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  • ...ins to use the term, it is not very salient, and refers simply to "other [[people]]." The term seems to be borrowed from [[Hegel]], to whose work [[Lacan]] w ...[little other]] is designated <i>'''a'''</i> (lower case italicized, for [[French]] ''[[Other|autre]]''). [[Lacan]] asserts that an [[awareness]] of this dis
    5 KB (780 words) - 03:27, 15 June 2021
  • ...cant impact on [[critical theory]], [[literary theory]], twentieth-century French philosophy, [[sociology]], [[feminist]] theory and [[clinical]] psychoanaly [[Category:People|Lacan, Jacques]]
    13 KB (1,795 words) - 17:56, 3 June 2019
  • ...need]] for there to be a [[content]] of belief. Th e seventeenth-century [[French]] [[philosopher]] Blaise [[Pascal]] described the [[performative]] element ...now]] that Father Christmas does not [[exist]]. In [[reality]], the only [[people]] who truly believe in Santa Claus are the parents themselves! They pretend
    14 KB (2,087 words) - 13:40, 13 October 2020
  • ...emantic richness reflects the complexity of the connections to [[other]] [[people]] in the [[psyche]]; it also can lead to confusion. ...] the relation between the parents, or those who perform this function, as people, as against the father or mother as "objects" used in the [[psychoanalytic]
    31 KB (4,666 words) - 10:21, 1 June 2019
  • The English word "[[training]]" is used to translate two [[French]] [[terms]] used by [[Lacan]]: ''[[training|analyse didactique]]'' ("'''[[t ...''[[training|formation des analystes]]'') refers to the process by which [[people]] learn how to conduct [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic]] [[treatment]], i.e
    6 KB (763 words) - 02:43, 21 May 2019
  • ...e pass' and was essentially an institutional framework designed to allow [[people]] to testify to the end of their analysis. The main [[idea]] behind this wa ...oanalytic [[Society]]] and the Société française de [[psychanalyse]] [[[French]] Society of Psychoanalysis]), member [[analysts]] of the school (who were
    13 KB (1,979 words) - 20:47, 20 May 2019
  • [[Alain Badiou]] ([[born]] 1937, Rabat, Morocco) is a prominent [[France|French]] [[left-wing]] [[philosopher]] formerly [[chair]] of [[Philosophy]] at the ...ialist Party (France)|United Socialist Party]] (PSU), an offshoot of the [[French Communist Party]]. The PSU was particularly active in the [[struggle]] for
    14 KB (2,106 words) - 17:50, 27 May 2019
  • ...f the Société Psychanalytique de Paris (SPP), the first association of [[French]] [[psychoanalysts]]. * 4 November The first French [[Freudian]] society, the Société psychanalytique de Paris, is created. B
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...er, with the German military occupation of parts of France following the [[French]] declaration of war during [[World War II]], and the deportation of [[Jews ...is radical or simply a function of banality -- the tendency of ordinary [[people]] to obey [[orders]] and conform to mass opinion without critically [[think
    5 KB (730 words) - 23:12, 24 May 2019
  • '''Roland Barthes''' (November 12, 1915 &ndash; March 25, 1980) was a [[French]] [[literary critic]], [[literary theory|literary]] and [[social theory|soc ...other]], Henriette Barthes, and his aunt and grandmother raised him in the French city of [[Bayonne]] where he received his first exposure to [[culture]], le
    29 KB (4,425 words) - 22:23, 20 May 2019
  • ...olitics]]-[[Subjectivity]]: Essays on Derrida, Levinas, and Contemporary [[French]] [[Thought]] (1999) [[Category:People]]
    1 KB (143 words) - 23:14, 20 May 2019
  • The term '''''deconstruction''''' was coined by [[French]] [[philosopher]] [[Jacques Derrida]] in the 1960s and is used in contempor ...nor simple difference). Derrida spoke in an interview (first published in French in [[1967]]) about such "concepts," which he called merely "marks" in [[ord
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • '''Gilles Deleuze''' ((January 18, 1925 - November 4, 1995), [[French]] [[philosopher]] of the late 20th century. [[Category:People|Deleuze, Gilles]]
    12 KB (1,705 words) - 08:36, 24 May 2019
  • ...ly 15, 1930 &ndash; October 8, 2004) was an [[Algeria]]n-[[born]] [[France|French]] [[literary critic]] and [[philosopher]] of [[Jew]]ish descent, most often ...bsolute Other by renouncing any determinate [[structure]] involving real [[people]] in real circumstances and embracing a “primordial [[passivity]], sentie
    15 KB (2,119 words) - 20:38, 25 May 2019
  • ...born on the Caribbean island of Martinique, then a French colony and now a French département. He was born into a mixed family background of African slaves ...traveled to Dominica to join Free French Forces. He later enlisted in the French army and saw active duty in France, notably in the bloody battles of Alsace
    9 KB (1,388 words) - 12:25, 2 March 2021
  • ''Pierre-Félix [[Guattari]]''' (April 30, 1930 – August 29, 1992) was a [[French]] pioneer of institutional [[psychotherapy]], as well as the founder of bot ...f [[psychiatry]]. Due to his frustrations with the theories and methods of French [[psychoanalyst]] [[Jacques Lacan]] -- in relation to whom he was both stud
    8 KB (1,175 words) - 08:18, 24 May 2019
  • ...asy]], and are known for their droll humour. They often portray innocent [[people]] caught up in circumstances beyond their control or [[understanding]]. Thi ...cially the [[elite]] British and American critics. In the late 1950s the [[French]] New Wave critics, especially Éric Rohmer, [[Claude Chabrol]], and Franç
    35 KB (5,516 words) - 17:58, 27 May 2019
  • ...by the enigmatic "[[Monsieur Chouchani]]". Levinas became a naturalized [[French]] [[citizen]] in [[1930]]. [[Category:People]]
    5 KB (765 words) - 06:29, 24 May 2019
  • ...)|subject]]-[[object (philosophy)|object]] of history" (1960 Postface to [[French]] [[translation]]), but he wrote a [[defence]] of [[them]] as late as [[192 [[Category:People]]
    8 KB (1,081 words) - 08:29, 24 May 2019
  • '''Jacques-[[Alain]] Miller''' - the son-in-law of [[France|French]] [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalyst]] [[Jacques Lacan]] (in 1967 he [[married] ...of Jacques Lacan's seminars, having so far published half of [[them]] in [[French]]. He also supervised the [[English]] translations of Lacan's work: "[[Éc
    5 KB (734 words) - 01:15, 25 May 2019
  • ...l [[autonomy]] and rational choice. At the time of the May ‚68 events [[people]] were very concerned with questions of self-expression, [[desire]] and [[s ...ogy]] and structuralism. His early [[work]] coincided with the growth of [[French]] phenomenology and he was influenced by the thought of [[Hegel]] and [[Hei
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • ...es, wars or [[other]] human disasters. The effect of these events on the [[people]] [[present]] or just watching [[them]] is said to be traumatic and psychol ...[patients]] appear to [[enjoy]] their own [[illness]] or [[symptom]]. In [[French]] the [[word]] also has sexual connotations and is associated with sexual p
    33 KB (5,457 words) - 20:48, 25 May 2019
  • ...ation or digitalisation of our environment. We know that 60 percent of the people on this Earth have not even made a phone call in their life. But still, 30 ...It is a deeply conservative gesture. The true conservatives today are the people of new paradigms. They try desperately to avoid confronting what is really
    36 KB (5,977 words) - 21:58, 21 May 2006
  • ...f sarcastic [[laughter]]: [[Marx]] is OK, even on Wall Street, there are [[people]] who [[love]] him today — Marx the poet of commodities, who provided per ...deological coordinates: those who "really want to do something to [[help]] people" get involved in (undoubtedly honorable) exploits like Medecins sans fronti
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...e see — no dismembered bodies, no blood, no desperate faces of the dying people… in clear contrast to the reporting from the [[Third]] World catastrophie ...ion]] in New York rapist gangs and a dozen or so snipers blindly targeting people who walk along the streets, one gets an [[idea]] about what Sarajevo was a
    52 KB (8,449 words) - 23:27, 23 May 2019
  • ...spectatle staged to convince him that he lives in a real world, while all people around him are effectively actors and extras in a gigantic show? The most r ...s people from their bodies — but it also frees the machines from "their" people
    64 KB (10,730 words) - 00:53, 21 May 2019
  • ...der. For that reason, [[Buddha]]'s followers [[form]] a [[community]] of [[people]] who in one way or [[another]] have broken with the hierarchy of the socia ...Lacanian]] movement. The IPA is the psychoanalytic church, excommunicating people from its ranks only when it feels effectively threatened, prone to endless
    95 KB (16,281 words) - 23:43, 24 May 2019
  • ...r Kojeve the end of history was Russia and America, the realization of the French Revolution. Then he noticed that someting was missing. He found the answer ...ning', based on Stephen King's novel? This is America at it's worst. Three people, a family, in a big hotel and still the space is too small for them and the
    29 KB (5,034 words) - 05:05, 22 May 2006
  • ...this stance, which allows theoreticians to `[[speak]] for' the masses of [[people]], to [[know]] the [[truth]] [[about]] [[them]], Ranciere endeavours again ...[[politicization]], discernible in all great democratic events, from the [[French]] [[Revolution]] (in which le troisieme etat proclaimed itself identical to
    51 KB (7,820 words) - 07:36, 24 May 2019
  • ...ou calls a "situation" is any [[particular]] consistent multitude (e.g., [[French]] society, modern art): a situation is structured, and it is its [[structur ...ves its own series of determinations: the Event itself; its denomination ("French Revolution" not being an objective-categorizing designation but part of the
    71 KB (11,371 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...[[politicization]], discernable in all great democratic events, from the [[French]] [[Revolution]] (in which the [[Third]] Estate proclaimed itself identical ...l." However, a couple of days later, the slogan changed into "We are a/one people!" (Wir sind ein Volk!"), clearly signalling the closure of the momentary au
    8 KB (1,189 words) - 01:35, 21 May 2019
  • ...e set in motion a state [[apparatus]] consisting of 10 if not 20 million [[people]]." What we should recognise is the '[[madness]]' (in the Kierkegaardian se This gap — which recalls the interval between 1789 and 1793 in the [[French]] Revolution — is the [[space]] of Lenin's unique intervention. The funda
    27 KB (4,181 words) - 22:46, 20 May 2019
  • ...y to the US, but also to its neighbors, and we should liberate the Iraqi [[people]]; (3) the [[change]] of regime in Iraq will create the [[conditions]] for ...but appear deeply hypocritical — do they really care about how the Iraqi people feel?
    29 KB (4,655 words) - 00:47, 21 May 2019
  • ...chmen associate [[Germany]] with Eastern Balkan brutality - it [[lacks]] [[French]] finesse. Finally, to some British opponents of the [[European Union]], Co ...nsitivity to [[reflection]] - a [[neo-Nazi]] skinhead who beats up black [[people]] [[knows]] what he's doing, but does it anyway.
    27 KB (4,340 words) - 03:40, 21 May 2019
  • ...he first edition, the novel begins years later at the Divers' villa on the French Riviera where the couple lives a glamorous life; the story is told from the ...lashback after the first part sticks out: while the jump from the present (French Riviera in 1929) to the past (Zurich in 1919) is convincing, the return to
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...l be the fall of both houses that posed a menace to the [[unity]] of the [[French]] [[state]]. But this ingenious plan to play off her enemies against each ...of breaking the siege of Sarajevo, of imposing a corridor through which [[people]] and provisions could circulate freely? It would have cost nothing: with
    25 KB (3,745 words) - 01:55, 21 May 2019
  • ...t passion is aggressive secularism of the kind displayed recently by the [[French]] [[state]] where the [[government]] prohibited wearing all too conspicuous ...be deprived of it? So the [[idea]] was formulated that, in the same way [[people]] [[sign]] permission for their organs to be use for medical purposes in th
    31 KB (4,860 words) - 20:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...ists: [[le Pen]]'s entire program can be summed up in "[[France]] to the [[French]]!" (and this allows us to generate further formulas: "[[Germany]] to Germa ...eged position of a singularity with a direct access to the universal - all people participate in the universality, but Jews are "more universal than others":
    31 KB (5,186 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • ...ist passion is aggressive secularism of the kind displayed recently by the French state where the government prohibited wearing all too conspicuous religious ...y and the entire humanity. Instead of believing through the other like all people of culture, they really believed in their own religion and thus had no grea
    18 KB (3,007 words) - 20:51, 7 June 2006
  • ...tatorship was a [[threat]] to its neighbors and a catastrophe to its own [[people]], and these facts were [[reason]] enough to topple it. [[True]], but why t ...humanity's true [[desire]], then all that Americans need to do is to give people a [[chance]], liberate them from their imposed constraints, and they will e
    18 KB (2,898 words) - 01:02, 25 May 2019
  • ...these outbursts residing in the easily predictable racist REACTION of the French populist crowd to them. ...and cruel [[master]] of the city who violates every law, simply shooting [[people]] who do not pay him; the hero's father crime should thus be a law-founding
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  • ...now emphasizes that no milk of Danish cows is used in their products. The French supermarket chain Carrefour in Egypt informs their “dear clients” that ...and school-books in Muslim countries? Where is here the respect for other people and their religion, that they demand from the West? Some Muslim groups repl
    43 KB (7,118 words) - 14:37, 12 November 2006
  • ...tantism]] function as the [[ideology]] of early [[capitalism]]? Why did [[people]]’s [[belief]] that their redemption had been decided in advance not only ...algia]] for the [[Communist]] past) among many intellectuals (and ordinary people) from the defunct [[German Democratic Republic]] also a longing not so much
    10 KB (1,507 words) - 00:38, 26 May 2019
  • ...lnuit recently drew up the liberal communist’s ten commandments in the [[French]] magazine <em>Technikart</em>: ...ld get together and work out the best way of solving the problem, engage [[people]], governments and business in a common enterprise, start moving things ins
    12 KB (1,880 words) - 10:20, 1 June 2019
  • ..., this is it. The fate of this revolutionary was surely the fate of the [[people]] as a [[whole]] under [[Stalinist]] [[dictatorship]]: the millions who ove ...man toilets are really the key to the horrors of the [[Third]] [[Reich]]. People who can build toilets like this are capable of anything.' It is clear that
    20 KB (3,312 words) - 23:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...a safe, ordered [[existence]] before questions of [[desire]] by telling [[people]] to make their [[desire]]s wait. [[Lacan]] forces the [[subject]] to conf [[French]]: French: (texte établi par Jacques-Alain [[Miller]]), [[Paris]]: Seuil, 1986.<br>
    24 KB (3,720 words) - 16:19, 30 June 2019
  • ...He was also instrumental in introducing [[Latin]] American authors to the French [[public]]. ...cing authors such as [[Borges|J.L. Borges]] or [[Alejo Carpentier]] to the French-[[speaking]] public.
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  • André Breton (February 18, 1896 – September 28, 1966) was a [[French]] writer, poet, and [[surrealist]] theorist. His writings include the Surre [[Category:People]]
    284 bytes (33 words) - 01:45, 24 May 2019
  • Georges Bataille (September 16, 1897 – July 9, 1962) was a [[French]] writer, anthropologist and [[philosopher]], though he avoided this last t [[Category:People]]
    208 bytes (23 words) - 08:30, 24 May 2019
  • ...enomenology of Spirit]]''. After [[World War II]], Kojève worked in the [[French]] Ministry of [[Economic]] Affairs as one of the chief planners of the [[Eu ...'s views on this were reprinted in the Spring 1980 (Vol. 9) edition of the French journal ''Commentaire'' in an article entitled 'Capitalisme et socialisme:
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 17:57, 27 May 2019
  • ...the [[individual]] derives [[sexual]] [[pleasure]] from observing other [[people]]. Such people may be engaged in sexual [[acts]], or be nude or in underwear, or dressed i
    6 KB (827 words) - 03:16, 21 May 2019
  • ...ctively makes a choice. This is why, in our secular societies of choice, [[people]] who maintain a substantial [[religious]] belonging are in a subordinate [ ...ux of [[immigrant]] [[workers]] from [[Poland]] who lower the wages of the French workers, etc. (And before dismissing this last complaint as racist, one sho
    11 KB (1,702 words) - 00:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...first edition, the novel begins years later at the Divers' villa on the [[French]] Riviera where the couple lives a glamorous [[life]]; the story is told fr ...lashback after the first part sticks out: while the jump from the present (French Riviera in 1929) to the [[past]] (Zurich in 1919) is convincing, the [[retu
    5 KB (828 words) - 07:52, 24 May 2019
  • ...y">Fletcher and Osborn</ref> Laplanche also ran ''Chateau de Pommard'', a French winery, for many years, and, as of 2005, lives on the estate with his wife, [[Category:People]]
    845 bytes (111 words) - 01:53, 25 May 2019
  • ...ant tone of the Davos meetings comes from the group of entrepreneurs who [[French]] journalist Olivier Malnuit ironically refers to as “[[liberal]] communi ...toric]], we should simply examine what really solves the problem: Engage [[people]], governments and business in a common enterprise, approach the crisis in
    10 KB (1,545 words) - 00:51, 21 May 2019
  • ...tively makes a choice. This is why, in our secular societies of choice, [[people]] who maintain a substantial [[religious]] belonging are in a subordinate [ ...f [[immigrant]] [[workers]] from [[Poland]] who lower the [[wage]]s of the French workers, etc. (And before dismissing this last complaint as racist, one sho
    11 KB (1,659 words) - 00:29, 21 May 2019
  • ...rves that today this trinity has undergone a strange [[displacement]]: The French are preoccupied with [[culture]] (How to save their legacy from vulgar [[Am ...ntidote to French arrogant elitism and German excessive seriousness). The French focused on [[economy]] (which, against all expectations, theirs has been do
    14 KB (2,067 words) - 00:40, 21 May 2019
  • ...ite proposed to the people a choice that was effectively no choice at all. People were called to ratify the inevitable. Both the media and the political elit ...isfactions. Instead, in their reaction to the no results, they treated the people as retarded pupils who did not understand the lessons of the experts.
    7 KB (1,199 words) - 14:41, 12 November 2006
  • ...her boring circular myth, where basically god dies... you know, it's like, people are disordered, things go bad, but then there is the phoenix, everything is ...ian way that I want to assert "yes, Christianity is perverse!"‹you know, people who praise perversion as liberation, and so on.&nbsp; No, no none of it!<br
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  • ...ist passion is aggressive secularism of the kind displayed recently by the French state where the government prohibited wearing all too conspicuous religious ...y and the entire humanity. Instead of believing through the other like all people of culture, they really believed in their own religion and thus had no grea
    18 KB (2,954 words) - 14:47, 12 November 2006
  • ...arance]] of its opposite. Let's be serious: Nobody will convince me that [[people]] like Donald Rumsfeld, John Ashcroft and George W. Bush believe. They may ...hroud controversy, and he told me kind of a half-public [[secret]] - the [[French]] have this nice expression, le secret de Polichinelle, a secret which ever
    64 KB (10,850 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...igitalisation of our [[environment]]. We [[know]] that 60 percent of the [[people]] on this Earth have not even made a phone call in their [[life]]. But stil ...y - even I, with all my decadent tastes, was shocked to learn this - where people put a video-camera in their toilets, so you can observe them defecating. Th
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  • ...ican and a Jew, embraced them all and told his audience: 'They are no less French than I am - it is the representatives of big multinational capital, ignorin ...most elevators is a totally inoperative placebo, placed there just to give people the impression they are somehow contributing to the speed of the elevator j
    22 KB (3,584 words) - 14:56, 12 November 2006
  • ...chmen associate [[Germany]] with Eastern Balkan brutality - it [[lacks]] [[French]] finesse. Finally, to some British opponents of the [[European Union]], Co ...nsitivity to [[reflection]] - a [[neo-Nazi]] skinhead who beats up black [[people]] [[knows]] what he's doing, but does it anyway.<br>
    27 KB (4,379 words) - 03:41, 21 May 2019
  • ...spectatle staged to convince him that he lives in a real world, while all people around him are effectively actors and extras in a gigantic show? The most r ...ees people from their bodies - but it also frees the machines from "their" people...<br><br>
    63 KB (10,769 words) - 14:59, 12 November 2006
  • prospect of Karol and his [[French]] bride getting a second [[chance]] and remarrying. The very [[Nazis]] were deftly manipulating ordinary middle-[[class]] [[people]]'s fears and
    33 KB (5,283 words) - 08:09, 24 May 2019
  • ...ou calls a "situation" is any [[particular]] consistent multitude (e.g., [[French]] society, modern art): a situation is structured, and it is its [[structur ...ves its own series of determinations: the Event itself; its denomination ("French Revolution" not being an objective-categorizing designation but part of the
    71 KB (11,385 words) - 21:34, 20 May 2019
  • ...he end of [[history]] was [[Russia]] and America, the realization of the [[French]] [[Revolution]]. Then he noticed that someting was [[missing]]. He found t ...ng', based on Stephen King's novel? This is America at it's worst. Three [[people]], a [[family]], in a big hotel and still the [[space]] is too small for [[
    30 KB (5,061 words) - 22:00, 20 May 2019
  • <i>Sittlichkeit</i>, the unwritten rules are still unsure, [[people]] are still [[Heideggerian]] nationalists. But the Soros people have this [[ethic]] of the bad state
    32 KB (5,235 words) - 20:21, 27 May 2019
  • ...at the [[French]] Revolution, despite its subsequent concretization into a French Republican order, contained an emancipative potential, an "infinite [[multi ...re traces back to its origins in Athenian democracy. The demos, or "the [[people]]", is defined by its exclusion from the polis - it is the formless mass th
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  • ...sing whirlwind of [[thought]] to its conclusion saying "we [[need]] more [[people]] with Mary Kay's stance in today's [[politics]]." ...which he says is a "rebuke" to "the high-minded [[terrorism]] of so much [[French]] theory." But the [[real]] [[significance]] of the Zizek Effect is the way
    45 KB (7,481 words) - 23:15, 23 May 2019
  • ..., as well as by his reliance on the difficult notions of a [[notorious]] [[French]] [[psychoanalyst]]. Zizek's chief intellectual hero, [[Jacques Lacan]], is ...to two entrenched and antithetical bodies of contemporary [[thought]]: the French postmodernists' skepticism about the Enlightenment ideals of [[universality
    35 KB (5,651 words) - 23:13, 27 May 2019
  • maxims and mathemes, those Zen koans of the French postmodern era: [[people]] around us. "They shouldn't call it the fourteenth floor--they
    63 KB (10,146 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...l. It obscures the central truth — that crocodile tears about the "Iraqi people" are the basest form of imperial contempt … Democracy, as usual, has noth ...ct way that has a close relation to the Hegel presented to Lacan and other French intellectuals by Kojève in the 1930s; Zizek's Lacan is a version of late L
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • ...hich can only be guaranteed by a Party representing the interests of the [[People]]. It is not a proper solution to argue either that the socialist definitio ...reen space itself, for which the birds are only substitutes. Indeed, the [[French]] film theorist [[Pascal]] Bonitzer speaks of this 'doubling' or 're-markin
    105 KB (18,216 words) - 20:53, 23 May 2019
  • ...front, so that it is first laid out for us to inspect; in the traditional French lavatory, it is in the back, so that the shit is meant to disappear as soon ...his fellow diners but actually end up sharing a meal with them: 'How many people have entered the way of perdition with some innocent gangbang, which at the
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • ...[[United States]]' invasion of Iraq, Zizek, while rejecting the combined [[French]] and [[German]] opposition as a kind of appeasement "reminiscent of the [[ ...dam]]'s regime would have been a relief to a large majority of the Iraqi [[people]]. Of course militant [[Islam]] is a horrifying [[ideology]]". Instead, "al
    32 KB (5,154 words) - 20:52, 23 May 2019
  • ...ce]] – [[May 20]], [[2005]], [[Chatenay Malabry]]) was a [[French people|French]] [[philosopher]] best known for combining [[phenomenology|phenomenologica ...|WWII]] interrupted Ricœur's career, and he was drafted to serve in the [[French]] [[army]] in 1939. His unit was [[captured]] during the [[German]] invasio
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  • '''[[Christian]] Metz''' is a [[France|French]] [[film critic]], best known for the application of [[Ferdinand de Saussur [[Category:People]]
    905 bytes (122 words) - 03:54, 24 May 2019
  • ...and, together with [[Sartre]], the most important [[representative]] of [[French]] [[phenomenology]]. [[Category:People]]
    343 bytes (37 words) - 19:19, 20 May 2019
  • ...This way she picked up [[languages]] as Hebrew, [[German]], [[English]], [[French]] and Italian. At the age of 15, she started [[reading]] her father’s wor [[Category:People]]
    9 KB (1,402 words) - 18:24, 27 May 2019
  • '''Luce Irigaray''' ([[born]] [[1930]] [[Belgium]]) is a [[France|French]] [[feminism|feminist]] and [[psychoanalytic theory|psychoanalytic]] and [[ [[Category:People]]
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  • ...ion that prejudice "`could be eradicated only by subjecting the American [[people]] to what amounted to collective [[psychotherapy]]<img src="/ucp-entities/m ...to-Fascist irrationalists. At least I am here also in a good company, with people like Nietzsche and Adorno.<a href="#fn4" name="cfn4"><sup>4</sup></a> Wolin
    82 KB (13,178 words) - 17:18, 27 May 2019
  • ...arance]] of its opposite. Let's be serious: Nobody will convince me that [[people]] like Donald kumsfeld, John Ashcroft, and George W. [[Bush]] believe. They What does it mean when you say people believe in something? For example, I had a very interesting conversation wi
    46 KB (7,621 words) - 00:50, 21 May 2019
  • ...he right promoted by the supplemental effort to which, at Sade's call, the French would have consented, and the maxim become, for their regenerated Republic, ...the '50s (of the last century), for them it is "impossible that there are people that dumb."
    59 KB (10,417 words) - 14:56, 30 July 2019
  • ...rough his own [[action]]. I, he says, <i>have nothing to do with it. The [[people]] of Thebes, in their exaltation, gave me this [[woman]] as reward for havi </dd><dd>Meanwhile, people in Thebes continue to gossip. The people of Thebes are told - <i>Just a minutel You pushed it a bit far. It was all
    19 KB (3,512 words) - 21:56, 27 May 2019
  • ...e borne in [[mind]] throughout the following discussion that "le mal" in [[French]] includes the [[ideas]] both of "[[evil]]" and of "[[suffering]]."</font>P ...It is Akhenaton's God, the God of the secret message that the [[Jewish]] [[people]] bears by [[reason]] of the fact that, by assassinating Moses, it reenacto
    40 KB (7,339 words) - 01:20, 26 May 2019
  • ...stops at the level of those walls to which one can apply a label. What in French at least serves to designate the notion of self or same <i>(même), </i>the ...he as nobleman found himself, during the period from the beginning of the French [[Revolution]] and down through the [[Terror]], which he was to live throug
    37 KB (6,746 words) - 00:49, 21 May 2019
  • a whole generation of French thinkers. For insofar as language Some people regard language, when reduced to its elements, as<br>
    32 KB (5,721 words) - 23:20, 17 May 2006
  • ...3, 1901]] – [[Jacques Lacan:Chronology#1981|September 9, 1981]]) was a [[French]] [[psychiatrist]] and [[psychoanalyst]]. [[Category:People|Lacan, Jacques]]
    5 KB (600 words) - 01:24, 25 May 2019
  • At a certain level of its usage 'knave' may be translated into [[French]] as ''valet'', but 'knave' goes further. He's not a cynic with the element [[Category:People]]
    3 KB (550 words) - 07:34, 24 May 2019
  • ...ealize that these phenomena are by no means foreign to him. He [[knows]] [[people]] who have individually created such taboo prohibitions for themselves, whi ...e [[German]] [[schools]] on the psychologies of various peoples, and the [[French]] schools of [[sociology]]. [[Freud]] later made use of this [[work]] to de
    18 KB (2,676 words) - 00:21, 21 May 2019
  • ...a [[state]] of extreme confusion and insecurity. This is often seen when [[people]] or institutions depended on for survival violate or betray the person in ...ay perceive an event to be traumatic that [[another]] may not, and not all people who experience a traumatic event will become psychologically traumatized.
    3 KB (422 words) - 20:56, 23 May 2019
  • [[French]], that sounds false and awkward. That God affirms himself as identical [[People]] are not freed like that from their [[mental]] habits from one day to the
    43 KB (7,717 words) - 00:58, 25 May 2019
  • [[French]] [[philosopher]], novelist, and playwright Jean [[Paul]] Sartre (1905-1980 [[Category:People]]
    11 KB (1,617 words) - 21:09, 25 May 2019
  • ...nar]] at the SPP until 1939; that year he was mobilized as a doctor in the French [[army]], where he was decorated with the Croix de Guerre. After the armist ...York in 1943, maintaining his institutional and personal connections with French psychoanalysis, for which he was the New York correspondent. Rapidly recogn
    6 KB (830 words) - 22:24, 20 May 2019
  • François [[Rabelais]] (ca. 1494 - April 9, 1553) was a major [[French]] [[Renaissance]] writer. [[Category:People]]
    164 bytes (18 words) - 07:55, 24 May 2019
  • Nicolas Malebranche (August 6, 1638 – October 13, 1715) was a [[French]] [[philosopher]] of the [[Cartesian]] [[school]]. He was named by Pierre B [[Category:People]]
    275 bytes (32 words) - 23:25, 23 May 2019
  • ...er, and spent much of his [[life]] in relative poverty; but he was a major French symbolist poet and rightly famed for his salons, occasional gatherings of i [[Category:People]]
    1 KB (217 words) - 23:57, 20 May 2019
  • Marcel Mauss (May 10, 1872- February 10, 1950) was a [[French]] [[sociologist]] best known for his [[role]] in elaborating on and securin [[Category:People]]
    364 bytes (50 words) - 19:06, 20 May 2019

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