Saturday, December 24, 2011

1.8. On The Dialectic Interplay Between Philosophy and Psychology...On The Distinction Between 'Mutually Inclusive' and 'Mutually Exclusive' Choices -- and A Tribute To Soren Kierkegaard...

Dec. 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 2011..
I saw an assortment of new books in Chapters the other day that I hadn't seen before -- a product of my not having been in this store in about half a year or more....I could have easily walked out of there with $500 worth of books in my hands but a long lineup and bills that needed to be paid got the better of me -- and I walked out empty handed.

One new book that I saw -- I think it was published in 2010 -- offered a new, more 'dynamic, humanistic-existential' interpretation of Hegel's masterpiece, 'The Phenomenology of Spirit (TPS)' which was both exciting and frustrating at the same time since that is the same type of message that I have been offering here in Hegel's Hotel since I started writing it in 2006 -- i.e., a more 'psycho-dynamic, humanistic-existential' way of utilizing Hegel's dialectic logic and formula -- which is usually stated in what also might be classified as a 'triadic formula': 1. 'thesis'; 2. 'anti-thesis'; 3. 'synthesis' -- which Freud in 1923 'internalized into the psyche' in the form of: 1. 'id' (thesis); 2. 'superego'(anti-thesis); 3. 'ego' (synthesis). Immediately you can grasp the interconnection here between philosophy and psychology -- at least between Hegelian dialectic philosophy and Freudian dialectic psychology.

We can make 'either/or' choices in the spirit of Aristotle or Kierkegaard; or 'wedged into the middle of Aristotle and Kierkegaard, historically speaking, we can make 'Hegelian dialectically integrative choices' that 'conflate a part of each side of the "either" and the "or" -- into one integrative choice or package. 

For example, we can mix 'black' and 'white' and get 'gray'...which comprises an element of 'black' and an element of 'white' to get the final mixture of 'gray' -- what we generally call a 'compromise solution', or in Freud's terminology, a 'compromise-formation'....which is basically a 'synergy' of the two opposing, conflicting polar characteristics, ideas, theories, paradigms, desires, values, beliefs, tensions...

From 'homeostatic or dialectic polar tension between two opposing side', we creatively arrive at some form of better working 'homeostatic or dialectic balance'...that is, assuming you are a Hegelian Dialectic Idealist -- or even a Hegelian Dialectic Pragmatic Semi-Idealist. Two opposing theorists working together (for example, Freud and Adler) -- if you are of a Hegelian Dialectic Idealistic Mindset -- is better for 'The Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy Paradigm as a Whole' than two opposing theorists working apart.

If both opposing theorists are dead, or unwilling and/or incapable of working with each other, then that is when you need a good 'Dialectic Integrative or Synergist Theorist' to come along and do for the two opposing theorists what they could not accomplish themselves.

How to synerguze opposing theories -- even multiple opposing theories -- is what I am trying to demonstrate here -- i.e., how to get from 'mutually exclusive either/or choices' to 'mutually inclusive dialectically integrative or synergetic choices' that bring together opposing people in opposing camps who were working against each other and now may enjoy the possibility of 'combining forces in the same, or a more similar, larger paradigm that does not arbitrarily shut people down because they have suddenly come to the end of a 'conceptual and/or theoretical boundary.

Some boundaries may be there for a good reason; others simply restrict and constrict life -- and in this latter case -- we might be better off by 'taking a second serious look at the boundary we have been using' -- and see what we get in its place if 'we let it slide' and/or try out 'the paradigm on the opposite side of the boundary'...sometime a new paradigm...or a larger paradigm that does not restrict our field of vision and create internal screening bias....brings with it the opportunity for new experience, new clinical data....and new life...



Moving on....


Let's quickly examine the principle of 'homeostasis' and/or 'dialectically integrative' and/or 'homeostatically balanced' choices....and then we will finish off with a tribute to Soren Kierkegaard who I have mentioned a number of times now up above...


 The mind and body were wonderfully created and constructed such that they give us a full range of choices from the most extremely radical to the most delicately balanced....

Walter B. Cannon called this the 'Wisdom of The Body' and its foundational principle -- no different than the 'mind-psyche-self' - is what he labelled as the principle of 'homeostasis' or in my words, homeostatic-dialectic dialectic balance', which is also often called 'equilibrium'....

What is truly amazing both philosophically and historically here, is that if you take two of our oldest Western 'pre-Socratic philosophers' -- Anaxamander and Heraclitus (Heraclitus being the Western rendition of Lao Tse in The East) -- and you combine Anaximander and Heraclitus with Plato and Aristotle -- you have the four main foundational piller stones of Western culture, evolution, philosophy, psychology, politics, and medicine....

The essence of Anaximander's philosophy is his belief that we were/are all born from 'Chaos' (The Apeiron), and like Freud would similarly say, 'to the Earth and to Chaos (Entropy, Death) shall we return...'

The wisdom of Anaximander is shocking as he basically states that history and evolution is both a 'power struggle', and, at the same time, like a game of 'tag', in that 'opposite polarities take turns dominating each other with the 'winner' basking in the temporary 'Sunshine of Existence', while 'the loser' retreats to 'The Shadows' (The Apeiron) to re-energize, re-think, compensate, build stronger offensive and defensive powers....and then one day return to the playing field, return to the 'power battle of existence' -- to re-battle their/our polar nemesis, and one day, if or when things go right, defeat their/our polar nemesis, such that we get time to 'bask in the sunshine of our glory and achievement' while our polar adversary gets a metaphorical or more substantial kick to the sidelines, i.e., thrown into The Shadows, The Darkness of Existence, to nurse his or her or our wounds, and do the same thing that they/we did while they/we were 're-arming and otherwise preparing' ourselves for the next 'dominance vs. submission' power battle....

 Anaxamander's perspective on life was basically that life was/is a power battle in which we all take turns winning and losing...and winning and losing again...

 Heraclitus, who was probably familiar with Anaximader's philosophy although they did not walk the earth (Ancient Greece) at the same time, had a different perspective on life: opposite polarites are attracted to each other and need each other in order to establish 'a harmonious, working homeostatic or dialectic balance or equilibrium' (he did not use these words; they didn't come along until much, much later, i.e., the 20th century and Cannon) -- the two opposing polar elements are attracted to, and need each other, because they, in effect, compensate for each other's weaknesses and vulnerabilities'....'Two opposite halves make a whole'...

But what is attracted to each other is also repelled by each other, setting up one of the ultimate paradoxes of man's existence: 'freedom and individuality' vs. 'committment to a bipolar and/or multi-polar union'....

Plato recounts a Greek myth of love which he delivers through the speech of Aristophanes in 'The Symposium'....

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From Wikipedia...


Aristophanes

Before launching his speech, Aristophanes warns the group that his eulogy to love may be more absurd than funny. His speech is an explanation of why people in love say they feel "whole" when they have found their love partner. He begins by explaining that people must understand human nature before they can interpret the origins of love and how it affects the then present time. It is, he says, because in primal times people had doubled bodies, with faces and limbs turned away from one another. As somewhat spherical creatures who wheeled around like clowns doing cartwheels (190a), these original people were very powerful. There were three sexes: the all male, the all female, and the "androgynous," who was half male, half female. The males were said to have descended from the sun, the females from the earth and the androgynous couples from the moon. The creatures tried to scale the heights of heaven and planned to set upon the gods (190b-c). Zeus thought about blasting them to death with thunderbolts, but did not want to deprive himself of their devotions and offerings, so he decided to cripple them by chopping them in half, in effect separating the two bodies.

Zeus then commanded Apollo to turn their faces around and pulled the skin tight and stitched it up to form the navel which he chose not to heal so Man would always be reminded of this event. Ever since that time, people run around saying they are looking for their other half because they are really trying to recover their primal nature. The women who were separated from women run after their own kind, thus creating lesbians. The men split from other men also run after their own kind and love being embraced by other men (191e). He says some people think homosexuals are shameless, but he thinks they are the bravest, most manly of all (192a), and that many heterosexuals are adulterous men and unfaithful wives (191e). Aristophanes then claims that when two people who were separated from each other find each other, they never again want to be separated (192c). This feeling is like a riddle, and cannot be explained. Aristophanes ends on a cautionary note. He says that men should fear the gods, and not neglect to worship them, lest they wield the axe again and we have to go about with our noses split apart (193a). If man works with the god of Love, they will escape this fate and instead find wholeness.

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That life -- and love -- should be so simple....

The lover we 'find' is not always -- indeed, not even often these days -- the lover who we 'keep' and/or 'stay with'...

No, I find that Life, Love, and even Creation and Destruction, are more like the types of 'biochemical reactions' that take place within 'stable' and 'unstable' atoms and molecules...

Sometimes atoms and/or molecules have too many 'electrons' (too much 'yin'), or too many 'protons' (too much 'yang') making for 'instability' within the atom and/or molecule....Sometimes you have 'free radicals' running around and 'blowing up' the stability of a particular atom and/or molecule....Life -- and love -- is often the 'dialectic tension' that is created by the inherent and continually changing nature of the paradox between the 'stability' and 'instability' of the atom/molecule/moment/encounter/relationship....

Plato also was a 'rational idealist' meaning that he believed that everything perfect could be found in our minds alone whereas everything in the  'outside sensory or phenomenal world' is an 'imperfect reflection' of what is 'perfect in our mind'.

In contrast, Aristotle was a 'rational-empiricist' believing that Plato had it 'backwards' -- that everything 'real' must be determined first and foremost through our 'senses', and then from our senses we can jump deeper into 'logical abstractions' as long as these logical abstractions are still connected to 'our real phenomenal world' as determined by a logical connection between our senses and our abstractions that gives us a good, working, functional representation or 'map' of our outside and inside world.

In other words, we need to use our 'senses' first according to Aritotle and then build our 'map of abstracted, conceptual representations' based on our sensory information; not the reverse as Plato idealistically and rationalistically theorized....


It was Aristotle who established 'the law of non-identity' which resulted in 'either/or' logic meaning that a 'thing' cannot be 'A' and 'not A' at the same time. Something cannot be 'white' and 'not white' at the same time, something cannot be an 'animal' and 'not an animal' at the same time, something cannot be a 'vegetable' and 'not a vegetable' at the same time...and so on...

To which both Hegel and later Alfred Korzybski (founder of General Semantics) objected...

In contradistinction to Aristotle,  Hegel introduced or at least clearly articulated (as both Kant and Fichte started up this 'dialectic' path before him) the idea of 'dialectic logic' whereby 'A' mixes with 'B' and both 'A' and 'B' -- thus, 'integrated' or 'synthesized' -- take on the characteristics of 'AB'....This happens in genetics every day...

Dialectic logic is the foundation of biological evolution -- the idea that genes synthesize and mutate in order to biologically evolve and survive, both individually and as a species...

In a similar vein, dialectic logic is also the basis of 'conceptual evolution'.....and 'philosophical evolution'...and 'political evolution'....and 'legal evolution' and 'psychological evolution'....indeed, all different aspects of cultural evolution in the history and evolution of man...

It should be added that in genetic evolution, every time that 'A' and 'B' 'fertilize' and 'mix genes'  -- resulting in a 'child' or 'offspring' of A and B that we are calling 'AB' -- everyone of these resulting 'AB's' (children, offspring) meaning 'AB1' and 'AB2' and 'AB3' and 'AB4' is going to be 'uniquely different' than all the other 'ABs' in their particular 'gene mix'....

Although each will still carry the similar characteristic of being an 'AB' mix, within that 'AB mix', the possible and actual gene permuations and combinations are biologically and biochemically endless....meaning that no two children will be exactly the same genetically except for identical twins who may start out as being 'genetically identical' but as soon as they both hit the doctor's or nurse's hands crying, they will still start to show their individual differences both 'intra-psychically' and 'socially'....

So too, it is with 'conceptual and theoretical evolution'....

Every time 'ideas metaphorically have sex with each other', the resulting 'conceptual and/or theoretical fertilization' is going to be 'uniquely different' than any prior or following conceptual/theoretical fertilizations/integrations/syntheses. (Sounds very Freudian, doesn't it? All I have to do is finish off with 'The Big Bang Theory' and everyone can go home happy...)

Let us see where this takes us. Let us imagine 1000 psychoanalysts out there. Everyone of them comes from a uniquely different 'conceptual-theoretical-practical' inter-psychoanalytic (and perhaps even 'neo-psychoanalytic' and/or 'non-psychoanalytic') gene pool. Each one of them today would probably have a working knowledge or at least a basic theoretical knowledge of 'Pre-Classical' (Traumacy Theory) Psychoanalysis, 'Classical' (Fantasy Theory) Psychoanalysis, Object Relations, Self Psychology, Lacanian Psychoanalysis, Bionian Psychoanalysis...and/or whatever else I might have missed...

However, all the individual 'conceptual-theoretical-therapeutic gene mixes' would/will be uniquely different in one respect or another -- and for a client, each experience with each individual psychoanalyst would/will be, at least partly uniquely different, with some general foundational similarities... We may have a 'conservative' Psychoanalyst or a 'wilder' one working within any of the paradigms and/or combinations of paradigms that I have mentioned above....and all will have their different 'personality traits' and their own unique 'transference and counter-transference complexes'...

 This psychoanalyst might use 'The Oedipal Complex Theory' while this one might not...Within the underlying or over-riding 'general paradigm of Psychoanalysis', you are going to have a whole host of 'mini-paradigm shifts' if you were to move around from one psychoanalyst to another, and then on again to another...

Again, each psychoanalyst is going to be at least partly unique in his or her own particular 'brand' of Psychoanalysis, in terms of his or her unique influences, and in terms of his or her 'anal-rigid-conservative' or 'liberal-rebellious' attitude towards what he or she has been taught -- and either approach could be either publicly acknowledged or publicly denied. 

This makes it virtually impossible for me to sit here and say that I have some sort of  'intimate pulse' on what is happening in Psychoanalysis today -- how many psychoanalysts are using some form of 'traumacy theory', how many are not, how many are using 'The Oedipal Theory', and how many are not, how big a deal the concept of 'repression' is in the different 'brands' of Psychoanalysis today, and/or to what extent it is not?

Every time we start talking about a different concept or theory, and how it is practically applied in therapy -- or not -- we are talking about some sort of major or minor 'paradigm shift'....which is going to affect the direction and outcome of therapy....I feel comfortable using the concept of 'The Oedipal Complex' in the way that I will demonstrate in my Freud example later... Why wouldn't the creator of 'The Oedipal Complex Theory' have an intimate example from his own network of 'childhood transference memories' upon which to base this theory?...)


I do not use the concept of 'repression' -- to me this was, and still is, a 'Big Paradigm Stopper'  in Psychoanalysis...an example of why Hegel wrote that 'Every theory carries the seeds of its own self-destruction.'... Freud simply 'overplayed' this theory -- hugely...probably because of his foundational work with Charcot, Breuer, hypnosis, and hysteria...We 'enlargen' the paradigm of Psychoanalysis significantly when we allow ourselves to use 'childhood conscious memories' as 'diagnostic tools' for 'transference complexes' rather than digging around enlessly looking for some 'repressed memory' that may or may not exist, and even if it does not exist, it may not be 'etiologically more significant' than what we can find right in front of our nose, simply by asking a client....'Think back to your earliest childhood memory....Can you share it with me? And perhaps two or three more memories that you remember before or up until the age of about 7 years old? 

It has been my experience -- based on my training in Adlerian Psychology -- and extrapolating Adler's precious 'lifestyle diagnostic tool' back into the 'conflict and transference model' of Psychoanalysis -- that we can find a 'theoretical and therapeutic gold mine' here of 'transference complex material' that may only take 20 minutes to 'dig up' rather than 200 hour long sessions....(I may or may not be exaggerating here...)


Instead of 'repression', I use such concepts as 'suppression', 'oppression', 'alienation', 'isolation', 'dissociation', 'exclusion'...'relegated to The Shadows of conciousness or subconcsiciousness'...

I am comfortable using both 'traumacy theory' and 'fantasy theory' in a way that I have 'conceptually and theoretically synthesized' as opposed to 'dissociated' and 'alienated' from each other... Instead, I have brought my  Adlerian knowledge back into a Freudian and post-Freudian paradigm where I feel totally comfortable talking about 'conflicts' and 'paradoxes' and 'inconsistencies' and 'object relations' and 'internal power struggles' in a way that Adlerian Psychology wouldn't -- and didn't -- teach me while I was learning there in 80-81.

Adler believed in the assumption of 'unity in the personality'; not 'conflict in the personality' and this was one of the main assumptive differences between Freud and Adler that I had to sort out for myself, with Perls and Gestalt Therapy offering more 'fuel' for this 'assumptive controversy'....Using the same idea that either Freud or Perls first articulated (I know Perls did; I am not sure about Freud), in the same way that 'every part of a dream can be considered to be a part of ourselves', so too it is with our conscious early childhood transference memories. Analysts who look at these memories as being simply 'screen memories', which started with Freud in 1899, are doing themselves a huge disfavour in terms of essentially 'dismissing' valuable theoretical and therapeutic material.

Even if they can be 'structurally associated' with other similar memories before and/or after them, harder or easier to 'dig up', this does not 'dismiss' their own theoretical and therapeutic value in themselves...

Remember, for those of you intimately familiar with Freud's early work, that Freud wrote that  'neurotic symptoms tend to be overdetermined' -- by perhaps a whole series of similarly structured memories, fantasies, and/or dreams/nightmares all  'converging' or 'conflating' on the same neurotic symptom and/or set of neurotic symptoms..everything 'transference related and interconnected'.... 


Regarding the 'conflict' vs. 'unity' in the personality controversy between Freud and Adler, this was one of my first major 'challenges' to my evolving brand of Hegelian dialectic thinking -- I had to turn what was deemed to be an 'Aristotlean "either/or" decision' -- into a 'synthesized Hegelian dialectic conflict resolution'...which I eventually did although it took me a number of years before I could clearly see my own answer to the controversy...it took even longer once I got into the middle of 'the seduction theory controversy'...

Today, I see all types of 'working and non-working or functional and dysfunctional differences' between some people who are 'more or less conflicted' than others, as well as the fact that we can all go through different periods of 'high', 'medium', and 'low' intra-psychic and/or social conflict, often the two types of conflict going hand and hand with each other...the intra-psychic type being 'projected outwards' into our social environment, and the 'social type' being 'introjected inwards' into the different psychic structures and/or dynamics of our personality....



Regarding Kierkegaard...



A distinction can be made betwen our Kierkgaardian 'either/or' choices and our Hegelian 'dialectically integrative' choices. In the first instance, I could either continue to write, or go back to bed, or go downstairs and make another coffee and/or some breakfast....All of these choices are more or less mutually exclusive relative to 'moment to moment choices'.....Our lives, from moment to moment, are built at least partly -- and significantly -- on these types of moment to moment Kierkgaardian choices...Do I write about Hegelian 'dialectically integrative choices, compromises, syntheses'? Or do I write about 'symptoms' and different types of 'obsessional neuroses'? Or do I use the one topic to 'dialectically bridge the gap between the two topics' -- and thus, demonstrate how seemingly 'mutually exclusive' topic choices can be 'cross-fertilized, integrated, synthesized' to form 'mutually inclusive' choices that are interconnected with each other?

In Kierkegaard's case, he perhaps made the 'ultimate Kierkgaardian either/or choice' in his lifetime: he chose to largerly isolate himself inside his particular brand of 'religious existential philosophy' rather than marry the woman he loved.....Ouch! that was a very harsh existential choice -- one that he probably/definitely spent a lot of time regretting afterwards, especially when he saw his 'ex-fiancee' get married to another man in the same town....

Now, at this point in time, I can only do a 'mini-analysis' of Kierkegaard's character based on Donald Palmer's work from 'Kierkegaard For Beginners' (1996).  It seems, according to Palmer, that there were only three people of significant importance in Soren Kierkegaard's life -- his father (Michael Kierkegaard), his (ex)-fiancee (Regina Olsen), and the editor (Meier Goldschmidt) of the local (comical/satirical) newspaper (The Corsair). One wonders where Soren's mother and seven brothers (five of whom died prematurely) fit into this equation but...hey, let's go with what we have here...and perhaps a little more...Perusing very quickly through the beginning of Patrick Gardiner's book, 'Kierkegaard: A Very Short Introduction' (1988), I find a few more valuable tidbits about Kierkgaard's childhood -- enough to start to buiid a 'transference profile' of Kierkegaard's character....

What I don't have -- the most valuable information that a 'transference profiler' can have regarding the makeup of a particular person's character structure and psycho-dynamics, including their unique 'ego-defenses' and 'transference obsessional neuroses' -- is any of Kierkegaard's 'conscious childhood memories'.....

In Freud's case, Ernest Jones, through his famous or infamous biography of Freud, has given the world a series of Freud's earliest conscious childhood memories (even though he lightly dismisses them as quickly as he recites them due to the Freudian bias of 'repressed memories and fantasies' meaning much, much more than 'easily retrieved, conscious early childhood memories that became so important in Adler's work -- anyways, the Freud 'conscious early memories' are a 'God-Send' for me in putting together a much more reliable 'transference profile'; in this case here, with Kierkegaard, again, we have to work with what I have, and what I don't have, at least at this point in time, is any of his conscious, early memories... 

Still, we have some significant childhood pieces to work with...

Here's an interesting piece of trivia....Did you know that Kierkegaard and Freud were born one day -- and 43 years -- apart? Kierkegaard died when he was 42 in 1855. He was born on May 5th, 1813; Freud was born on May 6th, 1856. Both liked to smoke cigars and both could be seen at the live theatre -- with their cigars.

Their respective temperments seem to have been quite a bit different, however. Freud was treated like a royal prince in his family -- particularly by his mom. A relatively secure child is going to, in all likelihood, become a relatively secure adult. If anything, Freud was pampered as a child -- and expected to be treated royally -- he was an 'Establishment Child' for the most part, and once Freud got through, for the most part, 'shocking the world' (let's say after 1905 and 'Three Essays on Sexuality'), Freud, more or less settled into an 'Establishment lifestyle', delivering one more major 'shocker essay' to us in 1920 with 'Beyond The Pleasure Principle'. His 1938 'Splitting of The Ego' was just a 'tease' as if he anticipated and was foreshadowing the way that Psychoanalysis was going to evolve in hands of Melanie Klein, Winnicott, Fairbairn, Guntrip, and others...

Besides, Freud's wish to 'shock' or 'astonish' the world was from an entirely different place of psychic being -- like a 'magician shocking and astonishing an audience' -- than Kierkegaard who was usually writing from a place -- like Doestevsky -- of supreme pain and anguish, morbid guilt and grief, and wicked sarcasm stemming from underlying anger, bordering on barely contained, suppressed rage...  Where did all this pent up morbid guilt and grief and rage come from?  Kierkegaard was like a walking time bomb ready to explode....and he essentially 'creatively and emotionally exploded in the essays that he wrote'... In this regard, we can actually draw a line of 'emotional similarity' between Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Doestevsky, Nietzsche, and perhaps if we stretched it out far enough, Voltaire, Marx, Foucault, and Derrida...Freud -- although he could appreciate the anguish and the essence of this group (or at least the first four who lived predominantly before him), was probably more like Hegel, more at home in a middle to upper class environment, and more at home 'making the rules' once he had established his 'foothold of power' with people coming from around the world to meet him....No one came to meet Kierkegaard....He was a man who predominantly lived -- and died -- alone...at least once he turned his back on his fiancee....marriage and family.....Kierkegaard lived the life of a morbid man who believed that he was cursed -- and not capable of being 'normal'....As Palmer writes...'Kierkegaard was sacrificed -- or almost sacrificed -- on the alter of his dad's religiosity.' (p. 5).....Sounds like Nietzsche's childhood...

In Soren's case, Palmer writes that there is the hint of sexual impropriety regarding his dad and the family maid while his wife was on her death bed....That maid would become Michael Kierkegaard's second wife -- and Soren's mother.

It seems likely that Soren's father 'projected' the full rage of his own ethical and religious guilt on his son...Palmer writes that there is a passage in The Bible according to which...'The sins of the father will be visited upon by the sons.' (p. 8)

Well, something passed into little Soren's psyche -- and it wasn't healthy...From Palmer's book, we have a quote that seems to be from Soren: 'As a child I had already been made into an old man.' (p. 7)

Soren had another lifelong problem -- or let us say 'challenge'.  A weak spine that he was ridiculed and bullied by other school kids because of his presumably 'hunched over' appearance...

Soren learned to fight back with words using his superior intellect and sarcasm...as he honed in on other people's vulnerabilities....an 'ego defense' that he used for his entire life....

It was a good way of keeping people at a distance...hurting them before they could hurt him....but it backfired with the editor of The Corsair  -- because the editor, Meir Goldschmidt -- could play this 'game' as well, or better, than Soren, plus he had the advantage of a public newspaper to ridicule Soren over and over and over again until Soren was the laughing stock of Copenhagen....Almost sounds like 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame'... only there was no woman to love him because he had rejected the only woman who did...

Ah, Soren.....you 'recreated your own misery in the template of your childhood -- and rejected the only two people who liked or love you -- your fiancee, and the editor of The Corsair who very much admired you until you belittled his newspaper and then he turned on you....Call that a 'self-fulfilling prophecy'...or Freud would call it your own private 'repetition compulsion'....your own private 'death instinct wish'...

But man, it took a while for people to recognize your philosophical greatness -- almost a hundred years before they learned the importance in academic circles of 'personal subjectivity' from you....and the importance of the 'living in the concrete moment'....

Soren Kierkegaard, you were the bridge between Hegel and Nietzsche, between Hegel and Existentialism -- in fact, you are usually referred to as 'the father of existentialism' -- with Fichte (The Subjectivity of The Ego), Schelling (Romantic Dialectic Unity), Schopenhauer (Cosmic Narcissism and Absurdity), and Doestevsky (Notes From The Underground) all contributing along the way...


Here is some of you at your best....courtesy of Brainy Quotes....


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Soren Kierkegaard Quotes
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A man who as a physical being is always turned toward the outside, thinking that his happiness lies outside him, finally turns inward and discovers that the source is within him.
Soren Kierkegaard

Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.
Soren Kierkegaard

At the bottom of enmity between strangers lies indifference.
Soren Kierkegaard

Be that self which one truly is.
Soren Kierkegaard

Because of its tremendous solemnity death is the light in which great passions, both good and bad, become transparent, no longer limited by outward appearences.
Soren Kierkegaard

Boredom is the root of all evil - the despairing refusal to be oneself.
Soren Kierkegaard

Concepts, like individuals, have their histories and are just as incapable of withstanding the ravages of time as are individuals. But in and through all this they retain a kind of homesickness for the scenes of their childhood.
Soren Kierkegaard

Don't forget to love yourself.
Soren Kierkegaard

During the first period of a man's life the greatest danger is not to take the risk.
Soren Kierkegaard

Face the facts of being what you are, for that is what changes what you are.
Soren Kierkegaard

Far from idleness being the root of all evil, it is rather the only true good.
Soren Kierkegaard

God creates out of nothing. Wonderful you say. Yes, to be sure, but he does what is still more wonderful: he makes saints out of sinners.
Soren Kierkegaard

How absurd men are! They never use the liberties they have, they demand those they do not have. They have freedom of thought, they demand freedom of speech.
Soren Kierkegaard

I begin with the principle that all men are bores. Surely no one will prove himself so great a bore as to contradict me in this.
Soren Kierkegaard

I feel as if I were a piece in a game of chess, when my opponent says of it: That piece cannot be moved.
Soren Kierkegaard

I see it all perfectly; there are two possible situations - one can either do this or that. My honest opinion and my friendly advice is this: do it or do not do it - you will regret both.
Soren Kierkegaard

It belongs to the imperfection of everything human that man can only attain his desire by passing through its opposite.
Soren Kierkegaard

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Monday, December 19, 2011

1.7. The Splitting of The Ego in The Process of Defense as Captured By The QDP Model of The Psyche

Finished revision!....Dec. 20th, 2011

Man's psychology of defense is very similar to his physiology/biology/bio-chemistry of defense....Same basic type of 'modus operandi' at work....

When we talk about 'the ego splitting in the process of defense'.....we are talking about the ego splitting for the perceived purpose of both 'functional adaptive advantage', and at the same time, for the purpose of internal and/or external defense...

Before we go on to talk about any others, let us list eight primary 'ego-functions' of perceived adaptive advantage and/or internal and/or external defense: 

1. flight;
2. fight;
3. submission and/or co-operation; 
4. let's call 'narcissistic-hedonistic activities and/or escapism'; 
5. let's call for now 'covert operations';
6. let's call 'righteous ethical-moral restraint';
7. let's call 'nurturing encouragement';
8. let's call 'integrative, final, executive decisons'

Now, from years of research in clinical psychology, particularly what in psychoanalysis is called 'object relations', we learn that people 'introject' or 'internalize' their most important childhood relationships, particularly with their parents, their siblings, their closest friends, their closest relatives, and/or their other role models....relationships that may be 'authoritarian', 'co-operative', 'competitive', 'antagonistic', and so on.....

From all of this work, I get the first part of my QDP 'model of the psyche' that now looks like this:

1. The Nurturing Superego;
2. The Narcissistic-Hedonistic Superego;
3. The Distancing Superego;
4. The Righteous-Rejecting Superego;
5. The Co-operative (Approval-Seeking) Underego;
6. The Narcissistic-Hedonistic Underego;
7. The Distancing Underego;
8. The Righteous-Rejecting Underego;
9. The Central (Mediating, Executive) Ego.

From these different types of 'ego-functions' and 'ego-defenses' that come about through 'the splitting of the ego in the process of defense', we can have a relatively 'functional, harmonious ego' if all 'ego-states' are basically 'getting along with each other' and moving together in a relatively 'healthy, constructive direction; alternatively, if different ego states are at war with each other, the results can be more dysfunctional and destructive....

The inside of the personality, for the most part, is going to look like a snap shot of the childhood 'transference' factors that make up the person's 'Memory-Learning-Transference (MLT)' Template which are then 'projected upwards' into the different more 'conscious ego states' in the personality, as listed above..

The Central Executive Ego can be divided into two parts, in integrative Freudian-Jungian terminology: 1. the outward bound, socially directed 'Personna'; and 2. the 'covert, internal operations' going on within 'The (Conscious) Shadow-Id Vault'.

Sometimes above consciousness, sometimes below consciousness, we have:

10. 'The Symbolic Image Maker and Dream/Nightmare Weaver';
11. 'The Memory-Learning-Transference (MLT) Template';
12. 'The Shadow-Id' and 'The (Subconscious) Shadow-Id Vault' ('unrestrained' vs. 'restrained' Shadow-Id formations and activities);
13. The Internal Abyss of Perceived Existential Self-Defeat (guilt, anxiety, panic, anger, rage, depression, grief, mortification, distancing...unworked through...)
14. The Internal 'Mountain' of Perceived Existential Self-Contact, Self-Congruence, Self-Actualization and Self-Achievement;
15. The Genetic, Potential, Existential Self


As a humanistic-existentialist in the mold of Erich Fromm, I personally view the 'purpose' of life as the existential self-contact, self-congruence, self-actualization, and self-achievement of our Central Ego in the service of our Genetic, Potential Existential Self as well as the encouragement and support of others in the pursuit of their particular individual goals, hopefully towards both self and social interest as well, without anyone having to use or exploit another person as a means of achieving their own personal goals....Fairness to self, fairness to others....a code of ethics that seems to be largely lost within a paradigm of largely unbounded Corporate, Gorvernment, and Cultural Narcissism. 

You can be a 'religious' humanistic-existentialist, an 'agnostic' humanistic-existentialist, an 'atheist' humanistic-existentialist, a 'pantheist' humanistic-existentialist', a 'deist' humanistic-existentialist -- it's all the same to me...

Just two main 'ethical points of reference' that are important in my books: a workable balance between 1. compassion; and 2. accountablity -- both to ourselves and to others; in Adler's terminology, a balance between 'self and social interest'....

Merry Christmas everyone !


-- dgb, Dec. 20th, 2011,

-- David Gordon Bain,

-- Dialectic Gap-Bridging Negotiations...

-- Are Still in Process....

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

1.6. Quantum-Dialectic Psychoanalysis (QDP): Traumacy, Fantasy, and Transference Theory United Through The Splitting of The Ego in The Process of Defense

New direction...just finished...Dec. 19th, 2011....


 I want to bring together a number of different elements in this paper in a highly unusual, unorthodox, pre-Classical, Classical, and post-Classical integrative fashion.

To do this, I will write quickly, succinctly, and dogmatically -- like Freud in 1938 when he wrote 'An Outline of Psychoanalysis' -- emphasizing the similarities and differences between Freud's analytic findings, generalizations, concepts, theories, and paradigms -- and my own.

Freud wrote another essay in 1938, 'Splitting of The Ego in the Process of Defense' which had the potential to become another revolutionary turning point in the evolution of psycho-analysis, indeed, still partly was, but his work was contaminated by what I believe to be a 'personal Freudian neurosis' -- Freud's fixation with the concept (and the underlying experience) of 'castration anxiety' -- which more or less nullified the potential monumental importance of this work.

I have a much better way of explaining the idea of 'The Splitting of The Ego in the Process of Defense' that borrows partly on the work of Klein, Fairbairn, and Berne, as well as an extrapolation of what I just pulled out from Wikipedia here a moment ago to describe a certain general human phenomenon...

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Fight-or-flight response

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
The fight-or-flight response (also called the fight-or-flight-or-freeze response, hyperarousal, or the acute stress response) was first described by Walter Bradford Cannon.[1][2][3][4][5]
His theory states that animals react to threats with a general discharge of the sympathetic nervous system, priming the animal for fighting or fleeing. This response was later recognized as the first stage of a general adaptation syndrome that regulates stress responses among vertebrates and other organisms.


...........................................................................................................

In order to understand the theory of 'the splitting of the ego in the process of defense' you need to understand and accept traumacy theory -- and its multitude of potential compensatory defensive human reactions that become essentially 'cemented' or 'templated' into the traumatized psyche.

Each potential compensatory reaction 'motivates', 'precipitates', and/or 'causes' a different 'split' in the ego as a means of a 'choice' of future potential compensatory defensive reactions in the face of what is perceived as a 'similar danger or threat to the ego and/or whole psyche' as just was experienced in the face of the traumatic event that  just happened.

Now, the 'splitting of the ego' does not have to happen because of traumacy.

Let's now call 'traumacy' -- 'ego-traumacy'.

And now let's call 'ego-traumacy' a 'narcissistic injury'.

The splitting of the ego can be precipitated by either a 'narcissistic injury' and/or a 'narcissistic fixation'. A narcissistic fixation may be a narcissistic injury or it may be something else -- an 'object of heightened or strongly cathected narcissistic interest'. In effect, a narcssistic fixation is likely to become a 'fantasy object' which may or may not also mean that it is a 'fantasy sexual object'.

Now, here are the first two primary differences between 'GAP-DGB' or 'Quantum Dialectic Psychoanalysis (QDP)' and Classical Freudian Psychoanalysis.

The first primary difference is that I 're-engage' Freud's pre-1897 'traumacy theory' -- with a set of QDP differences, such as the ones mentioned above, some of which Freud touched upon in the period that he was working with Alfred Adler after he had more or less abandoned his traumacy theory but Adler was perhpas starting to 're-awaken' a different brand of traumacy theory as he began to talk about 'organ inferiorities' and 'super-cerebral-brain-activity' to (over)compensate. From 'organ inferiorities, Adler would move on to later talk about 'psychic inferiority perception and feelings' and 'superiority striving' aimed at '(over)compensating' for 'the perceived psychic inferiority issue or complex'. (See 'The Minutes of The Vienna Psychoanalytic Society, November 7th, 1906.)

The second primary difference between Classic Freudian Psychoanalysis and QDP is that Freud spent his lifetime 'chasing repressed memories and/or fantasies' whereas I again show my Adlerian influence, preferring to chase and interpretively analyze 'conscious early childhood memories' that can tell us a lot about the makeup of our 'Memory-Learning-Transference Template' as well as our 'Compensating Impulsive and/or Defensive Transference Fantasies'. 

I have a certain friend who years ago related to me a childhood memory where he remembers seeing the 'tops of his teacher's stockings'. I don't need Freud's theory of 'disavowal' or worse, his theory of 'castration anxiety and the castration complex' to explain to you where my friend's 'stocking fetish' came from -- I simply need to say to you that it became 'fixated' from an 'accidental childhood experience' that was accompanied by a feeling of 'childhood (pre-puberty) sexual excitement' which in turn was probably accompanied by a sense of the 'morally forbidden' -- and then 'locked in over time' in terms of his wanting to essentially 're-live the morally forbidden childhood experience over and over and over again, in similar and/or different contextual renditions'. This is what we might call a 'narcissistic transference fixation'.

The only difference between 1. a 'narcissistic (sexual) fixation and fantasy; and 2. a 'narcissistic injury (ego-traumacy) sexual fixation and fantasy is that in the latter type of 'transference fantasy' we are looking to essentially re-live the scene of one of our early childhood transference traumacies but with this essential difference: we wish to re-live the experience in a host of different possible ways that each show a unique 'compensatory defensive' purpose -- but in the end, there is one shared purpose amongst all these possible 'renditions of the traumacy-transference fantasy', and that is to 'nurture' and 'repair' our damaged childhood ego in a form of 'self-therapy' that when acted out satisfactorily -- may indeed partly repair our damaged psyche, but usually only temporarily, until the 'hole' or 'the gap' or 'the sick point' in our psyche motivates us, usually in combination with our sexual drive, to repeat our fantasy-action over again in some similar and/or different 'transference rendition'.

There -- in that small nutshell above -- I probably just delivered to you the best work on 'transference' since Freud's 'The Dynamics of Transference' (1912) -- like I said I would. In fact, I am the same age as Freud was when he wrote The Dynamics of Transference -- 56 -- which is why I wanted to finish this essay before the new year -- and ideally before Christmas. Having said this, I was writing about my particular unique 'Dynamics of Transference' back in the 1980s, before I knew who either Heinz Kohut or Jeffrey Masson were......I just didn't have any 'blogspot' on the internet to write my stuff on, I had barely even started studying Psychoanalysis seriously, and my ideas were just in their infancy. I trumpet the influence of Jeffrey Masson and his introducing me to Freud's 'Seduction Theory' as being the key turning point in helping me to bring these ideas all home in the fashion that you are now reading them. 

I hope you understand the full significance of what I have written above. Because, you see, in this little nutshell of an essay here, I have also tied Freud's Memory, Traumacy, Fantasy, and Transference Theories all together and put them in a nice little Christmas box, complete with a nice red bow, as a present to you.

The only thing I need to do now is to extrapolate in greater detail on what has been said here, to articulate in greater depth the process of 'The Splitting of The Ego in the Process of Defense', its connection to our 'oral' and 'anal' characteristics, and its birthplace in traumatic and/or exciting narcissistic early childhood memories turned into repetitive and/or compensatory ego-satisfying, usually but not always, erotic transference fantasies.

This is both so Freudian and so anti-Freudian at the same time that I don't have a clue how orthodox Freudians or Object Relationists or Adlerians or any other academic and/or professional will react to it from the confines of their own  conceptual box, theory, paradigm...whether that 'conceptual box' be 'analy tight' or conversely 'fluidly liberal and dynamic'.


My argument against Dr. Masson, to the limits of the degree that he gingerly steps back into the Psychoanalytic Colliseum, is that his thought too has become 'stuck inside a one-sided paradigm that confines the potential growth and evolution of Psychoanalytic Theory as a cohesive, integrative theory'.

I couldn't have arrived where I am today -- I couldn't have created QDP the way I have today -- without the huge academic influence of Dr. Jeffrey Masson...

But we have to get beyond Dr. Masson's arguments -- and for the longest while I was stuck on those same controversies and arguments too. Did Freud 'morally fail' Psychoanalysis? And if so, how badly? Or is there an alternative explanation -- one part of the 'mystery of the human psyche' that Freud couldn't fully and properly put together; one part of the 'human jig-saw puzzle' that Freud couldn't entirely comprehend?

Was perhaps, Freud too caught up inside an Aristotlean 'either/or' paradigm in which he thought he had to choose between 'memories' and 'fantasies' -- and didn't properly see how the two were so intermeshed together and pushed forward in 'the seemingly paradoxical dynamics of the transference complex'?

Or did Freud simply make a bad theoretical, therapeutic, and ethical mistake at the same time -- and that mistake was 'The Oedipal Complex'.

Did Freud fundamentally and ethically fail women?

In this way, did Freud essentially 'identify with his aggressors' and like all the other essentially paternalistic, chauvanistic, Victorian doctors in The Psychiatry and Neurology Society -- in harmony with their leader, Krafft-Ebing -- believe that when Freud wrote his stunning essay on Childhood Sexual Abuse -- 'The Aetiology of Hysteria' (1896) -- in which Freud connected childhood sexual abuse with hysteria and other 'neurotic' conditions, that this, according to Krafft-Ebing, was essentially a 'scientific fairy tale'.

Did Freud end up actually believing this himself? Or did he 'alter his theoretical direction' as a 'defense mechanism' in order to safeguard his job and his profession as a doctor, substituting his Oedipal Complex Theory (false sexual assault memory syndrome, from 1897 onwards...) for his earlier Seduction Theory (before 1897, where Freud believed that these childhood sexual assaults actually happened)?

One way or the other -- or both -- Classical Psychoanalysis ended up with a 'sick point' between 1896 and 1897, and that 'sick point' was the dissociation between Freud's 'Reality Theory' and his 'Fantasy Theory'....

Like a 'religious person' stuck inside a 'religious paradigm' or an 'atheist person' stuck inside an 'atheist paradigm', before 1897, Freud couldn't see outside of his 'reality memory-traumacy-seduction-transference box'; and after 1897, Freud couldn't see outside of his 'fantasy-Oedipal box'.

Just like Quantum Physics needed to put together a 'particle-wavelength dialectic theory of matter and energy', so too did Freud and Psychoanalysis.

But in 1896, Freud dropped the ball. He missed the key shot.

And Pre-Psychoanalysis and Classical Psychoanalysis have had to live with this 'Splitting of The Psychoanalytic Ego in The Process of Defense'....

Regardless of whether it was with good or bad 'moral-ethical intentions'...

One way or the other, Freud still morally failed women....

And so too, did his daughter, Anna Freud...

Because a female client's childhood memories -- if the classical psychoanalyst even gets so much as a sniff of 'childhood sexual abuse' in one of these memories between a father and her daughter (the client) -- would immediately -- without any hesitation, if he or she is following the stereotype of the Oedipal Complex Theory, as strigently taught by father Freud, would move to 're-classify' this alleged memory as a 'repressed sexual fantasy of the daughter's'....thus, 'disavowing' the memory as being potentially 'real'...

And that is not right....

If stringent, anal-retentive, Classical Psychoanalysis....

Self-destructs...which it probably already mainly has...

It will be under the tombstone...

Of Freud's worst theoretical mistake...

The Oedipal Complex...

In this small essay here,

I have shown a new, evolving direction...

An integrative direction...

In one small swoop here, I have shown the essence of the necessary integration between Freudian 'Pre-Psychoanalytic Reality, Memory, Traumacy, and Transference Theory' with 'Classical' Freudian Fantasy and Oedipal Theory -- as well as the main essence of Adlerian 'Inferiority and Superiority and Lifestyle Theory', and the essence of Object Relations and The Splitting of The Ego in The Process of Defense...

The rest can be extrapolated on...

-- dgb, December 19th, 2011...

-- David Gordon Bain

-- Dialectic Gap-Bridging Negotiations...

-- Are Still Pressing On...




  






  

Friday, December 9, 2011

1.5. Maps and Territories -- and Their Integration With Hegelian Dialectic Logic

In process.....Dec. 12th, 2011


I am just coming off a six day work week and seem to have lost some of the momentum that I had when I started to write this essay at the beginning of last week....

We will find out very shortly whether I can pick up my 'lost momentum' relative to the direction that this essay was heading last week -- or conversely, and based on today's 'immediacy' -- steer the essay in a somewhat or entirely different direction. I have two days off to write this essay, and hopefully, I can write one or two others as well which are clamoring to get out of my head. -- dgb, dec. 12th, 2011..

1. In and Out of The 'Name Box'

Regarding the name -- 'Quantum-Dialectic Psychoanalysis' -- think of this statement:

'If you dialectically engage both the people in your lives, and the ideas in your head, as well as your thoughts, feelings, and actions, in a respectful, egalitarian manner that invites both experiential and conceptual learning  -- in other words, passionately integrates your mind, body, heart and soul, and also allows you to think and feel both inside and outside the 'conceptual box, the theoretical box, the paradigm box' -- you will, generally speaking, make 'quantum leaps' in the overall quality, immediacy, and direction of your life. -- dgb

Regarding past names that I still partly hold onto, use, and/or integrate...

GAP or GAAP Psychology -- recognizes the four main psychological cornerstones of what I teach: 1. Gestalt Therapy; 2. Adlerian Psychology; 3. Analytic (Jungian) Psychology; 4. Psychoanalysis. Two other honorable mentions not included in the name above are: 5. Transactional Analysis; and 6. General Semantics and Cognitive Therapy.

Furthermore, we all have different types of 'GAPS' in our thinking, feeling, doing that can be addressed both theoretically and therapeutically with the goal of improving the quality of our lives...

And also, there are 'gaps in theory and therapy' that exist between all the different schools of psychology (and philosophy), including the six different schools of psychology above: these 'gaps' can be 'bridged' and the different schools of psychologiy 'integrated' or 'synthesized'....which leads to this last name and acronym on my own personal name...

DGB(AIN) Psychology as in 'Dialectic-Gap-Bridging-And-Integrative-Negotiations....
are still in process...(with every essay that I write...until I die...there is no timeline or deadline on 'personal evolution' except within the 'finite timeline and deadline' of our own lives...)

Or to synthesize two of the names above, we arrive at: 'GAP-DGB' Philosophy-Psychology...

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2. Maps and Territories

I have been in the transportation business almost all my adult life -- so talking about 'maps' and 'territories' comes easily to me, as a driver, as a scheduler, as a dispatcher -- and stepping outside the realm of transportation and 'geography' -- we can move internally into man's psyche and talk about the 'geography of the psyche' and how this subject matter too is very intimately connected to the the metaphor of -- 'maps' and 'territories' -- with the ideal goal being 'better and better structural and associative similarity between the 'map' or 'model' and the 'territory' this map or model is supposed to represent.

Recall that Kant was the first to distinguish between 1. the 'noumenal/objective world' of 'things' that exist above and beyond the finite capabilities of 2. 'the  subjective/phenomenal world' of our 'senses' -- i.e., 'our sensory-experiential world' -- that, in turn, leads us deeper and deeper into our 3. 'increasingly abstractive, interpretive world of 'logic', 'associations', 'generalizations' and 'causes' that exist entirely beyond our senses (but should have logical connections to them), and finally, these interpretive generalizations lead us even deeper into 4. our personal 'value generalizations and judgments' and, from these, our 'contextual evaluations' that we attach to our abstractive interpretations and generalizations in order to classify and label particular things and/or processes as being 'good' or 'bad', 'right' or 'wrong' -- which in turn, lead us, based partly also on particular 5. 'perceived survival needs, self-demands, wishes, and/or wants' to 6. stimulate and motivate the creation of different possible/plausable  'response-choices' and imagined 'action scenarios' that we might play out, which, in turn, we judge based on what we imagine to be each of their likely or possible consequences to our lives -- good, bad, ugly, or ineffectual -- , following which we make, 7. 'executive decisions' -- either radical or mediating and compromising -- on how best to act, or not act, given the certain set of external and/or internal stimuli that are impinging on us and demanding that we act -- or not act -- as best we conclude and see fit based on our imagination and judgment of each of their likely or possible consequences, and the element of risk involved for each.

 'No adventure, no gain....' or 'No adventure no loss...' -- either of these axioms could be our more general rule of thumb. Which one we use more often could be partly or mainly a product of our 'abstracted' and/or 'concretized' past experience, and/or it could be a product of our general character makeup -- which again, could be based mainly on our past experience of relative success or failure in our 'risk-taking behaviors'..., culminating in whether we are more likely to view ourselves in a particular risk-taking situation as a 'risk-taker' or conversely, as a 'non-risk-taker' which, translated, usually means a 'comfort, safety, and security-seeker'...

3. Abstraction, Evaluation and Health

This evaluation process or evaluation cycle is what I focused on in my 1979 Honours Thesis, essay, Evaluation and Health -- and this evaluation is primarily the domain of what today I would call our 'Central (Executive and Mediating) Ego' -- which in turn is surrounded by a whole 'network of ego-states' and 'facilitatory ego functions and divisions' -- all of which can be viewed as being like 'special interest lobbyist groups' within the confines of the human psyche and mediated by  -- our internal leader  which is our 'Central Ego' .

Sound familiar regarding the 'special interest lobbyst groups?  That's because both our government and our private corporations can be viewed as 'external reflections or projections' of the structural and dynamic makeup of our internal psyche -- which entails all of the good, bad, and/or ugly' of what we call 'human nature' and/or 'human behavior'.

4. The Ego, The I, and The Self

If we go back to the period of 'German Philosophical Idealism', we will find that the philosopher Johann Fichte used the term 'ego' (I'm not sure whether or not Kant used it) which translates from German to English as basically the word 'I', although in English, we have also become very comfortable using the word 'ego' as well.

This raises the whole 'subject-object' conundrum and controversy which goes back at least to Kant and his 'Kant Know' thesis. According to Kant, we 'cant know' what is in our completely 'objective (noumenal) world' because this world of 'things' and 'processes' is outside of, and beyond, the realm of our imperfect 'sensory and rational-empirical (phenomenal) world'... Thus, our objective-noumenal world -- being above and beyond the capabilities of our phenomenal-subjective world -- can also be viewed and labelled as our 'metaphysical world' -- a world that we cannot know (or as I would say, cannot know completely and perfectly).

Stuck inside this 'subjective-objective Kantian Split' is our 'I' (subject) and 'ego' (object). Our 'subjective I' is capable of perceving, interpreting, analzying, and judging our 'objective ego'....within the realm of its capability as an 'imperfectly perceiving, interpreting, analyzing, and judging mind-brain system'...

Of which, for the purpose of our 'map' and 'territory' metaphor or analogy, and the goal of 'teaching' and 'learning' purposes, we can 'sub-divide' or 'sub-classify' the objective ego into 'sub-compartments' or 'ego-states' -- Freud was heading in this direction (at least partly) at the very end of his career and life in 1938 when he wrote his small but evolutionary essay on 'ego-splitting'. Melanie Klein was heading in this same direction -- perhaps she even influenced Freud, or he, her -- when she created the first 'alternative' school of Psychoanalysis which is now referred to as 'Object Relations' (which Eric Berne turned into 'Transactional Analysis').

From an integration of all the different schools of psychology listed above -- I have created 'Quantum-Dialectic Pscyhoanalysis' or 'GAP-DGB Philosophy-Psychology'.

My '14 Compartment Model' of the Ego, the Self, the I....'splits' the ego into these sub-compartments:

1. The Nurturing Superego;
2. The Narcissistic Superego;
3. The Righteous-Rejecting Superego;
4. The Approval-Seeking (Compliant, Co-operative) Underego;
5. The Narcissistic Underego;
6. The Righteous-Rebellious Underego;
7. The Central Ego which can be sub-divided, Jungian style, into:
7a. The Personna; and 7b. The Shadow;
8. The Dream and Fantasy Weaver;
9. The Superego-Id-Defensive (SID) Vault;
10. The Memory-Learning-Transference (MLT) Template;
11. The Nietzschean 'Superman or Superwoman' of Existential Self-Actualization and Self-Achievement;
12. The Nietzschean Abyss of Self-Defeat (Guilt, Anxiety, Panic, Depression, Grief, Hopelessness, Anger, Rage, Hate, Self-Hate...);
13. Biological/Hormonal Influences on The Id-Ego-Superego-Self;
14. The Genetic Potenetial Self (GPS).

This model may or may not seem relatively simple or complex -- depending on your perspective -- but, one way or the other, it has taken me almost 40 years to build (1972-2011). It is an extension of my 1979 model of what I now call 'The Central Ego'.

Maps, models, concepts, theories, and paradigms -- are only as good as their relative functional usefulness, and as the cognitive theorist, George Kelly (1955, the year I was born) once wrote -- and I am paraphasing from my distant memory going back to my work in the 70s -- all concepts, theories (or 'constructs' in Kelly's terminology) have both a focus and range of usefulness -- meaning that once we extend these contructs 'outside of, or beyond, their range of usefulness, they start to lose their functionality, and instead become  -- 'dysfunctional'.

Now, at this point Kelly's thinking starts to merge with Hegel's dialectic thinking (although I am sure that Kelly didn't see the association) -- and, in fact, it is only now, at this exact moment in time, that I see the associative linke between Hegel's dialectic thinking and Kelly's cognitive theorizing.

Specifically, one-sided, unilateral theories and/or constructs are going to run out of 'real estate' or 'territory' faster than than 'dialectic or bipolar or multi-bipolar or multi-paradigm theories' which can cover significantly more 'territory'...

Thus, a 'trauma-fantasy' dialectic, bipolar theory has the capability of being functionally superior to either a unilateral 'trauma' theory or a unilateral 'fantasy' theory, both of which are going to run out of 'functional usefulness' faster than a well-defined and articulated trauma-fantasy bipolar theory that can cover twice as much 'human phenomenology'. 

Thus, when Hegel asserted that 'every theory carries the seeds of its own self-destruction'...this has dialectic evolutionary implications, specifically...

That a one-sided, unilateral theory is going to deconstruct or self-destruct faster than a well articulated dialectic, bipolar theory such as in physics a 'particle-wavelength' theory which is superior to both a 'particle' theory and a 'wavelength' theory in and by themselves...With the evolution of the bipolar particle-wavelength theory, physics took a 'quantum leap' into the realm of 'Quantum Physics'...

And we can do the same in both psychology and, more specifically, Psychoanalysis...

Thus, the latest name for my 'Underground School of Psychoanalysis' -- 'Quantum-Dialectic Psychoanalysis...

Keep reading me and you will see some 'quantum leaps' in the evolution of Psychoanalytic Theory...

-- dgb, Dec. 12th, 2011,

-- David Gordon Bain,

-- Dialectic Gap-Bridging-And-Integrative-Negotiations...

-- Are Still in Process...
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If you are interested in checking out further references to the work of George Kelly and some of the early cognitve theorists, which evolved in one direction into 'cognitve-behavior theory and therapy' of which I wrote my honours thesis for one of the pioneers and best recognized theorists and therapists in this area -- Dr. Donald Meichenbaum, 1979, at The University of Waterloo, you can find the essay below on the internet...as I just did...



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Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy: Basic Principles and Applications
Robert L. Leahy



American Institute for Cognitive Therapy, NYC

and Weill-Cornell University Medical College

Reprinted with permission of Jason Aronson Publishers. © 1996

Jason Aronson.

This book may be purchased at www.Aronson.com

CHAPTER 2

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

OF COGNITIVE THERAPY

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Newly Updated Quantum-Dialectic Model of The Human Psyche

A/ Our Mainly Conscious Ego-States

01. Our Nurturing Superego;
02. Our Narcissistic Superego;
03. Our Righteous Superego;
04. Our Central (Executive, Mediating) Ego which has two parts;
4a. Our 'Personna'; and
4b. Our 'Conscious Shadow Vault' (CSV);
05. Our Co-operative (Compliant, Approval-Seeking) Underego;
06. Our Narcissistic (Hedonistic-Egotistic) Underego;
07. Our Righteous/Rebellious Underego;


B/ Our Mainly Subconscious Facilitary Ego-Functions/Divsions


08. Our Dream (and Nightmare) Weaver;
09. Our 'Subconscious Shadow Vault' (SSV);
10. Our Memory-Learning-Transference (MLT) Template;
11. Our 'Mountain Foot Hill' of Who We Are And Who We are Capable of Becoming;

12. Our 'Mountain Peak' of Celebratory, Existential Self-Actualization and Self-Achievement;
13. Our 'Dark Abyss' of Lost Hope, Anger, Rage, Hate, Self-Hate, Guilt, Anxiety, Depression, Grief, and/or Despair';
14. Our Biological/Hormonal 'Id Influences'
15. Our Genetic Potential Self (GPS)


-- dgb, December 5th, 8th, 12th, 2011,

-- David Gordon Bain,

-- (DGBAIN) Dialectic Gap-Bridging And Integrative Negotiations...

-- Are Still in Process...

Newly Updated, General Table of Contents

Hegel's Hotel: A Phenomenology of Mind, Body, and Spirit For The 21st Century


Newly Updated, General Table of Contents

Part 1: Introductory Essays on Hegel, Dialectic Logic, and The Dialectic Methodology;

Part 2: Quantum-Dialectic Philosophy: On The History, Evolution, And Integration of Western Philosophy;

Part 3: Quantum-Dialectic Psychology: On The History, Evolution, and Integration of Psychoanalysis and Other Schools of Psychology;

Part 4: Quantum-Dialectic Politics;

Part 5: Quantum-Dialectic Law and Civil Rights;

Part 6: Quantum-Dialectic Business and Economics;

Part 7: A Tribute To My Father's 21st Century Canadian, Romantic Poetry;

Part 8: Quantum-Dialectic Logic and Methodology: Closing Essays

-- dgb, December 5th, 2011,

-- David Gordon Bain,

-- Dialectic Gap-Bridging Negotiations...

-- Are Still in Process...

-- Democracy Goes Beyond Narcissism...