Comments to
Prof. Jaakko G. Borg's book:
Drive
Emotions and Color Preferences: Szondi´s Personality Theory in the Year 2004.
In this book he describes the further development
of his BEL (Borg-Ekman-Lüscher) color test. On page 88 of this book he states:
If
Lüscher's eight color series is run twice, as Lüscher himself recommends, a
summing of the results of the two runs will produce figures fully comparable
with those from the BEL.
Reading this statement I became enthusiastic, as Borg´s
extended studies in the year 2000 [Szondi’s
Personality Theory in the Year 2000] had already shown a correlation
between Szondi's factors and Lüscher's colors. If these were correct it would
mean that, in addition to the basic Lüscher interpretation, one could apply
much of the collected knowledge already presented by Szondi's research. This meant an immense increase of potential
valuable information, based on only 12 minutes testing!
It looked, moreover, that Freud´s famous
metaphor of "The Shattered Crystal Theory," (1936 in Die
Zersetzung der Persönlichkeit) without great theoretical
problems even might apply to the Lüscher test. Lüscher's eight colors
might be interpreted from the same theoretical outlook as he applied it to the
eight Szondi factors.
After this short theoretical
introduction follow herewith some of
the terms Borg and Lüscher had in common:
1. a). Autonomous, (Field independent.
A law onto Oneself.) Authoritarian, Directive. +2 +3 Green and Red.
(Centripetal [concentric] movement toward the self [green] - centrifugal [ex-centric]
movement outward from the Self [red]) or Major (Sexual Index, subjective
experienced Masculinity).* [See explanations of terms in End Note.]
1. b). Heteronomous, (Field
depending. Subject to Another’s law). Receptive, +1 + 4 Blue and Yellow (Centripetal
[concentric] movement toward the Self, the centre [blue] - centrifugal [ex-centric]
movement outward from the Self [yellow]. Suggestible. Minor (Sexual
Index, subjective experienced Femininity). Note: “minor-tonality
individuals seek personal feedback, even to the point of dependency.”* [See explanations
of terms in End Note.]
2a) Integration
(sociability) +1 + 3 (Blue and Red)
versus
2b)
Differentiation. +2 +4
(Green and Yellow) was another valuable factor one could find in Lüscher’s
classification.
With these qualities in mind, and
especially based on the interrelation
of the four basic colors, one can easily draw important
conclusions: for example, to indicate to which “potential psychiatric class”
the client might belong. But of course this presupposes a thorough knowledge of
the significance of the colors.
The Phenomenal Modes of Experiencing
Colors:
Prof. Borg
explained them in the following way [Borg, 2004, pp. 74-78]:
Lü. 3. Red
As a color experience red is inherently
centrifugal. Lüscher also characterizes it as autonomous, independent,
self-sufficient.
"Preference for red indicates a
desire for activation in general, on the one hand in the erotic direction, but
also, depending on the situation, in the direction of aggression." "A
subject who is himself forceful, vital, energetic -- and thus has the
self-confidence red presupposes -- will incline to red; one who is weak and
encounters something powerful will experience red as threatening" (Lüscher
1974, p. 6).
Thus:
(+3) = Attraction (Hinwendung); "A desire for experiences, a craving for
stimuli" (Lüscher 1974, p. 45); autonomy, centrifugality.* [See explanation
of terms in End Note.]
(-3) = Rejection (Gegenwendung); "Fear of excessive stimulation, excessive
demands, exhaustion (Ibid. p. 45); contrary to the foregoing this is
negation of centrifugality, which means centripetality. Autonomy is lacking and
feared; hence a tendency to heteronomy, especially if blue is placed first.* [See
explanations of terms in End Note.]
Lü. 4. Yellow
As a color experience this is also
centrifugal, possibly even more so than red.
According to Lüscher yellow is nevertheless heteronomous, lacking in
self-sufficiency, resorting outside itself. "Yellow is preferred by
subjects who seek changed, liberating conditions in order to find outlet for
built-up tensions in the desired way, to develop more happily. They desire
liberation from burdens, or detachment from some relationship which they find
distressing in the dependency it entails." (Ibid. p. 19). (They want to be independent.)
Central here is on the one hand
“increased activation,” but at the same time a “growing tendency to seek outlet
and release of tension in a search for the new.”
Thus:
(+4) = Hinwendung; "A craving for things distant, for freedom, flight
from problems"; Centrifugality, Heteronomy.
(-4) = Gegenwendung; "Fear of openness, of loss and defeat, fear of
change." (Ibid. p. 45).
Centripetality and rejection of heteronomy.
Lii. 2. Green
As a color experience this is centripetal
and autonomous.
(+2) = Hinwendung; "A need for independence and recognition"
(Lüscher 1974, p. 45). The subject seeks to barricade himself within his own
self -- in other words, centripetality and autonomy in a full sense.
(-2) = Gegenwendung; "Fear of confinement and dependency, fear of
situations of compulsion" (Ibid. p.
45); opposite to the foregoing: centrifugality, especially if red or yellow is
placed first.
Lü 1. Blue
As a color experience centripetal, if
possible even more so than green; blue is relaxing, soothing, tending to
surrender. According to Lüscher blue is heteronomous, i.e., non-independent,
non-self-sufficient. This is understandable in the light of Lüscher's
association of preference for blue with dependency, desire for close
relationships -- i.e., heteronomy. Preference for blue evinces in all
essentials the opposite of the inclination to red -- an overall desire for
tranquility.
As it is generally observed (Borg 1988
and numerous other studies) that blue is a woman's preference; this can hardly
be taken to entail a dimension of "cold blue - warm red" -- women are
certainly not inherently cold.
The explanation for the phenomenon lies
in all likelihood primarily in the fact that minor-tonality individuals seek
personal feedback -- even to the point of dependency. They are, in other words, heteronomous,
whereas the major tonality is linked to centrifugality and autonomy, men usually
choosing red.
Thus:
(+1) = Hinwendung; "A need for peace and relaxation."
Centripetality and Heteronomic.
(-1) = Gegenwendung; "A stimulus vacuum, fear of lack and non-satisfaction"
(Ibid.
p. 45); that is, centrifugality.
Lü 5. Violet
According to Lüscher this color is
characterized by mutually exclusive opposites -- in the fusion which produces
it, red is active and exciting, blue tranquillizing -- a 'coincidentia
oppositorum' (Cusanus). Binding here consists in an intense desire to merge - object identification.
Preference for violet has been held to
evince a desire for magical identification – Levy-Brühl’s participation mystique (Ibid.
p. 11). In this color centrifugal and centripetal so tend to cancel each other
out that in appropriate proportions these oscillate, rendering it conflicting,
ambivalent in tendency. If red is the stronger element the propensities of red
will dominate, i.e., centrifugality; if blue, the centripetality of that color
will prevail.
Thus
(+5) = Hinwendung; "If in the Lüscher test violet is placed first,
this will invariably evince “faszinierte Intresse” and a need for sensitive
identification. This, however, is of a completely different kind according as
second place is assigned to drive-like sexual red or sensitive tranquil blue,
ecstatic enthusiasm with all its possibilities for sensitivity " (ibid.
p.12).
(-5) = Gegenwendung; "A subject, again, who rejects violet fears loss
of independence in sensitive erotic surrender, fear of having to pay as price his
own fearful egocentric selfhood " (Ibid. p. 13). (Matter-of-fact oriented?)
"Our culture leaves little space
for violet - for sensitive identification" (Ibid. p. 13). It should be observed that although violet involves a
merging of opposites, it remains nonetheless inwardly conflicting, even inchoate
-- or rather civilized man experiences it as such.
Lü. 6. Brown
"Brown is a darkened orange,
obtained when this is tinged for example with black. In the process the
vitality of red is extinguished, suppressed, or "broken," as a
painter might say. Brown has lost the active, expansive impulse, the
forcefulness of red. What is left is vitality no longer actively assertive but
passively receptive -- brown thus represents a vital physical-sensual emotion,
the drive-like nature of Id determination. Hence preference for, indifference
to or rejection of brown evinces the
subject's attitudes to his own physicality. A subject who rejects brown as
unpleasant is denying the vital state of his own body (Ibid. p. 21)."
This latter comment applies particularly
to women; those who reject brown wish to be accepted as something other than
bodily beings. Rejection of brown is constantly observed, especially in female
subjects (Borg 1988, e.g. p. 106 and p. 155).
Orange is a centrifugal color, and,
depending on the amount of black used in darkening, its effect will, as already
noted, be offset and its centrifugality diminished, approaching centripetality
until, via an ambivalent state, inhibition sets in as black predominates.
According to the proportions fused, then, brown involves a struggle for balance
between centrifugality and centripetality/ inhibition.
(+5) = Hinwendung; "Subjects who find themselves in an apparently
inescapable conflict frequently prefer brown, a subdued, dull color. They no
longer wish to deliberate; they shun reason and rational lucidity out of fear
that they can no longer bear the life they are living. In suppressing reason
they seek the refuge of a primitive drive state" (Ibid. p. 22). Here binding
via suppression: one is prompted to ask whether the brown uniform of the German
SA troops was not a coincidence.
(-5) = Gegenwendung; "Subjects who reject brown seek thereby to raise
themselves above the drive-like instincts of the masses and gain attention as
individual personalities" (Ibid. p. 22): brown moves to last placing.
Lu. (0) Grey
"The medium grey is not a color;
neither light nor dark. It is completely devoid of stimulus and free of all
psychic tendencies" (Ibid. p. 23). Grey evinces a “limit” of
experience, an extremity.
Thus:
(+0) = Hinwendung; "A test subject who chooses grey -- that limit --
does not wish to be known, isolates himself from all influences in order to
attain a stimulus-free state" (Ibid. p. 23).
Neutral grey is neither centrifugal nor
centripetal and likewise neither autonomous nor heteronomous.
(-0) = Gegenwendung; "A subject who shuns grey activates
himself out of readiness for stimulus and is distressed to be left unsatisfied
(German: “zu Kurz kommen”). He
desires to draw upon all possibilities to attain this goal and thus to achieve
freedom from a stimulus-free state." (Ibid. p. 23).
Lü. 7. Black
"Black constitutes denial, the
boundary at which the diversity of life ends. Black thus manifests the notion
of nothingness (das Nichts),
non-being in relinquishment, as death, denial in defiant protest" (Ibid.
p. 25). "Black evinces the damming up of impulses, defense
against them, rejection" (Ibid. p. 26). Preference for black does indeed
indicate autonomy, although excesses in a pathological direction. (Destructive
aggression SCH k-!!!)
(+7) = Hinwendung; "A subject who places black first is rising in
defiant protest against his fate" (Ibid. p. 26).
(-7) = Gegenwending; Does not wish to give up. Relinquishment means to him
lack and distressing deficiency. A subject who finds black unpleasant --
statistically the most common observation -- finds it so difficult to give up
in anything that he runs the danger of imposing authoritarian, inordinate
demands (Ibid. p. 26).
==================
Moreover Borg describes, in his 2004 book, how he
applied the Lüscher interpretation in a depth psychological way when he writes:
This approach really gives a surprising extra amount
of diagnostically information in at most 12 minutes.
Lüscher succeeds with the Cube model to show the
dialectics of the client’s 4 basic colors selection. By this model one
can immediately see the color's Foreground profile (FGP), the first positive position in
its relation to the selected Theoretical background profile (THP). The last is a negative position.
Lüscher based his psychotherapeutic conclusions on the
dialectics of these two findings. For instance when the selection of Position
one was Red and the last (negative) position Blue (+3 - 1), his
therapeutic suggestion (Goal) was then to strive to turn around these positions
and make the activation of the THP = (Blue/red, +1 - 3) qualities the
goal of the therapeutic efforts in order to arrive at a better inner
balance.
*End Note
On Centripetal
and Centrifugal: Borg relates
these concepts to tension: centripetal is accumulative, thus it builds up
tension; centrifugal is dispersive, thus it releases tension [Borg, Szondi’s Personality Theory in the Year 2000,
p. 86]. Centripetal and centrifugal are both extremes.
Borg also equates centripetal and centrifugal in terms
of direction: Centripetality is the
movement towards the self and centrifugality
is movement outwards from the self. [Ibid. p. 97]
Another idea that Borg relates and accepts is Lüscher's
idea of concentric and ex-centric Ian Scott [The Lüscher Color Test, 1969, pp. 26-27]
defines these two terms well so that one does not equate concentric with
introversion and ex-centric with extroversion [something that Borg eventually
does in his 2008 book]. "Concentric means 'subjectively
concerned'".... Scott says that this is not to be confused with
introversion, although an introvert is concentric. "To be
subjectively concerned is to be exclusively interested in that which is an
extension of oneself, as well as being interested in the Self." He
cites a person who talks and acts like an extrovert but the only things talked
about are himself and all his family, possessions, and his interests.
Borg explicitly equates centripetal with concentric [Borg,
2000, p. 97].
More on Scott's ideas: "Ex-centric means 'objectively concerned' and is more nearly akin to
extraversion than concentricity is to introversion. The ex-centric individual is interested in
the environment, in the things and people around him, either from the point of
view of impinging on and causing effects on his environment. If the
former, he is being causative and therefore autonomous towards his
environment; if the later, he is being the effect of his environment and
therefore heteronomous.
Autonomy is thus the equivalent of 'being a cause,' while heteronomy is equivalent to 'being an
effect.'”
Borg explicitly equates centrifugal with ex-centric [Ibid. p. 97].
On this same page, Borg states: blue and green are concentric
and thus centripetal and that red and yellow are ex-centric and thus
centrifugal. This agrees with Lüscher.
Borg then adds the Lüscher dimensions of autonomous and heteronomous: Autonomous,
independent, a “law onto itself” for red and green and heteronomous: subject to other laws for blue and yellow.
Borg further adds to the situation by adding major tonality [which is the Szondi’s Dur idea for masculinity] and minor tonality [which is Szondi’s Moll idea for femininity]. Borg
equates the extreme of centrifugality
with masculinity and the extreme of centripetality
with femininity. Borg distinguishes between the constitutional and actual sex against
the subjective experience of one’s sex [Ibid.
pp. 101-102].
Hinwendung
[turning toward] refers to the first two choices in the 8 color test; these
choices are in the direction of satisfaction. Gegenwendung [turning against] refers to the last and the
second-last choices and indicates rejection. As used above in the main text, Hinwendung refers to the goal of
position one, and Gegenwendung refers
to the last position, one of rejection.
The end of Part 1.