By David Marcus
Monday, May 21, 2018
Dr. Jordan Peterson, who has enjoyed a surge into fame
over the past year, has become a bit like the Yanny and Laurel audio meme.
People listen to what he has to say but disagree wildly about what they are
hearing.
Some hear a man with important ideas that can help people
live a more fulfilling life, others hear a dangerous misogynist who wants to
set back the cause of liberated women, trans people, and the rest of the
cast(e) of oppression. In a feature for The
New York Times Magazine this weekend, Nellie Bowles clearly came down on
the latter side.
The first paragraph makes this obvious: “Look back to the
1950’s he says.” It’s not clear from the article if this is a quote from
Peterson. In any event, this interpretation has an essential mistake. When
Peterson talks about changes in gender, sexuality, family, and work, he is
exposing central contradictions, both evolutionary and social, that he believes
are making people unhappy.
He is not suggesting that all women should aspire to be a
1950s Donna Reed housewife, but that on many levels some women do want
something closer to that lifestyle. Part of the evidence for this is that since
the sexual revolution the question of whether women can “have it all” has been
so often on our tongues and pages. Peterson suggests the answer, in many cases,
is no.
He isn’t telling women not to strive for whatever they
want, or to be forced into anything. But that’s the progressive narrative
against him, one that the Times
reinforced. A perfect example of this is Bowles’ mischaracterization of
Peterson’s argument that societies are better off with “enforced monogamy.”
The Times Got It Wrong
The Times
article makes it appear that Peterson means somehow women will be forced into
sex they don’t want to have, calling his ideas about “enforced monogamy”
absurd. The reaction to that line has been swift and damning. But that’s not
what he is talking about at all. He is talking about societal norms that value
monogamy and work to enforce it. He addressed this on Twitter this weekend.
He also addressed it on his blog: “My critics’ abject
ignorance of the relevant literature does not equate to evidence of my
totalitarian or misogynist leanings.” The important thing here is that Peterson
assumed his interviewer was up on anthropological terms of art. That’s never a
good bet for journalists. We are mostly known for not paying for lunch.
Peterson blames Knowles for not being familiar with the
relevant literature, but “enforced monogamy,” is not a well-known term of art,
and it does sound menacing. Knowles probably should have asked for
clarification before presenting it as absurd, but Peterson also has to know and
anticipate that these kinds of attacks are going to be leveled at him by people
who may be ill-informed in anthropology, but nonetheless well-intentioned.
Some of the confusion over just what Peterson means to
propose is that most of his content is delivered verbally, either in lectures
or interviews. Indeed, as in this case, once presented with someone’s confusion
Peterson will often go to his blog to effectively explain the position.
In writing and especially editing one thing an author
does is actively anticipate misunderstanding and try to get ahead of it. This
is much harder to do when talking off the cuff, especially if you are talking
to people who agree with you. It allows you brush past ideas you and the
audience take for granted that others might not. This unfortunately is a
central theme of Peterson’s style. It leaves him open, often legitimately, to
fair attacks.
What Is Our
Medium?
Bowles derides Peterson as a YouTube philosopher. Okay,
cutting and demeaning, but so what? What important philosopher who scribbles
with a quill is he being compared to? What scary things does he say? That
marriage and monogamy are good for society? If you think that is nonsense, okay,
#TindrTill90, or whatever. Have sex with whomever you want, be whatever gender
you want, be no gender, be all genders, be the fulcrum of humanity the moment
it changes. I get that appeal.
But we are not that. At least, we don’t have to be. The
central message Peterson sends is to reject postmodernism and the Marxism it
embraces. I’m on board with that, with one small reservation. Postmodernism
itself was a denial that science could tell us all. Philosophers like Fredric
Jameson urged us to take ancient narratives more seriously. This is a central
plank of Peterson’s program, and one that we don’t hear enough about in popular
accounts of his oeuvre.
In fact, much of Peterson’s insistence that we listen to,
and understand, our ancient myths, legends, and stories is not because they
tell us how we should be, but because they tell us how we have been. These old
narratives give us insight into what our ancestors thought about being human,
where humanity had been, where humanity wanted to go. This is an essential tool
for understanding western thought and ideas — assuming we still wish to be
human.
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