Žižek on Hegel May 2013

Audio Link: Ž on Hegel May 12 2013.

Real is impossible and unavoidable.  As long as we are subjects of market we are universal.

7:00 Universality, oh we can’t reach universality, imperialism imposing their universality.
8:00 India struggle for universal
8;30 desire is indestructable, it avoids you as such it always returns
9:00 Freedom in a hidden way there was a pathological motivation, even if your act was pure you did it maybe to boast to others. What causes true anxiety, is the prospect that our act truly was free and this trauma is domesticated by reducing it to the pathological. What’s traumatic for Kant is that its terrifying to accept a FREE act, so he reduces it to something pathological.
The unbearable fact is that we are immortal, responsible in the afterlife …
11:30 Hegel’s materialism: Can the Hegelian moment of negation of negation account for redoubled impossibilities.
I’m not free I negate freedom but this escape from freedom proves impossible.

12:10 Lacan’s Alienation and Separation. Alienation in Symbolic order constitutive of the subject. The Subject is the RESULT of the process of alienation. It emerges as a result, alienation is not standard Hegelian view, no, alienation for Lacan is just re-doubled. Ancient Egyptians secrets, what we saw as secrets of Egyptians for us, were secrets for them as well. The secrets remain its just redoubled.

Self-negated pessimism. A form of optimism which is worse than pessimism.
15:00 optimism is negated, life is shit. but the very form of pessimists position is negated, life is shit is too much of a principled position, in a wierd optimistic way, life goes on……….
15:50 Aaron Schuster: subtracted from the nothingness of pessimism, violent peterbation of self-cancelling nothing
17:30 immortality, vampires undead.
Where does Hegel stand with regard to all of this. Can formal matrix of dialectic process account for this downward synthesis, the lowest of the lowest.

19:00 Where the danger is grows also what can save us. Where the danger is is also hope for a reversal. Hegel is usually taken as clearest case of this paradigm, NO, Hegel is not part of this paradigm.
20:00 textbook Hegel. It is Marx not Hegel who follows this logic. Precapitalist modes of economic production, the uniqueness of the CMP, labour is torn out of its primoridal condition into its objective conditions … the worker appears as objectless, purely subjective capacity of labour with its objective conditions of production.
22:50 Proletariat substanceless subjectivity
23:40 The true Hegel. Resolution misses its goal and turns into nightmare, how to remain faithful to goal of original liberation and not get conservative, oh a nihilistic mistake. How at the very moment is liberation goes wrong, how to nonetheless save the day through repetition and redeem its rational core. Our moment is still Hegelian. What Hegel called absolute Freedom and Terror was pretty mild compared to Stalin. The Jacobins were simply overthrown by a vote in Assembly National, ha do that to Stalin.
26:00 return from Marx to Hegel. From Marxist revolution eschatology, to Hegel’s tragic vision of history as open. The historical process always redirects are activity into an unexpected direction. Accepted the alienation of the historical process, we can’t control, not because we are puppets, no, there is no big Other. This acceptance of alienation. It implies a fully engaged position, aware of the risks involved. There is no higher historical necessity, only activity open to risks of open contingent history. The conclusive moment of the dialectic process is not synthetic unity, return at a higher level to some form of the One, for Hegel, alienation is also constitutive of the subject, subject does not pre-exist its alienation, but emerges through it. It’s only nature that only alienates itself from itself, the subject is the outcome of the self-alienation of nature.

The big Other doesn’t exist, no higher historical necessity, no World Spirit (forget Charles Taylor). Nonetheless, because self-alienation of nature is constitutive of subject, when you break out of alienation, you don’t get overblown narcissistic subject that appropriates the other, the GAP is displaced, we experience ourself as alienated from the other, we see how this alienation is displaced into the other itself, there is no substantial other to which we are alienated, the gap is redoubled.

On late Heidegger: historicity goes all the way down, cannot be reduced to a non-historical absolute. His achievement is a transcendental historicism, different historicist modes of being. The ultimate horizon is the horizon of this play of different transcendental horizons. For Heidegger at much higher level, does same as west coast American pseudo-follower of Foucault, what is this table? we can only ask what discursive regime, the ontic question is subordinated to the ontological horizon, the ultmate catastrophe is the ontological one. The true catastrophe is not whether humanity will destroy itself ontically, the true catastrophe has already happened, humanity dwells in technology etc. From the beginning of zein and seit Heidegger was bothered, transcendental is not creation, objects appear within a horizon of being, what Nature would be without man? The past carries with it a temporal index, our coming was expected on earth, we should bring this logic to the end, later the last big revolution will retroactively redeem earlier revolution, human being and nature: that is to say, what is nature outside humanity with no relation to humanity 1929-1930, perhaps animals are in an unknown way aware of their lack, their poorness. The definition of animal as poor in the world, as stone without world, when Heidegger as animals as poor in the world he means that we as humans are dwelling within a world, and we cannot but experience animals as within this world, we can’t step outside our horizon of meaning, and simply look at reality. He doubts this transcendental reply, not that things are simply there, it is something that characterizes immanently, the sorrow of nature as Derrida, the animal that I am: our human exploded to redeem nature from its suffering. it raises the right question: NOt what is nature for language, can we grasp nature adequetely through language, but What is language for nature, how does emergence of language affect nature.
Aaron Schuster: on the one hand official position, symbolic order is ultimate horizon, all we can do is concoct invent beautiful stories, myths about what went on before, BUT the symbolic order is a reaction to some RADICAL deadlock (sorrow in nature) dislocation, that is already there in nature. So that the Freudian civilization and its discontents, nature is not homeostatic universe things in their own place and then human being displace nature NO. a displacement was already in place in nature.
Higher level of non-resolution. Lacan speculates on infinite pain of being a plant. on the one hand you have this eternal poetry of dislocation of sexuality in human species in contrast to poor animals who nonetheless have instincts that tell them when/how to copulate. The fascination of national Geographic, animals a universe that works, I think we should go here a step further, when you watch National Geographic, they report on human community which is treated as a small animal community, one should risk a step further, a secret awareness already in nature, no go further than New Age, maybe nature is the ultimate invented tradition, True Materialism begins when you transpose the gap as specifically human. when we transpose this gap back into nature itself. Sexuality, when Lacan introduces Lamella, Seminar XI. the deadlock is already there in nature, it means that human speech is not a fall from some natural balance but a reaction reacting to a fall that was already there.
The Wound can be healed only by the spear that Cut it.
The spirit is itself the wound it tries to heal. The spirit of human subjectivity is the power of tearing apart, spirit is nothing but the process of overcoming immediacy and organic unity.
a withdrawal the creates that which it withdraws from.
50:00 India

Žižek university of vermont Oct 2012

Tibetan Bhuddism: Canned laughter
Objectively you are praying, it doesn’t matter what you are thinking. The tv laughs for you. Something that is supposed to be spontaneous emotional reaction can be externalized. The function of canned laughter is to trigger in this Pavlovian reflex to trigger your laughter, NO! it laughs for you. I watch tv, like an idiot, at the end I feel relieved as if I was laughing.

Brevik an enigma: Pro-Zionist, yet anti-Semitic. What is happening here.

Levinas, smuggled into Judaism, pseudo Christian attitudes, the face of the Other, vulnerability of other’s face, this is profoundly NON-Jewish. From a Jewish standpoint, the zero-level ethical experience is single face of other is NON-Jewish. You see a weak child, oh my god, this is automatic reaction, ETHICS begins for me, when you ask a question: “Is it something that I don’t see which is the price for seeing this?”

But still I have respect for some insights of Levinas. When you read in the bible DON’T KILL it isn’t God addressing humans, the addressee is GOD HIMSELF. The big problem from the very beginning, is BRUTAL DIVINE VIOLENCE. re-read the Old Testament and see the incidents of brutal divine violence. God is like the castle in Kafka’s novel, it is the sublime object up there, but what appears from below is a majestic builing is only a couple of dirty cottages. The basic Jewish suspicion is this one, don’t get too close to God it won’t be bliss, it will be furor.

Marshal McCluhan scene in Annie Hall: this happens in the Talmud. Two rabbis debate theological point, the one who is losing, tries to pull Annie Hall trick. Let’s call God. Jehovah comes, an old man, but then the other Rabbi shouts at God, you old man beat it, you did your job, your created the world, you did it pretty god, now go away. The reply of God is My children have vanquished me and with a merry laughter walks away.
The danger of the proximity of God. How to keep God at a proper distance. The point is God should be only in dead letter not in images, images come to close, God should be dead.

Lacan: The only true atheists today are theologists
God dies in Auschwitz. how could he have allowed etc. In view of the horrors of 20th century, to describe them in secular terms is not strong enough, 6 million killed, words don’t match the horror, we need a dimension of the sacred. Not that God is behind, but an excessive sublime, its too much to explain away as small secular affair. Not only God did not die at Auschwitz, in Auschwitz God came back and was too close to us.

This terrifying Living God, the God if you know Greek Tragedy, Bachae, crazy woman exploding in orgy. Excessive sacred orgies. Where is this today. I see signs.

Shitty boring movie. PROJECT X. College kids organize a small party. House burns down etc. You can see how, in a nice strategy, it starts as jokes, at level of obscene Hollywood sex comedy, but then at a certain point you are transported, its too much, something ectasy, something sacred is going on. There is a demand for this sacred dimension, no I’m not America bashing, no in Europe, 3-4 weeks ago, a girl in Belgium, announced on Facebook a party, 40,000 people came. Its obvious this sacred dimension in SOCCER, trance and violence.

And before parents leave they give the rules, don’t touch this etc. At the end of the film when father returns, you expect him to explode, Father then returns, and says, ok, you did it, its damage, nonetheless I didn’t think you were able to do this, you are a man.
Lacan says, “Beyond the mother, stands out the image of the father … fundamentally to unite and not oppose a desire to the law.” while formerly prohibiting, discreetly not only tolerates, but solicits them, you are expected someway to violate the prohibitions. A permissive father can be much worse, a father who prohibits, by playing a game of do it but out of my site. The bible itself, in so far as God is father, in old Testament, of turning a blind eye, the prohibition don’t celebrate other gods, but if you look closely, don’t celebreate other gods in front of me, but what you do discreetly over there, is not my business.

Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit
Master and Servant: Servant not ready to risk his life, Master enjoys. Lacan turns it around. The Master is prohibited to enjoy. He enjoys in such a regulated way. The only enjoyment, is servant in marginal space, when Master turns his eye away. But Masters do have orgies, but only that they are overly regulated. Private life of ancient Indian masters, so fat barely able to walk, so how did they do it … What about normal permissive father. Permissivity You can do it, turns imperceptibly into you Have to do it, you Have to Enjoy. Enjoy! it turns oppressive. Healthy sex is promulgated in a terrifying utilitarian way, sex is good for your muscles etc. Is this sex? This medical assertion, it is much more liberating for Father to prohibit it, then he goes out and you bring in girlfriend.

In the area of generalized permissivity: we get so much anxiety impotence, etc.

Ž then begins on Gangnam style which I have recorded not here but in the Žižek Toronto 2012 posting.

To be Continued

wither marx 20 years later

The Time of Marx: Derrida’s Perestroika by Peggy Kamuf

April 23rd, 2013

ON THE OCCASION of the 20th anniversary of the “Whither Marxism?” conference conceived by Stephen Cullenberg and Bernd Magnus and organized by the Center for Ideas and Society at the University of California, Riverside, we asked Peggy Kamuf to reflect on the lecture that Jacques Derrida delivered there: “Specters of Marx.” The lecture was eventually published as a book, translated into English by Kamuf, and subtitled The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, and the New International. It stands as a landmark text in Derrida’s oeuvre. Continue reading “wither marx 20 years later”

cutrofello reviews comay

2011.05.07
Rebecca Comay
Mourning Sickness: Hegel and the French Revolution

Rebecca Comay, Mourning Sickness: Hegel and the French Revolution, Stanford University Press, 2010, 202pp., $21.95 (pbk), ISBN 9780804761277.

Reviewed by Andrew Cutrofello, Loyola University Chicago

Rebecca Comay’s insightful study of Hegel’s philosophical reflections on the French Revolution clarifies Hegel’s conception of the temporality of absolute knowing. On her account, absolute knowing is neither an atemporal intellectual intuition of the absolute nor the immediate self-presence of a persisting subject. It is, instead, a conceptual elaboration of the ubiquity of delay. This is not to say that thought is discursive in the Kantian sense of requiring the performance of temporal syntheses. The delay of the concept registered in absolute knowing is not due to the fact that concepts are second-order representations that succeed or postpone intuitions of objects. Absolute knowing represents thought as essentially belated (subsequent to events never apprehended and so unavailable for synthesis) and premature (prior to events whose essential, and therefore irreducible, futurity again makes them unavailable for synthesis). Acknowledging itself to be a Johnny-come-lately-and-early, spirit abandons previous conceptions of itself as a gathering subject of retentions and protentions (Self-certainty), or the gathered Da of a three-fold temporal ekstasis (Sittlichkeit). Terror, not anxiety, has taught it that time is out of joint. The moral impossibility of setting right a time disjoined by terror is brutally summarized by Lady Macbeth: “What’s done cannot be undone.” Despite the definitiveness of this hard, if banal, lesson, Hegel allows the confession of un-undoable evil to be answered — not without a crucial delay (123) — by an act of forgiveness that purports to undo past crime (146): “The wounds of the Spirit heal, and leave no scars behind” (129). This response marks, for Comay, the advent (in every sense of the term) of absolute knowing. Whether Hegel succeeds in reconciling Lady Macbeth’s thesis with his own antithesis — a veritable antinomy in Comay’s juxtaposition of the two — is the difficult question posed by Mourning Sickness.

As the title of her book indicates, Comay represents Hegel’s philosophical response to the French Revolution in the vocabulary of psychoanalysis: trauma, repetition compulsion, mourning, melancholia, introjection, incorporation, etc. This approach is justified by the fact that the Phenomenology of Spirit prefigures (both conceptually and lexically) psychoanalytic descriptions of the experience of loss (96). Comay does not seek to psychologize Hegel’s dialectical analyses of shapes of consciousness, but rather to bring out their “normative” significance (6). As she says of her guiding concept: “by ‘trauma,’ I don’t mean anything psychological… . My interest is philosophical: to explore trauma as a modal, temporal, and above all a historical category” (4). This raises the stakes, inviting us to wonder not only about the philosophical significance of psychoanalytic concepts, but about what it might mean to absolve them of psychological significance.

As an historical category, trauma is a kind of cultural malaise — one translation of Das Unbehagen in der Kultur[1] — or, as Comay prefers, une Misère, a term she borrows from Marx’s reference to “die deutsche Misère” (2). In his “Introduction to the Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right,” Marx lampoons “German history” for commemorating revolution only “on the day of its burial” (3). Comay discerns in the “German ideology” (17) the structure of melancholia, understood as mourning for a lost object never possessed. The French Revolution played the role of such an object for German intellectuals who constructed a national self-identity around its available unavailability. Comay represents the logic of this experience of “vicarious” self-constitution as one of obsessive translation. Exposing its narcissistic character is, on her reading, one of the chief burdens of Hegel’s account of Kantian and post-Kantian moral philosophy.

Before turning to Hegel, Comay identifies several of the ideology’s component beliefs. One was that, since the Germans went through the Reformation, they didn’t need a political revolution (18). Another was the converse notion that, since the Germans had the Reformation (and Kantian critique), they were the only ones who could properly complete it (19-20). In holding these two contrary thoughts together, German writers represented “their” Revolution as something simultaneously past and future. A third idea, advanced by Kant, was that the true revolution was moral, taking place in the supersensible (and therefore supra-temporal) hearts of men (48). If this revolution could be detected at all, it was in the paradoxical affect of disinterested sympathy that witnesses felt for the cause of the political revolutionaries (34). Together, these three mutually incompatible (yet somehow mutually supporting) beliefs exhibit Freud’s “kettle logic,” or what Hegel, borrowing a metaphor from Kant, calls a “whole nest” of contradictions (102).

Comay finds Hegel getting caught in the nest himself despite his best efforts to disentangle it: “He shows how a fantasy can be simultaneously enjoyed and deconstructed” (6). For much of the Phenomenology’s chapter on spirit, such ambivalence is shunted along a series of representations of the logic of (“French”) revolutionary terror and (“German”) morality. It catches up with spirit — and Hegel — the moment that belated forgiveness purports to wipe the “slate” of history clean, as if the pure negativity of absolute Terror could thereby accomplish what it had been after all along, namely, to start everything all over again from scratch (a fantasy of self-birthing that would effectively translate mourning sickness into morning sickness[2]) (125, cf. 118). With and independently of Hegel, Comay shows how ruthlessly the Terror in France destroyed monuments that the Revolution had built, only to find it necessary to efface all traces of the destruction itself (61-3). This self-defeating mania for destruction was no less pitiless for being self-contradictory; on the contrary, the Terror exhibited a kind of pitiless pity (52). If the aim of pitiless cruelty — torture — is to inflict unforgettable scars,[3] the aim of terror, as Hegel and Comay understand it, is pure “obliteration” (72). Comay underscores this difference by highlighting the professed “humanitarian” motives for the introduction of the guillotine, which supposedly killed instantaneously and painlessly (176 n.1). The flip side of the logic of the guillotine can be found in Sade, for whom the seemingly immortal body of Justine (brilliantly linked by Comay to the troubling corpse of Polyneices [117]) is an ever-renewed surface for the inscription of new torments — the converse fate of the corpses of those victims of the Terror who committed suicide only to have their heads cut off anyway (73).

Part of the worry about Hegel’s representation of forgiveness as absolute forgetting is that forgiveness, so understood, is formally indistinguishable from terror qua pure negativity or death drive (73). Comay thinks Hegel deserves credit for not disavowing this connection, as Kant disavows the formal identity between principled moral action and diabolical evil (43). For Kant, political revolution is the diabolical crime par excellence. As such, it is not only impermissible — morally impossible — but unthinkable: logically impossible. A legally sanctioned execution of a monarch would be, at best (or worst), a performative contradiction (27). Were such a crime possible, it would be an unforgivable — and therefore unforgettable — blot on human history. Kant discerns an equally “unforgettable” sign of moral progress in the sympathetic responses of contemporaries to the Revolution (28). One way to square Kant’s sympathy and horror is to emphasize the difference between the Revolution and the regicide. Instead of dividing the object this way, Comay’s strategy is to represent the two affects as inseparable components of a single (if complex) sublime feeling of “horrified fascination” at a tragic spectacle (28).

Stanley Cavell has asked why spectators watching a performance of Othello don’t rush on stage to try to prevent Othello from strangling Desdemona.[4] One obvious, if ultimately unsatisfying, response is to say, well, we’re in a theater, and this is a play. Comay argues that Kant’s theory of the dynamical sublime points toward a more satisfying response, namely, that vicarious trauma is the vehicle of self-constitution: “Kant’s analytic of the dynamic sublime is perhaps the first fully modern theory of the tragic, in that it links the experience of catharsis to the heroic self-production of the subject by way of the fantasy of its own annihilation” (50). We purport to keep our hands clean by drawing clean distinctions, first and foremost that between actor and spectator. By tearing down Kant’s “fourth wall,” Hegel exposes the narcissistic investments of the spectator, but the “dramaturgical distinction between actor and spectator” persists up to the confrontation between forgiving and forgiven consciousnesses (151). Hegel’s “hard heart” initially refuses to forgive evil, attempting to erect and maintain an unbreachable wall separating his/her quasi-psychotic beautiful soul from worldly evil (i.e., from the evil of belonging to the world). What eventually enables the hard heart to offer forgiveness is its discovery that it is like Sartre’s peeping Tom suddenly caught unaware by another witness. Such an experience is staged in Duchamp’s Étant donnés, a work that forces us to acknowledge the essential complicity of the gaze — a gaze whose object could very well be Sade’s “undead” Justine. For Comay, the crucial fact in Hegel’s analysis is not the hard heart’s discovery of the culpability of its initial withholding of forgiveness, but, rather, the logically subsequent realization that the pretense of being entitled to offer forgiveness is itself culpable and so in need of forgiveness (126).

Comay’s account of Hegel’s Aufhebung of the actor/spectator distinction presents a much more complicated picture than Arendt suggests when she accuses Hegel (and Marx) of privileging the spectatorial stance of the historian over that of the engaged political actor.[5] Comay reminds us that, for Arendt, crimes falling outside the purview of law are strictly unforgivable: “one cannot forgive what one cannot punish” (135). For Arendt, what is unforgivable is unforgivable simpliciter: full stop. For Comay’s Hegel, as for Derrida, what is unforgivable is also unforgivable simpliciter, but (by a strange logic) it is therefore the only thing that can be forgiven (126). For Arendt, as we might put it, the unforgivable is unforgivable! (exclamation point), whereas for Hegel and Derrida, it is simply unforgivable period — a period marking the full pause of a necessary delay only after which forgiveness may be granted. Comay emphasizes the immeasurability (and possible interminability) of such a pause, for otherwise the confession of evil would be reduced to the mere purchase of forgiveness (122). If everything is forgiven, nothing is forbidden, a thought that caused Kant great consternation.

Comay’s Hegel seems to accept the antecedent, but only by way of a quasi-Derridean experience of the “impossible.” The Christian provenance of Hegel’s treatment of this experience is encapsulated for Comay in the Gospel of Matthew: “Judge not, lest ye be judged” (134). This is also the central theme of Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, so it presents a nice test case. At the end of Shakespeare’s play, Isabella, unaware that her brother still lives, kneels to the Duke to plead for the life of his supposed murderer Angelo. By the logic of Hegel’s account, it would have been a worse crime for Isabella not to have forgiven him than it was for Angelo to order Claudio’s execution. By passing the Duke’s test (however impossible such a test may be), Isabella allows the lingering potential for tragedy to resolve itself into Christian comedy.[6] However, the fact that forgiveness remains essentially spectatorial and belated suggests that Isabella herself stands in need of forgiveness more than Angelo, as Portia would more than Shylock. Here we can begin to see how Comay’s reading of Hegel complicates our understanding of his understanding of the religious meaning of forgiveness. Hegel’s Aufhebung looks more and more like a deconstruction that demonstrates the impossibility of escaping from terror unscarred or “unscathed” (another Derridean term).

If melancholia runs the risk of perpetually killing the other for the sake of maintaining a relationship with it, mania runs the converse risk of terror itself. Comay associates these twin dangers with Adorno and Lukács, who accused each other of succumbing, respectively, to aestheticizing melancholia and Thermidorian mania (150). From a psychoanalytic point of view, the tendency to cycle back and forth between the two represents a failure to complete a “normal” work of mourning. Whether “normal” is taken in a normative or a descriptive sense, problems arise here too if mourning is understood as remembrance with a term limit: remembering for the sake of forgetting (like confessing for the sake of being forgiven). For mourning to be meaningful, it must run the risk of being interminable — and so formally indistinguishable from melancholia. Such is the nature of the Misère, or what Comay calls “mourning sickness” (103, 139). Comay suggests that Hegel understood its logic better than Marx because Hegel recognized it to be a universal feature of historical experience, something that couldn’t be magically, manically overcome through the performance of actual and actualizing revolutionary deeds. This theme, also developed by Derrida, does not entail a valorization of the standpoint of the spectator over that of the actor, let alone a denigration of revolutionary deeds. It only serves to remind us that we cannot not be “latecomers and precursors,” even with respect “to our own experiences” (4-5).

Comay takes issue with Derrida’s characterization of the Phenomenology’s “rush toward the economy of a reconciliation” (cited on 128). For Derrida, this rush is symptomatic of a desire to be done with delay (a spatial as well as a temporal category), but Comay convincingly shows that it is better understood as a certain kind of “gamble” (149) that is “precipitated” by the delay that precedes it (128). The logic of this delay would be equivalent to that analyzed in Lacan’s essay on “Logical Time,” in which hesitation precipitates hastening, except for one crucial difference, namely, that Lacan is describing a game-theoretic situation governed by nothing but calculating reason.[7] The gamble run by Lacan’s prisoner (deducing the color on his back from the behavioral responses of his fellow prisoners) is “restricted” rather than “general,” whereas that run by Hegel’s guilty criminals is — or rather purports to be (I will return to this Kantian phrasing) — absolute. Hegel’s account of forgiveness is not unambiguous, but Comay suggests that the ambiguity in question is a function of the “shape of consciousness” in question. Just as it is impossible to distinguish a genuine knight of faith from a “bourgeois in his Sunday best,” so it is impossible to tell whether a “rush toward reconciliation” is that of a calculating prisoner or a knight of forgiveness. It is equally uncertain whether an act of forgiveness is “diabolical” or benevolent, absolute or relative, a forgetting without remainder or the mere repression of what is destined to return as ressentiment.

Comay discerns an acknowledgment of such undecidability in Hegel’s use of the participial versöhnende in the phrase “das versöhnende Ja” — the “reconciling yes” — at the end of the Phenomenology’s chapter on spirit. Hegel’s wording suggests that reconciliation through mutual forgiveness is something that merely “ought” to occur. Reconciliation would thereby remain or become a regulative ideal, undercutting Hegel’s disparagement of regulative ideals as essentially unattainable pretexts supporting Kant’s moral view of the world (136). Comay finds a second Kantian slippage in the last paragraph of the Phenomenology, where Hegel unexpectedly inserts a counterfactual “as if”: “Spirit has to start afresh … as if, for it, all that preceded it were lost” (cited on 147; Comay’s italics). Comay is sympathetic with Hegel’s official critique of Kantian morality, particularly his proto-psychoanalytic (and proto-Nietzschean) detection of Kantian morality’s internalization of terror (“The categorical imperative smells of cruelty”). Yet she is equally sympathetic with Hegel’s Kantian slippages. To understand why, let us turn to the antinomy between “What’s done cannot be undone” and “The wounds of the Spirit heal, and leave no scars behind.”

In “The Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate,” Hegel associates “the fate of the Jewish people,” “the fate of Macbeth,” and “Kant’s ethics.”[8] Each represents an experience of evil that forecloses the possibility of reconciliation through forgiveness. Macbeth “destroyed … the friendliness of life” by killing Duncan and Banquo, and since life itself could not be destroyed, Banquo came back to haunt him as “an evil spirit.”[9] Macbeth’s crime could only be expiated by the punishment of fate, just as the Jewish people, having similarly “stepped out of nature,” could know no reconciliation with the divine.[10] Finally, Kant’s subordination of Christian love to moral law represents, for Hegel, a lapse back into the abstract Jewish world-view. From this perspective, “What’s done cannot be undone” represents a kind of Kantian-Judaic fatalism whose suppressed counterfactual ought — “If only” — expresses despair at the impossibility of reconciliation through forgiveness.

Comay suggests that by the time Hegel wrote the Phenomenology of Spirit, he had left “this overtly anti-Semitic approach” behind, yet without “soften[ing] his earlier position on Kant” (95). She does not refer to Hegel’s discussion of Macbeth, but she does liken Lady Macbeth to the beautiful soul, who “cannot stop washing and wiping as it fades into a somnambulist swoon of ‘yearning consumption'” (119). Together, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth commit an unforgivable crime that allows neither of them to be “restored to life.”[11] “What’s done cannot be undone” — uttered twice in the play — may be characterized as Lady Macbeth’s despairing confession to her partner in crime: first in his presence and then when she is sleepwalking, removed from the world (despite the presence of spectators) in the solipsistic nightmare from which she manages to escape (if at all) only by committing suicide. “The wounds of the Spirit heal, and leave no scars behind” is precisely what neither Macbeth nor Lady Macbeth can say to each other. Hegel does say it, and the fact that he does represents, for Comay, the most dangerous moment of the Phenomenology — but also the most audacious, and precisely because of the Kantian slippages.

If Comay can endorse both Hegel’s critique of Kant and his Kantian slippages (as she can Lady Macbeth’s thesis and Hegel’s antithesis), it is by reading Hegelian forgiveness and reconciliation in terms borrowed from Benjamin. If the wounds of the Spirit heal and leave no scars behind, it is through a messianic intervention into the past, one that purports to fulfill the law through love for the sake of “those without hope.” The key to this reading is Comay’s temporal — and modal — construal of the “ought” and “as if.” Every “ought” and “as if” is a counterfactual of a special sort, whether it concerns the past, the present, or the future. Kant’s counterfactuals direct us toward the future: the question posed by past and present evil is whether the human race is constantly progressing “toward the better.”[12] Benjamin’s counterfactuals direct us toward the past: toward “a missed encounter, a lapsed experience, or even, in the end, another’s experience” (153). Here we can begin to appreciate the modal significance of Comay’s conception of trauma and of her implicit suggestion that not only time, but modality, is out of joint, since, through forgiveness, the actual reverts to the merely possible. Extending to Hegel the benefit of this doubt, Comay concludes that Hegelian forgiveness — qua undoing — is “rapidly approaching [i.e., ‘rushing toward’] Benjamin’s idea of a ‘Messianic cessation of happening,’ the revolutionary caesura in which the locomotive course of history is arrested” (146). It is this “possible” reading that saves Hegel from himself — and us from ourselves, were we to play the hard heart toward his own (witting or unwitting) confessions of evil.

[1] As noted by James Strachey in his introduction to Sigmund Freud, Civilization and Its Discontents, trans. and ed. James Strachey, W.W. Norton, 1989, p. 4.

[2] My thanks to Virginia C. Barry for calling my attention to this point.

[3] Elaine Scarry, The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World, Oxford University Press, 1987.

[4] Stanley Cavell, Disowning Knowledge in Seven Plays of Shakespeare, updated edition, Cambridge University Press, 2003, pp. 98ff. Cf. A.D. Nuttall, Why Does Tragedy Give Pleasure?, Oxford University Press, 1996.

[5] Hannah Arendt, On Revolution, Penguin, 1988, pp. 52-4.

[6] For a discussion of Hegelian forgiveness in relation to the comedy of Shakespeare’s Romances, see Jennifer Bates, Hegel and Shakespeare on Moral Imagination, State University of New York Press, 2010.

[7] Jacques Lacan, “Logical Time and the Assertion of Anticipated Certainty,” in Écrits: The First Complete Edition in English, trans. Bruce Fink in collaboration with Héloïse Fink and Russell Grigg, W.W. Norton & Company, 2006, pp. 161-75.

[8] G.W.F. Hegel, “The Spirit of Christianity and Its Fate,” in Hegel, Early Theological Writings, trans. T.M. Knox, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971, p. 205.

[9] Ibid., p. 229.

[10] Ibid., p. 205.

[11] This Dickensian phrase is meant to invoke the world of A Tale of Two Cities — another exploration of national self-constitution through the spectacle of the French Revolution, one in which the borderline separating actors from spectators is crossed.

[12] Immanuel Kant, The Conflict of the Faculties, trans. Mary Gregor, University of Nebraska Press, 1992, p. 141.

johnston ethics desire Seminar VII part 2 das Ding

Johnston, Adrian. “The Vicious Circle of the Super-Ego: The Pathological Trap of Guilt and the Beginning of Ethics.” Psychoanalytic Studies. 3.3/4 (2001): 411-424.

🙂 Johnston does not agree with Žižek’s take on das Ding.

Žižek’s definition: das Ding doesn’t exist prior to the ‘backwards glance’ of the nostalgic subject of the Symbolic wishing to have lost something he/she never possessed in the Žfirst place (das Ding is a result of the fundamental strategy of fantasy, wherein the structural impossibility of the drives’ ‘full satisfaction’ quajouissance obtained’ is concealed from the subject by making it seem as if this enjoyment is hypothetically re-obtainable).

However, this is a misleading exaggeration that treats Lacan as wholly Hegelian.

The most misleading feature of virtually every extant commentary on Lacan’s ethics of psychoanalysis is the attribution to him of the imperative “Do not give way on your desire!”

In the seventh seminar, Lacan does not present the link between desire and guilt in the form of a command, an injunction to ‘persist’ in one’s desire.

Instead, he merely states that guilt is the result of ‘ceding on’ (i.e., not enacting in reality, refraining from concrete actualization ) one’s desires“Je propose que la seule chose don t on puisse être coupable, au moins dans la perspective analytique, c’est d’avoir cédé sur son désir”.

At the beginning of this seminar, Lacan remarks that psychoanalysis is confronted , across the range of its analysands, with the omnipresence of guilt in human life.

Lacan is not so much interested in proposing a new prescriptive ethics as in comprehending the precise nature of ‘moral masochism’, in fully grasping how the constellation of the id, the super-ego, and the socio-symbolic Umwelt of reality ‘pathologize ’ the ethical Žfield.

At most, this Lacanian analytic diagnosis of moral masochism should be interpreted as a preparatory clearing of the ground for a genuine ethics, as a mapping out of the obstacles hindering the construction and enactment of a non-pathological ‘metaphysics of morals’. 417

Lacan repeatedly makes reference to the Freudian super-ego as an excessive, greedy, and out-of-control agency. Echoing Freud, he observes that, “the more one sacrifiŽces to it, the more it demands”.

The super-ego isn’t satisfied with mere external/behavioral conformity to ethico-moral precepts; it uncompromisingly insists upon the impossible purification of intentionality itself (thus, the super-ego is, in a manner of speaking, a spontaneous Kantian). 418

when Lacan speaks about being guilty for having ‘ceded’ or ‘given ground’ relative to one’s desire, what he really means is the following: the more the subject surrenders (to) his/her desires by obeying the restrictions of the Law, the more guilty he/she feels, since such concessions only aggravate the (unconscious) volatility and intensity of these same desires (namely,‘internal’ repressed desires which never fail to escape the notice of the omniscient authority of the sadistic super-ego).

Near the end of his 1974 television interview, Lacan clearly advances this claim in saying that, “Freud reminds us that it’s not evil, but good, that engenders guilt” (Lacan, p. 45).
To be Continued …

 

 

Žižek in Toronto 2012

Žižek in Toronto  Toronto 2 Oct. 2012.

Gangnam Style is exemplary of ideology today: it functions why? A quasi-religious rave experience, its not just this, its more making fun of yourself, ironic distance. Kung-fu Panda
The story in itself is ridiculously melodramatic, it is the form
What if a spiritual experience itself is disgusting, even if it is authentic.

Here is Ž talking about Gangnam in the United States at Todd McGowan’s place Oct 2012.  IF there ever was a PURE IDEOLOGICAL phenomenon it is this.  Rave, tech trance, repetitive.  All the madness at Gangnam in South Korea is there.  What fascinates me, it started as stupid song, it blew up into something SACRED.  We haven’t seen something like this since early Beatles.  100,000 people in a stadium all dancing.  They refer to him as messiah.  It’s exploding everywhere.  The words are obviously ironic, they make fun of the scene described by the song, but today’s functioning of ideology, you can make fun of it, not believe in it, but YOU ARE CAUGHT IN IT, IT WORKS.
Kungfu Panda: sacred warrior, it makes fun of its own ideology but it works.  How does it functions?? How do you get caught in this song? You don’t like it … when you hear some totally disgusting song, but you can’t get rid of it .. it functions like this, my small son said it was disgusting, he ended up listening to it everyday. SINTHOME condensation of stupid enjoyment, you cannot get rid of it. This is authentically sacred. Not claiming this is false, there is ambiguity between sublime and ridicuoulsy, obsene compulsive enjoyment that is the sacred.

Returns of the sacred, what is it reacting against? Today’s society in which there is less and less space for dimension of the sacred, is the way to approach stupid returns of the sacred, ok ridiculous reactions but ask: WHICH FORM OF SPIRITUALITY FITS PERFECTLY, WOULD BE IDEAL FOR OUR GLOBAL CAPITALIST society?  Is there a form of spirituality that would fit this society perfectly. Global capitalism, bio-genetic revolutions. I claim that a version of Bhuddism fits perfectly.

5 Nazi horror, transgression.
6 No ethnic cleansing without poetry, Levinas, Adorno, blame philosophers who do Totality, you brutally impose your vision on reality.
7 Edmund Burke, the revolutionaries were much more absolute, the reference to absolute can open up space of freedom
8 Poets, you need absolute mythic vision to function as a screen to kill people
9
10
11
12
1
3
14
15
1 Cogito Ergo Sum: The mistake is at the very beginning, cogito is a process, totally non-substantial, but going to res cogitans, thing which thinks is wrong.  Rennaisance is humanism, but lesson of Descartes, Kant, Hegel, the wealth of our personality is a mask, there is a VOID there.  Transcendental tradition of modern philosophy, the wealth of human being is the mask of a VOID.  I as a Cartesian am ready to sacrifice all my content, my emotions, what I can’t give away is the VOID itself.
2 Intelligent Cognitivists, like Daniel Dennett
3

johnston desire ethics Kant Antigone seminar VII

Johnston, Adrian. “The Vicious Circle of the Super-Ego: The Pathological Trap of Guilt and the Beginning of Ethics.” Psychoanalytic Studies. 3.3/4 (2001): 411-424.

🙂 In this article Johnston takes on Lacan’s “Do not give way on your desire!” What does this mean? It does not mean, “do not give way on your jouissance!”

AJ starts with Nietzsche. Why? Because Nietzsche is totally against Kant.

In the standard version of the Kantian schema, the subject’s intentions are most ethical when they are least tied to the particularity of the individual (i.e., his/her inclinations, desires, wishes, circumstances, etc.).

The categorical imperative (“I am never to act otherwise than so that I could also will that my maxim should become a universal law”) functions as a kind of ‘sieve’ meant to strain out, as much as possible, these pathological materials tainting the intentional purity of duty.

Conversely, the injunction of the eternal return—perhaps this injunction is capable of being rendered in the imperative form as “I am never to act otherwise than so that I could also will that my concrete, unique , and utterly individual act should be ‘universalized’, namely, should endlessly recur for all eternity ”—demands exactly the opposite of the categorical imperative.

In a Nietzschean ‘system of valuation’, rather than being the basest, most unworthy of intentional states , the particular, idiosyncratic desires of the individual subject are the highest standards by which to measure actions.

Only if an action expresses the strongest of subjective urges, urges so strong that the subject would will them to infinitely manifest themselves again and again in all their singular uniqueness, is it of any worth.  412

Most reading s of the Lacanian dictum “Do not give way on your desire!” understand him to be proposing something similar to Nietzsche: (pure) desire is conceived of as jouissance, as the uncompromising , unconditional thrust of Trieb once operative outside the confining consequentialist calculus of the pleasure principle.

The subjective particularity of pure desire is ethical precisely when its strength overwhelms the mitigating influence of the pleasure-oriented ego.

Various commentaries on the seventh seminar point to the tragic Žfigure of Antigone as proof that this is exactly what Lacan intends to convey. Antigone’s passionate attachment to her dead brother Polyneices drives her to transgress Creon’s edict forbidding the burial of the corpse. Her excessive ‘love’ is then compared with the Todestrieb, since Antigone is compelled to disregard the tragic consequences that she is fully aware await her in the wake of her act.

A Real passage á l’acte (i.e., Antigone’s burial of her brother as a result of her desire) transgressively disrupts the reign of a Symbolic system of Law (i.e., Creon’s denial of funerary rites for Polyneices on the grounds of the interests of the polis).

Is this the distilled essence of Lacan’s ‘ethics of psychoanalysis?’ Is he, like Nietzsche, simply interested in turning Kant on his head, in unreservedly transforming Kant into Sade?

Lacan explicitly states that desire arises from the sacrifice of jouissance: <span style=”font-weight: bold; font-size: 11pt;”>not ceding on one’s desire</span> would seem to entail not surrendering to the siren-song of jouissance, not capitulating to the uncompromising demands of Trieb.

Lacan describes desire as opposing jouissance—“desire is a defense, a prohibition against going beyond a certain limit in jouissance” 413

Lacan means, then “not giving ground on desire” is a translation of Kant’s insistence on the exclusion of pathological drives from properly ethical intentionality, with the psychoanalytic qualiŽfication that the detachment from these drives is itself achieved through and sustained by a subl(im)ation of inclination, a ‘self-subversion’ of Trieb. 413

Lacanian Desire

One of the easiest ways to gain a preliminary understanding of Lacanian desire is by returning to the Freudian concepts of Trieb and sublimation. For Freud, sublimation is the typical means by which Trieb adapts itself to the constraints and obstacles it comes to encounter at the level of the reality principle. Reality forbids certain drive-aims qua the attainment of satisfaction linked to determinate drive-objects. Thus, reality is said to be responsible for what Freud designates as ‘aim-inhibition ’ (a catalyst for sublimation).

The aim-inhibited drive then seeks other forms of satisfaction via different objects; and, if these alternate modes of securing gratiŽcation are not at odd s with the various prohibitions of the reality principle (usually, socio-cultural laws and norms), then the new libidinal arrangement is dubbed a successful sublimation of the drive .

Furthermore in Civilization and Its Discontents, he argues that ‘instinctual renunciation’ (i.e., the aim-inhibition of the drives demanded by human reality) is, despite appearances to the contrary, an unavoidable libidinal fate for all subjects.

As such, the Freudian subject lives in a state of unsatisfactory compromise: sublimation provides pleasurable outlets for Trieb, but Trieb itself is incapable of ever being fully satisfied with these compromises, since they are, by the very definition of the mechanism of sublimation, deviations from the original cathetic trajectory (i.e., the ‘earliest state of affairs’ which all drives struggle in vain to recover; in the seventh seminar, Lacan designates this posited ‘ground zero’ of the libidinal economy das Ding). The libidinal life of the human being is therefore marked by certain constitutive ‘lacks’ or ‘absences’—as Lacan puts it, the ‘sovereign Good’ of das Ding is always missing from the reality of subjective ‘ex-sistence’ — and this condition of (non-)existence is precisely what Lacan intends for his notion of ‘desire’ to designate.  413

Desire is the residual remainder/by-product of the subjection of jouissance (i.e., Trieb an sich, the unconditional attachment to das Ding) to the ego-mediated negotiations between the pleasure and reality principles. 414

In other words, desire is symptomatic of the drives’ dissatisfaction with the pleasure-yielding compromises of sublimation. 414

Lacan’s seventh seminar contains two separate lines of argumentation:

1. Lacan seeks to clarify and further develop Freud’s analyses of conscience as a manifestation of a pathological ‘moral masochism’ fueled by an insatiable super-ego;

2. Lacan lays down the preliminary groundwork for a psychoanalytic meta-ethical theory based on the possibility of desire coming to function in a ‘pure’, properly ethical fashion.

These two dimensions of Lacan’s so-called ‘ethics of psychoanalysis’ must not be conflated, since doing so results in either muddleheaded confusion or outright error.

 

To be continued …

inter-subjectivity trans-subjectivity

Hook, Derek.  “Towards a Lacanian Group Psychology: The Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Trans-subjective.”  Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour. 2012.

Lacan (Sem I and Sem II) is constantly wary of subjective meaning as a questionable ego-construction designed to substantiate effects of knowledge and stability. He will approach a discourse not as a set of thematic or narrative contents, but rather in view of the set of relations, in terms of the particular social links, the structural positions between people that it holds together (Lacan, 2007).

His attention is not drawn by the “descriptive materials” of a discourse, i.e. its narratives, meanings, stories, etc., butby the relations established between participants, hence his (2007) model of four fundamental social bonds (the discourses of the master, university, analyst and hysteric) in which the thematic contents may vary widely despite that the structural positions remain intact (master and subject; doctor and patient; teacher and pupil, etc).

Lacan is thus interested in structural positions that are not simply “secured” by meaning or by the contents of discursive practices, but which remain in question, uncertain, reliant on others” views which are themselves contingent on the pre sumption of given social norms and values. His attempt is precisely to circumvent the psychological (or in his jargon “imaginary”) concerns of subjective sense-making and meaning by looking to an underlying grid of inter-linked symbolic positions. These positions are both more precarious and opaque than those afforded by subjective attempts at making-meaning. They are, furthermore, always linked, as in the prisoner’s dilemma, to other positions (indeed, to a chain of interlinked positions). Furthermore, each of these related positions remains uncertainly related to a key signifier—in the prisoner’s dilemma, the white disk—which remains both conventional (it embodies a certain consensus) and yet uncer-tain (in the pragmatic sense of what it may mean here and now). Lacan’s focus on the trans-subjective, certainly inasmuch as it prioritizes structural positions and the contingency of symbolic values, exists always at a step’s remove from the (inter)subjectivity of discursive positioning that focuses on subjective forms of meaning, narrative and sense-making.  9

[ To be continued]

brilliant lecture Ž limits of Hegel 2011 Lebrun rips off Sekine and Albritton

The Limits to Hegel  26 March 2011. The Birkbeck Institute for the Humanities 

Hegel and Marx
Passage from money to capital is clearly formuated in Hegelian terms: Substance and Subject

Oh here what does Žižek say but only the capital is the SUBJECT, as self-positing, self-mediating agent and AUTOMATIC subject, just wants more, more profit, just blindly repeats itself.  What Hegel was no able to think was this weird unity dead blindly repetitive, conceptual self mediation and blind repetition.

When Marx describes the dance of capital, as the Hegel value of , but for Marx this is not the ultimate truth, the autonomy of this process, the self-generation of value is an ideological myth, it feeds on exploitation of workers and so on.

But we can say what Hegel describes here is not simply ideology, but its not also the brutal reality, it is something in-between the objective fantasy of capital. The ambiguous status of the reference to Hegel’s dialectic in Marx.  there are two fundamentally different references:  Grundrisse its the model of liberation, unity, reconciliation, subjectivy reconciled with substance.

Hegelian Dialectic in Capital not a model for process of liberation, but alienated capitalist reproduction, the big question here was the late Marx simply right? Lukacs is the model of the first reading, liberation, Hegel was right he just applied his dialectic matrix on wrong subject, replace Absolute Spirit with working class you got it, Adorno, dialectic is not dialectic of liberation but the very form of reproduction of alienated society. This idea that liberation will be a step OUT of dialectics. Dialectics is logic of alienated society. Ž says which should be much more DARING. Both Lukacs and Adorno is their reading of Hegel, is reconcilation is simply appropriation of the substance. If you really want to understand Hegel, you should see that reconcilation is not collective subject swallows reality, it is much more pessimistic mood.

DISGRACE one of the darkest novels that I know. It is not simple reaction of a deceived liberal to the new South Africa. But the final situation of the hero, this total loss, is maybe the closest we get to Hegelian reconciliation.

Maybe the way to go back to Hegel, is to ABANDON hyper idealist subjectivity reading where subject swallows everything, not its closer to Christian notion is that you get out of alienation not by overcoming it, you get out of alienation by redoubling it.   The formula for me

The secrets of the Egyptians for us were secrets to the Egyptians themselves.

To go beyond Hegel, is to discover Hegelian dimension precisely in what Hegel was unable to grasp.

What Hegel could not have imagined is basic paradox of capitalist societies, is that you have formal legal equality, but that relationship of domination reproduces itself precisely under the form of equality.  Domination that remains even when you abolish all direct forms of domination. In a modern democracy, certainly does not exclude the emergence of wealth and profound distinctions of rich and poor, there are still workers and managers, still profit and exploitation, but the new cultural equality, is infused with a powerful hatred of hierarchies and class caste distinctions, it is in our socieities permitted to be wealthy so long as the rich man is as vulgar as everyone else.

Possibility of a genuine reappropriation of HIGH culture.

RABBLE, the part of no-part

To be continued …

belief materialism subjectivity neighbour no big Other

Simon Critchley on love and self-loss

spiritual daring that attempts to eviserate and excoriate the old self, love dares the self to leave the self behind, to hue and hack to make a space large enough for love to enter love is an enrichment through impoverisment.

Slavoj Žižek, Tilton Gallery, New York City, 19 Nov. 2006

Belief

Steve Martin in Leap Of Faith: He really produced a miracle and breaks down
Atheism is secret inner conviction of believers. Internal doubt, but believe in external rituals.
Either we are alone in universe or there are aliens/God. Both situations are toally unbearable. WE would break down if aliens visited us, but we can’t stand that nobody is there too.
Ecology We can’t be sure or its the big multinationals. No we know but we are not ready to believe, you know global warming, but you look outside and see the sun and flowers. WE are wired, we can’t accept because our BEING itself disappears.
Free is a true human who is ready to make this step. One guy did it Mao in 1955. Why chinese people should not be afraid of American Atom Bomb. “But eve in atom bombs so powerful, they would blow the earth up, it would just be a minor event for the solar system.” This totally crazy position where you are ready to put everything at risk is the true radical position.

In order to truly confront global warming, we must cut our organic embeddedness. Gap between poetic universe and scientific results. Even if we know something to be NOT true, our poetry is naive. WE know there is no sunset, the earth rotation which moves, not sun, not sunset. The true tasks of poetry today is to make poetry at level of results. Oh my darling let’s meet a last quarter turn of earth.

Only in Christianity God himself for a moment becomes an atheist.
This idea of imperfect God. Wait a minute let’s call God. Wait a minute this is a old stupid man who screwed up creation. God accepts, yes you are right … What is the underlying message?
What is materialism
A particle position/velocity. REALITY IS IN-ITSELF UNDETERMINED. THINGS GET FUZZY as if they disappear into nothingness.  Here he uses the famous video game analogy but doesn’t mention or credit that guy Nicholas somebody’s book.

We should read reality like this computer game?  What if God underestimated us.  God thought when he programmed the universe, a don’t have to program all the way down, I ‘ll go so far as atoms.  God was too lazy to program further.  He cheated a bit.

Materialism at its purest

The movie 13th floor.  You reach the end, earth is no longer earth, it slowly moves into digital coordinates.  Now this would be the true materialism.  To think the unfinished character of reality, we don’t need God to imagine it.  Reality is in-itself unfinished.

When you approach too close an image, all you see are stains.     Modernism is an event, postmodernism is NOT.

Badiou and Multiplicity
His ontology of multiplicity, this dispersal multiplicity is fundamental of ontology, but it is not a multiplicity of ONES, his ontology is an ontology the oppositie of zero is not ONE, the primoridal fact is multiple in a void and then comes ONE.

What are the consequences for subjectivity, what kind of subjectivity fits this universe?
It is an EMPTY SUBJECTIVITY.  Recently a publisher asked me to do what I hate.  Books have on the back cover, personal idiosyncracies, John Irving is a wrestler and gardens in his spare time … Ž wanted to test them: in his free time Ž surfs internet for child porn and teaches his son to pull the legs off of spiders.  This supplement is a FUNDAMENTAL LIE.
The core of the subject is the THING and that’s the neighbour.

Neighbour is a THING. THING is the Impenetrable abyss of the Other’s desire. Everything else like gardening is to cover it up.

Here is the famous phone call on the plane about to crash
You call your beloved and say “I love you.” when the whole world is falling apart, what remains is love.  No, I am more a pessimist.  I claim that in that totally desperate scary position, you lie to yourself, you want to die with a clear account in good memory, at that point you lie.

A truly atheist crazy thing: imagine somebody who, the plane is falling down you are married, Honey just so that it is clear, the marriage was hell I want to divorce you. Bye.  That would be an act.
Decentrement of subjectivity
When you are at your innermost yourself, you are NOT yourself, you are LYING. You are at a distance from TRUTH.
Woman is a SYMPTOM OF MAN. It means for Lacan the symptom pre-exists what it is a symptom of. If woman is a symptom, imagine a woman walking around, do you want me to be your symptom. TO be an empty pure symptom, a NUN, A truly AUTHENTIC position, it could be a radical feminine position, I will remain a pure symptom. Woman can do it, man can’t do it. Man needs a symptom.
DaVINCI Code the movie
X-files of Darian Leader.  Why do some many things happen OUT THERE. To cover up the fact that nothing happens here.  Nothing happens here, no sex between the characters.
Abyss of subjectivity
Openness, our elementary reaction is FEAR, especially today the inexistence of the big OTHER is more marked than ever.  Not just symbolic, but what is truly horrifying, in ecology, that nature itself as ultimate big Other is disappearing.  NATURE is impenetrable density of our background, but the moment through genome and bio-genetic manipulations, NATURE itself turns into something else, it is no longer nature in terms of dense impenetrability.
Predominant mode of politics FEAR
Expert administration, to go a little bit up, to mobilize people, is to mobilize them with some kind of a fear, fear of immigrants/state/crime/terrorists
PReviously science nonetheless wanted to understand reproduce, now it can reproduce new forms of monsters. Cows with 2 heads, freaks of nature. Things will explode out of control. YET Behind all this is FEAR OF THE NEIGHBOUR
Control the explosive dimension of the neighbour.

Sam Harris the End of Belief; justifies torture.  Truth Pill, a de-caffeinated torture.  Subjectively the person who takes the pill would suffer incredibly, but outwardly it looks like he just took a nap.  Fat-free cakes, alcohol without beer.

Why is this reasoning wrong.  When Sam Harris talks about this proximity, is the Other too close to us or not.  He’s too short there. This proximity is not physical proximity. It’s the proximity precisely of the neighbour who can be too close even if he is far away.   That’s the definition of the neighbour.  The neighbour INTRUDES.  So I claim that this argument only works if the Other human beings are no longer treated as neighbours, they simply become objectivized in this field of calculation where you can say Ok I can torture you here to prevent a greater number of suffering …  The dimension of the neighbour gets lost.  For Sam Harris the dimension of the neighbour gets lost.

All our outbursts of violence are ultimately outbursts against the neighbour. The neighbour being not simply the other person in front of us but the ABYSS of the OTHER which can be detected from our fantasmatic symbolic space.

It’s easy to praise today’s global capitalism, oh a big village, but we are still Neighbours, with our own symbolic universe, our own way of enjoying, what we need today is not more communication, but more distance, we need a NEW CODE OF DISCRETION. We need to ignore others more. This is the great art today.

SOLUTIONS to proximity of neighbour is TOLERANCE. Ž criticizes new book by Wendy Brown. Tolerance as a solution to the neighbour is a problem.

Culturalization of politics, politics is culturalized.  Fukuyama and Huntington, Clash of Civilizations is not opposed to End of History.  Politics as rational administration, the only true conflicts are ones of culture.

Part 8 is a good discussion by Žižek
Good discussion of Amish and subjectivity
The moment you change them substantially, the whole attitude to community changes, you undermine communal identity and change into liberal subject, he made have freedom of choice but its no longer Amish culture.

Problem with Wendy Brown: They remain caught in pseudo-Marxist denouncing false universality, it goes like this, what appears to be a neutral universality really privleges a certain strata. Human rights not really universal human rights, the privlege male white of certain property, human rights are natural to every man, insofar as they are resonable human man, woman nope to passionate, workers have no time, criminals are out, savages are out …

I claim two things should be opposed, of course there is a GAP between universal human rights and how they truly function.  Nonetheless this very GAP has its positive aspects

It allows for a re-writing of it.  Mary Wollstencraft, Haiti revolution.

if you read closely the great idealist tradition of Hegel, its that this is only one side of the story, this denouncing universality as false universality.  We also have the opposite mystification which is much more interesting: your particular interests is already the tool for the actualization of universality.

Its not that formal universality masks you particular interests, its the opposite, your particularity you are not aware of the universal dimension of what you are doing, you think you are following particular interests, but you don’t see the universal nature of you acts.

So it is totally wrong to play the game capitalism is Eurocentric

As a capitalist subject, in your OWN INDIVIDUAL SELF-EXPERIENCE, you relate yourself to yourself as UNIVERSAL.

I am in myself an abstract universal, what I am in my particular identity, a teacher is something contingent, not part of my nature.  You experience yourself in the core of your being as universal.  Capitalist is universal in this way, it undermines the culture from within.

Example TIBETAN CULTURE and the Chinese onslaught
Descartes At first foreign cultures appeared strange, but then I asked myself, what if I’m viewed from foreign gaze, I must appear to them stupid idiosyncratic. Core of modernity, when you see your core of your identity as something as ultimately something contingent.
Feminism outside of modernity as Ying-Yang, we should reassert the feminine aspect etc.

The Neighbour
The way to break out this eternal Levinasian problematic, oh neighbour, abyss, otherness, should we respect/tolerate the other or not, This is a false problem
We should embrace this RADICAL UNIVERSALITY, Not i’m difference, we share common concerns
What interests me is my culture has some fights in it, your culture has some fights, what I want to share with you is the universality of our struggles.

Cultural solipsism: how can I be sure I’m not imposing, I am not fully myself, and can I share it with you
I am not myself, there is in the very core of myself a universality that surpasses me.

Ethics

Lacan: Have you acted in conformity with your desire, do not compromise/betray your desire.  THIS IS AMBIGUOUS.
Psychoanalysis can justify anything.  Stupid psychoanalysts, oh end oppression, liberate it and everything will be ok.
Israel Defense Forces: main theoretical references is Deleuze Guttari.  Strange things are happening.

Immoral Ethics: Nietzschean ethics
It doesn’t matter what you do, be authentic, be engaged.

Kantian Ethics: you not only responsible to do you duty, but you are responsible to determine what is your duty

There is no big Other, you can’t put on the big Other to tell you what is your duty, you have to be fully responsible for it.  Hannah Arendt is wrong, Eichmann said I just did my duty.  No you can’t do this.  YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED to use duty as an excuse to do my duty.  You have to FULLY STAND BEHIND your duty. No Guarantee behind the big Other.

Questions
Violent imposition of a universal will
Native Americans and white stupidity

Abandon that which you are afraid to lose Accept the loss, become universal. You are afraid to lose you particular identity, my solution is NOT identity politics. What if what you are so passionately protecting is in itself worthless, abandon that. As an attitude, I refer to Mao, “So what, a minor disturbance in the solar system.”
I think that again, the solution is don’t fear, be calm enjoy your life.  No the solution is more radical, accept that the big Other does NOT exist.

Nature, there is no balanced nature
There is no way to return.
We need to re-assert BIG COLLECTIVE decisions. without this we are lost

We have a struggle you have a struggle, let’s see how we can join our struggles. Universality is the universality of struggle.

Chinese Model of Capitalism

johnston on lacan

Johnston, Adrian, “Jacques Lacan”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2013 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.).

Download the MS doc here

Jacques Lacan

First published Tue Apr 2, 2013

Jacques Lacan (April 13, 1901 to September 9, 1981) was a major figure in Parisian intellectual life for much of the twentieth century. Sometimes referred to as “the French Freud,” he is an important figure in the history of psychoanalysis. His teachings and writings explore the significance of Freud’s discovery of the unconscious both within the theory and practice of analysis itself as well as in connection with a wide range of other disciplines. Particularly for those interested in the philosophical dimensions of Freudian thought, Lacan’s oeuvre is invaluable. Over the course of the past fifty-plus years, Lacanian ideas have become central to the various receptions of things psychoanalytic in Continental philosophical circles especially.

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let it go

Buddha

I believe one of the hardest obstacles for people to overcome, is what they feel is their inability to let go.

Whether it is letting go of a past hurt caused by a loved one, anger, resentment, jealousy, or even just material desires. Our desire to hold onto things keeps us from truly feeling free and living our life with as little worry as possible. That is why many Buddhist teachings talk about letting go. One of my better analogies about letting go came about while discussing how to overcome anger in a past relationship.

“Imagine your life like a gentle river that flows seamlessly along. You are in the middle floating peacefully as the river is taking you on your path or journey through life. Along the way you pick up stones and rocks that begin to weigh you down. This is the pain and harm caused towards you throughout life. As you continue to have new experiences that cause you anger, pain, jealousy, etc, you continue to grab more and more stones, weighing you down further. You become consumed by the water, your life is drowning and all you can feel is the pain that is caused by all the stones you have picked up along the way, never realizing that by simply letting go of the stones, you would once again rise to the top and float peacefully down the river through your path with life.”

Everything we cling and hold on to adds weight to our mind, bodies, and our energy. By allowing our past to grab hold of our present and remain there, we continue to give power to the person or things that have caused a disruption of our happiness and peace. It is important for us to recognize our unhappiness and take immediate steps to remedy the problem. As many have stated numerous times, finding happiness in difficult situations is ‘easier said than done’, and you are correct. If finding our inner peace and happiness came easy, the world would be a very different place. Unfortunately, it is much easier to find anger, hate, hurt, pain, jealousy, etc than it is to find our inner peace, compassion, and happiness. That is why we practice.

The quickest way to overcome the hurt caused by another is to learn how to forgive. First, you must forgive yourself for allowing the pain and hurt to effect your happiness. Then you must forgive the person or things that have caused you hurt. Once you have forgiven them, you must be willing to let it go and stay in the past. If you continue holding onto the past, it is like dragging a boulder behind you. Sure, you might get where you are going, but the weight of your past makes the journey hard, painful, and exhausting. Let go of the past as you would let go of something physical.

Try this exercise for letting go of your past. Imagine yourself on a tall bridge looking down over a river. The river is deep and moving rapidly and flowing behind you. As you are on top of the bridge, imagine the hurt and pain from your past. Imagine yourself taking that hurt and physically placing it in a canvas bag tied with rope. As you seal the bag, you show gratitude and thanks for your experience with the hurt, knowing that you will never feel this hurt again, as it will no longer be able to effect you as it has so many times. Now imagine tossing it over the bridge and watch it fall, farther and farther down until it finally hits the water. You watch the hurt splash and then rapidly move down the river, quickly floating out of sight…forever.

Do this exercise every time you want to get past negative emotions, and you will begin to understand how much easier it becomes to let go of things and the true power of letting go and being at peace.