[Lutecium-group] Lutecium-group Digest, Vol 25, Issue 36

Frans Tassigny frans.tassigny at gmail.com
Wed Dec 27 10:50:41 GMT 2006


chère amie,

Vous me me répondez pas sur le fond de mon texte mais vous l'interprétez
comme si je menait cette quête en solitaire, sûrement pas, je me fais au
contraire l'écho d'une multitude d'analysants, il y a bel et bien une
commande sociale pour une psychanalyse plurielle hors des castes
préétablies, c'est d'ailleurs le succès des TTC( au détriment de la
psychanalyse fermée..),

Voici un exemple concret d'avancées plurielles :

*

UNEFPE est une association loi 1901 d'analysants accomplissant leur cure
avec un même analyste. En expérience depuis 1985 elle complète le concept du
transfert avec l'élément de son rassemblement en commun. Elle marque dans
l'histoire de la psychanalyse la phase d'évolution de la méthode freudienne
qui intègre la psychologie collective

UNE Fonction Psychanalytique, Association dite UNEFPE, après avoir formé la
technique de psychanalyse plurielle et portant au service des groupes le
fruit des travaux poursuivis depuis Freud sur le psychisme, présentera son
activité au Forum Régional des Associations à Lyon les 14, 15 & 16 Janvier
1989. Elle intitule sa manifestation:

vou pouvez y lire la suite sur :
http://nfrance.com/~eq12866/miroir/2004/200400605154100_UNEFPE_PLurielANalytique.htm


cordial
ft
*
Le 26/12/06, lutecium-group-request at lutecium.org <
lutecium-group-request at lutecium.org> a écrit :
>
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>
> Today's Topics:
>
>    1. fake (jp.bienvenu at wanadoo.fr)
>    2. Re: Lutecium-group Digest, Vol 25, Issue 34
>       (Natalia Milopolsky-Costiou)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2006 10:47:59 -0300
> From: jp.bienvenu at wanadoo.fr
> Subject: [Lutecium-group] fake
> To: lutecium-group at lutecium.org
> Message-ID:
>         <mailman.49772.1167144009.25254.lutecium-group at lutecium.org>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> something is going wrong
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2006 09:39:13 -0500
> From: "Natalia Milopolsky-Costiou" <sirano at iname.com>
> Subject: Re: [Lutecium-group] Lutecium-group Digest, Vol 25, Issue 34
> To: maldoro at ifrance.com, "Groupe de travail pour la psychanalyse
>         lacanienne"     <lutecium-group at lutecium.org>
> Message-ID: <20061226143913.B2C091F50B1 at ws1-2.us4.outblaze.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
>
>
> A very inspiring speech, Frans, thank you for it.?
>
> Une des particularit?s de cette attirance des textes de Lacan en Anglais
> (comme dans pas mal d?autres langues) c?est que les Anglais ne parleraient
> justement pas comme cela. Le discours psychanalytique britannique (ou encore
> irlandais) est compl?tement ailleurs ainsi que tous ce que vient avec et ce
> que l?inspire. C?est pour cette raison entre autres que votre lutte contre
> l?herm?tisme psychanalytique reste si solitaire?: tant que ??l??lite??
> existe, il y aura toujours ceux qui voudront y acc?der, n?est-ce pas?? Voil?
> pourquoi beaucoup (je crois) entre nous s?occupons des mis en sc?ne de leur
> pratique plut?t que des barricades et restent donc dans leurs cabinets.
> Apr?s tout, ils sont beaux, nos cabinets, tandis que dehors il fait souvent
> froid?
>
> A ce propos, je vous souhaite une tr?s belle f?te de calendrier?:-))
>
>
>
> Natalia
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Frans Tassigny"
> To: lutecium-group at lutecium.org
> Subject: Re: [Lutecium-group] Lutecium-group Digest, Vol 25, Issue 34
> Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 21:36:10 +0100
>
>
> lutecium-group: Document interne au Groupe de Travail Lutecium.
> Ne doit pas etre diffuse hors du groupe.
> ---
> bonjour,
>
> Cette version en anglais a ?galement pour but de vous pr?senter le site US
> qui l'?dite, je re?ois r?guli?rement leur nouveaut?s et je trouve que
> leurs
> info sont r?solument diff?rentes que celles publi?es en Europe....
>
> Si vous d?sirez plus en savoir voyez :
> http://www.lacan.com/ericlaurent.html
>
>
>
>
>
> Par ailleurs , voyez : PLoS est une organisation ? but non lucratif des
> scientifiques et des m?decins commis ? rendre le monde litt?rature
> scientifique et m?dicale une ressource publique librement disponible.
> Toutes
> nos activit?s sont guid?es par nos principes de
> noyau
> .
>
> [image: OUVRIR L'ACCESS]Ouvrir l'Access : Tout que nous ?ditons est
> librement accessible en ligne pour que vous lisiez, pour t?l? chargez,
> copier, distribuer, et employer (avec l'attribution) n'importe quelle
> mani?re vous souhaitez.
>
> Je crois qu'? l'heure o? la psychanalyse doit s'ouvrir vers les
> neurosciences on ne peut plus se contenter de lire Freud uniquement (ou
> Lacan), des organisations telles http://www.plos.org/oa/index.html sont
> maintenant les nouveaux moteurs du savoir et de la connaissance. J'y
> participe activement , j'ai dirig? un mega site produit par l'Open access
> financ? par G.Soros cela m'a valu de travaillez avec mobynuke et post
> nunke,
> le sites que j'ai transform? en e-zine ont re?u une grande affluence.
> C'est
> donc dans la volont? de continuer sur blog cette philosophie de la
> gratuit?
> du savoir qu'il faudrait inscrire dans les groupes de psychanalystes.
>
> FINI LES CHAPELLES DE X Y Z ne r?duisons plus la psychanalyse au plaisir
> d'une ?lite, il faut r?solument se diriger vers une ouverture sans bien
> sur
> pour cela perdre sa sp?cificit?.
>
> cordial
> Frans Tassigny
>
>
> http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=fr&sl=en&u=http://www.plos.org/&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=1&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3DPLoS%26hl%3Dfr%26lr%3D%26sa%3DG
> 2006/12/25, ecium.org :
> >
> > Send Lutecium-group mailing list submissions to
> > lutecium-group at lutecium.org
> >
> > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
> > http://cerium.lutecium.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lutecium-group
> > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
> > lutecium-group-request at lutecium.org
> >
> > You can reach the person managing the list at
> > lutecium-group-owner at lutecium.org
> >
> > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
> > than "Re: Contents of Lutecium-group digest..."
> >
> >
> > Today's Topics:
> >
> > 1. Re: la suture de J.A Miller ver anglophone (kika)
> >
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Mon, 25 Dec 2006 17:05:54 -0200
> > From: "kika"
> > Subject: Re: [Lutecium-group] la suture de J.A Miller ver anglophone
> > To: "Groupe de travail pour la psychanalyse lacanienne"
> >
> > Message-ID: <000c01c72857$badf2340$8d00fea9 at all.com.br>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> >
> > Franz, je m'excuse mais je n'ai pas compris... pourquoi une version en
> > anglais?
> >
> > en tout cas, tout le monde peut avoir son interpr?tation propre de
> Lacan.
> > et
> > on peut discuter sa validit? ou non. mais c'est toujours une
> > interpr?tation,
> > il ya toujours l'inconscient qui ?tablit les sentiers du su-je.
> >
> > et je reprends l? des mots parus dans Quarto (Suppl?ment belge ? La
> lettre
> > mensuelle de l'?cole de la cause freudienne), en 1981: "Ce que notre
> > pratique r?v?le, nous r?v?le, c'est que le savoir, savoir inconscient a
> un
> > rapport avec l'amour." J.Lacan
> >
> > et il y aurait dans Ornicar? 9 le suivant dialogue entre Miller e Lacan
> > qui
> > me parait montrer un peu comment op?re ce su-je propre ? chacun des
> deux:
> >
> > "J.-A. M. - Ce serait ? montrer.
> >
> > J. L. - Ce serait s?rement ? montrer, c'est vrai, mais je ne le
> montrerai
> > pas ce soir."
> >
> > alors les ?crits de Miller o? qui que ce soit serviraient juste pour
> nous
> > faire apprendre que pense-t-il ? partir de son v?cu et sa compr?hension
> de
> > Lacan. c'est valable, c'est int?ressant, mais ?tre l'au-moins un ? le
> lire
> > ce n'est pas ?tre Dieu. et c'est ?a ce que je lui reproche. personne n'a
> > le
> > droit de "syst?matiser", voire asseptiser Lacan, sauf si cel? est fait
> > explicitement.
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Frans Tassigny"
> > To: "lutecium-group"
> > Sent: Saturday, December 23, 2006 9:19 AM
> > Subject: [Lutecium-group] la suture de J.A Miller ver anglophone
> >
> >
> > lutecium-group: Document interne au Groupe de Travail Lutecium.
> > Ne doit pas etre diffuse hors du groupe.
> > ---
> > No-one without those precise conceptions of analysis which only a
> personal
> > analysis can provide has any right to concern himself (or herself) with
> > it.
> > Ladies and Gentlemen, doubtless you fully con- form to the strength of
> > that
> > ruling by Freud in the *New Introductory Lectures*.
> >
> > Thus, articulated as a dilemma, a question raises itself foe me in your
> > regard.
> >
> > If, contravening this injunction, it is of psychoanalysis that I am
> going
> > to
> > speak, - then. by listening to someone whom you know to be incapable of
> > producing the credentials which alone would authorize your assent, what
> > are
> > you doing here?
> >
> > Or. if my subject is not psychoanalysis. - then you who so faith- fully
> > attend here in order to become conversant with the problems which relate
> > to
> > the Freudian field, what are you doing here!
> >
> > And you above all. Ladies and Gentlemen the analysts, what arc you doing
> > here. you to whom Freud specifically addressed the warning not to rely
> on
> > those who are not confirmed in the practice of your science, on those
> > so-called authorities, those literary intellectuals, who bring their
> soup
> > to
> > warm at your fire, without so much as recognizing your hospitality? Even
> > if
> > he who reigns in your kitchens as head-chef could amuse himself by
> letting
> > someone lower than the lowest kitchen boy get hold of the pot with which
> > you
> > are so naturally concerned since it is from it that you draw your
> > sustenance, it was still uncertain - and I confess that I myself doubted
> -
> > that you would be ready to drink in a soup merely cooked up in that way.
> > And
> > yet you are here. Permit me to marvel a moment at your presence, and at
> > the
> > privilege of your having lent me for a while that most precious of the
> > organs at your disposal, your ear.
> >
> > Which I must now attempt to justify to it, and with reasons which are at
> > least admissible.
> >
> > I will not keep you waiting. The justification lies in this, which will
> > come
> > as no surprise after the developments which have so enchanted your
> hearing
> > at this seminar since the start of the academic year, that the Freudian
> > field is not representable as a closed surface. The opening up of
> > psychoanalysis is not the effect of the liberalism, the whim. the
> > blindness
> > even of he who has set himself as its guardian. For. if not being
> situated
> > on the inside does not relegate you to the outside, it is because at a
> > certain point, excluded from a two-dimensional topology, the two
> surfaces
> > join up and the periphery or outer edge crosses over the
> circumscription.
> >
> > That I can recognize and occupy that point is what releases you from the
> > dilemma I presented to you. and entitles you to be listening to me
> to-day.
> > Which will enable you to grasp. Ladies and Gentlemen, to what extent you
> > arc
> > implicated in my undertaking and how far its successful outcome concerns
> > you.
> >
> > *Concept of the Logic of the Signifier*
> >
> > What I am aiming to restore, piecing together indications dispersed '
> > through the work of Jacques Lacan, is to be designated the logic of the
> > signifier - it is a general logic in that its functioning is formal in
> > relation to all fields of knowledge including that of psychoanalysis
> > which,
> > in acquiring a specificity there, it governs; it is a minimal logic in
> > that
> > within it are given those pieces only which arc necessary to assure it a
> > progression reduced to a linear movement, uniformally generated at each
> > point of its necessary sequence. That this logic should be called the
> > logic
> > of the signifier avoids the partiality of the conception which would
> limit
> > its validity to the field in which it was first produced as a category;
> to
> > correct its linguistic declension is to prepare the way for its
> > importation
> > into other discourses, an importation which we will not fail to carry
> out
> > once we have grasped its essentials here.
> >
> > The chief advantage to be gained from this process of minimisation is
> the
> > greatest economy of conceptual expenditure, which is then in danger of
> > obscuring to you that the conjunctions which it effects between certain
> > functions are so essential that to neglect them is to compromise
> analytic
> > reasoning proper.
> >
> > By considering the relationship between this logic and that which I will
> > call logician's logic, we see that its particularity lies in the fact
> that
> > the first treats of the emergence of the second. and should be conceived
> > of
> > as the logic of the origin of logic - which is to say, chat it docs not
> > follow its laws, but that, prescribing their jurisdiction, itself falls
> > outside that jurisdiction.
> >
> > This dimension of the archeological can be grasped most succinctly
> through
> > a
> > movement back from the field of logic itself, where its miscognition. at
> > its
> > most radical because closest to is recognition is effected.
> >
> > That this step repeats something of that which Derrida has shown to be
> > exemplary to phenomenology
> > [1]will
> > conceal to none but the most hasty this crucial difference, that here
> > miscognition finds its point of departure in the production of meaning.
> We
> > can say that it is constituted not as a forgetting, but as a repression.
> >
> > To designate it I choose the name of suture. Suture names the relation
> of
> > the subject to the chain of its discourse; we shall see that it figures
> > there as the clement which is lacking, in the form of a stand-in. For,
> > while
> > there lacking, it is not purely and simply absent. Suture, by extension
> -
> > the general relation of lack to the structure - of which it is an
> element,
> > inasmuch as it implies the position of a taking-the-place-of.
> >
> > It is the objective of this paper to articulate the concept of suture
> > which,
> > if it is not named explicitly as such by Jacques Lacan. is constantly
> > present in his system.
> >
> > Let it be absolutely clear that it is not as philosopher or
> philosopher's
> > apprentice that I am speaking here - if the philosopher is as
> > characterized
> > by Heinrich Heine in a sentence quoted by Freud, "with his nightcaps and
> > the
> > tatters of his dressing- gown. patching up the gaps in the structure of
> > the
> > universe". But take care not to think that the function of suturation is
> > peculiar to the philosopher: what is specific to the philosopher is the
> > determination of the field in which he operates as a "universal
> > structure".
> > It is important that you realize that the logician, like the linguist.
> > also
> > sutures at his particular level. And, quite as much. anyone who says
> "I".
> >
> > In order to grasp suture we must cut across what a discourse makes
> > explicit
> > of itself, and distinguish from its meaning, its letter. This paper is
> > concerned with a letter - a dead letter. It should come as no surprise
> if
> > the meaning then dies.
> >
> > The main thread of this analysis will be Gottlob Frege's argument in
> > *Grundlagen
> > der Arithmetik*,
> > [2]crucial
> > here because it puts into question those terms which in Peano's
> > axiomatic, adequate for a construction of a theory of natural numbers,
> are
> > taken as primary - that is. the zero, the number, the successor.
> > [3]This
> > calling into question of the theory, by disintricating, from the
> > axiomatic where the theory is consolidated, the suturing, delivers up
> this
> > last.
> >
> > *The Zero and the One*
> >
> > - Here then is the question posed in its most general form;
> >
> > what is it that functions in the series of whole natural
> > numbers to which we can assign their progression?
> >
> > And the answer, which I shall give at once before establishing it:
> >
> > in the process of the constitution of the series,
> > in the genesis of progression,
> > the function of the subjet, miscognized is operative.
> >
> > This proposition will certainly appear as a paradox to anyone who knows
> > that
> > the logical discourse of Frege opens with the exclusion of that which is
> > held by empiricist theory to be essential for the passage of the thing
> to
> > the unit, and of the set of units to the unit of number: that is, the
> > function of the subject, as support of the operations of abstraction and
> > unification.
> >
> > For the unity which is thus assured both for the individual and the set,
> > it
> > only holds in so far as the number functions as its name. Whence
> > originates
> > the ideology which makes of the subject the producer of fictions, short
> of
> > recognizing it as the product of its product - an ideology in which
> > logical
> > and psychological discourse are wedded, with political discourse
> occupying
> > the key position, which can be seen admitted in Occam, concealed in
> Locke,
> > and miscognized thereafter.
> >
> > A subject therefore, defined by attributes whose other side is
> political,
> > disposing as of powers, of a faculty of memory necessary to close the
> set
> > without the loss of any of the interchangeable elements, and a faculty
> of
> > repetition which operates inductively. There is no doubt that it is this
> > subject which Frege, setting himself from the start against the
> empiricist
> > foundation of arithmetic. excludes from the field in which the concept
> of
> > the number is to appear.
> >
> > But if it is held that the subject is not reducible, in its most
> essential
> > function, to the psychological, then its exclusion from the field of
> > number
> > is assimilable to repetition. Which is what I have to demonstrate.
> >
> > You will be aware that Frege's discourse starts from the fundamental
> > system
> > comprising the three concepts of the concept, the object and the number,
> > and
> > two relations, that of the concept to the object, which is called
> > subsumption and that of the concept to the number which I will call
> > assignation. A number is assigned to a concept which subsumes objects.
> >
> > What is specifically logical about this system is that each concept is
> > only
> > defined and exists solely through the relation which it maintains as
> > subsumer with that which it subsumes. Similarly, an object only has
> > existence in so far as it falls under a concept. there being no other
> > determination involved in its logical existence, so that the object
> takes
> > its meaning from its difference to the thing integrated, by its
> > spatio-temporal localization, to the real.
> >
> > Whence you can see the disappearance of the thing which must be effected
> > in
> > order for it to appear as object - which is the thing in so far as it is
> > one,
> >
> > It is dear that the concept which operates in the system. formed solely
> > through the determination of subsumption, is a redoubled concept: the
> > concept of identity to a concept.
> >
> > This redoubling. induced in the concept by identity, engenders the
> logical
> > dimension, because in effecting the disappearance of the thing it gives
> > rise
> > to the emergence of the numerable.
> >
> > For example, if 1 group what falls under the concept "child of Agamemnon
> > and
> > Cassandra", I summon in order to subsume them Pelops and Teledamus. To
> > this
> > set I can only assign a number if I put into play the concept 'identical
> > to
> > the concept: child of Agamemnon and Cassandra'. Through the effect of
> the
> > fiction of (his concept, the children now intervene in so far as each
> one
> > is. so to speak, applied to itself - which transforms it into a unit,
> and
> > gives to it the status of an object which is numerable as such. It is
> this
> > one of the singular unit. this one of identity of the subsumed, which is
> > common to all numbers in so far as they are first constituted as units.
> >
> > >From this can be deduced the definition of the assignation of number:
> > according to Frege "the number assigned to the concept F is the
> extension
> > of
> > the concept identical to the concept F". Frege's ternary system has as
> its
> > effect that all that is left to the thing is the support of its identity
> > with itself, by which it is the object of the operative concept, and
> hence
> > numerable.
> >
> > The process that I have just set out authorizes me to conclude the
> > following
> > proposition, whose relevance will emerge later, - the unit which could
> be
> > called unifying of the concept in so far as it is assigned by the number
> > is
> > subordinate to the unit as distinctive in so far as it supports the
> > number.
> >
> > As for the position of the distinctive unit. its foundation is to be
> > situated in the function of identity which, conferring on each thing of
> > the
> > world the property of being one. effects its transformation into an
> object
> > of the (logical) concept.
> >
> > At this point in the construction, you will sense all the importance of
> > the
> > definition of identity which I am going to present.
> >
> > This definition which must give its true meaning to the concept of
> number,
> > must borrow nothing from it
> > [4]-
> > precisely in order to ^ engender numeration.
> >
> > _ This definition, which is pivotal to his system. Frege takes from
> > Leibniz.
> > It is contained in this statement: *eadem sunt quorum unum potest
> > substitui
> > alteri salva veritate*. Those things are identical of which one can be
> > substituted for the other *salva veritate* without loss of truth.
> > Doubtless
> > you can estimate the crucial importance of what is effected by this
> > statement: the emergence of the function of truth. Yet what it assumes
> is
> > more important than what it expresses. That is, identity-with-itself.
> That
> > a
> > thing cannot be substituted for itself, then where does this leave
> truth?
> > Absolute is its subversion.
> >
> > If we follow Leibniz's argument, the failing of truth whose possibility
> is
> > opened up for an instant, its loss through the substitution for one
> thins
> > of
> > another, would be followed by its immediate reconstitution in a new
> > relation: truth is recovered because the substituted thing, in that it
> is
> > identical with itself, can be the object of a judgement and enter into
> the
> > order of discourse: identical with itself, it can be articulated.
> >
> > But that a thing should not be identical with itself subverts the field
> of
> > truth, ruins it and abolishes it.
> >
> > You will grasp to what extent the preservation of truth is implicated in
> > this identity with itself which connotes the passage from the thing to
> the
> > object. Identity-with-itself is essential if truth is to be saved.
> >
> > Truth is. Each thing is identical with Itself.
> >
> > Let us now put into operation Frege's schema, that is, go through the
> > three-stage itinerary which he prescribes to us. Let there be a thing X
> of
> > the world. Let there be the empirical concept of this X. The concept
> which
> > finds a place in the schema is not this empirical concept but that which
> > redoubles it, being "identical with the concept of X". The object which
> > falls under this concept is X itself" as a unit. In this the number,
> which
> > is the third term of the sequence, to be assigned to the concept of X
> will
> > be the number 1. Which means that this function of the number 1 is
> > repetitive for all things of the world. It is in this sense that this 1
> is
> > only the unit which constitutes the number as such. and not the 1 in its
> > personal identity as number with its own particular place and a proper
> > name
> > in the series of numbers.
> >
> > Furthermore, its construction demands that. in order to transform it. we
> > call upon a thing of the world - which, according to Frege. cannot be:
> the
> > logical must be sustained through nothing but itself.
> >
> > In order for the number to pass from the repetition of the 1 of the
> > identical to that of its ordered succession, in order for the logical
> > dimension to gain its autonomy definitively, without any reference to
> the
> > real, the zero has to appear.
> >
> > Which appearance is obtained because truth is. Zero is the assigned to
> the
> > concept "not identical with itself". In effect, let there be the concept
> > "not identical with itself". This concept, by virtue of being a concept,
> > has
> > an extension, subsumes an object. Which object? None. Since truth is, no
> > object falls into the place of the subsumed of this concept, and the
> > number
> > which qualifies its extension is zero.
> >
> > In this engendering of the zero. I have stressed that it is sup- ported
> by
> > the proposition that truth is. If no object falls under the concept of
> > non-identical-with-itself. it is because truth must be saved. If there
> are
> > no things which are not identical with them- selves, it is because
> > non-identity with itself is contradictory to the very dimension of
> truth.
> > To
> > its concept, we assign the zero. It is this decisive proposition that
> the
> > concept of not-ldentical-with- itself is assigned by the number zero
> which
> > sutures logical discourse.
> >
> > For, and here I am working across Frege's text. in the auto- nomous
> > construction of the logical through itself, it has been necessary, in
> > order
> > to exclude any reference to the real, to evoke on the level of the
> concept
> > an object not-identical-with-itself - to be subsequently rejected from
> the
> > dimension of truth.
> >
> > The zero which is inscribed in the place of the number con- summates the
> > exclusion of this object. As for this place, marked out by subsumption,
> in
> > which the object is lacking, there nothing can be written, and if a o
> must
> > be traced, it is merely in order to figure a blank, to render visible
> the
> > lack.
> >
> > >From the zero lack to the zero number, the non-conceptualisable is
> > conceptualized.
> >
> > Let us now set aside the zero lack in order to consider only that which
> is
> > produced by the alternation of its evocation and its revocation, the
> zero
> > number.
> >
> > The zero understood as a number, which assigns to the subsuming concept
> > the
> > lack of an object, is as such a thing - the first non-real thing in
> > thought.
> >
> > If of the number zero we construct the concept, it subsumes as its sole
> > object the number zero. The number which assigns it is therefore 1.
> >
> > Frege's system works by the circulation of an element, at each of the
> > places
> > it fixes: from the number zero to its concept, from this concept to its
> > object and to its number - a circulation which produces the 1.
> > [5]This
> > system is thus so constituted with the o counting as 1. The counting
> > of
> > the 0 as 1 (whereas the concept of, the zero subsumes nothing in the
> real
> > but a blank) is the general support of the series of numbers.
> >
> > It is this which is demonstrated by Frege's analysis of the operation of
> > the
> > successor, which consists of obtaining the number which follows n by
> > adding
> > to it a unit: n' the successor of n, is equal to n + 1, that is, ...
> n...
> > (n
> > + 1) = n'... Frege opens out the n + 1 in order to discover what is
> > involved
> > in the passage from n to its successor.
> >
> > You will grasp the paradox of this engendering as soon as I produce the
> > most
> > general formula for the successor which Frege arrives at: the Number
> > assigned to the concept "member of the series of natural numbers ending
> > with
> > n" follows in the series of natural numbers directly after n'.
> >
> > Let us take a number. The number three. It will serve to constitute the
> > concept "member of the series of natural numbers ending with three". We
> > find
> > that the number assigned to this concept is four. Here then is the 1 of
> n
> > +
> > 1. Where does it come from? Assigned to its redoubled concept, the
> number
> > 3
> > functions as the unifying name of a set: as reserve. In the concept of'
> > member of the series of natural numbers ending with 3", it is the term
> (in
> > the sense both of element and of final element).
> >
> > In the order of the real. the 3 subsumes 3 objects. In the order of
> > number,
> > which is that of discourse bound by truth, it is numbers which are
> > counted:
> > before the 3, there are 3 numbers - it is therefore the fourth.
> >
> > In the order of number, there if an addition the 0 and the 0 counts for
> 1.
> > The displacement of a number, from the function of reserve to that of
> > term,
> > implies the summation of the 0. Whence the successor. That which in the
> > real
> > is pure and simple absence finds itself through the fact of number
> > (through
> > the instance of truth) noted o and counted for 1.
> >
> > Which is why we say the object not-identical with itself
> invoked-rejected
> > by
> > truth, instituted-annulled by discourse (subsumption as such) - in a
> word,
> > sutured.
> >
> > The emergence of the lack as 0, and of 0 as 1 determines the appearance
> of
> > the successor. Let there be n; the lack is fixed as which is fixed as 1:
> n
> > +
> > 1; which is added in order to give n' - which absorbs the 1.
> >
> > Certainly, if the Lot n + 1 is nothing other than the counting the zero,
> > the
> > function of addition of the sign + is superfat1ory, and we must restore
> to
> > the horizontal representation of the engendering its verticality: the 1
> is
> > to be taken as the primary symbol of the emergence of lack in the field
> of
> > truth, and the sign + indicates the crossing, the transgression through
> > which the 0 lack comes to be represented as 1, producing, through this
> > difference of n to n' which you have seen to be an effect of meaning the
> > name of a number.
> >
> > Logical representation collapses this three-level construction. The
> > operation I have effected opens it out. If you consider the opposition
> of
> > these two axes, you will understand what is at stake in logical
> suturing,
> > and the difference of the logic which I am putting forward to logician's
> > logic.
> >
> > That zero is a number: such is the proposition which assures logical
> > dimension of its closure.
> >
> > Our purpose has been to recognize in the zero number the suturing
> stand-in
> > for the lack.
> >
> > Remember here the hesitation perpetuated in the work of Bertand Russell
> > concerning its localization (interior? or exterior to the series of
> > numbers?).
> >
> > The generating repetition of the series of numbers is sustained by this,
> > that the zero lack passes, first along a vertical axis, across the bar
> > which
> > limits the field of truth in order to be represented there as one,
> > subsequently cancelling out as meaning in each of the names of the
> numbers
> > which are caught up in the metonymic chain of successional progression.
> >
> > Just as the zero as lack of the contradictory object must be
> distinguished
> > from that which sutures this absence in the series of numbers, so the 1.
> > as
> > the proper name of a number, is to be distinguished from that which
> comes
> > to
> > fix in a trait the zero of the not-identical with itself sutured by the
> > identity with itself, which is the law of discourse in the field of
> truth.
> > The central paradox to be grasped (which as you will see in a moment is
> > the
> > paradox of the signifier in the sense of Lacan) is that the trait of the
> > identical represents the non-identical, whence is deduced the
> > impossibility
> > of its redoubling,
> > [6]and from
> > that impossibility the structure of repetition, as the process of
> > differentiation of the identical.
> >
> > Now, if the series of numbers, metonymy of the zero, begins with its
> > metaphor, if the o member of the series as number is only the
> > standing-in-place suturing the absence (of the absolute zero) which
> moves
> > beneath the chain according to the alternation of a representation and
> an
> > exclusion - then what is there to stop us from seeing in the restored
> > relation of the zero to the series of numbers the most elementary
> > articulation of the subject's relation to the signifying chain?
> >
> > The impossible object, which the discourse of logic summons as the
> > not-identical with itself and then rejects as the pure negative, which
> it
> > summons and rejects in order to constitute itself as that which it is,
> > which
> > it summons and rejects wanting to know nothing of it, we name this
> object,
> > in so far as it functions as the excess which operates in the series of
> > numbers, the subject.
> >
> > Its exclusion from the discourse which internally it intimates is
> suture.
> >
> > If we now determine the trail as the signifier, and ascribe to the
> number
> > the position of signified, the relation of lack to the trait should be
> > considered as the logic of the signifier.
> >
> > *Relation of Subject and Signifier*
> >
> > In effect, what in Lacanian algebra is called the relation of the
> subject
> > to
> > the field of the Other (as the locus of truth) can be identified with
> the
> > relation which the zero entertains with the identity of the unique as
> the
> > support of truth. This relation, in so far as it is matrical, cannot be
> > integrated into any definition of objectivity - this being the doctrine
> of
> > Lacan. The engendering of the zero. from this not-identical with itself
> > under which no thing of the world falls, illustrates this to you.
> >
> > What constitutes this relation as the matrix of the chain must be
> isolated
> > in the implication which makes the determinant of ( exclusion of the
> > subject
> > outside the field of the Other its representation in that field in the
> > form
> > of the one of the unique. one of distinctive unity, which is called
> > "unary"
> > by Lacan. In algebra, this exclusion is marked by the bar which strikes
> > the
> > S of the subject in from of the capital A, and which is displaced by the
> > identity of the subject onto the A, according to the fundamental
> exchange
> > of
> > the logic of the signifier, a displacement whose effect is the emergence
> > of
> > signification signified to the subject. Untouched by the exchange of the
> > bar, this exteriority of the subject to the Other is maintained, which
> > institutes the unconscious.
> >
> > For: - if it is clear that the tripartition which divides (1) the
> > signified-to-the-subject, (2) the signifying chain whose radical
> alterity
> > in
> > relation to the subject cuts off the subject from its field, and finally
> > (3)
> > the external field of this reject, cannot be covered by the linguistic
> > dichotomy of signified and signifier; - if the consciousness of the
> > subject
> > is to be situated on the level of the effects of signification,
> governed,
> > so
> > much so that they could even be called its reflections, by the
> repetition
> > of
> > the signifier: - if repetition itself is produced by the vanishing of
> the
> > subject and its passage as lack - then only the unconscious can name the
> > progression which constitutes the chain in the order of thought.
> >
> > On the level of this constitution, the definition of the subject comes
> > down
> > to the possibility o/ one signifier more.
> >
> > Is it not ultimately to this function of excess that can be referred the
> > power of thematisation, which Dedekind assigns to the subject in order
> to
> > give to set theory its theorem of existence? The possibility of
> existence
> > of
> > an enumerable infinity can be explained by this, that "from the moment
> > that
> > one proposition is true, 1 can always produce a second, that is, that
> the
> > first is true and so on to infinity".
> > [7]
> >
> > In order to ensure that this recourse to the subject as the founder of
> > iteration is not a recourse to psychology, we simply substitute for
> > thematisation the representation of the subject (as signifier) which
> > excludes consciousness because it is not effected for someone, but, in
> the
> > chain, in the field of truth, for the signifier which precedes it. When
> > Lacan faces the definition of the sign as that which represents
> something
> > for someone, with that of the signifier as that which represents the
> > subject
> > for another signifier. he is stressing that in so far as the signifying
> > chain is concerned, it is on the level of its effects and not of its
> cause
> > that consciousness is to be situated. The insertion of the subject into
> > the
> > chain is representation, necessarily correlative to an exclusion which
> is
> > a
> > vanishing.
> >
> > If now we were to try and develop in time the relation which engenders
> and
> > supports the signifying chain, we would have to take into account the
> fact
> > that temporal succession is under the dependency of the linearity of the
> > chain. The time of engendering can only be circular - which is why both
> > these propositions are true at one and the same time. that subject is
> > anterior to signifier and that signifier is anterior to subject - but
> only
> > appears as such after the introduction of the signifier. The retroaction
> > consists essentially of this: the birth of linear time. We must hold
> > together the definitions which make the subject the effect of the
> > signifier
> > and the signifier the representative of the subject: it is a circular.
> > though non-reciprocal, relation.
> >
> > By crossing logical discourse at its point of least resistance, that of
> > its
> > suture, you can see articulated the structure of the subject: as a
> > "flickering in eclipses", like the movement which opens and closes the
> > number, and delivers up the lack in the form of the 1 in order to
> abolish
> > it
> > in the successor.
> >
> > As for the +. you have understood the unprecedented function which it
> > takes
> > on in the logic of the signifier (a sign, no longer of addition, but of
> > that
> > summation of the subject in the field of the Other, which calls for its
> > annulment). It remains to disarticulate it in order to separate the
> unary
> > trait of emergence, and the bar of the reject: thereby making manifest
> the
> > division of the subject which is the other name for its alienation.
> >
> > It will be deduced from this that the signifying chain is structure of
> the
> > structure.
> >
> > If structural causality (causality in the structure in so far as the
> > subject
> > is implicated in it) is not an empty expression, it is from the minimal
> > logic which I have developed here that it will find its status.
> >
> > We leave for another time the construction of its concept.
> >
> > *Notes:*
> >
> > [1] Edmund
> > Husserl, *L'origine de la g?ometrie*, translation and introduction by
> > Jacques Derrida, PUF, 1962.
> >
> > [2] German
> > text with English translation published under the title *The Foundations
> > of
> > Arithmetic*, Basil Blackwell, 1953.
> >
> > [3] Our
> > reading will not concern itself with any of Frege'g various inflections
> of
> > his basic purpose, and will therefore keep outside the thematisation of
> > the
> > difference of meaning and reference, as well as of the later definition
> of
> > the concept in terms of predication, from which is deduced its
> > non-saturation.
> >
> > [4] Which
> > is
> > why we must say identity and not equality.
> >
> > [5] I leave
> > aside the commentary of paragraph 76 which gives the abstract definition
> > of
> > contiguity.
> >
> > [6] And, at
> > another level, the impossibility of meta-language (cf by Jacques
> > Lacan, *Cahiers
> > pour 1'analyse*, No I, 1966).
> >
> > [7]
> > Dedekind,
> > quoted by Cavailles (*Philosophie math?mathique*, p 124, Hermann, 1962).
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
> > This text was published in French in *Cahiers pour l'analyse* 1, Winter
> > 1966, subsequently its English version translated by Jacqueline Rose
> > appeared in *Screen* 18, Winter 1978.
> >
> >
> >
> > (c) lacan.com 1997/2006
> > Copyright Notice. Please respect the fact that this material in
> LACAN.COMis
> > copyright.
> > Available only through EBSCO Publishing. Inc.
> > It is made available here without charge for personal use only. It may
> not
> > be stored, displayed, published, reproduced, or used for any other
> > purpose.
> >
> >
> >
> >
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