1 / 5

PDF_ From an Other to the other, Book XVI (From an Other to the Other, 16)

19 minutes ago - <br><br>COPY LINK TO DOWNLOAD : https://uyahsegoro.blogspot.com/?book=1509510052<br><br> | [PDF READ ONLINE] From an Other to the other, Book XVI (From an Other to the Other, 16) <br><br><br>| Sollers once wrote that, to him, Claudel was first and foremost the man who wrote, 8220Paradise is around us at this very moment, all its forests attentive like a great orchestra that invisibly adores and implores. The whole invention of the Universe with its notes falling vertiginously one by one into the

amaraherman
Download Presentation

PDF_ From an Other to the other, Book XVI (From an Other to the Other, 16)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From an Other to the other, Book XVI (From an Other to the Other, 16) Sollers once wrote that, to him, Claudel was first and foremost the man who wrote, 8220Paradise is around us at this very moment, all its forests attentive like a great orchestra that invisibly adores and implores. The whole invention of the Universe with its notes falling vertiginously one by one into the abyss where the wonders of our dimensions are written.8221 &nbspWel, Lacan is, to me, the one who says in this Seminar, 8220We are all familiar with hell, it is everyday life.8221 &nbspIsthat the same thing? No, I don't think so. Here there is no adoration, no invisible orchestra, no vertigo or wonders. Let us begin by the end: Lacan 8220evacuated8221 from the rue d8217Ulm along with his audience, not without resistance or an uproar. The episode was in all the papers. What had he done to deserve such a fate? He had spoken not only to psychoanalysts, but also to young people who were still fired up by the events of May 1968, who nevertheless accepted him as a master of discourse at the same time as they dreamt of subverting the university system. What did he tell them? That 8220Revolution8221 means returning to the same place. That knowledge now imposes its law on power and has become uncontrollable. That thought is censorship itself. He spoke to them about Marx, but also about Pascal's wager8213which became in his hands a new version of the master/slave dialectic8213not to mention the foundations of set theory. He moved on to a discussion of perversion, and models of hysteria and obsession. All of that is connected, scintillates, and captivates. &nbspBeteen the lines, the dialogue between Lacan and himself continues regarding the subject of jouissance and the relationship between jouissance and

  2. speech and language.

  3. Bestselling new book releases From an Other to the other, Book XVI (From an Other to the Other, 16)

  4. COPY LINK DOWNLOAD TO GET ABOOK Link in description

More Related