From its etymological roots, sex is related to a scission, Latin for
sectus, secare, meaning “to divide or cut.” Therefore, regardless of the various studies applied to defining sex as inscribed by discursive acts, i.e. merely a "performatively enacted signification," there is something more to sex than just a social construction or an aprioristic substance. Sex is irreducible to meaning or knowledge.
This is why psychoanalysis cannot be formulated as an erotology nor a science of sex (
scientia sexualis). Following this argumentation, in the final class of his eleventh seminar, Lacan asserts that psychoanalysis has proven to be uncreative in the realm of sexuality. Henceforth, sex does not engrave itself within the symbolic: only the failure of its inscription is marked in the symbolic. In this matter, sex escapes the symbolic restraints of language; however, it is through its failure that it manifests itself through the symbolic, e.g. symptoms or dream life. So, what is sex?
Sex and Nothing embarks upon a dialogue between colleagues and friends interested in bridging psychoanalysis and philosophy, linking sex and thought, where what emerges is a greater awareness of the irreducibility of sex to the discourse of knowledge and meaning: in other words, sex and nothing.