Against the so-called formation, the formations of all kinds, those that are informed in the knowledge that accumulates in publications and is repeated thanks to well-constructed discourses, the mass effects that knowledge produces, far from the circus of everything that works and spreads, Lacan turns to us and tells us: if you had a little thread, whatever it is, that —he says at that moment to the young psychiatrists in “psychoanalytic training”— would be infinitely more valuable to you than anything else. , to the extent that this would necessarily lead them to what is involved in this relationship of concern with something that is unique, in each encounter, in each experience. Experience of an analysis, but also experience of reading practice and what a reading writes. From the thread, each experience finds pieces, shreds fallen in the text itself; he pulls them to hole the darnin...read more