这是DG还在做大学教授时的授课内容,非常精彩,于是听写下来了.
可能回有微小错误,请见谅.
You get the Kang’s points. Fantasies have to be unrealistic because the moment the second that you get what you seek you don’t, you can’t want it anymore. In order to continue to exist, desire must have its objects perpetually absent. It’s not the “it” that you want; it’s the fantasy of it. So desire supports crazy fantasies.
This is what Pas means when we say we are only truly happy when daydreaming about future happening. Or why we say “the hunt is sweeter than the kill.” or “be careful what you wish for.” not because you’ll get it, because you do not to want it once you do.
[at the University of Austin.]
David:
Come on. Think.
I want you to reach back into those minds and tell me, tell us all...
What is it that you fantasize about?
World peace?I thought so.
Do you fantasize about international fame?
Do you fantasize about winning a Pulitzer Prize?
Or a Nobel Peace Prize?
An MTV Music Award?
Do you fantasize about meeting some genius hunk, ostensibly bad but secretly simmering with noble passion and willing to sleep on the wet spot?
a student:
I'll take two! I'll take two!
What was that?
David:
Kimberly will take two.
You get Lacan's point.
Fantasies have to be unrealistic,
because the moment, the second,
that you get what you seek.
you don't,you can't want it anymore.
In order to continue to exist desire must have its objects perpetually absent.
It's not the "it" that you want.
It's the fantasy of"it."
So, desire supports crazy fantasies.
极富创意!《大卫·戈尔的一生》有哪些精彩片段?
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