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diff --git a/books/psicologia/eros-civilization.md b/books/psicologia/eros-civilization.md index 60a736d..d56aa5d 100644 --- a/books/psicologia/eros-civilization.md +++ b/books/psicologia/eros-civilization.md @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@  [[!meta title="Eros and Civilization"]]  * Author: Hebert Marcuse +* Some subjects covered (keywords): productivity, efficiency, labor, repression, domination, alienation, automation.  ## Snippets @@ -591,6 +592,11 @@ Superego:      repression, of uninhibited desire and gratification -- but reality proceeds      according to the laws of reason, no longer committed to the dream language. +    [...] + +    The danger of abusing the discovery of the truth value of imagination for +    retrogressive tendencies is exemplified by the work of Carl Jung. +  ## Unsublimated pleasure      Smell and taste give, as it were, unsublimated pleasure per se (and unrepressed @@ -618,6 +624,117 @@ Superego:      is more at home in such sub-real and surreal processes as dreaming,      daydreaming, play, the "stream of consciousness." +    [...] + +    The surrealists recognized the revolutionary implications of Freud' s +    discoveries: "Imagination is perhaps about to reclaim its rights." +    13 But when they asked, "Cannot the dream also be applied to the solution of +    the fundamental problems of life?" 14 they went beyond psychoanalysis in +    demanding that the dream be made into reality without compromising its content. +    Art allied itself with the revolution. Uncompromising adherence to the strict +    truth value of imagination comprehends reality more fully. That the +    propositions of the artistic imagination are untrue in terms of the actual +    organization of the facts belongs to the essence of their truth: The truth that +    some proposition respecting an actual occasion is untrue may express the vital +    truth as to the aesthetic achievement. It expresses the "great refusal" which +    is its primary characteristic. 15 This Great Refusal is the protest against +    unnecessary repression, the struggle for the ultimate form of freedom -- "to +    live without anxiety." 16 But this idea could be formulated without punishment +    only in the language of art. In the more realistic context of political theory +    and even philosophy, it was almost universally defamed as utopia. + +### Utopia + +    The relegation of real possibilities to the no-man's land of utopia is itself +    an essential element of the ideology of the performance principle. If the +    construction of a nonrepressive instinctual development is oriented, not on the +    subhistorical past, but on the historical present and mature civilization, the +    very notion of utopia loses its meaning. The negation of the performance +    principle emerges not against but with  the progress of conscious rationality; +    it presupposes the highest maturity of civilization. The very achievements of +    the performance principle have intensified the discrepancy between the archaic +    unconscious and conscious processes of man, on the one hand, and his actual +    potentialities, on the other. The history of mankind seems to tend toward +    another turning point in the vicissitudes of the instincts. And, just as at the +    preceding turning points, the adaptation of the archaic mental structure to the +    new environment would mean another "castrophe" -- an explosive change in the +    environment itself. However, while the first turning point was, according to +    the Freudian hypothesis, an event in geological history, and while the second +    occurred at the beginning of civilization, the third turning point would be +    located at the highest attained level of civilization. The actor in this event +    would be no longer the historical animal man but the conscious, rational +    subject that has mastered and appropriated the objective world as the arena of +    his realization. The historical factor contained in Freud' s theory of +    instincts has come to fruition in history when the basis of Ananke ( Lebensnot) +    -- which, for Freud, provided the rationale for the repressive reality +    principle -- is undermined by the progress of civilization. + +    Still, there is some validity in the argument that, despite all progress, +    scarcity and immaturity remain great enough to prevent the realization of the +    principle "to each according to his needs." The material as well as mental +    resources of civilization are still so limited that there must be a vastly +    lower standard of living if social productivity were redirected toward the +    universal gratification of individual needs: many would have to give up +    manipulated comforts if all were to live a human life. Moreover, the prevailing +    international structure of industrial civilization seems to condemn such an +    idea to ridicule. This does not invalidate the theoretical insistence that the +    performance principle has become obsolescent. The reconciliation between +    pleasure and reality principle does not depend on the existence of abundance +    for all. The only pertinent question is whether a state of civilization can be +    reasonably envisaged in which human needs are fulfilled in such a manner and to +    such an extent that surplus-repression can be eliminated. + +    Such a hypothetical state could be reasonably assumed at two points, which lie +    at the opposite poles of the vicissitudes of the instincts: one would be +    located at the primitive beginnings of history, the other at its most mature +    stage. The first would refer to a non-oppressive distribution of scarcity (as +    may, for example, have existed in matriarchal phases of ancient society). The +    second would pertain to a rational organization of fully developed industrial +    society after the conquest of scarcity. The vicissitudes of the instincts would +    of course be very different under these two conditions, but one decisive +    feature must be common to both: the instinctual development would be +    non-repressive in the sense that at least the surplus-repression necessitated +    by the interests of domination would not be imposed upon the instincts. This +    quality would reflect the prevalent satisfaction of the basic human needs (most +    primitive at the first, vastly extended and refined at the second stage), +    sexual as well as social: food, housing, clothing, leisure. This satisfaction +    would be (and this is the important point) without toil -- that is, without the +    rule of alienated labor over the human existence. Under primitive conditions, +    alienation has not yet  arisen because of the primitive character of the needs +    themselves, the rudimentary (personal or sexual) character of the division of +    labor, and the absence of an institutionalized hierarchical specialization of +    functions. Under the "ideal" conditions of mature industrial civilization, +    alienation would be completed by general automatization of labor, reduction of +    labor time to a minimum , and exchangeability of functions.  Since the length +    of the working day is itself one of the principal repressive factors imposed +    upon the pleasure principle by the reality principle, the reduction of the +    working day to a point where the mere quantum of labor time no longer arrests +    human development is the first prerequisite for freedom. Such reduction by +    itself would almost certainly mean a considerable decrease in the standard of +    living prevalent today in the most advanced industrial countries. But the +    regression to a lower standard of living, which the collapse of the performance +    principle would bring about, does not militate against progress in freedom.  + +    The argument that makes liberation conditional upon an ever higher standard of +    living all too easily serves to justify the perpetuation of repression. The +    definition of the standard of living in terms of automobiles , television sets, +    airplanes, and tractors is that of the performance principle itself. Beyond the +    rule of this principle, the level of living would be measured by other +    criteria: the universal gratification of the basic human needs, and the freedom +    from guilt and fear -- internalized as well as external, instinctual as well as +    rrational." "La vraie civilization. . n' est pas dans le gaz, ni dans la +    vapeur, ni dans les tables tournantes. Elle est dans la diminution des traces +    du pĂȘchĂ© originel" 17 -- this is the definition of progress beyond the rule of +    the performance principle. + +    Under optimum conditions, the prevalence, in mature civilization, of material +    and intellectual wealth would be such as to allow painless gratification of +    needs, while domination would no longer systematically forestall such +    gratification. In this case, the quantum of instinctual energy still to be +    diverted into necessary labor (in turn completely mechanized and rationalized) +    would be so small that a large area of repressive constraints and +    modifications, no longer sustained by external forces , would collapse. +  ### Misc      But, again, Freud shows that this repressive system does not really solve the  | 
