Jordan Peterson cautions against 'unbridled enthusiasm' for Bitcoin

Quick Take

  • Jordan Peterson cautioned against “unbridled enthusiasm” during his Bitcoin 2022 fireside chat.
  • While he said he’s not pessimistic and isn’t necessarily critical of the ecosystem, he’s wary of unintended consequences of decentralization.

Psychologist and author Jordan Peterson spent a significant portion of his Bitcoin 2022 fireside chat playing devil’s advocate against the Bitcoin ecosystem.

Peterson insisted he wasn’t expressing a personal opinion, frequently employing the phrase “and I’m not saying it is,” after positing uncertainty surrounding the ecosystem. Still, he cautioned the Bitcoin community against possible unintended consequences of decentralized money.

Wary of the revolution

Peterson was clear that he sees centralized control as an obstacle to "ethical" outcomes, but he was less clear on whether bitcoin itself was the remedy.

"The idea of a decentralized monetary system, well, that is a revolutionary idea, and the more I thought about it, it makes me wary," he said.

Cash, he posited, is something of a decentralized system in its own right since it's virtually untraceable. "And thank God," he said, since if it were traceable, centralized institutions would likely try to manipulate consumers into making what they discern are ethical decisions, which they are unlikely to accurately discern, according to Peterson.

Cheers broke out as Peterson posited that the growth of bitcoin could over time take money out of the hands of the political system, but then Peterson continued:

"As a social scientist, that also worries me."

Peterson reminded attendees that new ideas can have unintended — and unexpected — offshoots. It's hard to ensure that all of them will be positive.

"We have no idea what would happen if money was actually decentralized," he said. "If we manage that, let's say bitcoin attains primacy, is it irreversible? Is that permanent? And then you think, 'Well what if it's a bad idea?' and it's irreversible."

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While he said he's not pessimistic about bitcoin's effect, but rather that he's cautious.

"The probability that you invent something extremely powerful and it only does the things you think it will do and all those things are good, it's like no, that never happens."

Some government control

An exodus of fiat would have repercussions for government control, according to Peterson, and it's not clear what that will do. Though the activity of central banks could be construed as theft, he said, and the activity of elected officials can be dubious, governments still provide structure.

"Most of us assume that taxation is acceptable, or at least we don't strike up the revolution because it has occurred," he said. "We seem to think that there is a role for government and for the determinations that the government makes outside the free market, per se. Obviously, the government has to exercise some control over currency, over money, in order to make its functions possible."

We don't know what will happen if we take that control away, according to Peterson. Still, he said his comments aren't meant to be a criticism of bitcoin, but rather derive from years of watching social scientists mount large-scale social experiments that ultimately don't work.

"I'm not really suggesting that you do anything as a result of this caution, I'm just saying that unbridled enthusiasm predicated on the assumption that your new system will only do the good things you think it will do, that's not wise," he said.

But, he mused, perhaps the best way forward is to let the free market decide, and if bitcoin wins the battle of the currencies, so be it. 


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About Author

Aislinn Keely is a reporter on The Block's policy team holding down the legal beat. She covers court decisions, bankruptcies, regulatory actions and other key moments in the legal sphere, putting them in context for the wider crypto industry. Before The Block, she lent her voice to the NPR affiliate WFUV and helmed Fordham University's student newspaper. Send tips or thoughts on all things policy and legal to [email protected] or follow her on Twitter for updates @AislinnKeely.