Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1
135

L


LACAN, JACQUES (1901–1981). The
contribution of Jacques Lacan to philo-
sophy and the human sciences can be
summed up in his famous assertion that
“the unconscious is structured like lan-
guage.” With this, he brings together
Ferdinand de Saussure’s conception of
language and Sigmund Freud’s concep-
tion of the unconscious. Lacan’s crucial
assumption remained that language is a
self-regulating system of signs rather than
signs or words which refer to an indepen-
dent reality. Lacan analyzes language in
terms of its internal structures, i.e., what
language is in itself as a formal system of
relations, and not in terms of what lan-
guage refers to or is about. Lacan insisted
that Freud’s original insights were dis-
torted by positivist or scientist methods
which reduce the unconscious to the
behavior of the ego. In the late 1950s
Lacan would accuse the International
Psychoanalytic Association of reducing
(Freudian) psychoanalysis to a mechani-
cal causal behaviorism. He went on to
demonstrate that psychoanalysis as tool
for understanding the practice(s) of lan-
guage extends its sphere of influence to


the human sciences and so to the condi-
tions for all meaning and values. In this
way, Lacan extends his work and influ-
ence to the texts of philosophy, literature,
and theology, generating controversy and
often troublesome practices. At issue was
the Lacanian view that psychoanalysis, or
eventually “psycholinguistics,” is no more
than the science of provoking and seek-
ing to understand the language of the
unconscious; it cannot give any promise
of a cure. Lacan’s controversial theories
and practices kept him at the center of
debates within and outside of the profes-
sion of psychoanalysis, notably in the
debates of postmodern philosophers and
theorists. In his lecture, “On the Death of
God,” Lacan claims that Freud himself
might be counted among “the great theo-
logians of our century” because he exam-
ines the manifestations and deformations
of a religious function, that is, the reli-
gious form of the commandment to
love the Lord God your Father and your
neighbor as yourself. In other words,
Lacan saw in Freud what we might see in
Lacanian psycholinguistics: the persistent
life of God, despite claims to “the death
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