Lacan’s subject: the imaginary, language, the real and philosophy

Original Articles

Lacan’s subject: the imaginary, language, the real and philosophy

Published in: South African Journal of Philosophy
Volume 23 , issue 1 , 2004 , pages: 1–19
DOI: 10.4314/sajpem.v23i1.31381
Author(s): Bert Olivier Philosophy Centre for Advanced Studies University of Port Elizabeth,

Abstract

The thought of the psychoanalytical thinker, Jacques Lacan, is examined in this paper with a view to ascertaining the place and function of the so-called imaginary in it, the symbolic as well as the ‘real’. The extent to which the imaginary or realm of images is construed by Lacan as being the order of identification and a (spurious) sense of unity of the ego or self, is contrasted with the symbolic (or linguistic) order as that of the subject and of desire, in fact, of the subject of desire. The place and meaning of the enigmatic third register in Lacan’s thought, namely the ‘real’, is also addressed in relation to the question of desire. Furthermore, the question is raised, where philosophy in its traditional sense belongs - to the Lacanian register of the imaginary or to that of the symbolic.

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