Passage
Certain schools of thought that arose in the mid- to late 20th century and have since been labeled "poststructuralist" are well known for their propensity to "problematize," "destabilize," or "radicalize" the concepts of previous thinkers. For example, the controversial French poststructuralist and psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan sought to reenvision the concept, first introduced by Freud in the early 1900s, of the ego as the autonomous agent of the psyche. Hence in his salient 1949 essay, "The Mirror Stage as Formative of the 'I' Function as Revealed in the Psychoanalytic Experience," Lacan variously describes the formation and consequent function of the ego as a schismatic event of misrecognition, an epiphenomenon of narcissism, and a process of dialectical tension. The latter sets up an interchange between identification and alienation, generating confusion between being a subject as opposed to an object, between self and other, between what is "me" and "not me."The drama of the ego's emergence in what Lacan has designated "the Mirror Stage" explains its contrary nature. Somewhere between 6 and 18 months of age, an infant will likely encounter his (or her) own reflection in a mirror. At this phase of development, the child lacks any sense of a unified self but, encouraged by an adult, is able to recognize his reflection in the glass and, at the same time, comes to understand that the specular image looking back at him is, in fact, not himself. In other words, the image provides the infant with the first glimpse of himself as an object and specifically as "other." According to Lacan, the initial fascination and pleasure the child experiences upon self-recognition dissolves into confusion at being unable to distinguish between what is and what is not himself. Therefore, such recognition amounts to a kind of misrecognition, the French term for which, méconnaissance, implies an essential misunderstanding or lack of knowledge.Furthermore, while the reflection in the mirror appears coherent, coordinated, and whole, the child himself continues to perceive his body as uncoordinated and fragmentary, resulting in a profound sense of incongruity and disharmony. By exuding mastery and harmony, the mirror image serves as a gestalt; it holds up an "Ideal-I" or future self that promises completeness and perfection-a condition, Lacan believes, that is ultimately unattainable, though we will likely spend the rest of our lives in pursuit of it. Overall, the infant's reaction to the image or Ideal-I is narcissistic: he feels both attraction to it as a model and aggression toward it as a rival.Alienation, lack, absence, and conflict are thus constitutive of the Lacanian ego. The child's image and, hence, the emerging ego mark an ontological gap that serves as a repository for the projections and desires, whether conscious or unconscious, of parents and others. Consequently, this image is, as Adrian Johnston points out, "always already overwritten" with words that are not the child's own. For Johnston, the ego could more properly be described as "a coagulation of inter- and trans-subjective alien influences." Rather than a "fluid and autonomous subject," it becomes a rigid and "heteronomous" entity. Derived from the desires of others, this ego is, in Lacanian terms, "extimate," or internally exterior. It is an irreducible contradiction, both alien and alienating.This ego paradigm diverges from the more familiar and cohesive Freudian notion of the ego as the sovereign organizer of the personality, the rational mediator between internal drives and social pressures that in the interests of self-preservation will also resort to deceptions and defense mechanisms. From a Lacanian perspective, the ego is intrinsically and irreparably divided; it functions mainly to support the fictional construct we identify-or rather, misrecognize-as the "self."
-The author's assertion that Thomas was not unique in doubting Christ's resurrection (Paragraph 3) functions as supporting evidence for which of the following passage claims?
A) Correctly interpreting Thomas' declaration of doubt depends on properly emphasizing the way the words in the scripture were probably spoken.
B) The term "Doubting Thomas" has expanded beyond its origins to be used in contexts that have little to do with religion.
C) Thomas' declaration of doubt has traditionally led to his portrayal as a symbol of stubborn refusal of faith.
D) Thomas' declaration of doubt distinguishes him from other believers, who would have faith in the resurrection while lacking the confirmation of sight.
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q338: Passage
Certain schools of thought that arose in
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Certain schools of thought that arose in
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Certain schools of thought that arose in
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Jorge Luis Borges' 1946 short story "On
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Jorge Luis Borges' 1946 short story "On
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Jorge Luis Borges' 1946 short story "On
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Jorge Luis Borges' 1946 short story "On
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Certain schools of thought that arose in
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Certain schools of thought that arose in
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Jorge Luis Borges' 1946 short story "On
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