Thursday 5 July 2012

Behavior or expression?


The quoted passage from Daniel Stern’s book contains so many issues that several posts may be needed. I will begin with the first transformation in “chasing the path” from maternal representations to the infant’s understanding of its intent. Here it is: “We must be able to describe in concrete behavioral terms how the mother manages to be rejecting and aloof such that her rejection and aloofness can be perceived by the baby and have an impact on him.”
How do psychic processes become external? The concepts by which we attempt to describe this event affect the outcome. If we carry out the analysis by using “representation” and “behavior” we will get into Stern’s question, and the puzzling problem in it. In fact, the very term transformation contains an Aristotelian reverberation. A form is transferred from one domain into another.
An alternative would be to regard “the transformation” as an expression. Psychic processes become manifested through expressions. I Consulted the Oxford English Dictionary to get the current meanings of the term and found the following:
The action of expressing or representing (a meaning, thought, state of things) in words or symbols; the utterance (of feelings, intentions, etc.).
The action or process of manifesting (qualities or feelings) by action, appearance or other evidences or tokens.
An action, state, or fact whereby some quality, feeling, etc., is manifested; a sign, token
The confusion between representation and reference seems to be so pervasive that it is even reproduced in the OED definitions. “Expressing or representing” are used as equivalent terms. This won’t do! There is an unrecognized internal ambiguity here that reproduces Aristotle’s original rift between in-dwelling forms and their expressions in words. How does a form become a sign within the mental apparatus of a human being?
The OED definition clearly wants to include signs in characterizing expressions. In the OED Thesaurus this is  stated by relating an expression to signification, defined as “a thing, event, action, etc., which signifies, symbolizes, or expresses something.” It seems that I have to stop at this very first problem of how “representations” become “expressions” for a while.