Difference between revisions of "Progress"

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==Jacques Lacan==
 
==Jacques Lacan==
 
===Rejection of Progress===
 
===Rejection of Progress===
[[Lacan]] claims that the idea of [[progress]], like other [[humanist]] [[:category:concepts|concepts]], is alien to his teaching:  
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[[Lacan]] claims that the [[idea]] of [[progress]], like [[other]] [[humanist]] [[:category:concepts|concepts]], is [[alien]] to his teaching:  
  
<blockquote>"There is not the slightest idea of progress in anything I articulate, in the sense that this term would imply a happy solution."<ref>{{S17}} p.122</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote>"There is not the slightest idea of progress in anything I articulate, in the [[sense]] that this term would imply a happy solution."<ref>{{S17}} p.122</ref></blockquote>
  
 
In this respect, [[Lacan]] is a basically [[pessimistic]] thinker, and he finds support for such [[pessimism]] in the gloomier works of [[Freud]] such as [[Civilization and its Discontents]].  
 
In this respect, [[Lacan]] is a basically [[pessimistic]] thinker, and he finds support for such [[pessimism]] in the gloomier works of [[Freud]] such as [[Civilization and its Discontents]].  
  
These texts allow [[Lacan]] to argue that "Freud was in no way a progressive."<ref>{{S7}} p.183</ref>
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These [[texts]] allow [[Lacan]] to argue that "Freud was in no way a progressive."<ref>{{S7}} p.183</ref>
  
 
===Unidirectional Concept of Time===
 
===Unidirectional Concept of Time===
[[Lacan]] rejects the idea of [[progress]] because it is based on a linear unidirectional concept of [[time]], and because it implies the possibility of [[synthesis]].  [[Lacan]] rejects other related concepts such as that of a unilinear sequence of [[phase]]s of psychosexual [[development]].
+
[[Lacan]] rejects the idea of [[progress]] because it is based on a linear unidirectional [[concept]] of [[time]], and because it implies the possibility of [[synthesis]].  [[Lacan]] rejects other related [[concepts]] such as that of a unilinear sequence of [[phase]]s of [[psychosexual]] [[development]].
  
 
===Progress in Psychoanalytic Treatment===
 
===Progress in Psychoanalytic Treatment===
There is one sense, however, in which [[Lacan]] does speak of [[progress]]: the [[progress]] in [[psychoanalytic]] [[treatment]].  [[Treatment]] is a process which has a beginning and an [[end of analysis|end]].  When the [[treatment]] is moving and not 'stuck', we may speak of [[progress]].  Indeed, [[psychoanalytic treatment]] may be described as "a progress towards truth."<ref>{{E}} p. 253</ref>
+
There is one sense, however, in which [[Lacan]] does [[speak]] of [[progress]]: the [[progress]] in [[psychoanalytic]] [[treatment]].  [[Treatment]] is a [[process]] which has a beginning and an [[end of analysis|end]].  When the [[treatment]] is moving and not 'stuck', we may speak of [[progress]].  Indeed, [[psychoanalytic treatment]] may be described as "a progress towards [[truth]]."<ref>{{E}} p. 253</ref>
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Latest revision as of 21:26, 20 May 2019

French: progrès

Jacques Lacan

Rejection of Progress

Lacan claims that the idea of progress, like other humanist concepts, is alien to his teaching:

"There is not the slightest idea of progress in anything I articulate, in the sense that this term would imply a happy solution."[1]

In this respect, Lacan is a basically pessimistic thinker, and he finds support for such pessimism in the gloomier works of Freud such as Civilization and its Discontents.

These texts allow Lacan to argue that "Freud was in no way a progressive."[2]

Unidirectional Concept of Time

Lacan rejects the idea of progress because it is based on a linear unidirectional concept of time, and because it implies the possibility of synthesis. Lacan rejects other related concepts such as that of a unilinear sequence of phases of psychosexual development.

Progress in Psychoanalytic Treatment

There is one sense, however, in which Lacan does speak of progress: the progress in psychoanalytic treatment. Treatment is a process which has a beginning and an end. When the treatment is moving and not 'stuck', we may speak of progress. Indeed, psychoanalytic treatment may be described as "a progress towards truth."[3]

See Also

References

  1. Lacan, Jacques. Le Séminaire. Livre XVII. L'envers de la psychanalyse, 19669-70. Ed. Jacques-Alain Miller. Paris: Seuil, 1991. p.122
  2. Lacan, Jacques. The Seminar. Book VII. The Ethics of Psychoanalysis, 1959-60. Trans. Dennis Porter. London: Routledge, 1992. p.183
  3. Lacan, Jacques. Écrits: A Selection. Trans. Alan Sheridan. London: Tavistock Publications, 1977. p. 253