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Jacques Lacan:The Subject of the Unconscious

79 bytes added, 20:54, 25 May 2019
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the unconscious is constituted through the [[subject]]'s articulation in [[the symbolic]] [[order]]. The [[Lacanian]] unconscious is not an [[individual]] unconscious, in the [[sense]] that Freud speaks of the unconscious
The Lacanian unconscious is rather the effect of a trans-individual [[symbolic order]] upon [[The Subject|the subject]]. We can draw from this [[three]] related theses:
# The unconscious is not [[biological]] but is something that signifies.
# The unconscious is structured like a language.
Fink argues that the Lacanian unconscious is not only structured like a language but is language, insofar as it is language that makes up the unconscious. This involves us in rethinking, however, what we mean by language. Language, for Lacan, designates not simply [[verbal]] speech or written [[text]] but any signifying [[system]] that is based upon differential relations. The unconscious is structured like a language in the sense that it is a signifying [[process]] that involves coding and decoding, or ciphering and deciphering. The unconscious comes into [[being]] in [[The Symbolic|the symbolic ]] order in the gap between signifier and [[signified]], through the sliding of the signified beneath the signifier and the failure of [[meaning]] to be fixed (see Chapter 2). In short, the unconscious is something that signifies and must be deciphered.
THE [[Unconscious is the discourse of the Other|UNCONSCIOUS IS THE DISCOURSE OF THE OTHER]]
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