Reich expanded on the concept throughout his career. In his 1942 scientific autobiography
The Discovery of Orgone, Vol. 1: The Function of the Orgasm, Reich provided the following summary of his findings regarding orgastic potency: it is an outcome of
health, he argued, because full orgastic potency can only come about if a person is psychologically free of neurosis (pleasure
anxiety absent), physically free from "body armor" (chronic
muscular contraction absent), socially free from
compulsive morality and duty as imposed by
authoritarian and mechanistic ways of life, and has the natural ability to love. According to one source, Reich held that the vast majority of people do not meet these criteria and thus lack orgastic potency.
Character analysis In Reichian psychology, the individual lacking orgastic potency is seen to have developed a neurotic
psychosomatic "armor" that blocks the experience of pleasure. This is differentiated between the functionally identical "character armor" and "muscular armor". Muscular armor prevents the sexual climax from being experienced throughout the body. For example, forms of armoring are pulling back the
pelvis or tightening the
thigh and
buttock muscles. Reich used the terms "genital character" and "neurotic character" respectively to distinguish between two ideal character types: one with and one without orgastic potency. The genital character is the non-neurotic character structure, which is free from armor and, therefore, has the capacity of natural sexual and moral self-regulation, and experiences life as a fulfilment and unfolding of his or her natural tendencies and struggle to achieve objectives. The neurotic character operates under a principle of compulsive moral regulation due to chronic energy stasis. The neurotic character's work and life is permeated by struggle to suppress original and even more basic urges or tendencies. The various forms of neurotic character correspond to the equally many ways of suppressing such urges or tendencies that the human being in question considers to be dangerous or is ashamed of.
Therapeutic resolving of armor The two goals of Reichian
vegetotherapy are the attainment of orgastic potency (for sexual intercourse) and of the "orgasm reflex" during therapy. The orgasm reflex may be observed as waves of pleasure moving through the body, a series of spontaneous, involuntary movements, and signifies that the person is free of body armoring, entailing the ability to give and receive love in all its forms.
Prevention through social reform The Invasion of Compulsory Sex-Morality, written in 1931, was Reich's first step in approaching the answer to the problem of mass neuroses in society, followed by
The Mass Psychology of Fascism and
The Sexual Revolution. The primary sociological issues with which Reich dealt included in particular the following three: • How to prevent neurosis through correct upbringing and education. • How to prevent sex-negative attitudes in society through sexual reform. • How to prevent authoritarian repression through general social reform.
Bio-electric experiments In 1934, Reich expanded his orgasm theory in the essay "Der Orgasmus als Elektro-physiologische Entladung" ("The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological Discharge"). Through clinical observations in his sex-counseling centers, Reich concluded that conceiving of the orgasm as only mechanical tension and relaxation could not explain why some experience gratification and others do not. Thus, based on the work of
Friedrich Kraus and others, Reich proposed that the orgasm is a bio-electric discharge, and is part of what Reich termed the orgasm formula: mechanical tension > bioelectric charge > bioelectric discharge > mechanical relaxation. 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 fluids and the
hydro-mechanics of plasma movements in protozoa". 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". The corollary is the idea that bioelectric energy displayed an antithetic function: if it flows outward to the skin surface, causing a build-up of charge at the skin, it is experienced as
pleasure; in contrast, if it flows inward, away from the skin surface, resulting in a lowering of charge at the skin, then it is experienced as an increase in central tension or
anxiety. Finally, in 1937 Reich published
Experimentelle Ergebnisse über die elektrische Funktion von Sexualitat und Angst (
The Bioelectrical Function of Sexuality and Anxiety) in which he thought he experimentally verified the existence of what he first termed the "libidinal economy". The report summarised two years of research into the reaction of the skin to states of pleasure and anxiety. His claimed findings included the following: normal skin has a constant, basic electrical charge of 40 milivolts that does not change with mood states; erogenous zones have a wandering potential that can at times be much higher (200 milivolts) or lower, depending on the mood states; change in potential does not depend on the mechanical nature of the stimulus, but on changes in the subject's sensation or emotion; and, erogenous zones can have mechanical tension (be tumescent) without changes in levels of the charge, e.g. as in the case of a "cold erection".
Orgone energy A common misconception about Reich's later developed
orgone energy accumulator is that he claimed it could provide orgastic potency to those sitting inside the device. As Reich put it, "The orgone accumulator, as has been clearly stated in the relevant publications (
The Cancer Biopathy, etc.), cannot provide orgastic potency." == Reception ==