Nietzsche once remarked that there
is a joke concealed within Kant’s philosophy: that he set out to prove what the
man in the street already believes, but in a language so obscure that the man
in the street would find it completely dumbfounding.
One might say that there is a joke
concealed in Freud’s work too, though it is roughly the opposite of this: that he
set out to show how little the average educated man actually understands
himself, but in a language so clear that the average educated man is convinced
he now really does understand himself, but is convinced at the same time that
Freud was deluded.
I exaggerate, of course. But
perhaps not greatly.
It came to my mind while reading
Louis Menand’s recent essay on Freud & his critics in The New Yorker
magazine (28th August 2017). Although boldly titled “Why Freud
Survives”, it is not at all clear why Menand thinks he does survive. There is
no accusation that has been levelled against Freud in the last fifty years
against which Menand shows the slightest inclination to defend him in even the
most qualified degree.
The specific occasion of the essay
is a new book by long-time Freud critic Frederick Crews helpfully reminding us
again in case we had forgotten what a monster the founder of psychoanalysis really
was.
Menand raises an urbane question
mark over the intensity of Crews’ personal obsession with Freud & he is
ironically aware that Crews ends up trying to debunk the founder of
psychoanalysis by subjecting him to a version of psychoanalysis of his own. But
it is clear nevertheless he largely agrees with him that Freud was in essence a
fake.
Menand records again much of the
criticism Freud has been subject to in past decades, though most of this is now
over 30 years old. At the same time he signally fails to note how much of this
criticism has been shown to be unjust & misconceived. Evidently the
assumption is that if you go on repeating a charge long enough eventually you
will persuade yourself it is true.
According to Menand, for instance,
“historians like Henri Ellenberger & Frank Sulloway pointed out that most
of Freud’s ideas about the unconscious were not original, & that his
theories relied on outmoded concepts from nineteenth-century biology.” This is
simple nonsense & reveals Menand to understand nothing about psychoanalysis. In focusing specifically on conflict within the
unconscious, which is the key innovation that makes psychoanalysis what it is & distinguishes it from
everything else, Freud had no predecessors in the clinical study of the
unconscious, & among the philosophers only Nietzsche anticipates him in
this regard. As to biology, Freud uses this always as a general backdrop for
his thinking & as a source of metaphor but his characteristic ideas in no
way depend on abandoned biological theory.
Menand goes on to repeat without
any caveats the assertion by Peter Medawar, described as is now traditional in
this kind of literature as “the Nobel Prize-winning medical biologist” so that
he can serve as a kind of all-purpose genius, that psychoanalysis is “the most
stupendous intellectual confidence trick of the twentieth century.” As for Adolf
Grünbaum’s often
cited The Foundations of Psychoanalysis, Menand judges this to be “a
dauntingly thorough exposition designed to show that, whatever the foundations
of psychoanalysis were, they were not scientific.” And so on.
Menand
either does not know or does not care that all these attacks have long ago been
subject to penetrating criticism. Anyone seriously interested in studying the
problems with these writers & many other of the Freud critics could do
worse than to start with Walter Kaufmann’s Discovering The Mind: Freud,Adler & Jung, Paul Robinson’s Freud & His Critics, & my
own The Last Resistance.
For Menand however the notion that
Freud brought about a genuine revolution in the way we understand ourselves was
always an illusion. “For many years,” he remarks, “even as writers were
discarding the more patently absurd elements of his theory – penis envy, or the
death drive – they continued to pay homage to Freud’s unblinking insight into
the human condition.” To which the obvious response is: which writers does he
mean? Apparently for Menand anyone who has found Freud’s ideas to be fruitful can
only be the bamboozled member of a mindless cult, incapable of looking for anything
other than confirmation of the master’s pronouncements.
I
first began to read Freud when I was a teenager & Penguin Books began to
publish most of the Standard Edition in paperback form, starting with the
Introductory Lectures. I remember at this time, in the mid 1970s, wise adults
gravely explaining to me that Freud had now been superseded by more recent
advances in scientific psychology & that his theories were being abandoned by serious
scholars & thinkers. I made little protest at this, because I did not
believe it. The extraordinary clarity of thought in Freud’s writing & the clear
applicability of the ideas to everyday experience seemed to me then the work of
genius. More than forty years later they still do.
Over those years I have continued
to study & reflect on Freud, first informally for my own interest, later as
a doctoral student & in several years of personal analysis, &, for the
last twenty years or so, as a psychotherapist doing what I can to help my own
clients.
After all these years I am not
sure, by any means, that Menand’s examples of penis envy & the death drive
are not mistaken hypotheses. But I know for sure they are not “patently absurd”.
Anyone who imagines these ideas are not profoundly compatible with a great deal
of what we observe in human psychological life is simply unaware of the
evidence, or doesn’t want to look at it.
What is so revealing is that such
a supposedly sophisticated commentator as Menand should experience not the
slightest need even to attempt to justify dismissing these complex &
difficult notions. Menand, because he regards himself as a literate man, assumes
therefore he must also know enough to know these things are not worth taking seriously.
The great bulk of writing on Freud
in our culture is of this nature. The clarity of Freud’s words &, above
all, the fact that he writes on things that touch us all most intimately –
childhood, parents, siblings, the sexual life, anxiety, envy, death – persuades
almost every educated man & woman who approaches this work that he or she
must in some inherent way, & without the need for much careful reflection,
be in a position to know on what matters Freud was right & on what he was
wrong. On the validity of quantum mechanics, or even on the validity of the
theory of evolution, most of us are conscious enough of our ignorance of the
evidence to maintain an agnostic silence. But on the validity of the Oedipus
Complex we are all born experts. Or so we assume.
Menand goes on to write, with a
further display of psychological expertise: “It can be useful to be made to
realize that your feelings about people are actually ambivalent, or that you
were being aggressive when you thought you were only being extremely polite. Of
course, you shouldn’t have to work your way through your castration anxiety to
get there.”
Menand knows that “of course” we
shouldn’t have to do this because – well, because he is a literate & scholarly
man.
But in truth, there is no “of
course” about it. Castration anxiety is a symbolic expression for the fear of
parental, & later societal, punishment for trying to be true to one’s own
nature. None of us can start to come to terms with our ambivalence & none
of us can contain it until we have addressed & tried to be honest about
this most basic of all human fears that lies at the root of it.
Freud has been very controversial
from the beginning. But what are now referred to as the “Freud wars” began in the late 70s & early 80s around the time Jeffrey Masson, who had been given the
task of editing the definitive version of Freud’s letters to Fliess, claimed
that Freud had deliberately concealed sexual abuse among his patients, &
with Frank Sulloway’s bizarre charge that he had concealed the biological basis
of his psychological theories.
At the time both were sensations, in
the book review sections at least, because they satisfied a craving for
evidence that Freud must have “concealed” something. We accept as a matter of
course that genius by its nature is never transparent. But we find this very
hard to accept in the case of Freud who seems so skilled at uncovering our own
secrets. We resent this. And this is why the literature revealing all the ways
Freud was a moral monster has flowered so vigorously. We want his secrets out,
just as he has forced our secrets out.
Despite some cooling down in
recent years the wars have continued on & off in this vein pretty much ever
since: eccentric & ambiguous accusations are made, framed in sensational
terms, relating to Freud’s abuse of the evidence, or his abuse of his patients,
or his abuse of his colleagues, or his misunderstanding of science, or his
personal sexual life, that turn out always to have no relevance to his substantive
ideas. And this is why the Freud critics – by which I mean here those who have
turned attacking Freud into a career or vocation in itself – have had no impact
on the development of psychotherapy. Their work is animated not by a serious
engagement with Freud’s thought but reflects rather an intense emotional transference
to his figure that they cannot overcome in themselves. The ironical
thing is that nothing has done more to keep Freud alive in the mind of the
educated public than the extraordinary love, we cannot call it anything else,
these critics have for Freud.
A case
in point is Adolf Grünbaum’s The
Foundations of Psychoanalysis from the 80s. Though
described by Menand as designed to show that the foundations were not in fact
scientific, a closer reading of the work shows that it is much more ambiguous
than this. Supposedly questioning Freud’s scientific credentials, Grünbaum in
fact fiercely defends him against any other philosophers, like Karl Popper for
instance, who have questioned his understanding
of science. The true story of the book is Grünbaum’s intense
possessiveness of Freud, who he sees in a father & son rivalry with himself
alone for the deeper understanding of science.
Subscribing to what is now the
conventional wisdom on this subject Menand writes in his casually dismissive
way that “from the beginning, Freud was a lousy scientist.” Poor old Freud, bottom of the class again.
At the same time however Menand is too canny not to realize that there is throughout the critical literature of psychoanalysis an idealization of what science is & what it does. Here, for once, he identifies something genuinely significant.
At the same time however Menand is too canny not to realize that there is throughout the critical literature of psychoanalysis an idealization of what science is & what it does. Here, for once, he identifies something genuinely significant.
The ultimate origin for this
idealization is the philosophy of Kant, where it serves the purpose of leaving
a space free in the universe in which moral dogma can live unchallenged by
scientific questioning. What we have learnt from Freud is that when science
finally invades that formerly sacrosanct moral space it no longer looks the way
classical mechanics suggests it should look. Things get messy, & they get
emotional.
At the deepest level, this is what
the Freud wars have always been about.
They are not about whether Freud
was sometimes economical with the truth, or whether has was having an affair
with his sister-in-law, or whether he made a hash of understanding scientific
method. They are about the fact that Freud showed us how to criticize our moral
presuppositions. They are about the question of how we are going to live, &
how we are going to organize the often conflicting inclinations within us in a
world in which moral certainties have given way to ethical dilemmas. The Freud
wars are just one expression of the crisis that has been brought about in modern
life as a result of the disappearance of that ethical space in which motivation
seemed certain & transparent, & right & wrong seemed absolute.
The deepest artists &
philosophers before Freud could see that this ethical space would not survive
the end of Christianity. But it was Freud who did the demolition work in public
view when the time finally came. Some people have been able to adapt to this
fundamental change in cultural life but some have found it very difficult,
& among these are the Freud critics. They cannot make peace with the man
who has become the symbol for the coming of the age of moral ambiguity.
The argument therefore is not an
intellectual one that will be resolved eventually through some new piece of
evidence about Freud or about psychoanalysis.
It is on the contrary a debate
between two different kinds of human temperament. It is between those for whom
the most important & rewarding thing in life is now the challenge of
mastering the self in a world that has become essentially uncertain, of
acquiring ever deeper insight & access to ourselves & to whatever resources
Nature has given us, and, on the other hand, those for whom such a challenge is
alarming & repugnant, who, in our post-Christian world, cannot come to terms
with being morally orphaned & who, in spite of themselves & to their
own distress, cannot stop looking for a formula that will tell them how
to live – whether this be in religion, or in some idealized notion of Science,
or in Marxism, or in Feminism, or indeed as many of them previously did, in Freudianism
itself, and who cannot live without someone to blame for the fact that life
forever leaves them dissatisfied with their fate because it now refuses to give
them certain answers.
But for those of us who now
believe that moral uncertainty & ambiguity are the price of emotional
maturity Freud was a genuinely great man & he is one of the great
provocations & inspirations to personal autonomy. We are perfectly aware of
his flaws as a man, & we are very clear on which aspects of his theorizing
we think doubtful or certainly mistaken. But because we do not need him to be a
god, we are not in a perpetual state of rage because he fails to be one.
Those who have made careers out of
attacking Freud have missed the message Freud leaves our whole culture, because
they are unable to respond to it. And that message is this:
“I have tried to be as honest as I
can about the disturbing emotions I have discovered in the depths of my own mind
& in the minds of others. In spite of the mistakes I have made, as every human being who has the
courage to attempt something new will inevitably make, I have tried to be as honest as I can with myself without
losing control of myself & without ceasing to work to form myself into the kind
of human being I think Nature wants me to be. - Now, can you show me that you are
strong enough to try to do something similar with your own life …?”
Thank you for this analysis and for advice on further reading. I read that Freud said that needed to stop reading Nietzsche for fear that there would be nothing new to learn about human behavior. Do you know if that is that case?
ReplyDeleteHi Robert - Thank you for your message. Freud greatly admired Nietzsche but said he stopped reading him so as not to have his own ideas influenced too much by him. He wanted to develop his theories on the basis of his clinical work. There is a good book on Nietzsche's influence on Freud by Ronald Lehrer called Nietzsche's Presence in Freud's Life & Thought. See link here: https://www.amazon.com/Nietzsches-Presence-Freuds-Life-Thought/dp/0791421465/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1504027382&sr=1-3&keywords=Ronald+Lehrer
DeleteHope this is helpful.
All the best,
Marcus
Beautifully written and necessary in America right now.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind remarks, Elizabeth.
DeleteConcise and knowledgeable discussion of Freud's work and the anxiety it still generates. What would he say about those who have dedicated their careers to finding a fatal flaw rather than using their talents to move the field of psychotherapy forward? Such critics work long and hard to find where Freud was wrong but add nothing but tired cliches and are more outdated than Freud Good job Marcus.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment, Richard. I think the truth is that resistance to self-knowledge is always with us but for each new generation it takes a slightly different form.
Delete