1st Edition

Sex and Nothing Bridges from Psychoanalysis to Philosophy

By Alejandro Cerda-Rueda Copyright 2016
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    From its etymological roots, sex is related to a scission, Latin for sectus, secare, meaning "to divide or cut." Therefore, regardless of the various studies applied to defining sex as inscribed by discursive acts, i.e. merely a 'performatively enacted signification,' there is something more to sex than just a social construction or an aprioristic substance. Sex is irreducible to meaning or knowledge. This is why psychoanalysis cannot be formulated as an erotology nor a science of sex (scientia sexualis). In this matter, sex escapes the symbolic restraints of language; however, it is through its failure that it manifests itself through the symbolic, e.g. symptoms or dream life. So, what is sex? Sex and Nothing embarks upon a dialogue between colleagues and friends interested in bridging psychoanalysis and philosophy, linking sex and thought, where what emerges is a greater awareness of the irreducucibility of sex to the discourse of knowledge and meaning: in other words, sex and nothing.

    Introduction , From Ljubljana . . . , Sexuality within the limits of reason alone , Officers, maids, and chimneysweepers , Events through Imaginary, Symbolic, and Real , The unsoundable decision of being , Psychoanalysis and antiphilosophy: the case of Jacques Lacan , ... To Elsewhere , The sexual compact , Mathematics in the bedroom: sex, the signifier, and the smallest whole number , Ich-psychologie und Massenanalyse: a Žižekian reading of Lacan’s impasse , The aesthetic process as reversal , Love, psychoanalysis, and leftist political ontology

    Biography

    Alejandro Cerda-Rueda