重新审视但丁的《神曲》:现代精神分析学家能从中世纪的“精神分析”中学到什么?

R. Chessick
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引用次数: 8

摘要

在看完这些材料之后,我意识到我对但丁的《神曲》做了某种解构,它试图将人类的视野提升到超越的高度,并将爱集中在上帝的爱上,但它同时也沉迷于人类的怜悯、同情、音乐、诗歌和其他艺术,以及理性和困惑。从这个意义上说,这首诗也是对人类高级能力价值的阐述,这与赋予某些人物的明显严酷的专制命运形成鲜明对比——这些人物似乎不太应该受到施加在他们身上的东西。在这里,我们在对上帝的判断的绝对信仰与人类的理性和同情心之间发生了冲突,而人类的理性和同情心有时似乎无法为这些判断辩护。尽管但丁自始至终都在努力坚持正统神学,但很明显,他的诗性灵魂很难避免描写那些他暗藏同情的人物。研究《神曲》的中心观点是强调但丁是如何,几乎不顾自己的意愿,对各种不幸的人表达同情和理解的,无论是在地狱还是在炼狱。维吉尔甚至斥责但丁的同情心,认为上帝的正义永远是正确的,如果上帝对某人生气并惩罚他或她,但丁也应该生气而不是同情。但丁试过了,但他做不到。翻译成现代术语,我们可以从这篇中世纪“精神分析”的报告中学到我们临床工作的重要一课。严格遵守弗洛伊德自己宣称的规则(尽管他从未遵循这些规则),例如他著名的要求,一个人总是对病人不透明,和/或严格遵守一个或另一个精神分析理论,必须被理解为反移情的一种形式,分析师的性格缺陷。每一种情况都需要自己的方法,自己的理解方式,或形式,或渠道,就像但丁在《神曲》中告诉我们的那样。正是因为他几乎不顾自己的意愿提供了这样一个视角,他的诗才超越了中世纪的思想,与所有时代和文化相关。根据经验,当一个人发现自己对如何行事的本能信念与自己的理论和规则相冲突时,一定是出了问题。一个经过充分分析的精神分析学家强迫他或她自己忽视对病人的本能或直觉感觉,因为这与某些理论原则或官方程序规则相冲突,这是最令人恐惧的。这样的冲突需要进一步的自我分析,与同事协商,以及创造性的解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dante's Divine Comedy revisited: what can modern psychoanalysts learn from a medieval "psychoanalysis"?
I realize after having gone over this material that I have done a sort of deconstruction of Dante's Divine Comedy which putatively attempts to raise the human vision to transcendent heights and to focus love on the love of God, but which along the way indulges in the very human aspects of pity, compassion, music, poetry, and the other arts, as well as reason and puzzlement. In this sense the poem is also an exposition of the value of the higher human faculties, which contrasts at times rather vividly with the apparently harsh autocratic fates that are assigned to some characters--who do not seem quite deserving of what is inflicted upon them. Here we have a collision between absolute faith in the judgment of God and human reason and compassion which sometimes seems to be unable to justify these judgments. In spite of the fact that Dante is trying to adhere to orthodox theology throughout, it is clear that his poetic soul has great difficulty in avoiding the depiction of characters for whom he has a secret sympathy. The central point of this study of The Divine Comedy is to emphasize how Dante, almost in spite of himself, expressed empathy and understanding for a variety of unfortunates either in the Inferno or in the Purgatorio. Virgil even scolds him for his compassion, arguing that God's justice is always correct and if God is angry at someone and punishes him or her, Dante should also be angry and not compassionate. Dante tries, but he cannot quite manage to do it. Translated into modern terminology, we can learn from this report of a medieval "psychoanalysis" an important lesson in our clinical work. Rigid adherence to rules such as those Freud himself proclaimed (although he never followed them), for instance in his famous demand that one be always opaque to the patient, and/or rigid adherence to one or another psychoanalytic theory, must be understood as a form of countertransference, a character flaw in the analyst. Each case demands its own approach and its own form or forms or channels of understanding, just as Dante offers us in The Divine Comedy. It is because he offers such a perspective almost in spite of himself that his poem transcends the medieval mind and becomes relevant to all ages and cultures. As a rule of thumb, when one finds one's instinctual convictions about how to proceed in conflict with one's theories and set of rules, something is wrong. It is with the greatest trepidation that a well-analysed psychoanalyst should force him- or herself to ignore an instinctual or intuitive feeling of how to respond to a patient because it conflicts with some theoretical principles or official rules of procedure. Such a conflict is a call for further self-analysis, consultation with colleagues, and creative solutions.
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