Not a Semblance: On the Formation of the No-Body.

That which cannot be spoken, is an Act. The Olivet Discourse, that lilliputian apocalyptic praxis approbating the Act alfresco from the linear candles of time, those of the before and of the after, makes itself current because Mathew’s gospel, to whom Lacan has dedicated a repetition of his name in his seminar on the Act- that is disremembered when it comes to that Real which cannot be said, with whom analysts fail to recollect that it is acted, for, they cannot act upon the knot and turn it into, at least, a Hansel and Grete metaphor of finding a way out- and with which one ought to commiserate that the instrumentality of an evil spell instead of the gospel∙ that one attributed to Mathew has been directed towards the Hebrews as much as Lacan directed his seminars to the formation of psychoanalysts, been in the position of the aerial transition of a literature one cannot read, not Next to, but Towards, which another evangelist wrote: And the Word, that is not a lexis alone, was towards God but not the Kinesis of the letter which is beyond∙ the Olivet Discourse occurs at the moment of pathos- an orientation that can depart en route for a two-flowing superintendence as exemplified by the Diskobolus, if an analyst is in possession of an autocratic aegis as much as Caesar contravening the rudimentary canon because he acted on what constitutes that imperative itself∙ anxiety is produced at that twinkling of the fathom of a breath’s illiterate noisomeness, and to which an analyst cannot say for sure that it is the result of truism of the conveyance of a mono alphabetic substitution- a letter representing the letter for another letter: that is the Apraxia of time, where the subjects’ chirokinesthesian Acts generate a Being outside of time’s parable, even outside from the cave that one sees only the shadows of the Platonic word, acts, that are moving a worth allied with a Being Silent.

 

 

 

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

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.