Lacan -

Whether you are a student of critical theory, a clinician, or simply a student of existence, understanding Lacan means abandoning the search for a "true self." It means learning to read desire in the slips of the tongue, the logic of a dream, or the desperate plea for recognition. This is a long voyage into the three orders that structure reality: The Mantra: "The Unconscious is Structured Like a Language" Before diving into the topography of the mind, one must grasp Lacan’s foundational axiom. Where Freud spoke of condensation and displacement , Lacan saw metaphor and metonymy . Taking a structuralist view of Saussurian linguistics, Lacan argued that the unconscious is not a primordial soup of instinctual drives (a cellar of monsters, as it were); rather, it is a linguistic network .

In the pantheon of 20th-century intellectual titans, few names inspire both reverence and exasperation quite like Jacques Lacan . To the uninitiated, his work is a forbidding fortress of mathematical formulae, Hegelian dialectics, and pun-filled neologisms. To his followers, he is the "French Freud"—the man who rescued psychoanalysis from the flat, ego-psychology of American empiricism and returned it to the scandalous, subversive core of its discovery: the radical decentering of the self. Whether you are a student of critical theory,

Critics call him a charlatan who hid a paucity of ideas behind mathematical gibberish (the mathemes ). Defenders call him the most important thinker of subjectivity since Freud. Taking a structuralist view of Saussurian linguistics, Lacan