Jordan Peterson: Gender Pronouns and Free Speech War

Near the end I thought they both made some semi-good criticisms of each other. Zizek challenged Peterson to name some "post-modern neo-Marxists". I could see his point, but at the same time I think it was a bit nit-picky and just semantics. His point was that the so-called postmodern neo-Marxists aren't Marxists, so why use the word? And even if they are, they're nobodies, because nobody knows their names. Peterson's point was that they may not be Marxists, but their ideology has a very similar shape as Marxism. Rather than class, they focus on other dimensions of oppressor/oppressed. Zizek could agree with that, just not with the label of Marxism.

[...] Peterson's criticism of Zizek: Why call himself a Marxist if he disagrees with so much about Marx? If I remember correctly, Zizek said he basically called himself a Marxist to be provocative. And if there's any way in which he actually is a Marxist, it's because he agrees with Marx's critique of capitalism. Not sure those are the best reasons...

I was glad that both challenged each other with such questions, cause they went to the heart of the matter of their original 'disagreement'. Zizek rightly pointed out that those postmodernists such as Foucault and Derrida explicitly said they were NOT Marxists - cause Marxism is a metanarrative, and postmoderism is against metanarratives. So why talk about postmodern neo-Marxists, and who could those be anyway? Yet Peterson has a point in that, even if postmodernists say they are not Marxists, they take the same template to confront different social identity groups against each other, and they share the same righteous victim mentality. That people like Foucault and Derrida realized that Marxism was discredited back in the 60s, so they just moved to some other form of 'social justice' narrative. Also, that nowadays, many postmodern enthusiasts in academia also think of themselves as some sort of Marxists. Probably not the most serious ones though, cause they would understand that it's hard to argue for being in both camps at the same time.

When Peterson asked why Zizek called himself a Marxist if he accepted so many criticisms to Marx, his response I believe was that Marx had the best critique against capitalism in The Capital. This is something I have heard before from other intellectual-type of people - The Capital is a great 'deconstruction' of capitalism - yet those other people don't necessarily call themselves Marxists - often quite the opposite! So yeah, there's a degree of provocation on Zizek's adoption of the Marxist label, and he might do well to drop it.

Overall pretty cool discussion. I like both guys and I'm happy they met.
 
I found it to be a bit nitpicking too from Zizeks side and a bit of a trap, even if not so intended. Stephen Hicks in his book "Explaining Postmodernism writes quite a bit about how the marxist in the 50'ies and 60'ies migrated from class struggle issues to environmentalism, feminism, gender, etc. This is described quite a bit in chapter five, called The crisis of socialism. Here is a map from there that illustrates it:

Yes, but I think Zizek and other intelligent (non-SJW) lefties see it like this: Identity politics/simplistic environmentalism etc. are a reaction by capitalism to the threat of earnest Marxism. In other words, capitalism turns the legitimate class struggle by the exploited workers into a degenerate fight for things that not only don't matter and are no threat to the powers that be (i.e. capitalists), but can actually be turned into profit! Think of selling "woke" people all kinds of woke stuff, bringing women into the workforce to exploit them just like the men etc. So not only did the capitalists manage to divide and conquer, but even profit from it!

I think Detmer's book "Challenging Postmodernism" goes in a similar direction, as does Noam Chomsky. And of course there is truth to that idea. However, blaming "capitalism" and painting the cliché of the evil fat capitalist of the 19th century is way too simplistic. Again, we need to define precisely what we mean when we talk about all these things - and we might even realize that the honest-to-god right-wing critique of cultural marxism isn't so far from the honest-to-god left-wing critique of capitalist excesses.
 
Here's an interesting piece from Quillette that is critical of Peterson's understanding of Marxism/socialism.

Marx Deserves Better Critics - Quillette
The most shocking moment of the Žižek-Peterson debate occurred during the first five minutes. In Jordan Peterson’s opening statement, he mentioned that he’d re-read The Communist Manifesto in preparation for the debate. This, in itself, wasn’t especially surprising. One of many reasons the event was so hotly anticipated—as Dr. Peterson mentioned, Toronto scalpers were charging more for seats than they were charging for Maple Leafs tickets—was that one of the most important Marxist intellectuals in the world would be debating one of the fiercest critics of Marxism. So, one would expect Žižek’s opponent to brush up on some Marxist classics in preparation for their encounter. The shocking part came a few seconds later when the 56-year-old Peterson casually added that he hadn’t read the Manifesto since he was 18.

Peterson has a deep and long-standing interest in totalitarianism. He’s filled his house with art from the Soviet Union in order to remind himself of the evils of that system. Oddly enough, something similar is true of his Marxist sparring partner. Žižek was a dissident Communist in Tito’s Yugoslavia who quit the Party to protest the ZBTZ trial, and he keeps a portrait of Stalin in his home. While he’s explained the significance of the portrait in different ways to different interviewers, at least part of the idea seems to be that it serves as a reminder of the ways in which the socialist project can go terribly wrong.

Unlike Žižek, Peterson apparently believes that attempts to carry out a political program inspired by Marx’s writings can only go wrong. Before he agreed to debate Žižek, Peterson turned down a similar offer from the Marxist economist Richard Wolff. Although Wolff is a democratic socialist who promotes workers’ cooperatives as “the cure for capitalism,” Peterson has called his introduction to a new edition of The Gulag Archipeligo “an answer to the Richard Wolffs of the world.”

The debate about whether there’s a straight line from Marx to Stalin is an important one, especially given the revival of interest in socialism in the contemporary West. Everyone should want the key participants in that debate to be as well informed as possible. Marxists should want to sharpen their minds by having to confront the best versions of anti-Marxist arguments, while anti-Marxists should want a champion for their position who knows Marx’s writings inside and out. Unfortunately, as he’s shown on many occasions, Jordan Peterson doesn’t fit this bill.

Marx’s Critique of the Gotha Program and Peterson’s Critique of Marx

Peterson seems to suggest in the video below that postmodernism and Marxism share a dangerous belief in “equality of outcome.” While he sees “equality of opportunity” as a “laudable” goal, Peterson thinks that attempts to enforce equality of outcome lead to disaster.

Many critics have taken issue with his claim about the relationship between these two schools of thought. Marxism is, after all, precisely the sort of “grand narrative” decried by poststructuralist thinkers. But what has been less widely appreciated is that Marx was far from an advocate of strict “equality of outcome.” In his 1875 Critique of the Gotha Program, Marx argued that in the earliest stages of a post-capitalist society, individual workers would have to be compensated unequally for a variety of reasons:

[O]ne man is superior to another physically, or mentally, and supplies more labor in the same time, or can labor for a longer time; and labor, to serve as a measure, must be defined by its duration or intensity, otherwise it ceases to be a standard of measurement…. Further, one worker is married, another is not; one has more children than another, and so on and so forth. Thus, with an equal performance of labor, and hence an equal [share] in the social consumption fund, one will in fact receive more than another, one will be richer than another, and so on. To avoid all these defects, right, instead of being equal, would have to be unequal.
Later on, cultural and technological progress would eliminate the need for such disparities. Under capitalism, automation puts people out of a job. Under socialism, Marx predicted, it would just mean that everyone had to work fewer hours. Eventually, he thought that there would be so much abundance that everyone could simply take what they needed, and what little work still needed to be done by humans could be accomplished by everyone just pursuing whatever projects happened to interest them. “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs.”

Critics of Marxism will likely roll their eyes at the utopianism of this vision. Some resources, they will argue, will always be scarce. Furthermore, it’s unrealistic to imagine that financial incentives will ever stop being the primary driver of human ingenuity. This is a debate worth having. To have it, though, all the disputants need to know what Marx is—and isn’t—saying. At no stage of his reasoning about how a socialist future might work does he envision anything like everyone having a strictly equal share of society’s resources.

Democracy, Dictatorship, and Revolution

In his opening statement in the debate with Žižek, Peterson said that Marx’s solution to the ills of capitalism was “bloody violent revolution.” That’s not quite right. Marx advocated revolution against the hereditary monarchs who ruled most of Europe when The Communist Manifesto was published. But I know of no passage in his and his collaborator Engels’s voluminous writings in which either man said that socialists would need to resort to a violent seizure of power in an advanced parliamentary democracy where the franchise had been extended to the working class.
In, for example, his 1872 “La Liberté” speech to the International Working Men’s Association, Marx is explicit about that distinction.

What, though, about the cases in which revolution was necessary? Marx and Engels talked in a few places about the idea that a temporary “dictatorship of the proletariat” would be necessary to consolidate revolutionary gains. That certainly sounds undemocratic. But what exactly does it mean? As Slavoj Žižek pointed out in Toronto, any historically grounded discussion of “the dictatorship of the proletariat” must reference the real world example that Marx and Engels pointed to in order to illustrate the concept. In 1871, workers took over the city of Paris and created the Paris Commune. All elected officials in the Commune could be recalled by their constituents at any time and for any reason. There was a popular militia instead of a standing army. Factories abandoned by their owners were re-opened as workers cooperatives. The Commune was so radically democratic that it was viewed as a post-revolutionary model by both the Marxist and anarchist wings of the International Working Men’s Association.

Critics of Marxism may argue that radical experiments like the Paris Commune are by their nature dangerously chaotic. Perhaps there are even good reasons to believe that this ultra-democratic model would eventually deteriorate into something as ugly as the Soviet experience. Whatever one thinks about these questions, any reasonable debate has to start from the knowledge that when Marx talks about “the dictatorship of the proletariat” what he has in mind is the Paris Commune.

Capitalism, Poverty, and The Communist Manifesto

Peterson often points out that a great many people have been lifted out of poverty since the early nineteenth century. Here, for example is a tweet from July 2018

Here’s one from April 2019, a couple of weeks before the debate:


3,823 people are talking about this

He made the same point on the debate stage in Toronto, this time referencing 1800 rather than 1820 as the starting point. In all three cases, the strong implication was that this point undermines the case of Marxists and other left-wing critics of capitalism. Why should it, though? One of the reasons Marx thought that the transition from feudalism to capitalism was progress is that it allowed the “forces of production” to develop in a way they couldn’t when they were fettered by feudal social structures. The opening pages of The Communist Manifesto are devoted in large part to a celebration of the wonders that had been wrought by that transition.

All fixed, fast-frozen relations, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air… The bourgeoisie, during its rule of scarce one hundred years, has created more massive and more colossal productive forces than have all preceding generations together. Subjection of Nature’s forces to man, machinery, application of chemistry to industry and agriculture, steam-navigation, railways, electric telegraphs, clearing of whole continents for cultivation, canalisation of rivers, whole populations conjured out of the ground — what earlier century had even a presentiment that such productive forces slumbered in the lap of social labour?
In 1820, not only were islands of industry surrounded by a sea of countryside but a great many of the peasants who toiled in Europe’s countryside were (or, at least, had been born as) serfs. Capitalism was just starting to come out from the shadow of feudalism. A fact of far greater relevance to the dispute between Marxists and advocates of free market capitalism is the fact that the rate of extreme poverty has continued to decline two centuries later. Some of this is disputed territory. Is $2 a day or $5 a day a better indication of “extreme” poverty? Should we care about raw numbers or about the percentage of the population that is desperately poor?

In some ways an even more interesting point of contention concerns the role the People’s Republic of China has played in this process. China is full of private businesses these days, but the state continues to play an outsized role in shaping the Chinese economy. If one of the primary drivers of the global decline of extreme poverty is its decline in the People’s Republic, is this a success story for “free market” capitalism or for a modified and liberalized form of state socialism? An answer to that question might shed some light on the deeper issue of whether capitalism continues to be the most effective way of improving the lot of the poor or whether an alternative global system would be preferable. This is a debate worth having, but the pro-capitalist side deserves better-informed anti-Marxist representatives than Jordan Peterson.
 
Here's an interesting piece from Quillette that is critical of Peterson's understanding of Marxism/socialism.

Marx Deserves Better Critics - Quillette

Yeah, although not sure it's that interesting.

"one of the most important Marxist intellectuals in the world would be debating one of the fiercest critics of Marxism"

But that isn't what it turned out to be. Zizek is not "one of the most important Marxist intellectuals in the world", and he made that clear in his talk. There was, as Peterson said, barely anything about Marxism that Zizek actually agreed with! Also, the discussion wasn't about Marxism from 150 years ago but how it is understood and applied today in Western nations, mostly by left wing ideologues and SJWs. The way it is understood today is extremely oversimplified and childish, as Peterson has repeatedly said, it is basically about personal will to power 'revenge and identity politics'. It's complete nonsense, and I would respond to the person who wrote that article that readers of quillete deserve a better quality of thinker who can actually grasp the crux of the matter.

Btw, that Marx quote he/she used: “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs” is well-known, but the point that everyone seems to miss is that no political or economic theory is necessary to 'impose' such a social order, life already does that and always has, and any attempt by humans to play that role usurps the existing natural order and would undoubtedly lead to some form of totalitarianism. Human life experience is, by definition, the result of the varied abilities of each, and each always receives according to their needs.
 
Also, the discussion wasn't about Marxism from 150 years ago but how it is understood and applied today in Western nations, mostly by left wing ideologues and SJWs. The way it is understood today is extremely oversimplified and childish, as Peterson has repeatedly said, it is basically about personal will to power 'revenge and identity politics'. It's complete nonsense, and I would respond to the person who wrote that article that readers of quillete deserve a better quality of thinker who can actually grasp the crux of the matter.

Yeah, you're right. The author either hasn't considered the context of the current Far Left adoption of Marxist ideas in his article or he deliberately avoids it.
 
One thing that always kinda rang true for me when it comes to Marxism is Marx' theory of "alienation":

Karl Marx's theory of alienation describes the estrangement (Entfremdung) of people from aspects of their Gattungswesen ("species-essence") as a consequence of living in a society of stratified social classes. The alienation from the self is a consequence of being a mechanistic part of a social class, the condition of which estranges a person from their humanity.
The theoretical basis of alienation within the capitalist mode of production is that the worker invariably loses the ability to determine life and destiny when deprived of the right to think (conceive) of themselves as the director of their own actions; to determine the character of said actions; to define relationships with other people; and to own those items of value from goods and services, produced by their own labour. Although the worker is an autonomous, self-realized human being, as an economic entity this worker is directed to goals and diverted to activities that are dictated by the bourgeoisie—who own the means of production—in order to extract from the worker the maximum amount of surplus value in the course of business competition among industrialists.
(Marx's theory of alienation - Wikipedia)

Notice how today's right-wingers make similar points about the decline of traditional human endeavors and values. And notice how you can use that Marxist idea to critizise the insane SJWism so rampant in today's mega-corporations! You can also use that critique to defend traditional craftsmanship, local communities and so on.

But if misunderstood, as so often happened with lefties unfourtunately, this "alienation" argument can be misused to justify laziness, resentment etc. Like "I'm too good/special/entitled to be alienated by the evil capitalists". But the Marx' critique of how modern, industrialized society can crush people's souls is spot-on - and it got so much worse with today's mega-corporations to the point that many even yearn for the good old days of the industry workers! Even Marx didn't see that coming I guess. Not only that: the whole alienation business is dominated by leftist ideology today! Man, what a tangled web indeed.
 
One thing that always kinda rang true for me when it comes to Marxism is Marx' theory of "alienation":


(Marx's theory of alienation - Wikipedia)

Notice how today's right-wingers make similar points about the decline of traditional human endeavors and values. And notice how you can use that Marxist idea to critizise the insane SJWism so rampant in today's mega-corporations! You can also use that critique to defend traditional craftsmanship, local communities and so on.

But if misunderstood, as so often happened with lefties unfourtunately, this "alienation" argument can be misused to justify laziness, resentment etc. Like "I'm too good/special/entitled to be alienated by the evil capitalists". But the Marx' critique of how modern, industrialized society can crush people's souls is spot-on - and it got so much worse with today's mega-corporations to the point that many even yearn for the good old days of the industry workers! Even Marx didn't see that coming I guess. Not only that: the whole alienation business is dominated by leftist ideology today! Man, what a tangled web indeed.

I think it make sense that thinkers such as Marx can come up with a somewhat valuable criticism of the status quo, given that their agenda is to provide an alternative framework. In cognitive sciences there's something called motivated resoning, meaning that we scrutinize ideas more carefully if we don't like them. Arguably, these thinkers can be good at tearing down some presuppositions and showing where problems lie.

The problem is with the alternatives which they provide, and that is usually based on omitting some basic facts about reality and experience. A big part of that is some fundemantal knowledge about human psychology, psychopathology, as Lobaczewski noted. Some basic humility and coming to terms with the complexity of our world is also lacking with these overreaching "metanarratives", basically playing "God" instead of admitting ignorance.
 
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One thing that always kinda rang true for me when it comes to Marxism is Marx' theory of "alienation":

(Marx's theory of alienation - Wikipedia)

But the Marx' critique of how modern, industrialized society can crush people's souls is spot-on -

Not sure I agree, I think that theory of alienation is very naive and uninformed about the actual abilities of the average person and what they aspire to in life and what makes them happy. In the end, I always come back to the idea that the conditions of life are perfectly tailored to human life and well-adjustedfor progress, right down to the level of each individual.
 
Not sure I agree, I think that theory of alienation is very naive and uninformed about the actual abilities of the average person and what they aspire to in life and what makes them happy. In the end, I always come back to the idea that the conditions of life are perfectly tailored to human life and well-adjustedfor progress, right down to the level of each individual.

It makes me wonder about how the "tailoring" is done. It only makes sense if we were "designed" as Darwins Black Box seems to support then the designer/designers must have an over-all plan to provide for our development. I can only imagine what a complex process that would be (maybe like an "experiment"?).
 
I think it make sense that thinkers such as Marx can come up with a somewhat valuable criticism of the status quo, given that their agenda is to provide an alternative framework. In cognitive sciences there's something called motivated resoning, meaning that we scrutinize ideas more carefully if we don't like them. Arguably, these thinkers can be good at tearing down some presuppositions and showing where problems lie.

The problem is with the alternatives which they provide, and that is usually based on omitting some basic facts about reality and experience. A big part of that is some fundemantal knowledge about human psychology, psychopathology, as Lobaczewski noted. Some basic humility and coming to terms with the complexity of our world is also lacking with these overreaching "metanarratives", basically playing "God" instead of admitting ignorance.

Yes exactly. But then they fail to see their own presuppositions. It takes work, mental work to come to understand the nuances and complexity of our world, as you say. I can't help but think if we were truly able to work out all of those factors to create a system capable of giving all what they needed, that we would transcend this level of existence altogether.
 
It makes me wonder about how the "tailoring" is done. It only makes sense if we were "designed" as Darwins Black Box seems to support then the designer/designers must have an over-all plan to provide for our development. I can only imagine what a complex process that would be (maybe like an "experiment"?).

Reality on planet earth provides for a likely infinite combination of possible experiences, and the individual nature and ability of each person 'combines' with that field of potential experiences to draw to each person the lessons they need to learn. I know that's kind of detached and philosophical, but the more the world descends into chaos and infighting, the more I find myself retreating to a philosophical perspective because it's often the only way for any sense to be made of the apparent madness.
 
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Capitalism (and other variations of a hierarchical system) has 'won' on this planet because it seems there can be no consensus among all, or even a majority of, human beings as to what way society should be structured. That seems to be the result of there being different kinds of human beings with different needs/wants etc. Any attempt to impose a 'great equalizing' system is doomed to failure then, because it has to be forced on people. 'Free market' capitalism is the best option because it allows people the greatest scope to choose their own way, and it also appeals to the strong materialist bent of most people. Of course, it comes with significant negatives, not least of which is that same appeal to materialism and materialist thinking. But the old maxim of 'each to their own' seems to be the most egalitarian way society can be structured here, albeit with necessary limits on the expression of human will provided by laws, punishment etc.
 
And notice how you can use that Marxist idea to critizise the insane SJWism so rampant in today's mega-corporations!

Since the Google incident with James Damore (and if you haven't read what he actually wrote, I encourage you to do so, very enlightening when compared to how it was reported), I've begun to wonder if the failure of Google will be under the crushing weight of its own virtue signaling. Reading about the internal struggles of the company makes it sound more like it's held hostage by children with naive ideas and total power rather than a company empowering its employees to improve the work environment.
 
Reality on planet earth provides for a likely infinite range of possible experiences, and the individual nature and ability of each person 'combines' with that field of potential experiences to draw to each person the lessons they need to learn. I know that's kind of detached and philosophical, but the more the world descends into chaos and infighting, the more I find myself retreating to a philosophical perspective because it's often the only way for any sense to be made of the madness.

I think what you are describing sounds like what happens when you throw "freewill" into layers of realties, experiments and experimenters. It kind of gives a picture of the concept of perpendicular realites in a way. We do our own experimenting within the the experiment I think.

experiment (n.)
mid-14c., "action of observing or testing; an observation, test, or trial;" also "piece of evidence or empirical proof; feat of magic or sorcery," from Old French esperment "practical knowledge, cunning; enchantment, magic spell; trial, proof, example; lesson, sign, indication," from Latin experimentum "a trial, test, proof, experiment," noun of action from experiri "to try, test," from ex- "out of" (see ex-) + peritus "experienced, tested," from PIE *per-yo-, suffixed form of root *per- (3) "to try, risk."

experiment (v.)
late 15c., from experiment (n.). Intransitive sense by 1787. Related: Experimented; experimenting.

The result is very much like "all there is is lessons".

experience (n.)
late 14c., "observation as the source of knowledge; actual observation; an event which has affected one," from Old French esperience "experiment, proof, experience" (13c.), from Latin experientia "a trial, proof, experiment; knowledge gained by repeated trials," from experientem(nominative experiens) "experienced, enterprising, active, industrious," present participle of experiri "to try, test," from ex- "out of" (see ex-) + peritus "experienced, tested," from PIE *per-yo-, suffixed form of root *per- (3) "to try, risk." Meaning "state of having done something and gotten handy at it" is from late 15c.
 
Capitalism (and other variations of a hierarchical system) has 'won' on this planet because it seems there can be no consensus among all, or even a majority of, human beings as to what way society should be structured. That seems to be the result of there being different kinds of human beings with different needs/wants etc. Any attempt to impose a 'great equalizing' system is doomed to failure then, because it has to be forced on people. 'Free market' capitalism is the best option because it allows people the greatest scope to choose their own way, and it also appeals to the strong materialist bent of most people. Of course, it comes with significant negatives, not least of which is that same appeal to materialism and materialist thinking. But the old maxim of 'each to their own' seems to be the most egalitarian way society can be structured here, albeit with necessary limits on the expression of human will provided by laws, punishment etc.
There's another advantage to free market systems. They don't need to be tied to materialism and materialistic thinking. Free markets existed along the old silk road, in the Ancient Near East, in Aleppo, Mosul, Baghdad, in ancient China and India. Even Native Americans practiced some free market principles, and Confucius and Mencius advocated some of the same. Modern free markets have the unfortunate circumstance of having developed along with materialistic Enlightenment philosophies, but the link between them isn't a necessary one. Now, if a whole bunch of people get their act together a la Jordan Peterson by acting as responsibly as possible in all aspects of their lives, I think a lot of the negatives about materialism (with its consumerism, radical individualism, 'greed is good', etc.) could be mitigated, even within a free market system.
 

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