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Against Adaptation

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===Introduction: Freud's Copernican Revolution===
===The Primacy of the Symbolic and the Unconscious===
=====Freud and Lacan on the Unconscious and Language=====
=====A Few General Remarks on Lacan's Theory of Language=====
=====The Body, Language, and the Unconscious =====
===The Subject of the Unconscious===
=====The Subject of the Enunciation and the Subject of the Statement=====
=====The Subversion of the Subject=====
=====''Wo Es war, soll Ich werden''=====
===From the First to the Second Version of the Graph of Desire===
=====Introduction=====
=====The Other in the Second Version of the Graph of Desire=====
=====The Other as "Witness"=====
===The Symbolic and the Imaginary===
=====The Imaginary: General Remarks=====
=====The Ideal Ego and the Ego-Ideal=====
===Language, the Unconscious, and Desire===
=====Introduction=====
=====Beyond Need and Demand: Desire=====
=====The Unconscious Is the Discourse of the Other=====
===The Metapsychological Significance of the Phantasy and of the Object a===
=====The Third Version of the Graph of Desire=====
=====The Significance of the Phantasy=====
===The Truth of the Unconscious: S(0O), the Castration Complex, and the Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father===
=====The Final Version of the Graph=====
=====The Significance of S(0O)=====
=====The Castration Complex in Freud=====
=====The Imaginary Phallus=====
=====''Ne pas céder sur son désir'': Towards a Dialectic of Desire?=====
===Conclusion: The Primacy of Sexuality, or Against Adaptation===
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