Autobiography of Pierre Janet
First published in Murchison, Carl.
(Ed.) (1930). History of Psychology in Autobiography (Vol.
1, pp. 123-133).
Republished by the permission of Clark University Press,
Worcester, MA.
© 1930 Clark University Press.
Posted March 2000
The editor of this collection
had a very unique idea when he asked psychologists to write
their own intellectual histories and criticisms, to transform
themselves into philosophical historians, and treat themselves
as though they had been dead for a long time. This hardly
seems right since we are too active and too close to our own
work to judge it with independence and to understand the influences
which have unknowingly drawn us in certain directions. I have
always protested against subjective psychology, and here I
am asked for a most personal and subjective psychological
analysis. It will necessarily be very poor, and the historians
of the future, if by chance they should concern themselves
with me, will find this autobiography very ridiculous. I beg
to be excused in advance and I blame the initiators of this
Project and their powers of seduction.
I
I was born in 1859 and
became interested in psychology at an early age. My studies
seem to be the result of a sort of conflict, a compromise
between incompatible and diverse tendencies. In my childhood
I acquired a fondness for the natural sciences. At a very
early age, I became interested in botany and started a collection
of dry plants. Alas, since this is a confession, I must admit
that I have retained that same unfortunate passion all my
life. I still have my herbarium which I increase every year
and which becomes increasingly cumbersome. This passion determined
my taste for dissection, precise observation, and classification,
which should have made a naturalist or physiologist of me.
But I had within me
another tendency which was never satisfied and which one scarcely
would recognize in its present metamorphosis. At the age of
eighteen I was very religious, and I have always retained
mystical tendencies which I have succeeded in controlling.
It was a question of conciliating scientific tastes and religious
sentiments, which was not an easy task. The conciliation could
have been effected by means of a perfected philosophy satisfying
both reason and faith. I have not found this miracle, but
I have remained a philosopher.
My interest in philosophical
studies was quickened by the example [p. 124] of my uncle,
Paul Janet, my father's brother. Paul Janet, to whom I owe
much, was an excellent man, industrious and intelligent, and
today it seems to me that justice was not done him. He was
not only a spiritual metaphysician, the last representative
of the eclectic school of Cousin, but he was a great spirit
who was interested also in politics and the sciences, and
who, with great liberalism sought to reunite these studies.
He understood the importance of medical and anatomical studies
to the moral intelligence of man. It was he who, at the beginning
of my philosophical studies, presented me to Dastre, Professor
of Physiology at the Sorbonne, and started me in his laboratory.
It was he who had me, after normal School, enroll at the Medical
School in Paris and continually urged me to combine medical
and philosophical studies.
Already the philosophers
of Cousin's school, Maine de Biran and Joufroy, regarded psychology
as a departure from philosophy, and my philosophical ideas,
at once scientific and religious, led very naturally to a
study of psychology which was to terminate in the distant
future in the desired metaphysics. Do not the thousands of
observations on the ideas and sentiments of the afflicted
and of those presumably in good moral health, which I have
gathered during my whole life and classified with so much
care, constitute a collection, a herbarium, which may be placed
alongside of the other? Under such diverse influences, the
philosopher has become a psychologist.
When I became Professor
of Philosophy at the Lycée at Havre at the age of 22, I wished
to continue my studies of medicine and scientific psychology
in spite of difficulties. I was received with a welcome, which
I shall never forget, by the doctors of the hospital who put
themselves at my disposal not only in communicating medical
experiences to me but also in procuring subjects who were
interesting from the psychological point of view.
An unusual proposition
made by a well-known doctor in Havre, Dr. Gibert, has from
the beginning oriented my studies in a rather unforeseen manner.
At that time, it was my intention to prepare a medical thesis
on hallucination and to study in connection with this the
mechanism of perception. I asked Dr. Gibert if he knew of
anyone suffering from hallucinations that I might study. He
told me that he knew of none at that time which was interesting,
but that he could show me other psychological cases which
in his opinion were far more remarkable. He had always had
a certain partiality for the study of animal magnetism, which
had flourished in Normandy, [p. 125] above all in Caen, and
which persisted despite official discredit even of the connoisseur.
He had kept in touch with a woman known by the name of Léonie,
who had been hypnotized in her youth by Dr. Perrier of Caen,
who had been introduced by Dupotet, and who had been observed
to perform some curious things with clairvoyance, mental suggestion,
and hypnotism from a distance, etc. What a godsend for a young
psychologist, 22 years of age, curious as to all psychological
phenomena and drawn by the mysterious side of these occult
faculties! At my request Gibert had the celebrated Léonie
brought to Havre and my studies on her at various periods
over a stretch of years oriented my early works toward the
marvels of hypnotic somnambulism.
II
The experiments that
Gibert showed me and that I myself reproduced on Léonie, in
particular the provocation of hypnotism from a distance, did
not seem entirely conclusive but were, nevertheless, quite
strange and worthy of attention and discussion. I had the
opportunity of informing of my work a society of psychologists
just recently founded in Paris under the presidency of Charcot
and Charles Richet. This little discourse, though very prudent
and skeptical as to mental suggestion and hypnotism from a
distance, nevertheless attracted the attention of the Society
for Psychical Research in London who proposed to send one
of their members to Havre to verify my work. The experiments
which I conducted at the request of this commission and with
the precautions demanded have given some very interesting
results: 16 times out of 20 somnambulism has exactly coincided
with a mental suggestion made at a distance of one kilometer.
These experiments, which the representatives of supernormal
(supra-normale) psychology have published and popularized
in my opinion too soon, have since that time been cited and
used in all works on the unknown faculties of the human mind.
In viewing these citations and this abuse of my former observations,
I have always had a feeling of astonishment and regret. Strange
that these authors who reproduce with such confidence these
experiments of 1882 have never had the idea of writing to
the experimenter who still living and asking what he thought
of them! I should have answered that already at that time,
and even more so now, I doubted the interpretation of the
facts and was disposed to criticize them myself, regarding
them as a simple departure from more profound studies. [p.
126]
My first entrance into
the study of the disorders of the nervous system by examination
of mysterious phenomena and doubtful reality does not seem
entirely regrettable. In the first place, these strange investigations
have put me in contact with some important people who had
the same curiosity at the back of their minds, Charcot, Charles
Richet, Frederick Myers, Sidgwick. They have informed me of
their own enthusiasms and doubts, and have shown me their
own research work and methods. This difficult and dangerous
research work has taught me from the beginning the necessity
of a certain disposition of mind indispensable for the study
of pathological psychology. One must approach this research
with a certain calmness devoid of systematic and predetermined
admiration or denial. Charcot said to me later in speaking
of the study of hysteria: "Nil admirari is an indispensable
attitude." I had already learned that in examining Léonie.
I was very much displeased after each séance to hear the exaggerated
and inexact accounts of the assistants who appeared awkward
and talkative during the experiment, and afterwards constructed
entirely false recollections of what had happened. At that
time, I resolved to examine subjects and patients as far as
possible without the encumbrance of witnesses. Furthermore,
I acquired a habit which I have always retained, the habit
of writing constantly during the meeting minute notes on everything
that happened, of noting the words spoken by the witnesses,
by the patient, by myself, and keeping no further account
of any recollection unless it coincided exactly with some
written note. My psychology has become the "psychology of
the fountain pen," and my descriptions of the patients have
unfortunately become unusually long and weighted by the reproduction
of the exact words spoken and recorded by me. However, all
this gave to the observation the character of reality which
I sought particularly. Whatever they may be, these first studies
in the wonders of animal magnetism turned me to the study
of somnambulism and hypnotic practice, which were then very
popular and at least appeared to be a means of approach to
the psychological study of mental pathology.
It must be remembered
that at this time, in 1882, I had made only very few studies
in anatomy and physiology and I had not the slightest notion
of the teaching of Charcot at Salpêtrière, nor of those of
Bernheim at Nancy of whose very existence I was ignorant.
With some difficulty, I became acquainted with these teachings
and, at the same time compiled the works of the French hypnotists
into a collection [p. 127] which is still of interest today.
Entirely independent of these various schools, I set about
criticizing these works. I proved in particular the very curious
and historical relationship between the teachings of Charcot
or Bernheim and those of the hypnotists whom they pretended
to ignore and scorn but who nevertheless influenced them.
(Médications psychologiques, Vol. I, p. 170.) My conviction
was that these authors approached the study of certain strange
forms of behavior with too much medical preoccupation and
without sufficient knowledge of the psychological problems
underlying these conditions. This led me to an extended study
of neuroses, particularly hysterical neuroses, which I continued
at Havre until 1889 and at Salpêtrière in the Psychological
Laboratory which Charcot had placed under my supervision in
1889. This work has been summarized in several articles published
since 1886, in my philosophy thesis, 1889, and in my medical
thesis, L'état mental des hystériques, 1892.
These studies have been
somewhat forgotten today because of the discredit thrown on
observations relative to hysteria since the death of Charcot
in 1895. Hysteria patients seemed to disappear because they
were now designated by other names. It was said that their
tendency toward dissimulation and suggestibility made an examination
dangerous and interpretations doubtful. I believe these criticisms
to be grossly exaggerated and based on prejudice and misapprehension,
and I still am under the illusion that my early works were
not in vain and that they have left some definite ideas.
From the psychological
viewpoint, they have to a small extent begun to throw light
on the difference between actions of the higher centers and
those of lower order, between synthetic and automatic acts.
The latter were only the regular repetition of a group of
psychological phenomena, of a system of ideas, images, emotions,
movements, which had been set up by the higher acts of synthesis
at the moment when a complex situation presented itself for
the first time. This difference, especially in certain cases,
gave rise to the distinction of unconscious acts as
opposed to completely conscious acts. These studies
have begun the interpretation of suggestion which plays
so important a rôle in social behavior and have approached
those of will and belief.
From the medical viewpoint,
I still believe that one will eventually be compelled to return
to interpretations of neuropathic disorders similar to those
which I have proposed in regard to hysteria. I was one of
the first to point out the enormous rôle of suggested beliefs
[p. 128] and autosuggestion in hysteria: in my thesis on the
mental state in hysteria, 1892, I designated most of the accidents
of the neurosis by the name of fixed ideas of the hysteriac.[sic]
After the death of Charcot, an interpretation of hysteria
which reattached all the symptoms to suggestion was presented
with the pretension of being entirely different from mine.
Of course, in reality I had never absolutely systematized
my interpretations by means of fixed ideas. In establishing
the importance of suggested belief in hysteria, I was forced
to notice that this explanation was not to be exaggerated,
that even in certain cases of hysterical hemiplegia, there
was a disposition to go beyond the fixed ideas of the subject,
and that in general these fixed ideas did not always exist
with precision. Above all, I could not consider this tendency
toward suggestibility as an absolutely primitive phenomena,
I could not admit that an ailment might be explained by limiting
one's self to saying that the subject had suggested to himself
that he was sick. In my opinion, a preliminary ailing tendency,
a weakening of the functions of resistance and synthesis,
are necessary to give rise to suggestibility.
In seeking the conditions
of this weakening which in my opinion are numerous, I was
led to recognize in certain cases the rôle of one or several
events in the subject's past life. These events, which had
established a violent emotion and a destruction of the psychological
system, had left traces. The remembrance of these events,
the mental work involved in their recall and settlement, persisted
in the form of lower and more or less conscious psychological
processes, absorbed a great deal of strength, and played a
part in the persistent weakening. Here still, if I am not
mistaken, this notion has been fruitful and has given rise
to a whole theory of neurosis and psychosis by the subconscious
persistence of an emotional traumatism, and a whole method
of research has been worked out to the utmost of this kind
of traumatism. So far, I had never introduced a clinical observation
as a metaphysical system, and I had never claimed that all
neuropathic weaknesses were exclusively the consequence of
a traumatic reminiscence. Besides, my studies at the Salpêtrière
showed me more and more the part played by exhaustion of all
kinds, organic ailments, and hereditary predispositions; I
did not want to exaggerate the import of a just observation
in some particular cases.
III
This fear of generalizing
a particular observation, this desire to point out the different
forms of psychological weakness have led me [p. 129] to a
study of other aspects of depressive neurosis. In a large
hospital where there were so many different kinds of patients,
it was easy to choose, and for several years I devoted my
studies to tics, insanity, phobias, obsessions, and impulses
of all kinds. This new series of observations is summarized
in numerous articles, in my books on Les nérvoses et les
idées fixes, and has terminated in my work on Les obsessions
et la psychasténie, 1903.
These various disorders
which torment the patient for years and which border on grave
mental maladies, dementia praecox in particular, had been
described separately without relation to one another. I have
sought to give some unity to this confused group of symptoms
in discovering what is essential and common to the different
forms of disorder. That has permitted me to place under the
heading of psychasthenia, if not a so-called malady,
at least a great syndrome, a form of neurosis, distinct from
epilepsy and hysteria.
In my description of
the symptoms of the psychasthenic neurosis, I stressed particularly
the pathological feelings (sentiments pathologiques)
which I designated at that time as feelings of inadequacy
(sentiments d'incomplétude) and which have become in
my last book a part of the feelings of emptiness (sentiments
du vide).
From the psychological
viewpoint, this work on obsessions and psychasthenia marks
a very interesting stage in the evolution of my ideas on the
different degrees of psychological activity. Instead of limiting
myself to two easily distinguished forms, automatic activity
and synthetic activity, I have been led to establish certain
degrees of higher activity. One quality of these activities
strikes the observer when he examines the maladies of doubt,
the various aboulias, and the feelings of inadequacy (sentiments
d'incomplétude). In the normal man, these activities are
characterized by a strict conformity between actions and exterior
reality, physical or social. No doubt, generally speaking,
all activity conforms somewhat to reality: the simplest reflex
is adapted to some fact in the real world, but this relationship
which is not perceivable in the lower activities becomes at
a certain level an object of consciousness, and this feeling
of reality plays an important part in the operations of the
will and belief. It is easy to recognize that most of our
patients have difficulty with this function of reality.
In studying these differences
in functioning, one is naturally led to suppose that all the
operations of the mind do not have the same degree of facility,
and that in the course of a weakening of cerebral [p. 130]
functions, they disappear successively and progressively by
reason of their unequal degrees of facility. The degree of
psychological tension or the elevation of the mental
level is manifested by the degree in the hierarchy of
phenomena occupied by the highest functioning which the subject
attains. The functions of reality, together with actions,
perceptions of reality, certainty, all demanding high degrees
of tension, become phenomena of high tension; dreams, disturbances
of motility. emotions demanding lower tensions may be considered
as phenomena of low tension corresponding to a lower mental
level.
IV
I wish to mention here
a circumstance, which, if I am not mistaken, has played a
certain part in the evolution of my teachings. Placed by circumstances
between philosophers and medical men, for a long time I had
the feeling that it was very difficult to speak to both at
the same time and that their different languages prevented
them from understanding each other. I have never been so struck
by the language difficulty in psychology as in a trivial incident
which I beg your permission to repeat.
About 1896 or 1897,
some of the students at the hospital, the internes, and the
directors of the clinic among whom were my friends, Laignel-Lavastine,
and the lamented Sicard, came and asked me to conduct a special
course in clinical psychology for them. At the end of the
course, a strange thing happened: the students were satisfied
or at least were kind enough to say they were, but the professor
was very much dissatisfied with himself. Never before had
I had such a feeling of the insufficiency of this teaching,
the conventional character and practical nullity of our psychology.
At that time, having begun to substitute for Ribot at the
College of France, I had the opportunity to work up the course
in a new way and with new terminology. During my thirty years
at the College of France, I believe I treated all questions
of psychology and psychiatry from a more clinical point of
view and with a more appropriate terminology.
A practical psychology
which aspires to a part in jurisprudence, pedagogy, and medicine
should above all be objective and based upon externally observable
facts. Psychology evolved from Cartesianism regarded thought
as the most primitive phenomenon and action as a consequence
or secondary expression. Its language is based upon descriptions
of internal phenomena and is not in accord with the language
based upon objective descriptions. We are obliged to formulate
[p. 131] a psychology in which externally observable action
is the fundamental phenomena, and in which inner thought is
only a reproduction, a combination of these outward actions
in a reduced and specialized form.
Behaviorism, so necessary
in the study of the conduct of animals, may easily be applied
to elementary acts. The question arises: Can the same kind
of description be applied to the behavior of men? It is possible
under two conditions: in the first place, this psychology
of action must make a place for consciousness, which may be
forcibly suppressed in the case of lower animals. One must
regard the phenomenon of consciousness as specialized conduct,
a complication of the act which is superimposed on the elementary
conduct. A second condition is that in this description of
conduct one must necessarily be preoccupied with the higher
forms of conduct, beliefs, reflection, and experiences. These
facts have ordinarily been expressed in terms of thought,
and in order to preserve the same language throughout the
science of psychology, it is necessary to express them in
terms of action. This psychology may be designated by the
name psychology of conduct in order to indicate that
it is concerned with a broader and higher form than behaviorism·
This is what I have been trying to do in my teaching for the
last thirty years.
These reflections determined
by the necessity of clinical teaching have inspired my later
works. In the three volumes of Médications psychologiques
in 1919, I presented in this more precise language a summary
of my long medical studies on neuroses, psychoses, and
their treatment. Not only did I try to review the doctrines
which I had gathered since my youth on the history of various
methods of psychotherapy, but I also tried to explain briefly
the facts and ideas contained in those words repeated so often
at random, suggestion, hypnotism, moral catharsis (désinfection
morale, liquidation morale) rest, aesthesiogeny, isolation,
excitation, moral direction. I have stressed a subject
which has always interested me, that of the difficulty of
social action. It has not been taken sufficiently into account
how much one person by words or his presence alone can modify
in one sense or another the psychological tension of another.
The problem of religious conduct is closely related to this
study of influences, directions, and social excitation.
V
This psychology of conduct,
however, presents difficulties and raises new problems. Many
of the higher psychological phenomena [p. 132] have an internal
spiritual aspect and appear entirely different from so-called
actions. The desire to classify all psychological facts under
action and conduct has forced me to introduce a new
analysis of consciousness, belief, memory, thought, and
above all emotions. These studies were explained in
my courses on inner thought and on the evolution
of memory, and the notion of time, both of which have
been published and in my two volumes, De l'angoisse à l'extase,
1928, which deal with belief and emotions. Thought is
inner language; belief becomes a special combination of language
and action; memory is above all a system of recounting; emotions
are regulations of action, reactions of the individual to
his own actions.
The psychology of conduct
adapts itself very readily to our former conception of psychological
tensions which places one tendency above another according
to its degree of complexity, perfection, and order of acquisition.
In my lectures at the university, and in my first volume of
De l'angoisse à l'extase I was able to give a pictorial
hierarchy of the more definite tendencies. I was glad to notice
that from this point of view the different forms of contemporary
psychology, child psychology, and psychology of primitive
peoples, all agree along many lines with pathological psychology
and approach an analogous pictorial hierarchy. I have particularly
stressed two forms of belief, primitive belief (asséritive),
and reflected belief: this distinction seems important for
the interpretation of suggestions and delirium.
At the same time, the
psychology of conduct obliges us to stress another aspect
of actions which often appear in a different form and have
another efficacy although they seem to remain at the same
level. The efficacy of actions appears to depend not only
on their psychological tension but also on the material force
of movements capable of displacing objects, on the rapidity
of these movements which determine the displacement in a given
time, on the relative duration of these movements. Those are
the measurable quantities which express the energy of a living
being. Instead of trying to introduce quantity in psychology
by the hypothetical constructions of psychophysics, one must
introduce quantity by the appreciation of the energy of the
subject and its variations.
Modifications of psychological
energy, whether they be general or more or less systematized
in a specific tendency, determine great changes in character
and play an important part in most psychological disorders.
At the point of departure from the neuroses, one can ascertain
[p. 133] hereditary exhaustions, exhaustions of infectious
or toxic origin, and in many cases particular actions which
have caused the exhaustion. I have drawn up a list of these
costly actions and of the characteristics of the action which
modify the expenditure of energy. Many disorders have a direct
bearing on the derivation of energy which is produced when
a more or less charged action of high tension cannot be executed.
The psychological problem of the cost of action, of exhaustion
by expenditure, of the use of residual energy will later become
a paramount problem in psychology and psychiatry although
today it is scarcely suspected.
I must mention a whole
new study which has scarcely begun and which has as its object
not only this psychological energy but also the relationship
between this energy and tension. I have approached part of
this study in examining the phenomenon of discharge which
plays an essential part in convulsive attacks and in the crises
of psycholepsy. Probably in normal life, among well-balanced
individuals, a certain proportion must be maintained between
disposable energy and tension, and it is not good to combine
great energy with feeble tension or inversely to seek to maintain
high tension with insufficient energy: the result is always
agitation, insufficiency, and disorder. The most useful psychology
of the future will be a practical psychology of conduct which
will at the same time be dynamic and will study the physiological
production of energy and its distribution.
Without doubt, these
systematic constructions are very hypothetical and temporary.
The most interesting part of my work will always be the numerous
observations I have gathered on both the normal and ailing
man. I should never have been able to gather them or classify
them if I had not been directed by philosophical ideas which
were always indispensable. As William James said, one sees
what one is prepared to see, so too, one cannot study the
psychology of man without guiding ideas, without philosophical
or even religious interests.

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