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"The Dissection
of the Psychical Personality."
New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis 111.
Moving through [the traffic of a big city] involves the individual
in a series of shocks and collisions.
At dangerous intersections, nervous impulses flow through him in
rapid succession, like the energy from a battery. Baudelaire speaks
of a man who plunges into the crowd as into a reservoir of electric
energy. ... [T]echnology has subjected the human sensorium to a
complex kind of training.
Benjamin,
"On Some Motifs in Baudelaire," Illuminations 171.
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Let
us picture a living organism in its most simplified possible form
as an undifferentiated vesicle of a substance that is susceptible
to stimulation. Then the surface turned towards the external world
will from its very situation be differentiated and will serve as
an organ for receiving stimuli ... It would be easy to suppose,
then, that as a result of the ceaseless impact
of external stimuli on the surface of the vesicle, its substance
to a certain depth may have become permanently modified, so that
excitatory processes run a different course in it from what they
run in the deeper layers. A crust would thus be formed which would
at last have been so thoroughly "baked through" by stimulation
that it would present the most favourable possible conditions for
the reception of stimuli and become incapable of any further modification.
...
This
little fragment of living substance is
suspended in the middle of an external world charged with the most
powerful energies; and it would be killed by the stimulation emanating
from these if it were not provided with a protective shield against
stimuli. It acquires the shield in this way: its outermost surface
ceases to have the structure proper to living matter, becomes to
some degree inorganic and thenceforward functions as a special envelope
or membrane resistant to stimuli. In consequence, the energies of
the external world are able to pass into the next underlying layers,
which have remained living, with only a fragment of their original
intensity; and these layers can devote themselves, behind the protective
shield, to the reception of the amounts of stimulus which have been
allowed through it. By its death, the outer layer has saved all
the deeper ones from a similar fate--unless, that is to say, stimuli
reach it which are so strong that they break through the protective
shield.
Freud,
Beyond the Pleasure Principle 297-9.
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