The Apocalyptic Act- Part 3: The Death of the Subject Supposed to Know.

The Subject Supposed to Know has deceased, yet transference is alive; then, it is to version our terminology if we are to declare anything decent with some kilowatts of responsibility for the clinic beyond the father, whose long craved reign a given doubtful Thomas hunts for situating his smallest of his ten fingers upon the rotten blood of the wound, by asking if, is it a clinic beyond the father, or, is it a clinic with a different sort of a father: one is, if the thoughts may peregrinate in time, in the linearity of the signifier, which is erroneous yet settled, provoked to think of Pax Romana, an era which, as much as the changes of it could be argued in chronological terms and not only, one strikes a mind more, that of the reallocation from hubris to sin, which is, among these revolutions, the only one that is not sequential and timed as much as the signifier in the graph of desire: it is free as free association ought to be if the analysts ears do not listen to the Other; there was no word in ancient Greek language having the same connotation as did later on the word Sin, with its reference to guilt and the moving away from the father.

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.