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		<title>First Things RSS Feed - Jeffrey Burke Satinover</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jan 2025 16:53:26 -0500</pubDate>
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		<ttl>60</ttl>

		<item>
			<title>Jung Love</title>
			<guid>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1995/10/jung-love</guid>
			<link>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1995/10/jung-love</link>
			<pubDate>Sun, 01 Oct 1995 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
			
			<description><![CDATA[<p>  
<em> </em>
<em><a href="https://www.amazon.com/Jung-Cult-Origins-Charismatic-Movement/dp/0684834235?tab=firstthings20-20" target="_blank">The Jung Cult: Origins Of A Charismatic Movement</a><br></em>
<span class="small-caps">by richard c. noll</span>
<br>
 
<span class="small-caps">princeton university press, 387 pages, $24.95 </span>
</p> <p><em><a href="https://www.firstthings.com/article/1995/10/jung-love">Continue Reading </a> &raquo;</em></p>]]></description>
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			<title>Jungians and Gnostics</title>
			<guid>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1994/10/jungians-and-gnostics</guid>
			<link>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1994/10/jungians-and-gnostics</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 01 Oct 1994 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
			
			<description><![CDATA[<p>  
</p> <p><em><a href="https://www.firstthings.com/article/1994/10/jungians-and-gnostics">Continue Reading </a> &raquo;</em></p>]]></description>
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			<title> Psychology and the Abolition of Meaning</title>
			<guid>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1994/02/psychology-and-the-abolition-of-meaning</guid>
			<link>https://www.firstthings.com/article/1994/02/psychology-and-the-abolition-of-meaning</link>
			<pubDate>Tue, 01 Feb 1994 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
			
			<description><![CDATA[<p>It is of course a commonplace nowadays to observe that we are living in the era of &ldquo;psychological man.&rdquo; By this we mean that psychology in one of its various incarnations&mdash;psychoanalysis and psychiatry included&mdash;has become the primary means whereby we try to understand the meaning and purpose of our existence.
<br>
<br>
Psychological understandings of the ultimates in human nature are characterized by the fact that rather than making appeal to traditional theological understandings, the psychoanalytic, psychological, and psychiatric endeavors fit themselves as best they can within the&nbsp;
<em>scientific</em>
&nbsp;framework that has slowly emerged in the West over the six or seven centuries since the beginning of the Renaissance. The term &ldquo;Renaissance&rdquo; means, of course, rebirth. It is so called because the era was characterized by a rebirth of classicism (which means, in fact, paganism). But the Renaissance could just as easily, from an opposite perspective, have been called, for example, &ldquo;The Great Death,&rdquo; since it marked the beginning of a great dying off of a particular cultural synthesis&mdash;and a particular understanding of man's ultimate nature. This cultural synthesis was based on Judaism and Christianity, and in the previous two-and-one-half millennia it had largely conquered paganism and thus come to dominate much of the civilized world.
<br>
<br>
Among the set of human accomplishments that emerged from the Renaissance transformation of human thought, science&mdash;and the technology that derives from it&mdash;is certainly one of the most powerful to which we are heir. In keeping with the Renaissance spirit, and with the apotheosis of that spirit in the Enlightenment, a primary goal of any modern, scientific psychology has been to understand human subjectivity and behavior&mdash;including those areas that touch on morals, meaning, purpose, and value, and therefore on human motivation and choice&mdash;not in terms of ultimate purpose but in terms of prior causes.
<br>
<br>
In the domain of psychology or psychoanalysis proper, this search for causes inevitably means the reduction of what appears to be a freely acting or choosing agent&mdash;man&mdash;to prior, more elementary influences: complexes, structures of the psyche, family influences, earlier experiences, archetypes. In the complementary domain of biological psychiatry, this same reduction is to the organic substrates of these functional subsystems at ever finer levels of detail.
<br>
<br>
From within this truly analytic framework&mdash;analysis consisting of the 
<em>lysis</em>
 or breaking down of a whole into constituent parts&mdash;all areas of seeming autonomy within human experience are illusory, the residue, as it were, of our ignorance of the true causes that lie &ldquo;beneath&rdquo; our experience and cause it, and which only for the time being remain obscured.
<br>
<br>
Unwittingly, and unacknowledged, the scientific study of man thus aims ultimately at his abolition as man&mdash;as free agent&mdash;and his reconstruction as mechanism.
<br>
<br>
&ldquo;No, that's not entirely true,&rdquo; the analytically informed and guided psychotherapist is apt to object. &ldquo;Yes, we try to explain our patients' behavior in terms of the conflict among various forces: the instincts in conflict with material and social exigency, for example. But each individual arrives at his own unique solution to these conflicts. And, indeed, when he becomes aware of the conflicting forces that influence him, he is better able to make an informed and creative decision.&rdquo;
<br>
<br>But upon closer examination, this notion of free&mdash;indeed creatively free&mdash;choice remaining somewhere outside the scope of analytic reduction is just a comforting illusion. All that has occurred is that the process of analyzing motives at some point stops, and what remains we decide not to examine further. From a therapeutic perspective this makes sense: the surgeon cuts away the diseased tissue and allows the healthy tissue to remain, better functioning after the operation than before.
<br>
<br>
But the analogy quickly breaks down: the &ldquo;surgery&rdquo; of psychotherapy does not consist in the physical elimination of a section of the psyche, it consists of &ldquo;seeing through&rdquo; psychic structures, the dissolving of them into their constituent parts, in which state they no longer need be taken seriously. And of course once we believe we've seen through the parts of our selves we don't care for, it's hard not to start seeing through the ones we do care for. Even though at a certain point, pragmatically determined, most of us stop the analytic process, at some level we and our patients know, or at least sense, that our understanding of selfhood, its very integrity, has been unalterably changed and even damaged.
<br>
<br>
The method itself &ldquo;sets the ball rolling,&rdquo; as it were, in one inevitable direction: if our choices prior to analysis were only thought to be free, and were, in fact, the result of unconscious conflict (or biochemistry, for that matter), then why should I believe that my current, post-analytic choices are anything more than the result of other as-yet-unanalyzed influences? And indeed, the study, for example, of ego psychology (which came later in psychoanalytic history), of pre-oedipal influences, of individual differences, of family patterning, of intrauterine milieu, of the genetics of mental disorders (and of character itself) all whittle away at whatever remaining area of true choice there might seem to be.
<br>
<br>
In its very essence the analytic, scientific method is reductive without limit. Applied to man, it is the universal solvent. The alchemists, who first conceived such a thing, of course never found the universal solvent, and were fortunate not to. For they never considered what would happen if ever they laid hands on it: nothing could contain it; it would eat its way through everything, devouring even its creators.
<br>
<br>
Freud, whatever his flaws, had the courage of his convictions, and so followed the implications of his vision through to their ultimate end. What he found was a universe devoid of meaning; to explain his own mental state he was driven near the end to postulate a &ldquo;death instinct,&rdquo; a concept no more scientific or measurable than &ldquo;God&rdquo; or &ldquo;purpose&rdquo; or &ldquo;meaning,&rdquo; but considerably more grim, and in the end he chose to die by his own hand.
<br>
<br>Consider the current debate over homosexuality once (in the pre-psychoanalytic era), homosexual behavior was considered purely a matter of choice. Then, during the psychoanalytic era, it began to be seen as a rough composite of choice and family influences. Now, at least among mental health professionals, a vaguely emerging consensus points toward a complex mixture of genetic and environmental influences with choice being squeezed out altogether.
<br>
<br>
To translate into statistical language: as the number of studies increase, and correlation is found with an increasing number of factors extrinsic to &ldquo;free will,&rdquo; the amount of variance in human sexual behavior that remains unaccounted for by known factors will continue to shrink, and so the amount left over to attribute to choice will by default likewise shrink.
<br>
<br>
But more importantly, the experience of a line of progress consisting of an ever-smaller proportion of variance left unaccounted for will inevitably suggest&mdash;quite plausibly&mdash;that with sufficient effort and advances in technique all the remaining variance could be accounted for and nothing of it left to choice. And even if this theoretical end point is never quite achieved, the remaining proportion left unexplained is apt to be so small that we shall dismiss it anyway.
<br>
<br>
The example of homosexuality is particularly useful in the context of this discussion because the social and political forces arrayed around the question just happen, at this moment, to be constellated in such a way as to make many people&nbsp;
<em>want</em>
&nbsp;to find little or no choice involved in it. The homosexuality debate is thus configuring itself in precisely the reverse way of most debates about the medical bases of human behavior: people usually resist the idea that their behavior is driven by unchangeable, biological factors (consider the feminist arguments). But in the case of homosexuality, many people are today quite open to the idea of a line of research progress that will reduce this particular behavior mostly to prior causes, and even to the end point this line marches toward, that of no choice involved in homosexuality at all.
<br>
<br>But, if we think about it carefully, all aspects of human behavior are at least in principle subject to a similar analysis. That is, after all, the end point of all scientific research. From a scientific perspective there is never any room whatever for freely acting agents. At best, a given analysis only leaves us with remaining areas for which we have not (yet) discovered, or are (as yet) incapable of discovering, the true, prior causes. It is in the very nature of science and the scientific method that it cannot at all address or understand free agency. If there is such a thing, it lies entirely outside the domain of scientific analysis, for to the extent that an analysis of the behavior of any agent is successful, to that extent the agent's behavior has been demonstrated no longer to be free, but predetermined.
<br>
<br>
Freud observed that psychoanalysis was resisted by so many people&mdash;including many of his erstwhile followers-because of the wound it inflicts on their self-regard. But we can go even further with this keen, if somewhat infuriating, insight (infuriating because, on an ad hominem basis, it implies that the mere fact of an objection to psychoanalysis a priori supports it). All scientific method applied to human behavior gives rise not just to resistance, but to dread and even revulsion, because its end point&mdash;even if only sensed inchoately and not faced fully&mdash;is appalling: the elimination of the possibility of choice, meaning, and purpose in human existence. For from the scientific perspective, &ldquo;meaning&rdquo; and &ldquo;purpose,&rdquo; like &ldquo;free will,&rdquo; are but illusions of human subjectivity, ultimately reducible to other, prior causes. While this certainly wounds man's pride, it does more than that: it demonstrates that the object of his deepest longings is utterly illusory, and hence his longings are utterly unfulfillable.
<br>
<br>
Here we have introduced a new observation, namely, that there is such a thing as a profound common human longing for meaning and purpose. If it is true that, unlike our longings for food, water, nurturance, accomplishment, and romance (to name a few), our longing for meaning and purpose has no attainable object, then it makes perfect sense to label such a longing as neurotic. The repetitive, compulsive pursuit of illusory and therefore unattainable goals is, after all, almost a definition of the term.
<br>
<br>
The tacit goal, then, of a rigorous psychoanalytic, and hence reductionist, worldview is a unique kind of renunciation. One is, on the one hand, meant to attain a stoic abstemiousness with respect to spirit, while embracing, with all due practicality, the world of matter (practically speaking, the instincts). Anatomy, gross and fine, especially that of the nervous system, indeed becomes destiny.*
<br>
<br>Along with the majority of his fellow psychoanalytic adventurers, Freud seems to have assumed that to understand the sources of our neurotic longing for meaning would somehow relieve us of it, in the same way that understanding may relieve us of other, more mundane, neuroses; or that a more creative solution to the problems caused by instinctive conflict would ipso facto translate into a subjective and satisfying, even if ultimately meaningless, feeling of meaningfulness. This has not proven true. Either psychoanalytic theories about the source of religious longings are false, or if they are not, then mere knowledge of how these longings come about no more satisfies them than would a lengthy discourse on gastronomy serve as food to a starving man.
<br>
<br>
Granted, there are some individuals who seem to us at first blush to be exemplars of this new kind of maturity of character. They appear entirely abstemious with respect to spirit, and are quick to let us know it. But a careful examination of this particular post-Enlightenment vanity allows us on closer look to acknowledge that all of us&mdash;psychiatrists, psychologists, psychoanalysts of whatever stripe, or simply laymen who have inhaled the reductionist worldview with the spirits of the air&mdash;merely recreate within our supposedly secular domains all the same structures of dogma, devotion, and worship (of our fellow creatures) that we criticize as neurotic among the religious. The mature psychoanalyst works through his projections onto his family and friends, and his transference of all this onto his analyst, only to re-project it all over again onto his Institute, or onto Freud or Jung or&mdash;mirabile dictu&mdash;John Bradshaw. Nor do we count it as an advance should he find some way to mutilate his soul and so never again fall in love.
<br>
<br>
No, it is clear that the thirst for ultimate meaning and purpose is not at all slaked by simply describing, classifying, and analyzing it. No more so than is deconstructing a poem (or doing a word count on it) the same as loving it. When we have no higher object of our devotion, we make gods of the lower objects at hand. When we do not, or feel we cannot, worship God, we worship our own instinctive cravings instead, mostly not knowing what we are doing, and certainly not admitting it. But willy-nilly, one way or the other, worship we will.
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