Abstract
A strange dialectical reversal characterizes the oppositions which psychoanalysis posits
against philosophy and neuroscience: what psychoanalysis intervenes with as a unique
and missing quality of these subjects, reveals itself upon enquiry as already having been a
feature of said subjects. This article first discusses the failed intervention of psychoanalysis
within the perceived totalities and absolutes of German idealism. Psychoanalysis, founded
on an ontological division and internal inconsistency with a retroactive logic, finds this
internal contradiction already reflected within the supposed totalities of Schelling and
Hegel. Schelling’s “blind act,” a decision with no prior foundation that grounds an abstract
identity-in-itself, appears as the counterpart to what Badiou calls the strictly “analytic act.”
Hegel’s Science of Logic, in which the inconclusive interpenetration of being and nothing
presupposes its own conclusion in the transitions to essence, and in which an internal
incompleteness and contradiction are retroactively constitutive of the concept, similarly
nullifies the intervention of psychoanalysis. Finally, precisely such a reversal is presented
in neuroscience, where the constitutive contradiction of contingently functional neuronal
formations in the adaptive “multiple demand” model of executive functioning repeats the
contingent and self-contradicting psychoanalytic subject as being its own deference within
linguistic, discursive formations.