Difference between revisions of "Against Adaptation"
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=====Introduction: Thejouissance of the Other and Pathology===== | =====Introduction: Thejouissance of the Other and Pathology===== | ||
=====The Jouissance of the Other, the Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father, and Psychosis===== | =====The Jouissance of the Other, the Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father, and Psychosis===== |
Revision as of 11:39, 18 August 2006
Contents
- 1 Introduction: Freud's Copernican Revolution
- 2 The Primacy of the Symbolic and the Unconscious
- 3 The Subject of the Unconscious
- 4 From the First to the Second Version of the Graph of Desire
- 5 The Symbolic and the Imaginary
- 6 Language, the Unconscious, and Desire
- 7 The Metapsychological Significance of the Phantasy and of the Object a
- 8 The Truth of the Unconscious: S(0), the Castration Complex, and the Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father
- 8.1 The Final Version of the Graph
- 8.2 The Significance of S(0)
- 8.3 The Castration Complex in Freud
- 8.4 The Imaginary Phallus
- 8.5 The Father as Symbolic Third
- 8.6 The Symbolic Father Is the "Dead" Father: Totem and Taboo
- 8.7 The Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father
- 8.8 The Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father and Symbolic Castration
- 8.9 The Primacy of the Phallus, Sexuality, and the Unconscious
- 8.10 The Phallus, Castration, and the Problem of Sexuation
- 9 The Impossible Jouissance: Elements of a Structural Psychopathology
- 9.1 Introduction: Thejouissance of the Other and Pathology
- 9.2 The Jouissance of the Other, the Metaphor of the Name-of-the-Father, and Psychosis
- 9.3 The Three Moments of the Oedipus Complex
- 9.4 Perversion
- 9.5 Phobia
- 9.6 Neurosis: Hysteria and Obsessional Neurosis
- 9.7 Jouissance, the Law, and the Pleasure Principle
- 9.8 Ne pas céder sur son désir: Towards a Dialectic of Desire?
- 9.9 Conclusion: The Primacy of Sexuality, or Against Adaptation