Civilization #57: How Modernism Ruined Everything

Civilization · Episode 57 · 1h 3m

Transcript

Okay. Um good morning. Today we do um Sigma Freud. Uh first what I will do is I will put Freud in the context of the western religious intellectual and literary tradition. All right.

So in the beginning um the main religion for us humans during the um ice age was animism. Okay. And the idea of animism is that we humans are no are no different from every other living conscious being in the world. Uh we are like the trees. We are like the animals.

We're all interconnected together. And life is just a cycle um of life and death, birth and rebirth. All right. And this is this religion is still around today in many primitive societies for example in the Amazon. And then we transition to the mother goddess.

So as we became more agricultural, fertility was more more important. We need to have more children and we needed to grow more crops. And so we began to worship the mother goddess and women were of very high status uh at this stage in history. But as populations grew and towns came into being, they came into competition with each other. They start to war against each other and this created polytheism.

Polytheism is the idea that each place has its own god. That's its patron. And when these places come into conflict and war, the way they settle disputes is the losing party, their god becomes servant to the winning god. And this creates the idea of the pantheon that we see in Greek Roman mythologies as well as Norse mythologies. Now the radical break from this tradition was the birth of montheism.

Now um there's going to be a lot of scholarly debate about which was the first monotheistic religion. Some say um there are certain Egyptian cults that were monotheistic. Some say the Jews were. Some say the Zoroastrians were. in this class.

Um, what you what you learn is actually it was the Christians who were the first true monotheistic religion. And the reason why is the Christians introduced the idea of the Holy Trinity. All right? Can remember what the Holy Trinity is. The Holy Trinity.

The idea is God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. These are different entities, but they are co-equal to each other. They are separate but unified. They are different but equal. And this idea um it's very hard for us to logically reconcile.

The only way for us to understand this is if God is both nothing and everything. Therefore, it excludes everything. There can be no other God with our God. Okay? And this is the idea of montheism.

And the power of montheism is that for the first time in human history, it creates the idea of the individual because when God is everything, you have a direct connection with God and it removes you from the community. Okay? Now this will create a lot of problems in the future. But at this point in history, remember monotheism is being promoted by the Roman Empire as a way to consolidate its rule over its vast territory. At this stage in history, this is not a problem.

And the reason why is mediating you and God is the Catholic Church. But not only that, the Catholic Church mediates God for everyone. So in this way the church create its own community. Okay. So at this stage in history this is not a problem.

But remember um the church becomes corrupt and there are many religious form reformers who believe that you don't really need the church in order to access God. In fact, you have a moral imperative to access God directly through the Bible. You have to read the B Bible by yourself and you have to interpret it properly. Okay? And so obviously the most sim reformer is Martin Luther.

Now this is important because what will happen is by limiting the church you create direct direct access to God and this creates the idea of crisis in faith. The idea of crisis in faith is how do you truly know as a person whether or not you love God and how do you know God loves you? Think about your mother, right? You know your mother loves you and you know you love your mother, but there are many days when you really hate your mother and you fight with your mother. Okay.

So um it's hard for us not to doubt ourselves. And so this creates the crisis in faith because um in Protestinism you are required to show absolute faith and devotion in God. If you doubt, if you hesitate, you will be condemned to hell. Right? So this creates idea of crisis in faith.

Um historically there have been many solutions to this problem. different um uh prophets have proposed different solutions. So let's look at three different solutions. All right. So the first solution is the idea of wealth accumulation.

All right. So the these are the Calvinists, right? They argue that to show your true faith in God and for you to prove to yourself God truly loves you, you make a lot of money. Right? That is a testament to the power of your faith, wealth accumulation.

So that's one solution. It's a very popular solution. It's what gives us capitalism today. The second solution is that if jihad, you will die for your faith. You'll sacrifice yourself to promote the truth of God.

Right? That's also a solution. Um and then there's one more solution that we will discuss today and it's hard for us to truly understand. So I'm I'm going to take some time to explain it fully. Okay.

This is the idea of transgression. So um let me explain it to you slowly. The idea is this. You must demonstrate complete and abute faith in God to be one of the elect to go to heaven. To do so, you must demonstrate courage.

Um you must um demonstrate fanaticism. The best way to do that is to prove yourself to God by rejecting the laws of men, by rejecting human morality, by um rejecting social taboos, by breaking social taboss as you demonstrate your faith in God. Right? Now, I know this sounds like a strange idea. Um but let me give you an example to show you what this means.

Let's just say that in school I decide to start a new class and this new class is called individual empowerment. And my very first assignment to all my students is I want you guys to go shoplift. I want you guys to go steal a piece of candy from a small store. And of course you are disgusted and you are appalled by this suggestion. What if you get caught?

Well, you might get expelled from school. You might be uh jailed. Your parents may punish you. You may be outcast from society. And then I tell you as and then I tell you have faith.

Trust me, when you do this and you break the social taboo that's preventing you from real realizing your full potential, you will feel an extreme sense of exhilaration, liberation, excitement, and this will motivate you to do greater things in life. By breaking taboos, by transgression against society and showing your true faith in God, you will master your destiny. Okay? And so you guys go and you go steal something from the store. You get away with it and guess what?

You feel excited. You feel exhilarated. You feel energized. Okay? And that's the idea of transgression.

And um this has always been a very uh um this and and this has been around for us for like hundreds of years as well. Okay. So these are the three main ways that historically um the religious practitioners practitioners practitioners have tried to resolve the issue of the crisis of faith right wealth accumulation that's calminist jihad and but you you also have transgression remember transgression it's very important for discussion okay so remember this idea now um another way to resolve the crisis in faith is through philosophy epistemology ology. Epistemology. Epistemology is really just means the theory of knowledge.

How do ideas come together? What does knowledge come from? How do we know what we know? Right? Because the question of crisis of faith is essentially how do we know?

So, epistemology is really um philosophy's attempt to resolve this crisis in faith. Remember before we discussed Kant and Kant proposed the idea of active subjectivity. Active subjectivity is the idea that we are not just passive uh consumers of information. We actively participate in reality. We imagine reality in a way that allows us to understand it.

Um what Kant tells us is we imagine space and time onto reality which creates a world of appearance for us to understand. The problem with Kant is what is reality and Kant doesn't know. In fact, he tells us it is impossible to truly understand reality. And this creates a problem because if that's the case, then how do we know if reality exists or not? It's entirely possible that we are in a computer simulation, right?

So, so Hegel comes along and resolves this issue by introducing the idea of the gist. Okay, the gist, the spirit, the mind. He argues that this is the manifestation of God that is the underlying basis of all reality. And from this reality comes the material world. What h what will then happen is that markx will come along and he will argue that guys is really history.

Hegel believes that the gist is in a process of rec reconciling itself with the world. It's becoming the world. It's bringing us along with it so that one day everyone will achieve full enlightenment. Markx inverts Hegel and puts the material world before the world of ideas and he argues that history it is a movement of class struggle and the end of history is when all class struggle ceases and we all become equal in a workers's paradise. Why?

Because as capitalism becomes worse and worse, as the politer increase in number but are exploited in greater uh but but are oppressed by the capitalists, eventually the politer, you and me will develop class consciousness and we will unite. We will overthrow the capitalist class through collective action. Okay. So this is Markx. Now today we will study Freud because what will happen is Freud will come along and he will present a completely different conception of the movement of history and of the individual.

He argues that the individual is really just unconscious forces embedded within the brain. Okay. So these three forces are the superego, the ego and the id. The ego is who we think we are. The super ego are these social forces that act upon us.

And the id are these hidden sexual urges. And what he will argue is actually these hidden sexual urges are the true foundations of who we are as well as of civilization. And he names two of them. Okay. The first is what is called the edypo the edypole complex.

And the second is electro complex. So remember that Edypuz is a character from Greek mythology, a king who killed his father and married his mother. Electra is also a character from uh Greek mythology. Um a woman who wanted to kill um her um mother and marry his father. Okay.

Uh, Electra is from the Ishelis play the Aristia. Um, Freud was remarkably well read in Greek mythology as well as world literature. So he argues these are the two fundamental basis of who we are. If you're a man, you are the edible complex. If you have if you're a woman, you are the you have the electro complex.

Okay. Now um this is all strange because Kant makes sense. Hegel makes sense. Markx makes sense. They all seem to flow from each other.

And then you have Freud. Okay. So the question then is where did he get this idea? Where where's this from? How did he develop this idea?

All right. So, so, so we'll look at this question in great detail today. All right. So, at so um everyone sort of knew that Freud's theory of unconscious is problematic. Um, and he had a very famous student, his best student, his hair parent named Carl Young.

And Carl Young really saw Freud as a father and he worshiped Freud and he wanted to improve on Freud's theory of the unconscious and over time what Carl Young will do is he will systemize this idea. Okay. So for Carl Young we have the ego and the ego is made up of two forces. the conscious force and the subconscious. The subconscious is also divided into the personal as well as the collective.

Sorry, uh it's not subconscious, it's unconscious. Okay, unconscious. So the personal conscious are just our our memories or experiences. The collective unconscious is the collection of all society's memories and experiences. Um, and they are captured and expressed whenever we engage in society, when we eat the food, when we talk to people, when we watch movies, when we read books.

Okay, the collective unconscious is embedded through society. You breathe it like you would breathe air. Okay. So, um K uh sorry, Yun also says that we have the enemist and the enema. In other words, we sorry, in other words, we are made up of two opposing forces, the male and the female.

There's a duality to us. Um so when when we meet people the ego projects a persona. Okay the persona is just basically our best self in a certain social context. So so in school you're a student and you try to be the best student. At home you're a daughter.

Um at McDonald's you're a friend. Okay. So so you are different personas in different social contexts. Now we try to protect our best self but we are made up of a lot of bad memories, bad thoughts. So the ego suppresses uh the worst aspects of us in a shadow form.

Okay. So the shadow is really the alter ego of the ego and this Y argues is what is called the self. All right. And what he tells us is life is a constant process of self-discovery. If you truly want to master yourself, you must discover who you are.

And that will take a lifetime of um self-exloration guided by a psychotherapist. All right? And this sounds much more logical, right? and it's become really the standard model for modern day psychology. Now, you would think that Freud would be happy that Coyong came up with this new idea on how to improve his theory, but Freud um was infuriated that Yung would question his theory.

In fact, Freud was notorious for being a control freak. He re he executed Yun, refused to have any anything to do with him. In fact, everyone in the community around Freud um would now distance distance themselves from Cole Young and there would be no reconciliation between the two ever. And that's why and that's why Co had to had to go and develop this this theory. Okay.

So, um and it's strange because all Cole Young is trying to do is improve Freud. So, that le that gives us the second question. What why was Freud so afraid of criticism? Why why was he so secretive? All right.

And then the third question that we will look at today is why did this idea become so popular? In fact, the ideas of Freud and Cole Yun will become the basis of a major cultural movement called modernism. And modernism is the cultural movement that we still live in today. Now there are many different definitions of modernism but for us the easiest definition is cult of the self. We live in a world in a society in a culture that's obsessed with ourselves with self-improvement with self-empowerment.

All right. So um we will look at where this came from. Okay. So the three questions we're looking at today is first of all where did Freud get this idea for the edible complex? Second is why was Freud so secretive?

The third question is what explains Freud's popularity? Why was he why was he so influential and why was his influence able to spread so quickly? And what I will show you today is Freud became so influential and so famous not because his psychoanalyst system was designed to help his patients. Ultimately, his system was designed to pro protect the interests of powerful interests, powerful men. Okay, that's my argument to you uh today.

Okay. So, having made the general argument, what I want to do now is look at the evidence to support the argument. Okay. So um again this is a chart that summarizes the different perspectives of these four major thinkers Kant Hegel Marx and Freud. Okay so to summarize the main ideas Freud believes that our sexual urges is what underpins our identity as well as civilization.

It's because we cannot control our sexual urges that gives rise to religion which helps us um cope with our guilt. Okay. Um he also believes that truth lies and our suppressed memories and in his framework God has abandoned us. There's really no God in his system. We are left to fend for ourselves.

We are left to deal with the trauma being alone. All right. So um let's put Freud in his historical context. So Freud lived and worked um at the end of the 19th century primarily in Vienna and at this time Europe was going through fundamental, social, cultural, economic, political change. Um we were transitioning from the preodern era to the modern era.

Before we lived primarily in towns and villages where we dealt with each other emotionally and we had a purpose in our community but when we moved to the cities um it is money and the clock that regulates our life and it's still true today. Right? So um when you come to school um what controls your behavior it's the it's it's your grades as well as the clock right if you are late for class if you're not if you're absent then you are then your grades get deducted right so it's the same concept as we have today all right um now because of these social changes in two new fields sociology and psychology are developed in order to try to um understand what these changes mean for us as humans. So in the field of sociology there are three major thinkers pioneers of this time Max Weber, Eml Durkham and this man George Siml and George Siml wrote a wonderful essay called the metropolis and mental life in which he describes what the impact of moving to the city has on people. Okay, so we'll just read a couple sentences.

Instead of reacting emotionally, the metropolitan type reacts primarily in a rational manner, thus creating a mental predominance through the intensification of consciousness which in turn is caused by it. Thus, the reaction of the metropolitan person to those events is moved to a sphere of mental activity which is least sensitive and which is furthest removed from the depths of the personality. Okay, so let's use a metaphor. Let's think about food. When you're in the village, you grow your own food and then you make the food, you eat it, and that's it.

Okay? You know exactly where the food comes from. You know how it's made and you're not really curious about the food. But the one wonderful thing about the city is you get um exposed to all different types of cuisine, all different types of flavors, and that excites your imagination. You're much more curious about it, right?

You're you want to know where this food is is made. The problem though of course is this is all an abstraction. You have absolutely no idea where the food comes from. You have absolutely no idea how where the food is made and quite honestly you don't even know the food is healthy for you or not. Okay.

So, so um the city life is a higher abstraction and of course today we have the internet which is even a higher abstraction. Okay. So you go from the village to the city now to the internet. Um, of course, this creates a lot of problems for people because this transition causes psychological issues and the three major psychological issues are enemy. Okay?

Um, and what this means is before the village, you know exactly what to do. Um, but you you move to a city there are different rules and it confuses you. For example, in the village, if someone punches you, you punch back and then afterwards you become friends. In a city, if someone punches you and you punch back, you both go to jail. So, it's confusing for people.

Okay. Uh, alienation means that you have actually no freedom in the city. You work from 9 to5, you get up, you get up at 6:00 in the morning, get on at 7:00, then get to work at 9:00. Then you get up for work at 5 and get home at 10:00. Okay?

So, everyday is the same reg same regulated life. And it's and it's um and you lack freedom. Okay? Okay, that that causes alienation. The last idea is disenchantment where you feel as though you are just a machine and you have lost human agency.

Okay, so this creates lots of psychological issues and that's why at this time psych psychology is becoming much more popular. Um this is Simon Freud and um he was a very ambitious uh medical student who became a psychologist and he start to see patients and these patients were often young women who were historical historical is not a word we use anymore but back then it just meant that they couldn't control their emotions. Um, they were prone to outbursts, crying. When they saw a man, when they were touched by a man, they screamed, they cried. They couldn't form healthy relationships.

Okay? And so Freud was tasked with figuring out why this was happening and trying to help these women. And he spent a lot of time with these women. And he did something pretty novel at the time which is he basic he just won their trust and asked them directly why are you like this and the woman um after many sessions after becoming friends with Freud they start to confide in Freud and they told him the truth which is I'm hysterical I'm afraid of men touching me because when I was young my father abused me and Freud at first was shocked. I think everyone would be shocked.

But over time he would hear this story from so many different patients with the same symptoms that he concluded that they must be telling him the truth. And he wrote a very famous paper in 1896 called the ideology of hysteria. Ignies means origins. Okay. And in it he says, "My previously communicated assumption that trauma, specifically sexual trauma, cannot be stressed enough as a pathic agent, was confirmed a new.

Even children of respected, high-minded parental families fall victim to real rape much more frequently than one had dared to suspect. Either the parents themselves seek substitution for their lack of satisfaction in this pathological manner or else trusted person such as relatives um abuse the ignorance and innocence of children. Okay. So he's arguing that abuse is much more common than we are led to believe. Even those that we think are pillars of society engage in the sort of abuse.

So what he's doing is that he's becoming an advocate for advocate for these women. He's telling the world they're not crazy. They're not being hysterical. They were traumatized and that's why they're behaving like this. If you got hit by a car, your leg wouldn't um you wouldn't be able to walk.

Well, these women are the same way. They were traumatized physically when they were young and that's why they are behaving like this. That's why they have problems forming these emotional bonds of others. Um the symptoms of hysteria are determined by certain experiences of the patients which have operated in a traumatic fashion and which are being reproduced in a psychological life in the form of pneummetic symbols. Okay.

So what he's saying is this is not made up in the mind. This happened physically and then it gets represented in the mind. Um so that's Freud arguing for um his patients. Now let me introduce you to a man named Jeffrey Mason and he wrote a book called the assault on truth. His story is this.

He went to Harvard and he became very interested in psychoanalysis and he studied began to study it and he became friends with Anna Freud who is Simon Freud's daughter. Anna Freud um thought very highly of him and um she trusted him with the letters of Sigman Freud and before this was this was not open to the public and no one knew about these letters but Jeffrey Mason spent years going over the letters and what he discovered shocked him. The early Freud and the later Freud are two different people. They have two different theories about trauma and abuse. Okay.

And in his book, he presents the evidence which are Freud's letters to friends. All right. So, let's just read a couple. This is early Freud. I therefore put forward thesis that at the bottom of every case of hysteria, there are one or more occurrences of premature experience, occurrences which belong to the earliest years of childhood.

Okay. There are a whole number of other things that vouch for the reality of infatile sexual scenes. In the first place, there's a uniformity which exhibit in certain details. So, what he's saying is um I know that people don't believe me, but the evidence is clear. I've talked to different people.

They don't know each other. They're telling the same story. They're bringing the same details. So, either there's this giant conspiracy or they're telling the truth. It is less easy to refute the idea that the doctor forces reminiscences of this sort on the patient, that he influences him by suggesting to imagine and reproduce them.

Nevertheless, it appears to me equally untenable. I've never yet succeeded in forcing on a patient a scene I was expecting to find in such a way that he seemed to be living through it with all the appropriate feelings. Perhaps others may be more successful in this. When you read Freud, you see him as a very clear, as a very nuanced, as a very balanced thinker. Okay?

He accepts there are different possibilities. It's possible that he himself is suggesting false memories to his patients. And he and he and he says this this is possible, but I have failed to achieve this goal. And there are others who may be better at this than I, but I haven't been able to do it. Okay.

So based on this evidence um he argues that these patients must be telling truth. Okay. This is the early Freud. Um this is Sandor for the longest time they were colleagues. They were best friends.

They were both advocates for patients and then um they had a falling out. Okay. they started to um they they basically refused to talk to each other anymore. Okay. And the reason why is Senator Frenzy continue to advocate for um patient rights whereas Simon Freud completely changed his attitude.

All right. So let's look at the new Freud. Since child masturbation is such a general occurrence and is at the same time so poorly remembered, it must have an equivalent in psychic life and in fact it is found in the fantasy encountered in most female patients. Namely that the father seduced her in childhood. This is a later reworking which is designed to cover up the recolleation of infatile sexual activity represents an excuse and thereof.

The grin of truth contained in this fantasy lies in the fact that the father by way of his innocent caresses in earlier childhood has actually awakened the little girl's sexuality. It is these same affectionate fathers that are the ones who then endeavor to break the child of the habit of masturbation. Okay. So what Freud is trying to say is young girls from a very early age they are sexual animals. They have these urges and they have this longing for the father.

And it's compounded by the fact that the father in his innocence hugs and caresses his little girl. It's made worse when the father notices that the girl is masturbating and tries to stop her. And this creates a sense of both resentment, hatred, and more longing. Okay. So now what Freud is saying is it's not the father.

The father did nothing. He's innocent. The girl is the one who who who because of these sexual urges has all these sexual fantasies that she is no longer able to differentiate between fantasy and reality. All right. So um this is from from the essay fragments of analysis of hysteria.

The love hungry little girl, unhappy at having to share her parents' affection with her brothers and sisters, realizes that all that tenderness comes flowing back when her parents are made anxious by her illness. The little the girl now knows a way of calling forth her parents' love. So now he's explaining why hysteria is so common in society. And the answer is very simple. Women are desperate for attention.

It's that simple. They're fine. They have no issues. They just want attention. And that's why they are hysterical, okay?

Because they know that illness attracts attention from caregiving uh males. Um this is this is Simon Freud's book, Civilization in Its Discontents. And in it, he expresses his contempt for women in society. All right, let's read it. Furthermore, women should soon come into opposition to civilization and display their retarding and restraining influence.

Those very women who in the beginning laid the foundations of civilization for the claims of their love. Women represent the interests of the family and of sexual life. The work of civilization has become increasingly the business of men. It confronts them them with ever more difficult tasks and compels them to carry out instinctual sublimations of which women are little capable. All right.

So Freud's saying this, we must thank women because without women there being no civilization. They give birth. They raise families. But men are smarter than women. And so men are tasked with the responsibility of building civilization, of creating science, of creating literature, of creating philosophy, of politics, of administration.

Okay. And but what all women want is attention to be doted on. And that's why women hate civilization. First of all, because they're not smart and they can't really uh contribute to civilization, but also because it takes uh men away from from them. Okay.

So now the question then is okay. This is like really strange because the four that we encountered earlier was a scientist. Um, very clear, very nuanced, very subtle in his thinking. This Freud, he's like a mythmaker. He's almost like a priest.

Okay. So, so what explains the trans transition? Okay. Well, there's there's a very simple explanation, right? Um the simple explanation which is simple explanation is um he may be treating his patients who are a young woman but who's paying the bills?

The father, right? It's a father who's paying Freud. So um if Freud went to the father and said, "Oh, I talked to your daughter. It's your fault that she's like this." Well, they wouldn't be very happy. Okay.

So, um, we can understand why at the end of the day, Freud decided that he needed to change his story if he wanted to maintain his clientele. Um, so the question then is, okay, is there evidence to suggest that sexual trauma and abuse was common in Vienna at this time in history, the late 19th century? And the answer is yes. There is some piece of evidence, okay? not complete.

Okay. But there's some piece of evidence suggests this was actually a thing in Vienna in the late 19th century. So um this is so Vienna is part of the AustriaHungary Empire and there are lots of secret societies and religious cults at this time. Okay. One of them is called Frankenism and Frankenism uh um rejected Jewish norms and he and believe they were obligated to transgress moral boundaries.

Okay, remember the crisis of faith, right? How do you demonstrate um your faith in God? How do you know God loves you? How do you know you're faithful? Well, you break taboos.

And they were breaking a lot of taboos. The fragrance engaged in sexually promiscuous rights such as the infamous 1756 incident where they were allegedly caught dancing around a half naked woman. Um at its height, fragmentism claimed perhaps 50,000 followers. That's a lot. 50,000 followers is a lot.

And a lot of them were powerful people. um primarily Jews living in the Polish Lutheran Commonwealth as well as central and eastern Europe. Later Francis were encouraged to convert in in mass to Catholicism. Okay. And um so who are these people?

Well, they are followers of a man named Sibetai Zevi who lived in 19th century who who was a um Jewish rabbi who lived in 19th century Ottoman Empire. And for many he was extremely charismatic and he was basically their messiah. Okay, he was the Jewish Messiah and he preached a religion of transgression because transgression meant courage. It meant empowerment u it meant true faith and he had a lot of followers and that's why the sultan called him and then said okay I'll give you a choice you can either continue doing what you do and I'll kill you or you convert to Islam. so he can murder Islam.

But when he did so, he told his followers, I did so because God doesn't care about what you do. God cares about what's in your heart. As long as you're true to God, what you do in life does not matter. Okay? And the religion he started is still around uh today.

Okay? And um this is from Wikipedia. Okay? All this is from Wik Wikipedia and you can look look you can look at it online to make sure that I'm just making making this up. All right.

So as part of this movement um I mean you can read this right? All right. Um sexual abuse was actually pretty common. So we have evidence suggests that yes um these women were probably telling the truth and Freud knew knew so. But Freud ultimately had to change his story in order to prot protect his livelihood.

Okay. But there's also another reason why Freud had to change his story. Okay. And this it has to do with a man named Ignis Simise. Ignis Simise lived in 1840s uh Vienna.

He was and he he was a doctor who worked at uh Vienna General Hospital and he was in charge of two maternity clinics, places where women gave birth. um same hospital, same staff, but the maternity but the mortality rate at the second clinic was much higher than the first clinic. Women would uh could could die giving birth because of fever. So 10% of of women were dying in the second clinic and only about 3% were dying in the first clinic. So in wise he was appalled by by this and so he launched an investigation as to what was happening and he spent seven months a long long time trying to figure out what happened what was happening and he looked at all different possibilities including weather including um treatment including personnel everything okay and then he had a radical breakthrough he had an insight which is this in a second clinic it was a teaching hospital.

So doctors would in the morning work work with cadaavvers, okay? They would show students how to how to dissect dissect cadaavvers and then in the afternoon they'd go and deliver babies. And similar he didn't know why because at this time germs were not a thing. People didn't know know about the existence of germs. Um he didn't know why but he he theorized that there could be connection.

So he created a protocol. He basically had everyone wash their hands uh using a um a formula of um water, chlorine, and lime. And we still use it today. Exactly the same formula today. And so he tried this protocol and it was a miracle because because after people start to wash their hands, no one died in childirth anymore.

And similar wise being a rigorous scientist he collected all this data conducted a lot of experiments to prove this had to be true that washing your hands could save lives. And then we presented his findings to the staff the doctors of Vienna General Hospital believing that they would um they would praise him and then promote this all throughout Europe in order to save as many lives as possible. Instead the doctors told him they had to um they had to keep this quiet. um they'll promote similice uh they respect him and he did amazing work but if word came out that uh this was true then people would know that they were responsible for the deaths of these women before and their reputation would be in tatters um and then sim of course responded by yes I understand that but if we don't publish our findings if we don't let the world know know about this more women are going to die in child birth and they fought for a long time, years and years and then eventually similar wise he was black uh blacklisted. He would he would not he was not allowed to work work ever in hospital again and then ultimately he was confined to an incident asylum where he was killed by the guards and he let and he died leaving a young family and so that's what happens to you when you defy powerful people in Vienna uh in the 19th century and Freud didn't want the same fate okay and he al he also had a young family um so this story is horrible but if if you don't believe me you can go on Wikipedia Okay.

Um he was institutionized in in the same asylum um by his colleagues and in asylum he was beaten by the guards. He died 14 days later. All right. So this is a fate that will happen to you in Vienna if you defy powerful people. So So now we have an explanation for why Freud made the transition, why he changed his story.

But now there's another problem which is how does Freud convince his patients to go along right before he told his patients I believe you um and they trusted him and now he's changing his story. So how can he convince them that they in fact do suffer from sexual fantasies and like these this experience of sex sexual abuse it's all just made up in the head and that's a very hard job to do. So the solution is the interpretation of dreams. All right. So Freud pioneered a new way of hypnotizing um his patients.

So together they would analyze their dreams, right? Because if you if you talk about their memories in their past, they're going to fight back and says, "I remember very clearly." you talk about your dreams that allows you to um suggest subtly new ideas and new memories to basically implant uh new memories and basically gaslight that person. Okay, does that make sense? All right, so the interpretation of dreams. So um that is the story of Freud.

Okay, but this leaves a question is why did this spread throughout the world? All right, and that's something that we will look at in part three. So a lot of the influence of Freud has to do with Carl Young who will take his ideas of the unconscious and systemize it for popular um consumption. Okay. Um so we already discussed his framework where we are all dualities.

Okay, we have an ego but we also have a shadow. We have a conscious but also a unconscious, a personal as well as collective, an animous and an animma. Um yung popularized ideas of personality types, right? Introvert um extrovert which is what we still use today. All right.

Um the main influence is in modernism a transformative art movement beginning around the um early 20th century. All right. So arguably the first great modern artist is James Joyce who in 1922 published Ulyses. Um James Joyce was Irish. He was an Irish expatriate and he actually studied Dante in university.

So um he wrote Ulyses um as a way to imitate almost surpass Dante. And of course Ulisses refers to Homer's Odyssey. Now um we're going to read a passage from Ulyses to understand um the P's writing. Okay. In evil modality of the visible at least that if no more thought through my eyes signatures of all things I'm here to read sea spawn and sea rack the nearing tide that rusty boot star green blue silver rust colored signs limits of the dian fun but he adds in bodies.

Okay. Um what does this mean? I have no idea. All right. I I have no idea.

Um I can explain to you Dante. I can explain to you Homer and Shakespeare, but I struggle with James Joyce. And there are two reasons why. Okay, the first reason is he was um a singer. So you have to read what he writes as though it's music.

Okay, it's meant to be read read out loud. So it's musical and that's really the power of his writing. He's more focusing on the style rather than the substance. Okay, that's the first thing. Second thing is that he was extremely well read and everything that he writes in every sentence there are multiple illusions and references to other books.

Okay? So you must have read what he read. You must have experienced what he experienced in order to understand him. And there are those who argue that Ulisses is the greatest book in the world. In fact, if you go online, you just Google the best book ever written in human history, James Choice is up there.

Okay. Uh, Ulissiz is either number one or number two on these list of 50 best books in human history. Um, um, and there is there are many who tell me, "Yeah, James Joyce is hard, but if you spend the time to go over what he's writing and connect the references, you will have a transformative intellectual experience." Okay? It's almost like doing a jigsaw puzzle. Um, and that's all true, okay?

But think about what they're saying. They're saying what they're really saying is that James Joyce believes that he is God. He has the mind of God. And if you spend the time to understand what he writes, and it might take you years, decades, okay, you will access the mind of God. That's very different from Dante which is trying to use poetry to bring people into the mind of God which is the truth of the world.

Okay. Donis is a lot more accessible than James Joyce. So look let's look at the differences. Uh modern literature as represented by Ulyses it is elitist. It's self self-reerential.

Okay, it just has a lot of illusions and references, but you don't you actually don't know what the meaning is like what is the bigger story here and it's usually something called stream of consciousness writing which is it's trying to capture the mind as it thinks and works. Okay, that's different from a from Homer who was who was very democratic. He was trying to bring beauty and truth to the people through epic poetry. Okay. So starting with modern literature, we have this abrupt change in the nature of literature.

Before it was about empowering people to seek the truth for themselves. Now modern literature, it's really just this very elite club of very arrogant, hotty people. Okay. Um James Joyce was good friends Virginia Wolf. In fact, Virginia Wolf actually published um James Joyce in 1927.

Wolf published a book called To the Lighthouse and it's probably her most famous work and um in it she's also trying to respond to Joyce to the Lighthouse. It's very much based on Homer's Odyssey and um it's it's a very it's extremely well written. Okay, let's let's just look at what she writes. There were the eternal problems, suffering, death, the poor. There was always a woman dying of cancer even here.

And yet she had said to all these children, "You shall go through with it." To a people she had said relentlessly to that and the bill for the greenhouse would be 50 pounds. Okay. So what she's what she's doing is she's reading a book and she's thinking about the issues raised by book. But she's also thinking about life like, "Oh, I I have to go and do something." Okay. And that's really how our minds work.

So this captures really well stream of conscious thinking and she's heavily influenced by Freud, right? She's trying to go into the unconscious and trying to figure out how the conscious unconscious works. The lighthouse is really about memory, about perception, about remembering. All right. Um, but again, it's extremely self-indulgent and it's inwardlooking and it's very and again it's a radical departure from traditional literature.

So, let's compare um modern literature with Dossi. Mr. Before we discuss Dossi for DSvski the heart it's a deep impenetrable ocean and our psychology responds to external events. We live in the world and respond to the world. We must surrender ourselves to others to seek salvation and redemption.

We cannot rely our on ourselves to forgive ourselves to love ourselves. We must rely on others. We are we are in a community of people. Okay. So these are the truths of doski.

When we get to modern literature, self-discovery will allow for selfmastery. Our psych psychology responds to suppressed memories. We can be our own salvation and redemption. It's too optimistic. Uh it's too positive.

Okay? It's saying that hey, if you're poor, um don't worry about it. As long as you think happy thoughts, you'll be good. Okay? this this idea of positive psychology right that we have today.

Um Cole Young and Fred also had a major influence on Pablo Picasso and you can see it from his painting um head of a woman. Okay. Now what you will notice is it's it's it's a cubis portrait of a woman but if you look further it's actually two people as well. Okay. And so what this is doing is it's visually representing the theory of the self as presented by Yung.

Okay. So so do do you see the similarities? Great. Okay. So why is this art spreading throughout the world?

Well, I mean not to be conspiracy theorists, but let's look at an article, right? Was modern art really a CIA scop? All right. So this article is from JStore which is a academic journal very mainstream and this let's read what it writes in the mid- 20th century modern art and design represented the liberalism individualism dynamic activity and creative risk risk possible in a free society. Okay.

So in other words right now uh the capitalist west is at war with communism. 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, commis is spreading all around the world, it's very popular among people. It calls for collective action. So, um, the capitalist west, the powers that be, they're spreading Freud, they're spreading joy, they're spreading wolf, they're spreading public, they're spreading all this art, this modernist art in order to create a cult of self. Because if you believe in the cult of the self, if you believe that you are the source of everything, then you don't you're not capable of collective action.

Okay, so in many ways this this is response to the problem posed by communism. And this will be um obviously uh most obvious during the cold war. Okay, does that make sense? All right. So why would that be bad?

Why would the cold itself be bad? Well, this is Macau Buchanan and he explains it very well in his writings. Okay, so let's read really quickly what he wrote. Having human in man and freedom above all is a product of a social collective labor. To be free and absolute isolation is an absurdity invented by theologians, metaphysicians who have replaced the society of humans by that of God, their phantom.

to say that each person feels free in the presence of God that is the presence of absolute emptiness nothingness. Freedom in isolation then is a freedom of nothingness or indeed the nothingness of freedom slavery. God the figment of God has been historically the moral source or rather the immoral source of all slaveries. So what he's saying is the radical turning point in human history is the invention of Christianity because it allows it gives us the idea of individualism. And we think that's a good thing because we we're taught that individuality individ individualism means free choice.

It means freedom. What he's saying is that's that's an absurdity. We only have freedom from our community. We only have freedom if others are free around us. If we are free but no one else is free then we are slaves as well.

So because individuality prevents us from working with others from loving others then that makes us slaves to ourselves and that allows for the powers that be in society to better control us. Okay. And so what he's saying is Christianity is a slave religion. All right. Right?

It was designed to make us all into slaves. And this will and he and Buchanan lived in 19th century. But if he read Freud, then he would also argue that the cult of psychoanalysis, it's really about entrapping yourself in your own emotions. As for us, we want neither phantoms nor nothingness, but living human reality. And we recognize that man can feel free be free and therefore can achieve freedom.

In order to be free I need to see myself surrounded by men by free men and be recognized as such by them. I am free only when my individuality reflected in the mirror of the equally free consciousness of every individual around me comes back to me strengthened by everyone's recognition. Okay. So what he's saying is this. If you want to be happy, if you want to be free, care about others, be kind to others, work with other people, sacrifice your own self-interest for the self-interest, for for the for the greater good.

Okay, that is what that will that is that is what will make you really happy. And that's generally true because think about this, okay? If you're by yourself, will you be happy? Probably not. But if you have a family, you have kids, you don't have any freedom, but you're a happier person in many in in many many ways.

You're a more free person because you have better control of your emotions. You have more purpose in life. All right. So, um let's bring this to the present day. Social media.

What social media is? It is the democratization of the cult of itself. Before only the wealthy could enjoy the cult, right? only the wealthy could take the time to self-indulge. But now with social media, everyone can participate in the cult of self and that has led to a global um epidemic of depression.

Okay. So look look at year 2015. You see this huge spike in depressive symptoms because 2015 is the year when we had access to smartphones, right? So now young people feel they can't do anything right. Life is not useful and I do not enjoy life.

Okay. This huge spike which has led to a huge spike in suicide. All right. And this is happening throughout the world not only in North America and Europe but also in Latin America and East Asia as well. So the color itself which originated in Europe has now conquered the world through technology.

All right. So, um that's it. All right. So, the answer to the three questions. The first question is where did Freud get his idea?

Second question, uh why did Freud break of Yun? The third question, why is Freud's idea so popular today? Okay. Well, it's all to serve the interests of the powerful and that's the world we live in today. And the only solution moving forward is if we rediscovered our humanity.

We if we are able to find the courage to um care about others and put the interests of others before our own interests, we ourselves must choose to kill the cult of the self. Okay. All right. So, uh next class we will do um nationalism, right?
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