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	Facts of Repression 
	 
	 
	  
	    
	      
		  
		 Since psychoanalysts
		are specialists in this matter - I shall begin with their case.
		
		 In a recent
		symposium - New York 1997 - the most renowned post Freudian specialists in
		the Moses affair collated their progress made subsequent to the1938 publishing
		of Moses and Monotheisn.  I was not present, but did receive a report
		of the meeting from one of the the leading representatives in attendance.
		 
		 When I asked
		him if Velikovsky had been mentioned - he answered that one of the speakers
		had certainly listed him in his references. 
		  It
		was all about Freud's student, he said, who established in 1960
		the identity between Oedipus and Akhnaton.  My reporter asked me about
		Velikovsky's thesis, and was surprised to learn of the matching case between
		Sophocles' play and Egyptologian data. It indicated how the symposiunm had
		well informed him about the progress since Freud's death!
		 
		 When I asked
		him if Hermes Trismegistus had been mentionned, he said: Yes,
		certainly! 
		 But
		he was even more surprised when I mentioned F.A.Yates' 1964 study, which
		disclosed that the Renaissance was on the brink of identifying Trismegistus
		as Moses himself, and that his Solar City and his Monotheist revolution ranked
		this legendary King of Egypt as the most probable Middle-Ages remembrance
		of the historical Akhnaton.
		 
		 When we talked
		about the Egyptologist who published, in 1990, the identity of Moses as Akhnaton,
		he said: Oh, yes, he was mentioned for sure! By the way, what is his
		name... 
		 Thus, to conclude,
		I was, once again, reassured that Psychoanalysis was a good tool for the
		observation of the Freudian repression!
		 
		 As you will
		see, if you have the will to so acknowledge what is described and explained
		in this web site, - that the discovery of Akhnaton by egyptology (Lepsius
		1900) has been followed by a magnificent display of one century's resistance
		toward this knowledge, which is still vivid today when New York hosted
		the state of the affair at the dusk of the century. 
		 
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	 The second piece
	of material that I am exposing as revealed repression may be
	farfetched. Yet it is a solid observation, even if my conclusion is a 
	personal one.
	 
	 It the
	reader is not acquainted with The Selfish Gene, it will
	suffice to be known that its author, Richard Dawkins is a Lecturer in Zoology
	at Oxford University and a Fellow of New College. With these titles, he wrote
	a book about General Genetics published in 1976, then again in 1989, and
	subsequently reprinted several times.  It became an orthodox textbook,
	and even coined a new conceptualization which has been dramatically extended
	in Cybernetics.
	 
	 As its title
	indicates, it is about the 'selfishness' of a replicator that Dawkins defined
	as its ability to raise its survival prospects. 
	 Now, you will
	be interested to look at the unique and exemplary ability of the Y chromosome
	for maintaining its survival presence through male lineages
	  .Just to think that
	a Y gene is unique within the genetic pool for being constantly hosted by
	living human bodies gives an idea of a metaphore for maneuvering one's
	prospectus in an ecosystem.
	 
	 In this prospect,
	one must wonder why Dawkins' textbook NEVER mentions the Y chromosome. Would
	you believe it!  Perhaps not. So you may have to read the entire book
	and send me an email indicating where the most blattant expression of gene
	selfishness is represented in the founding text of this law.  For just
	as a  memo, I shall hereby copy two paragraphs from the conclusive apogee
	of the book, which summarizes its discourse: 
	 We were built
	as gene machines, created to pass our own genes. But that aspect of us will
	be forgotten in three generations.  Your child, even your grandchild,
	may bear a resemblance to you, perhaps in facial features or color of hair,
	or in a talent for music.  But as each generation passes, the contribution
	of your genes is halved.  It does not take long to reach negligible
	proportions. Our genes may be immortal but the collection of genes
	that is in any one of us is bound to crumble away. Elisabeth II is a direct
	descendant of William the Conqueror.  Yet it is quite probable that
	she bears not a single one of the old king's genes. We should not seek
	immortality in reproduction. 
	 But if you
	contribute to the world's culture, if you have a good idea, compose a tune,
	invent a spark plug, write a poem, it may live on, intact, long after
	your genes have dissolve in the common pool.  Socrates may, or may not,
	have a gene or two alive in the world today.   As G.C. Williams
	has remarked, but who cares?
	 
	 The biblical
	Aaron cares, I guess, as well as the Cohen family, whose genes still
	sustain his lineage
	 .   How then,
	can Dawkins give the example of an unusual kingship lineage, since at its
	foundation it is supposed to be carried along by male heirs? Why does he
	say that our genes are halved when his science contradicts the understanding
	of the patronymic Y function
	  and the 100% transmission of the male
	gene?  Obviously, this demonstrates some repression around this matter...
	 
	 What is the
	meaning of this repression ? In eluding the 100% transmission Y case,
	Dawkins is a hero for those who may not want cloning  to make sense
	- that is, 100% transmission of the whole genome.  That can be read
	with Sherlock Freud's glasses, where the author himself underlined
	'collection' - above in the excerpt; for he rests there on the emotional
	figure of the genome that is any one of us, while in his opening
	chapter he concluded : 
	 I shall argue
	that the fundamental unit of selection, and therefore of self-interest, is
	not the species, nor the group, nor even, strictly, the individual.  It
	is the gene, the unit of heredity.  
	 He may argue
	that bread is made of genes, yet he puts the butter on with the
	persona (i.e. the individual which is any one of us). Dawkins
	may patent his method for this sleeping pill.  But for the sake of the
	breed, we shall better use the complex dimension of an anima (the
	genome as a unit). Of course its asks for the circumstance of our ability
	for genetic engineering - and that requires our awakening to the history
	of science.
	 
	 
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