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Catching Foxes

Jordan Peterson Tweets Won't Get You into Heaven Anymore

Catching Foxes

Luke and Gomer

Religion & Spirituality, Christianity, Tv & Film

4.8769 Ratings

🗓️ 16 June 2023

⏱️ 79 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Let's chat masculinity.

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  • What Are The Big 5 Personality Traits? | Thomas.co — Many modern and traditional studies in psychology point to 5 basic dimensions of personality. Evidence of this theory has grown over the years with the principle theory emerging in 1949. The five broad personality traits described by the theory are extraversion (also often spelled extroversion), agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism.
  • Dr Jordan B Peterson on Twitter — "There is nothing Christian about #SocialJustice . Redemptive salvation is a matter of the individual soul."
  • Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls: Mary Pipher, Ruth Ross — Everybody who has survived adolescence knows what a scary, tumultuous, exciting time it is. But if we use memories of our experiences to guide our understanding of what today's girls are living through, we make a serious mistake. Our daughters are living in a new world. Reviving Ophelia is a call to arms from Dr. Mary Pipher, a psychologist who has worked with teenagers for more than a decade. She finds that in spite of the women's movement, which has empowered adult women in some ways, teenage girls today are having a harder time than ever before because of higher levels of violence and sexism.
  • Quote by Neil Postman — “What is peculiar about such interpositions of media is that their role in directing what we will see or know is so rarely noticed. A person who reads a book or who watches television or who glances at his watch is not usually interested in how his mind is organized and controlled by these events, still less in what idea of the world is suggested by a book, television, or a watch. But there are men and women who have noticed these things, especially in our own times. Lewis Mumford, for example, has been one of our great noticers. He is not the sort of a man who looks at a clock merely to see what time it is. Not that he lacks interest in the content of clocks, which is of concern to everyone from moment to moment, but he is far more interested in how a clock creates the idea of "moment to moment." He attends to the philosophy of clocks, to clocks as metaphor, about which our education has had little to say and clock makers nothing at all. "the clock," Mumford has concluded, "is a piece of power machinery whose 'product' is seconds and minutes." In manufacturing such a product, the clock has the effect of disassociating time from human events and thus nourishes the belief in an independent world of mathematically measurable sequences. Moment to moment, it turns out, is not God's conception, or nature's. It is man conversing with himself about and through a piece of machinery he created. In Mumford's great book Technics and Civilization, he shows how, beginning in the fourteenth century, the clock made us into time-keepers, and then time-savers, and now time-servers. In the process, we have learned irreverence toward the sun and the seasons, for in a world made up of seconds and minutes, the authority of nature is superseded. Indeed, as Mumford points out, with the invention of the clock, Eternity ceased to serve as the measure and focus of human events. And thus, though few would have imagined the connection, the inexorable ticking of the clock may have had more to do with the weakening of God's supremacy than all the treatises produced by the philosophers of the Enlightenment; that is to' say, the clock introduced a new form of conversation between man and God, in which God appears to have been the loser. Perhaps Moses should have included another Commandment: Thou shalt not make mechanical representations of time.”
  • St. Basil the Great quote — “When someone steals another's clothes, we call them a thief. Should we not give the same name to one who could clothe the naked and does not? The bread in your cupboard belongs to the hungry; the coat unused in your closet belongs to the one who needs it; the shoes rotting in your closet belong to the one who has no shoes; the money which you hoard up belongs to the poor.”
  • Gratuitous Simpsons Clip — I know you can read my thoughts, boy
  • American Football - Every Wave To Ever Rise (ft. Elizabeth Powell) — A gorgeous song

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, everyone. This is Gomer. This is Luke. Luke is Winnie the pooing it right now.

0:04.4

I'm shirt and no pants.

0:07.2

That's a honeypot if I've ever heard it.

0:11.2

He, ho, ye, ho, he, he, he, he, he, da, no, no, that. I don't know what the hell you're doing.

0:22.6

What the hell are you doing?

0:23.7

It's a song from Winning the Poe.

0:26.0

I have to watch 30,000 times.

0:27.7

Oh, got you.

0:28.4

It's when they're pulling out.

0:29.2

They're pulling out poo, and then he goes flying in the air, and he's with the bees.

0:33.3

He's with the bees.

0:34.7

Oh, right, because he's getting honey out of the trees.

0:37.3

Yeah.

0:38.0

Roger that.

0:39.0

Okay, so we, Gomer is using a roadcaster.

0:41.7

Yes, all my settings are correct.

0:44.0

It asks me that.

0:44.8

It has like five warning messages whenever, every single time you do it, even when it's set up

0:48.9

correctly.

0:49.7

Anywho, so me and Luke were talking, because Luke just had an interesting experience. So I immediately called him.

0:54.4

And we started talking.

0:55.6

And then he asked me how I was doing because he's so selfless.

...

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