Today I am going to try to speak about knowledge, about that
knowledge which, in the inscription of the four discourses - on which the
social link is based, as I thought I could show you - I symbolized by writing
S2 Perhaps I will manage today to make you sense why this 2 goes further than a
secondariness in relation to the pure signifier that is written S1.
Since I decided to give you this inscription as a prop on
the blackboard, I am going to comment on it, briefly I hope. I did not, I must
admit, write it down or prepare it anywhere. It doesn't strike me as exemplary,
if not, as usual, in producing misunderstandings. In effect, a discourse like
analytic discourse aims at meaning. By way of meaning, it is clear that I can
only deliver to you, to each of you, what you are already on the verge of
absorbing. That has a limit, a limit provided by the meaning in which you live.
I wouldn't be exaggerating if I said that that doesn't go very far. What
analytic discourse brings out is precisely the idea that that meaning is based
on semblance ce sens est du semblant. If analytic discourse indicates that
that meaning is sexual, that can only be by explaining its limit. There is
nowhere any kind of a last word if not in the sense in which "wod" is
"not a word" mot, c'est motus - I have already stressed
that. "No answer, not a word", La Fontaine says somewhere, meaning indicates
the direction toward which it fails.
[…] We'll start with the four propositional formulas at the top of the table, two of which lie to the left, the other two to the right. Every speaking being situates itself on one side or the other. On the left, the lower line - ⍱xФx - indicates that it is through the phallic function that man as whole acquires his inscription (rend son inscription), with the proviso that this function is limited due to the existence of an x by which the function Фx is negated: Ǝx(Фx) ̅. That is what is known as the father function - whereby we find, via negation, the proposition (Фx) ̅, which grounds the operativity of what makes up for the sexual relationship with castration, insofar as that relationship is in no way inscribable. The whole here is thus based on the exception posited as the end-point, that is, on that which altogether negates Фx..."
—Jacques Lacan - Encore - March 13, 1971
[…] We'll start with the four propositional formulas at the top of the table, two of which lie to the left, the other two to the right. Every speaking being situates itself on one side or the other. On the left, the lower line - ⍱xФx - indicates that it is through the phallic function that man as whole acquires his inscription (rend son inscription), with the proviso that this function is limited due to the existence of an x by which the function Фx is negated: Ǝx(Фx) ̅. That is what is known as the father function - whereby we find, via negation, the proposition (Фx) ̅, which grounds the operativity of what makes up for the sexual relationship with castration, insofar as that relationship is in no way inscribable. The whole here is thus based on the exception posited as the end-point, that is, on that which altogether negates Фx..."
—Jacques Lacan - Encore - March 13, 1971
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