Reinventing the Asexual Infant: On the Recent
"Explosion" in Infant Research
Arthur Efron, State University of New York at Buffalo
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 1985, Vol 6, No. 2, Pages 89-126,
ISSN 0271-0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.] The recent revolution in the study
of the infant involves a massive theoretical shift from considering the infant as
"a passive organism who was the object of forces which determine development,"
a view taken in very different ways by Freud, Watson, and Gesell, to the mapping
out of the competencies that infants have and of the limits to those capabilities.
In the years after 1960, "there has been an explosion of infant research of
all kinds, and our knowledge continues to expand at a rapid rate" (Appleton,
Clifton, and Goldberg, 1975, pp. 102-103). The term "explosion" has occured
repeatedly in the research literature (Klein, 1981b, p. 7; Stern, 1977, p. 144; Stone,
Smith and Murphy, 1973, p. vii; Stratton, 1982a, p. 1), and by now things have simmered
down. Some have urged that the revolution is over and it is time to get on with other,
more important things. But it would be hard to deny that there has been a great access
of new and surprising findings in the study of the infant, with results that are
confusing.
Chapter Six of the book The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective.
The Adult Sexual Body: A Missing Theory
Arthur Efron, State University of New York at Buffalo
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 1985, Vol 6, No. 2, Pages 127-178,
ISSN 0271-0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.] In adult sexuality, there has been
no research explosion underway, at least not since the heyday of Masters and Johnson.
It might be more correct to refer to an "explosion hangover," a period
of relative complacency during which it was assumed that the major facts about adult
sex had become "known." Masters and Johnson initially were to little concerned
with emotions, with relationships, and with adult psychology in general, to prevent
their extraordinary empirical findings from being taken as a script for the oversimplification
of sexuality. There was one earlier, more limited, but potentially explosive breakthrough,
however, which promised to give a new and profound sense of the mind-body, sexuality
and dream relationships. That breakthrough in sleep research was reported (among
other places) in a book widely distributed within the psychoanalytical community.
I refer to Charles Fisher's "Dreaming and Sexuality" (1966), first presented
as the A.A. Brill Memorial Lecture for the New York Psychoanalytic Society in November,
1965, and then printed in a memorial volume dedicated to Heinz Hartmann. Fisher offered
to his psychoanalytic audience and readers some excellent empirical evidence showing
a strong correlation between the occurrence of adult male erections in sleep, and
the occurrence of REM dreaming. The correlation was shown to continue into advanced
age, even into the years during which the male dreamers no longer engaged in sexual
intercourse. Fisher expressed the modest enough hope that his work might be "a
contribution to the psychobiological investigation of the id, "and that it would
help to fulfill Freud's goal "for a future meeting of psychoanalysis and physiology..."
(p. 567). The hypotheses Fisher drew from his research were that some daytime perceptions
and feelings are processed within the dream work, and that the genital area of the
body is indispensible in the neurophysiological event. Sexuality thus acquires an
additional and little understood dimension. The erections of REM dreamers were not
related to recent sexual gratification. Attempts to correlate dream affect with degree
of erection were not successful while correlations with dream content were found.
Fisher found that when the content was erotic, rapid erection accompanied the REM
dream, but if the content was anxiety-provoking (castration anxiety, in the psychoanalytic
terminology), detumescence set in promptly. Similar findings were reported independently
by Karacen, Goodenough, Shapiro, and Witkin (1965). Such a set of findings would
appear to be definite support for Freud's classical psychoanalytic position which
postulates sexual body connections for an enormous range of mental functions. His
masterwork, The Interpertation of Dreams (Freud, 1900), connects dreaming
with sexuality in innumerable ways. Speaking even more generally, Freud wrote in
1905: "...I can only repeat over and over again-for I never find it otherwise-that
sexuality is the key to the problem of the psychoneuroses and that of the neuroses
in general. No one who disdains the key will ever be able to unlock the door."
(1905a, p. 115) Freud realized that "the chemical changes" in the human
organism which must provide an "organic basis" for the neuroses were not
available to the scientific world of 1905; But he held that "we should expect
to find" such changes, given a more powerful method of inquiry (Freud, 1905a,
p. 113). The correlations of REM dreaming and penile erection might well be taken
as an indication of an essential link between sexuality and the human mind. The meanings
of the correlation are still unclear; they could be regarded as an "index of
limbic activity" in the brain during REM dreaming, as Kline (1981, p. 319) points
out. This still would be a facet of the sexual body, and one more such aspect that
would cause us to expand and revise our overall theory of sexuality.
Chapter Seven of the book The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective.
The Sexual Body, Pschoanalysis and Science: Bowlby,
Peterfreund, and Kohut
Arthur Efron, State University of New York at Buffalo
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 1985, Vol. 6, No. 2, Pages 179-218,
ISSN 0271-0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.] The last two chapters have shown
that the sexual body is a perspective demanding a complexity of critical understanding.
The complications probably exceed whatever concepts of sexuality existed at the time
of Freud's classical period. The perspective demands consideration of research on
sexuality in a way that never loses contact with the problematic flesh and blood
realities of the body, yet it does not encourage the temptation to think that we
can some day uncover the preexisting "reality" or "essence" of
sexuality that we have just not happened to find previously. As Dewey would have
warned, there is no certainty to be sought for in the perspective of the sexual body,
although there is every reason to attempt to increase human security by taking hold
of the research results we do have and using them intelligently, as Dewey also held
(Dewey, 1929b). Psychoanalysis as the key discipline for this perspective has not
absorbed or integrated the material presented in the last two chapters, but it remains
the only discipline which is ultimately committed to do so. Although the theories
of Melanie Klein, D.W. Winnicott, Anna Freud, Margaret Mahler, Erik Erikson, George
S. Klein, and others in the psychoanalytic tradition have been shown to be seriously
deficient in their understanding of the sexual body, there is also a set of recent
theorists who provide genuine revision of certain key aspects of psychoanalytic thought.
In these newer theories, the sexual body is not pushed out of sight, or at least
the denials are of a different and probably less severe character. In fact, well
before the recent simultaneous emergence of a series of critical issues for psychoanalytic
theory, that is, before the infant research explosion, before the "trouble"
in the Freud archives over Freud's virtual giving up of the "seduction"
theory, and before the renewed interest in Freud as a "biologist of the mind"
and not a thinker who could get along without the body, there have been highly challenging
reconstructive projects under way in psychoanalytic theory. What seems to be different
about the work of John Bowlby, Emanuel Peterfreund, and Heinz Kohut, in contrast
to many other reformist efforts such as those of Schafer (1976, 1980), is a possibility
for accommodation with the sexual body rather than an effort to dispense with it.
Two of these theorists, Peterfreund and Kohut, avoid basing their work on the model
of the infant sexual body; they have a real sense of adult sexual life which appears
frequently in their writings, even though its position within their theoretical structures
is ambiguous or even dubious. Bowlby has continued to develop theory on the basis
of infant and early childhood considerations, but he has moved a long way from the
object-relations school of psychoanalysis, in which he originally began developing
his theory (Bowlby, 1984, p. 37). Although Bowlby and Peterfreund developed their
theories without knowledge of each other's activity, they have each come to recognize
an affinity between their two approaches (Bowlby, 1981; Peterfreund, 1980).
Chapter Eight of the book The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective.
Lichtenstein, Holland, and Lacan: Ambivalence
Toward the Sexual Body, Cooptation, and Defiance
Arthur Efron, State University of New York at Buffalo
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 1985, Vol. 6, No. 2, Pages 219-242,
ISSN 0271-0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract available.] In this chapter I wish to examine
the recent psychoanalytic revisionist theories of two more thinkers, Heinz Lichtenstein
and Jacques Lacan. Lichtenstein's theory contains provisions which appear to be most
favorable to the sexual body, perhaps the most explicit which have been made in the
past twenty years within a large comprehensive theory. This explicit emphasis on
sexuality is probably exactly what guaranteed that Lichtenstein would be either ignored
among other psychoanalytic thinkers or that he would have his theory taken over,
co-opted, by others who would de-sexualize it. The desexualization in fact took place
in the one field where Lichtenstein has made an impact, that is, in the literary
criticism of Norman N. Holland. Lacan's theory, on the other hand, appears to be
flourishing even though -- unlike Lichtenstein's -- it is expressed in terminology
that is thoroughly innovative and in language that is extremely hard to comprehend
(as almost all his readers agree). Perhaps Lacan made certain that his theory would
not be taken over or co-opted by those who might wish to bowdlerize it; he seems
the perfect examplar, in fact, of C.S. Pierce's insight into the "moral aspect"
of scientific terminology. Pierce maintained that if you do not want your theory
taken over by "loose thinkers," then it should have a "technical vocabulary"
which is "composed of words so unattractive" that only serious investigators
will dare to adopt it (Pierce, quoted by Hyman, 1955, pp. 369-370). As Alderman points
out, there is a strong tradition of semi-deliberate obscurity in European thought,
especially in thought that aspires to impart radical insights (Alderman, 1977). Lacan
is certainly part of that tradition. But the flourishing of Lacanian theory is also
due, I suspect, to its definitive and sophisticated effort to separate psychoanalytic
thinking from the sexual body once and for all.
Chapter Nine of the book The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective.
World Hypotheses and Interdisciplinary Sciences
in Intimate Relation
Arthur Efron, State University of New York at Buffalo
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 1985, Vol. 6, No. 2, Pages 243-286,
ISSN 0271-0137
[Note: First paragraph, no abstract avilable.] The perspective of the sexual body
seems to have been turning up in each of the disciplines I have discussed. Such ubiquity,
however, may be a mixed blessing insofar as the perspective is intended to clearly
exhibit interdisciplinary relationships amd at the same time make for a more valuable,
coherent study of sexuality in all its dimensions. To what extent is the perspective
a potentially scientific point of view? As Pepper understood the problem of scientific
hypotheses, none of the hypotheses of science can be considered to have unrestricted
scope (Pepper. 1982). Yet the perspective of the sexual body threatens to balloon
interminably. I have attempted to show that psychoanalysis is the key discipline
for such a perspective, but the key may not act as a useful control precisely because
it is grounded in an incompletely specified theory of sexuality. Indeed, Freud's
grasp of the necessarily open definition of sexuality, given his new insights into
pyschosocial pervasiveness, was probably a saving element in his own integrity as
a scientific thinker, for as Willbern has argued, Freud tended his most intimate
fantasy life (as shown in his dreams) to move toward a sense of closure and certainty
(Willbern, 1979). The fact that in his theory of sexuality Freud resisted this tendency,
this deep need of his own personality. gave psychoanalysis its resilience as a potentially
scientific discipline; within the psychoanalytic tradition, sexuality became an unending
series of "objects of knowledge" (Dewey, 1929a), rather than a hopelessly
dogmatic claim to have "discovered" what sexuality "is." Sexuality
might also be illuminated by disciplines outside of psychoanalysis. Freud's hope
that biology would eventually contribute an understanding of the psychology of bisexuality
is one instance (see Chapter Seven). It is one instance out of many in which the
results of research in one discipline regarding sexuality will affect not merely
one or more theories in other specializations, but will cause larger ripples in the
shared social and scientific assumptions about the general nature of sexuality. What
seems to occur in such cross-fertilization of the disciplines, wherever sexuality
is the focus, is the development of a large, unlimited hypothesis which Pepper would
not call a scientific hypothesis at all (even though it must have empirical foundations
in order to be cognitively valuable). Instead, the scientific understanding of sexuality,
when it includes the psychological dimensions of sex, tends to move toward becoming
a world hypothesis (Pepper, 1942). The perspective of the sexual body, in other words,
may turn out to be a way of focusing upon the sexual elements in any hypothesis of
what the world is probably like, but it may also prove to be a generating force in
theory for the construction of a relatively new and relatively adequate world hypothesis.
Chapter Ten of the book The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective.