Hitler understands that people need this kind of messianic goal in their lives, and he's captured that in the book and then also in his speeches. Just because we have enough straw doesn't mean where we're going to lose our unbelievable capacity for destructive creation. And i've been trying, i suppose, to meet that desire for a call to adventure with what i'm writing and with my lectures. I think it's harmless, in some sense, or as harmless as such things can be, because it is focused. It's like changed you leave the other people alone. Or if you want to change them, maybe you can do it through example,. O but they're not your they
Join Michael Shermer and Jordan Peterson (bestselling author of 12 Rules for Life) for this extraordinary conversation based on Peterson’s new book Beyond Order. After working for decades as a clinical psychologist and a professor at Harvard and the University of Toronto, Peterson has become one of the world’s most influential public intellectuals. His YouTube videos and podcasts have gathered a worldwide audience of hundreds of millions, and his global book tour reached more than 250,000 people in major cities across the globe. What is it that gives Peterson’s message such mass appeal?