Adrian Johnston
Adrian Johnston
J
acques Lacan says very little about what, in his later life and teachings, he
calls “antiphilosophy.” The negation of the oldest of the academic professions,
he proposes this field in 1975 as an area of study for those who have been
exposed to psychoanalysis in the context of a university education.1 Five years
later, just as he is dissolving his École freudienne and winding down le Séminaire,
Lacan, speaking again of antiphilosophy, declares, “I rebel, if I can say, against
philosophy.”2
Despite (or, maybe, because of) the fact that Lacan leaves behind merely two brief
mentions of antiphilosophy, a fair amount of ink has been spilled on this topic since
Lacan’s death by some of his most able readers—in particular, Jean-Claude Milner,
Alain Badiou, François Regnault, and Colette Soler. Perhaps they were provoked
by understandable perplexity, for Lacan’s entire intellectual trajectory of course
involves a sustained, recurrent reliance upon philosophy.3 As Regnault correctly
observes, citations of Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, Hegel, and Heidegger, among oth-
ers, in Lacan’s work are nearly as ubiquitous as references to Freud.4 In Regnault’s
reading, the philosophy at stake in Lacanian antiphilosophy isn’t so much phi-
losophy in general as the then—current antipsychoanalytic philosophy of the anti-
Oedipal duo, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari.5 Slavoj Žižek endorses this reading,
asking, “which (singular) philosophy did Lacan have in mind; which philosophy
was, for him, a stand-in for philosophy ‘as such?’”6 Žižek claims that Lacan has
1. Jacques Lacan, “Peut-être à Vincennes…” Autres écrits, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller (Paris:
Éditions du Seuil, 2001) 314-35.
2. Jacques Lacan, “Monsieur A.,” Ornicar? 21-22 (Summer 1980): 17.
3. Jean-Claude Milner, L’Œuvre claire: Lacan, la science, la philosophie (Paris: Éditions du
Seuil, 1995) 146.
4. François Regnault, “L’antiphilosophie selon Lacan,” Conférences d’esthétique lacanienne
(Paris: Agalma, 1997) 61.
5. Regnault, 61-2, 73.
6. Slavoj Žižek, The Ticklish Subject: The Absent Centre of Political Ontology (London: Verso,
1999) 250.
S: Journal of the Jan van Eyck Circle for Lacanian Ideology Critique 3 (2010): 137-158
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 138
Deleuze’s thought in view as a philosophical stance epitomizing a “false subversive
radicalization that fits the existing power constellation perfectly” in the climate
of post-May ’68 Paris.7 Apropos of a generalized concept of antiphilosophy, Badiou
advances a claim dovetailing with Regnault’s and Žižek’s observations—“Each an-
tiphilosopher chooses the philosophers that he intends to make into canonical ex-
amples of emptied and vain speech”8 (that is, the “anti-” of antiphilosophy is always
relative to particular philosophers and/or philosophies, rather than to Philosophy
per se, if such a thing even exists at all).
But, as with his technical formalized graphs and “mathemes” (the latter discussed
below), Lacan’s precious few sentences regarding his rebellion against the philo-
sophical—offering no specifications for what, precisely, Lacan takes “philosophy”
to be—function somewhat like Rorschach ink blots, supporting the projections of
multiple divergent interpretations. Whereas both Regnault and Žižek detect a dis-
paragement of philosophical tendencies prevailing within France’s restless student
bodies of the late 1960s and 1970s, Soler construes the later Lacanian denigration of
philosophy as going with, rather than against, the flow of its contemporaneous so-
cio-cultural Zeitgeist in the wake of May ’68; Soler depicts this Lacan as participat-
ing in the widespread (quasi/pseudo-)Marxist devaluation of theoretical thought as
being hopelessly embedded in ideologically compromised superstructural strata of
status quo society.9
Although antiphilosophy à la Lacan has given rise to such exegetical discrepancies,
those who have addressed this topic nonetheless converge on a specific shared hy-
pothesis regarding its significance: Milner, Badiou, Regnault, and Soler are united
in their agreement that it is neither by accident nor coincidence that Lacan’s an-
nounced insurgency against philosophy comes at a time when his institutional
circumstances involve issues to do with the teaching and transmission of psychoa-
nalysis in academic settings.10 Indeed, Lacan’s initial use of the term, in “Peut-être
à Vincennes…” defines antiphilosophy as an “investigation of what university dis-
course owes to its supposed ‘educational’ function.”11 As is well known, the phrase
“university discourse” is part of Lacan’s theory of the four discourses (the other
three being those of the master, hysteric, and analyst), a theory first elaborated at
length in the seventeenth seminar of 1969-1970 (L’envers de la psychanalyse).
12. Lacan, Le Séminaire de Jacques Lacan, Livre XV: L’acte psychanalytique, 1967-1968 (unpub-
lished), session of February 28th, 1968.
13. Lacan, Le Séminaire de Jacques Lacan, Livre XVI: D’un Autre à l’autre, 1968-1969 ed.
Jacques-Alain Miller (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2006) 239-40.
14. Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XVII: The Other Side of Psychoanalysis, 1969-
1970, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller, trans. Russell Grigg, (New York: W.W. Norton and Company,
2007) 31.
15. Lacan, Seminar XVII, 168.
16. Lacan, Le Séminaire de Jacques Lacan, Livre XVIII: D’un discours qui ne serait pas du sem-
blant, 1971, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller, (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2006) 43.
17. Lacan, Seminar XVII, 169; Adrian Johnston, Žižek’s Ontology: A Transcendental Materialist
Theory of Subjectivity (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2008) 251-52.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 140
which analytic discourse should not be confused, ultimately buttresses the power
of capitalism and makes it more effective;18 University discourse, epitomized by
the history of philosophy, generates a knowledge that is a dissimulating ideology,
bolstering whoever happens to be the given status quo master.19 In the twentieth
seminar (Encore, 1972-1973), Lacan flatly identifies “philosophical discourse in its
true light” as “a variation on the master’s discourse.”20 Soler’s reading of Lacanian
antiphilosophy, as being very much of its time, is by no means unjustified. Further-
more Badiou, with his interest in defending the philosophical tradition from its
detractors and eulogizers, insists that philosophy as such is “diagonal” to Lacan’s
four discourses (that is, it cannot be reduced to any of these structural schemas).21
Curiously, while citing 1975’s “Peut-être à Vincennes…” and 1980’s “Monsieur A.,” pre-
vious discussions of Lacanian antiphilosophy have neglected Lacan’s 1974 interview
with journalists in Rome, “Le triomphe de la religion.” The section of this interview,
entitled by Jacques-Alain Miller, “Ne pas philosophe,” begins with the interviewer
prefacing a question with the phrase, “In your philosophy.…” Lacan interrupts,
snapping back, “I am not at all a philosopher.”22 When the questioner specifies that
by “philosophy” he/she means an “ontological concept” (nozione ontologica) such as
Lacan’s “metaphysics of the real,” he/she is met by another, similarly blunt nega-
tion—“It is not at all ontological”23 (the evidence from this period of Lacan’s theoriz-
ing strongly suggests he entirely equates philosophy with ontology, unsympatheti-
cally viewing the latter as a systematic Weltanschauung, an intellectually bankrupt
and laughable “theory of everything” grounded on the supposition that being is an
ultimately coherent and unified substantial whole, a seamless One.24 Regnault rea-
sonably proposes that the undermining of the ontological worldviews of academic/
university philosophy is a key mission of Lacanian antiphilosophy, which does not
attempt to pose as an alternate worldview25). When the interviewer then describes
18. Lacan, Le Séminaire de Jacques Lacan, Livre XIX: Le savoir du psychanalyste, 1971-1972
(unpublished), session of December 2nd, 1971.
19. Lacan, Seminar XIX: Le savoir du psychanalyste, session of May 4th, 1972; Jacques Lacan,
Le Séminaire de Jacques Lacan, Livre XIX: …ou pire, 1971-1972 (unpublished), session of June
21st, 1972.
20. Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XX: Encore, 1972-1973, ed. Jacques-Alain
Miller; trans. Bruce Fink, (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1998) 39.
21. Alain Badiou, “Lacan et Platon: Le mathème est-il une idée?,” Lacan avec les philosophes,
ed. Collège international de philosophie, (Paris: Éditions Albin Michel, 1991) 148.
22. Lacan, “Le triomphe de la religion,” Le triomphe de la religion, précéde de Discours aux
catholiques, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller, (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2005) 96.
23. Lacan, “Le triomphe de la religion,” 96.
24. Lacan, Seminar XIX: …ou pire, session of June 21st, 1972); Lacan, Seminar XX: Encore,
30-1; Adrian Johnston, “Conflicted Matter: Jacques Lacan and the Challenge of Secular-
izing Materialism,” Pli: The Warwick Journal of Philosophy (Spring 2008): 184-85; Adrian
Johnston, “Life Terminable and Interminable: The Undead and the Afterlife of the Afterlife-
A Friendly Disagreement with Martin Hägglund,” New Centennial Review 9.1 (Spring 2009):
168-69.
25. Regnault, “L’antiphilosophie selon Lacan,” 64, 66, 73.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 141
the Lacanian Real as Kantian, Lacan, evidently assuming (like Hegel) that for Kant
the noumenal realm of thing-in-themselves beyond the limits of possible experi-
ence forms a consistent totality, retorts:
But this is not at all Kantian. It is even on this that I insist. If there is a notion
of the real, it is extremely complex, and on this account it is not perceivable
in a manner that would make a totality. It would be an unbelievably pre-
sumptuous notion to think that there would be an all of the real.26
A short while later in the conversation, Lacan exclaims, “I do not make any philos-
ophy; on the contrary, I am wary of it like the plague.”27 He immediately goes on to
mention his topological Borromean knotting of the registers of the Real, the Sym-
bolic, and the Imaginary as central to a non-philosophical, non-Kantian handling
of the Real in analysis28 (similarly, Soler and Badiou both note Lacan’s opposition
to a Kantian-style critical cordoning off of the Real as an absolutely inaccessible
noumenal ‘x’29). At this juncture, things become especially puzzling.
Clearly, the Lacan of “Le triomphe de la religion” thrusts to the fore his topologized,
analytic register theory as antithetical to the all-encompassing fictions of philo-
sophical ontology (with even Kant’s critical-transcendental framework implicitly
accused of harboring unanalysed vestiges of traditional substance metaphysics).
By contrast, the temporally proximate Lacan of the twenty-third and twenty-fifth
seminars (Le sinthome, 1975-1976 and Le moment de conclure, 1977-1978) appears to
sing a quite different tune. The Lacan of Le sinthome wants to forge a “foliesophie”30
(that is, a neologism involving an acoustic resonance between “philo-” and “folie,”
madness); he speaks of “supplementing” a “certain lack” in philosophy with his
Borromean knot, thereby creating “the first philosophy that it appears to me sup-
ports itself.”31 Stranger still, in 1977, addressing his lifelong engagement with the
theory and practice of analysis, Lacan confesses:
That which I do there…” is of philosophy…” My Borromean knots are phi-
losophy too. It is philosophy that I have handled as I have been able to in fol-
lowing the current, if I can say, the current that results from the philosophy
of Freud.32
All of these vacillations on Lacan’s part are sandwiched in time between his two
explicit uses of the word “antiphilosophy.” Two reactions to the above are to be
33. Badiou, “Lacan et Platon,” pg. 135; Jean-Claude Milner, “Lacan et la science moderne,”
Lacan avec les philosophes, 348.
34. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, pg. 117-158; Jean-Claude Milner, Le périple structural: Figures
et paradigme (Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2002) 153-18; Jean-Claude Milner, “Interview with
Jean-Claude Milner (with Knox Peden),” Concept and Form: The Cahiers pour l’Analyse and
Contemporary French Thought, ed. Peter Hallward, Christian Kerslake, and Knox Peden,
(London: Verso Books, forthcoming).
35. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 147-48.
36. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 148, 150-51, 154.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 143
ing to which understanding entails misunderstanding37). Of course, this goes some
way toward explaining Lacan’s notoriously cryptic fashions of expressing himself
in light of his “return to Freud.” But, what is more, it also clarifies the link between
the doctrine of the matheme and the recurring theme of transmission. Contem-
poraneous with his declaration of insurgency against philosophy during a period
when the place of psychoanalysis in the university is at stake, Lacan, speaking of
the matheme in the ancient Greek sense of ta mathemata (that is, that which can be
taught and passed on without loss),38 repeatedly emphasizes that his formalizations
function in the service of rendering his analytic concepts integrally transmissible.39
The implicit contrasting case is Freud, whose concepts, couched in non-formalized
writing, proved themselves vulnerable to corrupting, perverted mistransmissions.
And yet, in an irony not to be missed, Lacan’s mathemes can be seen as pillars of
a new Tower of Babel inasmuch as, not self-evident in their own interpretations,
they have given rise to thriving pluralities of incommensurable readings (although,
admittedly, Lacan shows an awareness of this danger—for instance, with respect
to these mathemes, he remarks, “they are not transmitted without the help of lan-
guage, and that’s what makes the whole thing shaky”40).
However, the significance of Lacan’s increasing mobilization of mathemes in the
’60s and ’70s also has to do with issues of communication and understanding (as
miscommunication and misunderstanding) apropos not only of the practice of ana-
lytic pedagogy (that is, the educational teaching and transmission of analysis), but
also the very objects of metapsychological theory (that is, the parlêtre as subject
of the unconscious). In his discussion of Lacanian antiphilosophy, Milner asserts
that philosophy (at least in this context) remains completely wedded to its archaic
roots in a pre-modern ethos concerned with the enrichment of the soul (psuchê,
âme) through the acquisition of meaningful wisdom. Milner’s contention is that the
advent of modern science—following Alexandre Koyré, as does Lacan, he privileges
Galileo’s mathematization of the study of nature as the founding gesture of scien-
tific modernity41—shatters the pre-modern fantasized wholeness of the closed cos-
37. Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book III: The Psychoses, 1955-1956, ed. Jacques-Alain
Miller; trans. Russell Grigg, (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1993) 163-64.
38. Martin Heidegger, “Modern Science, Metaphysics, and Mathematics,” trans. W.B. Bar-
ton, Jr. and Vera Deutsch, Basic Writings, ed. David Farrell Krell, (New York: HarperCollins
Publishers, 1993) 273-78.
39. Lacan, Seminar XIX: …ou pire, sessions of December 15th, 1971, April 19th, 1972; Lacan,
Seminar XIX: Le savoir du psychanalyste, session of May 4th, 1972; Lacan, Seminar XX:
Encore, 110, 119; Jacques Lacan, “L’étourdit,” Autres écrits, 472, 482-83; Milner, L’Œuvre claire,
122-23.
40. Lacan, Seminar XX: Encore, 110.
41. Alexandre Koyré, From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe (New York: Harper
Torchbooks, 1958) 99, 278; Jacques Lacan, “The Function and Field of Speech and Language
in Psychoanalysis,” Écrits: The First Complete Edition in English, trans. Bruce Fink, (New
York: W.W. Norton and Company, 2006) 235-39; Jacques Lacan, “Variations on the Standard
Treatment,” Écrits, pg. 299-300; Jacques Lacan, “On an Ex Post Facto Syllabary,” Écrits, 608;
Jacques Lacan, “Science and Truth,” Écrits, 726-27; Jacques Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 144
mos with which the wisdom-loving soul of the philosopher is entangled.42 By con-
trast, unlike the philosophical tradition which (still) allegedly lags behind the early
seventeenth-century revolutionary rupture signified by the proper name “Galileo,”
psychoanalysis, according to Milner, is entirely in synch with modern science43 (as
is common knowledge, Lacan considers this new scientificity an historical condi-
tion of possibility for the subsequent emergence of Freudian psychoanalysis nearly
three centuries later44). Hence, among other of its agendas, Lacan’s antiphilosophy
perhaps aims to draw attention to the fact that the philosophical (and quotidian)
conception of psychoanalysis, as a depth hermeneutics in search of the profound
meaning of psychical suffering, is a hopelessly wrong-headed misreading of Freud
and his place in the history of ideas.
Soler rightly reminds readers that Freud’s discovery of the unconscious poses a
series of fundamental challenges to traditional philosophy.45 Buttressing Milner’s
position, she maintains that the later Lacan comes to place his faith in mathemes
modeled on scientific formulas because anti-ancient, mathematized modern science
does not “think”46—with thinking associated here with modes of cognition that are
prone to endow things with sense and significance (indeed, traditional philosophy
certainly thinks in this manner). In the post-Galilean universe, the Real of mathe-
matically-parsed material being, although anything but ineffable and unknowable,
is meaningless, decoupled from the ordered, organizing plans of final causes as
guarantees of rhyme and reason.
A couple of months prior to his second and final self-identification as an antiph-
ilosopher, Lacan, in his “Letter of Dissolution” announcing the end of his École
freudienne, presents his “obstinacy on the path of mathemes” as a struggle against
“meaning” qua “always religious.”47 In other words, atheistic psychoanalysis is op-
Lacan, Book II: The Ego in Freud’s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis, 1954-1955,
ed. Jacques-Alain Miller, trans. Sylvana Tomaselli (New York: W.W. Norton and Company,
1988) 298-99; Lacan, Seminar III: Psychoses, 238; Jacques Lacan, Le Séminaire de Jacques
Lacan, Livre XIII: L’objet de la psychanalyse, 1965-1966 (unpublished), session of December
8th, 1965; Lacan, Seminar XX: Encore, 81-2; Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 9, 37-53; Jean-Claude
Milner, “De la linguistique à la linguisterie,” Lacan, l’écrit, l’image, ed. l’École de la Cause
freudienne (Paris: Flammarion, 2000) 8; Adrian Johnston, “Turning the Sciences Inside
Out: Revisiting Lacan’s ‘Science and Truth,’” Concept and Form (forthcoming).
42. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 148-49.
43. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 149.
44. Lacan, “Position of the Unconscious,” Écrits, 712; Jacques Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques
Lacan, Book XI: The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, 1964, ed. Jacques-Alain
Miller; trans, Alan Sheridan (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1977) 47, 231; Adrian
Johnston, Time Driven: Metapsychology and the Splitting of the Drive (Evanston: Northwest-
ern University Press, 2005) 61-71; Johnston, “Turning the Sciences Inside Out.”
45. Soler, “Lacan en antiphilosophie,” 124-25.
46. Soler, “Lacan en antiphilosophie,” 142-43.
47. Lacan, “Letter of Dissolution,” trans. Jeffrey Mehlman, Television/A Challenge to the
Psychoanalytic Establishment, ed. Joan Copjec (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1990)
130.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 145
posed to the essence of religiosity, the latter rendered as the infusion of purpo-
siveness, sense, or significance into being, existence, reality, the world, etc. (in his
seminar on Lacan’s antiphilosophy, Badiou indisputably has this statement from
1980 in mind when he describes the doctrine of the matheme as a countermeasure
to the fact that psychoanalysis is “constantly threatened with being a hermeneutic
of sense,” with “Lacan imputing to philosophy a religious recovery of sense”48).
Combining this with Milner’s and Soler’s previously mentioned observations, a
stark opposition between two chains of equivalences becomes apparent in the final
stretch of Lacan’s teachings: religion-philosophy-meaning (grounded and totalized
in the ancient finite cosmos) versus psychoanalysis-antiphilosophy-meaningless-
ness ([un-]grounded and detotalized in the modern infinite universe).
In her exegesis of Lacan’s revolt contra philosophy, Soler refers to the Lacanian “an-
ticognitivist thesis” according to which “thought is jouissance,”49 a thesis she dwells
on at some length.50 Both Badiou and François Balmès similarly identify jouissance
as that which is granted no proper place in classical philosophy/ontology.51 As with
so many things that initially appear enigmatic and mysterious in Lacan’s musings,
returning to Freud is both helpful and crucial for illuminating the reasoning be-
hind these assertions. At root, what connects all of the above is Freud’s conception
of primary-process-style mentation as characteristic of unconscious thinking.52 De-
void of innate ideas, Jungian archetypes and the like—as a hard-wired foundation-
al basis of necessary deep meanings—the Freudian psyche acquires its contingent
contents over the course of temporally elongated ontogenetic subject formation.
These contents, furnished thus and registered in the form of ideational represen-
tations (Freud’s Vorstellungen and Lacan’s signifiers), come under the driving in-
fluence of primary processes as libidinally charged (that is, jouissance-saturated)
psychical dynamics chaining together concatenations of mental materials with no
regard for considerations of sense, significance, communicability, or comprehensi-
bility whatsoever. These latter are the concerns of secondary-process-style menta-
tion, as usually governing conscious cognition (and here we circumnavigate back
to one of Soler’s earlier remarks: philosophy “thinks” in a secondary process mode,
a mode circumvented by Lacan’s analytic mathemes. The thinking she equates with
jouissance, on the other hand, is quite distinct and is associated with the primary
process).
The ensemble of Lacan’s later concepts emerging cotemporaneously with his an-
nounced move onto the terrain of antiphilosophy (for example, the letter, lalangue,
48. Badiou, Le antiphilosophie de Lacan, third, fourth, sixth, and seventh courses.
49. Soler, “Lacan en antiphilosophie,” 127.
50. Soler, “Lacan en antiphilosophie,” 128-29, 131-32, 134.
51. Badiou, Le antiphilosophie de Lacan, sixth course; François Balmès, Ce que Lacan dit de
l’être (1953-1960) (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1999) 206.
52. Adrian Johnston, “Sigmund Freud,” The History of Continental Philosophy, Volume III: The
New Century, ed. Keith Ansell Pearson, The History of Continental Philosophy, Eight Volumes,
ed. Alan Schrift, Chesham: Acumen Press (forthcoming).
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 146
and jouis-sens, enjoy-meant) can be seen as extensions of Freud’s insight into the
primary processes. According to this insight from the origins of psychoanalysis,
networks and webs of associations that are meaningless from the standpoint of
self-consciousness’ awareness (associations hinging on the acoustic and graphic
resemblances between Vorstellungen/signifiers as material rather than meaningful)
comprise the unconscious grounds of psychical life itself. If philosophy peers intro-
spectively into the presumed depths of the soul (âme) in order to discover profound
a priori meanings anchoring the unified self in its relations with the world as a co-
herent global whole, Freudian psychoanalysis, as developed by Lacan, is antiphilo-
sophical insofar as it scans the surfaces of the -qua-parlêtre to detect traces of the
Real, of a strange thoughtless thinking out-of-joint with sensible worldly reality—a
thinking in which currents of jouissance (as jouis-sens) concatenate a posteriori frag-
ments of phonemes, words, images, and memories in movements whose suscepti-
bility to formal delineation and analytic interpretation makes them no less sense-
less relative to common, conscious sense. The sub-title of Milner’s L’Œuvre claire, in
which Lacan’s name is linked to science as well as philosophy (“Lacan, la science, la
philosophie”) might be recalled here: just as scientific equations such as “E = mc2”
ultimately do nothing more than descriptively encircle facets of a universe with
no transcendent, metaphysical Other or Elsewhere—the sheer, brute givenness of
immanent materiality in its inexplicable contingency is science’s one-and-only
Ground Zero, that which it represents without adding any supplementary meaning
or guarantee of necessary significance—so, too, do Lacan’s mathemes, equally as
meaningless as the mathematical formulas of physics, reflect the baseless base of
subjectivity’s structures as beneath or beyond the spheres of sense.
Milner concludes his remarks on antiphilosophy in Lacanian psychoanalysis by
placing psychoanalysis and philosophy in relation to the dialectic of contingency
and necessity foreshadowed above. Focusing on the subject, the notion constituting
the core hub of intersection between Lacanian theory and the philosophical tradi-
tion, he states:
The point of intervention of psychoanalysis is very nicely summarized thus:
the passage from the anterior instant where the speaking being would have
been able to be infinitely other than it is—in its body and thought—to the
ulterior instant where the speaking being, due to its very contingency, has
become entirely the same as an eternal necessity. For in the end psychoa-
nalysis speaks of only one thing: the conversion of each subjective singular-
ity into a law as necessary as the laws of nature, also as contingent as them
and as absolute.53
Milner continues:
Yet, it is true that philosophy has not ceased to treat this instant. In a sense,
one would be able to maintain that it has properly invented it. But, to de-
scribe it, it has generally taken the paths of the outside-the-universe (hors-
53. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 153.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 147
univers). Yet, psychoanalysis is nothing if it does not maintain, as the pivot
of its doctrine, that there is no outside-the-universe. There and only there
resides that which is structural and non-chronological in its relation to mod-
ern science.54
In a sense, the claims in these passages tap into a line of thought present in Lacan’s
theorizations at least as early as his mid-1950s discussions of Poe’s “The Purloined
Letter”55 (that is, well before the dominance of the antiphilosophical mathemes in
the 1970s and start of the 1980s). Simply put, Lacan consistently remains committed
to models of subject formation in which a scaffolding of firm, law-like structural
constraints shaping subjectivity (that is, apparent necessities regulating the vicis-
situdes of psychical life) emerges via a bottom-up genesis in the interplay between
primary-process-level dynamics (including the libidinal economy, jouissance,
drives, and desires) and arbitrary sets of signifiers qua Vorstellungen (that is, im-
posed contingencies stamped upon the psyche by chance experiences, encounters,
relationships, etc.). In Milner’s reading, philosophy errs in that it seeks to stabilize
this groundless ground of contingency by slipping under it the imagined depth of
a supposedly solid bedrock of final, irreducible meaning/sense (that is, an “outside-
the-universe,” with “universe” designating the post-Galilean plane of mathema-
tized materialities, as a metaphysical and/or theological “other scene” giving rea-
son to existence by rationally orchestrating the order of things). As Badiou puts it,
“Philosophy operates, in Lacan’s eyes, by affirming that there is such a thing as a
meaning or sense of truth (sens de la vérité).”56
Milner, Regnault, and Badiou all agree that, for Lacan, philosophy and antiphiloso-
phy are not simply and diametrically opposed to one another as mutually exclusive
entities. For Milner, “psychoanalysis has not only the right, but the obligation to
speak of that which philosophy speaks, because it has exactly the same objects.”57
For Regnault, the “anti-” of “antiphilosophy “is to be understood, no longer in the
sense of contradiction.”58 For Badiou, the issue is particularly complicated. On the
one hand, just as Regnault describes psychoanalysis as on “the opposite shore,”59
bordering the same river as philosophy—this is another way of articulating Mil-
ner’s assertion that philosophy and psychoanalysis share common points of refer-
ence—Badiou, too, grants that Lacanian theory is quite proximate to philosophy
in that it applies itself to an identical ensemble of topics60 (in a related vein, he
recognizes Plato’s Socrates as the first analyst61). Nonetheless, he repeatedly and
all possible as well as actual knowledge, an unspeakable and ineffable “x.” Badiou, Le
antiphilosophie de Lacan, fourth course.
83. Badiou, “The Formulas of L’Étourdit,” 85.
84. Johnston, Žižek’s Ontology, 85-90; Johnston, Badiou, Žižek, and Political Transformations,
118-124; Adrian Johnston, “Slavoj Žižek’s Hegelian Reformation: Giving a Hearing to The
Parallax View,” Diacritics 37.1 (Spring 2007): 9.
85. Badiou, Le antiphilosophie de Lacan, second course.
86. Badiou, Logics of Worlds: Being and Event II, trans. Alberto Toscano (London: Continu-
um, 2009) 523.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 153
The idea of philosophy as questioning and openness always paves the way,
as we know, for the return of the religious. I use “religion” here to describe
the axiom according to which a truth is always a prisoner of the arcana of
meaning and a matter for interpretation and exegesis. There is an Althus-
serian brutality to the concept of philosophy that recalls, in that respect,
Nietzsche. Philosophy is affirmative and combative, and it is not a captive
of the somewhat vicious delights of deferred interpretation. In terms of phi-
losophy, Althusser maintains the presupposition of atheism, just as others,
such as Lacan, maintain it in anti-philosophy. That presupposition can be
expressed in just one sentence: truths have no meaning.87
Insofar as Lacanian psychoanalysis concerns itself with a distinctive meta-physics
of the incorporeal-yet-material signifier, it avoids a scientism that submits to and
imitates the physical sciences. But it does so without lapsing into religiosity, as
happens all too often to those who pit themselves against scientistic reductionism.
The Symbolic of an analytic savoir outlining and capturing, through the formal
“literalization” (as Milner has it88) of mathemes, the play of Real vérité, itself with-
out meaning or sense, bypasses the Imaginary lures of a connaissance fixated upon
visions of a corporeal wholeness (biologistic scientism) and/or enveloping world
of significance (onto-theological religion and, as observed previously, the majority
of traditional philosophies as Lacan and Badiou see them). For anyone acquainted
with both Lacan and Badiou, it is impossible not to hear profound cross-resonances
between the antiphilosophy of the former and the philosophy of the latter.
In response to these cross-resonances, one could go so far as to maintain that Badi-
ou’s opposition of philosophy and antiphilosophy comes undone in the confron-
tation with Lacan-the-supposed-antiphilosopher (Milner’s endorsement of Lacan’s
few self-identifications as an antiphilosopher likewise becomes problematic at this
juncture too). Arguably, some of Badiou’s own statements indicate this. His 1990
Collège international de philosophie presentation contains an admission that La-
can’s thought is uncannily proximate to his own philosophy.89 Near the end of this
same presentation, Badiou, avowing that both Plato and Lacan, side-by-side, are
crucial inspirations for his own thinking, describes a “cross-fertilization in torsion,
without unity of plan, between antiphilosophy and philosophy.”90 Quite recently,
he invoked “Lacan the philosopher, as much as antiphilosopher. Or, philosopher of
that which in psychoanalysis is antiphilosophical,” going on to propose that Lacan
87. Badiou, “Louis Althusser (1918-1990),” Pocket Pantheon: Figures in Postwar Philosophy,
trans. David Macey (London: Verso, 2009) 67.
88. Milner, L’Œuvre claire, 141-146; Milner, Le périple structural, 149-150; Milner, “De la lin-
guistique à la linguisterie,” 8; Milner, “Interview with Jean-Claude Milner.”
89. Badiou, “Lacan et Platon,” 138. In his discussion of Lacanian antiphilosophy, Regnault
also highlights the relevance of Badiou’s thought to analysts interested in Lacan’s later
teachings. See Regnault, “L’antiphilosophie selon Lacan,” 76.
90. Badiou, “Lacan et Platon,” 154.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 154
offers “no reason to conclude as to the triumph of antiphilosophy.”91 Similarly, in
“La psychanalyse a-t-elle des fondements philosophiques?” he states that, “inasmuch as
there is a philosophy of Lacanianism, it’s the philosophy of antiphilosophy.”92 The
precise formulation of this statement signals that for Badiou, Lacan’s thought repre-
sents a paradoxical node of convergence at which the apparent opposites of philos-
ophy and antiphilosophy pass into each other, a short-circuit in which these seem-
ingly antinomic poles are rendered fluid, unstable, and, perhaps, even indiscernible
at times. Such an interpretation is further supported by reference to the 1994-1995
seminar on Lacan’s antiphilosophy, in which Badiou posits that, “Lacan elaborates
the first immanent antiphilosophy and, as such, it’s the last antiphilosophy.”93 By
“immanent,” he means here that, by treating ab-meant Real truths as attested to
in and through transmissible knowledge, Lacan eschews the standard antiphilo-
sophical gesture of pointing at unsayable mysteries transcending any and every
possible savoir (that is, truths absolutely refractory to all efforts at knowing). Ac-
cording to this characterization, Lacan’s name designates a historical switch-point
at which, to resort to Hegelian language, antiphilosophy becomes self-sundering,
surpassing itself at the very moment it reaches an apex of culmination. As noted
earlier, Lacan himself, in the years 1975 to 1980, oscillates back-and-forth between
embracing and repudiating philosophy as his key intellectual partner in thinking
through everything at stake in Freudian psychoanalysis. Hence Badiou’s ambiva-
lences, hesitations, and qualifications surrounding the identification of Lacan as an
antiphilosopher echo Lacan’s own vacillations apropos this issue. Can anything
more satisfactory be said about this matter?
Interestingly, Žižek’s very first reference to Badiou in print, in the introduction to
his 1993 book, Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology-a
text essential for an understanding of the philosophical foundations of Žižekian
theory in its various guises and manifestations-hinges on the question of whether
Lacan is an antiphilosopher in the Badiouian sense. Žižek argues at length:
According to Alain Badiou, we live today in the age of the “new sophists.”
The two crucial breaks in the history of philosophy, Plato’s and Kant’s, oc-
curred as a reaction to new relativistic attitudes which threatened to de-
molish the traditional corpus of knowledge: in Plato’s case, the logical ar-
gumentation of the sophists undermined the mythical foundations of the
traditional mores; in Kant’s case, empiricists (such as Hume) undermined
the foundations of the Leibnizean-Wolfian rationalist metaphysics. In both
cases, the solution offered is not a return to the traditional attitude but a
new founding gesture which “beats the sophists at their own game,” i.e.,
which surmounts the relativism of the sophists by way of its own radicaliza-
91. Badiou, “Formules de «l’Étourdit»,” in Alain Badiou and Barbara Cassin, Il n’y a pas de
rapport sexuel: Deux leçon sur «l’Étourdit» de Lacan (Paris: Librairie Arthème Fayard, 2010)
107-8.
92. Badiou, “La psychanalyse a-t-elle des fondements philosophiques?”
93. Badiou, Le antiphilosophie de Lacan, fourth course.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 155
tion (Plato accepts the argumentative procedure of the sophists; Kant accepts
Hume’s burial of the traditional metaphysics). And it is our hypothesis that
Lacan opens up the possibility of another repetition of the same gesture.
That is to say, the “postmodern theory” which predominates today is a mix-
ture of neopragmatism and deconstruction best epitomized by names such
as Rorty or Lyotard; their works emphasize the “anti-essentialist” refusal
of universal Foundation, the dissolving of “truth” into an effect of plural
language-games, the relativization of its scope to historically specified in-
tersubjective community, etc., etc. Isolated desperate endeavors of a “post-
modern” return to the Sacred are quickly reduced to just another language
game, to another way we “tell stories about ourselves.”94
He continues:
Lacan, however, is not part of this “postmodern theory”: in this respect, his
position is homologous to that of Plato or Kant. The perception of Lacan as
an “anti-essentialist” or “deconstructionist” falls prey to the same illusion as
that of perceiving Plato as just one among the sophists. Plato accepts from
the sophists their logic of discursive argumentation, but uses it to affirm
his commitment to Truth; Kant accepts the breakdown of the traditional
metaphysics, but uses it to perform his transcendental turn; along the same
lines, Lacan accepts the “deconstructionist” motif of radical contingency,
but turns this motif against itself, using it to assert his commitment to Truth
as contingent. For that very reason, deconstructionists and neopragmatists,
in dealing with Lacan, are always bothered by what they perceive as some
remainder of “essentialism” (in the guise of “phallogocentrism,” etc.)—as if
Lacan were uncannily close to them, but somehow not “one of them.”95
Of course, this inaugural invocation of Badiou, one that initiates a subsequent sus-
tained engagement with Badiou’s ideas, implicitly contests the Badiouian depiction
of Lacan as an antiphilosopher. As mentioned at the outset, Žižek (like Regnault)
insists that Lacan’s antiphilosophy is not an antagonistic dismissal of Philosophy
tout court, but rather a rejection of particular philosophies (such as Deleuze and
Guattari’s anti-Oedipal philosophy of nomadic desiring machines in vogue during
the period when Lacan declares himself to be an antiphilosopher—or many meta-
physical and/or ontological systems of the philosophical past). Furthermore, as the
above quotations reveal, Žižek goes so far as to situate Lacan in a classical West-
ern philosophical lineage tracing all the way back to Badiou’s dear Plato, contend-
ing that the Lacanian “anti-” signifies hostility specifically to the new postmod-
ern sophists, namely, many of his intellectual contemporaries in post-war France.
Given that Badiou subsumes what Žižek refers to as “postmodernism” under the
heading of antiphilosophy, if Žižek’s assertions in these quoted passages regarding
94. Žižek, Tarrying with the Negative: Kant, Hegel, and the Critique of Ideology, (Durham:
Duke University Press, 1993) 4.
95. Žižek, Tarrying with the Negative, 4.
Johnston: This Philosophy Which is Not One S3 (2010): 156
Lacan were to secure Badiou’s agreement (which it isn’t evident they wouldn’t), it
would mean that Lacan’s antiphilosophy is actually an anti-antiphilosophy (inter-
preted here according to a dialectical, rather than a classical, construal of double
negation, meaning that the Lacanian “philosophy” resulting from the negation of
the negation is different from the [traditional] philosophy initially/originally ne-
gated by the first “anti-”). Moreover, as regards the Žižekian rendition of Lacanian
vérité “as contingent,” Badiou’s (conception of) philosophy, based as it is on truths
generated by aleatory events in the four “generic procedures” of truth-production
(that is, art, love, politics, and science) as “conditions” for philosophy, now appears
to be itself an heir of Lacan, inheriting some of his defining features (the title of
the thirty-seventh and final meditation of Being and Event, his 1988 magnum opus,
“Descartes/Lacan,” is telling in this regard as well).
Lacan’s influence on Badiou is no secret. The latter is quite forthright about his
profound indebtedness to the former (“my master Jacques Lacan”96). For instance, in
his Manifesto for Philosophy (1989), Badiou speaks of Lacan-the-antiphilosopher as
“the greatest of our dead.”97 He goes on to identify Freud and (especially) Lacan as
marking a proper event at the level of thinking the generic procedure of love, itself
one of philosophy’s four conditions.98 This leads Badiou to declare that “the anti-
philosopher Lacan is a condition of the renaissance of philosophy. A philosophy is
possible today, only if it is compossible with Lacan.”99 In the immediate wake of Be-
ing and Event, Badiou’s confining of Lacan’s importance to a radical transformation
of the amorous may strike the eye as an exercise in shoehorning Lacan into a pre-
arranged picture, in which love is the final category of truth-production left, once
Badiou has identified the artistic, political, and scientific events conditioning his
philosophy; anyone with even a passing acquaintance with Lacan’s texts is aware
that he has a great deal to say about art, politics, science, truth, subjectivity, and so
on (that is to say, love is hardly the sole thing with respect to which Lacan makes
crucial theoretical contributions pertinent to Badiouian philosophy). Additionally,
those familiar with Badiou’s texts is aware that Lacan is deeply significant for
Badiou beyond the topic of amorous matters alone. In several texts prior to Being
and Event, this is frankly admitted. For the relatively younger Badiou, faithful to a
Maoist version of Marxism and a certain materialist deployment of dialectics, “La-
can…” is our Hegel.”100 “Like Hegel for Marx, Lacan for us is essential,”101 and “For
today’s French Marxists, the function of Lacan is the function that Hegel served for
the German revolutionaries of the 1840s.”102 In hybrid Hegelian-Žižekian parlance,
de Jacques Lacan, Livre X: L’angoisse, 1962-1963, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller (Paris: Éditions du
Seuil, 2004) 105.
108. Johnston, “Life Terminable and Interminable,” 168-69.