Monday, December 31, 2018

Fear of life


Fear of life

Nietzsche’s descriptions of the architectural metaphors of knowledge and culture, beautifully abridged by Sarah Kofman (1972/1993, pp. 59–80), provide invaluable material for psychotherapy. Whether understood as a progression or as each containing and implying the others, the following images are found in his writings: beehive, tower, pyramid, columbarium, and spider’s web. Mainly intended as metaphors describing the trajectory of knowledge and culture, they are also, in my view, inextricably linked to how we ordinarily understand the relationship between the self and the world. To apprehend Nietzsche’s contribution in this way is to see him as both physician of culture and psychologist of the individual psychic domain.

a      The beehive of knowledge – where “our treasure is to be found” (Nietzsche, 1887/1996, p. 3) – represents the resolute and concerted activity of science. Used by Nietzsche to indicate the orderly organization of cultural/scientific ideas, it is still instinctual, and its beauty, though “not disinterested … is symptomatic of … neediness” (Kofman, 1972/1993, p. 62). In the same ways as bees build cells and fill them with nectar that has been gathered outside, so science builds an empty structure and crams it with the world. Being a semiology (system of signs) as well as a mythology (an extensive series of narratives), all science can do is attempt to describe the world. It does not and cannot explain it. Already with the beehive, only the first rung in this series of architectural images, we find a theme that will remain constant throughout successive stages. Having collected the nectar of experience from the external world, we too, “spiritual bees from birth, [have] our hearts set on one thing only – ‘bringing something home’” (Nietzsche, 1887/1996, p. 3). We carefully preserve the treasure of experience gained in our forays into the external world within a remarkable, precarious structure. This is in many ways understandable and even legitimate. The problem arises once we gradually start believing that the descriptions gathered and classified within the edifice of knowledge – and within the cocoon of our self-construct – are not merely interesting attempts at describing the world but constitute its very essence. At the ‘beehive stage’, there are still signs of life: the link with the natural world is still tangible, the treasure gathered is still nourishing. This state of affairs soon changes, however, once the initial structure begins to morph into the next – the tower.

b      The tower, or medieval fortress, boldly asserts itself as a stronghold of knowledge. Here the link to nature (as with instinct and intuition) slackens considerably. The tower’s purpose is to guard the treasure of knowledge against life itself. Individually, one must defend oneself against everything which affirms life, whether within, or outside of oneself” (Kofman, 1972/1993, p. 89). Collectively, the tower becomes a Tower of Babel: it knits an intricately artificial language whose aim is to turn living processes into an imaginary set of quantitative measurements. There is no doubt that this has helped the preservation of the human species; we found shelter and solace within this rigid, computable structure. But we also paid a high price, for it separated us from the living world. How can we become immune to the perceived dangers life poses for us? By playing dead, by being dead in life: “The rigidity of the construction mimics that of a skeleton; it is only by being always already dead in life that we can survive” (Kofman, 1972/1993, p. 66). The skeletal rigidity provides inspiration for building the next structure, the pyramid.

c      If some degree of uncertainty still lingered in the previous stages, parallel to a traceable, if dimmed, echo of life – the pyramid presents us with the certainty, hierarchy and perceived stability of a ‘true’ order, rational and reasonable, confidently set against a ‘false’ phenomenal world of varying impressions and unreliable appearances. Life itself is entombed within this structure, in exchange for the great achievement of fathoming a new “regulative” and “imperative” (Schrift, 1990, p. 89) conceptual world made up of sensory impressions that have been captured, killed and skinned. Once turned into mummies, they can now be more comfortably relied upon.

d      The move from the orderly and hierarchical mummification within the pyramid to the next architectural structure is but a brief step. Whilst the pyramid is still a noble tomb, where life, in some very impoverished form, is still at least conceivable, the Roman columbarium (a room or building with niches for funeral urns to be stored) preserves ashes of the dead, and can be compared, according to Nietzsche, to concepts in science, which are merely the dregs of metaphors. At this stage, all remnants or faint connections between life and the occupants of this structure have been cut off. The structure is no mere depository of concepts but ends up being the very place we inhabit. At the same time, Nietzsche is genuinely in awe of the genius of construction shown at every stage of this process. The building of several intricate temples and tombs of knowledge, and of complex concepts about ourselves – they all deserve our admiration. Even so, we would do well to remember that these structures rest on an illusory base, one which is “made out of the very material of those it has to shelter and protect” (Kofman, 1972/1993, p. 69). By the time all life has completely and irretrievably vanished from the picture, the last metamorphosis takes place.

e      If there was any doubt, up to this point, as to the profoundly reactive nature of this process, the emergence of the spider’s web reveals the inherent destructiveness of the entire project of acquisition of knowledge and of the one-sided consolidation of the self-construct. The worthy industriousness of the bees results in, and perhaps even conceals, the harmfulness of the spider’s web, a harmfulness which, one must remember, is not rooted in animosity but in “necessity” (Kofman, 1972/1993, p. 69). A spider’s web on a sunny day, seen against the light, is a wondrous thing. It is easy to forget that the spider is also a vampire that sucks the blood of midges it has attracted into its nets, in the same way as the concept disfigures life, makes it pale and sad (ibid., p. 69). The act of converting the rich life of the world into an array of metaphysical narratives, whether ‘religious’ or ‘scientific’, is motivated by a nihilistic will. This is, in Sarah Kofman’s wonderful turn of phrase, “a sign of a life which is afraid of life”, a life that is anxious of “being seduced by sensuality because it would not be strong enough to bear its intoxication” (ibid., p. 72); a life that advocates objectivity and detachment from the senses because, despite a yearning for closer contact with the world, it is unable to endure it. Parallels with Freud’s notion of the spider as symbol of castration, representing the phallic mother, are unavoidable and deeply resonant. It seems fitting to think of the enterprises of knowledge, science and metaphysics as elaborate schemes unconsciously aimed at enfeebling this uncertain and bountiful life to manageable and measurable levels.

Psychotherapy too, despite its revolutionary beginnings, is fast becoming another implement in the hands of an all-encompassing nihilistic project. This demonstrates the cunning of the latter’s more recent incarnations, namely neoliberalism and its cultural appendix, neopositivism. That it does so while managing to repeat mantra-like the tenets of its once progressive endeavour can be seen, depending on one’s sensibility, as ingenious, comical, or sad.

Bazzano, Manu. Nietzsche and Psychotherapy (pp. 100-103). Taylor and Francis. 2019, Kindle edition.

Cf. Kofman, S. (1972/1993). Nietzsche and Metaphor, trans. D. Large . London: Athlone.