THE HISTORY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS
"The more I became
interested in psychoanalysis, the more I saw it as a road to the same kind of
broad and deep understanding of human nature that writers possess."
Anna Freud
Anna Freud
Towards the end of the 19th
century, the new discipline of psychology became entrenched in both Europe and
America. The study of the human mind, hitherto a preserve of philosophers and
theologians, became a legitimate subject of scientific (some would say,
pseudo-scientific) scrutiny.
The Structuralists
- Wilhelm Wundt and Edward Bradford Titchener - embarked on a fashionable
search for the "atoms" of consciousness: physical sensations,
affections or feelings, and images (in both memories and dreams).
Functionalists, headed by William James and, later, James Angell and John Dewey
- derided the idea of a "pure", elemental sensation. They introduced
the concept of mental association. Experience uses associations to alter the
nervous system, they hypothesized.
Freud
revolutionized the field (though, at first, his reputation was limited to the
German-speaking parts of the dying Habsburg Empire). He dispensed with the
unitary nature of the psyche and proposed instead a trichotomy, a tripartite or
trilateral model (the id, ego, and superego). He suggested that our natural
state is conflict, that anxiety and tension are more prevalent than harmony.
Equilibrium (compromise formation) is achieved by constantly investing mental
energy. Hence "psychodynamics".
Most of our
existence is unconscious, Freud theorized. The conscious is but the tip of an
ever-increasing iceberg. He introduced the concepts of libido and Thanatos (the
life and death forces), instincts (Triebe, or "drives", in German) or
drives, the somatic-erotogenic phases of psychic (personality) development,
trauma and fixation, manifest and latent content (in dreams). Even his
intellectual adversaries used this vocabulary, often infused with new meanings.
The
psychotherapy he invented, based on his insights, was less formidable. Many of
its tenets and procedures have been discarded early on, even by its own
proponents and practitioners. The rule of abstinence (the therapist as a blank
and hidden screen upon which the patient projects or transfers his repressed
emotions), free association as the exclusive technique used to gain access to
and unlock the unconscious, dream interpretation with the mandatory latent and
forbidden content symbolically transformed into the manifest - have all
literally vanished within the first decades of practice.
Other postulates
- most notably transference and counter-transference, ambivalence, resistance,
regression, anxiety, and conversion symptoms - have survived to become
cornerstones of modern therapeutic modalities, whatever their origin. So did,
in various disguises, the idea that there is a clear path leading from
unconscious (or conscious) conflict to signal anxiety, to repression, and to
symptom formation (be it neuroses, rooted in current deprivation, or
psychoneuroses, the outcomes of childhood conflicts). The existence of
anxiety-preventing defense mechanisms is also widely accepted.
Freud's
initial obsession with sex as the sole driver of psychic exchange and evolution
has earned him derision and diatribe aplenty. Clearly, a child of the repressed
sexuality of Victorian times and the Viennese middle-class, he was fascinated
with perversions and fantasies. The Oedipus and Electra complexes are
reflections of these fixations. But their origin in Freud's own
psychopathologies does not render them less revolutionary. Even a century
later, child sexuality and incest fantasies are more or less taboo topics of
serious study and discussion.
Ernst Kris
said in 1947 that Psychoanalysis is:
"...(N)othing
but human behavior considered from the standpoint of conflict. It is the
picture of the mind divided against itself with attendant anxiety and other
dysphoric effects, with adaptive and maladaptive defensive and coping
strategies, and with symptomatic behaviors when the defense fail."
But
Psychoanalysis is more than a theory of the mind. It is also a theory of the
body and of the personality and of society. It is a Social Sciences Theory of
Everything. It is a bold - and highly literate - attempt to tackle the
psychophysical problem and the Cartesian body versus mind conundrum. Freud
himself noted that the unconscious has both physiological (instinct) and mental
(drive) aspects. He wrote:
"(The
unconscious is) a concept on the frontier between the mental and the somatic,
as the physical representative of the stimuli originating from within the
organism and reaching the mind" (Standard Edition Volume XIV).
Psychoanalysis
is, in many ways, the application of Darwin's theory of evolution in psychology
and sociology. Survival is transformed into narcissism and the reproductive
instincts assume the garb of the Freudian sex drive. But Freud went a daring
step forward by suggesting that social structures and strictures (internalized
as the superego) are concerned mainly with the repression and redirection of
natural instincts. Signs and symbols replace reality and all manner of
substitutes (such as money) stand in for primary objects in our early formative
years.
To experience
our true selves and to fulfill our wishes, we resort to Phantasies (e.g.,
dreams, "screen memories") where imagery and irrational narratives -
displaced, condensed, rendered visually, revised to produce coherence, and
censored to protect us from sleep disturbances - represent our suppressed
desires. Current neuroscience tends to refute this "dreamwork" conjecture
but its value is not to be found in its veracity (or lack thereof).
These musings
about dreams, slips of tongue, forgetfulness, the psychopathology of everyday
life, and associations were important because they were the first attempt at
deconstruction, the first in-depth insight into human activities such as art,
myth-making, propaganda, politics, business, and warfare, and the first
coherent explanation of the convergence of the aesthetic with the
"ethic" (i.e., the socially acceptable and condoned). Ironically,
Freud's contributions to cultural studies may far outlast his
"scientific" "theory" of the mind.
It is ironic
that Freud, a medical doctor (neurologist), the author of a "Project for a
Scientific Psychology", should be so chastised by scientists in general
and neuroscientists in particular. Psychoanalysis used to be practiced only by
psychiatrists. But we live at an age when mental disorders are thought to have
physiological-chemical-genetic origins. All psychological theories and talk therapies
are disparaged by "hard" scientists.
Still, the
pendulum had swung both ways many times before. Hippocrates ascribed mental
afflictions to a balance of bodily humors (blood, phlegm, yellow and black
bile) that is out of kilt. So did Galen, Bartholomeus Anglicus, Johan Weyer
(1515-88). Paracelsus (1491-1541), and Thomas Willis, who attributed
psychological disorders to a functional "fault of the brain".
The tide
turned with Robert Burton who wrote "Anatomy of Melancholy" and
published it in 1621. He forcefully propounded the theory that psychic problems
are the sad outcomes of poverty, fear, and solitude.
A century
later, Francis Gall (1758-1828) and Spurzheim (1776-1832) traced mental
disorders to lesions of specific areas of the brain, the forerunner of the
now-discredited discipline of phrenology. The logical chain was simple: the
brain is the organ of the mind, thus, various faculties can be traced to its
parts.
Morel, in
1809, proposed a compromise which has since ruled the discourse. The propensities
for psychological dysfunctions, he suggested, are inherited but triggered by
adverse environmental conditions. A Lamarckist, he was convinced that acquired
mental illnesses are handed down the generations. Esquirol concurred in 1845 as
did Henry Maudsley in 1879 and Adolf Meyer soon thereafter. Heredity
predisposes one to suffer from psychic malaise but psychological and
"moral" (social) causes precipitate it.
And, yet, the
debate was and is far from over. Wilhelm Greisinger published "The Pathology
and Therapy of Mental Disorders" in 1845. In it he traced their etiology
to "neuropathologies", physical disorders of the brain. He allowed
for heredity and the environment to play their parts, though. He was also the
first to point out the importance of one's experiences in one's first years of
life.
Jean-Martin
Charcot, a neurologist by training, claimed to have cured hysteria with
hypnosis. But despite this demonstration of non-physiological intervention, he
insisted that hysteroid symptoms were manifestations of brain dysfunction. Weir
Mitchell coined the term "neurasthenia" to describe an exhaustion of
the nervous system (depression). Pierre Janet discussed the variations in the
strength of the nervous activity and said that they explained the narrowing
field of consciousness (whatever that meant).
None of these
"nervous" speculations was supported by scientific, experimental
evidence. Both sides of the debate confined themselves to philosophizing and
ruminating. Freud was actually among the first to base a theory on actual
clinical observations. Gradually, though, his work - buttressed by the concept
of sublimation - became increasingly metaphysical. Its conceptual pillars came
to resemble Bergson's élan vital and Schopenhauer's Will. French philosopher
Paul Ricoeur called Psychoanalysis (depth psychology) "the hermeneutics of
suspicion".
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