The three paradoxes theory proposes a new paradigm on how the human mind would have formed through the evolution of our species. Naturally, it offers new leads on the formalisation of the psychoanalytic theory. Notably, the definition of the unconscious has to be enshrined in this conception of the mind's structure. That is what this… Lire la suite I – On the nature of the unconscious
Étiquette : human
VI – Structured constellation and the tensor
Text in pdf : Clémence Ortega Douville - Hermeneulogy - VI - Structured constellation and the tensor 'Dès lors, de quoi nous satisfaisons-nous exactement quand le sujet nous dit que les choses sont arrivées à ce point de déclic où il a le sentiment de la vérité ?' In Jacques Lacan, Le séminaire - livre… Lire la suite VI – Structured constellation and the tensor
The most probable case : the hand paradox and gravity in being human
Text in pdf : Clémence Ortega Douville - The most probable case Before to begin, we always wonder how the hands are going to take over our decision to do things. What we will start with. How we would be able to go uninterrupted. As well, as it is to pose the question of our… Lire la suite The most probable case : the hand paradox and gravity in being human
I – First moment : causal associative chains
Text in pdf : Clémence Ortega Douville - Hermeneulogy - I - Causal associative chains We are now entering a new phase of our developments that would be the setting of the foundations and conceptual territory of Hermeneulogy. As precedently announced, this field would have for object a cross-disciplinary approach to the structures of the… Lire la suite I – First moment : causal associative chains
II. Heterogenous spaces and capacity to action
Text in pdf : Clémence Ortega Douville - The place the hands can't seek - II - Heterogenous spaces and capacity to action The mind is a network. It is formed to a great extent through learning, experimenting, connecting experiences and reinforcing them. To know what to do with our body in our environment includes… Lire la suite II. Heterogenous spaces and capacity to action