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Moebius strip

1 byte added, 03:24, 24 June 2006
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It is a three-dimensional figure that can be formed by taking a long rectangle of paper and twisting it once before joining its ends together.
The result is a figure which subverts our normal (Euclidean) way of representing [[space]], for it seems to ahve have two sides but in fact has only one.
Locally, at any one point, two sides can be clearly distinguished, but when the whole strip is traversed it becomes clear tha that they are in fact continuous.
The two sides are only distinguished by the dimension of time, the time it takes to traverse the whole strip.
The figure illustrates the way that [[psychoanalysis]] problematizes various binary oppositions, such as [[inside]]/[[outside]], [[love]]/[[hate]], [[signifier]]/[[signified]], [[truth]]/[[appearance]].
While the two terms in such opposiitons oppositions are often presented as radically distinct, Lacan prefers to understand these oppositions in terms of the [[topology]] of the [[moebius strip]].
The opposed terms are thus seen to be not discrete but continuous with each other.
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