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  2. Demand (psychoanalysis) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_(psychoanalysis)

    Demand (psychoanalysis) In Lacanianism, demand ( French: demande) is the way in which instinctive needs are alienated through language and signification. [1] The concept of demand was developed by Lacan—outside of Freudian theory—in conjunction with need and desire in order to account for the role of speech in human aspirations, [2] and ...

  3. Channel 4 (VoD service) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_4_(VoD_service)

    Channel 4 (previously 4oD and All 4) is a video on demand service from Channel Four Television Corporation, free of charge for most content and funded by advertising. The service is available in the UK and Ireland; viewers are not required to have a TV licence—required for live viewing and the BBC iPlayer on-demand service—when watching on-demand services.

  4. Mireille Fanon Mendès-France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mireille_Fanon_Mendès-France

    Fanon Mendès-France has been teaching at Paris Descartes University. She was also a visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley in international law and conflict resolution. She has also worked for UNESCO and the French National Assembly. Together with Gilles Devers, she filed a complaint with the International Court of ...

  5. Infallibilism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infallibilism

    Definition. In philosophy, infallibilism (sometimes called "epistemic infallibilism") is the view that knowing the truth of a proposition is incompatible with there being any possibility that the proposition could be false. This is typically understood as indicating that for a belief to count as knowledge, one's evidence or justification must ...

  6. Pseudorationalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudorationalism

    Pseudorationalism was the label given by economist and philosopher Otto Neurath to a school of thought that he was heavily critical of, which relies on an erroneous vision of the process of thinking and moral action. He made these criticisms throughout many of his writings, but primarily in his 1913 paper "The lost wanderers of Descartes and ...

  7. Martial Gueroult - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martial_Gueroult

    Biography. Gueroult was born on 15 December 1891 in the city of Le Havre in northwestern France. A veteran of both the First and Second World Wars, he was awarded the Légion d’Honneur [Legion of Honour] and twice with the Croix de Guerre [Cross of War]. It was during his time as a prisoner of war in Germany that Gueroult began drafting his ...

  8. Descartes (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descartes_(disambiguation)

    Descartes number, a number that is "almost" a perfect number. Descartes Prize, the European prize for excellence in scientific research and science communication. Descartes' rule of signs, a mathematical technique devised by René Descartes that is used to find the number of positive, negative, and imaginary roots of a polynomial.

  9. Principia philosophiae cartesianae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principia_philosophiae...

    Principia philosophiae cartesianae ( PPC; "The Principles of Cartesian Philosophy") or Renati Descartes principia philosophiae, more geometrico demonstrata ("The Principles of René Descartes' Philosophy, Demonstrated in Geometrical Order") is a philosophical work of Baruch Spinoza published in Amsterdam in 1663.