We have a bit of a delayed talk this week. It was a real busy few days with wrapping up some of the loose ends with the big move, Father’s Day, and Juneteenth—but hey, better late than never! Today’s talk is a bit off the beaten path. Today Jay talks a lot about Kierkegaard and what it means to think and act as individuals, rather than fall into scary groupthink. Jay discusses the strange truths we have, and how often we have an assumption that anyone, or any thought, that is in the majority is automatically true. But is that always the case? Can there be a fear or an agenda in the majority that infects its way through the crowd. Is a crowd the untruth? Jay also takes Kierkegaard’s ideas and takes a look at some of Jesus’ teachings, as well as Paul, to see what they say about the individual. Because groupthink keeps us from living our best lives in so many ways. A lot of the division we have these days is because of focusing on whole groups of people, rather than individuals. It can be hard to love a crowd, it’s real easy to hate a crowd. But it’s a bit easier to love an individual. To not turn the individual into a fraction of who they are. Obviously, a group or community can be a very beautiful thing. Very beautiful. But let us remember too that a crowd is composed of individuals. So let’s not turn other people in fractions of who they are. Or as Jay puts it Let’s live a life that confuses the algorithm.
This talk was given on June 20, 2023 from Seattle, WA.
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