First published at 22:56 UTC on January 13th, 2022.
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Mikhail Avdeev interviews Jordan Peterson in this episode. his career and body of research into the behavior of chimpanzees and early humans through the lens of his anthropological and primatological work. We explore the behavior of the great apes, living in the wild, DNA similarity study, working alongside Jane Goodall, evolution from cooking, war among the chimps, proactive aggression, and more.
Jordan Peterson is interviewed by Mikail Avdeev, a member of his foreign translations team. The interview focuses on the impact of Peterson’s work beyond the western world.
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Shownotes:
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[00:00] Jordan Peterson is interviewed by Mikail Avdeev, a member of his foreign translations team. They begin the discussion by talking about the forming of the international translation teams.
[02:00] The healing effect of Jordan's lectures. The outcry for new material from Jordan’s catalog of books, lectures, and podcasts has been overwhelming.
[04:00] Espousing the profundity of Eric Neumann’s works in his “The Origins and History of Consciousness and The Great Mother.”
[05:20] Peterson comments on another personal favorite author of his, Mircea Eliade, and his history of religious ideas - an anthropological and sociological assessment of religion that’s also deeply psychological.
[06:40] How Russians respond to Jordan's affinity for Alexander Solzhenitsyn. Mikail details the feelings of the Russian people by their portrayal after the fall of communism.
[10:00] How we deal with the guilt of the things our ancestors or society have done: a very difficult question because we are very historical creat..
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