I
 just watched the first debate of Jordan Peterson with Sam Harris on 
YouTube. 
I haven't watched debate #2 yet, but I will. From what I saw so
 far, this debate displayed the following existential conflict: the 
capacity to order language and ideas across time, which operates and 
functions at the level of and functions in, though, and as the a priori,
 distinguishing, demarcating, meaning-creating centers of activity that 
precede, transcend, update, and unify meanings (displayed by but never 
explicitly stated by Peterson), vs 
Harris' capacity to (only) move ideas and meanings around, which relies 
on acts of distinguishing, demarcating, and meaning-creation which
a) he's unconscious of
b) were done by others in the past,
c) he doesn't understand the nature of,
and d) he will only admit exist with pressure. And he does (they both call them, I think unhelpfully, "intuitions")
Sam's big idea is that meaning is a function of accounts of what is
 (facts, in other words), but implicit in Peterson's point (as far as I 
can tell; he struggles to say this explicitly; I sure did too; English 
is not a language that lends itself to this kind of thinking) is that 
meaning is a function of activities that
a) ontologically precede
 accounts of what is, that is, facts (since it's not clear how an 
account of what is, which is an act that occurs at a given moment, can 
also give an account of that in what is that transcends said moment and 
only exists in, through, and as that transcendence, which is, itself, an
 activity that creates what is in its wake),
b) transcend accounts of what is (for the same reasons),
c)  update
 accounts of what is (since an account of what is can be demonstrated as
 wrong by certain new accounts of what is, or facts, that become 
apparent to us, and since this "becoming apparent" is itself an activity
 that cannot be accounted for as fact, since it exists in, through, and 
as the act of transcending accounts of what is),
and d) unify
 accounts of what is (since this level of activity, as what exists in, 
through, and as the perpetual transcendence of the accounts of what is 
that occurs across time, is what allows us to posit that two elements of
 an account of what is can cohere in some meaningful way as the same 
account).
In other, much shorter words, 
Harris moves around elements of meaning that have been situated, whereas
 Peterson operates at the level of what situates meaning, of meaning 
(the gerund) itself.
This isn't arbitrary
a)
 because it's not clear how we can have meaning at all, to not succumb 
to nihilism, without centers of meaning that precede, transcend, update,
 and unify individual meanings,
b) 
because in order to allow one word to succeed another over time instead 
of another, I have to choose it for some generative, meaning-creating 
reason, to participate in an activity that privileges one value over 
another and thereby creates one meaning and not another.
c) because people have different such modes of letting words succeed each other in ways we can talk about and discuss.
d)
 because these centers of generative activity are, put differently, that
 which privileges one value over another in action (like speech or 
writing) are, therefore, what exists in and through meaningful action, 
are, therefore, what exists as the reason I choose that act over 
another, and are, therefore, the moral intuitions that Peterson and 
Harris both agree exist and can't be explained away
and
 e) because these generative centers, as what unifies a chain of 
signified meanings across time, is by definition *narrative," and we 
enjoy narrative as a culture.
TL;DR: 
Harris lives and works in the signified past and Peterson lives and 
works in the signifying present. Harris sees meaning as a function of 
facts, of accounts of what is; Peterson sees meaning as a function of 
the generative centers that precede, transcend, update, and unify 
accounts of what is, i.e., moral intuitions. Harris operates only using 
the logic of "meaning" as a noun, where Peterson also operates at the 
level where he can use  "meaning" as a gerund. The former is trapped by 
what has been signified and can only see what precedes, transcends, 
updates, and unifies what has been signified as arbitrary nonsense. The 
latter knows that this preceding, transcending, updating, unifying 
activity is not nonsense but is a) the condition for any sense, and b) 
intelligible and something we can discuss.
Btw,
 I suspect that Peterson hasn't articulated this to himself, but this 
distinction seems to be at the heart of their disagreement and, more 
broadly, certain philosophical conflicts in general (like whether or not
 Heidegger is saying anything but nonsense).
 
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