Orgastic Potency
Orgastic Potency
point of Reichs orgasm theory was his clinical observation of genital disturbance in all neurotics,[9] which he
presented in November 1923, in the paper "ber Genitalitt vom Standpunkt der psychoanalytischen Prognose
und Therapie (Genitality from the viewpoint of psychoanalytic prognosis and therapy). That presentation was
met with a chilling silence, much hostility, and was partially discredited because Reich could not adequately dene normal sexual health. In response, and after a further
year of research, Reich introduced the concept orgastic
potency at the 1924 Psycho-analytic Congress, Salzburg
in the paper Die therapeutische Bedeutung des Genitallibidos (Further Remarks on the Therapeutic Signicance of Genital Libido).[10]
For Reich, orgastic impotence, or failure to attain orgastic potency (not to be confused with anorgasmia, the
inability to reach orgasm) always resulted in neurosis, because during orgasm that person could not discharge all
libido (which Reich regarded as a biological energy). According to Reich, not a single neurotic individual possesses orgastic potency.[2]
Reich coined the term orgastic impotence in 1924 and
described the concept in his 1927 book Die Funktion
des Orgasmus, the manuscript of which he presented to
Sigmund Freud on the latters 70th birthday.[3] Though
Reich regarded his work as complementing Freuds original theory of anxiety neurosis, Freud was ambivalent in
his reception.[4] Freuds view was that there was no single
cause of neurosis.[5]
In addition to his own patients love lives, Reich examined through interviews and case records those of 200 patients seen at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Polyclinic. Reich was impressed by the depth and frequency of genital disturbances he observed. One example was a patient who had reported having a normal sex life, but on
closer interviewing by Reich revealed not experiencing
orgasm during intercourse and having thoughts of murdering her partner following the act. Such observations
made Reich very suspicious of supercial reports about
sexual experience.[9] His analysis of these cases led Reich to conclude that genital disturbance was present in all
neuroses and correlated in severity to the severity of the
neurosis, and that all patients who improved in therapy
and remained symptom-free achieved a gratifying genital sex life.[9][11] This led Reich to establish criteria for
satisfactory sexual intercourse. Based on interviews with
people who appeared to have satisfactory sex lives, he described the sex act as being optimally satisfactory only if
it follows a specic pattern.[9][11] Orgastic potency is Reichs term for the ability to have this maximally fullling
type of sexual experience, which in the Reichian view is
limited to those who are free from neuroses and appears
to be shared by all people free of neuroses.[11]
Background
2 Denition
Reichs precise denition for the phrase orgastic potency changed over time as he changed his understanding of the phenomenon. He rst described it in detail in
Wilhelm Reich
his 1927 book Die Funktion Des Orgasmus. In the 1980
Reich developed his orgasm theory between 1921 and English translation of the book, Genitality in the Theory
1924 and it formed the basis for all his later contributions, and Therapy of Neuroses, he dened orgastic potency as
including the theory of character analysis.[8] The starting the ability to achieve full resolution of existing sexual
1
need-tension.[12]
In his 1940 book Die Entdeckung des Orgons Erster Teil:
Die Function des Orgasmus, published in English in 1942
as The Discovery of the Orgone, Volume 1: The Function
of the Orgasm, he dened it as the capacity to surrender
to the ow of biological energy, free of any inhibitions;
the capacity to discharge completely the dammed-up sexual excitation through involuntary, pleasurable convulsions of the body.[13]
His last published denition of orgastic potency, which
is part of his 1960 published Selected Writings, is the
capacity for complete surrender to the involuntary convulsion of the organism and complete discharge of the
excitation at the acme of the genital embrace.[14]
Reich related orgastic potency and orgastic impotence
to a, respectively, healthy and unhealthy sexual experience for the adult.[15] He described that the healthy experience has specic biological and psychological characteristics; is identical for men and women;[16] is characterised by love and the ability to express it; full, deep,
pleasurable breathing is present; deep, delicious currentlike sensations run up and down the body shortly before orgasm; and involuntary muscular movements are
present before climax.[17] Moreover, Reich dened the
healthy sexual experience exclusively in terms of the sexual union between male and female. The dierence between the presence and absence of orgastic potency in the
sexual encounter, as described by Reich, is summarised
by Boadella as follows:[15]
Orgasm theory
Reich was strongly inuenced by Sigmund Freud's distinction between psychoneuroses and actual neuroses, the
latter being considered of a physiological origin,[18] and
the related libido as the energy of an unconscious sexual
instinct.[19] However, Reich emphasised the libido theory
exactly when it was being discarded by psychoanalysis.[20]
Freud observed that one group of patients suering from
neurosis had sexual disturbancespractising coitus interruptus, conicts related to masturbation or sexual abstinenceand were cured when these disturbances were removed. Hence, Freud reasoned that sexual maladaption
caused the active damming-up of sexual stu[11] and
dened actual neurosis as anxiety based on dammedup libido.[21] In contrast, those with psychoneuroses had
conicts related to the unconscious: repressed impulses,
desires and memories, and repressed unresolved conicts
and childhood traumas.[11] Freud abandoned this view in
the 1920s and postulated the never popularly accepted
death instinct to explain the destructive behaviour that
was earlier attributed to frustrated libido.[22]
Reich retained the idea of a sexual energy and the concept orgastic potency as central elements in sex-economy,
a general Reichian theory of health dealing with an organisms energy household.[30] Reich progressively called
this energy libido, sexual energy, emotional energy, bioelectric energy, biophysical energy and, nally, orgone
(life) energy. In terms of this theory, an individual lacking in orgastic potency is unable to fully discharge energy
Reich distinguished between complete release of ac- in orgasm, and thus remains in a constant state of tension,
cumulated sexual tensions in orgasm, resulting in the both physical rigidity and mental anxiety, which constirestoration of energy equilibrium, and orgastic impo- tutes neurosis.[31]
4.3
4.1
5 RECEPTION
and education.
Bio-electric experiments
5 Reception
Secondly, in 1934 Reich published the paper Der Urgegensatz des Vegetatives Lebens (Sexuality and Anxiety: The Basic Antithesis of Vegetative Life). The paper is a literature study in which Reich explored the
physiology of the autonomic nervous system, the chemistry of anxiety, the electro-physiology of the body uids and the hydro-mechanics of plasma movements in
protozoa.[43] In conclusion, Reich proposed a functional
psychosomatic antithesis between the parasympathetic
and sympathetic nervous systems, captured respectively
as pleasure or movement towards the world, and anxiety or movement away from the world.[44][45] The corollary is the idea that bioelectric energy displayed an antithetic function: if it ows outward to the skin surface,
According to Myron Sharaf, Reichs view that the capacity to unite tender and sensuous feelings is important
for a healthy love relationship was not a new concept.
Freud had noted this as early as 1912. However, Sharaf
states that the involuntary physical aspects of the full genital discharge in Reichs work were new.[9] He called the
concept orgastic potency and the manner in which Reich
connected a series of psychological, social, and biological ndings with the presence or absence of this function
unique to Reich.[51]
When Reichs rst introduced the orgasm theory at the
psychoanalytic congress in Salzburg he was congratulated
by Karl Abraham for successfully formulating the economic element of neurosis.[20] However, Reichs presen-
5.2
Reichian legacy
tation of the orgasm theory came exactly when psychoanalysis was moving away from the original Freudian instinct theory based on psychic energy. In his 1926 book
Inhibitions, Symptoms, Anxiety Freud completely abandoned his earlier position and wrote: Anxiety never
arises from repressed libido.[52]
5
and furthermore he hid the conicts in the psychoanalytic movement that were explicit in Reichs work. A major entry mainly based on Fenichels work appeared in
the 1953, 1970 Psychiatric Dictionary by L. Hinsie and
R. Campbell: "Impotence, orgastic: The incapacity for
achieving the orgasm or acme of satisfaction in the sexual
act. Many neurotics cannot achieve adequate discharge of
their sexual energy through the sexual act. . . . According
to Fenichel, an important concomitant of orgastic impotence is that these patients are incapable of love.[60][61]
Freud was ambivalent in his reception. When Reich presented him the manuscript of Die Funktion des Orgasmus in May 1926, Freud replied, That thick?" Later that
year he wrote to Reich that the book was valuable, rich
in observation and thought,[53] but in May 1928 wrote to As of September 2012, there are no peer-reviewed artiLou Andreas-Salom: We have here a Dr. Reich, a wor- cles in the PubMed database that discuss the concept of
thy but impetuous young man, passionately devoted to his orgastic potency or Reichs orgasm theory.[62]
hobby-horse, who now salutes in the genital orgasm the
antidote to every neurosis. Perhaps he might learn from
your analysis of K. to feel some respect for the complicated nature of the psyche.[5]
Sharaf writes that the theory was immediately unpopular within psychoanalysis.[54] Paul Federn (18711950),
Reichs training assistant, and Hermann Nunberg (1884
1970) were particularly opposed to it. The German psychiatrist Arthur Kronfeld (18861941) wrote a positive
review of Die Funktion des Orgasmus in 1927: In this
extremely valuable and instructive work the author has really succeeded in broadening as well as deepening Freuds
theory of sex and of the neuroses. He broadens it by
clarifying for the rst time the signicance of the genital orgasm for the development and the whole structure
of the neuroses; he deepens it by giving Freuds theory
of the actual neuroses an exact psychological and physiological meaning. I do not hesitate to consider this work
of Reichs the most valuable contribution since Freuds
The Ego and the Id.[55] The most prominent Freudian
to make clinical use of the concept orgastic potency was
Edward Hitschmann, the Director of the Psychoanalytic
Polyclinic.[56]
Two further reactions to Reichs work in the psychoanalytic movement were either completely ignoring it or
using the concept as if it was commonly accepted, but
without referring to Reich as the source. As a result,
the theme orgastic potency survived but became divorced
from the concepts in which Reich embedded it. For example, in Clinical Psychology Charles Berg uses Reichs
sex economic theory of anxiety as his own without attributing it to Reich.[57] Erik Erikson was another psychoanalytic writer who partially adopted Reichs concept
without acknowledgement. In his bestselling Childhood
and Society, Erikson wrote: Genitality, then, consists
in the unobstructed capacity to develop an orgastic potency so free of pregenital interferences that the genital
libido . . . is expressed in heterosexual mutuality . . .
and with a convulsion-like discharge of tension from the
whole body.[58][59]
1923: Zr Triebenergetik, Zeitschrift fr Sexualwissenschaft 10. Republished in English as Concerning the Energy of Drives in ibid.: 143-157.
Mature orgasm
See also: Orgasm Clitoral and vaginal categories
In 1905, Freud developed the psychoanalytic distinction
between clitoral and vaginal orgasm, with only the latter
being identied with psychosexual maturity.[75] This distinction has since been challenged among others on physiological grounds. For example, Masters and Johnson
wrote: Are clitoral and vaginal orgasms truly separate
and anatomic entities? From a biological point of view
the answer to this question is an unequivocal NO.[76]
However, a clinically grounded qualitative distinction between psychosexual maturity and immaturity was only introduced with Reichs concept orgastic potency vs. orgastic impotence (instead of vaginal vs. clitoral).[77] As Masters and Johnson focussed on phenomena shared by all
sexual climaxes - ranging from what Reich categorised as
orgastic potency to impotence - their nding has no direct
relevance to or implications for Reichs distinction.[78]
Psychoanalysis
In the following articles Reich discussed the positive and
negative therapeutic reactions of patients to changes in
their genitality:[79]
1922: "ber Spezitt der Onanieformen", Internationale Zeitschrift fr Psychoanalyse 8. Republished
in English as "Concerning Specic Forms of Masturbation" in ibid.: 125-132.
1924: "ber Genitalitt vom Standpunkt der psychoanalytischen Prognose und Therapie, Internationale Zeitschrift fr Psychoanalyse 10. Republished in English as On Genitality: From the Standpoint of Psychoanalytic Prognosis and Therapy in
ibid.: 158-179.
1925: Weitere Bemerkungen ber die therapeutische Bedeutung der Genitallibido, Internationale
Zeitschrift fr Psychoanalyse 11. Republished in
English as Further Remarks on the Therapeutic
Signicance of Genital Libido in ibid.: 199-221.
1926: "ber die Quellen der neurotischen Angst
(Beitrag zur Theorie der psychoanalytischen Therapie) [On the Sources of Neurotic Anxiety (A Contribution to the Theory of Psychoanalytic Therapy)],
Internationale Zeitschrift fr Psychoanalyse 12, and
International Journal for Psychoanalysis 7: 381391.
1927: Die Funktion des Orgasmus: Zur Psychopathologie und zur Soziologie des Geschlechtslebens, Vienna: Internationale Psychoanalytische
Verlag.[80] Second, revised edition published in English in 1980 as Genitality in the Theory and Therapy
of Neurosis, New York: FSG, ISBN 0374516413.
Biology
Sexology
1921: Der Koitus und die Geschlechter, Zeitschrift
fr Sexualwissenschaft 8. Republished in English in
1975 as Coiton and the Sexes, Early Writings, Vol.
1, New York: FSG: 73-85, ISBN 0374513473.
1922: Triebbegrie von Forel bis Jung, Zeitschrift
fr Sexualwissenschaft 9. Republished in English as
In the following articles Reich explored whether the orgasm theory was rooted in physiology:[7]
1934: Der Orgasmus als Elektro-physiologische
Entladung, Zeitschrift fr Politische Psychologie
und Sexualkonomie 1: 29-43, Copenhagen. Republished in English in 1982 as The Orgasm as an
Electrophysiological Discharge, The Bioelectrical
Investigation of Sexuality and Anxiety, New York:
FSG: 3-20, ISBN 0374517282.
7
1934: Der Urgegensatz des Vegetatives Lebens,
Zeitschrift fr Politische Psychologie und Sexualkonomie 1: 125-142, Copenhagen. Republished
in English as Sexuality and Anxiety: The Basic Antithesis of Vegetative Life, in ibid.: 21-70.
Synthesis
1942: The Discovery of the Orgone Vol. 1: The
Function of the Orgasm, New York: Orgone Institute Press.
See also
Body psychotherapy
Human sexual response cycle
Libido
Psychosexual development
Sexual dysfunction
Footnotes
[16] Reichs model takes a unisex, integrated biopsychological perspective. Source: Mah, Kenneth and Yitzchak M.
Binik (2001) The nature of human orgasm: a critical review of major trends, Clinical Psychology Review 21(6):
823-56.
[17] Daniels 2008: Orgiastic Potency [sic].
[18] Rycroft 1971: 29.
[19] Rycroft 1971: 18-22.
[20] Boadella 1985: 19.
[21] Kovel 1991.
[22] Rycroft 1971: 34, 36-7.
[23] Daniels 2008: Neurotic Sexuality.
[24] Rycroft 1971: 29-31.
[25] Baker 1986: 3, 10 (in pdf).
[26] Baker 1986: 12 (in pdf).
[27] Rycroft 1971: 31.
[28] Reich 1999: 6-8.
[29] Konia 1987.
[30] Raknes 1944: Lead.
[31] Baker 1986: 2, 10 (in pdf).
[32] Daniels 2008.
[33] Reich 1961: 9-12.
[34] Baker 1986: 2 (in pdf).
[35] Daniels 2008: Sexuality and Armoring.
10
REFERENCES
10 References
Baker, Elsworth (1986), Sexual
Theories of Wilhelm Reich
(PDF), Journal of Orgonomy 20
(2): 175194, ISSN 0022-3298,
OCLC 1754708, archived from the
original on 6 June 2012.
Boadella, David (1985), Wilhelm
Reich: The Evolution of His Work,
London.
Daniels, Victor (10 May 2008),
Lecture notes on Wilhelm Reich
and His Inuence, Victor Daniels
Website in The Psychology Department (Sonoma State University),
archived from the original on 6 June
2012.
Freud, Sigmund (1942), Letter to
Reich. quoted in Reich (1942) The
Function of the Orgasm, New York.
Freud, Sigmund (1948), Inhibitions, Symptoms, Anxiety, Hogarth
Press.
Kardiner, Abram (1955), Sex and
Morality, Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Kinsey, Alfred (1948), Sexual Behaviour in the Human Male, & Others, New York.
Kinsey, Alfred (1953), Sexual Behaviour in the Human Female, &
Others, New York.
Konia, Charles (1987), A Patient
Brought to Genitality (PDF), Journal of Orgonomy 21 (2): 172184,
ISSN 0022-3298, OCLC 1754708,
archived from the original on 6 June
2012.
Kovel, Joel (1991), A Complete
Guide to Therapy: From Psychoanalysis to Behaviour Modication,
London: Penguin Books, ISBN
0140136312.
9
Kronfeld, Arthur (1927), Review
of Die Funktion des Orgasmus",
Archiv. fuer Frauenkunde 14.
Lowen, Alexander (1966), Love
and Orgasm, New York & London.
Marmor, Judd (1954), Some Considerations Concerning Orgasm in
the Female (PDF), Psychosomatic
medicine 16 (3): 240245, archived
from the original on 16 September
2012.
Masters, W.H. (1963), Johnson,
V. E., The sexual response cycle
of the human female III. The Clitoris: anatomic and clinical considerations, West. Jo. Surg. Obst. &
Gynec..
Masters, W.H. (1966), Human
Sexual Response, Johnson, V. E.,
Boston, US.
Philipson,
Tage
(1952),
Kaerlighedslivet:
Natur Eller
Unnatur, Copenhagen.
Raknes, Ola (March 1944), (under pseudonym Carl Arnold), Sexeconomy: A theory of living functioning, International Journal of
Sex-Economy and Orgone-Research
3 (1): 1737, OCLC 5917664.
See here for a summary on Xiandos.info, archived from the original
on 9 June 2012.
Reich, Wilhelm (1961), Selected
Writings: An Introduction to Orgonomy, Foreword by Mary Boyd Higgins, New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, ISBN 0374501971.
Reich, Wilhelm (1980) [Published
in 1927 as Die Funktion des Orgasmus: Zur Psychopathologie und zur
Soziologie des Geschlechtslebens],
Genitality in the Theory and Therapy of Neurosis, Trans. by Philip
Schmitz, New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux. Note: not to be confused with the 1942 The Function
of the Orgasm, Volume I of The Discovery of the Orgone.
Reich, Wilhelm (1999) [First English tr. published 1942], The
Function of the Orgasm: SexEconomic Problems of Biological
Energy, The Discovery of the Orgone, Volume I, Trans. Vincent R.
Carfagno, London: Souvenir Press,
ISBN 0-285-64970-1.
Roazen, Paul (1985), Fury on
11 Further reading
Baker, Elsworth (1986), Sexual Theories of Wilhelm
Reich (PDF), archived from the original on 6 June
2012.
Bakhtunin, M (2014), The Art of Making Love,
archived from the original on 15 January 2014.
Raknes, Ola (1944), Sex-economy: A Theory of Living Functioning. For a summary see here on Xiandos.info, archived from the original on 9 June 2012.
Reich, Wilhelm (1927) [1980 translation], Extract
from: Die Funktion des Orgasmus/Genitality in the
Theory and Therapy of Neuroses (Part II) (PDF),
archived from the original on 6 June 2012.
Reich, Wilhelm (1942), The Discovery of the Orgone Vol. 1: The Function of the Orgasm, New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, ISBN 0374502048.
12 External links
Documentary Mans Right to Know (28 min) Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust. An introduction to the life
and work of Wilhelm Reich.
Documentary Who is Afraid of Wilhelm Reich
(Wer Hat Angst vor Wilhelm Reich) (1:34 hr),
Antonin Svoboda in coproduction with Austrian
TV.
10
13
13
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