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  1. 22 de may. de 2024 · The four fundamental concepts of psychoanalysis’ is the name which Jacques Lacan gave to Seminar XI in 1964. Introduction to Cormac Gallagher’s translation Extract from the 1965 Yearbook of the École pratique des hautes etudes, p. 249-251; published as an entreaty of Seminar XI.Introduction to Adrian Price’s translation This text originally published in the Annuaire

  2. 11 de may. de 2024 · Seminar 11 Ryan and Todd unpack Jacques Lacan's most well-known seminar--Seminar XI: The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis. In doing so, they focus on Lacan's own exclusion as a starting point and then delve into two concepts that Lacan does not list among the fundamental ones--subjectivity and the objet a.

  3. Hace 5 días · This introductory year-long programme explores Jacques Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis: transference, repetition, the unconscious and the drive in the context of contemporary debates on mental health.

  4. 12 de may. de 2024 · The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, text established by Jacques-Alain Miller, London, Penguin, 1977, chap. vi to ix, pp. 65-119. (Of the Gaze as objet petit a ). Visit the NLS International Congress 2023 here

  5. 22 de may. de 2024 · Thought in Motion is a series dedicated to the Seminars of psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. This video is the final video of Seminar 5, covering lectures 24 to 2...

    • 23 min
    • 289
    • Singularity as Sublimity | A Philosophy Channel
  6. 2 de may. de 2024 · According to Lacan, this is the subject reduced to its most extreme point of being a mere onlooker: being reduced to an eye. That is a fundamentally desubjectivized situation and here the subject is no more than “a screen upon which the subject is established.”

  7. Hace 5 días · Lacanian psychoanalysis is a departure from the traditional British and American psychoanalysis. Jacques Lacan frequently used the phrase "retourner à Freud" ("return to Freud") in his seminars and writings, as he claimed that his theories were an extension of Freud's own, contrary to those of Anna Freud, the Ego Psychology, object ...