Does "refer to the subject’s position of desire and relation to language" in the following text mean "refer to a. [the subject’s position of desires] and b. [the subject’s relation to language]?
Text:
Lacan was famous for using abstract formula called ‘mathemes’ to refer to the subject’s position of desire and relation to language. The barred ‘S’ was one of his infamous mathemes, and signified that the subject does not know what his/her true desire is because s/he is barred from it by language. Kelly claims that she found these mathemes poetically evocative, although many critics found her use of them alienating and obfuscatory.
Does "refer to the subject’s position of desire and relation to language" in the following text mean "refer to a. [the subject’s position of desires] and b. [the subject’s relation to language]?
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Does "refer to the subject’s position of desire and relation to language" in the following text mean "refer to a. [the subject’s position of desires] and b. [the subject’s relation to language]? Yes, that's how I interpret it.
Note that the text below speaks of the subject’s position of desire, but your second quote above uses the plura