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Pleasure principle

2,937 bytes added, 16:52, 26 September 2020
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Jacques Lacan: fixing typos
#REDIRECT {{Top}}principe de [[plaisir]]{{Bottom}} ==Sigmund Freud==According to [[Freud]], the [[pleasure principle]] is one of the "two principles of [[mental]] functioning" -- the [[other]] [[being]] the [[reality principle]]. The [[pleasure principle]] directs all mental or [[psychical]] [[activity]] towards obtaining -- maximizing -- [[pleasure]] and avoiding -- minimizing -- [[pleasure|unpleasure]]. All mental or psychical activity is directed -- by the [[pleasure principle]] -- towards obtaining [[pleasure]] and avoiding [[pleasure|unpleasure]]. ===Equilibrium===[[Unpleasure]] is related to the increase of quantities of [[excitation]]. [[Unpleasure]] results from increased excitation. [[Pleasure ]] results from their reduction. The [[pleasure principle]] therefore serves to reduce tension and to [[return]] the [[psyche]] to a [[state]] of equilibrium or constancy. ===Beyond the Pleasure Principle===[[Freud]] suggests that there is something "[[beyond the pleasure principle]]" -- namely the [[death drive]]s -- which attempt to reduce [[psychic]] tension to zero, and thus to return [[living]] beings to an inorganic state. ==Jacques Lacan==For [[Lacan]] the [[pleasure principle]]is an obstacle to ''[[jouissance]]' that takes the [[subject]] to that extreme point where the [[erotic]] borders upon [[death]] and where [[subjectivity]] risks extinction. The [[pleasure principle]] is closely linked -- closely related -- to the [[prohibition]] of [[incest]], the [[symbolic law]] and the regulation of [[desire]]. The [[pleasure principle]] is "that which regulates the distance between the subject and ''[[das Ding]]''. In [[Chronology|1960]], [[Lacan]] develops an important opposition between [[pleasure]] and ''[[jouissance]]''. ''[[Jouissance]]'' is an excessive quantity of excitation which the [[pleasure principle]] tries to prevent. The [[pleasure principle]] is a commandment -- which can be phrased -- "[[Enjoy]] as little as possible."'' <blockquote>The function of the pleasure principle is, in effect, to lead the subject from [[signifier]] to signifier, by generating as many [[signifiers]] as are required to maintain at as low a level as possible the tension that regulates the [[whole]] functioning of the psychic [[apparatus]].<ref>{{S7}} p. 119</ref></blockquote> [[Lacan]] describes the [[pleasure principle]] in the [[seminar]] of 1954-5.<ref>{{L}} "[[Seminar II|Le moi dans la théorie de Freud et dans la technique de la psychanalyse]]." (The Ego in Freud's [[Theory]] and in the [[Technique]] of [[Psychoanalysis]].) 1954-5. Unpublished.</ref> ==References==<div style="font-size:11px" class="references-small"><references /></div> [[Category:Freudian psychology]][[Category:Sigmund Freud]][[Category:Jacques Lacan]][[Category:Terms]][[Category:Concepts]][[Category:Psychoanalysis]][[Category:Theory]][[Category:Symbolic]][[Category:Edit]][[Category:New]][[Category:Dictionary]]{{OK}} __NOTOC__
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