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Robert M. Young Online Writings
Darwin, Marx, Freud: The Foundations of the Human Sciences
by Robert M. Young
My purpose today is to raise issues in order to stimulate or catalyse a worthwhile
discussion. I shall try to do so by means of pointing to controversies while making my own
views as plain as I can. I have points to make about recent scholarship but want to keep
these for the discussion.
It will be more or less obvious to everyone here - more or less, depending on his or
her ideological framework - that every word in my title (with the possible exception of
'of' and 'the') is highly controversial in many overlapping, interacting and mutually
constitutive ways. For example, are the works of Darwin, Marx and Freud the right ones to
place at the foundations of the human sciences? I would say yes and find it difficult to
imagine other candidates. Indeed, I thought for some time after writing that sentence, and
could not come up with anyone else of the stature of any of those three thinkers. I have
in my time been a close student of the works of Franz Joseph Gall and of Herbert Spencer,
each of whom was in his day considered the most profound thinker about human nature, and
the claims of each had its merits. It is important to remember, however, that neither they
nor others for whom I can reach with little conviction - for example, Schutz, Vygotsky,
Watson, Pavlov, Weber, Durkheim, Parsons, - have reputations, or have inspired enduring
traditions which approach those of the founders of the modern theory of evolution, of
historical materialism, and of psychoanalysis. Their influence has the further historical
merit of setting a framework outside of which it is difficult to think. Moreover, when
people formulate their oppositional views, they always do so in the light of the concepts
of these dramatically profound figures in the history of theory, of research, and of
practice. As I think back on my own work as a reader, scholar, teacher and practitioner,
theirs are the ideas with which I have increasingly and persistently found myself
preoccupied.
Of course, each has his vehement enemies and gainsayers. This is least true of Darwin,
about whom few would disagree, since his work knitted together everything living and
placed history at the heart of the study of life, the environment and human nature, and
their interrelations. On the other hand, few in the West would agree about Marx and few in
the East about Freud. Of those who would place one or other or both in his or her
pantheon, disagreements would begin very quickly about readings of their works. I
am thinking of Marxist humanists who emphasise the Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts
of 1844 and who read the later Marx in the light of those Hegelian and Feuerbachian
reflections. This approach is opposed by those who would posit a more or less sharp
version of an epistemological break after which Marx was said to be a scientist focussing
on putatively objective concepts like exploitation and surplus value rather than
humanistic and subjective ones like alienation (sometimes translated as 'estrangement')
and 'species being'. There are both nineteenth and twentieth century
versions of the humanistic or utopian versus the scientific or scientistic Marxists.
There are, of course, many nuanced positions on either side of these broad dichotomies,
just as there are reflexive and hermeneutic positions which emphasise the scientificity of
Marxism while placing humanistic categories at the heart of their concepts. Indeed, some
would argue that psychoanalysis, not physics or physiology, is the paradigm science.
There are broadly similar controversies about Freud - scientist versus humanist - and
if scientist, do we refer the scientificity to his physiological and biological work,
thereby grounding psychoanalysis in biology a la Sulloway; or do we seek the foundations
in the study of language a la Lacan? If we adhere to the humanistic side of the divide, do
we take a tough line a la Marcuse and Bettleheim or a soft one a la Fromm? Other versions
of this dichotomy lie between scientistic ego psychology and humanistic traditions such as
the Middle or Independent Group of the British Psychoanalytical Society, embracing the
theories of, for example, Winnicott and Rycroft.
There are also strict and reductionist Darwinians, for example the
militant reductionism of Frances Crick or the positivistic and decontextualised thinking
of Ernst Mayr and Michael Ghiselen. There is an existentialist version of Darwinism in the
writing of Jacques Monod. There are also scientistic Darwinians of the right such as
Michael Ruse and humanistic ones of the left, among whom I would count myself and Jim
Moore, while seeing the work of John Greene and John Durant as centrist.
Just as the meanings of Darwin, Marx and Freud are problematic so are
the other terms in my title: foundations, human and sciences. Controversies rage on the
locus of the foundations of the human sciences. Are they biological, political, cognitive,
cultural? Which comes first and how do they interrelate?
The concept of 'human' is fragility itself - forever in danger of being reduced to the
biological or, latterly, to the linguistic. To argue for the primacy of the personal, the
evaluative and the humanistic and to assert that these categories are epistemologically
prior to body or mind, that is, to biology or psyche, has until recently been seen as
naive. A related way of putting this point is to say that a human science is a
contradiction in terms. In so far as something is scientific, it is reducible to the
physico-chemical or (if only temporarily) to the physiological, the operant and/or the
genetic. In so far as it is human in the humanistic sense, it is derivative of historical,
social and biographical modes of discourse. How, if at all, can we reconcile these?
In attempting to do so, I would ask what is the meaning of history, by
which I mean historicalness or historicity. This was a question for Darwin, for Marx and
for Freud. Another form of the question is, 'What is the meaning of experience?' How can
we learn from experience? In each case, there was a depressing alternative, since their
enemies were, respectively, fatalistic loss of faith in progress, fetishism or the
treatment of social relations as though they were relations between things what we now
call reification; and (in Freud's case) the pessimistic belief that although we can
understand unconscious motivation, we may not be able to change it in the individual or
the culture. Freud once told Jones, his biographer, that he had been half-converted to
Bolshevism. A Bolshevik predicted great carnage followed by universal happiness. Freud
said he believed the first half.
How do these questions bear on the discussion at this conference? These are clearly
vital issues for many scholars. They are vital for one's sense of self in theory and in
practice. In my own case they could not be more urgent. I consider myself a Darwinian and
have done research in that tradition for three decades. At present, illiberal and
reductionist notions of Darwinism are rampant in sociobiology, in genetic engineering and
in social Darwinist political and ethical philosophies which are prevalent in countires in
the first and third worlds. I am also a Marxist at a time when one is hard pressed to
point to regimes anywhere in the world where Marxism is promoting human liberty and
progress. I like to think that this is so in Nicaragua. It's all too easy to point to
Marxist sects in the first world which are utterly out of touch with political reality and
Marxist regimes which are out of touch with the aspirations of their poeple and are
sources of shame to Marxists throughout the world. It is also hard - though not impossible
- to point to Marxist groups and scholars of whom one is proud.
Finally, I am a psychoanalytical psychotherapist at a time when the
social location and beliefs of most professionally trained analysts are far from the
social, political and ideological issues which must be addressed if psychoanalysis is to
contribute towards a better world.
From where I sit and think and practice, there is more movement towards
enlightenment among dissidents in and around psychoanalysis than among Darwinians or
Marxists. I don't wish to denigrate those who hold high the banners of enlightenment in
biology or Marxism, for example, Lewontin, Levins, Williams or Eagleton. But I would say that there are more promising stirrings among people who are trying to extend
psychoanalysis in to the area of thinking about our species, about society and about
culture and politics.
Examples which I would cite are:
1. The Kleinian and Winnicottian attempts to link culture - including science itself -
to our most primitive psychological functions and to point out the persistence of the
primitive in our most putatively mature cultural creations. Much of this work is occurring
under the influence of Wilfred Bion's psychoanalytical epistemology and Donald Winnicott's
concepts of transitional objects and transitional phenomena as the fundamental particles
of culture.
2. The attempt to look at war and aggression in psychoanalytic terms is
beginning to bear fruit. This is occurring in the work of Barry Richards, Karl Figlio, F.
Fornari, G. Bovensiepen and Hanna Segal. I regret that I cannot say the same of
psychoanalytic approaches to racism, although there are stirrings in this direction, as
well.
3. The attempt to unify the psychoanalytic study of biography with
large scale historical and cultural forces in a Marxist perspective. The work of Victor
Wolfenstein has set new standards in integrating psychobiography with history. Standards
in psychobiography and psychohistory need considerable attention and rigour before the
scepticism with which they have justifiably been met should be relaxed. Wolfenstein is my
own best example, while the recent writings of Peter Gay seem to me to be worth critical
examination.
4. There is a need to broaden and deepen the meaning of the human spirit for both
psychoanalysis and Marxism. Both have a tendency to reify - to reach for laws when
solidarity and will stop. Liberation theology is an area which is challenging both
psychoanalytic and Marxist limitations. Having done notable work in criticising facile
tendencies in psychotherapy and in writing about racism, Joel Kovel is now at work on the
bearing of liberation theology on psychoanalysis and Marxism. I agree with him that this
is a profound movement in theory and practice.
5. My last growth point offers a chance to bring together the
perspectives of Darwin, Marx and Freud. It leads us to the question at the foundations of
the human sciences: what is basic, how amenable to change is human nature and how can we
bring about more humane human relations? As I see it, all these matters come together in
the problematic Marxist notion of 'second nature'. First nature is the biologically
given - a domain whose boundaries have themselves never been clearly drawn and are now
quite open as a result of the phenomena of pharmacology,biofeedback (intraditional and
modernforms) and genetic engineering (an areain which the future is open in both positive
and alarming senses).
But without pushing those boundaries between the voluntary and
involuntary nervous system and between mere inheritance and manipulated inheritance, we
have a large scope for deep reflection and serious practice. Historians of the human
sciences will know that belief in the extreme plasticity of human behaviour has been held
by behaviourists, operant conditioning theorists and those thinking in the related
tradition of Pavlovian conditioning. At the other extreme, behavioural geneticists and
sociobioligists have held relatively pessimistic views on the potential for change in
human behaviour. Moreover, the sociobiologists have made various takeover bids into ethics
and the social sciences, although these seem under control for the present.
There is a similar continuum on the optimism/pessimism axis among
psychoanalysts. Does psychoanalysis or psychoanalytical psychotherapy change the self or
merely adapt it to the given of the inner and outer worlds? Second nature is history
experienced as if it were unmodifiable - as though it were not amenable to change through
practice and enlightenment. Belief in the ability to learn through practical experience is
the sine qua non of an enlightened human science, however onerous and slow the
process of change. Those of us in the East and West who reached for rapid change in the
nineteen-sixties have learned a lot about the pace that one can hope for.
Neurosis is a perfect example of second nature. On a larger scale so is
racism. On a still larger scale so are capitalism and eastern European socialism. Beyond
these in a degree of generality lie hierarchy and patriarchy. An important desideratum for
a human science is the study of the relative refractoriness to change of various aspects
and levels of human nature.
The writings I have found most helpful in understanding second nature are both
Freudo-Marxist. They are the works of Herbert Marcuse and Russell Jacoby, although other
members of the Frankfurt school, as well as the Lukacs of History and Class
Consciousness, and various Hungarian philosophers, have also thought about it. Both
Marcuse and Jacoby have written widely against various reductionisms - Darwinian, vulgar
Marxist and biologistic Freudian. They have also essayed against extremes of voluntarism
and Dionysiac Freudianism. Both have been concerned to pay due respect to the given in
biology, economics, culture and therapy while striving for a better psychic and social
order. Both have de-emphasised traditional notions of class struggle as the key to social
change and have focussed more clearly on cultural and other political processes. Their
perspectives are complemented by the writings of Gramsci on the subtle ways in which
consent is organised. In addition to his concept of hegemony, I have benefitted from
Raymond Williams' writings on cultural materialism. His critique of the
base-superstructure model of vulgar Marxism stresses the complexity of mediation between
culture, on the one hand, and the production and reproduction of real life on the other.
Indeed, he adds the crucial insight that culture is in the base - a material, that is, spiritual need. Raymond Williams died between the delivery and the publication of this talk. His
voice - its substance and its tone - are central to my conception of humanity, and I wish
to dedicate my remarks to his memory.
This brings us back to basics. Look how Darwin, Marx and Freud are mutually
constitutive. Darwin brings historicity to the heart of the sciences linking life to the
earth and our humanity to both. Teleolgical and anthropromorphic concepts lie at the basis
of his concept of natural selection. Marx teaches us the historicity of all - including
scientific - concepts and points out that there is only one science, the science of
history. Freud teaches us that all of history and culture continue to be mediated by basic
human drives and that no matter how high we reach into abstractions, our thought remains
rooted in primitive psychic mechanisms.
It would seem, then, that our conception of a human science must always
draw on these three dimensions of what Marx calls our species being. The historical,
conceptual and practical tasks that follow from this will surely occupy all of at least to
the retiring age.
We have in these three thinkers - at first glance -biology, economics and the psyche,
but looked at more closely each takes us to history and historicity, to culture and its
roots and to the question of the nature and extent of what is distinctly human - the
limits, the realities, the visions, aspirations and achievements now and in the future. As
I read them, each offers us a conception of the disciplined study of humanity which always
retains a notion of human values in action as the central guiding conception. None will do
alone, while the task of integrating them in historical studies and in theory has hardly
begun. Their writings span the century between about 1840 and 1940. Darwin (1809-82) and
Marx (1818-83) were - how easily we forget this - near contemporaries and published their
main works almost simultaneously. They died within a year of each other just over a
hundred years ago. (Indeed 1986 was the centenary year of Darwin's Life and Letters.)
Freud was a toddler of three years when The Origin of Species and An
Introduction to the Critique of Political Economy appeared in 1859. The problematic of
his life's work makes little sense without seeing both Darwin and Marx as providing the
framework of ideas and aspirations about nature and human nature which he addresses. All
three are very much alive today - vivid - providing us with the terms of reference for
both a realistic and a cautiously hopeful view of our humanity.
This is the text of a talk delivered to CHEIRON, the international society for the
history of the human sciences, Brighton. It appeared in the newsletter of the society,
Spring 1988, pp. 7-12.
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Rd., London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
© The Author
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