SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.35 número65O corpo imóvel e sua imagem imortalNonadas: uma leitura de “Lá nas campinas”, de Guimarães Rosa índice de autoresíndice de materiabúsqueda de artículos
Home Pagelista alfabética de revistas  

Servicios Personalizados

Revista

Articulo

Indicadores

Compartir


Reverso

versión impresa ISSN 0102-7395

Resumen

FURTADO, Dimas Barreira. Antigone and the psychoanalytical ethic: notes about the Seminar 7. Reverso [online]. 2013, vol.35, n.65, pp.31-37. ISSN 0102-7395.

Jacques Lacan treads a long pathway along its seminar, the Ethics of Psychoanalysis. He goes from the pulse of death, to the functional utility of the good and the beauty, up to Sophocles’ tragedy Antigone. Lacan puts forward his own views of the ethics of psychoanalysis, distinguishing from Kant’s proposals and making Antigone’s unique figure as reference. The quest for one’s own desires does constitute a representation of the ethics of psychoanalysis. That is, not wavering from her desires. The ethics of psychoanalysis does not lean over easy promises of happiness, but only with the quest for one’s own desires.

Palabras clave : Anguish; Antigone; Helplessness; Desire; Ethics of psychoanalysis; Pulse of death.

        · resumen en Portugués     · texto en Portugués     · Portugués ( pdf )