was the journey. So ours is unknown to
Knowing or advancing a theory of everything. That's the goal. Let's read some of the comments now. Are you planning on getting your PhD in physics? No, no, no, no, no, no, what I'm no, there's no, no, no, many reasons for no, sorry. Okay, here's one reason if you could get a PhD in physics, you have to solve a particular problem. And it has to be a solvable problem. This seems like an intractable one, you would not get approved to be you would not get approved. If you said what I want to do is survey the theories of everything and make
an advanced, potential new theory of everything. That would not get any funding, and that's the way it works. As well as you have other departmental meetings. When I talked to, I was talking to Jonathan Gerard of Stephen Wolfram. Jonathan Gerard is a bright, bright, bright fellow. Bright fellow. And he was saying, I was telling him, we're just talking about what we do for our days. He was saying, well, I had to do
So-and-so work and then I got to do some research and I he asked me what I do and I said pretty much I research all day and he said that that's the dream life for an academic research all day whatever you want so luckily luckily I'm so lucky that I get to do that do I plan to study physics in the future I am studying physics okay thank you for calling me a hot man and a and a handsome man that's flattering I appreciate that
Have I grown more sympathetic to the left after interviewing Chomsky many times? I've grown more sympathetic to virtually every side after interviewing virtually every person. I don't think that one side... See, there's this phrase that says, only the shallowest of mind can believe that in great controversy, one side is mere folly. And I tend to believe that. I don't think that the radical left, quote unquote, is mere folly. I don't think that the alt-right is mere folly as well, although that might get you banned for saying. I don't think that the pro-socialists or the pro-capitalists are mere folly.
I think that many of them are misguided. I think that many of them are deluded. I think that many of them are selfish. I think that many of them are lazy thinkers, let's say. But who among us
I'm trying to decipher your question. I always have a difficult time. So please rewrite that if you don't mind because I have to read quickly as I want to get through this fairly fast. I'm only halfway done and it's been an hour and a half. And I imagine that I'm going to lose some subscribers for this, but hopefully the ones that I retain are the ones that are more interested in theories of everything. Okay. GLXL says, why haven't you interviewed Jason Reza Jorjani yet? Do it. Let me put some emoticons.
I don't know this person. Grizz Grimm says I'm a random troll on the internet with a theory of everything. Do you plan on branching out past the respectable demographic on your show? What he's referring to is right now I'm interviewing primarily academics, though Thomas Campbell isn't one and Bernardo Castro isn't one. The answer to this is yes. I actually encourage people to send me PDFs and if you don't know where to send me email, you can send me at toe.com.
That email address is also in the about page of this channel, I believe. Send me it there. What I would like to do is get two people because it takes me quite some time to go through an entire toll. I want to get two people, non-academic tolls, let's say, and get them to agree that I'm going to critique this person and this person is going to critique me and Kurt, you can moderate it. And we're going to live stream that on the toll clippings channel. The reason is that I don't want to dilute the density of material on this channel and
Griswold Grimm also says, if your data department reported all your interviews and all the backups were lost, which one would you hope wasn't lost? Well, I don't know why if they reported it, it was lost, but let's just say it was lost in the fire. The one that I would choose to be kept would be Bernardo Castrop's. Any thoughts on Chris Langdon's toll? I'm interviewing, I mean,
Yes, I'm interviewing him in late spring, I believe, or mid spring. So, watch out for that. What are your thoughts on Wittgenstein's ladder? The idea of propositions that refute themselves. Yeah, yeah, that was an interesting one. He said that all of this was pretty much for you to get up the ladder and then kick it away. When I believe it was in his tractatus. Hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm.
See, Wittgenstein's a super interesting individual because he's heralded by the new atheist rationalists as being on their side, but he adamantly was not. He actually, I think Norman Malcolm said, the religiosity that characterized Wittgenstein's later life surpassed even those who consider themselves to be religious. And Wittgenstein said that he believes that his work is only worth it if the light shines from on high.
as well as he said about Bach's phrase he said Bach said to the glory of the most high and let my neighbors be benefited thereby the most high God that is and Wittgenstein said I wish that that could be said about my work so Wittgenstein was deeply religious in fact he said part of his work well he didn't say this in these in these words but he said that part of his work was that religious experience and consciousness and quality and so on are so
outside linguistic expression that you it's better to be silent about them because you reduce them you and you cause a curtailment of them by speaking about them hans frankfurter says i'm 36 and can i still learn mathematics that's advanced and contribute something meaningful so i would say hans that it depends on your
aciduity and your IQ so that is your diligence and your intellect and that you have more of a chance of understanding the mathematics than you do have of contributing to mathematics unless what you if all you're concerned about is contributing and going to a burgeoning field find a new field where there are relatively few papers or it's just extremely new and research that
though I wouldn't recommend that because then you're chasing new for newness sake and I don't I don't I don't particularly understand why. Ivan Goran says, are you familiar with general semantics of Alfred Korazewski? No, I'm not. I'm familiar with some of Chomsky's work and to the degree that it's a subset of Chomsky's work or superset, I don't know. Ja524309 says, I can't believe this is he was referring to Richard Borchardt's
I can't believe you asked Richard Borchardt one of my questions from the comments in his commutative algebra videos. How did you find that? And did you just watch all his videos? Well, I'll say that I do my research before speaking to people. I do my research. Second, I learn and relearn mathematics.
Almost on a daily basis, so I watch lectures, many lectures online. In fact, here's something you can let me know if you're interested in this. I was thinking of live streaming my own study sessions just to mitigate my own proclivities to ADHD and distractibility, as well as it's interesting to the audience to study or to watch someone study because then they study and they're more motivated to do so. I realized that the Toe Clippings channel has only 350 subscribers.
Johan Hedeval says, which one of your interviews made you feel more energized directly afterward and perhaps inspired you to try and apply
Well, which ones made you more energized afterward? And which ones made you feel tired? Okay, virtually every single interview makes me feel wired right afterward, though I generally go into them extremely habitudinous and and lacking of energy. And that's one because of my general let's say dullness of mind. But two, that's because I'm often tired and fasting
directly before in an effort to study for the interview it's difficult for me to get sleep when I know a podcast is coming up the next day because I'm thinking about it thinking about it and I have trouble I have I have extreme trouble with my own mind I'm uncomfortable with my own mind and it's something I need to work on it's something I struggle with it's difficult to shut my mind off and meditation does not help has not helped I've tried it many many times
As for what drained me, what interview drained me, there are two interviews that actually drained me. Methuna's interview on Looking Glass Universe, I was so tired going into it. I was just falling, falling, taking everything from me to read and to pay attention to the words she's saying. A little bit of that is happening right now. That was not because she was an insipid guest at all, it was because
of my own innervatedness and listlessness as for the other guest that drained me Thomas Campbell okay Thomas bless his heart he is my friend well I don't know if you would consider me a friend I consider him a friend I hold him with high regard but that man is incapable of giving an answer that is less than two minutes long in fact often his answers would go up to 30 minutes long and I'm just thinking time is money here Tom I have 100 questions to get to
June 80s says, number one, you're a hot dude. Thank you.
I appreciate that. Number two, what you do is so unique. Thanks for the pursuit. I appreciate that. Number three, what are your views on pineapple on pizza? Okay, so I assume this is a serious question. Let me think about this. I don't dislike it. I actually like it, though I would never order it. I'm not snobbish when it comes to food. In fact, I'm
indiscriminately voracious on the opposite I think I need to be a bit more snobbish because I'll eat almost I mean I don't eat lamb and I don't eat any I consider those to be advanced animals for some reason in my brain I consider them to be different a different kind like lamb and goat and duck and deer I don't eat those I just I'm a simple man chicken and
cows and pigs that's it even pigs i don't i only like bacon but but within that i eat virtually anything okay then he said or she said what is it that you may have not done on your time on earth that could leave you with one regret on your deathbed i imagine it's not spending enough time with my parents i'm selfish and
I could spend much more time with them and it lifts their spirit like mad. It lifts their spirits, especially my mom, especially during lockdown. But I don't visit as much as I could. Part of that is my own. I just treat them as an imposition on my work.
and I know they feel that and I don't try to convey that and I try to even hide that and I even saying it right now, I don't like to say it. I don't, I don't even like to admit it. I feel like I'm admitting it right now, but that's a part of me that is inside me. And I know that if they were to die or if I was to die, that that would be a huge regret. And I, and I still don't visit them.
Coca-Cola. For the big. For the small. The short. And the tall. Peacemakers. Risk-takers. For the optimists. Pessimists. For long-distance love. For introverts. And extroverts. The thinkers. And the doers.
They would say I'm a wonderful son. They would say I'm a wonderful, wonderful son, but I'm a well-behaved son.
That's true, and I think that's what they mean when they say I'm a wonderful son, but I think that I'm not in many other ways. That's my regret. That would be my regret, and that is my regret, and I'm working on it, or I hope that I'm working on it. LightArmenov asks with regard to Chomsky, how do I keep getting him on?
He likes me. Chomsky happens to like me for whatever reason, at least he told me so, and I don't think Chomsky's a liar. I don't see Chomsky as someone who would be particularly polite to someone that he dislikes. People despise that I like Chomsky and Peterson, because I'm apparently not allowed to be a fan of both, and that brings me back to that quote about, only the shallowest of minds can think that in great controversy one side is mere folly. I think that's a foolish way of
Thinking I don't I don't I think that just demonstrates to me that people have chosen their side their side which has to do with what they've identified with and that's why I have a huge problem with identity and identifying with some category identity means sameness just so you know the etymology of it look I'm I'm well trained in my hear that sound
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go to Shopify.com slash theories now to grow your business no matter what stage you're in Shopify.com slash theories left brain that's a left brain activity to see sameness and categories i'm i'm so well trained that i would say i'm overly trained as a left hemispheric person and i need to balance that with the uniqueness of the right brain and see each as unique which means you can't compare you can't compare chomsky to
Peterson in a at least not in a simple sense and I have less sympathy for those who are there is something in me that has less sympathy for those who are on the extreme left that criticize in this manner than I do for those that are on the extreme right and the reason is that a personality they are on the left because they have high openness that is a big five personality trait so I see them as like the right I see is being closed-minded automatically so I expect that from them but the extreme left
The extreme left is so ardent for people who are open-minded, which to me demonstrates that they have this pre-ordained dogma that they're following. And they're following it despite their openness. Well, plenty of that is what they've been taught by universities, but I can't... But plenty of it is not. That's why it's important to never lie. Never, never, never, never lie. You corrupt your soul. You corrupt your conscience. You violate it. Never, never, never lie. Never lie. Never... Never dishonor someone who
I'll never cheat on someone, never lie. They're horrible, horrible, horrible acts. Horrible, horrible acts. Okay. My April says you have an artistic side. What do you do besides filmmaking? So I sing. I sing horribly and I play the guitar horribly. It's more grunge-like. I love art galleries. I used to do stand-up comedy. I used to write music. I used to rap. I like writing screenplays.
Mario Calabri says, what can change the nature of man? Well, what can change the nature of man? I wouldn't say it's rational argumentation. Okay, barfie man barfie man 362 says, please talk about meaning equals intellect intelligibility times value as well as attention equals value structure of beings. Also interest is about getting more value than you put in. Hmm, you and your channel interesting. Thank you. Appreciate that.
This is my name. Sure, I can play the guitar for you, but my wife is sleeping right now. Boris, you asked if I tried L-Theonine? Yes. Doesn't help much. Ashwan Gonda? Doesn't help much. Gaba? I don't know what you mean by Gaba if you mean the... if you mean Gabapentin. Fennibut... Fennibut helps socially. It helps you feel disinhibited. Or uninhibited. By the way, I have a letter wiki. There's a website called letter.wiki.
with a conversation between me and Desh, who is the producer of Better Left Unsaid. And the letter is all about my critique on rationality. So Mario Calabrese, what can change the nature of man? I say not rational argumentation and I can point you to there to hear my views on rationality. Which one person would I like to interview most for the channel? So I'll give you a set. Douglas Hofstadter is number one. Daniel Dennett. Eminem.
I would love to talk to Eminem. I would love to talk to Ed Whitton. I would love to talk to Terry Tao, Hideo Kojima, video game developer. The developers of Rockstar. That is Dan and Sam Houser. I would love to talk to Jonathan Blow. He's the developer of Braid and The Witness. I would love to talk to Colin Quinn. He's a comedian. I consider him to be the greatest comedian living right now, even of all time, in my personal taste. I don't
find, I think some of these people who say, Richard Pryor was the funniest and George Carlin was the funniest. I don't know. George Carlin never made me laugh. He makes the audience mainly clap in agreement and often he astounds the audience as to how he can memorize long phrases, but he never made me laugh. And that's mainly a function of time. It's that I grew up in a different era. So he probably was hilarious for his time. Probably Colin Quinn will be extremely lame for people 20 years from now.
So it's just a function of time much like people love the old rappers I think Eminem is one of the best rappers if not the best rapper ever and I'm sorry obviously Tupac is I'm not a fan of Biggie Biggie had great flow but Tupac had a great heart and heart like heart like no one else almost each song just makes you collapse and this guy died when he was so young
holy moly so it's like tupac and m&m but in terms of verbal acuity and fluidity it's m&m by far i don't think there's a contest and some people who say that the rappers from the 80s and 70s are the best
Well, it's more like they grew up with those rappers and to them it was the best for their time and it may be in the same way that George Carlin was the best for his time. I think Colin Quinn is the best for our time. Sean Murray is someone else I'd like to interview. He's from Hello Games, a video game developer. Sam Harris I'd like to interview and I'd also like to interview this guy named Cosmic Skeptic. I think his name is Alex.
He's not a dream guest because he's within reach, he's not a dream, but Nat wants to know, I'm interested to hear your thoughts on philosophy and education, specifically pedagogy and the curriculum pre-degree level. How and to whom, what age groups should philosophy be taught and what broader social problems might be remedied if we had proper philosophical education.
Here's my take on education. I think that what's in the STEM fields as an undergraduate can be learned by any high school, not any, by almost by a sufficiently gifted high schooler. I don't think there's anything in the university undergraduate degree in the stems that can, that cannot be learned by a 17 year old personally. I think that philosophy is absolutely different because it requires experience. And it's another reason why there's no such thing as a child prodigy in film, because you had to have gone through life. You had to have gone through
Hopes and dreams and Places and pain and particularly pain and philosophy requires that that's a requisite as for the social problems I wouldn't say that the social problems are a lack of philosophical understanding per se but perhaps a lack of humility That is the people ardently claim that whiteness is the number one enemy or socialism is de facto incorrect Etc
It may be a lack of religious orientation, or a lack of commitment to the good, or a lack of being honorable in one's private life, no matter what, rather than a philosophical problem. It may be that. And as for the last question, I need to think about that. Am I thinking of having Graham Priest on the show? This is by Noah Noah Noah. Yes, it's confirmed, but without a date. I need to work through his material. That may take a month. It takes quite some time to work through someone's material. I don't know why
You would say that Jordan Peterson is delusional. What about Jordan Peterson is delusional? See, I don't like this when people dismiss people by saying, Oh, he's obvious. Someone recently said, Elon Musk is obviously low IQ. I said, low IQ, Elon Musk. Why? They said, because he doesn't see socialism as the solution. Are you? Well, okay. I will reserve. It's such a,
Such a simple-minded thinking that says that. So simple-minded. It's absolutely not easy to dismiss almost any intellectual. Almost any intellectual. At least, I don't think so. Maybe I'm stupid.
Maybe I'm asinine. Freestyling. I wasn't that great at freestyling. I could, but I never developed it. I was more interested in writing the songs. I had about 50 songs in rap that I deleted in a rage because I was beat up one time during a battle with someone, a freestyle battle or a rap battle, where I insulted someone's... Look, anything is fair game when you're rapping. So I was 14 or so. I insulted someone's dead
Cousin
Okay, let's get to this.
Does it help?
When they were supposed to be in elementary school out from school and traveled for a half a semester or semester or full year or whatever it may be and said that they got more Education from that than they got from being in school and people were snarky about that One reason they are is because they're not able to do that for their own child So they then tend to repudiate others, but I think it's salutary. I'm thinking if I have a kid I'm thinking of
homeschooling him or her in a process that Peter Gray calls unschooling. Now I do have an interview with Peter Gray for those of you who want to watch it. It's on the Drakma Institute. I'll leave the link in the description. It's not one that's on this channel. The problem then becomes how do you socialize them because they can easily become awkward if you don't expose them to the harshness of the flagacious peers.
One option is to push them to their limits of social discomfort. Another is to develop or to cultivate a local group of like-minded unschoolers, parents who are similarly interested and then have our kid hang out with them. As for education, look in math, I was watching a recent lecture by Richard Borchards and he was saying, okay, we're going to talk about modular forms.
Now, this is what a modular form is. He writes down the equation, then he says, and now if someone says this is what a modular form is, it looks like if someone had a contest for what is the strangest equation you could come up with and then chose one of them. I'd like to that because that's actually what you're thinking when you look at the equation for a modular form. You're thinking this is highly unmotivated. Where did this come from? Why is this useful? However, if you look at Wikipedia, it's removed from any emotion, from any commentary. It's just purely clinical.
I understand that because it was modeled after the encyclopedia. It's called Wikipedia. But a project of mine that I would like to start is a way of humanizing. See, I don't see it as opinion versus editorial and Wikipedia would consider Richard Borchardt's comments to be opinion, but I don't see it as opinion. I see it as human.
I see it as making math approachable. And I think that plenty of people would understand math and physics far greater if there were little commentaries like that. And I don't know how to facilitate that being in Wikipedia. Maybe Wikipedia is not the right format. But I would like to cultivate a project in the future that helps people learn math and physics much more easily. As to what other elements or ingredients it would take other than the occasional sentences to how absurd an equation seems,
or where this is potentially going, whatever it may be. I don't know. And I'm totally open to suggestions. It's a project that I have going on in the back of my mind. Paul Marie says, what is your background in math and physics? My background is a specialist degree in math and physics from the University of Toronto. And you can look this up. It's the hardest degree that is math and physics. I chose it because as a high schooler, you have to choose it once you're in high school. I chose it because I always liked doing what's the hardest. I remember once there was the
a puzzle called the hardest logic puzzle in the world. And I remember thinking, OK, that one's I'm going to solve that. And you know what? I'm going to solve that in my head without writing. So I remember it took me about a month or so. I wasn't thinking about it all the time constantly, but it took me about a month of thinking to try and solve that problem in my head. I always like challenges, intellectual challenges. So I took what is the hardest degree at U of T, the specialist degree of math and physics. The president of U of T actually told me that was the hardest degree.
I'm not saying I did well in it. In fact, I had many zeros, many, many zeros because I had major depression, clinical depression and would just gain weight and played video games, did nothing, hated my life. Horrible students, horrible student. Didn't go to class after first year, not one, well, a couple of classes, but
I didn't like going to classes. I despised going to classes. I never took notes, even in high school. The reason why I didn't take notes was because there was this lecture I watched once where a professor was writing notes and speaking, and he was speaking. What he was saying was extremely important. You should have been taking notes about that.
But people were only taking notes about what was written on the board. And then the teacher was speaking and then he started drawing a circle as he was thinking and speaking. And then people drew the circle in their notebook. And then I thought, okay, I'm done. I'm not taking notes because obviously these people who take notes are just followers. They're not actually processing the information. So let me listen to what the professor is saying and actually understand it. And later I can go through the textbook. So I never stopped taking notes from high school because of that.
I wasn't a good student, though. By the way, okay, you may wonder how is it that if I wasn't a great student, was I able to finally get my degree? Well, one is that I'm great at studying for tests. I can study for a test in two days or three days just by going through the material. Obviously, I would forget it quite a few days later, but it was fairly easy for me to study for tests. It still is. Peter Nikolov says, oh, man, just do it. Make more than sure your subscribers want to hear from you. Maybe not just this Q&A, maybe do an in-depth review on what you think of TOES.
the toes that have been on your podcast. So again, like I'm betting that the innovation is going to come from the periphery rather than the scholastic center, which is why I'm cultivating this community. It's not me. This channel is not just me, even though my face is on it, maybe I'll start to remove it more and more. But the channel is about us coming up with a theory of everything, or at least understanding the different theories of everything and then contributing
And perhaps at some point I'll do that via live streams on the Toe Clippings channel. OK, have I tried getting Roger Penrose on? Rishabh Prashat says yes, I've tried. I can't get him on. I don't know how. I don't want to use Brian. Brian Keating is a dear friend of mine. I don't want to use Brian Keating's connection for that. Again, it's distasteful sometimes to ask your friends for connections, and I know I ask Brian for plenty, and he's such a good man. He's a great man. He's a jovial man.
He's immense. If you understand some Yiddish, I think it's Yiddish, but I can't use them for that. I feel like that's stepping out of my bounds. Rutger Paulacher says, of all you've read, what book would you recommend us to read beside Gödel Escherbach? Beside Gödel Escherbach, which is right there. Master and his Emissary. It's a polarizing book. People love it. People hate it. The proportion of people that love it are much greater than those that hate it. And those that hate it tend to have already their worldview made up. And they say that's
Foolish, that's asinine, that's imbecilic, that's inane, out the gate. And I just despise, I don't like that. I don't see... I used to... Part of me not liking it is me not liking myself because I used to be like that. To such a large degree. And I just see the arrogance in it. And then I see the arrogance in myself and in my former self and I cringe and I don't think it's good for the world.
Either way, this will... Master and his emissary will discombobulate you in hopefully a salubrious manner. Ryan Culling says, what is love? To know love is to know God, and I don't know God. The greatest love I've felt and still feel is with my wife.
This is an experience I can't articulate into words and perhaps there's a reason for that. Perhaps it's destined to be like that. Perhaps that's the point of it. I don't know. I'm unsure. Ryan Colling says, Ryan Colling, which is also Barfie Man for those of you who are listening, Barfie Man wants to know, can you speak about the idea of the attention economy? Is attention the fundamental value of consciousness? So attention changes or alters consciousness. That seems clear. It obviously influences what enters your perceptive field.
your field of perception, that is. That means that in a fascinating manner, attention is prior to consciousness, which is absolutely fascinating. And I don't think that there's much attention placed on that aspect. I do think that a missing ingredient to consciousness may be an understanding of attention.
You know, in the same way that some thought that space-time was fundamental and then some thought that causality is more fundamental than space-time, I wonder if attention is more fundamental than consciousness, which puts a huge hole in all those non-dualists who think that consciousness is the most fundamental. And perhaps that's another reason why they don't like to talk about it. Ryan Collins says, what are your thoughts on solipsism? My thoughts are that it's not easily disproved by a rationalist or empiricist account.
And that to me, like, I haven't heard a great critique as to why solipsism is wrong from a rationalist. It doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I haven't heard it. And that to me demonstrates a problem with rationality, or demonstrates that solipsism is correct. Okay, we're nearing the end. Sharari says, what is your view on religion and how has it changed after Rupert Sheldrake?
I'll get to the chat soon, okay? Just a second, I want to get through some of these questions that people have been asking me for quite some time. So how has my views on the supernatural changed from Rupert Sheldrake and Thomas Campbell? With Rupert Sheldrake it showed me that there's a whole group of people who have a disdain for what's supernatural that edit on Wikipedia and that what you learn from Wikipedia isn't the whole truth
Sounds like it's obvious, but it's actually not. These people who identify with being skeptics aren't skeptics. They're not open-minded inquirers of what is, no matter what is, whatever is will be. It seems like they have an idea of what is, and they're trying to disprove what isn't, and they have a conception of what isn't. And they're also not willing to update their conception of what an is is, which sounds like a Bill Clinton statement, but I'm talking more about ontology.
so these people who label themselves as skeptics demonstrate to me more they demonstrate their axiomatic postulates more than they demonstrate what's true at least to me because there is no supernatural maybe there is no supernatural maybe it's all natural but then you need to update what natural is so maybe it is possible for people to communicate psychically
I don't know. It doesn't seem like it, at least from the evidence that I've seen, or the non-evidence that I've seen, but I still have to look into it. And I'm willing to look into it. And so many skeptics have their mind made up as to how is this wrong? How is this wrong? How is this wrong? And then if it's not wrong, then they'll say, well, there was something wrong somewhere with the setup, and I just don't know what it is, but you clearly cheated. Okay, someone's saying, what economic system do you think we should have? I don't know. That's a complicated...
People think physics is complicated or math is complicated, but I think economics and political theory is far more complicated because of the amount of variables. You have what's called aggregatory feedback, or at least I call it that, which means you get a yes or no. You get a ping. Did it work or did it not work? But you have no idea which one of the factors influenced it. It's difficult to do double-blind tests. Schmoney, that's called Schmoney, says, Hi Kurt, I was pleasantly surprised to find out you were Trinidadian in the Bernardo Castro interview, which was your best, I think. I think so as well, thank you.
Although the Ian McGilchrist interview to me is pushing it. I myself was born in Guyana, so it's great to see someone from the West Indy community grapple with such topics and do so thoughtfully as well. Just wanted to say you're doing a really great job. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Anyways, my questions are, what religion did you grow up with? Were you born in Trinidad? And do you think it's important to honor both systems of the East and the West? And then he says, PS, if you're ever in Queens, I would love to grab a chat, grab a drink in the chat.
The religion I grew up with was Christianity, non-denominational, but then when I was eight I became an atheist for reasons that I was... Well, I was questioning the origins of the universe and my brother who was studying physics at the time told me about quantum fluctuations and to me that solved it and I remember
not vividly but almost vividly being at home on my bed looking at the ceiling thinking that aha then that means that there is no need for God then I became an arrogant atheist let's say which is usually the path one goes down they don't just become a a humble atheist let's say as for
East versus West and incorporating them. See, this is super interesting, super, super interesting because people will say, Hey, what we need is to incorporate more of the East into the West. And they tend to be these people who are high in openness. Again, the personality traits and you don't hear them advocating much for the Western approach to be in the East. So that's a huge gap that I see in their approach, which says that all religions are equally true in some manner. Well, you're not advocating for the opposite.
So to me it shows their bias all along as well as when they say the types that say that that they like the Eastern approaches or that the Eastern approaches need to be integrated more with the Western ones. They tend to focus almost solely on the Eastern ones and meditate for three hours a day and say that all is illusory and there is no soul or if there is one it's infinitely being reborn.
and whatever it may be that are the traditional dictums of the East. Sorry, Desiderata of the East. I view it a bit differently. I think that that may be an approach incorporating the East into the West for people who are high in openness and mostly those who are watching are high in openness. You're most likely in the 95th percentile of openness or 90th at least.
But that doesn't mean that your approach works for everyone. And this is something that I find so funny, fascinating, is that people think what works for them should work for everyone. And I tend to view it as see the Western tradition and the Eastern tradition for the Easterners, the Western tradition for now is in our bones. It's in the way that we walk and we talk and we see and we think
It's definitely in the way that we see because your goals are influenced by you and your culture, as well as that's influenced by the history of your religion. So the West Judeo-Christian. So it's inside you. It's inside you to a degree that you have no clue. It's in your bones. It's in your sinew. And same with the East. And then to say that, well, what we can do is take an Eastern approach and apply it to a Westerner.
Well, that to me is like saying you can take a Windows program and put it on a Mac or vice versa. They may be the same program solving the same problem, giving the same solution, but you can't run them. And that may be another reason why people in the West find nihilism to be so abhorrent, because in the East, well, they're like, they're okay with nihilism in some regard, but in the West, that's not us. So to give a nihilistic Eastern philosophy,
it's horrible for people some people momentarily it's freeing because if you say there is no free will it's illusory then that's paradoxically freeing in some respect because you're no longer self-flagellating and self-mortifying but in the long run you then dive into an abyss
And it's and I don't think people take that into account. I think that people think if it's a solution, it's a solution. And we can run this program on any we can emulate it anywhere. Might not be like that. It might be but it might not. And I just Well, as for the offer and getting a drink in Queens, thank you. I'm going back to the questions which are almost complete now. Okay, what are your views on Islam? Does Islam promote violence? This person wants to get me demonetized? Well, I'll say this, that
It seems clear to me that some sects or some subsets of sects do promote violence. It also seems clear to me that many don't. It also seems clear to me that there are interpretations of Islam that are just as peaceful as any other interpretation of any religion.
then you get into the problem of what defines Islam. So this is tricky. So see, to me, this my view on it does Islam promote violence isn't more Sam Harris's is more observational or operation. Actually, it's more observational in the sense that, okay, let's look at the sum total of people who identify with being Muslim. And then let's see how readily are they willing to harm an infidel. And then let's judge the religion based on that. Okay, so what does the religion
mean? Do we judge it by the followers of the Quran? What is the definition of Islam? Is it the current followers of the Quran? Is it the current Islamic leaders and what they say, much like Catholicism depends on the Pope? What does it mean to follow the Quran? That's an interesting question. Okay, so here's one perspective. Do you judge a religion by what the majority of the followers say or do? Hmm. See,
old Kurt let's say would say yes but then Kierkegaard came about and Kierkegaard went against the conventions of Christianity at the time and was even critiqued for it but yet I would say Kierkegaard had a truer understanding of Christianity than the majority of the Christians at the time so then that's interesting what the heck does that mean that someone can have someone can have access to a more true or can espouse or can explicate or can
cultivate or materialize or elaborate on a Christianity that's more true than what the Christians at the time were engaged in. That's interesting. So then can one say the same about Islam? See, what we're getting to is a definition of what does Islam mean? What does Christianity mean? So I think these questions of does Islam promote violence are more philosophical than or at least you can take it practically like you want to know.
If I have a Muslim friend, are they more likely to harm me than a Christian friend? Or more likely to blow up so-and-so? You can take it practically like that, but I'm taking it philosophically. What does it mean to be a Muslim? What does it mean to be a Christian? It's not easy. That's what I would say. I don't know.
Sid, how many hours a day do you study? Do you find it difficult studying math? He finds it difficult studying math for more than four hours a day. And he used to be able to study for more than six hours when he was at his most productive. So for me, I study almost all the time. I wouldn't say it's math. I try to study for almost every waking hour that I can, unless I'm with my wife. All I'm doing is I'm with my wife or I'm studying, working in some way, shape or form.
I can study math if I'm feeling absolutely productive. I can study it for 10 hours straight, most of the time is four hours. And then there's a, I have to switch tasks. Mainly I have to switch tasks because I have to see because I'm having problems with my eyes now. So I have to look at objects that are more than one meter away because I'm stuck in this condo. I got to walk outside and see trees and so on and buildings. Otherwise I'm diminishing my eyesight and I feel it. I strain each day worse and worse, especially yesterday, especially yesterday.
okay someone says so euphoric 87 what do you think led to your existentialist curiosity and why do you think so many people don't have an interest in pondering the nature of things well most people aren't high in openness so that's why that's a as for my existential curiosity i've had that since i was eight like i mentioned what happened was i asked my brother about the origins of the universe how can something come from nothing and he mentioned quantum fluctuations it's not a complete answer but he mentioned it and i remember thinking ah that's interesting okay so
Well, ever since then I became interested in physics and existential questions. Okay, which of your guests have you found most compelling so far? Bernardo Kastrup and Ian McGilchrist. Which interpretations of quantum mechanics do you lean toward and prefer? Have you tried any meditation? If so, how have you found it? Okay, I've tried many meditations, many different types of meditation. I'm getting loopy here, just so you know.
I'm wearing thin. Okay. I'm trying to hold on to the questions. One was the interpretation of quantum mechanics and the meditation. So interpretations, I don't lean toward any, I lean away from one, which is many worlds, I lean away from that, although I'm not convinced that it's false. I tend to lean away from it mainly for a psychological reason that I think the reason for coming up with it has nothing to do with physics, but more has to do with one abdicating one's personal responsibility. And what I mean by that is,
It's the epitome of that think about I tend to think that you're special who you're listening to this who's listening you listening to this is you are special. You can change the world. You can change the world for good. You can change the world for evil. And I do think the world centers around you in some strange manner in the same way that we're the center of the universe, but we're not.
because there's many centers so it's as if there's multiple centers and that's a strange paradox but i don't know how to solve that antinomy but i think it's true in some manner and i see the many worlds interpretation as being the ultimate of the copernican statement of you're not special you're not special you're not special which by the way copernicus was wrong you can make a frame of reference where the earth is still and the rest of the universe is rotating around it
with general relativity quite easily so just so you know there's no preferred way of thinking about which one is spinning around which even though he's venerated as being the exemplar of science prevailing over the church's dogma I see the many worlds interpretation as the epitome of someone who wants to say that you're not special what's not special well you're a dust mode amongst a cloud amongst a whole hurricane that constitutes your galaxy amongst many planets somewhat that constitute the universe and so on
And then, what's even less special than that? Well, there's many of them, and none are preferred. I think the world does revolve around you in some manner though. I think that each lie that you say replicates. I think that each good act you do replicates. It replicates, it replicates, it replicates. So do good as best you can. Do good as best you can. Admit when you're wrong as best you can. Say sorry when you're sorry as best you can. Forget your ego. Be humble.
love love love love so it sounds like i have nothing what i said has nothing to do with physics it has to do with psychology and that's correct that's why i'm not saying that many worlds is incorrect i'm saying i lean away from it but i'm not wholly convinced that it's incorrect i'm still open to it cute kimis thank you so much i don't know if you have a question steward scott says congrats kurt you can see that we're getting toward the end because i'm at an s and this was sorted alphabetically congrats kurt i have a question for you
that pertains to your thoughts and reality do you believe that there's only matter or only mental states or something in between after interviewing so many intellectuals how do you think about consciousness okay so i'm unsure if there's only matter i'm unsure if there are only mental states i'm unsure of what mind or matter is as well okay as for the my take on consciousness my take is is that people who say that they have their theory of consciousness and it's
In some ways, I like it because I want to know their theories. But in some ways, I find it extremely orgyless, let's say, orgy, haughty, haughty, let's say, there's 50, there's maybe 20 to 50 different theories of consciousness. And when I bring it on, I do when I bring this up, much like the theories of everything to the physicists, I bring up the theories of consciousness to the individual guests. And I say, can you comment on this? Can you comment on this king? And often they say, oh, I don't I can't comment on that one, because I don't know that one. I don't know. How can you say you have the correct one if you don't know the rest? I don't understand that.
There are competing theories that seem to be self-consistent and you should at least know all. It's not that hard. It takes maybe two years or three years. The RMM says, how do you manage to get such famous thinkers to give you the time of the day? Well, I do so with luck and persistence and each feeds off the last. So for example, when I got gnome,
I can't answer that question. It's beyond my ability right now because I'm losing my own train of thought. I'm becoming wifty. I'll read the question to you and then maybe
I can try and answer the whole punching up and punching down. I find a lot of people like to make fun and bully white people or any majority class when the person on the receiving end is not and the person on the receiving end is not taken kindly to it. I understand some part of it, but it feels like bullying, rude, racist behavior. Except they're justifying by saying they're punching up and that doesn't have social repercussions or they say it doesn't. I don't understand it. Should we wait for something bad to happen?
There's a quote that people will do anything no matter how absurd in order to avoid facing their own soul. I'll say that and I'll let you interpret it as you will. Voyager says, Kurt, can you interview Commander David Fravor? He's the guy who chased the UFO off the coast of San Diego in a fighter jet. He was an extremely credible witness. Yes, I would love to interview him. However, I don't have any questions that Lex didn't cover.
lex did a wonderful interview with david fravor and if you can think of any spots that are needing to be filled or different angles please let me know that's the main issue when people request guests or famous guests what do you want me to ask them i know sometimes people just say well i want you to talk to them yeah that's not helpful it's not helpful for me because i already have a list of almost maybe 200 people to talk to so please give help me out and give me an angle someone says do you think you can get you can get a conversation with lex reidman
I don't have any interesting information
Wolf Winter says, what is currently stopping you from accepting idealism as the best ontology, specifically Bernardo Castrop's form of it? Cheers.
I have to understand it more. See, if someone talks to me about it, I think I can give an explanation that would be on par with, not on par, but I would give an explanation that Bernardo would approve of, but that's not enough. I need to understand it in the sense that I have to live it to some degree and incorporate it into my own thinking and I haven't, or only have to a minor degree.
as well as I have to understand all the different strains of consciousness before I can come to a conclusion. That's what's stopping me. See, for conversations like the ones that I engage in on this channel, as well as when you watch debates or when I watch debates and so on, I don't think it's useful to think in terms of an instant transformation, but instead to think in terms of slow... a slow process of change, a slow process of a seed that's been planted, seminal,
If this was group theory, if you can, if you're a mathematician, you understand group theory, then each conversation I have is like, I've been added a new generator, and time is the parameter. So it's almost like there's tiny chunks, tiny chinks in my armor, my armored vehicle that I used to pilot the world. And I see that this is this needs mending, this needs abandoning, this needs adding.
This isn't where I thought it was, I thought it was stronger here, and so on. And I find that my self-imposed interdictions are unnecessary, and that my trumpeted freedoms are superfluous, so... It's a... slog. It's a slow process of doing and undoing. I rearrange myself slowly, and that's a more effective way of describing what's going on during these conversations.
I think that's useful because people want to say that this changed my life and then someone asks you how did it change your life and then you're at a loss for words and then you feel like well maybe didn't change my life or maybe I'm foolish on inarticulate or maybe is that it changed your life at a small level right now that'll manifest itself later I think that's the better way to think about it and as long as I'm oriented by God or by truth or by love or all I hope that I'm I hope these conversations are changing me for a
For the good and hopefully changing others for the good or more specifically. I hope that I hope that Thank you again, thank you so much for watching this I appreciate it. I got to get going as you can tell I'm now drained if you want to support more Conversations like this then please consider going to patreon.com slash Kurt Jai Mungle. There is a custom pledge people ask how can I donate more than?
or less than $10. You can do a custom pledge and it actually helps. Each dollar helps. I hope that what I've said is coherent and sapid and copacetic and if it's not then please you can
message again and perhaps I'll do another AMA somewhat shorter this time so that I'm not struggling at the end of it thank you so much thank you I'm gonna watch the comment section now for just a minute or two and then I'm gonna go hydration thank you making sense hydration is not something I have a problem with at all actually I drink perhaps too much water it's more sleep that I have a difficult time with
Thank you, thank you. Misroom, Nathan. I can't pronounce this Japanese character, kanji character name. Thank you. Bo, Karina, thank you. Jaron, thank you. Yvonne, thank you. Munda. Oh, Munda didn't say thank you, but Munda, thank you. Amin, thank you. Micromat, thank you. Dimitri, thank you. Dina, thank you. Barfiman, thank you.
I'm in. Thank you. I'll look into it. Try red light goggles. Yeah, I have them. I've tried them. Okay. Thank you. I gotta get going now. Thank you. Bye bye.
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"text": " Welt, if you ever hear the word V or the letter V in a German word, it's W. The other aim for this channel to answer Akash's question, I'm only on question number one, to answer Akash's question is that there is a part of me that thinks coming up with a theory of everything, the way it's traditionally done is with private practice of erudite individuals in academia.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 624.394,
"end": 651.527,
"text": " And I'm unsure if innovation is to be found there anymore. That's false. There's plenty of innovation coming from the universities, especially in the STEM field. What I mean is, I think that there's vast swaths missing from our current theories of everything. And I think that it's a, I'm hoping that what I can do is make this a community effort that people from the outside can watch and contribute",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 652.295,
"end": 673.541,
"text": " who didn't necessarily have the chance to go to university, or aren't trained mathematically. And collectively, though I despise the word collectively because of how it's been co-opted, but collectively we can come up with, or at least advance, a theory of everything. So that's a goal of this channel. That's a dream. A dream of mine. Alright, let's get to the next one.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 674.77,
"end": 700.998,
"text": " Account number one says, what are your thoughts on Rupert Spira, invite, invite to vent dot vet Vedanta. And thanks for making such an awesome podcast. Now, account number one, you can see by the fact that I'm struggling to pronounce Vedanta, that I'm unfamiliar with it, I know a tiny amount like a modicum about it. And I know a modicum about Rupert Spira, though I do have an interview with him booked June 15 or so, which means it'll go online June at the end of June.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 702.039,
"end": 729.991,
"text": " They also say thank you for making such an awesome podcast. I don't like to read the plaudits, but I'll do so because it's part of the question and it also it's endearing. Thank you, account number one. Account number one has another question. What or how do you think about abstract mathematical structures philosophically? Okay, I'm not quite sure I understand what you mean when you say how do I think of them philosophically. I imagine what you mean is",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 731.015,
"end": 759.616,
"text": " Am I a Platonist or non-Platonist? That's all I can think of unless what you mean is am I algebraic or am I analytical or geometrical or visual? I'd say I'm minorly visual and a majorly algebraic and majorly conceptual. So that means that I don't know how to describe the conceptual one because I haven't heard many people talk about it. It's more like I think in terms of concepts that are nebulous or nubilous and then they relate. As for Platonism,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 760.213,
"end": 786.203,
"text": " I don't see how mathematical truths can be invented. I don't see it as being dependent on us, though Lee Smolin makes a case that they're time-dependent. This means that I'm... I'm not sure. The answer is I'm not sure and I'm tilted toward Platonism. You can think of it as I'm platonically dating Platonism. This comes from account number two. Kurt, have you considered getting Douglas Hofstadter on the show? The answer is every day.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 790.06,
"end": 816.391,
"text": " Alex Bromans says, what's the role that I see psychedelics having in our society for the next 20 years? And then he says, good job with a peace sign. Medically, it seems to be efficacious. It seems to be more so than traditional medications and treatments. As for individuals, I hope it's a force for good.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 821.476,
"end": 843.029,
"text": " Aleksander96 says, you seem to be a gamer, at least you've mentioned, excitedly, games when talking to other people. So what games do you like? What games have you played in the past and any thoughts on the value of video games?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 843.712,
"end": 873.404,
"text": " Personally, I'm certain that Dark Souls, a pretty challenging game if you don't know it, has strongly conditioned me to enjoy more difficult challenges. Okay, so this person is extremely perceptive. Alexander. I love Dark Souls. I love Demon's Souls. I love From Software games in general. I love Fallout. I love single player wide open sprawling vistas and missions and RPGs. I love those. I love those two bits. I'm extremely looking forward to playing this game called Disco. LSEM or LSI.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 874.206,
"end": 903.831,
"text": " Elysium, I believe. Disco Elysium. Though I played it for about an hour. I don't get time to play video games, man. I'm just studying for this podcast almost all the time. I wish I had more time to play because I love playing video games. I dislike shooters. Although I do like some mindless games, games that I could listen to a podcast or do some research that just require auditory input.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 904.565,
"end": 931.561,
"text": " while I play, but I don't like them in the sense that I enjoy playing those games. It's more like, okay, now I get to listen to this book that I have to read or research this person, and at least I can play a video game, maybe get a trophy or two at the same time. Disco Elysium, there seems to be elements of one psychological state speaking to oneself, and that's alarming to me. I won't rehash why. You can watch the Ian McGilchrist video to find out why.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 932.892,
"end": 959.735,
"text": " I just hope it doesn't induce something like psychosis. I don't know if I can handle that game. Metal Gear Solid, I love the series Metal Gear Solid. Metal Gear Solid V, though, I was extremely disappointed. I think everyone was. The gameplay in it is great, but it's not what I was looking for in a Hideo Kojima game. I love indie games. Indie games that play with mechanisms, sorry, mechanics, gameplay mechanics, inventively.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 961.169,
"end": 989.991,
"text": " I'm one of those rare people that find Metal Gear Solid 4 to be peerless. I actually think it's the best of all the Metal Gear Solids, even though... even though it's lacking in terms of the intricacies of Metal Gear Solid 3. In terms of fan service, it was wonderful. If you're a fan of Metal Gear Solid from 1, 2, 3, you're... I don't know how you can't love Metal Gear Solid 4. Someone said, Rebecca says, why am I wasting my life with video games instead of experiencing the earth? Well, that",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 991.732,
"end": 1021.19,
"text": " one can say why are you telling stories instead of experiencing the earth in some way the stories inform how you experience the earth and in some ways a video game is a more interactive story it depends on if you're using it to escape the earth and also video games are part of the earth where am i from daniela daniela wants to know i'm from trinidad i believe someone asks that later i also have an idea for a video game which at some point i because i don't like",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1022.24,
"end": 1047.86,
"text": " These games that have speech checks and then sneaking options or kill options, those are just three, and then they think, well, look, I've spanned the gamut of all you can do with a video game. Look how wonderful in options my RPG is. I don't think that's all there is. I like more than that. I have an idea, but I may have to lay it to the side along with the multiplicity of other forlorn ideas of mine. Amidu, Chimera, says, what ism of consciousness do I lean most toward?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1049.55,
"end": 1078.85,
"text": " and what are my thoughts on the bizarre phenomenon of alien abductions well okay as for the ism that I lean toward I would say none yet as for alien abductions I don't know what to make of it I don't think that everyone who claims that they've been abducted are asinine or lying I also don't think the same about Bigfoot and I would like I would love to get Les Stroud on the podcast to keep reaching out to his",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1079.65,
"end": 1108.32,
"text": " People and they keep putting me off. They keep saying six months from now or five months from now Hopefully at some point less drought will come on the podcast. I would love to talk to him That's survivor man for those of you who are unacquainted I do have an intimation as to why UFOs and Bigfoot and other phenomenon might exist As well as an explanation for why they're mysterious but it may be imbecilic so I don't I Won't state it because it's not well formed",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1110.79,
"end": 1139.12,
"text": " It's just that I don't know. I find it odd that Bigfoot hasn't been captured by any camera. Some people will claim it has been. Okay, Anna Lukomsky says, by the way, if I'm appearing tired, I am. For the past couple nights, I haven't gotten much sleep. Groggy, so I'm in the midst of that. Okay, let's see. Anna Lukomsky says, I would love to hear the story behind your podcast and how",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1139.85,
"end": 1169.1,
"text": " You became inspired to do a podcast on toes on theories of everything. The practicalities of how you actually managed to get it going, especially the story behind how you got your first guest. I wonder if you knew how much that moment would change your world. Theories of everything. Theories of everything. That is this channel was an evolution. It started as blue. That is better left unsaid. I call it blue. So if you ever ever hear me use the word blue, I'm referring to better left unsaid, which is a documentary I directed, which is releasing tomorrow.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1169.39,
"end": 1192.42,
"text": " And again, quick promotion. If you want to buy it, please get it from betterleftunsaidfilm.com. Don't buy it from iTunes and so on, because betterleftunsaidfilm.com will have the director's version, which is the much longer, ponderous, philosophical, psychological version that contains elements the public won't necessarily like. But if you're a fan of this channel, you'll probably like",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1193.23,
"end": 1217.24,
"text": " And that one, you get it for free on the BetterLeftOnSaidFilm.com when you buy the regular version. It just, you get a choice. Do you want to watch the regular or the director's cut? Which is two hours long. So a half hour of extra material. As for the first guest, it depends on what qualifies this channel. The first guest in many ways was Gnome, or in many ways it was Brian Keating, or in many ways it was Donald Hoffman.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1218.54,
"end": 1247.65,
"text": " Now, the Hoffman interview was one that I had no idea would change me as much as it did. Not because of his theories per se, but because it seems like as soon as I released that podcast, it was as if Toe, theories of everything, became his own genre. And that was exciting. Because it was me talking to someone the way that I would like to talk to them, instead of somewhat of a facade of an interviewer, journalist type person. Which,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1247.81,
"end": 1276.94,
"text": " Characterized the previous interviews which I've now unlisted because I am embarrassed about them and they don't fit the theme of this channel so Donald Hoffman and the reception to it indicated to me that I was on an interesting past path and it spurred me on Apostolos Prel says Do you have a Facebook page for your YouTube audience? Sorry, do you have a Facebook page for your YouTube channel and I want to support you Kurt so I don't have a Facebook page",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1277.12,
"end": 1306.49,
"text": " not for this channel at least and if you want to support then please support on patreon it patreon genuinely helps each dollar helps and you may not think so but it helps because it's completely voluntary it's someone voluntarily is giving me a dollar or ten or whatever maybe per month continually it financially it's it's a boon",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1307.98,
"end": 1337.65,
"text": " I tell my wife each time I get an email from a patron and I also personally email each patron they think that it's a form letter because they're usually surprised that they get a personal communication but I'm genuinely happy my wife and I were delighted each time it also serves the amount of patrons I have also serves as a metric of the positive response to this channel beyond the adulatory comments because some of these comments",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1339.26,
"end": 1367.42,
"text": " They're extremely flattering, but at the same time, I look at other channels. I'm sure if anyone here is a content creator, you've experienced this where someone says, I love this. This was the best podcast or this was the best video. And then you watch some other video of a, of a cat hitting a dog and then the dog being happy about it. And then someone says, this is the best video I've ever seen online. And then you wonder, okay, I was happy about my comments at first, but then that also gets the same attribution.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1368.76,
"end": 1389.41,
"text": " So there's a temporary ego boost I get, but then a subsequent deflation of it. However, the Patreon subscribers definitely indicate to me that someone's willing to say that this is something they see worth supporting, a mission that they can believe in, and they do with their dollar. So I'm delighted and I find it truly touching. Thank you.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1393.59,
"end": 1420.16,
"text": " Aspen French says, I want, I'm a fan of your content Kurt, but I'm also a feminist and I try to listen to the opposition and so on. But this was on the Janice Fiumengo interview. But I was extremely frustrated by this discussion. There's not. Well, what I want to ask is, would you consider a voice from the other side and answers? Absolutely. I am actively looking for people who are on the more radical left end who espouse critical race theory and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1421.36,
"end": 1446.17,
"text": " are black lives matters supporters and so on whatever you think of as the typical left extreme left-leaning whatever you want to call it I'm not disparaging it but those types of people I'm definitely looking for in fact for the documentary better left unsaid I reached out at least initially to way more people professors on the left than I did on the right and I got no after no after no after no after no it was only people who are on",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1446.36,
"end": 1472.5,
"text": " the center center left center right who actually said yes to me but I'm looking for people I have a whole document of questions for hoping that someone eventually will come online and speak with me hopefully a professor I don't want just some postdoc or it could be a postdoc I don't want some undergrad or recent graduate to talk to me or just someone who says that I'm a trans person and you should talk to me well I would prefer a professor for various reasons",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1475.03,
"end": 1501.53,
"text": " Austin Harper says, Do you believe in free will? Are aliens here God? Is ego death real death? What is the perfect form of government assuming there is one? Why does life have symmetry but physics is having issues with it? Do you think black holes have singularities? What about panpsychism? I've subbed since your Sabine interviews. That is the Sabine Haassenfelder interview. So basically you're required to answer at least one of these questions.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1502.36,
"end": 1531.89,
"text": " Okay, do you believe in free will? I'm not sure. There are arguments for it and there are arguments against it and I don't know. There's definitely the feeling that free will exists and there's definitely the feeling that you're feeling a free will is illusory. That is during meditation or a psychedelic experience, let's say, or even a hypnagogic near dream state. As for our aliens here, I'm not sure. As for God, I'm not sure. As for his ego death, real death, that's a terrifying question.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1534.17,
"end": 1556.99,
"text": " That's a terrifying question. Well, that's an extremely, extremely, extremely terrifying question, man. It's such a terrible question, I have to move on from that question. What is the perfect form of government, assuming there is one? So it might be that there's not, it might be God's government, or might be one that's dependent on time, or it might be one where you maximize",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1558.54,
"end": 1582.93,
"text": " Voluntary choice, but then you get into the issue of what constitutes voluntary choice. Is it positive freedom or is it negative freedom? which means you get into the base of philosophy and I see that many of the arguments about capitalism versus socialism or communism in fact are Arguments not about which political system is correct, but which philosophical strain do we use to interpret freedom? I",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1584.26,
"end": 1613.86,
"text": " I see it as a debate between freedoms, rather than political, which means it's a philosophical debate. As for it, why does life have symmetries but physics doesn't? I don't think physics has an issue with symmetries. In fact, I would say life has an issue with it. So I don't- I disregard the question. Do I think black holes have singularities? I don't- I don't know. They may, they may not. Panpsychism. Hmm. Panpsychism may be true. May be true in some strange way that we don't conceptualize currently.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1615.62,
"end": 1640.64,
"text": " Now hopefully, Austin Harper, hopefully I've answered your question somewhat, although I assume not copasetically. Babak Rasall... Babak Rasall the... Babak, I can't pronounce your last name, says, what have you learned from the many brilliant people you have interviewed that has affected your day-to-day life and what are the practical changes that I see day-to-day?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1648.52,
"end": 1671.7,
"text": " Each one, each interview has influenced me. Though, to say specifically how, would require me to dredge the influence from the depths, and often that requires sufficient reflection which I haven't been able to do, at least not for this AMA. What's influenced me most? Okay, well, that one, at least recently, is Ian McGilchrist.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1680.37,
"end": 1708.75,
"text": " To... Let's say... Well, it's worldview-shattering, that's for sure. It has me second-guessing almost all my thoughts and actions more so than usual, which we're already at... Brabdingnagian proportions, to use a word that I like. Beers Adidju says,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1709.04,
"end": 1733.92,
"text": " After interviewing all these brilliant people and educating yourself on so many topics, do you see the world clearly, more clearly, or are you lost? Now, I'd say, Beers, that I'm... ...much more lost, although simultaneously I do see the world... ...more clearly. Now, the way that I... I've been thinking about this for a while, and the best I could do is come up with an analogy.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1736.6,
"end": 1764.02,
"text": " Okay, so the analogy looks like this. Imagine that you're a swimmer and you can't see the top. You don't know where the surface is. And you're aiming for the surface. You want to get out. You don't know how far below you are. So you estimate. You have some gut. You have some intuition. You have a hunch. And you say, I think I'm 200 meters below the surface. I think the surface is 200 meters up, let's say. And you have a flashlight at the same time, which can see",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1765.76,
"end": 1789.29,
"text": " 50 meters ahead so that's like your clarity you can see a certain amount ahead but then you also have an estimation as to how much farther along are you well I would say that what's happened with each interview I'm swimming upward so I'm making progress that is well I'm making progress but my estimation as to how far",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1789.75,
"end": 1817.65,
"text": " the surface is keeps increasing. So whereas last year or two years ago, it would have been 200 meters up. Now it's a kilometer up. So 1000 meters up. But my flashlight has also gotten more powerful. So my flashlight can now see 100 meters up. So that's like my clarity has increased. And I've seen that I've made some progress. But at the same time, I'm much farther along. I mean, sorry, much, I have much farther to go than I thought. So it's a strange mix of both clarity and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1819.14,
"end": 1846.94,
"text": " I wouldn't say confusion, but being lost. Boris Martinez says, I see you're a man with a talent for figures, and I wonder what is your IQ, what is your age, and net worth? Three simple yet meaningful numbers. Of course, feel free to send me to hell with my impertinent questions. Okay, for IQ, when I was a teenager, I did a few tests. I got obsessed with them for a couple weeks.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1848.35,
"end": 1859.97,
"text": " And I did a gamut of tests. The score that I had most frequently was around the high 150s.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1861.39,
"end": 1891.37,
"text": " the lowest score that I achieved was in the high 120s and the highest score that I achieved was in the low 200s so take that for what it's worth it could be anywhere from 120 high 120s to low 200 likely it's around or likely it was around the high 150s though it has drastically decreased because well turning to the next question my age is 32 turning 33 and your IQ",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1892.47,
"end": 1921.7,
"text": " Steadily decreases from 18 to 24 onward And some of these IQ tests were the Ravens progressive matrices tests, so I do have some faith in them but at the same time they weren't official though I was officially tested by an ADHD clinic because I Was tested for ADHD and I apparently do have it but first the way that this clinic works is they have to make sure that they separate people from those who can't Stay focused because they're simply slow minded. Let's say",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1922.79,
"end": 1952.4,
"text": " in other words having a low IQ or those who have a functioning IQ and can't focus and they need to make sure you're in that group before they diagnose you with ADHD so they did a battery of cognitive tests for me and I remember that I either scored perfect or scored one away from perfect there were some verbal tests that is what is the definition of so-and-so word there were some mathematical tests now that's should be a breeze for me because hopefully I'm trained mathematically I mean I should be if I got a degree in it and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1953.98,
"end": 1983.37,
"text": " there was some physical manipulation puzzles I remember and I think that one I didn't I either scored correctly at the last second like there's a timer or I just missed it by one second I don't recall which one but either way as for my net worth my net worth is disappointing this guy said that I asked him I believe his name is Boris Boris Martin is Boris what do you think my net worth is before I answer this question on on an AMA and he said",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 1984.04,
"end": 2012.18,
"text": " He thinks it's a half a million USD to 1.5 million USD and like That would be well, it's much much much less in many ways what I'm doing is extremely irresponsible by putting YouTube videos out because I should be Working toward building my net worth especially considering I'm thinking of having a kid at some point, but my net net worth is Less than a tenth of what he thinks it is So there Hear that sound",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2013.08,
"end": 2039.17,
"text": " That's the sweet sound of success with Shopify. Shopify is the all-encompassing commerce platform that's with you from the first flicker of an idea to the moment you realize you're running a global enterprise. Whether it's handcrafted jewelry or high-tech gadgets, Shopify supports you at every point of sale, both online and in person. They streamline the process with the internet's best converting checkout, making it 36% more effective than other leading platforms.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2039.17,
"end": 2065.32,
"text": " There's also something called Shopify Magic, your AI-powered assistant that's like an all-star team member working tirelessly behind the scenes. What I find fascinating about Shopify is how it scales with your ambition. No matter how big you want to grow, Shopify gives you everything you need to take control and take your business to the next level. Join the ranks of businesses in 175 countries that have made Shopify the backbone.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2065.32,
"end": 2091.07,
"text": " of their commerce. Shopify, by the way, powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States, including huge names like Allbirds, Rothy's, and Brooklynin. If you ever need help, their award-winning support is like having a mentor that's just a click away. Now, are you ready to start your own success story? Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash theories, all lowercase.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2091.07,
"end": 2118.47,
"text": " As for the earnings of this podcast per month, it's something like $1,000 and that seems like plenty to some people and nothing to others. It depends on where you live and where I live. It's almost nothing because the rent is already $2,000 per month.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2120.09,
"end": 2149.89,
"text": " and the $1,000 doesn't even go directly toward me, it goes toward IndieFilmTO which is a company that I have as a non-profit because technically we're incubating this theories of everything channel as well as my documentary and so on. So what I'm doing is extremely irresponsible but I see the growth, monetary growth and I also believe wholeheartedly in what I'm doing and I'm much more fulfilled and excited almost each day to wake up and get started on studying for new guests",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2151.3,
"end": 2164.12,
"text": " And to talk to some of the community as well. So I'm at least temporarily being foolish and pursuing this rather than an accumulation of wealth.",
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{
"start": 2165.54,
"end": 2183.35,
"text": " Razor blades are like diving boards. The longer the board, the more the wobble, the more the wobble, the more nicks, cuts, scrapes. A bad shave isn't a blade problem, it's an extension problem. Henson is a family-owned aerospace parts manufacturer that's made parts for the International Space Station and the Mars Rover.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2183.35,
"end": 2211.82,
"text": " Now they're bringing that precision engineering to your shaving experience. By using aerospace-grade CNC machines, Henson makes razors that extend less than the thickness of a human hair. The razor also has built-in channels that evacuates hair and cream, which make clogging virtually impossible. Henson Shaving wants to produce the best razors, not the best razor business, so that means no plastics, no subscriptions, no proprietary blades, and no planned obsolescence.",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 2211.82,
"end": 2228.2,
"text": " It's also extremely affordable. The Henson razor works with the standard dual edge blades that give you that old school shave with the benefits of this new school tech. It's time to say no to subscriptions and yes to a razor that'll last you a lifetime. Visit hensonshaving.com slash everything.",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 2228.2,
"end": 2245.11,
"text": " If you use that code, you'll get two years worth of blades for free. Just make sure to add them to the cart. Plus 100 free blades when you head to H E N S O N S H A V I N G dot com slash everything and use the code everything.",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 2248.08,
"end": 2276.77,
"text": " Okay, I'll take some questions from the audience right now. If I'm ignoring your questions, it's because I'm reading the questions that have been given to me from a few weeks ago. There are quite a few comments. Please. Oh, Rune Thorson, thank you so much for donating. Have you considered space being a literal movie stage? I don't know what it... I'm sorry, Rune. I don't know what you mean by literal movie stage. I'm a filmmaker. And I would say we use",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2277.09,
"end": 2304.51,
"text": " Our movie stage in space. So it would be strange if space was a movie stage. I don't know how to understand that question. Boxers are briefs. Boxers. Stefan, the current status of Better Left Unsaid is that it's complete. It's releasing tomorrow. Please visit betterleftunsaidfilm.com if you want to buy Better Left Unsaid because then you will get the director's version",
"speaker": null
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"start": 2305.08,
"end": 2334.05,
"text": " This is something you may hear me talk about quite frequently, at least starting soon. It's a project of mine. Think about this. Science started from pre-science, that is from alchemy and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2334.7,
"end": 2359.27,
"text": " Rebekah says that she loved the Tammy Peterson interview. Thank you, Rebekah. I appreciate it.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2360.45,
"end": 2389.6,
"text": " making sense as we're investing in your growth man thank you so much you definitely are investing in my growth and I appreciate it and hopefully in some small way I'm investing in yours would I like God to be a reality hmm that's a tough question Rebecca I can't answer that Brandon SP says do you think philosophy should be more crucially in stem that's interesting see",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2390.84,
"end": 2416.27,
"text": " the people of this channel sorry that is you who are watching you're likely extremely high in openness extremely high otherwise you wouldn't be on this channel and people who are high in openness and high in intellect tend to think that everyone else should operate in the same way that they do and i don't think so i don't think that everyone should be guided by philosophy i don't think it interests them i don't think that it's useful for them at all and i i despise when you'll hear me never",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2417.35,
"end": 2439.6,
"text": " or seldom I don't like to use the word never you'll hear me almost never say the word stupid to describe people of low IQ and that's because I don't I don't think there's anything wrong with people with low IQ and I I see it as a an arrogance of people who are intellectual to look down at people who are less intellectual than them",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2445.16,
"end": 2469.56,
"text": " at the same time they need them to run their company so they despise them yet they need them which means you you don't like the people that you cooperate with which means you don't like humanity in some respect also IQ is heavily hereditary that means that calling someone stupid which to me is an ethically thick word which means that it comes with a descriptive a description and a connotation",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2469.99,
"end": 2499.02,
"text": " So the description is you have a low IQ, but the connotation is that you're inferior because of it. It's almost like the N-word. There's the description. You're a black person. But then there's the connotation that you're inferior and I'm insulting you. The word stupid is like that. And I don't like the word stupid. I wish that intellectuals wouldn't use that word because it firstly makes people with low IQ feel horrible about themselves and they can't necessarily help it because, like I mentioned, the research indicates that IQ is",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2499.43,
"end": 2525.04,
"text": " is extremely inveterate it's it's like your ethnicity it's something you can't change though you can harm it you can reduce it and so it's like being racist to me if someone says you're stupid that's like it's the same it should be considered to be the same as being racist anyway Brandon to answer your question about do I think philosophy should feature more crucially in STEM education I don't",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2525.73,
"end": 2554.34,
"text": " think so necessarily because I don't think it's for everyone, though I need to think more about that question. Brandon SP, you also have another question. What is your intuition as to the weirdness of a theory of everything that would have to be there for it to be the real deal? Any ideas as to its form compared to current conceptions of physics? I think at a minimum it should unify general relativity and quantum field theory. I think at a minimum it should do that. I think that there may be more forces than just the four that we know. I think space-time",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2554.79,
"end": 2583.23,
"text": " isn't as simple as, or may not be as simple as, a pseudo-Romanian four-manifold. I think it may be more strange than just that. I think consciousness may have some integral part to play. And I'm not saying this in any hokey or quote-unquote woo-woo manner, because Nima Arkani Hamed and even Ed Witten have espoused similar sentiments, though I can't find the exact quotation. I've looked for the Ed Witten one.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2583.83,
"end": 2610.95,
"text": " Nima, though, Nima did say that he thinks consciousness may have something to do with the collapse of the wave function, and the reason he gives is it's a great one. He says Penrose thinks so, and Penrose isn't an idiot, and I don't... well, that's basically the argument. Nima's one of the brightest physicists in the world, by the way. I also think that an understanding as to the origins of the universe is necessary for a tau, for a theory of everything. So those are... those are five elements. That is, unifying",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2611.43,
"end": 2640.69,
"text": " Bubble Puppy says, have you tried to get Bob Lazar on? So yes, I've tried to get Bob Lazar on. I don't want to use Jeremy Corvell",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2641.19,
"end": 2669.17,
"text": " or Korbel as a contact because it's off-putting to use some of your interviewees to get other interviewees but I have no idea of how to contact Bob and I think that Bob Lazar is uninterested in speaking which is why I would love to just talk to him about physics. Philip, Philip thank you so much I appreciate it. Philip Strenstrom asked a question and it I believe it'll come up yeah okay so Graham",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2669.7,
"end": 2699.65,
"text": " Josh says, or Joss, please excuse me if I'm mispronouncing your name. Graham Joss says, Kurt, what do you plan on doing with the knowledge you're collecting? Is there a synthesis coming? Well, see, there are different kinds of mathematicians. There are the kinds of mathematicians, and I'm not a mathematician, but let me go down this route. There are some mathematicians who are great at the details, and there are some mathematicians who are great at overviews. Now, I would say I'm more esemplastic.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2700.15,
"end": 2727.93,
"text": " in the sense that I'm much more interested in unifying disparate fields and principles, and I seem to have a knack for that. This is one of the reasons why I'm interviewing as many variegated intellectuals as I possibly can, then I'll assemble. So yes, there is a synthesis coming. It's not coming only from me, but hopefully from you all as well. We have a Discord and people talk there, and I do read it. I don't get the chance to read them all all the time, but",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2729,
"end": 2757.16,
"text": " oh yes at some point here's what i would like to do this is an announcement i would like to get some people who are audience members that have their own toe their own theory of everything to come on the toe clippings channel which will have a link in the description i think it already does if not you can find it search toe clippings and youtube it's a channel of the clips from this channel and i want them to live stream because i don't have the time always to go through it takes me quite some time to go through someone's corpus of work it would be great if",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2757.16,
"end": 2785.35,
"text": " what would happen is I get two people who two audience members who have toes and I say hey you want to be talked about on this channel and I would like you to be talked about as well but I don't have the time to go through your entire theory so why don't you learn this person's theory and this person learn this person's theory and battle it out on a live stream with me moderating this way there's something called Theo Maki which is battle of the gods and I tend to like that that's one of the reasons why I think people find debates to be nourishing and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2786.51,
"end": 2814.36,
"text": " Daniel says, how have your views on Marxism evolved since starting this channel? Well, again, for those who are watching, not to turn this into a complete promotion for Better Left Unsaid, but I have a documentary called Better Left Unsaid which is about when does the left go too far, the political left,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2816.01,
"end": 2840.23,
"text": " the reason is that it's extremely easy to identify when the right goes too far because one might co-locate them with racists and bigots and so on and they seem to overtly state that whereas on the left it's more philosophical which you can read as that being my domain i like philosophy now that that's out of the way the person wants to know how have my views on marxism evolved",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2841.56,
"end": 2867.91,
"text": " My views have changed to become more perplexed by anyone who is staunched in thinking that Marxism is correct or if they think socialism is correct or socialism is de facto wrong. It's just extremely difficult to... These concepts, these... Firstly, there's no consensus as to what Marxism is.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2868.05,
"end": 2897.82,
"text": " There's no consensus as to what socialism is. There's no consensus as to what capitalism is, though there seems to be a little bit more of a consensus there. And so when someone says capitalism is absolutely correct, or socialism is absolutely correct, it tells me more about their predilection to adherence of a particular handed down doctrine than it does tell me about the doctrine itself. And so I'd say that's how my views have changed. Dhruv Gupta says, he wants to know, or she wants to know, your introduction with films and your interest in watching them now.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2898.15,
"end": 2925.09,
"text": " I watch virtually any movie now. I used to be a film snob. As for my introduction to films, I started off just like anyone else, just watching films. Never had a extreme attraction to them. Still don't. I just watch them with my wife, almost as pastime to enjoy with her. I don't crave watching films. I actually enjoy creating more than I do watching, and I always have. Elijah says, hey Kurt, Revulet here. I'm fascinated by people's upbringing",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2925.71,
"end": 2954.97,
"text": " and was curious if you could give us a rundown as to what it was like growing up. What were your parents like? What were some of the most significant moments of your life? What was it like growing up? Well, I grew up in a somewhat tough neighborhood of Toronto. Keep in mind, tough neighborhood of Toronto, that's in Canada. That means a pleasant neighborhood in the States, let's say. So I grew up in a relatively tough neighborhood in Toronto called Jane and Finch. As for my parents... My parents are hardworking people.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2955.35,
"end": 2984.77,
"text": " Hard, hard, hard, hard, hard working people. They, they worked like mad. They came from almost nothing. My dad, especially, my dad's and his brothers slept on dirt in Trinidad. There were nights where they slept on dirt. There were nights or times where they ate dirt. They also ate the dirt. They slept on dirt. They ate the dirt at times, which I think means that they were lacking in a certain vitamin might be B12. Came from that.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 2985.25,
"end": 3012.42,
"text": " to coming to Toronto bringing their family having kids and now I have this sumptuous splendor of prosperity around me where I have a condo and I can speak into a microphone and relay that to hundreds or at least almost a hundred people who are watching and I have nice clothing and I have",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3015.23,
"end": 3037.84,
"text": " It's just wonderful. I'm not a tenth of my parents in terms of diligence. As for what were the significant moments of my life getting married, getting married was a huge moment for me. I love my wife.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3040.06,
"end": 3067.45,
"text": " Greening my first film was also a huge moment for me. It screened at a place called the Toronto International Film Festival Lightbox. That's the Tiff Lightbox, or the Bell Tiff Lightbox, because it's owned by Bell Media. That was a huge moment for me because it was received... well, although I wouldn't recommend watching it now, it's... anything that I've done that's more than two years old I'm utterly embarrassed of. Otterly. In fact, anything that's more than six months old, I...",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3068.06,
"end": 3097.06,
"text": " I cringe at. So this is five years old on it, or six years old. I wouldn't look at it if I was young. I'll take some questions now from the chat. Did I ever take Peterson's classes at U of T? No. Didn't know about him. Okay, so this person says, you said in the Borchard's interview that he was the smartest, one of the smartest if not the smartest, then who is the smartest? He is. He's the smartest person that I've interviewed, I believe. What did my mother and father do to earn this type of wealth? They just kept working. My mom worked at a factory job like a hard labor factory job. My dad",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3097.43,
"end": 3125.67,
"text": " at like 35 got an undergrad degree when he couldn't even understand the teachers because he not that Trinidad is different than English but it is a different kind of English he would have to write all the words that the teacher said and he even wrote down the jokes and he didn't know what were jokes and what weren't jokes because he couldn't comprehend it particularly well and he would reread and read he basically memorized different textbooks because that was the only way he could learn",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3126.77,
"end": 3152.14,
"text": " they tell you don't memorize but memorizing is actually I think that's a I think that's a disservice that our culture has done by saying you shouldn't memorize what you can easily look up and in some sense that's true but there is a case to be made for memorization having it within your working memory or at least within your the capacity of your working memory with facility is of great use so my dad at 35 he said he was humiliated because people were 18 year olds in his classes but",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3152.52,
"end": 3171.95,
"text": " And at times he would even sleep in a car because he had to drive far and he couldn't drive back. He would sleep in his car, go to classes just to get a degree at around 35, 36 years old, just so that he can get eventually a master's so that he can become a teacher. So my mom's back breaking work, almost literally back breaking work at a factory and my dad's intense",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3172.79,
"end": 3192.06,
"text": " Devotion to scholarly accolades so that he can be hired as a teacher is what? Allowed for me to be in the position that I'm in now Eli J says can you explain the most bizarre and profound experience that I've ever had whether Dreaming under the influence psychedelics, whatever it may be. This is more Sean Lynch aka beast mode checking in this holiday season. Everybody are stressing",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3192.06,
"end": 3217.91,
"text": " shopping, rapping, cooking, but me trying to kick back on some sports and go green on my prize picks lineups. Right now, prize picks is getting into the festive spirit where new users get $50 instantly in lineups. When you play your first $5, it's real simple to play. Pick two or more players, pick more or less on their stat projections, and you can win big. Real simple, real quick. I'm talking two-minute tops, faster than heating up leftovers.",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 3217.91,
"end": 3246.53,
"text": " Make some match players from any sport all season long on PrizePix available in 45 states including California, Texas, Florida, and Georgia. Download the PrizePix app today and use code SPOTIFY and get $50 instantly in lineups when you play $5. That's code SPOTIFY on PrizePix to get $50 instantly in lineups when you play $5. Win or lose, you'll get $50 in lineups for just playing. Guaranteed. PrizePix. It's good to be right. Must be present in certain states. Visit PrizePix.com for restrictions and details.",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 3268.99,
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"text": " Philip O says, do you think there could be another coherent answer to the question of why is there something rather than nothing? I think there could be. I don't see why there can't be. I just don't know what it would look like and I don't have a clue as to what it is. Philip S says, I have a question for you that's waited on me for some time. This is a problem, a feeling of inadequacy and uselessness. When I think of someone better than me, I get the feeling that I'm less than that person.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3299.58,
"end": 3328.25,
"text": " There's something humiliating about the fact that there's someone who's better than me and stands up higher in the hierarchy, and as if they have power over me, are all humans equally worth? I think you mean to say are all humans of equal worth? Isn't it obvious that humans have different degrees of power? He references Spinoza. The thought of this makes me feel inadequate and worthless, especially compared to some people like, for example, Noam Chomsky, he says.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3329.89,
"end": 3359.55,
"text": " Okay. There's a quote that I reference plenty. It's by Hildegard de Bingen. She was a medieval monk, I believe. She said, in one of her writings, and pride germinated in the first angel as he could no longer comprehend the source of his own light and through his own radiance, he said, he spoke to himself and said,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3362.16,
"end": 3390.26,
"text": " I want to be master and want none above me. Now that one strikes me. That one I think about weekly, maybe. There's such power there. So I want none above me is interesting. It equates wanting no master with Lucifer. So that is it's satanic thinking to think that I want none above me. I understand that this can be",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3390.45,
"end": 3420.01,
"text": " taken to mean, okay, well, let's justify slavery then, but that's not what it's saying. I mean, you can interpret it like that, but I think that's as foolish as interpreting the early comics of Wonder Woman to be about sex, when that's not all they were about. I saw that in a movie once, and that reminded me of Matt Dillahunty talking about that God likes human barbecue. It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous to say that. It's such a simple-minded reading of it, and in what's",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3420.67,
"end": 3448.23,
"text": " What's false about it is that it's true. Actually, sorry, what's tricky about it is that it's true. But it's not all that's true in the same way that the early Wonder Woman comics weren't just about sex. They also liberated many women or were about female empowerment and so on and to say it was just about someone in scantily clad clothing performing BDSM. It's such a devaluing of what it is. It's such a",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3449.36,
"end": 3475.37,
"text": " I think that to believe that any human is above you or even below you is a sin.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3475.86,
"end": 3504.6,
"text": " I think that to compare yourself to anyone in terms of worth is a sin. I think that for you to think of yourself as more moral than someone else is a sin. Or even conversely, then the converse has to be the case that for you to think of yourself as less moral is a sin, though that one might be a lesser sin. In the Judeo-Christian doctrine, there's a huge emphasis that there's a nugget of divinity at the core of each person and that they're all equally inviolable.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3506.6,
"end": 3534.79,
"text": " Which means that you are of no less worth than Jeff Bezos. Now, see, this is what materialism does. Materialism is the philosophy as well as being materialistic, but let's talk about the philosophy. If you just look at the world through a material lens, then Jeff Bezos is better than you in some way, because yes, he has more power and more money. But then that to me demonstrates the lack",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3535.4,
"end": 3562.96,
"text": " that demonstrates to me that there's something lacking in pure materialism see in Christianity there's the cross and I always wonder if one it symbolizes quite a few symbols are interesting because symbols take into account maybe a hundred phenomenon put it into one so this is just one interpretation but I've always wondered if this level the horizontal",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3563.56,
"end": 3592.86,
"text": " Sorry, if I keep biting my mouth, it's because, like I said, I didn't sleep much, and I didn't drink enough water, and so my lips are dry. The horizontal may be the material level, and the vertical may be the spiritual. What it's saying is the spiritual, the material matters, but also the spiritual, and it's where they intersect that matters most. And what's interesting is in the cross, not in the olden days, they were even, but now,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3593.54,
"end": 3616.6,
"text": " You see the material level as being slightly higher. What that means is that this spiritual matters more because it's higher on this spiritual axis. I think it's a sin to think of the world only through a materialistic lens. But this is a tough question.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3621.29,
"end": 3648.44,
"text": " in some sense all that matters is that you're swimming you're swimming upward to go back to my analogy of the diver I think all that matters is that you're swimming upward and you're trying to try to swim upwards make sure that each day you can see yourself as farther along than you were before and that's easy absolutely easy for anyone for me to say especially because like I mentioned I have such and I'm so lucky with what I have and I'm in a fantastic place in my life and I know that if",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3648.83,
"end": 3675.84,
"text": " When I was depressed, which I can get to a little bit about here, if you like, Philip, this may interest you. When I was 18 until maybe 26 or so, I was extremely, extremely depressed, even suicidal. I was so depressed, depressed from indolence, from my own indolence and from my own self-loathing. But I was so depressed that I even",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3678.63,
"end": 3697.57,
"text": " Enumerated the different ways that I could commit suicide and the pros and cons of each. I lost many years of university to it. I got literal zeros in my classes because I just didn't show up. Literal zeros. My undergrad which should have taken me three to four years to complete ended up taking me seven years.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3704.89,
"end": 3729.84,
"text": " It wasn't until... I mean, there are many factors that got me out of it, but one of them was to... One of them was akin to self-development and not thinking of... I want to say not thinking of people as better than myself, but that's a human quality. I don't know of anyone who... Some people will say, yeah, hey, like, I don't think of this person as above me or this person as below me, but",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3730.32,
"end": 3753.17,
"text": " I'm pretty sure that they are just unaware of their own unconscious attitudes, but you can mitigate it. I think our society has done a huge disservice with its emphasis on dating, dating people over and over. And I think that there's a profound, a profoundness to finding one person, one person and devoting yourself to that person loyalty.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3753.92,
"end": 3783.37,
"text": " And, and love and saying, I'm never leaving you. I'm never, never, never, never leaving you. No matter what I'm choosing you, no matter what, no matter, no matter what other temptations there are, I choose you, I choose you. And then that, and then that person has to, has to do the same to you. And that's in our culture, that's called marriage. And there's something to that because life is such a harsh, harsh, harsh game. It's such a harsh game.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3785.15,
"end": 3810.06,
"text": " and if you can say man it doesn't matter the world can be against me the whole world can be against me but if you're with me then it's okay as long as you're with me and i'm with you it's okay you also have to be close to god now god can be whatever you conceptualize it to be the universe or so on i mean it then becomes so diluted that it becomes meaningless but",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3811.1,
"end": 3822.43,
"text": " What happens if you lose your partner, right? Then you've lost your only hope. So that means you have to have something outside your partner. And that's why it's important that you hear that sound.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3823.37,
"end": 3849.51,
"text": " That's the sweet sound of success with Shopify. Shopify is the all-encompassing commerce platform that's with you from the first flicker of an idea to the moment you realize you're running a global enterprise. Whether it's handcrafted jewelry or high-tech gadgets, Shopify supports you at every point of sale, both online and in person. They streamline the process with the internet's best converting checkout, making it 36% more effective than other leading platforms.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3849.51,
"end": 3875.55,
"text": " There's also something called Shopify Magic, your AI-powered assistant that's like an all-star team member working tirelessly behind the scenes. What I find fascinating about Shopify is how it scales with your ambition. No matter how big you want to grow, Shopify gives you everything you need to take control and take your business to the next level. Join the ranks of businesses in 175 countries that have made Shopify the backbone",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 3875.55,
"end": 3898.95,
"text": " of their commerce. Shopify, by the way, powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States, including huge names like Allbirds, Rothies, and Brooklynin. If you ever need help, their award-winning support is like having a mentor that's just a click away. Now, are you ready to start your own success story? Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 3898.95,
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"text": " In a marriage, the marriage ceremony is sanctified by God because God is always going to be there. At least that's what it says in the Judeo-Christian texts.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3924.77,
"end": 3952.67,
"text": " You have to have something that will always be there. So at least you can always have God. You have to always have something, always have your family, let's say, so that the world can be against you, but you have them and that's all that matters. And I think that our society has done such a disservice by telling people that what matters is for you to date and see people and treat them in treat them in dispensably as if they're as if they're pieces of clothing that you try on and return until you find the right fit.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3959.68,
"end": 3987.33,
"text": " I think that's a horrible... I think that's a... And I'm saying this because there were years where I flandered and was a letharial, let's say, indiscriminately seducing women. And I regret that. And it's not fun for you to look at your... And I know this from talking to people. No matter what, whenever you're in a committed relationship with whoever it is,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 3988.13,
"end": 4015.62,
"text": " You're hurt as much as you don't want to say you're hurt by their past, and they're hurt by yours. It's not good. It's not fun. So I'd say stick to your. That's a tough question, Philip. Stick to your conscience. Don't violate your conscience. Never violate your conscience. Stick by someone never violate them never violate them. And that's all that matters and swim up always swim up no matter what.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4017.65,
"end": 4037.31,
"text": " Jim Carrey said that he wishes everyone had 15 minutes of fame because they would see how futile it is now. That may be easy for him to say because he already has it. But wouldn't it be a shame if you were led by something false simply because you told yourself it was true?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4042.06,
"end": 4063.39,
"text": " so have a goal keep moving up the world can be against you as long as you have your loved ones and conversely look you can have the world but not have your loved ones and it's a horrible life it's a meaningless one so that's not where the meaning is move toward where the meaning is finn says appreciate your videos what is in your opinion the most suited sentence to describe consciousness",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4064.45,
"end": 4090.49,
"text": " I don't know how to describe consciousness without automatically assuming it, so there's one which is consciousness is awareness. Consciousness is what it's like to be, but then what is to be? Well, who knows? DasStellMain wants to know, do you think string theory is wrong? I think string theory may actually be correct in a strange manner. For example, I was talking with the",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4091.72,
"end": 4115.18,
"text": " a professor or a former professor of mathematics about Eric Weinstein's geometric unity as well as the monster group which seems like it has nothing to do with geometric unity but there is a way to unify geometric unity string theory as well as lysis e8 via the monster group and strings more technically brains so",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4117.74,
"end": 4144.1,
"text": " I don't, I don't know. I don't know. I'm not one of those people like Sabine Hassenfelder who make their abhorrence of string theory known and develop a following because of it. I don't know if string theory is correct. I used to be somewhat of an arrogant little teenager who barely understood string theory at the time and would say, yeah, string theory is foolish, but I'm not like that anymore. Okay. Frederick Guigui wants to know. He just says AMA with Robert Sapolsky. So I'm working on it, Frederick.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4145.47,
"end": 4170.16,
"text": " Gamechanger says, should one go against his belief in order to not risk his own financial security, well-being, and when does persuasion become manipulation if the intent is never selfish or bad? Please watch your health and make sure you get enough sleep, and do not stress even if the quality suffers. The fastest tortoise wins, sending you lots of love. And then there's a couple emoticons. Okay, so the question is, should you risk financial insecurity in order to retain your beliefs?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4172.12,
"end": 4193.81,
"text": " I would say never violate your conscience never never never always do what you believe is right never lie never never never lie especially in the small cases especially in the small cases because they're the easiest to lie about there's a time that I was when I was doing videography there's a client who said and I'm making up some numbers but let's say he said we agreed upon 5200 dollars for a video",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4194.26,
"end": 4220.69,
"text": " So he said, and this was over the phone, and he's like, or video call, whatever, 5200. I said, Okay, a day later, he said, Hey, Kurt, what was that number that I that you quoted me again, or that we agreed upon? Now, there's one option that he was lying and testing me. But I didn't get that feeling. And let's assume it's not. I remember debating for an almost an entire day. Should I tell him 5400?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4221.44,
"end": 4237.67,
"text": " Don't violate your conscience for $200, Kurt. Don't corrupt your soul for $200.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4245.54,
"end": 4274.79,
"text": " If the money is large it's easier to not corrupt yourself because you can always say to yourself well I can't ask for ten thousand dollars extra because one they'll find out but two maybe someone else needs it and so on so it's the small cases that matter because they're harder the small cases are so minor as to merit disregard but you can't disregard the blemishes on your soul and they often take they often require wiping clean with interest",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4281.22,
"end": 4307.36,
"text": " Keep in mind, Jesus didn't have financial security, by the way. Jesus didn't have F-U money, and he still lived right. Same with Moses. In fact, Moses, I believe, gave up F-U money. It's a bit ridiculous when I hear people say that what you need is F-U money. No, what you need is principles, and you need to stick by them. So it's easy to be courageous when you have tenure. In fact, that's not courage. It's courageous to stand up for what you believe in despite not having the security behind you.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4309.36,
"end": 4333.69,
"text": " In fact, just so you know, I left the field of marketing. I used to be a marketer. I left the field of marketing specifically because of this. I don't think it's ethical. I think most of marketing is unethical, and I think the people who are marketers know this, and they have to couch what they do in language that is so self-deluded like value. I'm adding value, adding, you'll hear this over and over, this Tony Robbins-esque rhetoric that I was wholly",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4334.12,
"end": 4362.12,
"text": " Supporting and a part of and indoctrinated in although I wouldn't say indoctrinated because I I allowed it to take place as for the persuasion and manipulation question, I would say Lay the truth out as best you can and allow whatever Occurs to occur Don't try to persuade anyone of anything. See this is extremely difficult because there are some people who come to me for advice personal people and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4363.01,
"end": 4390.79,
"text": " They're so personal that I actually have a stake in which way it goes. And I want to... I used to do so much influencing that I feel like I know the set of words that I could say such that they would then choose one outcome over the other, but then I have to tell myself that I don't know what's best and I have to just say what I think is true and listen to them and let them come to their own conclusions. So that's another reason why when I'm being interviewed for the documentary, people ask, what am I advocating for? I'm not advocating for anything because",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4391.71,
"end": 4420.81,
"text": " I'm not trying to convince anyone of anything. I don't think that's a great way to operate. I think you should just say what you think and then let people incorporate that and then they contribute some and then you take some of that. I think that this whole to advocate implies that you already know the answer and that you know what's better for the other person as well. That's why I would say that there's a fine line between persuasion and manipulation and I would advise against it.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4421.66,
"end": 4451.41,
"text": " don't breach a contract with yourself or with God or with the universe don't violate yourself okay and as for my health and my sleep well that's tricky because some of this takes quite a bit of work and I often have to sacrifice if I want to release with quality frequently and grow this channel it requires some amount of longevity which saps me of my well which saps me slowly",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4453.08,
"end": 4482.65,
"text": " But at some point soon, I would like to go on a one week, a full week vacation. I would love that. That would be great. My wife would also love that. Would I consider doing an interview with Stephen Wolfram Frederick? Yes, I'm working on it. Stephen's Stephen's entire theory may take two months of work. Jim Carrey is crazy. Look, I don't think you should. I know you're saying that somewhat flippantly and frivolously, but this is something else that I feel adamantly about. I don't like I don't like to dismiss anyone as stupid. I don't like to dismiss anyone as crazy. I actually haven't",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4483.46,
"end": 4512.82,
"text": " I don't like this dismissal of people by labeling them as crazy. This could be interesting, you said. Paul VanderKlay talked about F.U. Money and Jesus.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4514.85,
"end": 4519.1,
"text": " Mm-hmm. Yeah. Well, I did talk to Paul Van der Kley. It's on this channel",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4520.49,
"end": 4548.4,
"text": " Okay, getting back. Gamechanger says, what drives you to find a toe, and how much do you entertain that a toe can be found in this universe? Because if this universe came from another one, where there was a singularity, then how can we find a toe? Well, okay, what drives me to find a toe is the same reason that drives people to understand God, or to understand their place in the universe, or their purpose, or where they're going, or their origins. And I also happen to like puzzles, and I can't conceive of a greater puzzle than this. I mean, the Riemann hypothesis is interesting. When I was 16, I thought that that's what I would go into university",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4548.8,
"end": 4578.34,
"text": " This is not a question. It's almost a critique. But it's one that I hear brought up quite frequently, so I thought I'd address it. See, this is almost a question about my interview style to the degree that I have one. I always am surprised when people say that they like my interview style or that they",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4579.05,
"end": 4607.74,
"text": " No one is at least that abrupt to say, I hate your interview style. So I mainly get compliments, but I'm sure they do. And they just don't leave comments because they're actually nice people and don't want to be rude. But either way, I'm always surprisingly, I don't have a style. I don't see myself as having a particular style. Once I was talking to Desh, who's the producer of Better Left Unsaid. One last promo for Better Left Unsaid. It's a film that's releasing tomorrow. I directed it, wrote it, starring it. It's about when does the extreme left go? What constitutes the extreme left?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4608.71,
"end": 4637.84,
"text": " Okay, so I was talking to Desh about one of my older videos. It wasn't doing too well. I mean, it had like a 90% like ratio, but that's actually low. It should be around 98% if you have a",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4638.37,
"end": 4657.16,
"text": " decent following and so on. And I asked him, I was saying, okay, I'm getting criticized. And he said, Kurt, it's because you're mixing up different interview styles. The audience doesn't know which frame to interpret. It's not the content itself. It's just that they don't know how to interpret what you're doing. So there's three styles. This is what Desh was telling me. He said, there's the Joe Rogan conversational style of interview.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4657.65,
"end": 4682.84,
"text": " there's the documentary style and that documentary style is probably the one that I had going in going into that interview because it was for the documentary and that one is where you actually know the format of your documentary and you're not trying to get them to say a particular phrase but you're trying to get them to say phrases in a particular manner so that they're easily editable and easily placeable in the lacuna inside the editing and then so there's the Joe Rogan interview the documentary interview",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4683.46,
"end": 4693.85,
"text": " And then there's the journalist type interview and he said, Kurt, you're mixing up all three and people are getting confused. And then I said to him, there's a fourth that you're not considering and that is office hours.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4694.14,
"end": 4722.84,
"text": " In fact, I wanted to rename this channel Office Hours at one point, because in university there's something called Office Hours where a professor just says, come in and ask me whatever you like. You have questions, you have misunderstandings and misapprehensions. Come, let's hammer them out. That's what theories of everything is. It's office hours. I get this professor or this luminary in for an hour to three hours often. I have questions. I don't understand particular aspects of their theories. So what I'm doing is I'm asking them almost",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4722.84,
"end": 4749.8,
"text": " selfishly what I don't understand and then the audience is there I'm almost indifferent to the audience I know that sounds horrible but in a way it's not because the audience tends to be more engaged the more I'm engaged and there's a facade of some people who ask questions that they don't care about so I'm asking questions that I care about and when one gap has been filled then I just move on to the next there's no need for me to make a smooth transition because I don't care about a smooth transition",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4750.27,
"end": 4778.73,
"text": " I understand that the audience can often feel disoriented, but I'm also aware that I have a fixed amount of time with the person, and this is primarily to explicate toes. This is about explicating toes, theories of everything. I want to make sure that this channel gives some time to each potential theory of everything. When you talk to people who say that they study theories of everything, they actually don't. And the reason why I say that is that there are maybe",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4779.38,
"end": 4804.04,
"text": " 30 to 50 academic tolls and then 100 they're about 100 to 200 non-academic tolls and when I interview virtually every single person and I ask them so what do you think about this theory of everything or this one or this one some of them they'll know about and some of them they won't have an opinion about because they've never investigated it which to me how can you claim that you have the correct theory of everything if you haven't conversed with the community and understood what the options are the alternatives",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4809.22,
"end": 4836.53,
"text": " It's not simple. It's absolutely not simple. That's another reason why my interview style, if there's a style, is that I get into some of the academic chaperone or the intricacies because I need to mention what is SO10 or what is X-bar structure in microtubules or sporadic groups and so on. If this podcast is geared towards solving a problem, which it is, so if you are part of this community,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4836.94,
"end": 4866.42,
"text": " One of the ways that you can think about this community to the degree there's a community is that what separates this podcast from others is that other podcasts are mainly conversational and they're just about, well, I want to talk inspirational often like Tim Ferriss and Lex Friedman. There's nothing wrong with them. They're brilliant, brilliance of what they do. I'm not adept at what they do, but this is geared toward actually solving a specific problem and the problem of theories of everything. So that means there may be a final date to it. It may end in three years, may end in two years, may end in 10 years.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4867.53,
"end": 4897.04,
"text": " There's a series, my favorite series, that's a drama called Breaking Bad. One of the reasons it was so great, absolutely great, was that they didn't have it run past its prime. They had an end in mind from day one. It was, how do I get from here? That is, I forget what Vince Gilligan called Walter White, whatever, some nerdy teacher calling Mr. Magoo, to Scarface. That was the journey. So ours is unknown to",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4897.28,
"end": 4925.18,
"text": " Knowing or advancing a theory of everything. That's the goal. Let's read some of the comments now. Are you planning on getting your PhD in physics? No, no, no, no, no, no, what I'm no, there's no, no, no, many reasons for no, sorry. Okay, here's one reason if you could get a PhD in physics, you have to solve a particular problem. And it has to be a solvable problem. This seems like an intractable one, you would not get approved to be you would not get approved. If you said what I want to do is survey the theories of everything and make",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4926.15,
"end": 4948.8,
"text": " an advanced, potential new theory of everything. That would not get any funding, and that's the way it works. As well as you have other departmental meetings. When I talked to, I was talking to Jonathan Gerard of Stephen Wolfram. Jonathan Gerard is a bright, bright, bright fellow. Bright fellow. And he was saying, I was telling him, we're just talking about what we do for our days. He was saying, well, I had to do",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4949.19,
"end": 4977.4,
"text": " So-and-so work and then I got to do some research and I he asked me what I do and I said pretty much I research all day and he said that that's the dream life for an academic research all day whatever you want so luckily luckily I'm so lucky that I get to do that do I plan to study physics in the future I am studying physics okay thank you for calling me a hot man and a and a handsome man that's flattering I appreciate that",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 4978.18,
"end": 5006.32,
"text": " Have I grown more sympathetic to the left after interviewing Chomsky many times? I've grown more sympathetic to virtually every side after interviewing virtually every person. I don't think that one side... See, there's this phrase that says, only the shallowest of mind can believe that in great controversy, one side is mere folly. And I tend to believe that. I don't think that the radical left, quote unquote, is mere folly. I don't think that the alt-right is mere folly as well, although that might get you banned for saying. I don't think that the pro-socialists or the pro-capitalists are mere folly.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5006.83,
"end": 5017.28,
"text": " I think that many of them are misguided. I think that many of them are deluded. I think that many of them are selfish. I think that many of them are lazy thinkers, let's say. But who among us",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5018.64,
"end": 5045.59,
"text": " I'm trying to decipher your question. I always have a difficult time. So please rewrite that if you don't mind because I have to read quickly as I want to get through this fairly fast. I'm only halfway done and it's been an hour and a half. And I imagine that I'm going to lose some subscribers for this, but hopefully the ones that I retain are the ones that are more interested in theories of everything. Okay. GLXL says, why haven't you interviewed Jason Reza Jorjani yet? Do it. Let me put some emoticons.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5046.36,
"end": 5075.15,
"text": " I don't know this person. Grizz Grimm says I'm a random troll on the internet with a theory of everything. Do you plan on branching out past the respectable demographic on your show? What he's referring to is right now I'm interviewing primarily academics, though Thomas Campbell isn't one and Bernardo Castro isn't one. The answer to this is yes. I actually encourage people to send me PDFs and if you don't know where to send me email, you can send me at toe.com.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5075.42,
"end": 5103.15,
"text": " That email address is also in the about page of this channel, I believe. Send me it there. What I would like to do is get two people because it takes me quite some time to go through an entire toll. I want to get two people, non-academic tolls, let's say, and get them to agree that I'm going to critique this person and this person is going to critique me and Kurt, you can moderate it. And we're going to live stream that on the toll clippings channel. The reason is that I don't want to dilute the density of material on this channel and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5104.84,
"end": 5133,
"text": " Griswold Grimm also says, if your data department reported all your interviews and all the backups were lost, which one would you hope wasn't lost? Well, I don't know why if they reported it, it was lost, but let's just say it was lost in the fire. The one that I would choose to be kept would be Bernardo Castrop's. Any thoughts on Chris Langdon's toll? I'm interviewing, I mean,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5133.4,
"end": 5160.93,
"text": " Yes, I'm interviewing him in late spring, I believe, or mid spring. So, watch out for that. What are your thoughts on Wittgenstein's ladder? The idea of propositions that refute themselves. Yeah, yeah, that was an interesting one. He said that all of this was pretty much for you to get up the ladder and then kick it away. When I believe it was in his tractatus. Hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5162.33,
"end": 5189.02,
"text": " See, Wittgenstein's a super interesting individual because he's heralded by the new atheist rationalists as being on their side, but he adamantly was not. He actually, I think Norman Malcolm said, the religiosity that characterized Wittgenstein's later life surpassed even those who consider themselves to be religious. And Wittgenstein said that he believes that his work is only worth it if the light shines from on high.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5189.43,
"end": 5216.99,
"text": " as well as he said about Bach's phrase he said Bach said to the glory of the most high and let my neighbors be benefited thereby the most high God that is and Wittgenstein said I wish that that could be said about my work so Wittgenstein was deeply religious in fact he said part of his work well he didn't say this in these in these words but he said that part of his work was that religious experience and consciousness and quality and so on are so",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5217.74,
"end": 5235.04,
"text": " outside linguistic expression that you it's better to be silent about them because you reduce them you and you cause a curtailment of them by speaking about them hans frankfurter says i'm 36 and can i still learn mathematics that's advanced and contribute something meaningful so i would say hans that it depends on your",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5236.07,
"end": 5257.58,
"text": " aciduity and your IQ so that is your diligence and your intellect and that you have more of a chance of understanding the mathematics than you do have of contributing to mathematics unless what you if all you're concerned about is contributing and going to a burgeoning field find a new field where there are relatively few papers or it's just extremely new and research that",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5258.8,
"end": 5286.49,
"text": " though I wouldn't recommend that because then you're chasing new for newness sake and I don't I don't I don't particularly understand why. Ivan Goran says, are you familiar with general semantics of Alfred Korazewski? No, I'm not. I'm familiar with some of Chomsky's work and to the degree that it's a subset of Chomsky's work or superset, I don't know. Ja524309 says, I can't believe this is he was referring to Richard Borchardt's",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5286.7,
"end": 5300.47,
"text": " I can't believe you asked Richard Borchardt one of my questions from the comments in his commutative algebra videos. How did you find that? And did you just watch all his videos? Well, I'll say that I do my research before speaking to people. I do my research. Second, I learn and relearn mathematics.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5301.48,
"end": 5325.67,
"text": " Almost on a daily basis, so I watch lectures, many lectures online. In fact, here's something you can let me know if you're interested in this. I was thinking of live streaming my own study sessions just to mitigate my own proclivities to ADHD and distractibility, as well as it's interesting to the audience to study or to watch someone study because then they study and they're more motivated to do so. I realized that the Toe Clippings channel has only 350 subscribers.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5326.51,
"end": 5346.83,
"text": " Johan Hedeval says, which one of your interviews made you feel more energized directly afterward and perhaps inspired you to try and apply",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5348.88,
"end": 5371.85,
"text": " Well, which ones made you more energized afterward? And which ones made you feel tired? Okay, virtually every single interview makes me feel wired right afterward, though I generally go into them extremely habitudinous and and lacking of energy. And that's one because of my general let's say dullness of mind. But two, that's because I'm often tired and fasting",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5372.48,
"end": 5400.5,
"text": " directly before in an effort to study for the interview it's difficult for me to get sleep when I know a podcast is coming up the next day because I'm thinking about it thinking about it and I have trouble I have I have extreme trouble with my own mind I'm uncomfortable with my own mind and it's something I need to work on it's something I struggle with it's difficult to shut my mind off and meditation does not help has not helped I've tried it many many times",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5406.75,
"end": 5430.98,
"text": " As for what drained me, what interview drained me, there are two interviews that actually drained me. Methuna's interview on Looking Glass Universe, I was so tired going into it. I was just falling, falling, taking everything from me to read and to pay attention to the words she's saying. A little bit of that is happening right now. That was not because she was an insipid guest at all, it was because",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5431.39,
"end": 5457.86,
"text": " of my own innervatedness and listlessness as for the other guest that drained me Thomas Campbell okay Thomas bless his heart he is my friend well I don't know if you would consider me a friend I consider him a friend I hold him with high regard but that man is incapable of giving an answer that is less than two minutes long in fact often his answers would go up to 30 minutes long and I'm just thinking time is money here Tom I have 100 questions to get to",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5458.37,
"end": 5486.39,
"text": " June 80s says, number one, you're a hot dude. Thank you.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5486.83,
"end": 5516.71,
"text": " I appreciate that. Number two, what you do is so unique. Thanks for the pursuit. I appreciate that. Number three, what are your views on pineapple on pizza? Okay, so I assume this is a serious question. Let me think about this. I don't dislike it. I actually like it, though I would never order it. I'm not snobbish when it comes to food. In fact, I'm",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5517.58,
"end": 5544.39,
"text": " indiscriminately voracious on the opposite I think I need to be a bit more snobbish because I'll eat almost I mean I don't eat lamb and I don't eat any I consider those to be advanced animals for some reason in my brain I consider them to be different a different kind like lamb and goat and duck and deer I don't eat those I just I'm a simple man chicken and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5545.85,
"end": 5574.85,
"text": " cows and pigs that's it even pigs i don't i only like bacon but but within that i eat virtually anything okay then he said or she said what is it that you may have not done on your time on earth that could leave you with one regret on your deathbed i imagine it's not spending enough time with my parents i'm selfish and",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5577.09,
"end": 5599.75,
"text": " I could spend much more time with them and it lifts their spirit like mad. It lifts their spirits, especially my mom, especially during lockdown. But I don't visit as much as I could. Part of that is my own. I just treat them as an imposition on my work.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5600.42,
"end": 5624.73,
"text": " and I know they feel that and I don't try to convey that and I try to even hide that and I even saying it right now, I don't like to say it. I don't, I don't even like to admit it. I feel like I'm admitting it right now, but that's a part of me that is inside me. And I know that if they were to die or if I was to die, that that would be a huge regret. And I, and I still don't visit them.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5625.23,
"end": 5654.1,
"text": " Coca-Cola. For the big. For the small. The short. And the tall. Peacemakers. Risk-takers. For the optimists. Pessimists. For long-distance love. For introverts. And extroverts. The thinkers. And the doers.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5654.84,
"end": 5681.53,
"text": " They would say I'm a wonderful son. They would say I'm a wonderful, wonderful son, but I'm a well-behaved son.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5681.99,
"end": 5707.81,
"text": " That's true, and I think that's what they mean when they say I'm a wonderful son, but I think that I'm not in many other ways. That's my regret. That would be my regret, and that is my regret, and I'm working on it, or I hope that I'm working on it. LightArmenov asks with regard to Chomsky, how do I keep getting him on?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5709.17,
"end": 5738.17,
"text": " He likes me. Chomsky happens to like me for whatever reason, at least he told me so, and I don't think Chomsky's a liar. I don't see Chomsky as someone who would be particularly polite to someone that he dislikes. People despise that I like Chomsky and Peterson, because I'm apparently not allowed to be a fan of both, and that brings me back to that quote about, only the shallowest of minds can think that in great controversy one side is mere folly. I think that's a foolish way of",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5738.69,
"end": 5758.03,
"text": " Thinking I don't I don't I think that just demonstrates to me that people have chosen their side their side which has to do with what they've identified with and that's why I have a huge problem with identity and identifying with some category identity means sameness just so you know the etymology of it look I'm I'm well trained in my hear that sound",
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"start": 5758.97,
"end": 5785.11,
"text": " That's the sweet sound of success with Shopify. Shopify is the all-encompassing commerce platform that's with you from the first flicker of an idea to the moment you realize you're running a global enterprise. Whether it's handcrafted jewelry or high-tech gadgets, Shopify supports you at every point of sale, both online and in person. They streamline the process with the internet's best converting checkout, making it 36% more effective than other leading platforms.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5785.11,
"end": 5811.17,
"text": " There's also something called Shopify Magic, your AI-powered assistant that's like an all-star team member working tirelessly behind the scenes. What I find fascinating about Shopify is how it scales with your ambition. No matter how big you want to grow, Shopify gives you everything you need to take control and take your business to the next level. Join the ranks of businesses in 175 countries that have made Shopify the backbone",
"speaker": null
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{
"start": 5811.17,
"end": 5836.95,
"text": " of their commerce. Shopify, by the way, powers 10% of all e-commerce in the United States, including huge names like Allbirds, Rothy's, and Brooklynin. If you ever need help, their award-winning support is like having a mentor that's just a click away. Now, are you ready to start your own success story? Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at shopify.com slash theories, all lowercase.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5836.95,
"end": 5866.44,
"text": " go to Shopify.com slash theories now to grow your business no matter what stage you're in Shopify.com slash theories left brain that's a left brain activity to see sameness and categories i'm i'm so well trained that i would say i'm overly trained as a left hemispheric person and i need to balance that with the uniqueness of the right brain and see each as unique which means you can't compare you can't compare chomsky to",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5866.94,
"end": 5896.66,
"text": " Peterson in a at least not in a simple sense and I have less sympathy for those who are there is something in me that has less sympathy for those who are on the extreme left that criticize in this manner than I do for those that are on the extreme right and the reason is that a personality they are on the left because they have high openness that is a big five personality trait so I see them as like the right I see is being closed-minded automatically so I expect that from them but the extreme left",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5897.47,
"end": 5927.23,
"text": " The extreme left is so ardent for people who are open-minded, which to me demonstrates that they have this pre-ordained dogma that they're following. And they're following it despite their openness. Well, plenty of that is what they've been taught by universities, but I can't... But plenty of it is not. That's why it's important to never lie. Never, never, never, never lie. You corrupt your soul. You corrupt your conscience. You violate it. Never, never, never lie. Never lie. Never... Never dishonor someone who",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5929.15,
"end": 5958.98,
"text": " I'll never cheat on someone, never lie. They're horrible, horrible, horrible acts. Horrible, horrible acts. Okay. My April says you have an artistic side. What do you do besides filmmaking? So I sing. I sing horribly and I play the guitar horribly. It's more grunge-like. I love art galleries. I used to do stand-up comedy. I used to write music. I used to rap. I like writing screenplays.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5960.81,
"end": 5987,
"text": " Mario Calabri says, what can change the nature of man? Well, what can change the nature of man? I wouldn't say it's rational argumentation. Okay, barfie man barfie man 362 says, please talk about meaning equals intellect intelligibility times value as well as attention equals value structure of beings. Also interest is about getting more value than you put in. Hmm, you and your channel interesting. Thank you. Appreciate that.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 5987.57,
"end": 6012.47,
"text": " This is my name. Sure, I can play the guitar for you, but my wife is sleeping right now. Boris, you asked if I tried L-Theonine? Yes. Doesn't help much. Ashwan Gonda? Doesn't help much. Gaba? I don't know what you mean by Gaba if you mean the... if you mean Gabapentin. Fennibut... Fennibut helps socially. It helps you feel disinhibited. Or uninhibited. By the way, I have a letter wiki. There's a website called letter.wiki.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6012.96,
"end": 6041.66,
"text": " with a conversation between me and Desh, who is the producer of Better Left Unsaid. And the letter is all about my critique on rationality. So Mario Calabrese, what can change the nature of man? I say not rational argumentation and I can point you to there to hear my views on rationality. Which one person would I like to interview most for the channel? So I'll give you a set. Douglas Hofstadter is number one. Daniel Dennett. Eminem.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6043.22,
"end": 6070.01,
"text": " I would love to talk to Eminem. I would love to talk to Ed Whitton. I would love to talk to Terry Tao, Hideo Kojima, video game developer. The developers of Rockstar. That is Dan and Sam Houser. I would love to talk to Jonathan Blow. He's the developer of Braid and The Witness. I would love to talk to Colin Quinn. He's a comedian. I consider him to be the greatest comedian living right now, even of all time, in my personal taste. I don't",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6070.62,
"end": 6099.19,
"text": " find, I think some of these people who say, Richard Pryor was the funniest and George Carlin was the funniest. I don't know. George Carlin never made me laugh. He makes the audience mainly clap in agreement and often he astounds the audience as to how he can memorize long phrases, but he never made me laugh. And that's mainly a function of time. It's that I grew up in a different era. So he probably was hilarious for his time. Probably Colin Quinn will be extremely lame for people 20 years from now.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6100.38,
"end": 6124.12,
"text": " So it's just a function of time much like people love the old rappers I think Eminem is one of the best rappers if not the best rapper ever and I'm sorry obviously Tupac is I'm not a fan of Biggie Biggie had great flow but Tupac had a great heart and heart like heart like no one else almost each song just makes you collapse and this guy died when he was so young",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6125.16,
"end": 6139.77,
"text": " holy moly so it's like tupac and m&m but in terms of verbal acuity and fluidity it's m&m by far i don't think there's a contest and some people who say that the rappers from the 80s and 70s are the best",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6140.93,
"end": 6161.78,
"text": " Well, it's more like they grew up with those rappers and to them it was the best for their time and it may be in the same way that George Carlin was the best for his time. I think Colin Quinn is the best for our time. Sean Murray is someone else I'd like to interview. He's from Hello Games, a video game developer. Sam Harris I'd like to interview and I'd also like to interview this guy named Cosmic Skeptic. I think his name is Alex.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6163.06,
"end": 6185.2,
"text": " He's not a dream guest because he's within reach, he's not a dream, but Nat wants to know, I'm interested to hear your thoughts on philosophy and education, specifically pedagogy and the curriculum pre-degree level. How and to whom, what age groups should philosophy be taught and what broader social problems might be remedied if we had proper philosophical education.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6192.86,
"end": 6222.84,
"text": " Here's my take on education. I think that what's in the STEM fields as an undergraduate can be learned by any high school, not any, by almost by a sufficiently gifted high schooler. I don't think there's anything in the university undergraduate degree in the stems that can, that cannot be learned by a 17 year old personally. I think that philosophy is absolutely different because it requires experience. And it's another reason why there's no such thing as a child prodigy in film, because you had to have gone through life. You had to have gone through",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6223.88,
"end": 6249.62,
"text": " Hopes and dreams and Places and pain and particularly pain and philosophy requires that that's a requisite as for the social problems I wouldn't say that the social problems are a lack of philosophical understanding per se but perhaps a lack of humility That is the people ardently claim that whiteness is the number one enemy or socialism is de facto incorrect Etc",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6250.15,
"end": 6277.84,
"text": " It may be a lack of religious orientation, or a lack of commitment to the good, or a lack of being honorable in one's private life, no matter what, rather than a philosophical problem. It may be that. And as for the last question, I need to think about that. Am I thinking of having Graham Priest on the show? This is by Noah Noah Noah. Yes, it's confirmed, but without a date. I need to work through his material. That may take a month. It takes quite some time to work through someone's material. I don't know why",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6278.34,
"end": 6305.61,
"text": " You would say that Jordan Peterson is delusional. What about Jordan Peterson is delusional? See, I don't like this when people dismiss people by saying, Oh, he's obvious. Someone recently said, Elon Musk is obviously low IQ. I said, low IQ, Elon Musk. Why? They said, because he doesn't see socialism as the solution. Are you? Well, okay. I will reserve. It's such a,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6306.07,
"end": 6321.48,
"text": " Such a simple-minded thinking that says that. So simple-minded. It's absolutely not easy to dismiss almost any intellectual. Almost any intellectual. At least, I don't think so. Maybe I'm stupid.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6324.67,
"end": 6349.68,
"text": " Maybe I'm asinine. Freestyling. I wasn't that great at freestyling. I could, but I never developed it. I was more interested in writing the songs. I had about 50 songs in rap that I deleted in a rage because I was beat up one time during a battle with someone, a freestyle battle or a rap battle, where I insulted someone's... Look, anything is fair game when you're rapping. So I was 14 or so. I insulted someone's dead",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6350.3,
"end": 6371.83,
"text": " Cousin",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6372.14,
"end": 6399.43,
"text": " Okay, let's get to this.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6399.92,
"end": 6417.42,
"text": " Does it help?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6417.42,
"end": 6443.08,
"text": " When they were supposed to be in elementary school out from school and traveled for a half a semester or semester or full year or whatever it may be and said that they got more Education from that than they got from being in school and people were snarky about that One reason they are is because they're not able to do that for their own child So they then tend to repudiate others, but I think it's salutary. I'm thinking if I have a kid I'm thinking of",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6443.08,
"end": 6463.18,
"text": " homeschooling him or her in a process that Peter Gray calls unschooling. Now I do have an interview with Peter Gray for those of you who want to watch it. It's on the Drakma Institute. I'll leave the link in the description. It's not one that's on this channel. The problem then becomes how do you socialize them because they can easily become awkward if you don't expose them to the harshness of the flagacious peers.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6464.17,
"end": 6489.84,
"text": " One option is to push them to their limits of social discomfort. Another is to develop or to cultivate a local group of like-minded unschoolers, parents who are similarly interested and then have our kid hang out with them. As for education, look in math, I was watching a recent lecture by Richard Borchards and he was saying, okay, we're going to talk about modular forms.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6491.13,
"end": 6518.17,
"text": " Now, this is what a modular form is. He writes down the equation, then he says, and now if someone says this is what a modular form is, it looks like if someone had a contest for what is the strangest equation you could come up with and then chose one of them. I'd like to that because that's actually what you're thinking when you look at the equation for a modular form. You're thinking this is highly unmotivated. Where did this come from? Why is this useful? However, if you look at Wikipedia, it's removed from any emotion, from any commentary. It's just purely clinical.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6518.64,
"end": 6535.67,
"text": " I understand that because it was modeled after the encyclopedia. It's called Wikipedia. But a project of mine that I would like to start is a way of humanizing. See, I don't see it as opinion versus editorial and Wikipedia would consider Richard Borchardt's comments to be opinion, but I don't see it as opinion. I see it as human.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6536.41,
"end": 6564.8,
"text": " I see it as making math approachable. And I think that plenty of people would understand math and physics far greater if there were little commentaries like that. And I don't know how to facilitate that being in Wikipedia. Maybe Wikipedia is not the right format. But I would like to cultivate a project in the future that helps people learn math and physics much more easily. As to what other elements or ingredients it would take other than the occasional sentences to how absurd an equation seems,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6565.49,
"end": 6595.13,
"text": " or where this is potentially going, whatever it may be. I don't know. And I'm totally open to suggestions. It's a project that I have going on in the back of my mind. Paul Marie says, what is your background in math and physics? My background is a specialist degree in math and physics from the University of Toronto. And you can look this up. It's the hardest degree that is math and physics. I chose it because as a high schooler, you have to choose it once you're in high school. I chose it because I always liked doing what's the hardest. I remember once there was the",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6595.96,
"end": 6624.44,
"text": " a puzzle called the hardest logic puzzle in the world. And I remember thinking, OK, that one's I'm going to solve that. And you know what? I'm going to solve that in my head without writing. So I remember it took me about a month or so. I wasn't thinking about it all the time constantly, but it took me about a month of thinking to try and solve that problem in my head. I always like challenges, intellectual challenges. So I took what is the hardest degree at U of T, the specialist degree of math and physics. The president of U of T actually told me that was the hardest degree.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6624.92,
"end": 6650.3,
"text": " I'm not saying I did well in it. In fact, I had many zeros, many, many zeros because I had major depression, clinical depression and would just gain weight and played video games, did nothing, hated my life. Horrible students, horrible student. Didn't go to class after first year, not one, well, a couple of classes, but",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6651.31,
"end": 6666.56,
"text": " I didn't like going to classes. I despised going to classes. I never took notes, even in high school. The reason why I didn't take notes was because there was this lecture I watched once where a professor was writing notes and speaking, and he was speaking. What he was saying was extremely important. You should have been taking notes about that.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6667.48,
"end": 6692.79,
"text": " But people were only taking notes about what was written on the board. And then the teacher was speaking and then he started drawing a circle as he was thinking and speaking. And then people drew the circle in their notebook. And then I thought, okay, I'm done. I'm not taking notes because obviously these people who take notes are just followers. They're not actually processing the information. So let me listen to what the professor is saying and actually understand it. And later I can go through the textbook. So I never stopped taking notes from high school because of that.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6693.71,
"end": 6721.05,
"text": " I wasn't a good student, though. By the way, okay, you may wonder how is it that if I wasn't a great student, was I able to finally get my degree? Well, one is that I'm great at studying for tests. I can study for a test in two days or three days just by going through the material. Obviously, I would forget it quite a few days later, but it was fairly easy for me to study for tests. It still is. Peter Nikolov says, oh, man, just do it. Make more than sure your subscribers want to hear from you. Maybe not just this Q&A, maybe do an in-depth review on what you think of TOES.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6721.53,
"end": 6744.36,
"text": " the toes that have been on your podcast. So again, like I'm betting that the innovation is going to come from the periphery rather than the scholastic center, which is why I'm cultivating this community. It's not me. This channel is not just me, even though my face is on it, maybe I'll start to remove it more and more. But the channel is about us coming up with a theory of everything, or at least understanding the different theories of everything and then contributing",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6746.05,
"end": 6773.88,
"text": " And perhaps at some point I'll do that via live streams on the Toe Clippings channel. OK, have I tried getting Roger Penrose on? Rishabh Prashat says yes, I've tried. I can't get him on. I don't know how. I don't want to use Brian. Brian Keating is a dear friend of mine. I don't want to use Brian Keating's connection for that. Again, it's distasteful sometimes to ask your friends for connections, and I know I ask Brian for plenty, and he's such a good man. He's a great man. He's a jovial man.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6777.21,
"end": 6804.8,
"text": " He's immense. If you understand some Yiddish, I think it's Yiddish, but I can't use them for that. I feel like that's stepping out of my bounds. Rutger Paulacher says, of all you've read, what book would you recommend us to read beside Gödel Escherbach? Beside Gödel Escherbach, which is right there. Master and his Emissary. It's a polarizing book. People love it. People hate it. The proportion of people that love it are much greater than those that hate it. And those that hate it tend to have already their worldview made up. And they say that's",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6805.21,
"end": 6832.53,
"text": " Foolish, that's asinine, that's imbecilic, that's inane, out the gate. And I just despise, I don't like that. I don't see... I used to... Part of me not liking it is me not liking myself because I used to be like that. To such a large degree. And I just see the arrogance in it. And then I see the arrogance in myself and in my former self and I cringe and I don't think it's good for the world.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6833.05,
"end": 6858.37,
"text": " Either way, this will... Master and his emissary will discombobulate you in hopefully a salubrious manner. Ryan Culling says, what is love? To know love is to know God, and I don't know God. The greatest love I've felt and still feel is with my wife.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6862.48,
"end": 6891.39,
"text": " This is an experience I can't articulate into words and perhaps there's a reason for that. Perhaps it's destined to be like that. Perhaps that's the point of it. I don't know. I'm unsure. Ryan Colling says, Ryan Colling, which is also Barfie Man for those of you who are listening, Barfie Man wants to know, can you speak about the idea of the attention economy? Is attention the fundamental value of consciousness? So attention changes or alters consciousness. That seems clear. It obviously influences what enters your perceptive field.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6892.38,
"end": 6918.3,
"text": " your field of perception, that is. That means that in a fascinating manner, attention is prior to consciousness, which is absolutely fascinating. And I don't think that there's much attention placed on that aspect. I do think that a missing ingredient to consciousness may be an understanding of attention.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6920.27,
"end": 6950.06,
"text": " You know, in the same way that some thought that space-time was fundamental and then some thought that causality is more fundamental than space-time, I wonder if attention is more fundamental than consciousness, which puts a huge hole in all those non-dualists who think that consciousness is the most fundamental. And perhaps that's another reason why they don't like to talk about it. Ryan Collins says, what are your thoughts on solipsism? My thoughts are that it's not easily disproved by a rationalist or empiricist account.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6951.42,
"end": 6972.29,
"text": " And that to me, like, I haven't heard a great critique as to why solipsism is wrong from a rationalist. It doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I haven't heard it. And that to me demonstrates a problem with rationality, or demonstrates that solipsism is correct. Okay, we're nearing the end. Sharari says, what is your view on religion and how has it changed after Rupert Sheldrake?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 6973.1,
"end": 7000.62,
"text": " I'll get to the chat soon, okay? Just a second, I want to get through some of these questions that people have been asking me for quite some time. So how has my views on the supernatural changed from Rupert Sheldrake and Thomas Campbell? With Rupert Sheldrake it showed me that there's a whole group of people who have a disdain for what's supernatural that edit on Wikipedia and that what you learn from Wikipedia isn't the whole truth",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7001.17,
"end": 7028.39,
"text": " Sounds like it's obvious, but it's actually not. These people who identify with being skeptics aren't skeptics. They're not open-minded inquirers of what is, no matter what is, whatever is will be. It seems like they have an idea of what is, and they're trying to disprove what isn't, and they have a conception of what isn't. And they're also not willing to update their conception of what an is is, which sounds like a Bill Clinton statement, but I'm talking more about ontology.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7029.31,
"end": 7049.58,
"text": " so these people who label themselves as skeptics demonstrate to me more they demonstrate their axiomatic postulates more than they demonstrate what's true at least to me because there is no supernatural maybe there is no supernatural maybe it's all natural but then you need to update what natural is so maybe it is possible for people to communicate psychically",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7050.71,
"end": 7076.53,
"text": " I don't know. It doesn't seem like it, at least from the evidence that I've seen, or the non-evidence that I've seen, but I still have to look into it. And I'm willing to look into it. And so many skeptics have their mind made up as to how is this wrong? How is this wrong? How is this wrong? And then if it's not wrong, then they'll say, well, there was something wrong somewhere with the setup, and I just don't know what it is, but you clearly cheated. Okay, someone's saying, what economic system do you think we should have? I don't know. That's a complicated...",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7077.71,
"end": 7105.35,
"text": " People think physics is complicated or math is complicated, but I think economics and political theory is far more complicated because of the amount of variables. You have what's called aggregatory feedback, or at least I call it that, which means you get a yes or no. You get a ping. Did it work or did it not work? But you have no idea which one of the factors influenced it. It's difficult to do double-blind tests. Schmoney, that's called Schmoney, says, Hi Kurt, I was pleasantly surprised to find out you were Trinidadian in the Bernardo Castro interview, which was your best, I think. I think so as well, thank you.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7106.36,
"end": 7134.87,
"text": " Although the Ian McGilchrist interview to me is pushing it. I myself was born in Guyana, so it's great to see someone from the West Indy community grapple with such topics and do so thoughtfully as well. Just wanted to say you're doing a really great job. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Anyways, my questions are, what religion did you grow up with? Were you born in Trinidad? And do you think it's important to honor both systems of the East and the West? And then he says, PS, if you're ever in Queens, I would love to grab a chat, grab a drink in the chat.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7137.67,
"end": 7157.93,
"text": " The religion I grew up with was Christianity, non-denominational, but then when I was eight I became an atheist for reasons that I was... Well, I was questioning the origins of the universe and my brother who was studying physics at the time told me about quantum fluctuations and to me that solved it and I remember",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7159.43,
"end": 7184.15,
"text": " not vividly but almost vividly being at home on my bed looking at the ceiling thinking that aha then that means that there is no need for God then I became an arrogant atheist let's say which is usually the path one goes down they don't just become a a humble atheist let's say as for",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7185.54,
"end": 7213.75,
"text": " East versus West and incorporating them. See, this is super interesting, super, super interesting because people will say, Hey, what we need is to incorporate more of the East into the West. And they tend to be these people who are high in openness. Again, the personality traits and you don't hear them advocating much for the Western approach to be in the East. So that's a huge gap that I see in their approach, which says that all religions are equally true in some manner. Well, you're not advocating for the opposite.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7214.19,
"end": 7240.96,
"text": " So to me it shows their bias all along as well as when they say the types that say that that they like the Eastern approaches or that the Eastern approaches need to be integrated more with the Western ones. They tend to focus almost solely on the Eastern ones and meditate for three hours a day and say that all is illusory and there is no soul or if there is one it's infinitely being reborn.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7241.78,
"end": 7263.97,
"text": " and whatever it may be that are the traditional dictums of the East. Sorry, Desiderata of the East. I view it a bit differently. I think that that may be an approach incorporating the East into the West for people who are high in openness and mostly those who are watching are high in openness. You're most likely in the 95th percentile of openness or 90th at least.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7264.63,
"end": 7287.48,
"text": " But that doesn't mean that your approach works for everyone. And this is something that I find so funny, fascinating, is that people think what works for them should work for everyone. And I tend to view it as see the Western tradition and the Eastern tradition for the Easterners, the Western tradition for now is in our bones. It's in the way that we walk and we talk and we see and we think",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7288.1,
"end": 7311.08,
"text": " It's definitely in the way that we see because your goals are influenced by you and your culture, as well as that's influenced by the history of your religion. So the West Judeo-Christian. So it's inside you. It's inside you to a degree that you have no clue. It's in your bones. It's in your sinew. And same with the East. And then to say that, well, what we can do is take an Eastern approach and apply it to a Westerner.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7311.46,
"end": 7341.31,
"text": " Well, that to me is like saying you can take a Windows program and put it on a Mac or vice versa. They may be the same program solving the same problem, giving the same solution, but you can't run them. And that may be another reason why people in the West find nihilism to be so abhorrent, because in the East, well, they're like, they're okay with nihilism in some regard, but in the West, that's not us. So to give a nihilistic Eastern philosophy,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7342.64,
"end": 7359.58,
"text": " it's horrible for people some people momentarily it's freeing because if you say there is no free will it's illusory then that's paradoxically freeing in some respect because you're no longer self-flagellating and self-mortifying but in the long run you then dive into an abyss",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7360.88,
"end": 7387.74,
"text": " And it's and I don't think people take that into account. I think that people think if it's a solution, it's a solution. And we can run this program on any we can emulate it anywhere. Might not be like that. It might be but it might not. And I just Well, as for the offer and getting a drink in Queens, thank you. I'm going back to the questions which are almost complete now. Okay, what are your views on Islam? Does Islam promote violence? This person wants to get me demonetized? Well, I'll say this, that",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7391.8,
"end": 7409.92,
"text": " It seems clear to me that some sects or some subsets of sects do promote violence. It also seems clear to me that many don't. It also seems clear to me that there are interpretations of Islam that are just as peaceful as any other interpretation of any religion.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7411.46,
"end": 7441.17,
"text": " then you get into the problem of what defines Islam. So this is tricky. So see, to me, this my view on it does Islam promote violence isn't more Sam Harris's is more observational or operation. Actually, it's more observational in the sense that, okay, let's look at the sum total of people who identify with being Muslim. And then let's see how readily are they willing to harm an infidel. And then let's judge the religion based on that. Okay, so what does the religion",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7442.58,
"end": 7471.77,
"text": " mean? Do we judge it by the followers of the Quran? What is the definition of Islam? Is it the current followers of the Quran? Is it the current Islamic leaders and what they say, much like Catholicism depends on the Pope? What does it mean to follow the Quran? That's an interesting question. Okay, so here's one perspective. Do you judge a religion by what the majority of the followers say or do? Hmm. See,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7472.69,
"end": 7500.85,
"text": " old Kurt let's say would say yes but then Kierkegaard came about and Kierkegaard went against the conventions of Christianity at the time and was even critiqued for it but yet I would say Kierkegaard had a truer understanding of Christianity than the majority of the Christians at the time so then that's interesting what the heck does that mean that someone can have someone can have access to a more true or can espouse or can explicate or can",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7501.42,
"end": 7530.74,
"text": " cultivate or materialize or elaborate on a Christianity that's more true than what the Christians at the time were engaged in. That's interesting. So then can one say the same about Islam? See, what we're getting to is a definition of what does Islam mean? What does Christianity mean? So I think these questions of does Islam promote violence are more philosophical than or at least you can take it practically like you want to know.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7531.37,
"end": 7546.6,
"text": " If I have a Muslim friend, are they more likely to harm me than a Christian friend? Or more likely to blow up so-and-so? You can take it practically like that, but I'm taking it philosophically. What does it mean to be a Muslim? What does it mean to be a Christian? It's not easy. That's what I would say. I don't know.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7547.5,
"end": 7567.6,
"text": " Sid, how many hours a day do you study? Do you find it difficult studying math? He finds it difficult studying math for more than four hours a day. And he used to be able to study for more than six hours when he was at his most productive. So for me, I study almost all the time. I wouldn't say it's math. I try to study for almost every waking hour that I can, unless I'm with my wife. All I'm doing is I'm with my wife or I'm studying, working in some way, shape or form.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7568.22,
"end": 7597.58,
"text": " I can study math if I'm feeling absolutely productive. I can study it for 10 hours straight, most of the time is four hours. And then there's a, I have to switch tasks. Mainly I have to switch tasks because I have to see because I'm having problems with my eyes now. So I have to look at objects that are more than one meter away because I'm stuck in this condo. I got to walk outside and see trees and so on and buildings. Otherwise I'm diminishing my eyesight and I feel it. I strain each day worse and worse, especially yesterday, especially yesterday.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7600.76,
"end": 7626.22,
"text": " okay someone says so euphoric 87 what do you think led to your existentialist curiosity and why do you think so many people don't have an interest in pondering the nature of things well most people aren't high in openness so that's why that's a as for my existential curiosity i've had that since i was eight like i mentioned what happened was i asked my brother about the origins of the universe how can something come from nothing and he mentioned quantum fluctuations it's not a complete answer but he mentioned it and i remember thinking ah that's interesting okay so",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7631.6,
"end": 7656.49,
"text": " Well, ever since then I became interested in physics and existential questions. Okay, which of your guests have you found most compelling so far? Bernardo Kastrup and Ian McGilchrist. Which interpretations of quantum mechanics do you lean toward and prefer? Have you tried any meditation? If so, how have you found it? Okay, I've tried many meditations, many different types of meditation. I'm getting loopy here, just so you know.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7658.03,
"end": 7686.73,
"text": " I'm wearing thin. Okay. I'm trying to hold on to the questions. One was the interpretation of quantum mechanics and the meditation. So interpretations, I don't lean toward any, I lean away from one, which is many worlds, I lean away from that, although I'm not convinced that it's false. I tend to lean away from it mainly for a psychological reason that I think the reason for coming up with it has nothing to do with physics, but more has to do with one abdicating one's personal responsibility. And what I mean by that is,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7687.29,
"end": 7707.48,
"text": " It's the epitome of that think about I tend to think that you're special who you're listening to this who's listening you listening to this is you are special. You can change the world. You can change the world for good. You can change the world for evil. And I do think the world centers around you in some strange manner in the same way that we're the center of the universe, but we're not.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7707.82,
"end": 7730.73,
"text": " because there's many centers so it's as if there's multiple centers and that's a strange paradox but i don't know how to solve that antinomy but i think it's true in some manner and i see the many worlds interpretation as being the ultimate of the copernican statement of you're not special you're not special you're not special which by the way copernicus was wrong you can make a frame of reference where the earth is still and the rest of the universe is rotating around it",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7730.73,
"end": 7756.77,
"text": " with general relativity quite easily so just so you know there's no preferred way of thinking about which one is spinning around which even though he's venerated as being the exemplar of science prevailing over the church's dogma I see the many worlds interpretation as the epitome of someone who wants to say that you're not special what's not special well you're a dust mode amongst a cloud amongst a whole hurricane that constitutes your galaxy amongst many planets somewhat that constitute the universe and so on",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7757.55,
"end": 7786.15,
"text": " And then, what's even less special than that? Well, there's many of them, and none are preferred. I think the world does revolve around you in some manner though. I think that each lie that you say replicates. I think that each good act you do replicates. It replicates, it replicates, it replicates. So do good as best you can. Do good as best you can. Admit when you're wrong as best you can. Say sorry when you're sorry as best you can. Forget your ego. Be humble.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7787.07,
"end": 7815.85,
"text": " love love love love so it sounds like i have nothing what i said has nothing to do with physics it has to do with psychology and that's correct that's why i'm not saying that many worlds is incorrect i'm saying i lean away from it but i'm not wholly convinced that it's incorrect i'm still open to it cute kimis thank you so much i don't know if you have a question steward scott says congrats kurt you can see that we're getting toward the end because i'm at an s and this was sorted alphabetically congrats kurt i have a question for you",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7816.46,
"end": 7840.96,
"text": " that pertains to your thoughts and reality do you believe that there's only matter or only mental states or something in between after interviewing so many intellectuals how do you think about consciousness okay so i'm unsure if there's only matter i'm unsure if there are only mental states i'm unsure of what mind or matter is as well okay as for the my take on consciousness my take is is that people who say that they have their theory of consciousness and it's",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7841.87,
"end": 7870.79,
"text": " In some ways, I like it because I want to know their theories. But in some ways, I find it extremely orgyless, let's say, orgy, haughty, haughty, let's say, there's 50, there's maybe 20 to 50 different theories of consciousness. And when I bring it on, I do when I bring this up, much like the theories of everything to the physicists, I bring up the theories of consciousness to the individual guests. And I say, can you comment on this? Can you comment on this king? And often they say, oh, I don't I can't comment on that one, because I don't know that one. I don't know. How can you say you have the correct one if you don't know the rest? I don't understand that.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7871.32,
"end": 7894.27,
"text": " There are competing theories that seem to be self-consistent and you should at least know all. It's not that hard. It takes maybe two years or three years. The RMM says, how do you manage to get such famous thinkers to give you the time of the day? Well, I do so with luck and persistence and each feeds off the last. So for example, when I got gnome,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7894.55,
"end": 7924.15,
"text": " I can't answer that question. It's beyond my ability right now because I'm losing my own train of thought. I'm becoming wifty. I'll read the question to you and then maybe",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7924.65,
"end": 7949.72,
"text": " I can try and answer the whole punching up and punching down. I find a lot of people like to make fun and bully white people or any majority class when the person on the receiving end is not and the person on the receiving end is not taken kindly to it. I understand some part of it, but it feels like bullying, rude, racist behavior. Except they're justifying by saying they're punching up and that doesn't have social repercussions or they say it doesn't. I don't understand it. Should we wait for something bad to happen?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7955.98,
"end": 7981.66,
"text": " There's a quote that people will do anything no matter how absurd in order to avoid facing their own soul. I'll say that and I'll let you interpret it as you will. Voyager says, Kurt, can you interview Commander David Fravor? He's the guy who chased the UFO off the coast of San Diego in a fighter jet. He was an extremely credible witness. Yes, I would love to interview him. However, I don't have any questions that Lex didn't cover.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 7982.23,
"end": 8011.46,
"text": " lex did a wonderful interview with david fravor and if you can think of any spots that are needing to be filled or different angles please let me know that's the main issue when people request guests or famous guests what do you want me to ask them i know sometimes people just say well i want you to talk to them yeah that's not helpful it's not helpful for me because i already have a list of almost maybe 200 people to talk to so please give help me out and give me an angle someone says do you think you can get you can get a conversation with lex reidman",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8012.77,
"end": 8034.6,
"text": " I don't have any interesting information",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8035.47,
"end": 8061.48,
"text": " Wolf Winter says, what is currently stopping you from accepting idealism as the best ontology, specifically Bernardo Castrop's form of it? Cheers.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8067.93,
"end": 8088.93,
"text": " I have to understand it more. See, if someone talks to me about it, I think I can give an explanation that would be on par with, not on par, but I would give an explanation that Bernardo would approve of, but that's not enough. I need to understand it in the sense that I have to live it to some degree and incorporate it into my own thinking and I haven't, or only have to a minor degree.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8089.99,
"end": 8116.82,
"text": " as well as I have to understand all the different strains of consciousness before I can come to a conclusion. That's what's stopping me. See, for conversations like the ones that I engage in on this channel, as well as when you watch debates or when I watch debates and so on, I don't think it's useful to think in terms of an instant transformation, but instead to think in terms of slow... a slow process of change, a slow process of a seed that's been planted, seminal,",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8117.36,
"end": 8142.47,
"text": " If this was group theory, if you can, if you're a mathematician, you understand group theory, then each conversation I have is like, I've been added a new generator, and time is the parameter. So it's almost like there's tiny chunks, tiny chinks in my armor, my armored vehicle that I used to pilot the world. And I see that this is this needs mending, this needs abandoning, this needs adding.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8143.06,
"end": 8162.94,
"text": " This isn't where I thought it was, I thought it was stronger here, and so on. And I find that my self-imposed interdictions are unnecessary, and that my trumpeted freedoms are superfluous, so... It's a... slog. It's a slow process of doing and undoing. I rearrange myself slowly, and that's a more effective way of describing what's going on during these conversations.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8163.61,
"end": 8192.16,
"text": " I think that's useful because people want to say that this changed my life and then someone asks you how did it change your life and then you're at a loss for words and then you feel like well maybe didn't change my life or maybe I'm foolish on inarticulate or maybe is that it changed your life at a small level right now that'll manifest itself later I think that's the better way to think about it and as long as I'm oriented by God or by truth or by love or all I hope that I'm I hope these conversations are changing me for a",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8193.68,
"end": 8223.66,
"text": " For the good and hopefully changing others for the good or more specifically. I hope that I hope that Thank you again, thank you so much for watching this I appreciate it. I got to get going as you can tell I'm now drained if you want to support more Conversations like this then please consider going to patreon.com slash Kurt Jai Mungle. There is a custom pledge people ask how can I donate more than?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8224.43,
"end": 8247.02,
"text": " or less than $10. You can do a custom pledge and it actually helps. Each dollar helps. I hope that what I've said is coherent and sapid and copacetic and if it's not then please you can",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8247.36,
"end": 8276.6,
"text": " message again and perhaps I'll do another AMA somewhat shorter this time so that I'm not struggling at the end of it thank you so much thank you I'm gonna watch the comment section now for just a minute or two and then I'm gonna go hydration thank you making sense hydration is not something I have a problem with at all actually I drink perhaps too much water it's more sleep that I have a difficult time with",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8277.94,
"end": 8306.15,
"text": " Thank you, thank you. Misroom, Nathan. I can't pronounce this Japanese character, kanji character name. Thank you. Bo, Karina, thank you. Jaron, thank you. Yvonne, thank you. Munda. Oh, Munda didn't say thank you, but Munda, thank you. Amin, thank you. Micromat, thank you. Dimitri, thank you. Dina, thank you. Barfiman, thank you.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8309.91,
"end": 8323.81,
"text": " I'm in. Thank you. I'll look into it. Try red light goggles. Yeah, I have them. I've tried them. Okay. Thank you. I gotta get going now. Thank you. Bye bye.",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8343.42,
"end": 8355.33,
"text": " Think Verizon, the best 5G network, is expensive? Think again. Bring in your AT&T or T-Mobile bill to a Verizon store today and we'll give you a better deal. Now what to do with your unwanted bills? Ever seen an origami version of the Miami Bull?",
"speaker": null
},
{
"start": 8355.83,
"end": 8373.47,
"text": " Jokes aside, Verizon has the most ways to save on phones and plans where you can get a single line with everything you need. So bring in your bill to your local Miami Verizon store today and we'll give you a better deal.",
"speaker": null
}
]
}
No transcript available.