Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 70/Libertarian Psychiatry: an introduction to existential analysis"
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+ | {{tab}}The con­cept of free­dom at the core of ex­ist­en­tial­ism is very dif­fer­ent from what I take to be the com­mon under­stand­ing of the term. In gen­eral usage, a man is free in as much as he can achieve his chosen ends with a min­imum of effort. Simil­arly, a man{{s}} free­dom is re­duced as the ob­stacles between his de­sires and chosen ends are in­creased. Free­dom is re­garded as a measur­able quant­ity; one may have a lot or a little of it, and it can be taken away{{dash}}or even {{qq|given}}. The anarch­ist{{s}} hypo­thet­ical destin­a­tion, the {{qq|free}} so­ciety, may often be thought of in the sense of an har­mo­ni­ous envir­on­ment in which all re­mov­able ob­stacles between man{{s}} de­sires and their ful­fil­ment have been elim­in­ated. But for Sartre, man is totally free by reason of his very being as man, and ob­stacles between de­sires and chosen ends are of no rel­ev­ance. To use a favoured ex­ist­en­tial­ist phrase, man is free by onto­lo­gical neces­sity. But his free­dom rests, within this con­cept, in his total re­spons­ibil­ity in the face of un­deter­mined choice and in his recog­ni­tion of the in­escap­able ob­lig­a­tion to choose. An intuit­ive aware­ness of this re­spons­ib­il­ity{{dash|per­haps pro­voked by some sort of {{qq|ex­treme situ­a­tion}}}}gives rise to what Sartre calls {{qq|the anguish of free­dom}}. It is our fate to be free. {{qq|… One must always de­cide for one­self and efforts to shift the burden of re­spons­ib­il­ity upon others are neces­sar­ily self-<wbr>de­feat­ing. Not to choose is also to choose, for even if we de­liver our power of de­ci­sion to others, we are still re­spons­ible for having done so. It is always the indi­vidual who de­cides that others will choose for him.}}<ref>Robert G. Olson, ''An Intro­duc­tion to Ex­ist­en­tial­ism'', New York, Dover Publi­ca­tions, 1962, p. 52.</ref> In so far as we are free in our choices, we {{qq|create}} the ob­stacles that lie between our pro­ject and its ful­fil­ment: {{qq|an in­sig­ni­fic­ant public of­fi­cial in {{w|Mont-de-Marsan|Mont-de-Marsan}} without means may not have the op­por­tun­ity to go to {{w|New York|New_York}} if that be his ambi­tion. But the ob­stacles which stand in his way would not exist as ob­stacles were it not for his free choice and values: in this case, his desire to go {{p|355}}to New York.}}<ref>ibid., p. 105 (a refer­ence to an epis­ode in ''Being and No­thing­ness'', p. 495).</ref> Even though human free­dom, in his view, is total, Sartre ad­mits of a sense in which it may be spoken of in terms of degree. A man may be said to become {{qq|more free}} as his con­scious­ness of total free­dom and re­spons­ib­il­ity in­creases; and cer­tain situ­a­tions in life can crystal­lize this aware­ness. In an ap­par­ently cryptic para­graph in ''Being and No­thing­ness'' Sartre de­scribes the {{w|German Oc­cupa­tion of France|German_military_administration_in_occupied_France_during_World_War_II}} during the last {{w|war|World_War_II}} as such a situ­a­tion. {{qq|… the choice that each of us made of his life and his being was an au­then­tic choice because it was made face to face with death, because it could always have been ex­pressed in these terms: {{q|Rather death than …}}.}}<ref>{{w|J.-P. Sartre|Jean-Paul_Sartre}}, ''Situations III'', Paris, Gallimard, 1949 (quoted by {{popup|Olson|Robert G. Olson. An Introduction to Existentialism.}}, p. 121).</ref> But the issue is not just one of an in­creased sense of re­spons­ib­il­ity for our day-<wbr>to-<wbr>day options{{dash}}for in­stance in de­cid­ing upon a change in oc­cu­pa­tion, or merely which book to read next; most sig­ni­fic­antly ''we choose our­selves'', and our day-<wbr>to-<wbr>day de­ci­sions neces­sarily re­flect this primary choice we have made. We are what we have chosen to be. All our sub­sequent modes of action are re­lated to this original {{qq|project-<wbr>of-<wbr>being}}, {{qq|Freely chosen at the moment one wrenches one­self away from the in-<wbr>itself to create one{{s}} own world}}<ref>{{popup|Olson|Robert G. Olson}}, {{popup|op. cit.|opere citato: cited above}}, p. 119.</ref> (the in-<wbr>itself: the world of things). This event I take to be com­par­able with what R. D. Laing calls {{qq|ex­ist­en­tial birth}} which, he sug­gests, is as essen­tial for a fully human ex­ist­ence as the bio­lo­gical birth which it nor­mally follows.{{ref|aster|*}} It is only in rela­tion to this funda­mental choice, the indi­vidual{{s}} original {{qq|pro­ject-<wbr>of-<wbr>being}} that his later beha­viour can be fully under­stood. The plaus­ibil­ity of this basic idea is not in­creased by Sartre{{s}} denial of the divi­sion of the self into con­scious and un­con­scious modes; the idea of a tooth­less infant con­sciously de­termin­ing its future life­style and pur­pose is at first thought ab­surd. But whilst ex­pli­citly deny­ing valid­ity to the {{qq|un­con­scious}} Sartre does separ­ate con­scious­ness into {{qq|re­flect­ive}} and {{qq|non-<wbr>re­flect­ive}} levels, and it is at the non-<wbr>re­flect­ive level that this funda­mental choice is made. He stresses that this original choice is in no way de­liber­ate: {{qq|This is not because it would be less con­scious or less ex­plicit than a de­liber­a­tion but, on the con­trary, because it is the found­a­tion of all de­liber­a­tion and because … a de­liber­a­tion re­quires an inter­pret­a­tion in terms of an original choice.}}<ref>{{w|J.-P. Sartre|Jean-Paul Sartre}}, {{w|''Being and No­thing­ness''|Being_and_Nothingness}}, London, Methuen, 1956, pp. 461-2.</ref> The con­cepts of {{qq|au­then­ti­city}} and its ap­proxim­ate op­po­site {{qq|bad-<wbr>faith}} are in a sense under­stand­able as judge­ments (al­though Sartre claims only to use these terms de­script­ively) upon the degree of con­cord­ance between the choices of our re­flect­ive con­scious­ness and our original pro­ject-<wbr>of-<wbr>being. In a pas­sage which bears di­rectly upon ex­ist­en­tial ana­lysis he writes that a man {{qq|can make vol­un­tary de­ci­sions which are op­posed to the funda­mental ends which he has chosen. These de­ci­sions can be only vol­un­tary{{dash}}that is, re­flect­ive. … Thus, for ex­ample, I can de­cide to cure myself of {{w|stutter­ing|Stuttering}}. I can even {{p|256}}suc­ceed in it. … In fact I can ob­tain a result by using merely tech­nical methods. … But these re­sults will only dis­place the in­firm­ity from which I suf­fer; an­other will arise in its place and will in its own way ex­press the total end which I pur­sue. … It is the same with these cures as it is with the cure of {{w|hys­teria|Hysteria}} by {{w|elec­tric shock treat­ment|Electroconvulsive_therapy}}. We know that this ther­apy can effect the dis­ap­pear­ance of an hys­terical con­trac­tion of the leg, but as one will see some time later the con­trac­tion will ap­pear in the arm. This is because the hys­teria can be cured only as a total­ity, for it is a total pro­ject of the for-<wbr>itself}}<ref>ibid., pp. 471-75 (quoted by {{popup|Olson|Robert G. Olson}}, p. 121).</ref> (the for-<wbr>itself: the world of con­scious­ness and in­ten­tion). | ||
− | {{tab}} | + | {{tab}}Sartre argues against the {{w|Freud­ian|Sigmund_Freud}} three-<wbr>way split of the per­sonal­ity into {{w|id, ego and super-ego|Id,_ego_and_super-ego}} and the {{w|Psycho-ana­lytic|Psychoanalysis}} dictum of con­scious beha­viour as de­term­ined by drives, in­stincts and de­sires al­legedly eman­at­ing from the id. As Sartre{{s}} argu­ments hinge upon his stated belief in man{{s}} on­to­lo­gical free­dom, Freud{{s}} pro­ject of {{qq|de­term­ina­tion by the un­con­scious}} is met with similar ob­jec­tions to those made against other de­term­in­ist theories and I need not at­tempt to sum­mar­ise them here.<ref>The first part of {{w|R. D. Laing|R._D._Laing}}{{s}} ''The Self and Others'' is a lucid argu­ment against the basic con­cepts of tradi­tional psycho-<wbr>ana­lysis.</ref> The only valid form of ther­apy is one aimed at dis­cover­ing an indi­vidual{{s}} funda­mental pro­ject-<wbr>of-<wbr>being{{dash}}and this is the pur­pose of ex­ist­en­tial ana­lysis (or psycho-<wbr>ana­lysis; the pre­fix seems to be op­tional). {{qq|The prin­ciple of this psycho-<wbr>ana­lysis is that man is a total­ity and not a col­lec­tion; he there­fore ex­presses him­self in his total­ity in the most in­sig­ni­fic­ant and the most super­fi­cial as­pects of his con­duct}} (''Being and No­thing­ness''). Through the use of a tech­nique or method based on such as­sump­tions the ini­tially {{qq|crazy}} actions of the in­sane may be made com­pre­hens­ible{{dash}}and may even ap­pear {{qq|reason­able}} if a picture of the world in which the pa­tient lives can be as­sembled. |
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+ | {{tab}}R. D. Laing has written that {{qq|only by the most out­rage­ous viol­a­tion of our­selves have we achieved our cap­ac­ity to live in relat­ive ad­just­ment to a civil­isa­tion ap­par­ently driven to its own de­struc­tion}} and has de­scribed the {{qq|normal}} person in the present age as {{qq|a half-<wbr>crazed creature, more or less ad­justed to a mad world}}.<ref>{{qq|Mas­sacre of the In­no­cents}}, ''{{w|Peace News|Peace_News}}'', 22nd January, 1965.</ref> What is the norm that gives the gen­erally ac­cepted mean­ing to such relat­ive de­scrip­tions as {{qq|mad}}, {{qq|insane}}, {{qq|mal­ad­justed}}? And what is the sig­ni­fic­ance of what is done to the people that are dis­qual­i­fied when meas­ured against this cri­terion; the people that the mad offi­cials label as {{qq|offi­cially mad}}? | ||
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+ | '''THE INSANE IN A MAD WORLD''' | ||
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+ | {{tab}}{{qq|In the con­text of our present mad­ness that we call normal­ity, san­ity, free­dom, all our frames of refer­ence are am­bigu­ous and equi­vocal.}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{r|{{w|R. D. Laing|R._D._Laing}}: ''The Divided Self''.}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ----- | ||
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+ | <font size="2">{{hang|{{note|aster|*}}See ''The Divided Self'', pp. 41-42. For an ac­count of the con­sequences of the ob­struc­tion of this oc­cur­rence: {{qq|an ex­ist­en­tially dead child}} see p. 183. In ''Views'', No. 8, {{w|David Cooper|David_Cooper_(psychologist)}} writes: {{qq|… the begin­ning of per­sonal de­velop­ment is never pure passiv­ity. … From the first moment of mother-<wbr>child inter­action, where each is an­other to the other, the child is in the posi­tion of having to ini­ti­ate the pro­ject to become who­ever he is to be, and this is in prin­ciple a free choice, his free crea­tion of his essen­tial nature.}}}}</font> | ||
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+ | <font size="2">{{c|''NOTES''}}</font> | ||
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+ | <font size="2"><references></font> | ||
+ | |||
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+ | <font size="2">{{c|''Relev­ant Books and Art­icles not men­tioned in Refer­ences'':}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|R. D. Laing|R._D._Laing}}, {{qq|Series and Nexus in the Family}}, ''{{w|New Left Review|New_Left_Review}}'', No. 15. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|David Cooper|David_Cooper_(psychiatrist)}}, {{qq|Sartre on Genet}}, ''{{w|New Left Review|New_Left_Review}}'', No. 25. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|R. D. Laing|R._D._Laing}}, ''The Polit­ics of Ex­peri­ence and the Bird of Para­dise'', Penguin Books, Autumn, 1966. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|R. D. Laing|R._D._Laing}}, {{popup|H. Phillip­son|Herbert Phillipson, British clinical psychologist (1911-1992)}}, {{popup|A. R. Lee|A. Russell Lee}}, ''Inter­per­sonal Per­cep­tion'': ''A Theory and a Method'', London, Tavistock, 1966. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|T. S. Szasz|Thomas_Szasz}}, ''The Myth of Mental Ill­ness'', London, Seeker and Warburg, 1962. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{w|Carl R. Rogers|Carl_Rogers}}, ''On Becoming a Person'', London, Constable & Co., 1961.</font> | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 21:22, 31 July 2017
an introduction to
existential analysis
Dr. Laing has written that his main intellectual indebtedness is to “the existential tradition”—
In anarchy 44 J.-P. Sartre is referred to as “one of the foremost anarchist moralists” (Ian Vine: “The Morality of Anarchism”). This description compares intriguingly with another, made by the socialist Alasdair MacIntyre, reviewing Sartre’s book The Problem of Method in Peace News. He refers to Sartre as a newly found “spokesman of genius” for “ersatz bolsheviks” and “imitation anarchists”. Not knowing MacIntyre’s idea of the genuine article, this does not exactly rule the Frenchman out and I believe his work may well justify a place on an anarchist’s book list. Writing with particular reference to Sartre’s recent work, MacIntyre notes that Sartre can offer no bonds, other than reciprocally threatened violence and terror, of sufficient strength to maintain the cohesion of human groups in a world of “impossibly individualist individuals”. Perhaps a spokesman for Stirnerites? Nevertheless, the potentialities of Sartre’s philosophy as a basis for anarchism are incidental to my purpose here.
The first of four episodes of this essay are intended to create a setting against which existential analysis may be viewed.
“Man cannot be sometimes slave and sometimes free; he is wholly and forever free, or he is not free at all.”
Sartre argues against the Freudian three-
R. D. Laing has written that “only by the most outrageous violation of ourselves have we achieved our capacity to live in relative adjustment to a civilisation apparently driven to its own destruction” and has described the “normal” person in the present age as “a half-
THE INSANE IN A MAD WORLD
“In the context of our present madness that we call normality, sanity, freedom, all our frames of reference are ambiguous and equivocal.”
<references>
R. D. Laing, “Series and Nexus in the Family”, New Left Review, No. 15.
David Cooper, “Sartre on Genet”, New Left Review, No. 25.
R. D. Laing, The Politics of Experience and the Bird of Paradise, Penguin Books, Autumn, 1966.
R. D. Laing, H. Phillipson, A. R. Lee, Interpersonal Perception: A Theory and a Method, London, Tavistock, 1966.
T. S. Szasz, The Myth of Mental Illness, London, Seeker and Warburg, 1962.
Carl R. Rogers, On Becoming a Person, London, Constable & Co., 1961.
- ↑ Robert G. Olson, An Introduction to Existentialism, New York, Dover Publications, 1962, p. 52.
- ↑ ibid., p. 105 (a reference to an episode in Being and Nothingness, p. 495).
- ↑ J.-P. Sartre, Situations III, Paris, Gallimard, 1949 (quoted by Olson, p. 121).
- ↑ Olson, op. cit., p. 119.
- ↑ Sartre J.-P. Sartre, Being and Nothingness, London, Methuen, 1956, pp. 461-2.
- ↑ ibid., pp. 471-75 (quoted by Olson, p. 121).
- ↑ The first part of R. D. Laing’s The Self and Others is a lucid argument against the basic concepts of traditional psycho-
analysis. - ↑ “Massacre of the Innocents”, Peace News, 22nd January, 1965.