The Rooting of the Mind in the Body: New Links Between Attachment Theory and Psychoanalytic Thought

Author:

Fonagy Peter1,Target Mary2

Affiliation:

1. University College London Gower Street London WC1E 68T United Kingdom,

2. University College London

Abstract

The relationship between psychoanalysis and attachment theory is complex indeed. A brief review of the psychoanalytic literature as it concerns attachment theory and research, and of the attachment literature as it pertains to psychoanalytic ideas, demonstrates an increasing interest in attachment theory within psychoanalysis. Some of the difficulties that attachment theory faces in relation to psychoanalytic ideas are traced to its links to the now dated cognitive science of the 1960s and 1970s. Today, however, a second-generation cognitive neuroscience seeks neurobiologically plausible accounts in which links with brain and body are seen as shaping mind and consciousness, which increasingly are seen as “embodied,” as emerging from or serving the needs of a physical being located in a specific time, place, and social context. This idea has also been at the core of much psychoanalytic thinking, which has historically affirmed the rootedness of symbolic thought in sensory, emotional, and enacted experience with objects. Now neurobiological advances supporting the concept of embodied cognition offer an opportunity to forge powerful links between the hitherto separate domains of attachment theory and psychoanalysis. Speculations about the nature of language are presented that emphasize the origin of internal working models (and of representations in general) in early sensorimotor and emotional experiences with a caregiver. It is argued that language and symbolic thought may be phylogenetically and ontogenetically embodied, built on a foundation of gestures and actions, and are thus profoundly influenced by the experience of early physical interaction with the primary object. Finally, the clinical and research implications of these ideas are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)

Reference167 articles.

1. Ainsworth, M.D.S., Bell, S.M. & Stayton, D.J. (1971). Attachment and exploratory behaviour of one-year-olds . In The Origins of Human Social Relations, ed. H.R. Schaffer. New York: Academic Press, pp. 17—57.

2. Attachment theory as a framework for understanding sequelae of severe adolescent psychopathology: An 11-year follow-up study.

3. Attachment and Loss, Vol. 3. Loss, Sadness and Depression. By John Bowlby.

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