“Psychology
and Capitalism – the Manipulation of Mind,” by Ron Roberts, 2019
This short
book centers on the uses of bourgeois psychology to capital in the realms of
control and illusion. Studies have shown
that since neo-liberal capitalism was introduced in the late 1970s, rates of
mental distress and deaths have increased markedly - suicide, alcohol and drug addiction leading the stats.
This has affected oppressed populations the most - and at present, especially 'white' middle-aged working class men. Yet the methods of contemporary psychology
and psychiatry center their treatment on individuals alone, with no
historical or social content. They ignore how capital has configured society to create stress and misery.
The psychological theories that are taught in college - Freud,
Adler, Maslow, Jung, Skinner, Rogers, Erikson and others – all of them conflict. This undermines any idea that psychology is a holistic science. The present large
division between talk therapy and biological drugs – the ‘couch and the brain
scan’ approaches, as Roberts put it, also conflict, though biological reductionism is now the most
prominent. Roberts counts 11 modern
forms of psychology at present - all of which are not integrated. These contradictions
hint at the ideological aspect of modern psychology.
Roberts
looks at the uses personality and character studies have, and how they
enable military and corporate entities to control warfare and workers
alike. Pop psychologists on PBS offer up 4 aspects of personality while rigid individual categories like neurotic,
introvert and extrovert, ‘passive aggressive,’ ‘the self,’ ‘A personality,’
‘beta males,’ nature and nurture, narcissism, pessimism and optimism and especially intelligence fill common talk
– all ahistorical and individualized, with questionable scientific bonifides. Loneliness
is the exception, as it is now commonly and obviously understood to be linked
to social disconnection.
Roberts outlines
the misuses of psychology as an insider.
He discusses military psychology and its collaboration with torture;
advertising manipulation; IQ and the bogus aspects of twin studies; manipulated drug
science tests and especially the ascendant role of the individual. As to the latter, he says this about current psychology: “…the individual is the primary
reality … By amazing coincidence, it is also the cornerstone of ‘rational’ self
interest and individualism upon which the entire field of (capitalist) economics is
predicated.” Corporate
psychology pushed through HR departments is especially geared to getting the
worker to be agreeable, conscientious, punctual, resilient and flexible. Especially flexible! Psychology essentially “privatizes
responsibility” in Roberts' words.
PTSD - Exception to the DSM Rule |
Roberts looks
at the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
(DSM) – the bible of psychology. The
categories were developed by committees, not by research. Half of the members of DSM committees have
ties to the pharmaceutical industry. The
National Institute of Mental Health no longer supports the DSM, calling it
‘unscientific.’ The PTSD category itself
exposed the rest of the categories when it allowed that a war environment might affect emotions. The other categories were however considered disconnected from
social experience.
One stunner
is that the Jason Bourne series
(‘Treadstone’) is actually based on a real CIA program, MKUltra, which as one of its aspects
attempted to train assassins to be able to do anything without compunction. Following this, the ‘defense’ industry is the largest
employer of psychologists. This should give us all pause.
Roberts
lists a few social psychologists who look at the links between society and
individual functioning and concepts like fascism, alienation and consumer fetishism – Wilhelm
Reich, Kenneth Gergen, Eric Fromm, R.D. Laing and Slavoj Zizek. Yet their social psychology is absolutely
marginal to the field as practiced now.
At the least, every psychology student should read this book.
P.S. - There is an excellent commentary on 'mindfulness' as a method of corporate and individualist quietism in The Guardian. This book is now in stock at May Day: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/jun/14/the-mindfulness-conspiracy-capitalist-spirituality
At the least, every psychology student should read this book.
P.S. - There is an excellent commentary on 'mindfulness' as a method of corporate and individualist quietism in The Guardian. This book is now in stock at May Day: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/jun/14/the-mindfulness-conspiracy-capitalist-spirituality
Other
reviews on this issue, below. Use blog
search box, upper left: “Propaganda,” (Bernays); "Bright-Sided," (Ehrenreich); "The Happiness Industry," "Lost Connections," "Shopping World."
And I
bought it at May Day Books!
Red Frog
June 10,
2019
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