On Not Knowing

On Not Knowing

Psychotherapy and the Search for Meaning

Recorded Friday 25 September 2020

With Judith Pickering, Meg Harris Williams and David Henderson. Chaired by Alice Waterfall

CPD Credits: 4 hours

In this conversation, we will examine the connection between spirituality, mysticism, contemplation and psychotherapy. Exploring the qualities that inspire growth, healing and transformation in the therapeutic journey, the speakers will consider the many qualities that contribute to these less tangible processes: presence, attention, mindfulness, calm abiding, analytic reverie and compassion. We will ask how these contribute to insight and wisdom, and how they can be developed and enhanced through certain forms of psychotherapeutic attention.

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FULL PROGRAMME

Judith Pickering
A Ray of Luminous Darkness: Bion’s Apophatic Mysticism of O
Judith will explore the importance of unknowing in Bion’s apophatic epistemology such as his application to psychoanalysis of Keats’ negative capability, Poincare’s selected fact, and St John of the Cross on the need to actively renounce memory, desire and understanding. In particular, she will focus on Bion’s O, the sign he used to denote “ultimate reality, absolute truth, the godhead, the infinite, the thing-in-itself” (Bion, 1970, p. 26). Although O is unknowable and inconceivable it is, for Bion, also a deeply personal and interpersonal domain of reality, the heart of what it means to be human, the core of the psychoanalytic encounter, the meaning of life. The O of ultimate truth is also the O of the personal truth incarnated in every true analytic session.

Q&A

Meg Harris Williams
Transformations in O and Conversing with the Object
In this talk Meg will use Keats’s Ode to a Nightingale to draw parallels between the poet conversing with his muse, and the conversation between the analytic couple that is overseen by their internal objects or, as Bion puts it, a “third party” watching over the conversation. A major problem in psychoanalytic writing is the difficulty of expressing the mysterious quality of the transference relationship – how to develop an authentic “language of achievement”, to use Bion’s term borrowed from Keats. This is the language of the psychoanalytic reverie, and some of the basic psychic movements involved in constructing this language are demonstrated by Keats in this Ode, which can therefore illuminate features of the thinking process in a psychoanalytic session.

Q&A

David Henderson
The Analyst’s Journey Toward the Unknowable
The problem of unknowing is central to the theory and practice of psychoanalysis. The premise of this talk is that psychoanalysis is a contemporary site of apophatic discourse, the attempt to speak the unknowable. The intuition of apophasis at work in each of the traditions of psychoanalysis (Freudian, Jungian, Kleinian, Lacanian, Existential, etc.) accounts for their family resemblance. The first section of this talk will survey a range of ancient and contemporary apophatic theories and discourses from philosophy, theology, literature and art. The second section of the talk will explore Jung’s work, which is saturated with apophatic concepts and practices. The concept of the coincidence of opposites, which he adopts from Nicholas of Cusa, is central to his conceptualisation of the self and the god-image; his notion of the transcendent function acts as an apophatic dynamic at the core of his practice of analysis. Jung insists that the analyst assume an attitude of unknowing before the dreams and images of the patient. The ego faces the infinity of the unconscious within and the infinity of matter without. Through the process of individuation the patient becomes conscious of his/her own specific, historical identity in the midst of the flux of the virtual.

All Panel Discussion & Q&A
Our final session will address the question of how the problem of unknowing might be addressed in psychoanalytic, psychotherapy and counselling trainings. What role, if any, should apophatic literature have in the curriculum. Or is the question of the unknowable really a CPD issue? Nicholas of Cusa spoke of learned ignorance. The professional development of the analyst seems to involve a deepening journey into unknowing and familiarity with the unknowable. Might a thorough engagement with apophasis have the potential to fundamentally transform our understanding of the analytic vocation.

End

FEES

Includes: 1 year’s access, test and CPD Certificate of Attendance, subtitles and transcript

INDIVIDUAL

£60 (or £48 Confer member)

GROUP RATE

£50pp in groups of over 10 (please apply to accounts@confer.uk.com)

CPD

Continuing Professional Development (CPD) credits for 4 hours are available as part of the course fee. You will need to fill out an evaluation form and pass a multiple choice questionnaire related to the content in order to receive your certificate. You can submit this test up to a maximum of 5 times.

SCHEDULE

00:04:32
Judith Pickering
A Ray of Luminous Darkness: Bion’s Apophatic Mysticism of O

00:55:15
Q&A

01:10:56
Meg Harris Williams
Transformations in O and Conversing with the Object

01:48:51
Q&A

02:23:31
David Henderson
The Analyst’s Journey Toward the Unknowable

03:37:45
All Panel Discussion & Q&A

04:07:50
End

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

By attending this workshop virtually, participants will be able to:
  • Describe therapeutic implications of apophatic philosophy/theology
  • Describe/identify elements of apophatic thinking in the work of Wilfred Bion and C.G. Jung
  • Compare and contrast states of knowing and not knowing that take place in the analytic situation
  • Engage therapeutically with the paradox and ineffable value of ‘not knowing’