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  • ...is]] of "[[gaze|the look]]."<ref>The fact that the [[English]] translators of [[Sartre]] and [[Lacan]] have used different [[terms]] obscures the fact th ...er-as-subject must be able to be referred back to my permanent possibility of ''[[being]] seen'' by the Other.<ref>[[Jean-Paul Sartre|Sartre, Jean-Paul]]
    4 KB (670 words) - 01:18, 3 October 2021
  • ...ing an almost intolerable level of [[excitation]]. Due to the specificity of the French term, it is usually [[left]] untranslated. ...', of ''property'', etc., but it [[lacks]] the ''[[sexual]] connotations'' of the [[French]] word. (''Jouir'' is slang for "to come".) -->
    36 KB (5,474 words) - 04:45, 29 July 2021
  • ...anatomical]]) [[body|bodily organ]] and the [[phallus]] as a [[signifier]] of [[sexual difference]]. ...batory jouissance ([[gratification]]). [[Freud]] argues that [[children]] of both [[sexual difference|sexes]] set great [[value]] on the [[phallus|penis
    27 KB (4,118 words) - 20:36, 16 December 2019
  • ...[[religion|primitive religions]]", in which it denoted an inanimate object of worship. ...italist]] societies, [[social]] relations assume the [[illusory]] [[form]] of relations between things ("[[commodity fetishism]]").
    14 KB (2,087 words) - 13:40, 13 October 2020
  • ...[process]] of [[art|artistic creation]] in general and certain [[art|works of art]] in [[particular]]. He explained [[art|artistic creation]] by reference to the [[concept]] of [[sublimation]], a process in which [[sexual]] [[libido]] is redirected tow
    9 KB (1,212 words) - 02:13, 24 May 2019
  • ...[[paranoia]], and can range from single [[ideas]] to [[complex]] networks of [[belief]]s. ==Name-of-the-Father==
    3 KB (349 words) - 05:18, 24 May 2019
  • ...efer to "[[structure|social structures]]" by which he means a specific set of [[affect]]ive relations between [[family]] members. =====Nature of the Psyche=====
    10 KB (1,342 words) - 23:56, 20 May 2019
  • ...Subject:About|No Subject]] wants you. Together we can build a [[library]] of No [[Subject]] - free and open textbooks. You can help [[No Subject]] by ...visit the [[No Subject:Staff lounge|Staff lounge]] (this is the equivalent of Wikipedia's 'Village Pump'). Also see [[textbook planning|planning]] pages
    20 KB (2,697 words) - 20:40, 27 May 2019
  • ...unnamed [[Oedipal conflict]]. This book is ideal for begginers in the area of psychoanalysis ...126). In general, most psychoanalysts would agree. The immediate influence of the <i>Three Essays</i> was profound, and fostered change in the way that p
    21 KB (3,303 words) - 08:35, 10 June 2006
  • ...a general level about ''[[signs]]'', while the study of the communication of information in [[living]] organisms is covered in [[biosemiotics]]. ==Clarification of terms==
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...eutic [[relationship]] and the presumed [[value]] of [[dream]]s as sources of insight into unconscious desires. He is commonly referred to as "the [[father]] of psychoanalysis" and his [[work]] has been highly influential — popularizi
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...proach to [[mental]] activity that has materialized in the [[development]] of the cognitive [[sciences]]. ...ld of cognitive [[science]] ([[social]] psychology or the [[neurobiology]] of development, for example).
    17 KB (2,389 words) - 20:32, 27 May 2019
  • ...ught]] and [[belief]]. It has various shades of meaning in different areas of study and [[discussion]], and is, by its very [[nature]], difficult to defi ===The problems of definition===
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • [[Zizek]] distinguishes [[three]] moments in the [[narrative]] of an ideology. ...eories of an ideology, i.e. [[liberalism]] partly developed from the ideas of John Locke.
    4 KB (620 words) - 00:05, 25 May 2019
  • ...enstein]] remarked that Kierkegaard was "by far, the most profound thinker of the nineteenth century" <ref [[name]]="ArisSoc"> ...e=Making Sense of Nonsense: Kierkegaard and Wittgenstein | work=University of Hertfordshire| url=http://www.herts.ac.uk/philosophy/Aris_Soc.html | access
    46 KB (7,030 words) - 00:20, 21 May 2019
  • If [[Zupancic]]'s book does not become a classic [[work]] of reference, the only conclusion will be that our academia is caught in an obscure [[de ...] it makes on us. Moreover, both are thinkers of [[desire,]] of the ethics of desire and the desire for ethics.
    3 KB (440 words) - 01:22, 24 May 2019
  • ...[[think]] psychoanalysis without any reference to a [[unified]] conception of [[self]] or ego. liberated interpersonal relationships, and there was an explosion of
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • Lacan's [[work]] in the 1950s placed emphasis on the [[role]] of [[language]] and [[the symbolic]] [[order]]. The [[Oedipus complex]] is a major [[concept]] of [[psychoanalysis]].
    49 KB (7,855 words) - 20:47, 25 May 2019
  • ...therein resides the lesson painfully learned through the [[experience]] of the XXth century totalitarianisms. ...oint on which one cannot and should not concede: today, the actual freedom of [[thought]] means the freedom to question the predominant liberal-democrati
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • The [[Matrix]], or two sides of [[Perversion]] ...had the unique opportunity of sitting close to the [[ideal]] [[spectator]] of the [[film]] - namely, to an idiot. A man in the late 20ies at my [[right]]
    64 KB (10,730 words) - 00:53, 21 May 2019
  • ...it. Ranciere's last book, La mesentente,l provides a definite formulation of this endeavour. ..., simultaneously, as the operator which will bring about the establishment of a post-political rational society.3
    51 KB (7,820 words) - 07:36, 24 May 2019
  • ...re the impact of The Road to Terror, one should start with the [[paradox]] of the revolutionary sacrifice.</p> ...se." In the same way, while most of the political regimes have a dark side of obscene secret [[rituals]] and apparatuses, the Khmer Rouge regime had noth
    63 KB (10,138 words) - 03:25, 21 May 2019
  • ...onkey-that is, in [[order]] to deploy the inherent, notional [[structure]] of a social [[formation]], one must start with its most developed form. ...ecological catastrophes, poverty, [[Third]] [[World]] diseases in collapse of social life, mad cow disease.
    30 KB (4,559 words) - 23:15, 24 May 2019
  • ...agance is allowed, solicited even, but with the [[explicit]] [[exclusion]] of the choices that may disturb the [[public]] (say, a person whose choice is ...[[polemics]] against the Menshevik and Socialist-Revolutionaries' critique of Bolshevik [[power]] in 1922:
    75 KB (11,848 words) - 17:15, 27 May 2019
  • ...ox is thus that the roles are reversed (with regard to the standard notion of the active subject working on the passive object): the subject is defined b ...m means that the reality I see is never "whole" - not because a large part of it eludes me, but because it contains a stain, a blind spot, which signals
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...er offer if Sieglinde cannot join him in Walhalla, preferring the [[love]] of a miserable mortal [[woman]] to Walhall's <i>sproeden Wonnen</i>. The shatt ...of giving up eternity for the sake of love, is the highest [[ethical]] act of [[them]] all? Ernst Bloch was [[right]] to remark that what is [[lacking]]
    52 KB (8,901 words) - 20:26, 20 May 2019
  • ...atistas. So their theoretical limitation is simultaneously the limitation of the actual movement.<br><br> ...the One, of the sovereign state [[power]]; "absolute democracy" ("the rule of everyone by everyone, a democracy without qualifiers, without ifs or buts,"
    28 KB (4,350 words) - 20:13, 20 May 2019
  • ...pularized and at the same [[time]] one of the most misunderstood [[ideas]] of [[psychoanalysis]]. --> ...site sex, usually accompanied by hostility and [[rivalry]] with the parent of the same sex.
    28 KB (4,345 words) - 20:18, 20 May 2019
  • ...tion]] retains its [[place]] as a necessary element in the [[structuring]] of [[sexuality]] for the [[speaking]] [[being]]. ===The notion of castration in Freud's work===
    19 KB (3,034 words) - 19:54, 27 May 2019
  • [[Breton]] was familiar with Freud's work on dreams and developed a technique of 'spontaneous' writing to give free expression to unconscious thoughts and w ...eir [[dreams]], which they saw as more '[[real]]' than the prosaic reality of our everyday world.
    32 KB (4,961 words) - 00:09, 21 May 2019
  • overheard a young man asking one of the staff: 'I just finished <i>Mrs de Winter</i>. Is it [[true]] illiteracy of the younger generation-how can anyone not [[know]] [[about]] <i>Rebecca</i>
    22 KB (3,529 words) - 18:45, 27 May 2019
  • ...enia, I had the unique opportunity of sitting close to the ideal spectator of the film - namely, to an idiot. A man in the late 20ies at my right was so ...he virtual character of the symbolic order "as such" is the very condition of historicity?<br><br>
    63 KB (10,769 words) - 14:59, 12 November 2006
  • ...r Dews' basic criticism of my [[reading]] of [[Schelling]] is that, by way of asserting the ...r affinity between spirit and [[nature]], and thus towards the possibility of
    33 KB (5,283 words) - 08:09, 24 May 2019
  • ...onkey-that is, in [[order]] to deploy the inherent, notional [[structure]] of a social [[formation]], one must start with its most developed form. ...ecological catastrophes, poverty, [[Third]] [[World]] diseases in collapse of social life, mad cow disease.
    30 KB (4,577 words) - 23:16, 24 May 2019
  • ...of the achievements and regulations which distinguish our lives from those of our [[animal]] ancestors and which serve two purposes—namely to protect m ...Future of an Illusion]]</i> [[Freud]] provided a more extended definition of [[civilization]]:
    10 KB (1,463 words) - 20:22, 27 May 2019
  • '''Historicism''' is a term which applies to a [[number]] of theories of [[culture]] or historical [[development]] which [[place]] the greatest weig # that there is an [[organic]] succession of developments,
    13 KB (1,919 words) - 20:56, 23 May 2019
  • The [[Sublime]] [[Object]] of [[Ideology]], New York: Verso, 1989. ...ich he returns to [[time]] and again - that the [[subject]] is the subject of a [[void]].
    13 KB (2,068 words) - 03:38, 21 May 2019
  • ...is [[good]] for you. Having described it he draws a mesmerising whirlwind of [[thought]] to its conclusion saying "we [[need]] more [[people]] with Mary ...th Monica Lewinsky and claiming that this is the paradoxical [[structure]] of an [[ideological]] [[statement]]. He'll tell a [[joke]] or every now and ag
    45 KB (7,481 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • ...caught in an obscure desire to self-destruct.' (Yannis Stavrakakis, author of <i>Lacan and the Political</i>, Athens, Greece). <br><br></tt></font></div> ...of Zizek is to go back and start again from scratch, now from the position of those who are encountering him for the first time. <br><br>
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • <b>The subject of philosophy</b><br><br> ...e that can be raised by a mere thought' (TS, 382-3)? Who else, in a parody of the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, would observe:</font></p>
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • ...with the title "The Oedipus [[Complex]] as an Explanation of the 'Mystery of Hamlet."' It was translated into [[German]] in 1911 in a brochure in the se ...et," which had previously appeared in 1929 in the <i>International Journal of [[Psycho]]-[[Analysis]]</i>.
    2 KB (280 words) - 20:17, 20 May 2019
  • ...on against its promotion as a medical [[treatment]]. Charged with contempt of court for violating the injunction, Reich conducted his own [[defense]], wh ...tons of his publications were [[Book burning|burned]] by the FDA. He died of heart failure in jail just over a year later, one day before he was due to
    39 KB (5,735 words) - 03:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...her]]. He is associated with what became known as the [[Frankfurt School]] of critical thinkers. ...iatry]] in [[1943]], and in [[1945]] the [[William Alanson White Institute of Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis, and Psychology]].
    12 KB (1,673 words) - 06:42, 24 May 2019
  • ...that [[ideas]] become "naturalized" in a [[process]] that informs notions of [[common sense]]. ...lizing its defined "[[heresy|heresies]]", provides a richly-exampled arena of cultural hegemony.
    11 KB (1,560 words) - 23:19, 24 May 2019
  • In "[[The Uncanny]]" [[Freud]] seeks to explain the [[feeling]] of uncanniness. ..."The Sandman" describes the [[figure]] of the Sandman who steals the eyes of [[children]].
    5 KB (679 words) - 02:58, 21 May 2019
  • </p><h3 align="center">The topic of the [[imaginary]]</h3><br> INTRODUCTION OF THE INVERTED BOUQUET<br>
    56 KB (10,016 words) - 02:16, 21 May 2019
  • The <i>[[jouissance]] </i>of [[transgression]]</font><br> </i>THE RESPECT OF THE IMAGE OF THE OTHER<br>
    37 KB (6,746 words) - 00:49, 21 May 2019
  • ...[body]] of [[thought]] in [[psychoanalysis]] concerning [[them]], in spite of the rather fragmentary references found in [[Freud]] and subsequent attempt ..."The initial [[helplessness]] of [[human]] beings is the [[primal]] source of all [[moral]] motives."
    6 KB (829 words) - 00:56, 24 May 2019
  • ...rather, not yet) speak," and refers to the [[baby]] before the acquisition of [[speech]] that marks the entry into [[childhood]].</p> ...elaborated a [[theory]] of the [[mother]]-[[infant]] relation in [[terms]] of [[discourse]] (with the mother as "[[word]]-bearer").
    10 KB (1,490 words) - 00:28, 25 May 2019
  • ...[[stability]] by avoiding [[anxiety]] and [[unpleasure]]. The [[concept]] of defense was broadened somewhat when Freud attributed an important [[role]] ...of sexuality alone is not enough to [[cause]] repression; the cooperation of defense is necessary" (p. 188).
    9 KB (1,258 words) - 21:43, 27 May 2019
  • ...00), a [[text]] already containing a reference to wit in the [[structure]] of dreams. ...as it was in Freud's Interpretation of Dreams and The [[Psychopathology]] of Everyday [[Life]] (1901).
    5 KB (684 words) - 21:17, 25 May 2019
  • ...and the resulting [[genital]] organization of the [[adult]] and [[choice]] of [[object]]. ...uch as the [[notion]] of [[dreams]] having a meaning and the [[existence]] of an [[unconscious]] psychic [[life]].
    10 KB (1,338 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...here, as it is in the [[case]] of mnemic [[symbols]] or in the forgetting of a proper [[name]], although to some degree [[condensation]] may also be [[p ...g, p. 148). Any memory could be a [[screen memory]] inasmuch as one aspect of it screened out something unacceptable to the ego.
    7 KB (1,054 words) - 22:42, 20 May 2019
  • The [[visual arts]] make use of nonverbal [[representation]] and therefore require a different [[psychoanal ==The Work of Art==
    6 KB (804 words) - 20:52, 23 May 2019
  • ...problem solving]] abilities, [[conceptual]] [[understanding]], acquisition of [[language]], [[morality|moral understanding]], and [[identity (social scie ...gradual accumulation of [[knowledge]] or through shifts from one [[stage]] of [[thinking]] to [[another]]; or if children are [[born]] with innate knowl
    30 KB (4,341 words) - 22:03, 27 May 2019
  • ...nscious is similar to but not precisely the same as the popular [[notion]] of the [[subconscious]]. For psychoanalysis, the unconscious does not include all of what is simply not [[conscious]] - it does not include e.g. motor skills -
    10 KB (1,380 words) - 02:59, 21 May 2019
  • ...]] has been - since its development in the 1930s - the dominant [[school]] of [[psychoanalysis]] in the [[International Psycho-Analytical Association]]. ...e function of the [[ego]] in mediating between the conflicting [[demand]]s of the [[instinctual]] [[id]], the [[moralistic]] [[superego]] and [[external]
    7 KB (983 words) - 23:01, 27 May 2019
  • ...uline]]/feminine. He then used these terms in his [[dynamic]] [[analysis]] of ego as [[agency]]. ...epeats an experienced sexual attack on [[another]] infant. This alteration of the sexual attack experienced by the [[child]] from [[passive]] to active c
    7 KB (1,022 words) - 17:31, 27 May 2019
  • ...e intimate." These [[ideas]] formed the springboard for a radical critique of [[introspection]], self-knowledge, and inner [[life]]. ...All conduct symbolizes and conceals, in various ways, the basic [[choice]] of every [[individual]] subject. Each person must be unveiled and revealed, as
    11 KB (1,617 words) - 21:09, 25 May 2019
  • ...how the Bolshevik movement related to [[medicine]], to doctors taking care of the Leaders; [[three]] documents are crucial here:<br><br> ...n one of the letters, after making it clear how he is shocked at Gorky's [[ideas]] -
    60 KB (9,765 words) - 23:51, 20 May 2019
  • ...real [[struggle]] is going on now: the struggle for the <i>[[meaning]]</i> of this NO - who will appropriate it? Who - if anyone - will translate it int ...ple awaken from their [[apolitical]] slumber, it is as a rule in the guise of a [[right]]ist [[populist]] [[revolt]] - no wonder many [[enlightened techn
    72 KB (11,294 words) - 17:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...alectical type of thought or methodology that he uses. (In Zizek's reading of Hegel, the dialectic is never finally resolved.) ...ute to the Marxist tradition of thought, specifically that of a [[critique of ideology]].
    39 KB (6,629 words) - 07:26, 5 June 2006
  • ...listed alphabetically within each [[category]] or subcategory. For ease of reference, one entry may be listed under several categories. [[Abstinence]]/rule of abstinence
    48 KB (5,452 words) - 20:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...offered by a [[number]] of [[other]] theorists, resulting in a splintering of [[psychological]] [[thought]]. Freud's theory of [[psychoanalysis]] was built on the assumption that human beings have an [[
    16 KB (2,497 words) - 23:09, 20 May 2019
  • The functions of [[language]] ...hip]] betweeh language and [[human]] [[subjectivity]], and the [[meaning]] of '[[full]]' and 'empty' [[speech]].
    85 KB (14,185 words) - 08:43, 24 August 2022
  • ...with the title "The Oedipus [[Complex]] as an Explanation of the 'Mystery of Hamlet."' It was translated into [[German]] in 1911 in a brochure in the se ...et," which had previously appeared in 1929 in the <i>International Journal of [[Psycho]]-[[Analysis]]</i>.
    2 KB (274 words) - 23:11, 24 May 2019
  • ..., showed that man did not have [[control]] over the most important aspects of his own [[mental]] [[processes]] (1917a). ...of the emotional movements,' as Darwin has taught." Consisting "originally of [[acts]] that are well-motivated and appropriate," [[civilization]] has red
    7 KB (1,004 words) - 21:27, 27 May 2019
  • ..." and can [[identity]] with "projected" characters. And we often [[speak]] of "[[dream]] screens." ...al Killer</i> by J. McNaughton, 1985, released in 1990, <i>The [[Silence]] of the Lambs</i> by Jonathan Demme, 1991, <i>Seven</i> by D. Fincher, 1995, an
    17 KB (2,666 words) - 03:57, 24 May 2019
  • ...fact that psychoanalysis can be considered an avatar of Kantianism, if not of [[metaphysics]] in general. 1. Freud presents Kant's "categorical imperative" as the "inheritor of the Oedipus complex."
    5 KB (650 words) - 23:28, 25 May 2019
  • ...de possible the discovery of the [[unconscious]]. To avoid [[reification]] of this [[concept]], it is preferable to use the [[word]] only as an adjective ...973); it appeared in [[France]] around 1985 in connection with the notions of inheritance, transmission, and genealogy (Guyotat, Jean, and Fédida, Pierr
    9 KB (1,199 words) - 00:40, 25 May 2019
  • ...topics, such as Pierre Janet's déjà-vu, or Joseph Capgras's [[illusion]] of the double. ...ar, or [[family]] (heim, or home), which defines and limits the [[notion]] of the uncanny.
    4 KB (611 words) - 02:18, 21 May 2019
  • ...Who is looking? What is seen or evoked? Why are these particular fragments of Eastern religiosity summoned at these moments? How are they placed in the t ...d a significant surreal moment for him, evoking an exotic Tibet still full of magical possibilities.
    23 KB (3,606 words) - 15:06, 10 June 2006
  • ...("evenly [[suspended attention]]"), for which they are prepared by virtue of what Ferenczi (1928, pp. 88-89) called the second fundamental rule, namely ...[rationality]] for the rule gradually came into question as the complexity of what was involved became [[apparent]].
    14 KB (2,059 words) - 08:15, 24 May 2019
  • ...eir complexity and idiosyncratic style and "An Introductory [[Dictionary]] of [[Lacanian]] Psychoanalysis" will be invaluable for [[reading]] in every [[ ...an ideas. Each major [[concept]] is traced back to its origins in the work of Freud, [[Saussure]], Hege and otbers.
    20 KB (3,089 words) - 18:08, 27 May 2019
  • [[Evans, Dylan]]. [[An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis]]. 2003. New York: Brunner-Routledge. ...es [[Lacan]]'s [[thinking]] revolutionized the [[theory]] and [[practice]] of [[psychoanalysis]] and had a major impact in fields as diverse as [[film]]
    2 KB (232 words) - 21:01, 23 May 2019
  • ...f the [[Oedipus complex]], the [[mother]] is the first [[love]] [[object]] of the [[child]]. THE INTERVENTION OF THE FATHER
    41 KB (6,137 words) - 03:36, 21 May 2019
  • ...in the case of actual neuroses (pp. 275-76) and [[psychoanalysis]] in that of the defense neuroses. ...omatopsychic [[communication]] was caused by [[particular]] [[conditions]] of [[mental]] functioning and generally led to [[symptoms]].
    7 KB (999 words) - 00:57, 24 May 2019
  • ...]]). His two aims in this piece were to arrive at "a sort of [[economics]] of nerve forces" and "to peel off from [[psychopathology]] a gain for normal p ...delusional" and feeling that it was an excellent start on "the elucidation of the [[neuroses]]"; and if the "quantitative conception" would in fact never
    11 KB (1,638 words) - 17:19, 27 May 2019
  • ...with the title "The Oedipus [[Complex]] as an Explanation of the 'Mystery of Hamlet."' It was translated into [[German]] in 1911 in a brochure in the se ...amlet," which had previously appeared in 1929 in the International Journal of [[Psycho]]-[[Analysis]].
    2 KB (266 words) - 23:11, 24 May 2019
  • The term '[[Oedipus complex]]', one of the cornerstones of [[psychoanalytic theory]], derives from a [[Greek]] [[myth]] in which [[Oed [[Freud]] dates the [[Oedipus complex]] to the ages of three to five years.
    51 KB (8,274 words) - 15:59, 25 July 2006
  • ...stigation) for the treatment of neurotic disorders and (3) of a collection of psychological information obtained along those lines, which is gradually be ...alysis is a dynamic conception, which reduces mental life to the interplay of reciprocally urging and checking forces.<ref>{{PVD}}</ref></blockquote>
    54 KB (7,727 words) - 09:45, 16 October 2006
  • ...and responds with an emotional overreaction, which mobilizes the processes of stereotyped defense. ...d already used the term, without any particular specificity, in his thesis of 1902.
    8 KB (1,168 words) - 22:08, 30 July 2006
  • ...atment]]' (''cure'') denotes the [[practice]] (rather than the [[theory]]) of [[psychoanalysis]]. The aim of [[treatment]] is not to '[[cure]]' the [[patient]].
    7 KB (1,106 words) - 04:07, 5 September 2006
  • The opposition between the affective and the intellectual is one of the oldest themes in [[philosophy]], and made its way into [[Freud]]'s [[vo 'This opposition is one of the most contrary to [[analytic]] experience and most unenlightening when i
    6 KB (891 words) - 01:03, 24 May 2019
  • ...m) "[[cartel]]" (refers to) denotes the basic working unit of a [[school]] of [[psychoanalysis]]. ...introduced) by [[Jacques Lacan]] as the basic working unit of a [[school]] of [[psychoanalysis]].
    9 KB (1,411 words) - 21:18, 25 November 2006
  • ...rm is rarely used by [[Freud]] but is central to [[Lacan]]'s reorientation of [[psychoanalytic theory]]. ...d [[symbolic]] value taken on by the [[biological]] [[penis]] in the ourse of the [[subject]]'s accession to [[language]] and the [[symbolic]].
    21 KB (3,292 words) - 20:37, 7 November 2006
  • ...(1905d), "Fetishism" (1927e), and "The Splitting of the Ego in the Process of Defense" (1940e [1938]). The views expressed in those essays are as relevan .... The fetish becomes the source of excitement, an idealized object capable of providing sexual pleasure to the fetishist.
    12 KB (1,817 words) - 22:46, 15 April 2019
  • ...belief]], inconsistent with the information available and with the beliefs of the subject's social group. ...ature of [[paranoia]], and can range from single ideas to complex networks of [[belief]]s.
    7 KB (1,107 words) - 15:34, 4 August 2006
  • ...s, it is to refer to "social structures," by which he means a specific set of affective relations between family members. ...peg upon which [[Lacan]] can hang his own views of the "relational" nature of the psyche, in opposition to the atomistic theories then current in [[psych
    8 KB (1,215 words) - 04:57, 18 August 2006
  • ...bruary 22, 1913) was a Swiss linguist, considered by many to be the father of structuralism. ...he 20th century. He perceived linguistics as a branch of a general science of signs he proposed to call semiology (now generally known as semiotics).
    40 KB (6,045 words) - 04:47, 18 August 2006
  • ...Jean-Toussaint Desanti and Tran Duc Thao, gave him a better understanding of Marxist thought. Althusser taught philosophy at the ENS until 1980. There h ...e of his thought. This work led him to postulate a break between the works of the young Marx, where theoretical humanism is still present, and the mature
    34 KB (5,155 words) - 02:25, 28 August 2006
  • ...only four reached adulthood. A gifted student, Otto entered the University of Vienna in 1898 and took courses in all the various subjects he would later He also frequently attended gatherings of the university philosophical society.
    31 KB (5,236 words) - 06:23, 28 August 2006
  • ...ari]]. His books ''[[Difference and Repetition]]'' (1968) and ''The Logic of Sense'' (1969) led [[Michel Foucault]] to declare that "one day, perhaps, t ...phy owed much to these teachers. Nonetheless, Deleuze also found the work of non-academic thinkers such as [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] strongly attractive. He
    19 KB (2,809 words) - 06:27, 28 August 2006
  • ...also referenced [[analytic philosophy]] in his work, particularly the work of [[J.L. Austin]]. ...t]] and others, he was a co-founder in 1983 of the [[International College of Philosophy]] (French acronym: Ciph), a research institution intended to giv
    37 KB (5,581 words) - 06:34, 28 August 2006
  • ...nt-day southwest [[Germany]]. His influence has been widespread on writers of widely varying positions, including both his admirers ([[F. H. Bradley]], [ ...t was to take these contradictions and tensions and interpret them as part of a comprehensive, evolving, rational unity that, in different contexts, he c
    36 KB (5,318 words) - 06:38, 28 August 2006
  • ...Much controversy has surrounded his status as a prominent academic member of the [[Nazi Party]]. .... In 1945/47, the French Occupation Authority forbade him to teach because of his Nazi past, a decision rescinded in 1951 when he became Professor [[emer
    43 KB (6,493 words) - 06:40, 28 August 2006
  • ...s Lacan]] founded the ''[[Ècole Freudienne de Paris]]'' ('Freudian School of Paris') ([[EFP]]) in 1964. ...he [[EFP]] indicated that it was an attempt to found a very different type of psychoanalytic institution from those which had been founded before.
    22 KB (3,767 words) - 07:02, 31 August 2006
  • ...d by Badiou, to [[control]] oneself (when Morpheus explains to Neo the lot of ordinary [[people]] totally caught (“plugged”) in [[the Matrix]], he sa ...[[democracy]], but the Plato who was the first to clearly assert the field of [[rationality]] freed from inherited beliefs.
    46 KB (7,077 words) - 19:04, 27 May 2019
  • or the Meaning of the Return to Freud in Psychoanalysis ...to delineate authentic Freudian psychoanalysis according to his re-reading of Freud.
    68 KB (11,112 words) - 23:36, 30 August 2006
  • ...in 1964 and marked a pivotal moment in Lacan's career and the development of his thought. ...FONDAMENTAUX DE LA PSYCHANALYSE (SEMINAR XI: THE FOUR FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS OF PSYCHOANALYSIS)-1973, 1978
    27 KB (4,351 words) - 06:38, 8 November 2006

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