Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Talk:Matheme

2,506 bytes added, 05:12, 23 June 2007
no edit summary
{| align="left" style====Background====="margin-right:10px;line-height:2.0em;text-align:left;align:left;background-color:#fcfcfc;border:1px solid #aaa" | [[French]]: ''[[mathème{{Bottom}}
The [[matheme]] is a concept introduced in the [[{{LB}}|work]] of [[Jacques Lacan]]. The "[[matheme]]" is a neologism coined by [[Jacques Lacan]] in the early 1970s. Formed by derivation from "[[mathematics]]" and by analogy with [[phoneme]] and [[Lévi-Strauss]]'s [[mytheme]],<ref>''Mytheme'' is a term coined by [[Claude Lévi-Strauss]] to denote the basic constituents of mythological systems.</ref> the term is an equivalent to "[[algebra|mathematical sign]]". It is not used in conventional [[mathematics]], but is part of [[Lacan]]'s [[algebra]]. ==Schema L==[[Image:Lacan-schemal.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Schema L]] In 1955, [[Lacan]] introduced what could be called his first [[matheme]], the relatively simple "'''[[schema L]]'''", illustrating the [[imaginary|imaginary function]] of the [[ego]]. '''[[Schema L]]''' [[identification|identifies]] four points in the [[signifying chain]]: # [[Image:Biga.gif]], the [[unconscious]] or the "[[discourse]] of the [[Other]]]", and then .# [[Image:Smalls.gif]], the [[subject]], which in turn results from the relation between # [[Image:Smalla.gif]], the [[ego]] and # [[Image:Smalla'.gif]], the [[counterpart|other]]. ==Signifier==[[Image:SAUSSUREANALGORITHM.gif|thumb|100px|right|Saussurean algorithm|The Saussurean algorithm]] Perhaps the most familiar [[matheme]] is the "[[matheme|algorithm]]" which in 1957 replaces [[Saussure]]'s simple diagram / arbor with the notion '''S/s'''. In 1957, [[Lacan]] begins replaces [[Saussure]]'s diagram of the [[sign]] with what is now referred to as the "'''[[Saussurean algorithm]]'''".<ref>{{E}} p. 149</ref> The [[matheme]] links the [[law]]s of the [[unconscious]] discovered by [[Freud]] to the [[law]]s of [[language]] ([[metaphor]] and [[metonymy]]). This is to be understood as demonstrating that the [[signifier]] is above the [[signified]] , showing the primacy of the [[signifier]] (which is capitalized, whereas the [[signifier]] is reduced to use mere lower-case italic), and that the two are separated by a variety [[bar]] that resists [[signification]] and forces the [[signifier]] to [[slip|slide]] endlessly.<ref>{{L}} "[[The Agency of graphs and the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud|L'instance de la lettre dans l'inconscient ou la raison depuis Freud]]." ''[[Écrits]]'schemata' at an early stage . Paris: Seuil, 1966: 493-528 ["[[The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud|The agency of the letter in the unconscious or reason since Freud]]." Trans. [[Alan Sheridan]] ''[[Écrits: A Selection]]''. London: Tavistock, 1977; New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1977: 146-78].</ref> ==See Also=={{See}}* [[Algebra]]* [[Drive]]||* [[Fantasy]]* [[Graph of desire]]||* [[Knowledge]]* [[Mathematics]]||* [[Signification]]* [[Structure]]||* [[Subject]]* [[Symbol]]{{Also}} ==References==<div style="font-size:11px" class="references-small"><references/></div>   =====Extra===== =====Unsorted=====They are formulae designed as symbolic representations of his workideas and analyses. They were intended to introduce some degree of scientific rigour in [[philosophy|philosophical]] and [[psychology|psychological]] [[{{LB}}|writing]], replacing the often hard to understand verbal descriptions with formulae resembling those used in the [[science|hard sciences]], and as an easy way to hold, [[memory|remember]] and rehearse some of the core ideas of both [[Freud]] and [[Lacan]]. For example: $ <> a is the [[matheme]] for [[fantasy]] for [[Lacan]]. "Matheme", for Lacan, was not simply the imitation of science by philosophy, but the ideal of a perfect means for the integral transmission of knowledge.
Originally used as teaching aidsNatural language, these range from teh relatively simply '[[schema L]]' illustrating the [[imaginary]] function of the [[ego]] in the 1966 pape on [[psychosis]] to the complex chart of the workings of [[desire]] (1960)with its constant "metonymic slide", fails here, where mathematics succeeds.
Perhaps the most familiar Though sometimes disparaged as a case of "physics envy" or accused of introducing false rigor into a discpline that is more literary theory than hard science, there is the 'algorithm' which also something of a sense of humor in 1957 replaces [[Saussure]]Lacan's simple diagram of the [[sign]]mathemes.
<center>---------<BR>arbor</center>
with the notation
<center>=====More=====[[Image:SAUSSUREANALGORITHM.gif|200pxLacan]]</center>begins to use a variety of graphs and 'schemata' at an early stage in his work.
This is to be understood Originally used as demonstrating that the teaching aids, these range from teh relatively simply '[[signifierschema L]] is above ' illustrating the [[signifiedimaginary]], and that function of the two are separated by a [[barego]] that [[resistance|resists]] [[signification]] and forces in the 1966 pape on [[signfierpsychosis]] to [[slip|slide]] endlessly.<ref>{{L}} "[[The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud|L'instance de la lettre dans l'inconscient ou la raison depuis Freud]]." ''[[Écrits]]''. Paris: Seuil, 1966: 493-528 ["[[The Agency complex chart of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud|The agency workings of the letter in the unconscious or reason since Freud]]." Trans. [[Alan Sheridan]] ''[[Écrits: A Selection]desire]''. London: Tavistock, 1977; New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1977: 146-78](1960).</ref>
-=====More=====
The graphs and schemata gradually become more complex, and are eventually replaced by an "[[algebra]]" of "little letters" or [[matheme]]s in which, for instance, "P" is the [[symbolic]] [[fahter]], and "M" the [[symbolic]] [[mother]].
The function of the [[formalization]] that results in the emergence of the [[amtheme]] is said by [[Lacan]] to be the integral transmission of his teachings on [[psychoanalysis]].<BR>{{S20}}
-
=====More=====
These [[algebra|formulae]], which were both created to designate points in the [[graph of desire]], are the [[matheme]] for the [[drive]], ('''$ <> D'''), and the [[matheme]] for [[fantasy]], ('''$ <> ''a''''').
-=====More=====
The [[structural]] parallel between the two [[matheme]]s is clear; they are both composed of two [[algebra]]ic [[symbol]]s conjoined by a rhomboid (the [[symbol]] '''<>''', which [[Lacan]] calls the ''poinçon'') and enclosed by brackets.
The rhomboid [[symbolize]]s a relation between the two [[symbol]]s, which includes the relations of "envelopment-development-conjunction-disjunction."<ref>{{E}} p.280</ref>
-=====More=====
[[Lacan]] argues that the [[matheme]]s are "not transcendent signifiers; they are the indices of an absolute signification."<ref>{{E}} p. 314</ref>
-----=====More=====
"[[matheme]]" (''[[mathème]]'')
The [[matheme]]s are part of [[Lacan]]ian [[algebra]].
--=====More=====
Although the term [[matheme]] is not introduced by [[Lacan]] until the early 1970s, the two formulae which are most often referred to as [[matheme]]s date from 1957.
The rhomboid symbolizes a relation between the two symbols, which includes the relations of "envelopment-development-conjunction-disjunction."<ref>{{E}} p.280</ref>
--=====More=====
[[Lacan]] argues that the [[matheme]]s are "not transcendent signifiers; they are the indices of an absolute signification."<ref>{{E}} p.314</ref>
=====More=====
The '''[[matheme]]''' is a concept introduced by [[France|French]] [[psychoanalyst]] [[Jacques Lacan]].
They were intended to introduce some degree of technical rigour in [[philosophical]] and [[psychological]] writing, as an easy way to hold, remember, and rehearse some of the core [[psychoanalytic]] [[concepts]]s.
"[[Matheme]]", for [[Lacan]], was not simply the imitation of [[science]] by [[philosophy]], but the ideal of a perfect means for the integral transmission of [[knowledge]].
==Mathemes==
The main [[Lacan]]ian [[matheme]]s in order of their appearance are:
 
In 1955, he introduced what could be called his first [[matheme]], [[schema L]], illustrating the [[imaginary]] function of the [[ego]].
Originally used as teaching aids, these range from teh relatively simple 'schema l' illustrating the [[imaginary]] function of the [[ego]] in the 1955 paper on [[psychosis]] to the complex chart of the workings of [[desire]].
In [[Greek]], ''mathêma'' means "that which is taught."
# [[Schema L]] (1955), which identifies four points in the [[signifying chain]]: first, the unconscious, or the [[discourse]] of the [[Other]] (A), and then the [[subject]] (S), which in turn results from the relation between the [[ego]] (a) to the [[other]] (a) to the other (d).
 
# The [[formula]] of the [[signifier]] (1957), S/s, links the [[law]]s of the [[unconscious]] discovered by [[Freud]] to the [[law]]s of [[language]] ([[metaphor]] and [[metonymy]]).
 
Perhaps the most familiar is the '[[algorithm]]' which in 1957 replaces [[Saussure]]'s simple diagram of the [[sign]] / arbor with the notation S/s.
This is to be understood as demonstrating that the [[signifier]] is above the [[signified]], and that the two are separated by a [[bar]] that resists [[signification]] and forces the [[signifier]] to slide endlessly.
# The "[[big graph]]" (1957) represented two different stages of the [[signifying chain]].
* [[Forumalas of Sexuation]]
* [[Signifier]]/[[signified]]
 
== External links ==
* [http://home.vicnet.net.au/~acp/fonts/readthis.htm Lacanian Matheme Fonts] provided by the [[Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis]]
*
==References==
* [[Lacan, Jacques]]. [[Écrits]]: A selection. Trans. [[Bruce Fink]]. New York: W. W. Norton. 2002.
* ——. [[Seminar XXI|Le Séminaire-Livre XXI, Les non-dupes errent]] ("[[Seminar XXI|Those Who Aren't Duped Err/The Names of the Father]]") 1973-1974. Unpublished [[seminar]].
 
__NOTOC__
{{Encore}} pp. 74''n'', 110, 119
Root Admin, Bots, Bureaucrats, flow-bot, oversight, Administrators, Widget editors
24,656
edits

Navigation menu