Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Helplessness

2,662 bytes added, 23:22, 24 May 2019
The LinkTitles extension automatically added links to existing pages (https://github.com/bovender/LinkTitles).
The state of helplessness is linked to the infant{{Topp}}détresse]]'s initial powerlessness in the face of its needs. This causes distress, as the protective shield is overwhelmed; only the intervention of another person can relieve this suffering.'|-| [[German]]: ''[[Hilflosigkeit{{Bottom}}
==Dependency==The neurophysiological model of Sigmund Freud's term "Project for a Scientific Psychology[[helplessness]]" (1950c is used in [[1895psychoanalysis]]) posits to denote the baby's original helplessness as the prototype [[state]] of all traumatic situations. Helplessness and satisfaction structure the two modes newborn [[development|infant]] who is incapable of mental functioning. In carrying out the primary modespecific [[act]]ions required to [[desire|satisfy]] its own [[need]]s, and so is completely ''dependent'' on [[other]] [[people]] (especially the desired object and..[[mother]]).
==Prematurity==
The [[helplessness]] of the [[development|human infant]] is grounded in its "'''[[prematurity]]'''" of [[birth]], a fact which was pointed out by [[Freud]] and which [[Lacan]] takes up in his [[Jacques Lacan:Bibliography|early writings]]. Compared to other [[nature|animal]]s such as apes, the [[development|human infant]] is relatively unformed when it is [[born]], especially with respect to ''[[motor coordination]]''. This means that it is more ''dependent'' than other [[nature|animal]]s, and for a longer [[time]], on its [[parents]].
==Mother-Child Dual Relation==[[Lacan]] follows [[Freud]] in highlighting the importance of the initial ''[[dependence]]'' of the [[development|human infant]] on the '''[[mother]]'''. [[Lacan]]'s originality lies in the way he draws attention to "the fact that this dependence is maintained by a [[world]] of [[language]].<ref>{{E}} p. 309</ref> The [[mother]] [[interpretation|interpret]]s the [[infant]]'s cries as hunger, tiredness, loneliness, etc. and [[punctuation|retroactively]] determines their [[signification|meaning]] (see [[punctuation]]). The [[development|child]]'s [[helplessness]] contrasts with the omnipotence of the [[mother]], who can decide whether or not to [[desire|satisfy]] the [[development|child]]'s [[need]]s.<ref>{{S4}} p. 69, 185</ref> The [[recognition]] of this contrast engenders a depressive effect in the [[child]].<ref>{{S4}} p. 186</ref> ==End of Analysis==[[Lacan]] also uses the [[concept]] of [[helplessness]] to illustrate the [[sense]] of '''abandonment''' and '''[[subjective destitution]]''' that the [[analysand]] feels at the [[end of analysis]]. "At the end of a [[training]] [[analysis]] the [[subject]] should reach and [[know]] the [[domain]] and level of the [[experience]] of absolute disarray."<ref>{{S7}} p. 304</ref> The [[end of analysis]] is not conceived of by [[Lacan]] as the realization of some blissful plenitude, but quite the contrary, as a [[moment]] when the [[subject]] comes to [[terms]] with his utter solitude. However, whereas the [[development|infant]] can rely on its [[mother]]'s [[helplessness|help]], the [[analysand]] at the [[end of analysis]] "can expect [[help]] from no one."<ref>{{S7}} p. 304</ref> If this seems to [[present]] a particularly ascetic view of [[treatment|psychoanalytic treatment]], this is exactly how [[Lacan]] wishes it to be seen; [[psychoanalysis]] is, in [[Lacan]]'s [[words]], a "long [[subjective]] ascesis."<ref>{{E}} p. 105</ref> ==See Also=={{See}}* [[Development]]* [[End of analysis]]||* [[Instinct]]* [[Language]]||* [[Mother]]* [[Nature]]||* [[Need]]* [[Punctuation]]||* [[Thing]]* [[Treatment]]{{Also}} ==References==<div style="font-size:11px" class="references-small"><references/></div> {{OK}}[[Category:PsychoanalysisDevelopment]][[Category:TermsNew]][[Category:ConceptsImaginary]] __NOTOC__
Anonymous user

Navigation menu