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Pierre-Gilles Gueguen
Among the responsibilities which fall to the analyst, there is a
special one which falls to the School and its analysts: that of keeping
the pass alive, and making of it something which is lived [faire
vivre la passe]. Lacan’s wish, as formulated explicitly in Note
italienne, was that analysts should testify to the importance they
attach to their belief in the unconscious, and that they should be
recruited on that basis. Under the impulsion of Jacques-Alain Miller, we
have hence created the School of the Pass.
This responsibility, once formulated, has appeared in our
orientation as an ethical duty. I will choose to comment upon this duty
from two practices: that of the passant who strives towards a speaking
well [bien dire] that conforms to (this) ethics, and that of the analyst
of the cartel of the pass, who searches to discern in the testimony the
right angle under which the articulation of the discourse of the patient
to the experience of the real manifests itself. To tell the truth, this is
not limiting, for each one of us who claims to analyse themselves, is
concerned with the belief in the unconscious linked to one’s practical
experience of it.
Let us begin with the analysand in the procedure of the pass. He
testifies to a relation with what we call an ‘unconscious knowledge’.
It is even on the basis of this knowledge, acquired from one’s own
analysis, that he attempts to make the Cartel perceive the trajectory of
his treatment, and how he has been able to touch the real. As always, in
analysis, two points are essential in this testimony: the beginning and
the end of the analysis. They determine a course in which the history of
the analysand, in its signifying determinations, has been taken up and
reshaped.
For him, it thus concerns: firstly, saying what his analysis has
been; and secondly, indicating how the trajectory of his analysis has come
to an end. In itself this constitutes a practical experience of knowledge,
since it is a question of a symbolic chain created in and through the
analysis. The knowledge that is born there was not perceived by the
patient before the experience of the couch: an unconscious knowledge
“which does not calculate, but nonetheless works for jouissance”.1
If it is an experience of knowledge, analysis is also an experience
of belief, since one must be the dupe of the axiomatic Other scene of
Freud so that an other knowledge (and one which is not a metalanguage)
inserts itself into common language, surfacing from the poverty of
everyday words. The pass is the enactment of this belief in the effort of
transmitting a subjective experience of knowledge.
This unprecedented subjective experience necessitates what we often
call ‘the authenticity’ of the subject. This term, although it is
inadequate, calls forth a relation to the truth of the experience
transmitted. Indeed, truth is in question, in effect as cause. This is
precisely what Lacan began by recalling, asserting it with force, only
then to signal2 that truth is suspect from a certain angle in
so far as it can just as well be entirely reclaimed by religion. He will
even end up demonstrating the relations of sorority between truth and jouissance.
For truth cannot be all spoken, and is even the sister of jouissance when given as absolute. Nevertheless the experience of
the pass is not thinkable without the half-saying of truth, without it
being brought to the point at which truth is ‘put on her guard in the
moment of the cause of desire’.
Thus the accent of truth cannot be ignored in the experience of the
pass.
From another perspective, knowledge drawn from the unconscious is a
semblant: it is created from nothing and woven out of language (this is
what Lacan designates with his ‘Nihil’ from which the fiction of
language [fiction langagière]
originates in his account of The
Logic of Fantasy’).3 Expressed in language, this
knowledge drawn from nothing nevertheless makes a social bond, and Lacan
even hoped that from this knowledge a new form of social bond would be
created. Lastly, unconscious knowledge, as in science, is correlated to a
real upon which it has effects. This is why Lacan could invoke
‘psychoanalytic science’ at the end of his Ecrits
and, even as late as 1973, again speak of ‘our science’ in order to
designate analytic practice.
In presenting his ‘triangle of knowledges’ 4
(science, semblant, truth), Jacques-Alain Miller signalled that for Lacan
scientific exigency has to do with the clinic as such, while rhetorical
exigency manifests itself in relation to the ‘well spoken’ of ethics.
And indeed, the pass certainly presents itself as a clinical experience,
but it is one in which the manner of speaking is essential. This manner
nevertheless proves insufficient, for one must succeed in making the real
in question pass into speech, the real in which the symptom is entangled.
Thus the psychoanalytic experience begins with a response of the
real caught in the initial symptom, the symptom from which the subject
suffers and which pushes him to articulate it in the form of a complaint
addressed to the Other. It ends with another response of the real,
accompanied by a consent of the subject, what we call the final
identification with the symptom. This identification with the fundamental
symptom is what the subject has a very particular responsibility for when
he is an analyst, since he must know how to make
do with it, which is to say he
must know how to make it serve the analytic cause (an eminently political
position).
If transmission through the pass is so difficult, it is because, as
in science, it necessitates the fabrication of a knowledge that rests on
reason, a coherent, logical knowledge: ‘The unconscious has to do with
pure logic’.5 But it is also because the pass cannot take
place without, as in religion, putting a belief into play. There is no
doubt that in analysis belief concerns the unconscious and not the father,
but nonetheless it obliges us to situate this latter.
It may be appropriate to situate between science and religion the
walls of this narrow and profound pass which Lacan evokes in Seminar XI as
‘the two walls of the impossible’: the testimony is certainly not all
scientific, but neither is it made entirely out of a belief in truth.
The surprising thing is that this passage between belief and
knowledge permits the subject to constitute a certainty. Nor is it less
surprising that this makes for transmission. And I will distinguish
between transmission and teaching with regard to this point. It is not
certain that the pass as such is, properly speaking, a teaching when it is
reported to the passer, in the sense that it does not aim at delivering a
knowledge which is integrally (transmissible) to the greatest number. It
aims, on the contrary, to produce a knowledge which surprises, which rings
true, while leaving it to the cartel of the pass and to the future AE to
teach it if they can: testimony and transmission falls to the passant,
while the task of trying to teach what has been transmitted falls to the
cartel and the AE. This distinction, which may seem very formal, is in
fact crucial. In the pass there must be not only a demonstration but also
an enunciation, not only a truth but also a drive, what one likes to call
an ‘encounter with the real’: a transmission is thus more than a
teaching.
The relation of the pass to the impossible of the real, and to what
approximates to it through its rim-like structure, in itself contains a
difficulty that is often remarked upon: for what is at stake is precisely
the saying of that which cannot be said, namely the impossible: as in
science, what is at stake in the pass is to introduce some symbolic in the
real, and, as in belief, what is at stake is to raise to the level of
truth, i.e. to that of the universal, that which can only be contingent
and therefore singular. To
believe in the unconscious: For
Freud, the unconscious was, first of all, the instrument for the proof of
truth in reality. And, more specifically, the Freudian investigation
brought to light, first of all, the truth of an event which has had an
impact on the body and the mind, a brutal encounter, too brutal, with the
real of the sexual, in the form of the trauma. In the early years of
psychoanalysis, this real was essentially attributed to the father. This
deductive sequence seems very archaic with regard to ulterior
elaborations.
Let us nevertheless note that it brings to light: 1.
a jouissance which was misrecognised [méconnue] and which is a jouissance
of the body of the subject. 2.
that this jouissance
is then inscribed in the form of a symptom (in the event, hysterical). 3.
that the said jouissance
is manifested as a rupture of the homeostasis of sense in which the
subject basked until then, ‘happy’. 4.
that this effraction is attributed to the Other.
We do not need anything else in order to characterise the
unconscious as the operator which allows for a new distribution of jouissance on the basis of a sexual knowledge, and for the emergence
of a sexual sense, of a new semblant each time that a rupture of sense
becomes present for the analysand, a non-sense, a gap in the signifying
chain which governs the homeostasis of the body.
The result of this approach is that to believe in the unconscious
is not so much to believe in the existence of a reservoir of buried
thoughts, as, to quote Lacan, ‘to believe in an operator of the cut’.
The unconscious is not to be substantivised, it is not a
metalanguage, it is not buried in any depths, it is ‘outside’.6
But how are we to believe in an operator of the cut? Let us note,
first of all, that it is verified, like science, through its effects on
the real. Each treatment, one by one, testifies to the effects of
unconscious interpretation on symptoms (for example, on the manner in
which the libido relocalised itself on the body under the influence of the
signifier). There is also an empiricism, a realism of the belief in the
unconscious which results from these effects. In passing, this is the
method used for the ontological proof of the existence of God.7
Let us recognise, nevertheless, that to believe in the unconscious is
closer to believing in a mathematical mode of proof or the theory of
relativity than to believe in God. Belief
in the unconscious and religious belief One
does not demonstrate the unconscious, any more than, in religion, one
demonstrates God; at most we assent to it. One must, first of all, believe
in the Freudian gesture. Let us be clear on this point: psychoanalysis is
not the religion of Freud, although he had his idolatrous followers -
so did Lacan. Psychoanalysis mobilises a whole belief in a unique gesture
which only finds its equivalent in Descartes’ Cogito.
All the same, one does not believe the unconscious, one believes in it,
and this is why the fragment of truth that it delivers through
interpretation calls for free association and repetition, which end up by
pointing to the tuché.
Let us say that in any case, the passant
as well as the members of the Cartel of the pass, will tend to rely
more on formations of the unconscious than on the purely declarative
effects of the passant. Let’s take, for example, the passant who may be
declaring an effect of the loss of the object: one will tend to rely on
the dream which indicates it and which he has himself considered as such,
in the light of a gesture of his analyst, rather than on a declaration,
however ‘sincere’ it may be. Thus the following dream — “she was
advancing on the floor of the attic. I wanted to tell her that it was
fragile. The words stuck in my throat, and I could not speak them until
the point at which the floor gave way and she disappeared. I knew her fall
was deadly” — tells us more about the relation of this analysand to
his daughter, the apple of his eye and witness of his failures, and about
his relation to women in general, than any long discourse. It is however
necessary that the analysand himself (and sometimes also his analyst)
punctuates the ‘thus’ that imposes itself, and which allows for a
passage into an explicit knowledge of what was until then kept in reserve. To the contrary, religious belief places the
burden of the cause in the hands of the ONE, unique God in truth, creator
and master of all things. From then on, the subject of religion places
himself in a relation of dependency on the Other and his ‘mysteries’,
and does all he can to respond to His demand. Religion believes it can
inscribe the being of the speaking being in this status of dependency on
the ONE. It is this very type of identification that an analysis must make
fall, the type which allows for the private religion of the subject.
This is why we can say that religion offers to its believers a
figure of the dead father, the one who reigns and demands. In so doing, it
does away with the live father, the one of desire, who has an effect on
the subject through the unary trait, which inscribes the first rupture of
homeostasis -
jouissance -
through the introduction of language in the body. For this, it is
necessary that ‘Logos, deposed from being the spermatic reason of the
world, be revealed as the knife which introduces difference into it’.8
Thus the unconscious, far from sending the question of the final
cause back to the Other, and thereby contributing to making this Other
consist, as religion does, sends us, on the contrary, back to the
incommensurable of the difference between the sexes and to the Other which
does not exist.
Lacan indicated it expressly in his Subversion
of the Subject; it is not enough that the father be dead (gone to
heaven), his grave must also be empty. Periodically, psychoanalysis is
threatened by its becoming the religion of the dead father; we have lived
through the most recent of such a vicissitude to date at the last College
of the pass; but one could make a reasoned inventory of such occurrences.
In this case, the treatment tends to reabsorb the jouissance
of the subject under the influence of the S1, and to make it
work for the demand of the Other, that is to say to mortify it and
normatise it. Unconscious
knowledge and science Descartes’
gesture, founding the modern episteme, installs on the scene of the world
a different means from that of religion of ensuring the extension of the
empire of the symbolic on jouissance.9
Descartes’ inaugural experience, the one he describes in his Meditations, and which he illustrates with his famous piece of wax,
allows him to deduce the primacy of thought over the sensible and thus
over being. The understanding of thought is thus necessary in order to
grasp the order of the world, an order which is present under the
diversity of sensible, irrational perceptions. Cogito
ergo sum.
This implies that thought comprehends the universe of being and
that it has universal value, i.e. that it ignores the Freudian Other
scene. As we have learnt from Lacan, it forecloses the subject as divided
by his jouissance. Thought, on
the contrary, wants to be the guide of jouissance.
And as Martial Guéroult, the great commentator of Descartes, has grasped,
it does not exclude in the least that God be included in knowledge, for
the tabula rasa of Descartes in his Discourse
of Method re-introduces the belief in God through the artifice of the
reflexibility of thought.10
For us, after Freud, Lacan has renewed this exigency. The analytic
discourse is intimately interwoven with that of Science, and as a recent
chronicle of Gérard Miller reminds us,11 psychoanalysis does
not fear the development of science, on the contrary it is in solidarity
with it, and offers to re-open what Science forecloses: the subject
understood as the subject of the unconscious who suffers. The knowledge
extracted from the unconscious is not irrational in the least, quite the
opposite: it is to be understood on the basis of the type of rationality
devised by Descartes, while giving it another import, another form, by
modifying the point of application.
Lacan, indeed, took up Descartes’ Cogito,
inscribing it with a very small personal touch which, as we know, through
the mere use of punctuation, renders apparent the effect of the subversion
of language on thought, and the subject in his lack-of-being, the subject
without substance.
The actual sense of the correction that Lacan brings to bear on the
Cogito is that it brings to
light the fact that as soon as I think, I imagine that I am, or again that
thought makes me believe in my being.
And, on this point, we must note the importance of two variants
which Lacan brought successively to the commentary of Descartes, with
respect to the definition of unconscious knowledge. One dates back to
1964, the other to 1969.
In Seminar XI, indeed,
the main part of the demonstration bears upon the fact that the Cartesian
‘I think’ is extremely fragile in its status. The question is to know
what this ‘I’ which thinks is. Lacan considers it to be the
homunculus, that is, the ego of psychology. Far from being ‘master of
himself as of the universe’, the subject of psychoanalysis only partakes
of the radical doubt instituted by the Cogito,
by being deposed from this ‘I’ which is thought by the Other much more
than it thinks. Nonetheless -
and this will be the object of numerous developments by Lacan on
alienation and separation -
there is thought, there where I am, not as I, and this thought responds to
a logic instituted by the Cartesian epistemological cut. The pass will
have to report on the logic of this thought which was there where the ego
of the subject was not.
All the same, this first mode of treating the Cogito
is correlative to the point reached by Lacan’s teaching at the time.
Indeed, at this time in his teaching, he presents the symbolic as neutral
with regard to jouissance.12
To believe in the unconscious, in this perspective, consists in extracting
some unconscious knowledge from the analysis in order to modify the mode
of division of the subject, and to introduce him more to desire. We are
close to the effect sought in an analysis of the type that Serge Leclaire
carried out in his case of the man with the Unicorn, and which aims at
opening the subject to desire.
Here, as Jacques-Alain Miller underlines it, the barred subject
‘is conceived by Lacan as the non-libidinal effect of the
signifier...what is in question is the dead subject’.13 This
is the reason why Lacan finds himself having to oppose to this dead
subject an effect invested by the signified, that which precisely he
called object a and which, while
not being substantial, nevertheless has all the value of the partial
drive. There is a contradiction here in the definition of object a,
a contradiction recently remarked upon by J.-A. Miller. This contradiction
in effect amounted to the fact that the pass must testify to a loss of jouissance
of the subject, a loss which would have to be situated as an abandonment
of jouissance after the
traversal of fantasy.14 Thus, in such a reading, to believe in
the unconscious and its analytic effects would amount to believing in a
destitution of the subject, and an effect of loss of jouissance
which can and must be demonstrated.
But the second advance of Lacan in relation to the Cogito, effected in his Seminar
XVII, contributes something different about what ‘belief in the
unconscious’ might mean in Lacanian theory.
The merit that Lacan recognises in the Cogito
is that it permitted a ‘sweeping away of mythical knowledges’,15
and hence that it allowed the analytic discourse to place the castration
complex where the ONE father was. And he already formulates in these
essential pages what his point of reliance will be in Seminar
XX: ‘The beyond of the Oedipus.’ “There is no possible place in
a mythical union which would be defined as sexual between man and
woman.”
It is on the basis of this statement that he situates the analytic
discourse, starting from the discourse that Descartes inaugurated without
being able fully to do away with the divine, unifying ONE. “The unifying
ONE”, says Lacan, “the ONE-all is not what is at stake in
identification. The pivotal identification, the main identification, is
the unary trait, it is being marked as one”. This distinction is capital
and coherent with the theory of the Other which does not exist.16
It also implies a certain number of consequences for the pass and
in particular, it leads us to emphasise consent in the analytic
experience. The passant will have to reveal the marks he bears and which
are absolutely singular, that is to say he will have to reveal that which
for him is irreducible, and of which Lacan speaks in these pages of Seminar
XVII when he presents the analytic Cogito
in the form of a series of Fibonnaci, i.e. as a series converging towards
a negative limit that will never be reached.
He then proposes another writing of the Cartesian Cogito by modifying the incidence of the punctuation he had added in
1964. He now writes it as follows: Cogito
ergo: sum. In this formula, he takes account of the fact that the appensé
17 is a means of joui-sense,
in other words a means for the subject to imagine himself, leaning on
Being.
By taking this new perspective into account, the passant could
realise at the end of an analysis that his whole trajectory through the
unconscious has been a means of enjoying the drive object. This could also
be said in the following form: “at the end of this trajectory under
transference [sous transfert] through the signifier, I can at last know what my
partner-symptom is”.18
We are now left with the question of how to determine how this
fundamental sinthome will be put
to work in each case in the service of the analytic cause... or not. And
this cannot be known in advance. Translated
by Philip Dravers and Véronique Voruz 1.
J. Lacan, Introduction
à l’édition allemande des Ecrits
in Scilicet No 5, p.17. 2.
J. Lacan, Ecrits,
p.876. 3.
Ornicar
? No
29 p.14. 4.
Cahier
No
7, Autumn 1996. 5.
Ecrits,
op.cit. 6.
Subtitle given by Jacques-Alain Miller to chapter 10 of Seminar
XI, p.123. 7.
This is why, if one is to follow Lacan, it is not correct to
say of God that he doesn’t exist but rather that he is unconscious in
the sense that if one believes in it, if one adopts the religious point of
view, one then believes in a whole mode of distribution of jouissances
and of the permitted use of bodies. On this point see the excellent book
of François Régnault: Dieu est
inconscient, (Paris: Navarin). 8.
J. Lacan, La
psychanalyse dans ses rapports avec la réalité in Scilicet No 1, p.57. 9.
The effect of science on the real by means of technique has
sufficiently been evoked for me not to have to return to it here; but it
is noticeable that by this means another mode of feeding off the demand of
the subject is produced, this time following the hysterical mode of
nonsatisfaction. This mode is always propagated further by what, in his Seminar
XVIII, Lacan called lathouses,
a word he used to designate objects, sticky like suction pads, offered to
our concupiscence and which have no other use value than to faire
jouir. 10.
It is indeed thanks to God that I can know that I think, and if I
think... then I am. It is thus that Guéroult qualifies the enterprise of
the great philosopher in terms of a rational positivism which, above the
world of created things, reduced to the reality of their essential nature,
admits to nothing other than the infinite power of God the creator. Descartes
selon l’ordre des raisons (Aubier, 1986), p.384. 11.
Gérard Miller, chronicle in the weekly ‘L’évènement’. 12.
Here we are referring to the indications given by Jacques-Alain
Miller in his work El hueso de un
analisis. p.52. 13.
Ibid. 14.
On this point see Jacques-Alain Miller’s article entitled ‘C.S.T’,
Ornicar? 29. 15.
J. Lacan, Le Séminaire XVII,
1970-71, p.179-80. 16.
Eric Laurent has extensively studied the consequences of this
distinction for Lacanian politics, in particular in the editorials of Ornicar digital of the year 1998-9. 17.
T.N.: appensé is a term
used by Lacan in order to indicate that thought [pensée]
needs to lean [appui] on
something of the real in order to gain consistency. See Seminar
XXIII. 18.
On condition that one takes this term partner-symptom
as a concept-status, as defined by Jacques-Alain Miller in his seminar La
fuite du sens. This
paper was presented at the ACF-VLB Study-Day on ‘Responsibility and
Psychoanalysis’, Nantes, September 1999. Copyright © Pierre-Gilles Gueguen 2003. This text from the website of the London Society of the NLS, at http://www.londonsociety-nls.org.uk. Permission to use material from this site must be sought from the LS-NLS. All rights reserved. Please include this portion of the text in any printed version of this paper. |
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