Re: Michel Foucault--The Birth of the Clinic
看板EngTalk (全英文聊天)作者fizeau (Gratias ad Opus)時間18年前 (2008/01/08 19:09)推噓0(0推 0噓 0→)留言0則, 0人參與討論串2/17 (看更多)
From what moment, from what semantic or syntactical change, can one recognize
that language has turned into rational discourse? What sharp line divides a
description that depicts membranes as being like 'damp parchment' from that
other equally qualitative, equally metaphorical description of them laid out
over the tunic of the brain, like a film of egg whites? Do Bayle's 'white'
and 'red' membranes possess greater value, solidity, and objectivity--in
terms of scientific discourse--than the horny scales described by the doctors
of the eighteenth century? A rather more meticulous gaze, a more measured
verbal tread with a more secure footing upon things, a more delicate, though
sometimes rather confused choice of adjective--are these not merely the pro-
liferation, in medical language, of a style which, since the days of galenic
medicine, has extended whole regions of description around the greyness of
things and their shapes?
In order to determine the moment at which the mutation in discourse took place
, we must look beyond its thematic content or its logical modalities to the
region where 'things' and 'words' have not yet been separated, and where--at
the most fundamental level of language--seeing and saying are still one. We
must reexamine the original distribution of the visible and invisible insofar
as it is linked with the division between what is stated and what remains un-
said: thus the articulation of medical language and its object will appear as
a single figure. But if one poses no retrospective question, there can be no
priority; only the spoken structure of the perceived--that full space in the
hollow of which language assumes volume and size--may be brought up into the
indifferent light of day. We must place ourselves, and remain once and for all,
at the level of the fundamental spatialization and verbalization of the patho-
logical, where the loquacious gaze with which the doctor observes the poisonous
heart of things is born and communes with itself.
Modern medicine has fixed its own date of birth as being in the last years of
the eighteenth century. Reflecting on its situation, it identifies the origin
of its positivity with a return--over and above all theory--to the modest but
effecting level of the perceived. In fact, this supposed empiricism is not
based on a rediscovery of the absolute values of the visible, nor on the pre-
determined rejection of systems and all their chimeras, but on a reorganization
of that manifest and secret space that opened up when a millennial gaze paused
over men's sufferings. Nonetheless the rejuvenation of medical perception, the
way colours and things came to life under the illuminating gaze of the first
clinicians is no mere myth. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, doctors
described what for centuries had remained below the threshold of the visible
and the expressible, but this did not mean that, after over-indulging in spe-
culation, they had begun to perceive once again, or that they listened to
reason rather than to imagination; it meant that the relation between the vi-
sible and invisible--which is necessary to all concrete knowledge--changed its
structure, revealing through gaze and language what had previously been below
and beyond their domain. A new alliance was forged between words and things,
enabling one to see and to say. Sometimes, indeed, the discourse was so com-
pletely 'naive' that it seems to belong to a more archaic level of rationality,
as if it involved a return to the clear, innocent gaze of some earlier, golden
age.
In 1764, J. F. Meckel set out to study the alterations brought about in the
brain by certain disorders (apolexy, mania, phthisis); he used the rational
method of weighing equal volumes and comparing them to determine which parts
of the brain had been dehydrated, which aprt had been swollen, and by which
diseases. Modern medicine had made hardly any use of this research. Brain
pathology achieved its 'positive' form when Bichat, and above all Recamier
and Lallemand, used the celebrated 'hammer, with a broad, thin end. If one
proceeds with light taps, no concussion liable to cause disorders can result
as the skull is full. It is better to begin from the rear, because, when only
the occipital has to be broken, it is often so mobile that one misses one's
aim....In the case of very young children, the bones are too supple to be
broken and too thin to be sawn; they have to be cut with strong scissors'. The
fruit is then opened up. From under the meticulously parted shell, a soft,
greyish mass appears, wrapped in viscous, veined skins: a delicate, dingy-
looking pulp within which--freed at last and exposed at last to the light of
day--shines the seat of knowledge. The antisanal skill of the brain-breaker
has replaced the scientific precision of the scales, and yet our science
since Bichat identifies with the former; the precise, but immeasurable gesture
that opens up the plenitude of concrete things, combined with the delicate
network of their properties to the gaze, has produced a more scientific ob-
jectivity for us than instrumental arbitrations of quantity. Medical rationa-
lity plunges into the marvelous density of perception, offering the grain of
things as the first face of truth, with their colours, their spots, their
hardness, their adherence. The breadth of the experiment seems to be identified
with the domain of the careful gaze, and of an empirical vigilance receptive
only to the evidence of visible contents. The eye becomes the depositary and
source of clarity; it has the power to bring a truth to light that it recieves
only to the extent that it has brought it to light; as it opens, the eye first
opens the truth: a flexion that marks the transition from the world of class-
ical clarity--from the 'enlightenment'--to the nineteenth century.
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