
Journal of Orgonomy Volume 21 no. 2
Further Problems of Work Democracy*
Wilhelm Reich, M.D.
Preface
This monograph was written between 1937 and 1940 just as
the weaknesses of the European democracies were abetting
Hitler's victory in Europe. I deal here only with the
European state of affairs since I am insufficiently
familiar with the American scene. I must emphasize that
I have never entertained any political ambitions and
prefer working in the politics-free milieu of my own
laboratory where a better grasp of human nature is
obtainable. As a medical psychologist and biologically
oriented psychiatrist, it behooves me to speak out against
the emotional plague of our century. As a confirmed
democrat, I am dead serious about free speech and leave
it to the false democrats to expose themselves as empty
freedom peddlers. We advocates of work democracy lean
neither to the right nor the left, but only go forward.
Maine, U.S.A.
August, 1940
Overview: Preface to "The Living" (Das Lebendige)**
This work comprises the past two decades of my
medical and scientific work on the living organism.
It was at first only a private journal where I could
air out ideas that otherwise might have compromised
my safety, my reputation, and some still unfinished
formulations.
Few can fathom how I can bestride such diverse fields
as depth psychology, sociology, physiology, and now,
biology, as well. Some analysts wish I would stick
to psychoanalysis; the politicians relegate me to
natural science; and the biologists banish me to
psychology.
By its very nature, the theme of sexuality runs
through all areas of scientific research. The
central phenomenon, the sexual orgasm, raises not
only psychological and physiological questions, but
sociological as well. There is hardly another field
of natural scientific research which can better offer
a unified schema of the living and thereby obviate
narrow, divisive specialization. Sex economy has
become an independent discipline with its own research
methods and body of knowledge. It is a natural,
scientific, empirically based theory of sexuality. I
can now unveil what is my own, original work, as well
as those aspects which relate to others' work and to
the source of those unfounded rumors about my
activities.
Sex economy emerged from the cradle of Freudian
psychoanalysis between the years 1919 and 1923. My de
facto split from the parental source occurred about 1928,
while my actual separation from the Psychoanalytic
Association did not take place until 1934.
This manuscript is not a textbook but a narrative. A
formal exposition could not possibly have conveyed to the
reader the inconceivable way in which problems and
solutions of the past twenty years succeeded one another
or how all of this evolved from the remarkable process of
scientific logic. It is not false modesty for me to say
I regard myself merely as a functional organ of this
logic.
The functional method of research works like a
compass in unknown terrain. I cannot imagine a
better proof of the validity of the sex-economic
theory of the living than this sequence of events: In
1922, I discovered orgastic potency, the cardinal
point in sex-economic theory; this led to the
discovery of the orgasm reflex in 1935, and
culminated in the finding of its scientific basis,
orgone radiation, in 1939. The logical development
of sex economy is the key to understanding the mass
of interpretations, distortions, and doubts whenever
confusion threatens to becloud our clarity of insight.
It is useful to write scientific biographies when one
is young. We still have our illusions about people's
ability to accept upsetting information. This
enables us to stick to the basic facts, resist the
myriad temptations to compromise, and not sacrifice
clear findings to comfortable thinking, much-needed
peace of mind, or world pressures.
The temptation to deny the sexual basis of so many
illnesses is far greater in sex economy than it is in
psychoanalysis. It was only with the greatest
difficulty that I arrived at the term "sex economy,"
which designates a new scientific discipline;
research into biopsychic energy. "Sexuality" is too
offensive a term for prevailing society; its
significance for life would be too easily forgotten.
It will need the work of many generations before
sexuality is taken seriously by official science and
the lay public; and this may never come about until
the life and death problems of our society
relentlessly drive us to understand and master the
sexual process under that society's protection. Such
a problem, for example, is cancer, which is endemic;
another is the emotional plague, which spawns
dictatorship.
Sex economy is a natural scientific discipline. It is
not ashamed of sexual themes, and it bars from its ranks
those who have not yet overcome their fear of being
sexually defamed by society. The term "vegetotherapy"
(the sex-economic treatment technique) is really a
concession to decorum. I would have preferred calling
this medical technique "orgasmo-therapy" for that is what it is. I had to consider that the latter term would impose too great a hardship on young sex economists just starting out in practice. People laugh maliciously or cynically when their natural longings and religious feelings are mentioned.
I fear that in a decade or two the school of sex
economists will split into two warring groups. One
group will maintain that sexual functions are subordinate
to general life functions and therefore expendable; the
other group will wage a stormy radical battle to save the
honor of sexual research. Thus, the functional identity
and life processes will be forgotten. Or I might give in
and repudiate the honest scientific convictions of my
early battle years. Likewise, a world taken over by
fascism could successfully scuttle our hard work with the
help of traditional psychiatrists and party bureaucrats,
as happened in Europe. My friends who are familiar with
the Norwegian press's scandal-mongering, fascist-inspired
campaign against sex economy know what I mean. So,
while there is still time, I must clarify what we mean by sex economy before I myself, succumbing to the pressure of antiquated social conditions, begin to change my thinking and hinder (through my authority) the search for truth by young scientists of the future.
The theory of sex-economic life research can be summarized in a few sentences.
Mental health is dependent on orgastic potency, i.e., the capacity for total surrender in the natural sex act and for experiencing full sexual excitation at acme. Its basis is a non-neurotic character structure, which implies the capacity to love. Mental illness is the result of a disturbance in the natural capacity to love. It depends as much upon social as upon psychic conditions.
Mental illness is a consequence of society's sexual chaos. For millennia, this chaos has served to subjugate people psychologically to the existing conditions of the time, by internalizing the external mechanization of life. It serves the psychic anchoring of a mechanized and authoritarian civilization by rendering people unable to stand on their own.
Life forces regulate themselves naturally and do not need a sense of duty or compulsive morality, both of which are sure signs of existing antisocial impulses. The latter stem from secondary drives which have arisen through the suppression of natural life and which conflict with natural sexuality.
Those reared in a life-negative and a sex-negative society have acquired a pleasure anxiety which is physiologically anchored in chronic muscular tension. Neurotic pleasure anxiety then impels them to reproduce that life-negative attitude so conductive to dictatorships. It is at the heart of their fear of leading full and independent lives and constitutes the most important influence in every type of political reaction calling for dominion by individuals or groups over most of the working class. It is biophysiological anxiety and represents the nuclear problem of psychosomatic research. Up until now it was the greatest obstacle to research into involuntary life functions, which neurotic can only experience as mysterious and frightening.
Today's human being perpetuates a 6,000-year-old
patriarchal authoritarian culture; he does this by
armoring himself characterologically, against nature
within himself and against social misery outside. This
gives rise to alienation, helplessness, sexual misery,
the need for authority, neurotic helpless rebellion, and
pathological tolerance. Man has alienated himself from
the life within as if it were an enemy. This alienation
is both biological and socioeconomic in origin and harks
back to stages in human development before the emergence
of patriarchy.
Compulsory duty has replaced the natural joy in work and activity. Among the masses, human structure has changed in the direction of weakness and fear of life: Authoritarian dictatorships can then arise and justify their existence on the basis of actual human attitudes, such as childishness and the abrogation of responsibility. The internal catastrophe we are living through is the external result of this alienation from life.
The basis of authoritarian structuring in the masses is not natural parental love but the authoritarian family. Its chief weapon is the suppression of sexuality in the young child and adolescent.
Consequent to the splitting of human structure, nature and culture, instinct and morality, sexuality and productivity become mutually exclusive. The longed-for unity and compatibility between culture and nature, work and love, morality and sexuality remain a dream as long as human beings deny the biological demands of natural (orgastic) sexual gratification. As long as this prevails, genuine democracy and responsible freedom remain an illusion. Helpless subjugation to chaotic social conditions is the hallmark of human existence. The murder of the living triumphs in compulsory education and war.
In the realm of psychotherapy, I developed the technique
of character-analytic vegetotherapy. Its basic principle
is the restoration of biopsychic motility through
dissolution of the characterological and muscular
rigidity ("armoring"). This technique for the therapy of
neurosis was experimentally based on the discovery of the
bioelectrical nature of sexuality and anxiety. They are
functionally antithetical directions of the living
organism: pleasurable expansion, anxious contraction.
Basic to sex-economic research is the orgasm formula of;
mechanical tension, bioelectric charge, bioelectric
discharge, mechanical relaxation. This turns out to be
the general formula in all living functions. From this
stemmed our experimental research into the organization
of living and nonliving matter, bion research, and more
recently the discovery of orgone radiation. The research
on sexuality and bions opened up a new approach to the
problem of cancer and several other disturbances of
autonomic functioning. Man is the only species which
does not follow the natural laws of sexuality; this is
the direct cause of a host of epidemic maladies.
Life-negative attitudes on the social scene lead to
mass death in the form of wars, as well as to psychic and
somatic derangement of the basic life functions.
The process of sexuality, that is, the expansive biological pleasure process, is the productive life process itself!
This is a loaded observation and sounds almost "too simple." This "simplicity" is the secret that some people sense in my work. I shall try to explain how it was possible to unscramble the puzzle which heretofore barred such problems from human awareness. I heartily wish to convince you that there is no magic or sorcery in this; on the contrary, my theory is very general (albeit rejected) human knowledge of the living. It bespeaks a total alienation from life that these facts and relationships I discovered were consistently overlooked and obfuscated.
This history of sex economy is incomplete without the
inclusion of its friends' participation. My friends and
coworkers will understand why I must forego appropriately
acknowledging their accomplishments. I can assure all of
you who have fought and often suffered for sex economy
that without your contributions its total development
would not have been achieved.
This presentation of sex economy is made solely from the standpoint of the catastrophic European situation. The triumph of dictatorships stems from the psychic illness of the European peoples who were unable to master democracy socially, economically, or psychologically. It is too soon for me to judge just how far this pertains to the American scene. I am not referring to external interpersonal relationships and social conditions, but rather to the underlying structure of the American people and their society. It will take time to get to know them.
* Translated by Barbara G. Koopman, M.D., and Sidney B. Heimbach, M.D., from Weitere Probleme der Arbeitsdemokratic. Als Manuskript, Nicht im Handel, April 1941. Durch den: Sexpol-Verlag, Europa. Politisch-psychologische Schriften, No. 5. (Included is a 32-page manuscript entitled "Overview: Preface to 'The Living,'" which is serialized herewith in two parts.)
** This excerpt appears at the beginning of the manuscript. It is then followed by the text of Further Problems of Work Democracy, which is the title of the entire monograph.
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