The party is over. Psychoanalysis is dead. It has
been dead for quite some time now. The only question is the burial and funeral
arrangements. In truth, it’s better to bury a dead horse than to try to beat it
back to life.
A few years ago I wrote my own funeral oration for
psychoanalysis. I entitled my book The Last Psychoanalyst. In it I showed how a pseudo-science became a
pseudo-religion. If you understand that psychoanalysis was always nothing
more than a cult gussied up to look like a scientific
practice you have been duped. The cult leader, the demiurge named
Sigmund Freud, promoted and sold a radical, ideologically driven theory that
accounted for nothing and that neither treated nor cured. As I said,
psychoanalysis is overpriced storytelling.
Some psychoanalysts have seen the light. Among them Jacques
Lacan, the most influential Freudian since Freud, who declared clinical
practice to be a scam. His acolytes and disciples dismissed his remarks as a
misstatement by a doddering old man, but they were both intelligible and correct. As famed Oxford biologist and Nobel
prize winner Peter Medawar said, Freudian psychoanalysis is a confidence trick.
As we would say on this side of the pond, it’s a con.
Now, reviewing Frederick Crews’ magnum opus debunking Freud—Sigmund Freud: The Making of an Illusion--
Alexander Kafka offered an indication of where it’s all at today.
He wrote:
"It’s
obvious," says Stewart Justman, an emeritus humanities professor at the
University of Montana who has written about medicine and society, "that
there’s a diminished hard core of Freudian defenders, and that when they pass
from the scene, that’s it. Game over."
Richard
J. McNally, a cognitive-behavior-oriented psychologist who runs a lab at
Harvard and oversees clinical training, remembers that on grand rounds at
Massachusetts General Hospital in the 1990s, there were still a lot of
psychoanalysts. "A half-dozen years later," he says, "they
seemed to have disappeared."
What does Crews think?
Apart
from any intellectual fuss that somebody like me could make, the system has
been dying on the vine for decades. So that now, really, psychoanalysis
survives in humanities departments not for any reason that one would call
scientific or empirical but because the psychoanalytic way of thinking is
conducive to discourse production, devoid of constraint.
As I said, the party is over. The few people still defending
psychoanalysis are superannuated, like Harold Blum, or true believers bitterly
clinging to their faith.
For example:
Crews
wants the public to think that psychoanalysis rises and falls on Freud’s
reputation and personal history, and that’s "a very reductionist way of
thinking," says Adrienne Harris, who teaches psychoanalysis in New York
and Northern California and has a clinical practice.
And if
psychoanalysis is so rickety, Harris asks, why do humanists who discover it in
academe so often want to pursue training as therapists? And why are
psychoanalytic institutes in Eastern Europe, China, and elsewhere so hungry for
it?
If you were a humanist in the American academy wouldn’t you
be trying to find another line of work? Freud attracts humanists
precisely because he is such a good storyteller. He has created a literary
fiction that attempts to transform nothing less than human nature itself. If
you are an arrogant humanist who thinks that literature can change the world,
you cannot do much better than that.
Harold Blum is a Freud apologist, one of the last. He touts
Freud’s influence, but such touting does nothing to counter the Medawar
argument that it was all a confidence trick:
"I
find it very hard to take Frederick Crews seriously," says Harold Blum, a
New York psychoanalyst and former executive director of the Freud Archives.
Oedipal urges, the incest taboo, the erotic fantasies underlying locker-room
talk and dirty jokes, loaded linguistic metaphors, Freudian slips, the
vividness of infantile sexuality, the stages of child development, the
importance of nurturing the young, the symbolic weight of dream images. On and
on. These bountiful psychoanalytic insights are in the very air we breathe. To
deny that, Blum says, is "irrational."
Calling these insights “bountiful” tells us that Blum has
little command of the English language. Calling these dogmas of the Freudian
pseudo-religion insights is yet another sleight-of-hand, a trick to seduce the
gullible. Does anyone really still believe that we are driven by our Oedipal
urges and that the only thing we really want in life is to copulate with our
mothers? You have to be a true believer, someone who has suspended your
critical faculties to take it seriously.
Crews does not. All religions need godheads, figures of
surpassing genius who can be worshipped for providing us access to higher
truths. And yet, Freud was simply a brilliant but arrogant man consumed by his
ambitions who wanted to become famous. At the least, Crews shows that Freud had
no use for scientific experimentation.
Kafka summarizes his viewpoint:
Early
in his career, as an anatomist, he wields his microscope expertly but cannot
take the next step of devising experiments that might test one hypothesis
against another. He suggests, later, in his quest for fame and wealth, that he
was more involved than he really was in discoveries made by others — for
example, Carl Koller’s breakthrough use of cocaine as a local anesthetic in eye
surgeries. The young Freud did make a name for himself, it’s true — but as a
foolhardy shill for cocaine’s much wider and more indiscriminate medical
application. That stance came to embarrass him and drive him even harder to
seek some magnificent accomplishment that would eclipse it.
He continues, describing Freud through Crews:
He is a
reckless, greedy, bullying, inept, and monomaniacal clinician. He fosters some
patients’ addictions to morphine, cocaine, or both. He treats symptoms with
possible physiological causes — arthritis, say, or ovarian cysts — as obvious
consequences of hysteria. He bilks rich but hopeless clients for whom he has no
sympathy or coherent treatment plan. He sleeps through his afternoon sessions,
confident nonetheless that he’s absorbing some psychic gist of his analysands’
complaints. He browbeats nominal hysterics into relating questionable traumas,
and some of his early patients scoff at his interpretations on their way out of
his empty waiting room.
Freud’s genius was as a writer, a novelist, if you will who knew how to tell stories:
None of
this stops Freud from writing up cases with a cocky flair, in conscious
imitation of Sherlock Holmes tales, depicting treatments as indisputable
triumphs of psychological detection and portraying questionable casual
encounters as triggering virtuoso insights. He reinterprets cases with
ever-shifting ideas of whether symptoms were set off by actual or imagined
sexual traumas.
Kafka summarizes the argument neatly:
For
Crews, however, most of Freud’s career was a blind alley, but filled with
dazzling and disorienting smoke and mirrors to disguise the futility of his
method.
2 comments:
Brilliant analysis and commentary, Dr. Schneiderman.
"psychoanalysis survives in humanities departments"
This explains why his books are still on the list of Great books of Western culture.
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