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300 Pages·2013·5.06 MB·English
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SELF AND EMOTIONAL LIFE PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOANALYSIS, AND NEUROSCIENCE I ADRIAN JOHNSTON CATHERINE MALABOU COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW YORK COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS Publishers Since rS93 New York Chichester. West Sussex cup.columbia.edu Copyright © 2013 Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Johnston. Adrian. '974- Self and emotional life : philosophy. psychoanalysis. and neuroscience / Adrian Johnston and Catherine Malabou. p. cm. - (Insurrections) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-231-15830-5 (cloth: alk. paper) - ISBN 978-0-23I-I5831-2 (pbk. : alk. paper) - ISBN 978-0-231-53518-2 (e-book) I. Emotions. 2. Self. 3. Psychoanalysis. 4. Neurosciences. 5. Psychoanalysis and philosophy. I. Malabou. Catherine. II. Title. BF531.J64 2013 J28:2-dc23 Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. This book is printed on paper with recycled content. Printed in the United States ofA merica ClO987654321 PlO9876S4321 Cover image: © Illona WellmannlTrevillion Images Cover design: Lisa Hamm References to websites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared. CONTENTS Prefoce: From Nonfteling to Misfeeling-Afficts Between Trauma and the Unconscious ix Acknowledgments xix PART I. GO WONDER: SUBJECTIVITY AND AFFECTS IN NEUROBIOLOGICAL TIMES CATHERINE MALABOU INTRODUCTION: FROM THE PASSIONATE SOUL TO THE EMOTIONAL BRAIN 1. WHAT DOES "OF" MEAN IN DESCARTES'S EXPRESSION, "THE PASSIONS OF THE SOUL"? 12 2. A "SELF-TOUCHING YOU": DERRIDA AND DESCARTES 3. THE NEURAL SELF: DAMASIO MEETS DESCARTES 4. AFFECTS ARE ALWAYS AFFECTS OF ESSENCE: BOOK 3 OF SPINOZA'S ETHICS 35 5. THE FACE AND THE CLOSE-UP: DELEUZE'S SPINOZIST APPROACH TO DESCARTES 43 6. DAMASIO AS A READER OF SPINOZA 50 7. ON NEURAL PLASTICITY, TRAUMA, AND THE LOSS OF AFFECTS 56 CONCLUSION 63 PART II. MISFELT FEELINGS: UNCONSCIOUS AFFECT BETWEEN PSYCHOANALYSIS, NEUROSCIENCE, AND PHILOSOPHY 73 ADRIAN JOHNSTON 8. GUILT AND THE FEEL OF FEELING: TOWARD A NEW CONCEPTION OF AFFECTS 75 9. FEELING WITHOUT FEELING: FREUD AND THE UNRESOLVED PROBLEM OF UNCONSCIOUS GUILT 88 10. AFFECTS, EMOTIONS, AND FEELINGS: FREUD'S METAPSYCHOLOGIES OF AFFECTIVE LIFE 102 VI • CONTENTS 11. FROM S NIFIERS TO LACAN'S SENThvfENTS AND AFFECTUATfONS 12. EMOTIONAL LIFE AFTER LACAN: FROM PSYCHOANALYSIS TO THE NEUROSCIENCES ISO 13. AFFECTS ARE SIGNIFIERS: THE INFINITE JUDGMENT OF A LACANIAN AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE ISS POSTFACE: THE PARADOXES OF THE PRINCIPLE OF CONSTANCY 211 Notes 225 Index 251} CONTENTS • VII PREFACE FROM NONFEELING TO MISFEELING AFFECTS BETWEEN TRAUMA AND THE UNCONSCIOUS T his book is the product of a fortuitous encounter between two people with significantly overlapping interests as well as fundamental convic tions and intuitions held in common. Adding to this good fortune is the fact that they bring major differences of perspective to these shared grounds. This combination of agreement and disagreement provides an abso lutely ideal foundation for productive exchange and stimulating debate. Catherine and I met in April 2007 at the annual Theory Reading Group conference hosted by Cornell University. During that weekend of intense dis cussions, we quickly recognized each other as well-matched interlocutors. Our backgrounds in Hegelianism, concerns with psychoanalysis, and, especially, beliefs in the importance and urgency of engaging with today's life sciences on the basis of Continental European theoretical traditions from Kant to the present all converged to convince us that we needed to build a lasting collab orative relationship. Our feeling of kinship has been further reinforced by an impression of being together in a marginal position vis-a-vis the majority of Continentalists, with their antinaturalist proclivities and preferences, by vir tue of our fascination with and enthusiasm for things biological. We remain convinced that no genuine materialist philosophy legitimately can neglect the natural sciences generally and that no authentically materialist theory of sub jectivity defensibly can sideline the life sciences specifically. Within weeks following our time together in Ithaca, Catherine and I hatched a plan via e-mail to coauthor a book. After we paused for deliberation, Catherine proposed the topic of affect as a focus for our joint project, express ing a desire to write about wonder in her half of the text. I happily agreed to this. It gave me the opportunity to revisit and more thoroughly digest problems I had been left to grapple with in the wake of my time spent in psychoanalytic training. The question of whether (and, if so, in what sense[s]) affects can be unconscious strictly speaking persistently perturbed Sigmund Freud through out his career and has remained an unresolved controversy in the worlds of psychoanalysis ever since. This issue is a big bone of contention, particularly in French psychoanalytic contexts dominated by Jacques Lacan. It entails far from-negligible consequences for theoretical metapsychology as well as clini cal practice. Compelled by a mixture of personal and intellectual reasons, I wanted to try to tackle the enigmatic (non)rapport between affects and the unconscious. By contrast, Catherine clearly intended to push further the chal lenges to psychoanalysis as a whole posed by her philosophical reflections on the implications of various neuropathologies. As I see it, the main fault line of divergence separating our approaches here is between my more immanent and her more external critiques of the psychoanalytic modeling and handling of the psyche, with our philosophical critiques of analysis nonetheless both being developed in dialogue with neurobiology. Before continuing to sketch an overview of the differences distinguishing my and Catherine's positions, I will offer a sharper outline ofo ur common com mitments, the shared preoccupations that brought us together and continue to cement our fundamental solidarity. For the past several decades, much ink has been spilled by scholars in the theoretical humanities about the intersections of Continental philosophy and the psychoanalytic traditions linked to Freud. However, with a few notable exceptions, Continental philosophers and those scholars in the humanities and social sciences influepced by them have been and remain averse to the prospect of any deep theoretical engagement with the life sciences. Biology as a whole, and the neurosciences in particular, have been largely avoided by such thinkers and writers on the basis of now-outdated (mis) conceptions according to which any such engagement inevitably must result in an ideologically dangerous mechanistic materialism demoting human subjects to the degraded status of mere objectified puppets of an evolutionary-genetic nature. This sort of alibi, speciously justifying an avoidance of philosophically and psychoanalytically responding to the revolutionary advances occurring in the life sciences, is no longer plausible or valid (ifit ever was to begin with). x • PREFACE isn't true that one to sell one's soul in its in order to dance with the devil (although Catherine and I have separate views regarding the nitty-gritty details of this). In fact, over the past half century, scientific matters concern ing neuroplasticity, mirror neurons, epigenetics, and newly proposed revisions to Darwinian depictions of evolution, among other topics, have destroyed the caricature of biological approaches to subjectivity upon which the ever more-hollow excuses of a tired old antinaturalism rely, caricatures depicting such approaches as essentially deterministic and reductive. This antinatural ism leans upon the partially obsolete early-twentieth-century critiques of the natural sciences formulated by, to name just a handful of prominent individu als, Edmund Husser!, Georg Lukacs, Martin Heidegger, and Jean-Paul Sartre. The time is long overdue for psychoanalysis and the ensemble of established Continental philosophical orientations to begin appreciating and seriously working-through a number of developments in the life sciences. Especially for any conceptual framework that wishes to identify itself as materialist, turning a blind eye to these developments seems unpardonable. A completely antinatu ralist, antiscientific materialism is no materialism at all. What might European philosophy and Freudian-Lacanian psychoanalysis look like if sincere and sustained efforts finally are made to digest the many implications for conceptions of the human mind flowing from cutting-edge neuroscientific research? There is very little presently available in print inter facing psychoanalytic metapsychologies with the neurosciences through the mediation of the rich conceptual resources of primarily French and German philosophy from the seventeenth century through today (especially Hegel indebted variants of historical and dialectical materialism arising in the nineteenth century). Furthermore, what currently goes by the name of "neuro psychoanalysis;' primarily an Anglo-American clinical endeavor, entirely ignores the ideas of Lacan and the philosophical sophistication of Lacanian analysis, its sophistication being rooted mainly in the legacies of modern phi losophy beginning with Descartes. One of the several fashions in which the two pieces by Catherine and me brought together in this volume complement each other is through their care fully correlated contrasts in terms of philosophically thinking the relations between psychoanalysis and the neurosciences. Simply stated, whereas Cath erine's primary agenda is to delineate the constraining limits of psychoanal ysis when it is faced with revelations arising from scientific investigations of the brain, my guiding program is targeted at examining how these two fields PREFACE • XI

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