Jordan Peterson will appear on the ABC’s Q&A on Monday, 25 February.
Clinical psychologist and author Jordan Peterson is rarely mentioned in the media without being called ‘controversial’.
In 2016, the University of Toronto professor attracted worldwide attention after he refused to use gender-neutral pronouns – arguing against Canada’s human rights legislation that prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender identity. He’s continued to become known for his criticisms of feminism, political correctness and the concept of ‘white privilege,’ and has evolved into an icon for his audience – mostly males in their 20s – who are adamant that this man has changed their lives.
But walking out of the Sydney Opera House two Saturdays ago, among a sea of thousands of men and women, you’d never guess that the man who had just spoken for close to two hours was such a polarising figure.
Just minutes before, he had been crying on stage, begging his audience to live by a simple philosophy: make the world a little more like heaven, and a little less like hell.
He had the room in stitches as he recounted the story of a young woman who presented to his clinic, miserable and with no energy, wondering why she had no drive to do anything at all. When he asked her about her diet, she said she ate essentially two small bowls of food a day, and never ate breakfast. ‘Have you considered…’ he recalled saying to her, ‘that you may be slowly starving yourself to death?’
His show, part of his 12 Rules for Life Tour, made no mention of the views which have landed him at the centre of countless outrage storms.