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==Philosophy==The term '"[[dialectic]]' " originated with the [[Greeks]], for whom it denoted (among other things) a discursive procedure in which an opponent in a debate is questioned in such a way as to bring out the contradictions in his [[discourse]].
This is the tactic which [[Plato ]] ascribes to [[Socrates]], who is shown as beginning most dialogues by first reducing his interlocutor to a [[state ]] of confusion and [[helplessness]].
==Psychoanalytic Treatment==[[Lacan ]] compares this to the first [[stage ]] of [[psychoanalytic treatment]], when the [[analyst ]] forces the [[analysand ]] to confront the contradictions and gaps [[gap]]s in his [[narrative]].
However, just as [[Socrates ]] then proceeds to draw out the [[truth ]] from the confused statements of his interlocutor, so also the [[analyst ]] proceeds to draw out the [[truth ]] from the [[analysand]]'s [[free associationsassociation]]s.<ref>{{S8}} p.140</ref>
Thus [[Lacan ]] argues that "[[psychoanalysis ]] is a dialectical [[experience]]"<ref>{{Ec}} p.216</ref>, since the analyst must engage the analysand in 'a dialectical operation."<ref>{{S1}} p.278</ref>
It is only by means of "an endless dialectical [[process]]" that the [[analyst ]] can subvert the [[ego]]'s disabling illusions [[illusion]]s of permanence and [[stability]], in a manner identical to the Socratic Dialogue.<ref>{{L}} "[[Works of Jacques Lacan|Some Reflections on the Ego]], " ''Int. J. [[Psycho]]-[[Anal]].'', vol. 34, 1953 [1951b: ]. p. 12</ref>
==Hegelian Dialectic==Although the origin of [[dialectic]]s goes back to the Greek [[philosophers]], its dominance in modern philosophy is due to the revival of the [[concept]] in the eighteenth century by the [[Kant|post---Kantian]] [[idealism|idealists]] [[Fichte]] and [[Hegel]], who conceived of the [[dialectic]] as a [[triad]] of [[dialectic|thesis]], [[dialectic|antithesis]] and [[dialectic|synthesis]].
==Lacanian Dialectic==
However, there are also important differences between the [[Lacanian]] [[dialectic]], and the [[Hegelian]] [[dialectic]].
For [[Lacan]], there is no such [[thing ]] as a final [[dialectic|synthesis ]] such as is represented by Hegel's concept of absolut eknowledge[[dialectic|absolute knowledge]]; the [[irreducibility ]] of the [[unconscious ]] represents the impossibility of any such absolute knowledge. For Lacan, then, "the ''[[Aufhebungimpossibility]]'' is one of those sweet dreams of any such [[philosophydialectic|absolute knowledge]]."<ref>{{S20}} p.79</ref>
Thus [[Lacan]] contrasts his own version of the ''[[Aufhebung]]'' with that of [[Hegel]], arguing that it repalces [[Hegel]]'s idea of [[progress]] with"the avatars of a lack."<ref>{{Ec}} p. 837</ref>
==See Also==
{{See}}* [[Analysand]]* [[Analyst]]||* [[Desire]]* [[Lack]]||* [[Knowledge]]* [[Master]]||* [[Other]]* [[Philosophy]]||* [[Progress]]* [[Time]]||* [[Treatment]]* [[Truth]]{{Also}}
==References==
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[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
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[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
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