Why people struggle with this basic idea I have no idea. Nothing is as it seems. Everything flows and nothing abides. And that hasn't changed since Heraclitus was a lad. I side with Chomsky that Lacan was a self promoting charlatan who brought nothing new to the table except his own cult. That's not to expunge all merit from his work. Reminding people of things again is a worthy cause.
1. There is a TED Talk by Laurel Braitman called " Depressed Dogs, Cats with OCD. What Animal Madness Means for us Humans". She studies animal's mental health issues. She says that people often think how difficult her work must be, since the poor things can't tell you what they suffer from. She answers saying that we aren't any different indeed.How very true! I am sure Lacan would like that! In fact,Argentina's most beloved psychoanalyst Gabriel Rolon says that when patients come to him claiming to have a certain problem, over the course of the therapy ,it always turns out that indeed their problem was something totally different... 2. I highly recommend Gabriel Rolon's wonderful psychotherapy books to everyone. He writes in Spanish, but the books are translated into German and Portuguese too. He mentions Lacan a lot in his books. He says for example, that for Lacan the ultimate achievement of a psychoanalyst would be to help a patent "live his solitude without sadness". What an ambitious goal really... 3. It is also very true that we will never understand anybody entirely ( including ourselves I would add) and we also will be misunderstood ( and misunderstand ourselves! ) Pico Iyer says that when his mother turned 80, he asked her what she has learned after so many years . She said: " You can never know another person". I also remembered this wonderful line by Federico Garcia Lorca: "..and the heart feels like an island in infinity." " y el corazon se siente isla en el infinito" It is as depressing as it sounds. But in the end, in terms of our need for love and all the things we all suffer from, we have a lot in common too. 4. Considering the "mirror face", there is an incredible and really fun episode by the podcast Radiolab called: Mirror, Mirror. Here is the info: Up next, we meet a man named John Walter who swapped places with his mirror self. Kind of. He explains how changing his hair part changed his life, and how the experience convinced him that mirrors (and the reversed images they reflect) lie to us. We run John's theory by Mike Nicholls of the University of Melbourne, who admits John might be on to something about the way we perceive faces. 5. I do agree with Lacan's thoughts on love! Talking about the way romantic love works he says something like: "To love is to give what you don't have, to the one who is not who you think that is". Sorry I don't have the original quote. I have it here in a book in Spanish: " Amar es dar lo que no se tiene a quien no lo es". I guess he is talking about that period where we fall in love: we show ourselves much more tolerant, understanding, generous( especially with our time) and patient than we indeed are. The first 6 months or so... So we are "giving" something that we indeed don't really have, since it is impossible for us to continue with that intensity. So in that period of mutual blindness non of us is being what he or she really is. 6. And the most fun quote I know by Lacan is what he says about the Christian injunction " love thy neighbour as thyself". He says this must be ironic, because people hate themselves! Well, I don't think this is true for everyone. But it reminds us of something very important: If we want to be a compassionate, loving and generous person, we must start with ourselves. Thanks a lot for this wonderful lesson, as always!
In my humble opinion we can never know everything about ourselves. But still, it is worth trying one life long, to learn as much as we can learn about ourselves. Any information helps. I use two types of meditation for this: 1. Alain be Botton's "Philosophical Meditation". If you wish, just watch the video they made about it. You can then click on the information under the video and print the questions. 2. I meditate using guided meditation podcasts. I heard about them watching a Yale Lecture on Mindfullness on youtube. Just search for this on Itunes: "UCLA Hammer Meditation". They are extremely helpful. I send you my best wishes!
***** Thanks for the recommendations. I search for my fears. Meditation is good, but nothing beats the real thing. And I use mushrooms. The thoughts become beings in that particular state. You can see parts of the brain at work. They can't do their job properly, but you'll learn something about each piece.
Just out of curiosity, why are you so curious about one's self? BTW I'm going to check on some of the sources you mentioned because I'm interested in a lot of this stuff too. Thanks.
Hello David! Thanks a lot for reading. I am curious about everything in this world, but since you are the lens through which you see the world, it is also very important to be curious about yourself. Especially in bad times, it is a wise thing to do, to approach one's self with a lot of curiosity, rather than being hard on yourself. Alain de Botton twitted this the other day, which is so true: "If we saw someone else treating us the way most of us treat ourselves, we might think them despicably cruel. " So true... Have a nice weekend!
The REALLY big problem with this video isn't that it's wrong, but that it leaves out so much stuff that it's more than easy Lacan as standing for something he didn't. Lacan didn't say that we don't know who we are, or that we're worried that nobody will get us- his point is that WE'RE NOT ANYTHING beside a linguistical construct, imaginary ego, a fundamental lack in being. This is what we form ourselves around. Look deep enough and you won't find a "true and stable self", but a psychological structure based around a fundamental lack both in ans of being. Lacan spent his life trying to create a thorough and unflinching model of the psyche as formed by language and society, not to provide life-affirming insights. Reducing him to that is insulting to his life work.
Say what you want about Lacan... I'm doing the past 2 years Lacanic psychoanalysis and it help me alot... With my major anxiety and with alot of other problems...
There are no Studies that probe as an effective Therapy. you are cheating saying that because you can't probe it was la can "Therapy" that worked and no something else. studies said that is no more effective than talking to a friend.
In a way, intellectuals are always at least a bit famous. The notion emerged with mass market press and exploded with radio and television precisely because it involves taking part in and elevating the public debate.
Slakfocmsnvfgls exactly. The word « intellectual » was invented by Maurice Barres, which was a french rightist extremist in the late 19th century, and created this neologism to describe « leftist jews Freemasons dreyfusard ». It was just after the Second World War that the word became to describe all people that were doing things that involved the intellect, even the rightists, thanks to television and radio.
Andre Sassi Not unusual anywhere, not just the France. Jordan Peterson comes to mind as the latest bullshitter, but it's by no means restricted to the Anglo tradition- celebrity of the Maharishi, Tony Robbins, the Dalai Llama, Gurus of ALL stripes, etc etc. Ironically, this is precisely what Laçan warned us about.
@@andresassi526 He said this very thing in the video, that's why I said that Lacan "warned us." In what ways is Peterson a serious thinker? He seems like a great therapist or self-help guru for certain people, but I have a Father already so I know to make my bed everyday, if you get what I mean. His only serious attempt at intellectual debate was the one a couple months ago against Slavoj Zizek, in which he was thoroughly embarrassed. Didn't you watch it? It's on here. I don't see how anyone can consider him to be a "serious thinker" anymore after such a disastrous performance. I at least expected him to have SOME kind of coherent critique of Post-Modernism/The Frankfurt School/neo-Marxism, but he didn't have any. I've literally heard better critiques of Marxism from Left Anarchists, and I've heard far better critiques of Post-Modernism from Marxist-Leninists! I agree with your last point though, we should attempt to be as clear as possible when communicating, especially by text, since it can be such a poor mode of communication.
oh dang really? I was watching this and really liking it...thought I'd familiarize myself with Lacan becuase i have a reading for a class coming up by Lacan...is this video innacurate? how so?
agreed--this is a very superficial video about lacan's ideas. i would say that it is perhaps more biographical facts about his life. how do you have a video about lacan and not mention linguistics, structuralism or freud?
Lacan as an antidote to all kinds of pop psychology... I find him fascinating (although sometimes unnecessary obscure) and very intellectually intriguing challenging a lot of so called "norms".
Can you guys do Henri Ey? He was a French psychiatrist who was Lacans' theoretical rival. He created his own theories behind the human psyche (mixing psychoanalysis and neurobiology) and helped modernize psychiatry by defining and classifing different mental illnesses in his manuals, some of which are still used to this day.
I'm having a rather hard time understanding Lacan's three stages (the Real, the Symbolic and the Imaginary). Shame you don't include them in the video :(
Hey, I'm a student of Psychoanalysis from Brazil (I became a student in 2018), BUT NOW, I'M HERE AND I WILL TRY TO HELP YOU (hope it's not TOO LATE) hahaha. @Erica Wrote some good stuff, but I will go further. The Real: it's the life, the events, the unassimilable, unsignifiable register (imagine when something really new and strange happened to you, like a car accident or getting robbed); The Symbolic: it's the Inconscious, Figures, symbols, words; The Imaginary: consciouness, what you are, and what you think and see.
That's just a formula. What do you do with it ? That's the problem with Freud or Lacan, they are useless when you work in psychiatry, and not much useful in your personal life. Fuck them, if I may say so.
in the premise that you cannot possess love but nonetheless give it and that you can actually acknowledge to want it or not, even when you have never had it because as said before you have never possessed it hence you have never experienced it, You are describing that love is the idea that you give something unknown to somebody who doesn't need it, but not because he has experienced it but because of his idea of what you are giving him is something he does not want or need at the time and they can think of love as anything their imagination allows them to think of it as they can never know what it really is because they can never experience it therefore the person who gives does not know what he is giving and the person who does not want it does not know what he doesn't want therefore love does not exist as it is something that a person can never have, possess, give, know, want or experience Your comment has denied the existence of love poetry-like You have managed to prove the existence of something based on its unexistence which is not possible but just rather poetic and ironic.
@@ofdrumsandchords Well from the very first, the final goal of Lacan psychoanalysis wasn't the adaptation of clinical patients like any other psychology or psychiatry man.
So, im a barber...this made sense When people sit in my chair ...and all their deep thoughts come out ,im a better help to them because of this channel. :) Ever thank ful.
It strikes me, watching these videos, that the lives of many of these great thinkers were shaped by their own personal experiences. Lacan's negativity about man and woman ever really knowing each other strikes me as typical of a good-looking man who dated a lot of beautiful women, serially. If he'd been a plainer man, who married a plain-looking sweetheart at a young age and stayed with her 40 years, I think his ideas on how well men and women know each other would have been quite different. I've observed that these are often the most stable relationships, while attractive people with seemingly enviable love lives often end up with the most polarized, Mars-and-Venus view of the sexes. Michel Foucault is another example: He grew up feeling very repressed by his bourgeois French family and the Catholic Church, and then spent his life proposing the most controversial, anti-bourgeois theories possible. In a way, he might have just been trying to make Mama and Papa really, really mad.
1:32, actually for the first time my dog had seen itself in the mirror, she started barking at her own reflection thinking it was another dog, after a while of freaking out she sort of accepted it and never paying attention to it, so I think some animals do understand
This is a very generous redemption of a man who is considered to be a charlatan and a deceiver (to gain status and economical benefits) by many important intellectuals like Chomsky and even some former psychoanalysts. I recommend reading “From Lacan to Darwin” by Dylan Evans (2005). He created a popular reference book about Lacan's theory, appreciated by many psychoanalysts, but in the process came to understand Lacan as a charlatan. I understand that this space is about philosophy. And if we take Lacan, Jung, and Freud's writings as philosophy, I sympathize that there are many things of value to highlight. The problem is that Lacan never had the humility to recognize that he was proposing a kind of philosophy. Instead, he was proposing a categorical description of human nature and a method of intervention. But the value of this theory/practice is not based on evidence, but on the obscurity of his texts and the authority of a charismatic man. The many cases in which psychoanalysis is not just unhelpful but harmful are well known in the psychological literature. I would simply advise more discretion when speaking about Lacan and the value or validity of his claims.
@@martharigby Video is not entirely wrong, he just let too much out, Lacan can't be summarized in 8 minutes, he did wayyy too much, it's a bad video and add the fact that the channel is super liberal, it's just tainted with politics as well lol.
A note on the short session; Lacan did this not because he “felt” like but because he wanted to punctuate the session. When a signifier with particular libidinal resonance was said he’d end the session so the signifier would emerge as a ‘quilting point’ that would rearrange the subject’s signifying structure. It’s very hard to explain Lacan in a short way that is faithful to the intricacy and profundity of his ideas. If anyone is interested in a deeper understanding of Lacan, I implore them to read Freud as Philosopher by Richard Boothby. While the title only names Freud, it is easily the best introduction to Lacan ever written.
Another excellent video, Alain. But can I just give a shout out to whoever edits your videos, they do an amazing job and I really enjoy it from a cinemagraphic perspective!
YES! A psychoanalyst that was in dire need of elucidation. Thank you, School of Life. EDIT: Well, that was a bit disappointing. How come there were no mentions of his psychoanalytic concepts besides the mirror stage, such as the Real and the Imaginary?
yes, alain gets all tangled up in trying to apply ideas to some vague social project, then we miss the actual thought of lacan - getting some misshappen contortion to tack on about everyday life instead
I like it though. also, consider the format. it's a less than ten minute film. It definitely condenses too much, but it acts as a good introduction to laymen.
They didn't include many of his concepts because many of them are littered with socialist propoganda. Lacan followed Freudo-Marxism, the idea that somehow, capitalism can cause mental disarray. Lacan, even if you look in this video, that all people secretly want some "Big Brother" figure ruling them.
It's kind of unsettling that no matter how hard we try how big our vocabularies are we will never be able to exactly precisely put words to thoughts and feelings don't get me wrong, we can get damn close but no other human being will see what you're thinking,or 100% understand that one unmistakeable, undesirable feeling not even if you're desperate but we still try , that's all we can do
As someone who has recently been trying to understand Lacan through a wide range of books, seminars, podcasts, etc., this really synthesized it all together for me. Thanks!
Well yeah I mean he has spent his whole career defending Lacan and Hegel pretty much. A video on him would be interesting though since he does have a lot of interesting theories.
People need to not be hated by their "loved" ones. No one is mental...it is a response to trauma ie hateful words & actions from those who are supposed to love you !
Great job with the video, though I would mention it covers more of Lacanian ethics than the actual theoretical framework. One central notion in Lacanian psychoanalysis is that we are who we are, as human beings, because of something that we experience to be missing from us (usually an incestuous forbidden love from our childhood). It naturally follows, at least from what I’ve read on Lacan, that we spend the rest of our lives making up for that lost object in an illusory fantasy we call reality. The episode of the toddler staring at its own reflection in the mirror is an instance of this, where the image in the mirror represents an imaginary “Self” constructed for the purpose of identification. Similarly, to play this game called life, everything in our immediate vicinity since socialization is set up as a mirror for us to identify with. Whether that thing is love, desire, or individuality, it is not coming from within us, it is constantly being produced from positions outside of ourselves. Taking advantage of this decentered nature of reality, the analyst tries to become a mirror for the analysand (patient) in order for the latter to project his or hers deepest concerns to them. Correct me if I’m wrong, I’m still reading Lacan, but just for fun :)
Rather subjective adaptation of Lacan. To me it seems like you are very selective in what you want to present to the viewer. This is of course due to both the brevity of this video and Lacan's usefulness for the conveyance of your own philosophy which I can understand to some degree but this video has a manipulative and subversive effect. Lacan's ideas are at least as complex and ungraspable as his writings and to represent him like this (straightforward and logical and indirectly as an anticipant of the school of life philosophy) feels unjust and even immoral to me.
I think even though there may be plenty of reason to hate him, judging by these comments, that's not really the point of this video or channel. It's more about the interesting things that have been said, the different ways to think and interpret the world and ourselves, and the only reason he's credited is to attribute these thoughts to a source. Regardless of who Lacan was, that's not the part we should take away from this video.
Not specifically about this video, but the 'Discover our range of books' bit at the end. I had a look at some of the School of Life books in my local bookshop and got a positive impression of their content and design. What _really_ put me off, however, was the feel of the cover. They have a chalky softness that sets my nerves on edge. More are more books are being published with this ghastly surface texture. Many will undoubtedly like or be indifferent to it, but bear in mind that there will be some people like me who dislike the feel so much they will be put off buying any of the books. I put this out for information - apologies for the off-topic rant.
All your videos are interesting and well done, Can you please optimize the voice level for external speakers? Like on desktop computers All your audio levels are mostly optimized for headphones only. Thank you, keep going
"Suppose you are an intellectual impostor with nothing to say, but with strong ambitions to succeed in academic life, collect a coterie of reverent disciples and have students around the world anoint your pages with respectful yellow highlighter. What kind of literary style would you cultivate? Not a lucid one, surely, for clarity would expose your lack of content" R. Dawkins
The Sokal affair, also called the Sokal hoax,[1] was a publishing hoax perpetrated by Alan Sokal, a physics professor at New York University and University College London. In 1996, Sokal submitted an article to Social Text, an academic journal of postmodern cultural studies. The submission was an experiment to test the journal's intellectual rigor and, specifically, to investigate whether "a leading North American journal of cultural studies - whose editorial collective includes such luminaries as Fredric Jameson and Andrew Ross - [would] publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors' ideological preconceptions" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sokal_affair
"For Lacan, the truly talented politician isn't someone who knows how to whip up the crowd and ignite feelings of semi conscious, childlike dreams of perfection." A dismissal of Sanders perhaps? "It's the one who dares to be an adult - someone who has the skill to persuade people of the disappointing nature of reality and Who has the tact to do so without arousing unbearable rage and tantrums." A dismissal of Clinton as well, I suppose.
A dismissal of any politican, really....very few have ever been able to win the political game from both sides of the spectrum..that is, appealing to the people while ALSO appealing to the rich.
My dog (labrador) usually barks with fear when he sees himself in the mirror haha the question would be if he barks because he recognizes himself and gets afraid or because he thinks there's another dog in front of him
"He didn't write very clearly." The reason Lacan's writing is difficult is not that he enjoyed being obscure or because he was covering up his so-called charlatanism. A lot of people think that and this video seems to suggest that as well. There are two reasons why Lacan is difficult. I. Lacanian psychoanalysis is a language about language. This means he is basically trying to articulate something outside of language using language itself, which is logically impossible. In order to do this, you have to 'torture' language, like a poet would, and force language to do something it refuses to do but also ultimately is unable to do. This is why the language seems to border on 'senseless'. II. His writing is primarily intended for other psychoanalysts. Reading Lacan is suppose to train you to be an analyst. Lacan says so in the introduction to his Écrits. An analyst is able to interpret a single phrase or word uttered by a patient in multiple ways to discover the hidden (repressed) meanings of the patient's discourse says during analysis. Like how a dream has multiple layers of meaning. For example, when a patient says they dreamed about a spider the spider can represent their boss, mother, wife, their literal fear of spiders, etc. “I did not write Écrits in order for people to understand them, I wrote them in order for people to read them. Which is not even remotely the same thing." - Lacan
I noticed The School Of Life has yet to say much on our roles within our extended family. One can link a great deal of the world's ills to the demise of community and extended family.
I've never understood fashion and now I can actually - for the first time in my life - make sense of it. It has nothing much to do with the point of the video, but that's really what stood out THE MOST for me. Like...OMG! I finally get it!!! ^_^ Great video.
There have been studies that suggest that elephants have self-recognition also. But they are summarizing *Lacan's* thoughts and theories. Like anyone else's, they are subject to error and one must keep what is valuable and bear the rest in mind and in stride.
The flaw in his gibberish is that you don't need a reflective smooth surface to self recognize in this way. The world and all of your social interactions are mirrors for you to see yourself in. All of your actions have noticable real world consequences everywhere you go, no matter how great or small, which effect the way you reflect on your own mental image of yourself and it's also how you're able to perceive yourself in a past and future tense. Seeing yourself in an actual mirror isn't the first time you perceive yourself. That's so dumb.
Stunningly inaccurate. You omitted the core components of his work and spent time on things that had nothing to do with Lacan at all. This is a shame because the other videos in this series have been very well done. This one seems to have been written by someone who scanned a couple of basic articles, missed the important points, invented a couple of things, and then confused Lacan with other thinkers. I hope that no one takes this as introduction to Lacan. Please don't use this as a source of knowledge about Lacan. There are a lot of good videos about Lacan on UA-cam, but this is most certainly not one of them. Please take this down and redo this video without the glaring errors.
"..hold on to a more accurate picture of what is normal, to be more or less always alone." Who can't find happiness when alone, will never find it in company with others.
Thanks for this. I knew nothing of Lacan and will now put him on my reading list. But my initial reaction from a Buddhist perspective, is that the impossibility of being understood arises from the construction by the person of what it means to be understood. The person constructs a self which they attempt to define with concepts expressed (as they must be) in words. Such concepts of self are a partial construction of experience which will more or less but rarely entirely correspond with those of another person. The Buddhist perspective would be to strip away such language based attempts to define the self and to recognise the commonality of human experience which one can infer subsists in others. Any statement about the self which begins “I am” is both a movement towards others but at the same time differentiates us from them. There may be reasons to construct a self in this way. But if the reason is to achieve a unity of understanding with others, it is self defeating. The key is to see the human process that underlies the language. This occurs in times of great stress such as war, where the vacuity of identity becomes apparent. But it can also be seen through mediation which is the Buddhist method and lets face it, is preferable.
First, I want to clarify that I am loving this channel, and that the way they take a lot of their subjects has sparked a lot of interest on my part to study things I didn't even consider before. That said, am I the only one that thinks the audio is a bit too low? I tend to put everything at max, and even then I can't really hear it properly, that added with the fast nature of the narrator, sometimes make it difficult to understand what is being said. Really good channel either way.
It is truly inspiring to learn about Jacques Lacan here in your video. Things were delivered very cleanly, and Jacques' humanity and vision really came through! Thanks!
Me: "Lacan interprets Freud by saying that the unconscious mind is structured like a language and functions like a language. Is this even possible from a linguistic standpoint?" Noam Chomsky: " I didn’t much like Lacan’s later work, but I thought his early work on language of dreams was of some interest. Wrote about it a little about 40 years ago. Far too little is understood about the unconscious for anything to be said along these lines"
I realized I am only ever commenting in a criticism type way. I'm sorry for that. I genuinely enjoy your videos, thanks for making them. I just am the type who likes discussion and there's no discussion to be had in "I agree with all of this."
Starting in 1975, Jacques Lacan clearly recognized, on several occasions, the aporias of psychoanalysis. In 1977, on ethics: "Our practice is a swindle, bluffing, making people stick, dazzling them with words that are shocked, [...] From an ethical point of view, it's untenable." In 1978, on scientificity: "Psychoanalysis is not a science. ...it is a delusion - a delusion that is expected to carry a science." In 1979, on the conditioning of the analyzed: "It is not a science at all because it is irrefutable. The psychoanalyst is a rhetorician. ...operates only by suggestion. He suggests, that's the characteristic of a rhetorician, he doesn't impose anything of substance." On 5-1-1980, Lacan declared in his 'Letter of Dissolution': "I have failed - that is to say, I have become confused. ...] Freud allowed the psychoanalytical group to prevail over discourse, to become Church." His followers continue to try to understand his SIBYLLINAR TEXTS by avoiding taking seriously the last cities, however clear they may be. Source: "Freud & Lacan. Quacks?" Facts and legends of psychoanalysis. Jacques Van Rillaer. Jacques Van Rillaer practised psychoanalysis for about ten years. Appointed professor of psychology at the University of Louvain and the University of Saint-Louis (Brussels), he had the opportunity to study Freudism and various innovations, in particular those of Lacan. He ended up becoming very critical of his old beliefs. He is the author of "Les illusions de la psychanalyse", "Psychologie de la vie quotidienne", "Le Livre noir de la psychanalyse" and "La gestion de soi".
The Mirror effect is very real. This is why they place high-definitions mirrors that tell the truth in rest-rooms . People are offended by the true image they see of themselves and won't loiter about. Don't think so ? Watch someone in a restroom. When they wash theirs hands and look into the mirror they quickly dry off their hands and exit the facility.
I hope The School of Life would subsequently make more videos covering Lacan. For those who're not familiar with him, there's way more fascinating stuff to it, for example his interpretation of the Oedipus Complex and the Phallus, the unconscious subject, the signifier, and of course, his intriguing theory of the Imaginary, the Symbolic and the Real.
These "Quick Capsule" reviews of key philosophers' lives and works are perfect for an attention-span challenged literalist like me. Do you have a group of redactors or are they solely the work of the narrator?
Thanks so much for your very generous comment, we're hugely conscious of the need for brevity!. Just to explain: The videos (including this one) are usually the collective work of a team of writers of which Alain, the narrator, is a key member.
This video is far too generous to Lacan. He deserves none of this praise. He was a megalomaniac who drove his patients to suicide and whose work is a mix of gibberish and total horseshit, for example his outright fraud of a thesis. His legacy was the destruction of all legitimacy for several entire disciplines of academia. Perhaps the single worst thinker of the 20th century. He's a disgrace, and it's disgraceful that he was ever afforded any legitimacy, but doubly disgraceful now that we've had the time to reflect on his terrible career. No discipline in academia that would welcome such a man deserves any respect.
I came here to try to get to the bottom of those moments when Zizek doesn't wipe his nose and pull his t-tshirt...you know - the bits where he talks...
how do we know the baby looking in the mirror recognises itself? Further, how do we know that animals cannot recognise themselves in reflections? Elephants paint pictures of elephants.
we humans are endlessly making the same mistakes, falling in the trap we unconsciously but very persistently create. the least we can do is read. there will be portrayed the lessons of whole lives.
Alan, you are killing it with these videos. This channel is a true blossom of youtube and a great find for anyone that comes here. Keep talking, we are listening.
Well lots of people have run scientific tests on this, and certain animals can. Octupi and dolphins can recognise their reflections for example. Its seen as an important (but obviously not complete) way of trying to gauge a species intelligence and consciousness. As far as I am aware no dogs have passed the test.
Dogs do not hold visual events to be of the same importance as olfactory events, and therefore can not be expected to react to a visual representation of themselves in the same way primates and birds do(due to vision being our most important sense). Therefore an identity test should probably be focused on scent rather than vision. There have been tests done and dogs do recognize what is 'their' scent and that it 'belongs' to them, but obviously the results are up for interpretation.
My dog knows that when he looks at my reflection in the mirror that's only a reference to know where I am. That means he recognizes some relation and diference between my image and my actual person (I have tried several ways of experimenting with this). Anyway, Lacan didn't have to state that diference, it wouldn't make any change at all to his theories if dogs could use language as we do. That was a mistake. I think Derrida's work on the subject are capital (L'' animal q donc je suis)
Alain, could be interesting if you can do some videos about others psycoanalysts like Piera Aulagnier, Roudinesco, or even a sequence to explain other aspects about Lacan's propositions. thank you
A pessoa pode ser feia, mas se for alegre, bem humorada, educada, batalhadora, respeitosa, vai continuar sendo feia, porque uma coisa não tem nada a ver com a outra.
Looks do matter. 90% of people who are ugly on the outside are also ugly on the inside. This is because they want people to like them without attempting to make themselves look good. Essentially they are self-centered. There's exceptions of course but that's the general way of things.
I think you may have missed two of his key concepts, namely the Imaginary and Symbolic Order (there is the real, but Lacan never explained it that much and you can see that there is an implication that the real is anything that preceeds language and culture)
"that no dog or chicken ever has", come on now, how could you assume that. Animals are curious creatures too. I'm pretty sure they're self aware and can notice themselves in mirrors. They're probably just far less concerned about how they look than we are lol.
""that no dog or chicken ever has", come on now, how could you assume that" Because scientists know it for a fact. Only a small number of animals can do that (recognise themselves in the mirror), which includes some apes. There are some standard tests...
@@foljs5858 again, how do they know that? What do they look for as evidence? Brain waves? Something physical? Regardless, the fact that some animals can still shits all over his entire philosophy and his obsession with words as a fundamental way of communicating. Perhaps if he spent more time studying art and music (arguably older than any verbal language) than obsessing over his own self image like a complete hypocrite, he'd notice.
Brendan Cahill The fact that other animals can recognize themself in a mirror absolutely does not disprove the theory, that is the least important part of the theory. The theory is about our fear of the other’s inability to fully know us based on our image and that other people are a collection of projections which we create, not simply that we recognize ourselves in the mirror.
@@jackmeyer8656 that's not his theory, I'm pretty sure people pondered that same thought thousands of years ago. My point is, the fact that some animals can recognise not only each other but themselves in relation to others in their hierarchy, matrelinial kinship, reflection etc clearly indicates words are not the fundamental way our species communicates. Pictures and first appearances come first, then words, then metaphor, not the other way around. And who's to say you can't fully understand someone based on their image alone? FBI agents make entire careers out of judging people based on appearances, clothes, body language, same goes for art historians. You can tell an immense amount about someone, their political leaning, their taste, their personality just by appearance alone. Heck, the word personality itself comes from personae which literally means "mask", an external objective identity that one wears on the outside to project an idea through an image. This guy is so wrapped up in words and jargon that he can't see what's right in front of him. Appearances and first impressions carry enormous weight and detail if only people would pay attention to them
25 years later, I still look at myself in the mirror and wonder, 'Damn! Is that me?'
"Well! now that is unfortunate"
"Now that can't be accurate"
we change everyday. we are never the same, so that is no surprise :)
Why people struggle with this basic idea I have no idea. Nothing is as it seems. Everything flows and nothing abides. And that hasn't changed since Heraclitus was a lad.
I side with Chomsky that Lacan was a self promoting charlatan who brought nothing new to the table except his own cult. That's not to expunge all merit from his work. Reminding people of things again is a worthy cause.
sorry but charlatanism is the most important quality one can have if they are to be intelligent. all true intelligence is charlatanism.
You had me thinking that Rasputin and Lacan sere related for a second
Lol same
Pretty sure everyone thought that!!
*were
Same lol
“His brother became a benedictine monk”
*shows an russian orthodox monk*
Rasputin, too, from the looks of it!
Rasputin 😂
1. There is a TED Talk by Laurel Braitman called " Depressed Dogs, Cats with OCD. What Animal Madness Means for us Humans". She studies animal's mental health issues. She says that people often think how difficult her work must be, since the poor things can't tell you what they suffer from. She answers
saying that we aren't any different indeed.How very true! I am sure Lacan would like that!
In fact,Argentina's most beloved psychoanalyst Gabriel Rolon says that when patients come to him claiming to have a certain problem, over the course of the therapy ,it always turns out that indeed their problem was something totally different...
2. I highly recommend Gabriel Rolon's wonderful psychotherapy books to everyone. He writes in Spanish, but the books are translated into German and Portuguese too. He mentions Lacan a lot in his books. He says for example, that for Lacan the ultimate achievement of a psychoanalyst would be to help a patent "live his solitude without sadness". What an ambitious goal really...
3. It is also very true that we will never understand anybody entirely ( including ourselves I would add) and we also will be misunderstood ( and misunderstand ourselves! ) Pico Iyer says that when his mother turned 80, he asked her what she has learned after so many years . She said:
" You can never know another person".
I also remembered this wonderful line by Federico Garcia Lorca:
"..and the heart feels like an island in infinity."
" y el corazon se siente isla en el infinito"
It is as depressing as it sounds. But in the end, in terms of our need for love and all the things we all suffer from, we have a lot in common too.
4. Considering the "mirror face", there is an incredible and really fun episode by the podcast Radiolab called: Mirror, Mirror. Here is the info:
Up next, we meet a man named John Walter who swapped places with his mirror self. Kind of. He explains how changing his hair part changed his life, and how the experience convinced him that mirrors (and the reversed images they reflect) lie to us. We run John's theory by Mike Nicholls of the University of Melbourne, who admits John might be on to something about the way we perceive faces.
5. I do agree with Lacan's thoughts on love! Talking about the way romantic love works he says something like:
"To love is to give what you don't have, to the one who is not who you think that is".
Sorry I don't have the original quote. I have it here in a book in Spanish:
" Amar es dar lo que no se tiene a quien no lo es".
I guess he is talking about that period where we fall in love: we show ourselves much more tolerant, understanding, generous( especially with our time) and patient than we indeed are. The first 6 months or so... So we are "giving" something that we indeed don't really have, since it is impossible for us to continue with that intensity. So in that period of mutual blindness non of us is being what he or she really is.
6. And the most fun quote I know by Lacan is what he says about the Christian injunction " love thy neighbour as thyself". He says this must be ironic, because people hate themselves!
Well, I don't think this is true for everyone. But it reminds us of something very important: If we want to be a compassionate, loving and generous person, we must start with ourselves.
Thanks a lot for this wonderful lesson, as always!
Do we ever really know ourselves?
In my humble opinion we can never know everything about ourselves. But still, it is worth trying one life long, to learn as much as we can learn about ourselves. Any information helps. I use two types of meditation for this:
1. Alain be Botton's "Philosophical Meditation". If you wish, just watch the video they made about it. You can then click on the information under the video and print the questions.
2. I meditate using guided meditation podcasts. I heard about them watching a Yale Lecture on Mindfullness on youtube. Just search for this on Itunes:
"UCLA Hammer Meditation".
They are extremely helpful.
I send you my best wishes!
*****
Thanks for the recommendations.
I search for my fears. Meditation is good, but nothing beats the real thing.
And I use mushrooms. The thoughts become beings in that particular state. You can see parts of the brain at work. They can't do their job properly, but you'll learn something about each piece.
Just out of curiosity, why are you so curious about one's self? BTW I'm going to check on some of the sources you mentioned because I'm interested in a lot of this stuff too. Thanks.
Hello David! Thanks a lot for reading. I am curious about everything in this world, but since you are the lens through which you see the world, it is also very important to be curious about yourself. Especially in bad times, it is a wise thing to do, to approach one's self with a lot of curiosity, rather than being hard on yourself.
Alain de Botton twitted this the other day, which is so true:
"If we saw someone else treating us the way most of us treat ourselves, we might think them despicably cruel. "
So true...
Have a nice weekend!
The REALLY big problem with this video isn't that it's wrong, but that it leaves out so much stuff that it's more than easy Lacan as standing for something he didn't.
Lacan didn't say that we don't know who we are, or that we're worried that nobody will get us- his point is that WE'RE NOT ANYTHING beside a linguistical construct, imaginary ego, a fundamental lack in being. This is what we form ourselves around. Look deep enough and you won't find a "true and stable self", but a psychological structure based around a fundamental lack both in ans of being.
Lacan spent his life trying to create a thorough and unflinching model of the psyche as formed by language and society, not to provide life-affirming insights. Reducing him to that is insulting to his life work.
What, no mention of The Real or Object petit a?
Say what you want about Lacan... I'm doing the past 2 years Lacanic psychoanalysis and it help me alot... With my major anxiety and with alot of other problems...
negative opinions about Lacan usually revolves around politics, because no one can agree on that shit
There are no Studies that probe as an effective Therapy. you are cheating saying that because you can't probe it was la can "Therapy" that worked and no something else. studies said that is no more effective than talking to a friend.
+ThirdEyeFilmz I haven't read Lacan politics I'm not interesting in politics
+Nuncio Sidereo yeah and also everything is 8n your mind... Tell this to all the people helped by Lacanic therapy
+Johnny “Walker” Kat that is stil not a valid Studie. not surprised that you couldn't make a stament ... :) simple and closed minds..
An intellectual celebrity is not that unusual in France.
In a way, intellectuals are always at least a bit famous. The notion emerged with mass market press and exploded with radio and television precisely because it involves taking part in and elevating the public debate.
Slakfocmsnvfgls exactly. The word « intellectual » was invented by Maurice Barres, which was a french rightist extremist in the late 19th century, and created this neologism to describe « leftist jews Freemasons dreyfusard ». It was just after the Second World War that the word became to describe all people that were doing things that involved the intellect, even the rightists, thanks to television and radio.
True. I think of Sartre and Camus. Especially Camus, actually.
Andre Sassi Not unusual anywhere, not just the France. Jordan Peterson comes to mind as the latest bullshitter, but it's by no means restricted to the Anglo tradition- celebrity of the Maharishi, Tony Robbins, the Dalai Llama, Gurus of ALL stripes, etc etc.
Ironically, this is precisely what Laçan warned us about.
@@andresassi526 He said this very thing in the video, that's why I said that Lacan "warned us." In what ways is Peterson a serious thinker? He seems like a great therapist or self-help guru for certain people, but I have a Father already so I know to make my bed everyday, if you get what I mean.
His only serious attempt at intellectual debate was the one a couple months ago against Slavoj Zizek, in which he was thoroughly embarrassed. Didn't you watch it? It's on here. I don't see how anyone can consider him to be a "serious thinker" anymore after such a disastrous performance. I at least expected him to have SOME kind of coherent critique of Post-Modernism/The Frankfurt School/neo-Marxism, but he didn't have any. I've literally heard better critiques of Marxism from Left Anarchists, and I've heard far better critiques of Post-Modernism from Marxist-Leninists!
I agree with your last point though, we should attempt to be as clear as possible when communicating, especially by text, since it can be such a poor mode of communication.
"wipe face" Its an obscenity "sniffs" catastrophe "rub nose" and so on and so on... "ajust shirt"
*Gesticulating and sweating profusely* You know, In the old USSR we used to have a joke that went somewhere like this...
@@SandroAerogen Yeh, pretty good, but he grew up in the old Yugoslavia (Slovenia).
God-like Entity: "I can grant any wish you may have, but what I do for you I will do twice for your neighbor."
Zizek: "Take one of my eyes."
This is fantastic.
You got slavoj
Yeah, this has almost nothing to do with Lacan...
Yep, on top of that is the core part of the video just egopsychology, which is fundamentally anti-lacanian.
oh dang really? I was watching this and really liking it...thought I'd familiarize myself with Lacan becuase i have a reading for a class coming up by Lacan...is this video innacurate? how so?
@@martharigby watch the plastic pills channel, they have good videos about lacan
@@nilsdninjasinlightspeeddie2122 hey, thanks dood!
agreed--this is a very superficial video about lacan's ideas. i would say that it is perhaps more biographical facts about his life. how do you have a video about lacan and not mention linguistics, structuralism or freud?
Lacan as an antidote to all kinds of pop psychology... I find him fascinating (although sometimes unnecessary obscure) and very intellectually intriguing challenging a lot of so called "norms".
Ioannis Kazlaris eww
Put the speed on 1.5 or even better, 1.75. Provides another perspective on his chat...
Can you guys do Henri Ey? He was a French psychiatrist who was Lacans' theoretical rival. He created his own theories behind the human psyche (mixing psychoanalysis and neurobiology) and helped modernize psychiatry by defining and classifing different mental illnesses in his manuals, some of which are still used to this day.
I'm having a rather hard time understanding Lacan's three stages (the Real, the Symbolic and the Imaginary). Shame you don't include them in the video :(
The Real: the unassimilable, unsignifiable register
Symbolic: language and signification
Imaginary: the level of images, and ego
Because it’s double speak / sophistry.
@@allseeingry2487 it’s dialectics m8 lol
Lacan online has some great videos on him
Hey, I'm a student of Psychoanalysis from Brazil (I became a student in 2018), BUT NOW, I'M HERE AND I WILL TRY TO HELP YOU (hope it's not TOO LATE) hahaha. @Erica Wrote some good stuff, but I will go further.
The Real: it's the life, the events, the unassimilable, unsignifiable register (imagine when something really new and strange happened to you, like a car accident or getting robbed); The Symbolic: it's the Inconscious, Figures, symbols, words; The Imaginary: consciouness, what you are, and what you think and see.
"Love is giving something we don't have to someone who doesn't want it."
This sounds more like the definition of capitalism.
@@BalthasarGondii why?
That's just a formula. What do you do with it ? That's the problem with Freud or Lacan, they are useless when you work in psychiatry, and not much useful in your personal life. Fuck them, if I may say so.
in the premise that you cannot possess love but nonetheless give it and that you can actually acknowledge to want it or not, even when you have never had it because as said before you have never possessed it hence you have never experienced it, You are describing that love is the idea that you give something unknown to somebody who doesn't need it, but not because he has experienced it but because of his idea of what you are giving him is something he does not want or need at the time and they can think of love as anything their imagination allows them to think of it as they can never know what it really is because they can never experience it therefore the person who gives does not know what he is giving and the person who does not want it does not know what he doesn't want therefore love does not exist as it is something that a person can never have, possess, give, know, want or experience
Your comment has denied the existence of love poetry-like
You have managed to prove the existence of something based on its unexistence which is not possible but just rather poetic and ironic.
@@ofdrumsandchords Well from the very first, the final goal of Lacan psychoanalysis wasn't the adaptation of clinical patients like any other psychology or psychiatry man.
So, im a barber...this made sense
When people sit in my chair ...and all their deep thoughts come out ,im a better help to them because of this channel. :)
Ever thank ful.
It strikes me, watching these videos, that the lives of many of these great thinkers were shaped by their own personal experiences.
Lacan's negativity about man and woman ever really knowing each other strikes me as typical of a good-looking man who dated a lot of beautiful women, serially. If he'd been a plainer man, who married a plain-looking sweetheart at a young age and stayed with her 40 years, I think his ideas on how well men and women know each other would have been quite different. I've observed that these are often the most stable relationships, while attractive people with seemingly enviable love lives often end up with the most polarized, Mars-and-Venus view of the sexes.
Michel Foucault is another example: He grew up feeling very repressed by his bourgeois French family and the Catholic Church, and then spent his life proposing the most controversial, anti-bourgeois theories possible. In a way, he might have just been trying to make Mama and Papa really, really mad.
interesting
I feel the same. I dont think theres any real way to truly get a holistic view on the nature of stuff without being at least a little schizophrenic
Maybe you haven't seen any glitches of your reality yet. If you don't see the problems, the theories are useless.
1:32, actually for the first time my dog had seen itself in the mirror, she started barking at her own reflection thinking it was another dog, after a while of freaking out she sort of accepted it and never paying attention to it, so I think some animals do understand
This is a very generous redemption of a man who is considered to be a charlatan and a deceiver (to gain status and economical benefits) by many important intellectuals like Chomsky and even some former psychoanalysts. I recommend reading “From Lacan to Darwin” by Dylan Evans (2005). He created a popular reference book about Lacan's theory, appreciated by many psychoanalysts, but in the process came to understand Lacan as a charlatan.
I understand that this space is about philosophy. And if we take Lacan, Jung, and Freud's writings as philosophy, I sympathize that there are many things of value to highlight. The problem is that Lacan never had the humility to recognize that he was proposing a kind of philosophy. Instead, he was proposing a categorical description of human nature and a method of intervention. But the value of this theory/practice is not based on evidence, but on the obscurity of his texts and the authority of a charismatic man. The many cases in which psychoanalysis is not just unhelpful but harmful are well known in the psychological literature. I would simply advise more discretion when speaking about Lacan and the value or validity of his claims.
Zizek brought me here
Same
Jesus brought me here.
Same here ! 😂
@@scottharrison812Jesus exists only in your brains. !
Lacan: a psychoanalyst expelled from psychoanalysis and largely unaware of all serious psychological and psychiatric research.
I hate hate HATE what you’ve done with lacan, the ego psychology and live laugh love could’ve really matched a video on any other thinker.
hey, i dont know much about Lacan but I ended up here to get an introduction...is this video really wrong? If so, what was Lacan really about?
@@martharigby Video is not entirely wrong, he just let too much out, Lacan can't be summarized in 8 minutes, he did wayyy too much, it's a bad video and add the fact that the channel is super liberal, it's just tainted with politics as well lol.
@@martharigby Derek Hook has some great introductory videos on his channel ua-cam.com/channels/zdZyq2SC9BtMn3fLTknIMQ.htmlvideos
You hate hate HATE... is just a reflection of your ego that you got the first time you saw yourself in a mirror..
Liberal? Like Margaret Thatcher liberal? @@ash-gms4562
A note on the short session;
Lacan did this not because he “felt” like but because he wanted to punctuate the session. When a signifier with particular libidinal resonance was said he’d end the session so the signifier would emerge as a ‘quilting point’ that would rearrange the subject’s signifying structure.
It’s very hard to explain Lacan in a short way that is faithful to the intricacy and profundity of his ideas. If anyone is interested in a deeper understanding of Lacan, I implore them to read Freud as Philosopher by Richard Boothby. While the title only names Freud, it is easily the best introduction to Lacan ever written.
Another excellent video, Alain. But can I just give a shout out to whoever edits your videos, they do an amazing job and I really enjoy it from a cinemagraphic perspective!
I second that. :)
I triple that! ;)
I'm all in.
Call
It's good in terms of production, but the script is just God-awful. He is not representing Lacan accurately. At all.
Carl Jung? Surprised he isn't in here already. And/or Otto Rank?
Agreed. Jung is the great.
@@hithere5133 None greater : )
And Carl Rogers (voted the most influential psychotherapist - by other therapists - in 2009).
fuck jung
@@djaballahadel why tho?
I'm still waiting for Carl Jung
The mirror stage was one of the most frustrating and liberating concept I ever learned about.
You didnt mention that he structured unconscious part as a language. "Symptom is a defect of symbolization".
Yeah, that's what I am interested about Lacan. Mind is language?
Can you please give me a link where I can find more about Lacan's theory of language
YES!
A psychoanalyst that was in dire need of elucidation. Thank you, School of Life.
EDIT: Well, that was a bit disappointing. How come there were no mentions of his psychoanalytic concepts besides the mirror stage, such as the Real and the Imaginary?
feel free to add them here if you can
and so on...
yes, alain gets all tangled up in trying to apply ideas to some vague social project, then we miss the actual thought of lacan - getting some misshappen contortion to tack on about everyday life instead
I like it though. also, consider the format. it's a less than ten minute film. It definitely condenses too much, but it acts as a good introduction to laymen.
They didn't include many of his concepts because many of them are littered with socialist propoganda. Lacan followed Freudo-Marxism, the idea that somehow, capitalism can cause mental disarray. Lacan, even if you look in this video, that all people secretly want some "Big Brother" figure ruling them.
"I don't think man can love. Atleast not the way he means. Inadequices of reality always set in."-Rustin Cohle, True Detective
why does this channel make me feel so good?
Pls do one on carl jung! He's one of the most interesting psychologists and the one fascinates me truly with his theories on personality.
It's kind of unsettling that no matter how hard we try
how big our vocabularies are
we will never be able to exactly precisely put words to thoughts and feelings
don't get me wrong, we can get damn close but no other human being will see what you're thinking,or 100% understand that one unmistakeable, undesirable feeling
not even if you're desperate
but we still try , that's all we can do
I think Terence McKenna would be a good character to make a video on.
Heartily seconded.
Substantially and evidentially vacuous sentiment.
R.B. Terence was a thinker and a deep one at that. Certainly one for Alain.
Terence had many things to say...
Definitely, as well as Alan Watts
As someone who has recently been trying to understand Lacan through a wide range of books, seminars, podcasts, etc., this really synthesized it all together for me. Thanks!
Sadly this video is very misleading and doesn t probide accurate info
@@livinginahotdog1563please elaborate
Can you please do a video on Slavoj Zizek? I believe his work was heavily influenced by Lacan as well.
Well yeah I mean he has spent his whole career defending Lacan and Hegel pretty much. A video on him would be interesting though since he does have a lot of interesting theories.
He’s a professional yapper
People need to not be hated by their "loved" ones. No one is mental...it is a response to trauma ie hateful words & actions from those who are supposed to love you !
Great job with the video, though I would mention it covers more of Lacanian ethics than the actual theoretical framework. One central notion in Lacanian psychoanalysis is that we are who we are, as human beings, because of something that we experience to be missing from us (usually an incestuous forbidden love from our childhood). It naturally follows, at least from what I’ve read on Lacan, that we spend the rest of our lives making up for that lost object in an illusory fantasy we call reality. The episode of the toddler staring at its own reflection in the mirror is an instance of this, where the image in the mirror represents an imaginary “Self” constructed for the purpose of identification. Similarly, to play this game called life, everything in our immediate vicinity since socialization is set up as a mirror for us to identify with. Whether that thing is love, desire, or individuality, it is not coming from within us, it is constantly being produced from positions outside of ourselves. Taking advantage of this decentered nature of reality, the analyst tries to become a mirror for the analysand (patient) in order for the latter to project his or hers deepest concerns to them. Correct me if I’m wrong, I’m still reading Lacan, but just for fun :)
by any chance, do you do policy debate? ;)
Rather subjective adaptation of Lacan. To me it seems like you are very selective in what you want to present to the viewer. This is of course due to both the brevity of this video and Lacan's usefulness for the conveyance of your own philosophy which I can understand to some degree but this video has a manipulative and subversive effect. Lacan's ideas are at least as complex and ungraspable as his writings and to represent him like this (straightforward and logical and indirectly as an anticipant of the school of life philosophy) feels unjust and even immoral to me.
Since he was a charlatan that wouldn't even finish sentences I agree with you 100%
That's a really unfair analysis of the video. I thought it was good. I've studied lacan for 9 years. I feel some real insecurity from your response.
Yea its shit, but, immoral?xD
@@buicktothemoon what have you learned from studying another person's thoughts/Lacan ?
@@Stoney-Jacksman I know you aren't asking me, but I'd hope that he learned what they think about!
Do a video on Kropotkin.
Chomsky works too.
That guy...
Which one? And why?
I think even though there may be plenty of reason to hate him, judging by these comments, that's not really the point of this video or channel. It's more about the interesting things that have been said, the different ways to think and interpret the world and ourselves, and the only reason he's credited is to attribute these thoughts to a source. Regardless of who Lacan was, that's not the part we should take away from this video.
"He had a fabulous head of hair" haha. Love it 😂
Not specifically about this video, but the 'Discover our range of books' bit at the end. I had a look at some of the School of Life books in my local bookshop and got a positive impression of their content and design. What _really_ put me off, however, was the feel of the cover. They have a chalky softness that sets my nerves on edge. More are more books are being published with this ghastly surface texture. Many will undoubtedly like or be indifferent to it, but bear in mind that there will be some people like me who dislike the feel so much they will be put off buying any of the books. I put this out for information - apologies for the off-topic rant.
"Lacan: an amusing and perfectly self-conscious charlatan.” Noam Chomsky. I think Chomsky summarized the issue quite well.
All your videos are interesting and well done, Can you please optimize the voice level for external speakers? Like on desktop computers All your audio levels are mostly optimized for headphones only. Thank you, keep going
Yeah, I agree. Plus i think it would be more interesting if they were to add background music.
"Suppose you are an intellectual impostor with nothing to say, but with strong ambitions to succeed in academic life, collect a coterie of reverent disciples and have students around the world anoint your pages with respectful yellow highlighter. What kind of literary style would you cultivate? Not a lucid one, surely, for clarity would expose your lack of content" R. Dawkins
www.physics.nyu.edu/sokal/dawkins.html
Richard Dawkins is an idiot. Just because he doesn't 'get it' automatically means that it is stupid? gtfo with that logic.
The Sokal affair, also called the Sokal hoax,[1] was a publishing hoax perpetrated by Alan Sokal, a physics professor at New York University and University College London. In 1996, Sokal submitted an article to Social Text, an academic journal of postmodern cultural studies. The submission was an experiment to test the journal's intellectual rigor
and, specifically, to investigate whether "a leading North American
journal of cultural studies - whose editorial collective includes such
luminaries as Fredric Jameson and Andrew Ross -
[would] publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it
sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors' ideological
preconceptions"
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sokal_affair
"For Lacan, the truly talented politician isn't someone who knows how to whip up the crowd and ignite feelings of semi conscious, childlike dreams of perfection." A dismissal of Sanders perhaps?
"It's the one who dares to be an adult - someone who has the skill to persuade people of the disappointing nature of reality and Who has the tact to do so without arousing unbearable rage and tantrums." A dismissal of Clinton as well, I suppose.
The second statement was a dismissal of every politician ever possibly
A dismissal of any politican, really....very few have ever been able to win the political game from both sides of the spectrum..that is, appealing to the people while ALSO appealing to the rich.
can you please do george orwell
thanks
don't you mean eric arthur blair? ;)
+Elexie Munyeneh wow you must be educated
fnchrstphr ...it's a joke. Don't be such a halophile
+Elexie Munyeneh I'm going to say something really cutting and mean but first I need to look up halophile.
fnchrstphr you'll be impressed.
Had a little heart attack when I saw fucking Rasputin. I thought for a second he was Lacan's brother.
I've been looking for a video like this on Lacan and the mirror stage to show my students for years! This is wonderful,, thank you :)
What proof do you have that dogs can't recognize themselves in a mirror?
They don't shave or brush their hair!
Because Lacan said so.
Red Dot experiment, theory of mind etc etc
My dog (labrador) usually barks with fear when he sees himself in the mirror haha the question would be if he barks because he recognizes himself and gets afraid or because he thinks there's another dog in front of him
Neon Genesis Evangelion makes so much more sense now.
Is that show about Lacan?
@@Onehundredpounds in a way
"He didn't write very clearly." The reason Lacan's writing is difficult is not that he enjoyed being obscure or because he was covering up his so-called charlatanism. A lot of people think that and this video seems to suggest that as well.
There are two reasons why Lacan is difficult.
I. Lacanian psychoanalysis is a language about language. This means he is basically trying to articulate something outside of language using language itself, which is logically impossible. In order to do this, you have to 'torture' language, like a poet would, and force language to do something it refuses to do but also ultimately is unable to do. This is why the language seems to border on 'senseless'.
II. His writing is primarily intended for other psychoanalysts. Reading Lacan is suppose to train you to be an analyst. Lacan says so in the introduction to his Écrits. An analyst is able to interpret a single phrase or word uttered by a patient in multiple ways to discover the hidden (repressed) meanings of the patient's discourse says during analysis. Like how a dream has multiple layers of meaning. For example, when a patient says they dreamed about a spider the spider can represent their boss, mother, wife, their literal fear of spiders, etc.
“I did not write Écrits in order for people to understand them, I wrote them in order for people to read them. Which is not even remotely the same thing." - Lacan
I noticed The School Of Life has yet to say much on our roles within our extended family. One can link a great deal of the world's ills to the demise of community and extended family.
I've never understood fashion and now I can actually - for the first time in my life - make sense of it. It has nothing much to do with the point of the video, but that's really what stood out THE MOST for me. Like...OMG! I finally get it!!! ^_^ Great video.
This is odd. My cat often looks at himself in a miror and seems to understand that it is him.
Cats yeah. I reckon some of them can eventually clock it
There have been studies that suggest that elephants have self-recognition also. But they are summarizing *Lacan's* thoughts and theories. Like anyone else's, they are subject to error and one must keep what is valuable and bear the rest in mind and in stride.
Many animals can; dozens of Ant species routinely pass the mirror test. What this actually means, I am unsure.
The flaw in his gibberish is that you don't need a reflective smooth surface to self recognize in this way. The world and all of your social interactions are mirrors for you to see yourself in. All of your actions have noticable real world consequences everywhere you go, no matter how great or small, which effect the way you reflect on your own mental image of yourself and it's also how you're able to perceive yourself in a past and future tense. Seeing yourself in an actual mirror isn't the first time you perceive yourself. That's so dumb.
@4:26
That part resonated with me somewhere deep
Stunningly inaccurate. You omitted the core components of his work and spent time on things that had nothing to do with Lacan at all. This is a shame because the other videos in this series have been very well done. This one seems to have been written by someone who scanned a couple of basic articles, missed the important points, invented a couple of things, and then confused Lacan with other thinkers. I hope that no one takes this as introduction to Lacan. Please don't use this as a source of knowledge about Lacan.
There are a lot of good videos about Lacan on UA-cam, but this is most certainly not one of them. Please take this down and redo this video without the glaring errors.
"..hold on to a more accurate picture of what is normal, to be more or less always alone." Who can't find happiness when alone, will never find it in company with others.
Thanks for this. I knew nothing of Lacan and will now put him on my reading list. But my initial reaction from a Buddhist perspective, is that the impossibility of being understood arises from the construction by the person of what it means to be understood. The person constructs a self which they attempt to define with concepts expressed (as they must be) in words.
Such concepts of self are a partial construction of experience which will more or less but rarely entirely correspond with those of another person.
The Buddhist perspective would be to strip away such language based attempts to define the self and to recognise the commonality of human experience which one can infer subsists in others.
Any statement about the self which begins “I am” is both a movement towards others but at the same time differentiates us from them. There may be reasons to construct a self in this way. But if the reason is to achieve a unity of understanding with others, it is self defeating.
The key is to see the human process that underlies the language. This occurs in times of great stress such as war, where the vacuity of identity becomes apparent. But it can also be seen through mediation which is the Buddhist method and lets face it, is preferable.
>French
>Father had success in emerging soap industry
>Emerging
>french
Lacan in 8 minutes? oh god
That was good! Thanks :)
Lacan sounds like an existentialist. Interesting video. I read a Lacan for beginners book once and found it almost incomprehensible.
First, I want to clarify that I am loving this channel, and that the way they take a lot of their subjects has sparked a lot of interest on my part to study things I didn't even consider before.
That said, am I the only one that thinks the audio is a bit too low? I tend to put everything at max, and even then I can't really hear it properly, that added with the fast nature of the narrator, sometimes make it difficult to understand what is being said. Really good channel either way.
No YOurrrrE Nawt DEE ONLIIIEEye Wum!!
I’ve been looking at the psychoanalytic approach to religion and the assumptions it brings.
It is truly inspiring to learn about Jacques Lacan here in your video. Things were delivered very cleanly, and Jacques' humanity and vision really came through! Thanks!
But this video gets Lacan completely wrong!?!?!
Me: "Lacan interprets Freud by saying that the unconscious mind is structured like a language and functions like a language. Is this even possible from a linguistic standpoint?"
Noam Chomsky: " I didn’t much like Lacan’s later work, but I thought his early work on language of dreams was of some interest. Wrote about it a little about 40 years ago. Far too little is understood about the unconscious for anything to be said along these lines"
Let's wait for Chomsky fanboys in comments complaining how difficult Lacan's language is and using word 'charlatan' in every sentence.
I realized I am only ever commenting in a criticism type way. I'm sorry for that. I genuinely enjoy your videos, thanks for making them. I just am the type who likes discussion and there's no discussion to be had in "I agree with all of this."
Starting in 1975, Jacques Lacan clearly recognized, on several occasions, the aporias of psychoanalysis.
In 1977, on ethics:
"Our practice is a swindle, bluffing, making people stick, dazzling them with words that are shocked, [...] From an ethical point of view, it's untenable."
In 1978, on scientificity:
"Psychoanalysis is not a science. ...it is a delusion - a delusion that is expected to carry a science."
In 1979, on the conditioning of the analyzed:
"It is not a science at all because it is irrefutable. The psychoanalyst is a rhetorician. ...operates only by suggestion. He suggests, that's the characteristic of a rhetorician, he doesn't impose anything of substance."
On 5-1-1980, Lacan declared in his 'Letter of Dissolution':
"I have failed - that is to say, I have become confused. ...] Freud allowed the psychoanalytical group to prevail over discourse, to become Church."
His followers continue to try to understand his SIBYLLINAR TEXTS by avoiding taking seriously the last cities, however clear they may be.
Source: "Freud & Lacan. Quacks?"
Facts and legends of psychoanalysis.
Jacques Van Rillaer.
Jacques Van Rillaer practised psychoanalysis for about ten years. Appointed professor of psychology at the University of Louvain and the University of Saint-Louis (Brussels), he had the opportunity to study Freudism and various innovations, in particular those of Lacan.
He ended up becoming very critical of his old beliefs.
He is the author of "Les illusions de la psychanalyse", "Psychologie de la vie quotidienne", "Le Livre noir de la psychanalyse" and "La gestion de soi".
The Mirror effect is very real. This is why they place high-definitions mirrors that tell the truth in rest-rooms . People are offended by the true image they see of themselves and won't loiter about. Don't think so ? Watch someone in a restroom. When they wash theirs hands and look into the mirror they quickly dry off their hands and exit the facility.
bad lighting?
I hope The School of Life would subsequently make more videos covering Lacan. For those who're not familiar with him, there's way more fascinating stuff to it, for example his interpretation of the Oedipus Complex and the Phallus, the unconscious subject, the signifier, and of course, his intriguing theory of the Imaginary, the Symbolic and the Real.
Thanks you so much. It’s a phenomenal job to condense Lacan’s work in this video.
Next stop, Carl Jung?
You need to do a video on Carl Rogers (voted the most influential psychotherapist - by other therapists - in 2009).
Person-centred Therapy - Tim Harvard
too boring
Superb channel, must have been asked already but would be nice to see a video about Carl Jung. Merci!
THAT INTRO MELODY THOUGH
Carl Jung next please
I actually remember the first time I recognized myself in the mirror
These "Quick Capsule" reviews of key philosophers' lives and works are perfect for an attention-span challenged literalist like me. Do you have a group of redactors or are they solely the work of the narrator?
Thanks so much for your very generous comment, we're hugely conscious of the need for brevity!. Just to explain: The videos (including this one) are usually the collective work of a team of writers of which Alain, the narrator, is a key member.
John Armstrong Cheers!
Try adderall
I hope and almost sure that if Lacan had desendants these will keep spreading the good desires he had on keeping together humanity.
This video is far too generous to Lacan. He deserves none of this praise. He was a megalomaniac who drove his patients to suicide and whose work is a mix of gibberish and total horseshit, for example his outright fraud of a thesis. His legacy was the destruction of all legitimacy for several entire disciplines of academia. Perhaps the single worst thinker of the 20th century. He's a disgrace, and it's disgraceful that he was ever afforded any legitimacy, but doubly disgraceful now that we've had the time to reflect on his terrible career. No discipline in academia that would welcome such a man deserves any respect.
هاها یو آر وری کانفدنت ایندید !! :))
I came here to try to get to the bottom of those moments when Zizek doesn't wipe his nose and pull his t-tshirt...you know - the bits where he talks...
favorite thing about lacan: stealing bataille's wife
how do we know the baby looking in the mirror recognises itself? Further, how do we know that animals cannot recognise themselves in reflections? Elephants paint pictures of elephants.
Great video! Could you please do a video on Julia Kristeva, particularly where she departs from Lacan?
we humans are endlessly making the same mistakes, falling in the trap we unconsciously but very persistently create. the least we can do is read. there will be portrayed the lessons of whole lives.
Lacan always struck me as a charlatan.
Alan, you are killing it with these videos. This channel is a true blossom of youtube and a great find for anyone that comes here. Keep talking, we are listening.
a video about specieism would be awesome!
Yes!
Why is Alain de Botton so obsessed with philosopher's hair? This video, the Derrida video...
I love this channel!! Can you guys do some stuff on logical fallacies?
Not very shure that dogs do not recognize their image in the mirror... :)
Well lots of people have run scientific tests on this, and certain animals can. Octupi and dolphins can recognise their reflections for example. Its seen as an important (but obviously not complete) way of trying to gauge a species intelligence and consciousness. As far as I am aware no dogs have passed the test.
Dogs do not hold visual events to be of the same importance as olfactory events, and therefore can not be expected to react to a visual representation of themselves in the same way primates and birds do(due to vision being our most important sense). Therefore an identity test should probably be focused on scent rather than vision. There have been tests done and dogs do recognize what is 'their' scent and that it 'belongs' to them, but obviously the results are up for interpretation.
My dog knows that when he looks at my reflection in the mirror that's only a reference to know where I am. That means he recognizes some relation and diference between my image and my actual person (I have tried several ways of experimenting with this). Anyway, Lacan didn't have to state that diference, it wouldn't make any change at all to his theories if dogs could use language as we do. That was a mistake. I think Derrida's work on the subject are capital (L'' animal q donc je suis)
Alain, could be interesting if you can do some videos about others psycoanalysts like Piera Aulagnier, Roudinesco, or even a sequence to explain other aspects about Lacan's propositions.
thank you
SoL please do one about Fritz Perls!!!
School of life, could you please make a video explaining why looks don't matter
A pessoa pode ser feia, mas se for alegre, bem humorada, educada, batalhadora, respeitosa, vai continuar sendo feia, porque uma coisa não tem nada a ver com a outra.
looks do matter.
sad truth is....it does
looks do matter, but they are not everything, personality is more important
Looks do matter. 90% of people who are ugly on the outside are also ugly on the inside. This is because they want people to like them without attempting to make themselves look good. Essentially they are self-centered. There's exceptions of course but that's the general way of things.
Yep, just erase and ignore all of his influence from, and towards Marxism.
I once had a session that lasted less than a minute!
erick vazquez
Sex
May I ask why you used Sarkozy's face instead of Hollandes's to depict french leadership? :p
I guess, because he is more popular. ....
I think that neither of them is really popular :p
I think you may have missed two of his key concepts, namely the Imaginary and Symbolic Order (there is the real, but Lacan never explained it that much and you can see that there is an implication that the real is anything that preceeds language and culture)
The "real" is oversimplified as reality, but it is actually pre-language, that which has no name.
"that no dog or chicken ever has", come on now, how could you assume that. Animals are curious creatures too. I'm pretty sure they're self aware and can notice themselves in mirrors. They're probably just far less concerned about how they look than we are lol.
""that no dog or chicken ever has", come on now, how could you assume that" Because scientists know it for a fact. Only a small number of animals can do that (recognise themselves in the mirror), which includes some apes. There are some standard tests...
@@foljs5858 again, how do they know that? What do they look for as evidence? Brain waves? Something physical?
Regardless, the fact that some animals can still shits all over his entire philosophy and his obsession with words as a fundamental way of communicating. Perhaps if he spent more time studying art and music (arguably older than any verbal language) than obsessing over his own self image like a complete hypocrite, he'd notice.
Brendan Cahill The fact that other animals can recognize themself in a mirror absolutely does not disprove the theory, that is the least important part of the theory. The theory is about our fear of the other’s inability to fully know us based on our image and that other people are a collection of projections which we create, not simply that we recognize ourselves in the mirror.
@@jackmeyer8656 that's not his theory, I'm pretty sure people pondered that same thought thousands of years ago.
My point is, the fact that some animals can recognise not only each other but themselves in relation to others in their hierarchy, matrelinial kinship, reflection etc clearly indicates words are not the fundamental way our species communicates. Pictures and first appearances come first, then words, then metaphor, not the other way around.
And who's to say you can't fully understand someone based on their image alone? FBI agents make entire careers out of judging people based on appearances, clothes, body language, same goes for art historians. You can tell an immense amount about someone, their political leaning, their taste, their personality just by appearance alone.
Heck, the word personality itself comes from personae which literally means "mask", an external objective identity that one wears on the outside to project an idea through an image.
This guy is so wrapped up in words and jargon that he can't see what's right in front of him. Appearances and first impressions carry enormous weight and detail if only people would pay attention to them