Changes
Instinct
,The LinkTitles extension automatically added links to existing pages (https://github.com/bovender/LinkTitles).
{{Topp}}instincts|instinct{{Bottom}}
==Jacques Lacan=====Instinct and Drive===[[Lacan]] follows [[Freud]] in distinguishing the [[instinct]]s from the [[drive]]s, and criticizing those who obscure this [[distinction]] by using the same [[English]] [[word]] ("[[instinct]]") to translate both [[Freud]]'s [[terms]] (''[[Instinkt]]'' and ''[[Trieb]]'').<ref>{{E}} p. 301</ref> "[[Instinct]]" is a purely ''[[biological]]'' [[concept]] and belongs to the study of [[animal]] [[ethology]]. Whereas [[animal]]s are driven by [[instincts]], which are relatively rigid and invariable, and imply a direct relation to an [[object]], [[human]] [[sexuality]] is a matter of [[drives]], which are very variable and never attain their [[object]]. Although [[Lacan]] uses the term "[[instinct]]" frequently in his early [[work]], after 1950 he uses the word less frequently, preferring instead to reconceptualize the concept of [[instinct]] in terms of [[need]].
===Biology and Social and Cultural Factors===From his earliest works, [[Lacan]] -- following criticizes those who attempt to [[understand]] human [[behavior]] purely in terms of [[Freudinstinct]] -- distinguishes s, arguing that this is to suppose a [[harmonious]] relation between man and the [[instinctsworld]], which does not in fact [[exist]].<ref>{{Ec}} p. 88</ref> The concept of [[instinct]] supposes some kind of direct innate [[knowledge]] of the [[object]] which is of an almost [[moral]] and [[drivescharacter]].<ref>{{Ec}} p. 851</ref>
== References ==
<div style="font-size:11px" class="references-small">
<references/>
</div>
{{OK}}