Search results

Jump to: navigation, search

Google site results

Loading...

Wiki results

  • ...is elected president of the [[SPP]]. However, six months later he resigns from the [[SPP]] to join the '''[[Société Française de Psychanalyse]]''' ([[S ...affiliation as a member [[society]] on condition that [[Lacan]] be removed from the [[list]] of [[training|training analysts]].
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...tanding]]" ([[1690]]), first coined the term "semeiotike" from the Greek [[word]] σημειον or ''semeion'', meaning "mark" or "sign". ...tion (semiotics)|denotative]] meaning) within their [[language]]. But that word can transmit that meaning only within the language's [[grammatical]] [[stru
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...e. His [[mother]] Amalia was 21. Owing to his intellect, which was obvious from an early [[stage]] of his [[childhood]], his parents favored him over his s ...fundmentals of chemistry and physics, according to [[John Bowlby]], stems from [[Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke|Brücke]], [[Meynert]], [[Josef Breuer|Breuer]]
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...their [[time]]. Freud ‚thought’ his discovery in [[concepts]] borrowed from [[biology]], mechanics and the [[psychology]] of his day. Marx [[thought]] students and [[workers]] that a liberated [[politics]] could only emerge from
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • ...engthening of the [[Oedipal]] [[prohibition]] of [[incest]] in the passage from Antiquity to [[Modernity]]: in the case of Oedipus, we are still dealing wi ...ng "crazy" but truthful remarks) is a [[universal]] myth found everywhere, from old Nordic cultures through Ancient Egypt up to [[Iran]] and Polynesia. Fur
    63 KB (10,767 words) - 21:37, 27 May 2019
  • ...tic - it is also only the activity of theorizing that saves him, saves him from the very thing this theorizing brings about.<br><br> ...i>The Ethics of Psychoanalysis</i>, in which he discusses Antigone's case, from this other side we can see and live life 'in the form of something already
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • synchronic dimension is distinguished from the diachronic, that in nature (<i>arbor</i>, for instance, can be considered from either view-<br>
    32 KB (5,721 words) - 23:20, 17 May 2006
  • Directed daydream (R. Desoille) [[L and R schemas]]
    48 KB (5,452 words) - 20:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...handed down by [[tradition]], sometimes orally and sometimes by written [[word]]. The stories are set in a primordial period during which the [[order]] of ...the fifth century BCE, the Greek word mythos was a synonym for [[logos]] (word). With Pindar and Herodotus, it came to mean [[words]] of [[illusion]]; rum
    7 KB (917 words) - 19:43, 20 May 2019
  • ...mediated through language and speech. Biological facts do not exist apart from the meaning that is given to [[them]] during the [[history]] of the 44 the ...ong time if you compare him with [[animal]] [[species]]. A [[baby]] cries. From the beginning the [[satisfaction]] of biological urgencies necessitates the
    85 KB (14,185 words) - 08:43, 24 August 2022
  • ...rsal into the opposite in the case of the "Wolf Man" 's dream (related in "From the History of an Infantile Neurosis" [1918b]), in which the scary immobili ...R.] in the dream" masked the wish that R. be a "simpleton" (p. 140-141)." R. was a possible rival for nomination to the title of professor. The analysi
    8 KB (1,298 words) - 05:11, 10 June 2006
  • ...ychiatry, such as <i>Shock Corridor</i> (Sam Fuller, 1963), <i>Lilith</i> (R. Rossen, 1964), or <i>One Flew Over the Cuckoo</i>'<i>s Nest</i> (Milos For ...present]] psychoanalytic imagery, even in a rudimentary [[form]]. In 1919, R. Wiene filmed <i>The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari</i>, in which a mad doctor—a
    17 KB (2,666 words) - 03:57, 24 May 2019
  • synchronic dimension is distinguished from the [[diachronic]], that in [[nature]] (<i>arbor</i>, for [[instance]], can be considered from either view-<br>
    33 KB (5,707 words) - 22:34, 20 May 2019
  • <blockquote>[[Symptoms]] result from the injuring of the [[instinctual]] impulse through [[repression]].<ref>{{P ...s worth noting, too, that syndrome, a set of symptoms, is likewise derived from Greek elements, [[meaning]], in this [[case]], "that which proceeds togethe
    12 KB (1,683 words) - 00:16, 21 May 2019
  • ...phonology (sound structure), morphology ([[grammatical]] inflection and [[word]] [[formation]]), syntax, and semantics of [[natural]] languages. And the f ..., an interpretive [[practice]]. Thus many literary terms and models derive from varieties of linguistics and linguistic philosophy.
    38 KB (5,148 words) - 01:00, 26 May 2019
  • ...aces. Faced with the [[impossibility]] of escape, the person [[suffering]] from claustrophobia fears [[being]] suffocated, being crushed, losing [[consciou The [[word]] is part of psychiatric semiology. Albert Pitres and Emmanuel Régis (1902) classify claustrophobia as a [[phobia]] of place, and Pierre Ja
    5 KB (663 words) - 04:08, 24 May 2019
  • * Lacan is [[discharged]] from military service because of excessive thinness. In the following years he s ...he lecture on [[Joyce]]'s ''[[Ulysses]]'' by Valéry Larbaud with readings from the [[text]], an [[event]] organized by La maison des amis des livres, and
    71 KB (10,839 words) - 20:42, 25 May 2019
  • ...arned that the room would be occupied by so-called [[oral]] exams and that from then on we could not answer for this that she would be free at such or such ...or [[nothing]] but it was still the [[satisfaction]] of a vow, namely that from then on I had only to roll [[them]]. Here.
    41 KB (7,822 words) - 15:53, 7 July 2019
  • ...p that forever separates every empirical ("pathological") object of desire from its "impossible" object-cause whose place has to remain empty? And is not w ...s the Lacanian divided subject of the unconscious, by definition separated from its Cause. It is not enough, however, to reduce Hegel to his grand formulae
    150 KB (25,356 words) - 02:55, 20 July 2019
  • From ''Critical Inquiry'' 43, no. 1 (Autumn 2016): 60-83. ...c object, an object of art. Ro­senkranz remains within the long tradition from Homer onwards that associates physical ugliness with moral monstrosity; for
    65 KB (10,841 words) - 20:11, 25 April 2020