On Lacanian Bastards.

There is nothing but despicable wondering when a subject is encountering an analyst serving two organizations with irreconcilable Ethics at their heart- well, it could be something to digest, akin to the food-brand to be mentioned a few lines bellow, if one is thinking in the same way of the professor also to be mentioned latter, who differs to nothing from a bad nutritional protein for the brain, for, as such a book is called, depending from the context and of course from one’s appetite. Church of England: it is precisely about service and mastery. How can one say, like the fairly minted professor, who even wrote his stupidities in a book, that, in his practice, he uses sometimes Winnicott and sometimes Lacan, to understand- and this is where he is absolutely wrong- his analysands? If one may attempt to be creative, to generate a moronic figure of speech or an idio-matic expression, one idyllic to explain mild mental dim-witted phenomena of this sort, that would be the McDonalds of Lacanian Psychoanalysis- this person is a Harvard professor, no wonder about the scientific reasoning used. Or, what about the other one, and there are many like this person, who considers herself half Lacanian and half Kleinian? Where do these halves have a place in an orientation, unless this implies a technique based on absolute knowledge, nothing to strike a chord of psychoanalysis?

 

 

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

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.