Psychoanalysis, Science, & Ethnography

Psychoanalysis, Science, & Ethnography

From Speaking Body by Neil Gorman

April 7, 2026 · 17 min · Season 2 · Episode 12

About this episode

Neil Gorman discusses the unique stance of psychoanalysis in the U.S. psychotherapeutic marketplace, comparing it to science and ethnography.

A short solo episode of The Speaking Body Podcast, building on a previous discussion of psychoanalysis as a clinical practice that does not take up the patient’s supposition that the analyst knows the patient’s unconscious, instead offering curiosity and a position of lack of knowledge. Neil argues this stance is unusual in the U.S. psychotherapeutic marketplace, where many therapies emphasize teaching skills, tools, and expert knowledge, but that the underlying ethic is not unique to psychoanalysis. He compares psychoanalysis to science, where experiments are driven by unanswered questions and results generate further questions, and to ethnography, where researchers enter unfamiliar settings with nonjudgmental curiosity to learn how people live. He references Chris Arnade’s “thick culture/thin culture” distinction and restates it psychoanalytically as unconscious plot versus conscious stage settings, and invites listeners to respond via speakingbody.substack.com. 00:00 Welcome and Setup 00:27 Recap Key Claims 01:50 Lacan and Curiosity 03:00 Beyond Psychoanalysis 05:08 Science as Not Knowing 05:57 Experiments and Replication 08:44 Ethnography Explained 11:45 Shared Ethic Across…

Topics covered

  • psychoanalysis
  • science
  • ethnography
  • curiosity
  • psychotherapy

Keywords

  • clinical practice
  • unconscious
  • expert knowledge
  • experiments
  • thick culture
  • thin culture

Mentioned in this episode

Places: U.S.

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