Subjectivity and Otherness A Philosophical Reading of Lacan
Another mistaken interpretation is the one which is somehow the opposite of the one which reduces desire to demand. Although at ...
desire (as fundamentally sexual) is equal to the additionof the necessity of need to the pre-Oedipaldemand for love. Another way ...
the unconditionality of the demand for love, and in so doing he subjectivizes him- self and emerges as a desiring lack-of-being ...
viduation—is possible (in the unconscious) only insofar as it is partly reduced to the demand of the Other (in self-consciousnes ...
in its purest state “the [post-Oedipal] demand for love doesn’t satisfy anything but itself, which is to say [pure] desire as an ...
attempt to draw some final conclusions about the various significations which can be attributed to the object a:this will be don ...
there is necessarily a price to be paid in order to transform the mere failure of the sub- jectwho is involved in the Oedipus co ...
Let us look at this issue of counting more closely. We have already explored from various standpoints the way in which symbolic ...
effected by Φ; such a paradox is well expressed by the formula of secondary iden- tification, which is perfectly calibrated in o ...
various Ur-Ich,the consolidation of the ego tout court.In other words, the self- conscious ego emerges only insofar as one “has ...
after castration. The object aas desire of the (m)Other corresponds to a real lack for the subject, since it is itself a real la ...
sire is the desire of the Other as desire of lack, this could apply equally to desiring the Other’s desire as the object of one’ ...
In Seminar X, Lacan clearly describes the fundamental fantasy as a “picture which is located over the frame [encadrement] of a w ...
scene in which one “makes oneself be seen” by “his” gaze as lost part-object lo- cated in the double. It is only in this context ...
is suspended due to the excessive proximity of the Other’s real desire (beyond my fantasy). This is nothing but the uncanny mome ...
a (paradoxical) “guarantee” of the function of the Other as lacking, desiring Other. In other words, assuming symbolic castratio ...
We have already analyzed the way in which Lacan discusses the notion of the real das Dingin Seminar VII. Now, we should reassess ...
Good since this is what the moral law, in founding itself, forbids as supremely evilfor the subject: “The [barred] Sovereign Goo ...
Conversely, the son’s consummationof incest, the subject’s plunging into the real lack in the (m)Other, does not entail any inst ...
Let us now focus on Kant. Lacan believes that, despite its structural impasse, Kantian ethics represents a historic preliminary ...
«
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
»
Free download pdf