Subjectivity and Otherness A Philosophical Reading of Lacan
Let us analyze more closely the meaning of this basic Law of the Symbolic as such. In Seminar III, Lacan draws one fundamental c ...
everyday reality as well as the inherently deceptive dimension of the symbolic Other; in Aristotle’s universe, the Other of the ...
One could propose that, for Lacan, all different “non-deceptive elements” tac- itly presuppose the universal Name-of-the-Father ...
view the mythical origin of many of the axioms of psychoanalytic theory does not by any means diminish their epistemological val ...
seek it in another signifier,which could not appear outside this locus in any way.Which is what I mean when I say that no metala ...
in Seminar V, and interpreting them in a new manner, one could argue that, after A is barred, the universal symbolic father—who ...
like the subject, it is also implicated in a dialectic situated on the phenomenal plane of the reflection in relation to the lit ...
Other is “marked by the [differential and thus lacking logic of the] signifier,” it should itself be related to the dimension of ...
in the S (A barred) and read as: signifier of a lack in the Other, inherent in[that is immanent to] its very functionas the trea ...
courtby means of a sublation of lack. To return to our original question: S (A barred) is both different from other signifiers S ...
of the phallus S (A barred). The signifier primordially holes the Real; such a hole transforms the “neutrality” of the Real into ...
fantasy attempt to formalize such a relationship while at the same time showing how it intersects with the imaginary order. ( 3 ...
In concluding this section, I should attempt to answer the following broad question: how does Lacan arrive at the conclusion tha ...
when he attempts to question the Real directly. As soon as the Real is more openly tackled, the idea of a pure Real soon becomes ...
defending the idea of a Real-of-the-Symbolic, Lacan also unintentionally falls back into a quasi-mystical understanding of the p ...
from reality in order to emphasize that there are things which “effectively hap- pen,” “effects” (Wirkungen),that are irreducibl ...
dependent on a material support than the notion of libido.”^87 But what about the material support of the unconscious power plan ...
ject that Lacan did not consider for an instant what is obviously the main issue at stake here: how was the power plant built in ...
infancy. Against this stance, which considers genitality to be the harmoniously preestablished goal of psychosexual development, ...
the subject of desire, it is precisely what ismissing from him.^109 Hence one must conclude that the Real-of-the-Symbolic (as be ...
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