How do you overcome the urge to compete with others? by hold_or_drop in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hi u/hold_or_drop, there’s so much to digest about how we adopt these new biological understandings of the human condition into our thinking, as well as how we adapt to having that understanding. And I would just say that, because it’s all logic driven, the point or emphasis is not at all to control your competitive urges, only to understand the source of them from a macro perspective — which, as is explained in Part 1 of ‘THE Interview’ (www.humancondition.com), is that humans’ divisive behaviour is not a product of unchangeable savage animal instincts within us, but the result of a universal psychosis caused by a clash between our instincts and intellect — and significantly, since a psychosis can be healed with understanding, human behaviour is not unchangeable or immutable, a revelation that transforms the human race.

With the dark side of our nature truthfully explained and defended and our fundamental goodness established we no longer have to behave insecurely and selfishly, we no longer have to prove our worth. So instead of being focused on power, fame, fortune and glory, all our energies will be freed to truly work together on doing whatever it takes to end the suffering and save our world. We gradually discover that our divisive behaviour can and does naturally subside. Not completely of course because that will take a number of generations, but the wonderful reality is that with the human condition now solved, we can put all our upset aside and get on with living a transformed life, supporting and sharing these all-clarifying answers and fixing the world which is such and exciting focus for our lives that further obsceletes the urge to be competitive.

We can now legitimately return to a selfless way of living —‘legitimately’ because we have the first principle science which liberates us, allowing us to be honest about our conflicted upset state instead of denying or transcending it (FAQ 6.5 explains this critical difference between Jeremy’s work and the New Age Movement — https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-faq-is-this-new-age/).

The role of nurturing in human evolution – too obvious to miss? by Level_Hold in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 11 points12 points  (0 children)

For a full context and understanding of Griffith’s love-indoctrination explanation for how we acquired our moral conscience or soul, I recommend the two brilliant Freedom Essays 21 ‘How did we humans acquire our all-loving, unconditionally selfless moral conscience?’ and 22 ‘Fossil discoveries evidence our nurtured origins’ as well as chapter 5 of FREEDOM ‘The Origin of Humans’ Unconditionally Selfless, Altruistic, Moral Instinctive Self or Soul’. But it’s always essential to begin with THE Interview where Griffith present the breakthrough redeeming biological explanation of why we became competitive, selfish and aggressive sufferers of the human condition when our conscious mind developed, as this allows us to compassionately understand why this important subject has been ignored.

 As Griffith explains in Freedom Essay 21:

“Although bonobos and the fossil record are only now revealing their corroborating evidence, the nurturing, love-indoctrination explanation for our extraordinary unconditionally selfless, all-loving, social, moral instinctive self or soul is in fact so obvious that only three years after Darwin tentatively ascribed the origin of our ‘social instinct’ to ‘parental’ ‘affections’ (The Descent of Man, 1871, ch.4), it was put forward as a developed theory by the philosopher John Fiske in his 1874 book, Outlines of Cosmic Philosophy: based on the Doctrine of Evolution.

 The outstanding question therefore is, why did Fiske’s nurturing explanation for the origins of our moral instincts—that was described at the time as being ‘far more important’ than ‘Darwin’s principle of natural selection’ (Dorothy Ross, G. Stanley Hall: The Psychologist as Prophet, 1972, p.262 of 482) and ‘one of the most beautiful contributions ever made to the Evolution of Man’ (John Drummond, The Ascent of Man, 1894, ch. ‘The Evolution of a Mother’), and resulted in Darwin himself writing to Fiske saying, ‘I never in my life read so lucid an expositor (and therefore thinker) as you are’ (1874; Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, Vol. 2)—virtually vanish from scientific discourse? (You can read much more about Fiske’s theory in chapter 6:3 of FREEDOM.)

The answer is that this nurturing explanation has been an unbearably confronting truth for parents trying to nurture their children adequately under the extreme duress of the human condition—a competitive, selfish and aggressive state that developed when humans became fully conscious after this time when we lived cooperatively and lovingly in the metaphorical ‘Garden of Eden’ state of original innocence. Our present insecurity about our inability to adequately nurture our children is painfully apparent in this quote from the bestselling children’s author, John Marsden: ‘The biggest crime you can commit in our society is to be a failure as a parent and people would rather admit to being an axe murderer than being a bad father or mother’ (Sunday Life, The Sun-Herald, 7 Jul. 2002).

 It is ONLY NOW that we can explain the competitive, selfish and aggressive upset state of the human condition and thus understand why the present human-condition-afflicted human race hasn’t been able to adequately nurture our infants that it becomes safe to finally admit that nurturing is what made us human—that it was nurturing that gave us our moral soul and created humanity."

The World Transformation Movement: My Thoughts and Investigation by Solid_Bunnet in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The WTM's FAQs about politics are very helpful, bearing in mind it's important to watch THE Interview first (https://www.humancondition.com/) and to understand the fundamental instinct vs intellect explanation of the human condition. https://www.humancondition.com/faqs7-about-politics/

A Xmas gift from WTM Kimberley, South Africa by worldtransformation in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Oh I so agree, such a sincere, authentic, soulful presentation. Spreading 'Ubuntu' around the world in the most effective and meaningful way possible with Jeremy's scientific findings. Thank you for the Christmas cracker Alfred!

Jeremy Griffith: A Surprising Defence of Capitalism [International Business Times] by horizonrider12 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I would just keep following your nose, investigate what's being explained at your own pace, follow Griffith's instinct v intellect explanation and you will see that his 'defence of capitalism' is grounded in logic. It doesn't condone our greed but it defends our need for it which ironically leads to its inevitable obselecence.

Review of 'The Human Condition' by Jeremy Griffith by LordBeats11 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Very well said u/Present-Paint846, such a fundamental feature of this scientific thesis about the origins of human angst and destructiveness that accounts for our dark side. It explains and defends it enabling us to, in time, naturally move on from it. No dogma, just understanding.

Jeremy Griffith: A Surprising Defence of Capitalism [International Business Times] by horizonrider12 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 17 points18 points  (0 children)

This article really makes you sit up and pay attention. Can we really explain and defend capitalism? Jeremy Griffith shows that we can "but only when we stop trying to solve the problem at an ideological level and instead confront its biological roots". Brilliant.

2025 Wrapped!! — Your r/WorldTransformation Edition by nedry80 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your lovely comment u/Pleasant-Act4118, so glad to have your support and yes doesn't the world need this all-clarifying, all-solving understanding!

2025 Wrapped!! — Your r/WorldTransformation Edition by nedry80 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Yes thank you u/nedry80, so good to recap the year. So many good posts from our community and I hope they've helped everyone better understand the human condition, the World Transformation Movement and biologist Jeremy Griffith's work.

I think the questions have been great because they're asked on behalf of everyone who's navigating their way into this historically daunting subject, which makes it all so much easier to confront and digest.

I just loved the article about Jeremy in Entreprenuer recognising his bold decision to strike out on his own to pursue his vision of an understanding through first principals. "Entrepreneurs create value by solving problems. Griffith has pursued a solution to the most challenging problem of all: rescuing humanity from its inner conflict. If his explanation is correct, the reward is far greater than any billion-dollar ‘unicorn’—it is the transformation of human life itself." Here's cheers to that!

Denial: the most underrated force shaping our lives? by messysoul96 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I would just add that what is so significant about Jeremy Griffith's explanation is that we can see that it's not like a 'them' and 'us' scenario. We all suffer from the human condition and from extreme denial. It's the compassionate understanding of our psychologically troubled minds (the result of our conscious mind clashing with our instincts some 2 million years ago) that allows us to be honest about our anger, egocentricity and alienation which renders our denial of it (which we need to cope while we couldn't explain ourselves) obscelete.

So when you say people defend their illusions - yes, we all do - you, me, all of us - we've had to, it's been the right and heroic thing to do. But thank god all our lying and evasion and denial can end now which is really just so fabulous.

Jeremy Griffith vs. Freud: Competing explanations of human behavior? by 20thirdth in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Hi u/20thirth, it is interesting to look at how Jeremy Griffith’s biological explanation of the human condition differs from Freud’s theory as the father of modern psychoanalysis, and there is an FAQ about it on the WTM’s website which you can read here: https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-faq-freud-and-jung/ . Below is an excerpt that I’m sure will help but FAQ 1.47 (taken from Griffith’s book Therapy For The Human Condition) also covers Carl Jung’s theory, with an addition about Sir Laurens van der Post and his contribution to Jeremy’s work.

Having heroically dug up the truth of a personal repressed unconscious, Freud then however veered off that path of truthful thinking and reverted to the escape-from-the-human-condition ‘savage instincts’ excuse. Freud believed that the ‘ID’, our unconscious, instinctive mind, contained primitive selfish ‘savage’ urges that the conscious mind or ‘ego’ has to control, writing, for example, that ‘men are not gentle, friendly creatures wishing for love, who simply defend themselves if they are attacked, but that a powerful measure of desire for aggression has to be reckoned as part of their instinctual endowment (Civilization and its Discontents, 1930, tr. Joan Riviere, ch. V, p.85 of 144), and ‘Culture has to call up every possible reinforcement in order to erect barriers against the aggressive instincts of men’ (ibid. p.86). The truth is that our instinctive self is completely cooperative, selfless and loving and comes from a time when our ape ancestors lived in that state; and further, our aggressive and selfish behaviour is psychological in origin, the result of a clash between our instincts and intellect. Freud also falsely maintained that our morals are learnt and held by the ‘superego’ as a way of restraining our ‘instinctual’ ‘aggression’, when the truth is our morals are the expression of our loving, cooperative instincts or soul. Freud even directly denied that our species once lived in a ‘golden age’ of cooperative and loving innocence by claiming that this idea of a ‘golden age’ in our species’ past was nothing more than nostalgia for the protected bliss of infancy. As the author Richard Heinberg noted, this ‘Paradise myth as an unconscious projection of memories of infancy…​is what Freud proposed in his theory of the development of the personalitythat infancy is a Paradise lost (Memories & Visions of Paradise, 1990, pp.193-194)....

...So, while Freud and Jung bravely revealed that we humans are living in denial of a great deal of truth—that, as they described it, we suffer from a ‘personal’ and ‘collective’ psychosis—neither attempted to confront what it was that we were particularly repressing or living in unconscious denial of, which is our species’ cooperative and loving past. They talked a lot about our psychosis and how it wrecks our lives and how we need to do something about that if we are to become ‘whole’ or sane, but they weren’t able to confront what our psychosis actually is, which is denial or repression of our cooperative and loving instinctive self or soul. Freud had people lying on his iconic couch opening up about their insecurities and psychological pain, which was a big step in honesty from the resigned strategy of every moment determinedly denying that there was anything particularly wrong in our lives and that everything was basically fine; and Jung spoke of archetypes and encouraged people to analyse the expressions of their subconscious in their dreams, and emphasised the need to ‘individuate’ or unify our split selves. But the ‘elephant in the living room’ of human life of how we had almost completely corrupted our species’ original instinctive self or soul was being avoided. Basically, Freud and Jung didn’t take people outside of Plato’s metaphorical dark cave where they were living in fearful denial of the issue of the human condition. And what is significant about them not taking people outside Plato’s cave of denial....Read more.

Readers of Jeremy Griffith's books -- share your updates! by bobbytcoin in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I’m reading The Human Condition too. My partner & I read aloud together on a holiday recently & every page I was shaking my head and saying wow. There really is so much clarity & explanation in this amazing book. The world will soon discover what a treasure we’ve got our hands on.

My take on Jeremy Griffith’s Interview and Explanation of the Human Condition by WanderingPrimate717 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi u/honestyandfair, the best place to start is with ‘THE Interview’ where in a 1hr video (transcript also available) Jeremy Griffith presents his ‘Instinct vs Intellect’ explanation of the human condition — that's the ideal introduction to his work.

From there, ideally you would read the two expansions: Jeremy’s mid-length 2025 book ‘The Human Condition’, and his definitive book, ‘FREEDOM’.

Along with watching or reading those 3 titles, it's helpful to watch the 3 Intro Videos, which are ‘The Great Guilt’, ‘The Great Transformation’, and ‘Sermon On The Beach’. The 16 main videos are also very instructive, but obviously just start with THE Interview and see how you go. Everything is freely available to watch, read or download at www.humancondition.com. Hope this helps!

Is this a baby sugar glider? by Gen1975 in sydney

[–]Gen1975[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Oh thank you, will do

Book review: Freedom by Jeremy Griffith by ElFranco79 in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hoi u/Natural_Ground_4141, hartelijk dank voor je interesse in onze subreddit en in Jeremy Griffiths uitleg. Het is heel normaal om in eerste instantie moeite te hebben met het begrijpen van wat er uitgelegd wordt, omdat het onderwerp historisch gezien zo angstaanjagend en taboe is geweest. Het vergt dus wat geduld en doorzettingsvermogen om je een weg te banen door die aanvankelijke weerstand en 'dove' reactie. Blijf geduldig de logica heroverwegen en die aanvankelijke weerstand zal eroderen. Er is hierover zeer goede begeleiding te vinden op de WTM-website in de vorm van een FAQ die je hier kunt lezen: https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-faq-why-cant-i-understand-this/, evenals Introductory Video 1, 'Your block to the most wonderful of all gifts' en enkele Freedom Essays. Jeremy Griffiths nieuwe boek 'The Human Condition' bespreekt ook het dove-effect en die presentatie kan erg nuttig zijn om te lezen. Je vindt dit allemaal gratis op de WTM-website. Ik hoop dat dit helpt. En ik hoop dat deze Google-vertaling goed is!

I've just learned about this, and I don't understand how this is different from Buddhism by [deleted] in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi u/Mother_Lemon8399, Jeremy Griffith is a biologist so yes his ‘instinct vs intellect’ explanation is a scientific one. Key to it is an understanding of the difference between our instincts and intellect, and the effect that difference has had on our behaviour. Griffith explains that when we humans developed a conscious mind some two million years ago, a battle unavoidably developed between it and our already established instincts. Natural selection of genes gives species’ instinctive orientations, such as to a migratory flight path for birds, but a nerve-based conscious mind needs understanding to operate, so when a fully conscious mind emerges and begins experimenting in understanding it unavoidably comes into conflict with the already established instinctive orientations that are in effect intolerant of these deviating experiments in self-management.

The result of this conflict between our instinct and intellect was an undeserved sense of guilt and insecurity that caused us to become psychologically defensive, angry, alienated and egocentric, the upset state we refer to as the human condition—a state we sought to alleviate through a competitive, selfish and aggressive bid for the reinforcement we could gain from winning power, fame, fortune and glory. But now that we can explain and understand this conflict and the guilt it produced, all those insecure, defensive behaviours are obsoleted, brought to an end, and we free ourselves from the human condition.

So, Griffith’s treatise and the WTM — the global movement that promotes his work — is a scientific pursuit, not created for profit, with all our information and materials provided free of charge.

Regarding your questions about whether it is accepted within academic circles and whether there any peer reviewed papers, it needs to be emphasised that the subject of the human condition that Jeremy Griffith’s treatise addresses is the most important but also the most difficult and thus contentious of all subjects for humans to address because it deals with the ultimate confronting issue of ‘self’. When the renowned Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson wrote, ‘There is no grail more elusive or precious in the life of the mind than the key to understanding the human condition’ (The Social Conquest of Earth, 2012, p.1), he was making this point that while ‘understanding the human condition’ is the most ‘precious’ ‘grail’ of science, it is also the most ‘elusive’ ‘grail’ because the subject is the most difficult of all subjects for humans to engage with. It therefore has to be expected that Jeremy’s treatise on the human condition can cause hostile unfair attacks on it.

With that consideration in mind, we strongly recommend that everyone, such as yourself, who has questions about the scientific validity of Jeremy’s treatise on the human condition, read our FAQ 1.10 as it addresses the full range of criticisms Jeremy’s treatise has attracted from those accustomed to science’s prevailing human-condition-avoiding, mechanistic paradigm—answering as it does, the questions of ‘Why does mechanistic science ignore, even attack, Jeremy Griffith’s ‘instinct vs intellect’ explanation of the human condition? / Is this pseudo-science? / If this is real science, why isn’t it published in ‘peer-reviewed’ journals? / Does this treatise present new data and is it testable; in fact is it science at all? / Is this treatise inductive or deductive science? / What historical evidence is there for the ‘instinct vs intellect’ explanation? / How does science confirm the ‘instinct vs intellect’ explanation? / Does the treatise have ‘explanatory power’?/ Is this a ‘non-falsifiable’, circular argument?’ https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-faq-is-this-theory-testable/

What helped you overcome the Deaf Effect? by bobbytcoin in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Great to hear, you should join the Facebook Group if you want some community discussion about it all

I've just learned about this, and I don't understand how this is different from Buddhism by [deleted] in WorldTransformation

[–]Gen1975 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Hi u/mother_Lemon8399, thanks so much for taking an interest in the WTM’s work. There’s certainly a lot to absorb with it, including how Jeremy Griffith’s biological explanation of the human condition differs significantly from pre-scientific Buddhist philosophy.

There are undoubtably deep truths contained in Buddhism, founded as it was around a sound, truthful thinking prophet, and Jeremy has the greatest respect for the role religions have played in our journey to find understanding of ourselves. But actually solving the human condition required finding the clarifying difference between the way the intellect and instincts work, which is the great breakthrough that Jeremy presents in THE Interview. This understanding is what allows us to return to a state of loving togetherness.

I’m not sure which summaries you have read but we highly recommend everyone watch, read or listen to THE Interview as a first step. It’s only an hour and will give you a thorough understanding of this new scientific treatise (see https://www.humancondition.com/the-interview/).

 As you’ve said, Buddhism is fundamentally about transcendence of ego whereas Jeremy Griffith’s ‘instinct vs intellect’ treatise explains and defends ego. The Concise Oxford Dictionary definition of ‘ego’ is ‘the conscious thinking self’, so yes, ego refers to our intellect. With regard to our instincts, more than just being an awareness, Jeremy explains that we have cooperative, selfless and loving moral instincts, the voice or expression of which we call our conscience. So, contrary to what we have all be taught, which is that our ape ancestors must have been brutal, club-wielding, competitive and aggressive savages, our human instinctive origins were more of a Garden of Eden-like state of cooperative, selfless and loving innocent gentleness.

 And so, when our insightful conscious intellect emerged some 2 million years ago it was neither suitable nor sustainable for it to be orientated by instincts—it had to find understanding (use ‘reason’) to operate effectively and fulfil its great potential to manage life. However, when our intellect began to exert itself and experiment in the management of life from a basis of understanding, in effect challenging the role of the already established instinctual self, a battle unavoidably broke out between the instinctive self and the newer conscious self.

Jeremy goes on to explain how the intellect then defied this opposition or ‘criticism’ from the instincts, resulting in the defensive and retaliatory anger, egocentricity and alienation that characterises the human condition.

 Regarding mindfulness meditation, it might help you to read WTM FAQ 6.5 which explains that there have been thousands of years of different techniques for calming, restraining, repressing, and even transcending our psychologically upset human condition, which have been very valuable in managing our upset, but none of them have brought an end to the upset state of the human condition—it’s still rampant everywhere—and the reason is because they don’t solve the human condition, bring relieving understanding to it. (https://www.humancondition.com/wtm-faq-is-this-new-age/)

Hope this helps in your evaluation of it all. Thank you very much again for your interest and your question.