This is because desire is not for an object but is articulated only through the Other, only through “the defiles of the signifier” and the structures of representation which take it further and further away from an unmediated reality.
Nevertheless, by fantasmatically sustaining a relation only to the object a, the subject maintains him- or herself on the level of desire, not anxiety, using the object a as if to plug up the hole in the Other.
Lacan takes Freud's insight a step further, adding that the forbidden object is also the object of enjoyment, for it is prohibition itself that makes enjoyment possible. In Seminar VII, he explains that the object of enjoyment is ...
It is the moment of pure experience that allows the taking place of experience as knowledge of an object. In this sense, it is the moment in which something of the thing in itself is communicated to the understanding as something that ...
Umbr(a): Incurable
We assume that the uncertain objects are independent to each other. In the following paper, we use object to denote multi-dimensional uncertain object whenever there is no ambiguity. Given an object U, Umbr denotes the minimal bounding ...
In fact , there may be only a unique key for each object . Only the distance function ... For realizing the C - tree it is only important to be able to store the objects . ... ( Umbr ) = the left split value of the root of MBT ( Ucr ) .
At its most radical, the unconscious is the inaccessible phenomenon, not the objective mechanism, that regulates my phenomenal experience. So, in contrast to the commonplace ... Published in UMBR(a): A Journal of the Unconscious 4, 2000,
Mute Objects, 430; OC, 1:430. 49. Ibid., 163; Ibid., 430. 50. Monique David-Ménard, “Must One Seek the Universal in Beauty?” Umbr(a): Aesthetics & Sublimation (1999): 55–56. 51. Ibid., 57. 52. OC, 1:438. 53. Ibid., 438. 54. OC, 1: 1013.
Search the R-tree for the roads whose MBRs overlap uMBR. 3. From the roads obtained in Step 2, select the road R whose Euclidean distance to (x,y) is the smallest. 4. Project (x,y) onto the road R. Let (x0,y0) denote the coordinate of ...